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<pb facs="00057255_0001"/>
?he lEaat (Eaniltmatt<lb/>
Vol. 54 No.JI t4<lb/>
r ?<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Thursday, March 20,1980<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Wahl-Coates<lb/>
Faces Fire,<lb/>
Renovation<lb/>
The old Wahl-Coates School and<lb/>
the Drama Building are currently<lb/>
undergoing renovation, and the<lb/>
workers got a little extra help from a<lb/>
minor fire in the attic Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
The Greenville Fire Department<lb/>
responded to the 5:20 p.m. incident<lb/>
and found a small fire, although a<lb/>
lot of smoke was coming from the<lb/>
attic vents.<lb/>
Fire officials reported that the fire<lb/>
was started by sparks from welding<lb/>
or cutting tools used by the workers<lb/>
in the process of replacing the roof<lb/>
of the building. Fire units, including<lb/>
two engines, the Snorkel unit, and a<lb/>
rescue truck, remained on the scene<lb/>
approximately one hour.<lb/>
This is the second fire to occur in<lb/>
the structure in less than a month.<lb/>
The first fire, on Feb. 27, caused<lb/>
minor damage to a first floor<lb/>
classroom when a pile of rags in a<lb/>
corner storage cubby caught fire<lb/>
and burned a section of floor.<lb/>
Due to the location of the fire,<lb/>
university police ruled ?out the<lb/>
possibility of arson.<lb/>
"I don't believe that anyone<lb/>
wishing to start a fire would bother<lb/>
to climb up to the attic to do it<lb/>
said Capt. Earl Wiggins of the<lb/>
university police.<lb/>
Workers are completely<lb/>
renovating McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
According to James J. Lowry,<lb/>
director of Maintenace and Opera-<lb/>
tions, they are pitting in a new<lb/>
stage, new dressing rooms and an<lb/>
elevator to the auditorium. The new<lb/>
stage will be four times as large as<lb/>
the old one. This phase of the<lb/>
renovation is expected to be com-<lb/>
pleted around April 1981 at a cost of<lb/>
approximately SI.9 million.<lb/>
Hunt: It Is Time<lb/>
To Tighten Belts<lb/>
By LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
"This country is in the process of<lb/>
doing something absolutely essential<lb/>
to survive: to stop the galloping of<lb/>
inflation and stop it now said<lb/>
Qov. James B. Hunt, Jr. at a press<lb/>
conference this morning at the<lb/>
Ramada Inn in Greenville.<lb/>
Commenting on the possible loss<lb/>
of state funds due to cutbacks in<lb/>
revenue sharing, Hunt said, "I am<lb/>
not going to nit-pick and throw<lb/>
stones at policies and programs over<lb/>
a possible revenue loss. I want<lb/>
North Carolina to help the nation<lb/>
bring about a balanced budget,<lb/>
which is essential. I don't know the<lb/>
effect of the Carter anti-inflation<lb/>
proposal with respect to reduced<lb/>
revenue sharing for the state of<lb/>
North Carolina. I have no aversion<lb/>
to tightening the belt. All Americans-<lb/>
are going to have to tighten the belt<lb/>
now rather than having inflation<lb/>
destroy us in the future<lb/>
In reference to energy, the gover-<lb/>
nor said, "I am committed to<lb/>
nuclear power and we should use it.<lb/>
For how long, I don't know. But the<lb/>
upmost concern must be registered<lb/>
with safety. The nuclear plants must<lb/>
be made safe and that is a prere-<lb/>
quisite<lb/>
"We should encourage and<lb/>
develop alternate energy sources, as<lb/>
opposed to traditional ones such as<lb/>
coal, oil, gas, and nuclear. Sources<lb/>
like solar, bio-mass, gasahol and<lb/>
alcohol fuels, and animal waste pro-<lb/>
ducts for gas. I think that our<lb/>
farmers in particular can come close<lb/>
to becoming energy self-sufficient<lb/>
with the use opf grain for gasahol<lb/>
and alcohol, the use of animal waste<lb/>
for methane, and solar and wind<lb/>
power Hunt continii. "I am ex-<lb/>
tremely excited about solar power. I<lb/>
have seen several solar energy out-<lb/>
fits and they are extremely in-<lb/>
teresting and exciting<lb/>
The governor noted that<lb/>
agriculture is still the mainstay of<lb/>
the state. He said efforts are under-<lb/>
way to increase support for tobacco<lb/>
programs, and agriculture and<lb/>
agriculture-related industries are<lb/>
worth over $10 billion a year to<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Hunt also said the best thing for<lb/>
this area of the state would be for<lb/>
Virginia Electric and Power Com-<lb/>
pany (Vepco) to sell its North<lb/>
Carolina Holdings to either<lb/>
Carolina Power and Light (CP&amp;L)<lb/>
or Duke Power Co.<lb/>
Later in the day, the governor of-<lb/>
ficially opened the Pitt County<lb/>
Hunt re-election headquarters on<lb/>
the 264 By-Pass. He told about 100<lb/>
supporters, "A lot of states would<lb/>
be satisfied with the work we have<lb/>
done in North Carolina, but I'm not<lb/>
satisfied. This is North Carolina,<lb/>
and we can do a lot more if we want<lb/>
to<lb/>
Hunt, a Democrat, is campaign-<lb/>
ing for re-election, the first gover-<lb/>
nor to do so in the history of North<lb/>
Carolina. He is opposed by former<lb/>
governor Robert Scott, another<lb/>
Democrat, and Republican state<lb/>
Senator I. Beverly Lake.<lb/>
Not In Jenkins9 Shadow<lb/>
Brewer A ims For Own Mark<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Sadat and Begin Planning Visit<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ? Prime<lb/>
Minister Menachem Begin of Israel<lb/>
and President Anwar Sadat of<lb/>
Egypt will visit Washington for<lb/>
separate talks with President Carter<lb/>
in April, White House officials an-<lb/>
nounced today.<lb/>
White House press secretary Jody<lb/>
Powell, announcing the new move<lb/>
in the bogged-down talks over<lb/>
Palestinian autonomy, said the<lb/>
dates for the meetings had not been<lb/>
set.<lb/>
Powell said the Israeli and Egyp-<lb/>
tian leaders would visit Washington<lb/>
"to review the progress and pace of<lb/>
autonomy negotiations for the West<lb/>
Bank and Gaza<lb/>
"The negotiations are being con-<lb/>
ducted in accordance with the prin-<lb/>
ciples of the Camp David accord<lb/>
which the three leaders signed in<lb/>
September 1978, Powell said.<lb/>
The agreements reached between<lb/>
the United States, Israel and Egypt<lb/>
provided for negotiations to settle<lb/>
the question of Palestinian<lb/>
autonomy on the West Bank of the<lb/>
Jordan River and the Gaza Strip,<lb/>
Arab territories occupied by Israel<lb/>
following the 1967 Middle East war.<lb/>
Israel, Egypt and the United<lb/>
States have agreed to accelerate the<lb/>
pace of the negotiations on self-rule<lb/>
for the 1.2 million Palestinians of<lb/>
the occupied West Bank of the Jor-<lb/>
dan River and Gaza Strip. But it ap-<lb/>
pears doubtful agreement will be<lb/>
reached by the May 26 deadline<lb/>
spelled out in the Camp David ac-<lb/>
cords.<lb/>
Begin said Tuesday the talks were<lb/>
stalled on three Egyptian demands<lb/>
that Jerusalem Arabs participate in<lb/>
Palestinian elections, that the<lb/>
Palestinian government include<lb/>
legislative as well as executive<lb/>
powers, and that Israeli security ar-<lb/>
rangements be a subject for agree-<lb/>
ment by the Palestinians.<lb/>
In 1978, Carter closeted the two<lb/>
Mideast leaders at Camp David for<lb/>
13 days until they agreed on two<lb/>
framework agreements that were<lb/>
honed into the formal peace treaty<lb/>
six months later.<lb/>
Reprinted from North Carolina<lb/>
Magazine, March 1980.<lb/>
Composer Johannes Brahms,<lb/>
while trying to write his first sym-<lb/>
phony, once complained that every<lb/>
time he took pen in hand "1 hear the<lb/>
footsteps of a giant (Beethoven)<lb/>
behind me<lb/>
Thomas Bowman Brewer, the<lb/>
Chancellor of East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity since mid-1978, could be<lb/>
forgiven if he felt a similar burden<lb/>
with regard to the ECU leader<lb/>
whom he succeeded. Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins was not North Carolina's<lb/>
most beloved educational leader,<lb/>
but even his severest detractors will<lb/>
probably admit that it was mainly<lb/>
the Jenkins drive, energy,<lb/>
resourcefulness and determination<lb/>
during his 18 years on this campus<lb/>
which built it from a modest<lb/>
teachers college to a bona-fide<lb/>
university which is North Carolina's<lb/>
third-largest institution of higher<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer, 47, a Ph.D<lb/>
historian, Texan, a scholar of con-<lb/>
siderable note, professes convinc-<lb/>
ingly not to feel any pressure from<lb/>
having his performance measured<lb/>
against that of his predecessor. He<lb/>
numbers himself among Leo<lb/>
Jenkins' admirers, and it was, after<lb/>
all, the growing reputation of ECU<lb/>
in the national academic community<lb/>
which attracted Dr. Brewer away<lb/>
from a prestigious post at Texas<lb/>
Christian University when Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins' retirement came due.<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer's view of the<lb/>
man he succeeded was expressed<lb/>
succinctly in an interview published<lb/>
last year in the ECU Report: "He<lb/>
(Jenkins) took the university from a<lb/>
teachers college to a rather large,<lb/>
diversified university, with a<lb/>
medical school. In doing this, great<lb/>
battles had to be fought, and Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins fought them successfully<lb/>
and deserves the great admiration<lb/>
shown to him by the people of<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
But the Jenkins era is done and<lb/>
See CHANCELLOR Page 3, Col. 4<lb/>
ECU Model UN Club<lb/>
Hosts Security Council<lb/>
Students from seven colleges and<lb/>
universities in Pennsylvania,<lb/>
Virginia and North Carolina are<lb/>
scheduled to arrive in Greenville to- ?<lb/>
day to attend a model United Na-<lb/>
tions Security Council conference.<lb/>
Sponsored by the ECU Model UN<lb/>
Club, the conference is a mock ver-<lb/>
sion of the actual United Nations<lb/>
Security Council. The 20 visiting<lb/>
students will join the seven par-<lb/>
ticipating members of the ECU club<lb/>
in examining international problem<lb/>
areas and writing resolutions con-<lb/>
cerning them.<lb/>
There will be four model Security<lb/>
Councils, each of which will choose<lb/>
its own agenda of international pro-<lb/>
blems to discuss. According to Jill<lb/>
Vaughn, Secretary-General of the<lb/>
ECU Model UN Club,the chief<lb/>
areas of concern will probably be<lb/>
the Iranian situation, the Soviet in-<lb/>
vasion of Afghanistan and the<lb/>
resurgent cold war atmosphere bet-<lb/>
ween the superpowers.<lb/>
George Ashworth, Counselor to<lb/>
the U.S. Arms Control and Disar-<lb/>
mament Committee based in<lb/>
Washington, D.C will deliver the<lb/>
keynote speech of the conference in<lb/>
room 244 of the Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center on Friday, March 21 at<lb/>
4:30 p.m. Interested<lb/>
students,faculty, and members of<lb/>
the community are welcome,<lb/>
See MODEL Page 2, Col. 1<lb/>
Hearing Set For Fee Increase Proposals<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
For the first time in the history of<lb/>
East Carolina University, a major<lb/>
effort is being made to find out stu-<lb/>
dent opinion on a set of proposed<lb/>
increases in the student fees.<lb/>
At 4:30p.m. in room 244 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center today,<lb/>
there will be a special hearing open<lb/>
to all students for the purpose of<lb/>
discussing the increases with the<lb/>
heads of the organizations that are<lb/>
requesting them.<lb/>
In addition .professors in all<lb/>
10:00 Friday classes this week will<lb/>
read aloud a special questionaire<lb/>
concerning the raises and record stu-<lb/>
dent reaction to them.<lb/>
At present, full-time students at<lb/>
ECU pay $105 per semester in stu-<lb/>
dent fees. The proposed additions<lb/>
would hike the figure to $134, which<lb/>
is roughly a 25 percent increase.<lb/>
"This particular time slot was<lb/>
chosen for the survey because that is<lb/>
when the greatest number of<lb/>
students are attending classes said<lb/>
SGA President Brett Melvin.<lb/>
The results of the survey will be<lb/>
tabulated before Sunday, March 24,<lb/>
when the ECU Board of Trustees<lb/>
will meet to vote on the proposals.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Meyer has acted as a<lb/>
coordinator between the university<lb/>
sectors which are asking for increas-<lb/>
ed funding and the SGA officers<lb/>
who have prepared the survey<lb/>
"What we are trying to do this<lb/>
year is open up this process Meyer<lb/>
said Wednesday.<lb/>
As a member of the ECU Board<lb/>
of Trustees, SGA President Melvin<lb/>
will have an opportunity to vote on<lb/>
the fee increases. According to him,<lb/>
he will base his vote on three con-<lb/>
siderations: the results of the stu-<lb/>
dent survey, the impressions gained<lb/>
from the special hearing Thursday,<lb/>
and the information presented in the<lb/>
upcoming Board of Trustees<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
The hearing and the survey will<lb/>
not determine the approval or rejec-<lb/>
tion of the fee increases, but will aid<lb/>
the trustees and administrators in<lb/>
assessing the overall attitudes to stu-<lb/>
dent programs.<lb/>
In comparison to other univer-<lb/>
sities within the UNC system, fees at<lb/>
East Carolina remain relatively<lb/>
Current And Proposed Student Fees<lb/>
Total Current Fees Per Semester: $105.00<lb/>
Total Proposed Fees Per Semester: $134.00<lb/>
small. Of the 15 member schools,<lb/>
ECU ranks eleventh or lower in the<lb/>
amount of funding through student<lb/>
fees.<lb/>
The burden of inflation accounts<lb/>
for much of the proposed raises, but<lb/>
some of it is earmarked for expan-<lb/>
sion and improvement of services.<lb/>
For instance, the Athletics Dept. re-<lb/>
quest amounts to roughly 55 percent<lb/>
above last year's budget, and the<lb/>
Health Services Dept. request<lb/>
represents an approximate 42 per-<lb/>
cent increase over its previous share<lb/>
of the funds.<lb/>
The following section presents<lb/>
some of the details concerning the<lb/>
fee increase proposals, but it is not a<lb/>
complete picture of the factors af-<lb/>
fecting each department making a<lb/>
request. For those who are in-<lb/>
$3.25<lb/>
terested in these group's funding, it<lb/>
is important to attend the Thursday<lb/>
hearing. The head of each depart-<lb/>
ment is scheduled to be there to<lb/>
answer questions concerning their<lb/>
1980-81 budgets.<lb/>
Health Services<lb/>
According to a Health Services<lb/>
Dept. budget projection for the next<lb/>
three fiscal periods, the infirmary<lb/>
will continue to operate at a deficit<lb/>
unless it receives a major funding in-<lb/>
crease. The department is currently<lb/>
advertising for a new director who<lb/>
will carry added responsibilities in<lb/>
coordinating programs with the<lb/>
ECU medical school, thus comman-<lb/>
ding a potentially higher salary than<lb/>
before. In February, 1980, the infir-<lb/>
mary handled over 5,000 patient<lb/>
59.75<lb/>
visits with a staff of four full time<lb/>
doctors.<lb/>
Last increase was in 1972-73.<lb/>
Athletics<lb/>
According to an Athletics Dept.<lb/>
spokesman, no workable budget for<lb/>
the 1980-81 season has been com-<lb/>
pleted. Athletics Director Bill Cain<lb/>
could not be reached Wednesday to<lb/>
clarify how the additional funding<lb/>
would be used.<lb/>
Last increase in 1979-80.<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
A survey done by Wayne Ed-<lb/>
wards, Director of Intramurals, in-<lb/>
dicates that 70 percent of male<lb/>
students and 40 percent of female<lb/>
See FEES Page 3, Col. 1<lb/>
$10.50<lb/>
$1.50<lb/>
Proposed Increase ?<lb/>
Current Fees<lb/>
S2.5A<lb/>
Student Fund<lb/>
$1.5$ <lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Activities<lb/>
$6.00<lb/>
$7.50<lb/>
SGA: Student Gov't. Transit Media Board $12.75<lb/>
Other Debt<lb/>
Services Fee<lb/>
$'8.00<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
$19.25<lb/>
Athletics<lb/>
Department<lb/>
$17.75<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Health<lb/>
Services<lb/>
(Infirmary)<lb/>
$24.00<lb/>
V<lb/>
a<lb/>
<pb facs="00057255_0002"/><lb/>
Owner Of Investment Firm Absentee Ballot: Student Democracy<lb/>
Puts Blame On Eurodollars<lb/>
.i a-ACf u;ii;vr-i rtr . <lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ?<lb/>
To John Winthrop<lb/>
Wright, whose invest-<lb/>
ment firm handles $1<lb/>
billion of individual<lb/>
and institutional in-<lb/>
vestments, the idea of<lb/>
curing inflation by pro-<lb/>
moting a recession is<lb/>
equivalent to<lb/>
phlebotomy.<lb/>
That practice, more<lb/>
commonly known as<lb/>
bloodletting, was<lb/>
thought to be a univer-<lb/>
sal cure many years ago<lb/>
when medicine was still<lb/>
in a very dark ago. Hut<lb/>
still no darker, he says,<lb/>
than some of modem<lb/>
economics.<lb/>
Recession, says<lb/>
Wright, a conservative,<lb/>
blue-chip investor, pro<lb/>
duces iwo effects he<lb/>
thinks should be ob-<lb/>
vious to everyone by<lb/>
now:<lb/>
It reduces the<lb/>
numbers o indepen-<lb/>
dent, competitive<lb/>
businesses and compels<lb/>
government to borrow<lb/>
in oulcr to finance<lb/>
lobless benefits and<lb/>
welfare programs that<lb/>
deplete the nation's in-<lb/>
dustrial capital.<lb/>
 recession, thus,<lb/>
not only weakens the<lb/>
subsequent recovery<lb/>
but sets the stage for<lb/>
the next recession. And<lb/>
as the patient grows<lb/>
weaker, the doctors see<lb/>
no alternative but to let<lb/>
more blood.<lb/>
Wright spoke<lb/>
Wednesday at the an-<lb/>
nual Symposium on<lb/>
American Capitalism,<lb/>
which he sponsors at<lb/>
Fairfield University, a<lb/>
short distance from the<lb/>
Bridgeport, Conn of-<lb/>
fices of Wright In-<lb/>
vestors' Service.<lb/>
As he sees it, the<lb/>
designers of fiscal and<lb/>
monetary policy con-<lb/>
tinually cut the veins of<lb/>
the patient, in this in-<lb/>
stance the private<lb/>
domestic economy, in-<lb/>
stead of attacking the<lb/>
disease that leads to the<lb/>
ailment.<lb/>
The disease, Wright<lb/>
told an audience of<lb/>
business people,<lb/>
a c a d e m i c s a n d<lb/>
students, is<lb/>
Eurodollars. No, he<lb/>
does not attribute all<lb/>
blame to them, but he<lb/>
does believe they are an<lb/>
obvious and unchecked<lb/>
monetary problem.<lb/>
Do not let<lb/>
"Eurodollar" throw<lb/>
you; it is really a simple<lb/>
term. All it means is a<lb/>
dollar borrowed from a<lb/>
foreign bank. That bor-<lb/>
rowed dollar is an lOU<lb/>
to the bank. It is an<lb/>
asset. It is a dollar<lb/>
asset. And when a bank<lb/>
has an asset it lends it<lb/>
out.<lb/>
That dollar asset<lb/>
does not take on the<lb/>
configuration o' a<lb/>
dollar bill imprinted<lb/>
with the figure of<lb/>
George Washington. It<lb/>
is a credit dollar, the<lb/>
very same as that<lb/>
created when you bor-<lb/>
row from your local<lb/>
bank.<lb/>
As we have seen, the<lb/>
federal Reserve can<lb/>
limit lending and bor-<lb/>
rowing in domestic,<lb/>
banksf but there is no<lb/>
formal regulation of<lb/>
those dollars produced<lb/>
overseas. And. Wright<lb/>
points out, they now<lb/>
total $450 billion, or<lb/>
only $50 billion less<lb/>
than the domestically<lb/>
produced total.<lb/>
Once upon a time,<lb/>
Wright observed,<lb/>
anyone wanting U.S.<lb/>
dollars would buy them<lb/>
on the foreign exchange<lb/>
market, creating a de-<lb/>
mand that would lift<lb/>
the price and protect us<lb/>
from imported infla-<lb/>
tion. If the dollars were<lb/>
valued higher, for ex-<lb/>
ample, oil might cost<lb/>
relatively less.<lb/>
The dilution of<lb/>
dollar value is likely to<lb/>
continue if Eurodollar<lb/>
production is not slow-<lb/>
ed, said Wright. If un-<lb/>
checked, he forecast<lb/>
the Eurodollar total<lb/>
will be triple the<lb/>
domestic dollar supply<lb/>
in five years.<lb/>
"There is no way of<lb/>
stopping the inflation<lb/>
of dollar prices all over<lb/>
the world, no way of<lb/>
stopping the escalation<lb/>
of Middle East oil<lb/>
prices payable in<lb/>
dollars Wright told<lb/>
his audience.<lb/>
"No way of avoiding<lb/>
the ever-rising cost of<lb/>
energy in the U.S.A.<lb/>
and the inflation which<lb/>
inevitably accompanies<lb/>
it; simply no way of ac-<lb/>
complishing these basic<lb/>
objectives without first<lb/>
recognizing and ac-<lb/>
ting on the obvious<lb/>
principle that the<lb/>
United States must con-<lb/>
trol the creation of<lb/>
U.S. dollar credits and<lb/>
deposits everywhere<lb/>
Model UN To Meet<lb/>
Primary Day is ap-<lb/>
proaching, and for<lb/>
those ECU students<lb/>
who are not registered<lb/>
to vote in Pitt County,<lb/>
the only way to vote is<lb/>
by absentee ballot.<lb/>
Absentee ballots are<lb/>
surprisingly simple to<lb/>
obtain. First of all, one<lb/>
must be registered to<lb/>
vote. Then the voter<lb/>
writes his or her home<lb/>
county board of elec-<lb/>
tions and requests an<lb/>
application for an<lb/>
absentee ballot. Ap-<lb/>
plications are also<lb/>
available from the ECU<lb/>
College Democrats.<lb/>
The completed ap-<lb/>
plication must be mail-<lb/>
ed by April 22, and the<lb/>
ballot must be received<lb/>
by the home county<lb/>
board of elections by 5<lb/>
p.m. May 5-the day<lb/>
before the primary.<lb/>
ABSENTEE BALLOT APPLICATION REQUEST CARD<lb/>
I,<lb/>
, am a<lb/>
registered voter in the<lb/>
county rid am<lb/>
precinct in <lb/>
unable to get to the polling place. I wish to apply<lb/>
for an application for an absentee ballot for the<lb/>
May 6 primary election.<lb/>
Signature of person as it appears on the reaistration<lb/>
book<lb/>
Local<lb/>
Address<lb/>
I<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
The conference is the<lb/>
fourth of its kind to be<lb/>
held at East Carolina<lb/>
since 1976, and will run<lb/>
1 three days.<lb/>
The real United Na-<lb/>
tions Security Council<lb/>
is made up of five per-<lb/>
manent seats occupied<lb/>
by the United States,<lb/>
the Soviet Union, Great<lb/>
Britain, France, and<lb/>
China, and 10 tem-<lb/>
porary seats that are<lb/>
filled by member na-<lb/>
tions on a rotating<lb/>
basis. With the excep-<lb/>
tion of West Germany,<lb/>
most of these seats are<lb/>
presently held by third<lb/>
world nations such as<lb/>
Bangladesh and the<lb/>
Phillipines.<lb/>
In deliberating inter-<lb/>
national questions, the<lb/>
students are supposed<lb/>
to represent the in-<lb/>
terests and the policies<lb/>
of the nation which<lb/>
they have chosen or<lb/>
were assigned.<lb/>
The visiting students<lb/>
are from the University<lb/>
of Pennsylvania, the<lb/>
University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill,<lb/>
Duquesne University,<lb/>
Thiel College, Ap-<lb/>
palachian State Univer-<lb/>
sity and Emory and<lb/>
Henery College. While<lb/>
in Greenville, the par-<lb/>
ticipants will stay at the<lb/>
Ramada Inn.<lb/>
TGIF<lb/>
4:00 - 6:30<lb/>
JOLLY ROGER<lb/>
?WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
YlCJrZ, by Nature's Way<lb/>
specializing in natural hair cuts for men A women<lb/>
Present ECU Student l.D. For<lb/>
20? o OH Your Next Haircut<lb/>
aDpomtments only<lb/>
758-7841<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
?fl FULL SEfWiCE LfHMlOW<lb/>
'NEW fAW7tt&amp; UMshERs<lb/>
o ddrptted lourtge uJith 7<lb/>
fluff cUd FClcl Strtfice<lb/>
oPirtlnodl fyAChifi&amp;S<lb/>
t Ece Went profestiCNd i ? foj<lb/>
 E. W ST.<lb/>
across from<lb/>
?GN J rs<lb/>
,<lb/>
r ? i<lb/>
n . rv<lb/>
Ci'S uJdsh clrci ol Soft di<lb/>
BVBO-tVfio' &amp;mU OA!? V<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
vj Sa.<lb/>
 19<lb/>
?? q<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
$?99<lb/>
DAILY LUNCHEON<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
I H0t D0gOnlyUil<lb/>
Hamburger,<lb/>
1 French Fries<lb/>
&amp; 12-0z. Drink<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4 00 8 00 PM<lb/>
SALAD-50 EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR g g<lb/>
PIZZA . ggw ITUE<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN 9 9<lb/>
SPAGHETTIONLVI HUR<lb/>
DIET PEPSI. MT. DEW OR<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
NO CARRYOUT<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Photo by CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
The FightirT Pirate Ship<lb/>
gets repair funds from INDVs tune-up clinic<lb/>
Pirate Ship Needs<lb/>
Money For Repaii<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
The ECU pirate ship,<lb/>
seen for the last two<lb/>
years at football games<lb/>
and in parades, needs<lb/>
funds to maintain its<lb/>
authentic appearance.<lb/>
The 42-foot replica<lb/>
of a 16th century sail-<lb/>
ing vessel, built by the<lb/>
ECU Industrial and<lb/>
Technical Education<lb/>
(INDT) Club, is con-<lb/>
structed on a Mercury<lb/>
chassis donated by<lb/>
Smith-Waldrop Motors<lb/>
and Ford Motor Co.<lb/>
Garris-Evans Lumber<lb/>
Co. donated $400<lb/>
worth of lumber, and<lb/>
Atlantic Rope Co.<lb/>
donated the rope for<lb/>
the rigging. Since the<lb/>
ship was completed,<lb/>
donations from the<lb/>
community and INDT<lb/>
students have been used<lb/>
to refurbish the ship.<lb/>
Since most of the<lb/>
ship's structural pro-<lb/>
blems are due to ex-<lb/>
posure to the weather,<lb/>
INDT plans to build an<lb/>
enclosed shelter to pro-<lb/>
tect the ship. The club<lb/>
also hopes to add can-<lb/>
nons and another mast<lb/>
to the ship.<lb/>
One source of funds<lb/>
for the ship is INDT's<lb/>
Tune-Up Clinic.<lb/>
Students in the<lb/>
organization will tune<lb/>
up any car for i0 and<lb/>
customers must supply<lb/>
the parts.<lb/>
There will be a sign-<lb/>
up sheet in the front<lb/>
hall of the ground floor<lb/>
of Flanagan Building<lb/>
for per ns interested<lb/>
in the clinic. On Mon-<lb/>
days, Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays, from 3<lb/>
p.m. to 5 p.m club<lb/>
members will work on<lb/>
cars at approximately<lb/>
one every half hour.<lb/>
"About 900 hours of<lb/>
work went into the con-<lb/>
struction of the ship<lb/>
said Paul Waldrop, ad-<lb/>
visor to the INDT<lb/>
Club, "and we've had a<lb/>
great response from the<lb/>
student body. We ran it<lb/>
in the Homecoming<lb/>
parade last year and<lb/>
won the show, and this<lb/>
year we participated<lb/>
but couldn't compete.<lb/>
We hope to get about<lb/>
$2,000 to $3,000 in our<lb/>
current fund-raising<lb/>
drive so we can get it<lb/>
looking great<lb/>
STROH'S OR<lb/>
Stroh's Light Beer<lb/>
$1<lb/>
ROSE, BURGUNDY.<lb/>
RHINE OR<lb/>
Paul Masson Chablis<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Balls<lb/>
$<lb/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
4N HCiMa<lb/>
Motor<lb/>
SOLD<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Fmcmsas<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
' Ljttie Debbie Snack Cakes &amp; Archway Cookies<lb/>
Chips, Snacks &amp; Bagged Huts <lb/>
Sauces &amp; Gravy Mixes gfl 4 t<lb/>
PEPPERIOGE ASMS I<lb/>
Bagged Cookies &amp; Sn"5L-t<lb/>
5v2-Oz.<lb/>
Pkgs.<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz. Twin Pack<lb/>
59<lb/>
Items and Price<lb/>
Effective Tuee Mer. It<lb/>
thru Sun Mar. 23. 1980<lb/>
Copyright 1980<lb/>
Kroger Savon<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None sotd to Dealers or Wholesalers<lb/>
S F MANUFACTURER S<lb/>
 SUGGESTED RETAIL<lb/>
i I :<lb/>
on<lb/>
ADVERTS SID ITIM POLICY<lb/>
e.?. ???? aritMrtlaad Items Is required to ba readily availablt tor<lb/>
S in aJenrogeTsivJoor. a??opt ?? splt?c.?y not ???<lb/>
IdH cto run olTolan advertised Hem. w. will offer you your cho.es<lb/>
i I ?J!m?mEa?mWhen svellaWa, raflaciing tha same savings or a<lb/>
I I advertised price within 30 days<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GEN<lb/>
MDSE. STORES<lb/>
rir t I<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
MJ&amp;<lb/>
OPfN SUNOA?<lb/>
9AM T0 9 P ?<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. ? Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057255_0003"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Fees Set For Hearing<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
students participate in some type of<lb/>
intramural recreation. The increase<lb/>
in this program is to maintain and<lb/>
improve intramural activities.<lb/>
Last increase in 1975-76<lb/>
Mendenhall Center<lb/>
The $3.25 per semester increase<lb/>
will cover the rising cost of<lb/>
maintenance, adjust staff salaries<lb/>
for inflation, and help to purchase<lb/>
new curtains for the entire building.<lb/>
The present curtains are old and<lb/>
energy-inefficient, and? replacicing<lb/>
them could cost as much as $19,000.<lb/>
Leakage problems are also adding<lb/>
to maintenance.<lb/>
First increase.<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Student Union programs will ac-<lb/>
tually only receive half of the $1.50<lb/>
per semester increase requested. The<lb/>
other half will be used by<lb/>
Mendenhall-sponsored activities,<lb/>
according to Charles Sune, Major<lb/>
Attractions chairman in the S.U.<lb/>
program.<lb/>
First increase.<lb/>
SGA Fund<lb/>
This money is used largely to fund<lb/>
official student organizations and to<lb/>
support the activities of student<lb/>
government. The increase amounts<lb/>
to $.50 per semester and is requested<lb/>
to cover increased operating costs.<lb/>
Last increase in 1972-73.<lb/>
SGA Transit<lb/>
Higher insurance and servicing<lb/>
costs are part of the reasoning<lb/>
behind the $1.00 per semester fee in-<lb/>
crease. The transit system is also<lb/>
planning improvements in bus ser-<lb/>
vice and equipment.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Not all student fee-funded<lb/>
organizations are asking for in-<lb/>
creases. Student Fund Accounting,<lb/>
which handles student loans and<lb/>
bookkeeping matters, has made no<lb/>
request. The category listed as Other<lb/>
Debt Services fees in the graph is for<lb/>
finance servicing (interest charges,<lb/>
bonds, etc.), and will remain the<lb/>
same in the 1980-81 fiscal period.<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer<lb/>
Goes His Own Way<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 20, 1980 3<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
the Brewer era is underway. It will<lb/>
surely be a different era, not only<lb/>
because no two men bring identical<lb/>
viewpoints, philosophies and<lb/>
methods to the same set of respon-<lb/>
sibilities, but more because the<lb/>
1980's will not be the same as the<lb/>
1960s and 1970's. New generations<lb/>
of young people have come to col-<lb/>
lege age since East Carolina College<lb/>
became East Carolina University.<lb/>
The new ECU chancellor is, of<lb/>
course, intimately familiar with<lb/>
those factors of his profession, and<lb/>
is attentive to the future they por-<lb/>
tend. He works out of an office<lb/>
which occupies most of one end of<lb/>
the Spilman Administrative<lb/>
Building; the office could be<lb/>
mistaken for a spacious living room<lb/>
with contemporary decor. He is a<lb/>
large, heavyset man with a<lb/>
generous, open face and a habit of<lb/>
never talking down to his visitors.<lb/>
He shows the friendly directness for<lb/>
which Texans are supposed to be<lb/>
famous, but there is little of the<lb/>
Texas twang in his speech.<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer is a widely<lb/>
published scholar in American<lb/>
business history, particularly<lb/>
transportation history, and has serv-<lb/>
ed as editor or co-editor of several<lb/>
books. Railroad history buffs will<lb/>
envy him his position as general<lb/>
editor- of the Railroads of America<lb/>
series of books of which five<lb/>
volumes have been published by the<lb/>
MacMillan Company, with others in<lb/>
the works. With a colleague, he<lb/>
works in his present spare time on<lb/>
one of the series,a history of the<lb/>
Missouri-Pacific Railroad Com-<lb/>
pany.<lb/>
He shares with former Chancellor<lb/>
Jenkins an advocacy of strong inter-<lb/>
collegiate athletics. The athletic pro-<lb/>
gram at ECU which grew apace with<lb/>
the academic programs during the<lb/>
Jenkins administration enjoys the<lb/>
full Brewer blessing and commit-<lb/>
ment. He sees no necessary conflict<lb/>
whatever between the fielding of<lb/>
competitive athletic teams and the<lb/>
carrying on of strong and deman-<lb/>
ding academic disciplines.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Mascot<lb/>
Men or omcn interested in trying out<lb/>
for the Mascot for ECU are asked to<lb/>
meet at Minges Coliseum on Thursday,<lb/>
March 20 ai 4 45 p m. More details will<lb/>
he furnished at that time Interested'1<lb/>
See sou at Minges on Thursday<lb/>
Poetry Forum<lb/>
The tast Carolina Poetry Forum will<lb/>
have a regular workshop and meeting<lb/>
Thursday March 20. at 8 p.m in<lb/>
Mendenhall, room 248. The public is<lb/>
cordially muted.<lb/>
Mini-Courses<lb/>
Sign up today for a non-credit mini-<lb/>
course now being offered by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Shag Dan-<lb/>
cing, Beginning Running, Clogging and<lb/>
CPR Training are now available to all<lb/>
ECU full-time students, faculty and<lb/>
staff MSC members, and their<lb/>
dependents, spouses or guests.<lb/>
Registration is at the MSC Central<lb/>
Ticket Office through the day prior to<lb/>
the first class meeting of each course.<lb/>
There is a maximum and minimum<lb/>
enrollment for each course and no fee<lb/>
refunds will be made after the registra-<lb/>
tion deadline. For more information<lb/>
.all 757-6611.<lb/>
Boxing<lb/>
Sci-Fi<lb/>
The Science Fiction Fantasy Federation<lb/>
ol I Si Greensboro is holding a 3 day<lb/>
convention. STELLARCON V, for the<lb/>
fans ot science fiction, fantasy and<lb/>
space exploration on March 21-23 on<lb/>
the campus of UNC-G. Elliot Universi-<lb/>
?s Center The guest of honor is George<lb/>
Takei. It Sulu of 'Star Trek " Other<lb/>
activities include- masquerade,<lb/>
speakers and panels, dealer's room.<lb/>
films and video tapes. D and D gaming.<lb/>
S X even and an art show. Joan<lb/>
Winston from the "Star Trek"<lb/>
W eicommittee will also he in atten-<lb/>
dance as our fan guest of honor Ad-<lb/>
mission is $8.00. For more information<lb/>
write STELLARCON V. Bos 1712,<lb/>
Shaw Hall. L ??(. Greensboro. N.C<lb/>
27412<lb/>
Openings for TKE boxing are still<lb/>
available. The tournament will be held<lb/>
April 8, 9 and W. Openings are<lb/>
available in 183-192. 193-202, and<lb/>
Unlimited weight classes. Interested<lb/>
boxers call 758-7894 or drop by TKE<lb/>
House. 951 E. Tenth St. This tourna-<lb/>
ment benefits St. Judes Childrens<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
Kite Making<lb/>
Learn to design and make your own<lb/>
kite b attending a free workshop spon-<lb/>
sored by Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The workshop, conducted by George<lb/>
Bred. Pitt Community College Artist-<lb/>
In-Residence, is scheduled for Wednes-<lb/>
day, April 26, from 6-8 p m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Crafts Center. There is no<lb/>
registration or supplies fee for this uni-<lb/>
que workshop. Ju" come by the Crafts<lb/>
Center and join in the fun!<lb/>
Toto<lb/>
Summer Dorms<lb/>
Residence hall room deposits for Sum-<lb/>
mer School 1980 will be accepted in the<lb/>
Cashiers Office, room 105, Spilman<lb/>
Building, beginning April 9. Room<lb/>
assignments will be made in the respec-<lb/>
tive residence hall offices on April 10<lb/>
and 11 Thereafter, they will be made in<lb/>
the office of Housing Operations, room<lb/>
201. w hichard Building. Students who<lb/>
wish to reserve rooms they presently oc-<lb/>
cupy, provided such rooms are to be in<lb/>
use this summer, are to make reserva-<lb/>
tions on Thursday. April 10. All other<lb/>
students may reserve rooms on a first-<lb/>
come, first-serve basis on Friday, April<lb/>
11. Residence halls to be used for<lb/>
women are Jarvis, Garrett. and Greene<lb/>
ffloors two through six). Men will be<lb/>
housed in Belk (floors one through<lb/>
three).<lb/>
BSPA<lb/>
The Black Students' Psychological<lb/>
Association will meet in the Psi Chi<lb/>
Library in Speight on Thursday. March<lb/>
20 at 6:00 p.m. All members are urged<lb/>
to attend. Any interested persons<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Adventure<lb/>
After three years of filming, Don<lb/>
Cooper invites everyone aboard for a<lb/>
fun and fact filled trip through some of<lb/>
the most spectacular natural beauty in<lb/>
North America. Cooper will appear in<lb/>
Hendrix Theater on Thursday. March<lb/>
20 at 8:00 p.m. to present his travel-<lb/>
adventure film. "Northwestern Adven-<lb/>
ture Tickets for the film are on sale at<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office for $2.00. Ad-<lb/>
mission for ECLS students will be by ID<lb/>
and Activity Cards and by MSC<lb/>
Membership Card for ECU faculty and<lb/>
staff<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The ECU delegation to the NCSL will<lb/>
meet Thursday at 7:00 pm. in Brewster<lb/>
C 102 to discuss plans for session. The<lb/>
meeting is mandatory for all members<lb/>
who are attending session.<lb/>
The Student Union Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee presents TOTO, with a<lb/>
special guest TBA, on April 17 at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. in Minges Coliseum. Tickets will<lb/>
go on sale Monday, March 31. at 10:00<lb/>
a.m. in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Tickets will be $5 00 for ECU studentv<lb/>
and $7 00 for the public.<lb/>
Twig<lb/>
Are you interesied in fellowship with<lb/>
other Christians? Come to Twig<lb/>
fellowship and hear the Word of God<lb/>
taught with dynamic accuracy. Monday<lb/>
and Wednesday afternoons at 3:00 in<lb/>
Mendenhall. room 247.<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
Sigma Nu fraternity will be holding a<lb/>
softball tournament on April 12 and 13.<lb/>
The entry fee will be $3.00 per player,<lb/>
which includes a jersey, and beverages<lb/>
at the championship party. For more<lb/>
information call 758-7640 or 758-6493.<lb/>
There will be a 20 team maximum.<lb/>
Family-Child<lb/>
The Family Child Association will meet<lb/>
Tuesday, March 25 at 5:00 p.m. in the<lb/>
Home Economics Conference Room<lb/>
143. All members and interested per-<lb/>
sons are urged to attend.<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Planning for Homecoming 1980 has<lb/>
begun, ans positions' of Student<lb/>
Homecoming Committee Chairman<lb/>
and Division Chairman (parade and<lb/>
halftime, decorations, entertainment,<lb/>
bands, community relations, promo-<lb/>
tions and publicity) are open. Applica-<lb/>
tions are available in all residence hall<lb/>
offices and at the Mendenhall Informa-<lb/>
tion Center. For additional informa-<lb/>
tion, contact Dean Rudolph Alexander.<lb/>
Summer Work<lb/>
Want to increase your chances of get-<lb/>
ting into Med School or a choice Allied<lb/>
Health Program? Spend the summer or<lb/>
fall semester in a career related work<lb/>
assignment tailored to meet your career<lb/>
interest. While participating in the Nor-<lb/>
mal Volunteer Program at the National<lb/>
Institutes of Health in Bethesda.<lb/>
Maryland, you will earn $12.50 a day.<lb/>
free room and board in the clinical<lb/>
facility, travel expenses to and from<lb/>
facilities at NIH. Ms. Ester Taylor<lb/>
from NIH will describe the program to<lb/>
interested people on Thursday, March<lb/>
20. at 7:30 p.m. in 304 Rawl. and will<lb/>
iniervww applicants Friday. March 21.<lb/>
by appointment only Contact Har-<lb/>
n?ne Keyes in (he Cooperative Educa-<lb/>
tion Office. 313 Rawl, 7S7-6979, im-<lb/>
mediately to pick up-appiication forms,<lb/>
additional information, or to schedule<lb/>
an interview. Act quickly before all the<lb/>
interview slots are Tilled.<lb/>
Navy Co-op<lb/>
Want to earn more than $4.50 per hour<lb/>
in a career related job, accumulate time<lb/>
toward retirement in federal govern-<lb/>
ment, and bypass the usual tests<lb/>
necessary for permanent positions in<lb/>
federal government? A representative<lb/>
from the Navy Administrative Co-op<lb/>
Program will be on campus March 26<lb/>
and 27 lo interview students interested<lb/>
in civilian positions with the Depart-<lb/>
ment of the Navy. Interviews will be<lb/>
held for two computer science positions<lb/>
in Philadelphia and four industrial<lb/>
specialist positions in Washington D.C.<lb/>
during fall semester 1980. If time is<lb/>
available, there will also be interviews<lb/>
for the following jobs: data processing,<lb/>
statistician, supply and transportation<lb/>
management, quality and reliability<lb/>
assurance specialists, personnel<lb/>
management, education specialists,<lb/>
logistics management, housing<lb/>
manager, program analysis, financial<lb/>
management, management analysis,<lb/>
and procurement. Contact the Co-op<lb/>
Office, 313 Rawl, 757-6979, immediate-<lb/>
ly to get more information or schedule<lb/>
an interview. Application forms musi<lb/>
be completed in advance.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
A "No-Tap" Bowling Tournament<lb/>
sponsored by Mendenhall Studeni<lb/>
Center will be held March 31 through<lb/>
April 21. A 9-pin hit will count as a<lb/>
strike, with all other procedures re-<lb/>
maining as usual. Trophies will be<lb/>
awarded to the first and second place<lb/>
singles winners and to the first place<lb/>
doubles winners in both men's and<lb/>
women's divisions. Competition is<lb/>
open to ail full-time ECU students<lb/>
Rules are available at ihe Bowling<lb/>
Center. Call 757-6611. ext 267. for<lb/>
more information<lb/>
ROTC Basketball<lb/>
The ECU Air Force ROTC is sponsor-<lb/>
ing us Eleventh Annual Basketball<lb/>
Tournament at Minges Coliseum on<lb/>
Friday. March 21 and Saturday. March<lb/>
22.<lb/>
Caucus<lb/>
The Student Caucus for Progressive<lb/>
Reform has been formed to promote<lb/>
student activism, fight nuclear energy,<lb/>
and to promote a humanitarian, alter-<lb/>
native lifestyle. The SCPR is presently<lb/>
organizing a "Festival for a<lb/>
Humanitarian Renaissance" tentatively<lb/>
scheduled for April 11. The Caucus is<lb/>
dedicated to providing a forum for the<lb/>
expression of the ideals of tomorrow.<lb/>
Interested people should cdntact: Jean-<lb/>
nie Igoe. 752-8493; Jeff Whisnal and<lb/>
Mark Kemp, 707 4th St: or Jay Stone.<lb/>
1207 Cotanche St<lb/>
ROSSE<lb/>
There will be a meeting of ROSSE,<lb/>
Returning Older Students Seeking<lb/>
Education, at 4 p.m. Thursday, March<lb/>
20, in Wright Annex, room 305.<lb/>
Discussion will center on problems en-<lb/>
countered by the older student return-<lb/>
ing to college after being out five years<lb/>
or more or older students just beginn-<lb/>
ing college.<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/>
Tuesday edition and 2:00<lb/>
p.m. Tuesday for the Thurs-<lb/>
day edition. We reserve the<lb/>
right to edit for brevity. We<lb/>
cannot guarantee that<lb/>
everything turned in will ap-<lb/>
pear in the paper, due to<lb/>
space limitations, but we will<lb/>
do our best.<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
In the article headlined "Majoi<lb/>
Attractions Expecting Success In<lb/>
Spring Concert" on page 5 of the<lb/>
March 18 issue of the The Easi<lb/>
Carolinian, some students may have<lb/>
inferred that the concert cancella-<lb/>
tions by The Allman Brothers and<lb/>
the Jefferson Starship may have ap-<lb/>
plied only to East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity. Charles Sune, chairman of the<lb/>
Major Attractions Committee, has<lb/>
pointed out that those groups<lb/>
cancelled their entire tours, and that<lb/>
the ECU concerts were not singled<lb/>
out for cancellation.<lb/>
II<lb/>
PIPE DREAMS<lb/>
Presents ? <lb/>
E.C.U. SPRING 1980<lb/>
T-SHIRTS<lb/>
COME ON BYANDSAV<lb/>
10 ON ALL<lb/>
PURCHASES OVER $5.00<lb/>
University<lb/>
THURSDAY ONLY Arcade<lb/>
 mm. JtJfc rm E. 5tH ST.<lb/>
11-10:00 PM 752-4811<lb/>
WE WERE SNOWED OUT<lb/>
on our<lb/>
Spring 20 Off Sale<lb/>
on March 1st.<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
ONE DAY ONLY<lb/>
MARCH 22nd<lb/>
EVERYTHING<lb/>
IN THE STORE<lb/>
20 OFF<lb/>
DON'T<lb/>
MISS m<lb/>
Free Layaway Plans<lb/>
Charge Cards Welcome<lb/>
756-9955<lb/>
The 3rd Annual<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau Spring Fling<lb/>
On March 28th 1980<lb/>
Sponsored By Our Following Friends<lb/>
hirt Shop<lb/>
riALF PRICE<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
Most Items In The Store<lb/>
March 20,21,22<lb/>
Georgetown<lb/>
Shops<lb/>
Open<lb/>
lOam - 6pm<lb/>
Taco Cid<lb/>
Coca Cola Bottling Co. Of<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
The New Bar<lb/>
Domino's Pizza<lb/>
Roffler of Greenville<lb/>
Designers<lb/>
Pipe Dreams<lb/>
Tree House Restaurant<lb/>
The Attic .<lb/>
University Book Exchange<lb/>
Pizza In"<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
Stereo Village<lb/>
Shirley's Cut &amp; Style Shop<lb/>
The Pipeline Restaurant<lb/>
Papa Katz<lb/>
Arbor Room at The Ramada Inn<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
Co. of<lb/>
King<lb/>
Rick's Guitar Shop<lb/>
Jason's Restaurant<lb/>
BY Bell Factory Outlet<lb/>
Fosmck'sJd90 Seafood<lb/>
IfeP&amp;OrWuh<lb/>
Marathon Restaurant<lb/>
Etna on 264 Bypass<lb/>
<pb facs="00057255_0004"/><lb/>
3if? iEaat (Kawltttian<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, ti rnr<lb/>
Diane Henderson, nnnm mw<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, om mmm Richard Green, cm m<lb/>
CHRIS LICHOK, ft ?' CHARLES CHANDLER, v?,m ?,<lb/>
TERRY GRAY, Mn? a DEBBIE HOTALING, ta? ?<lb/>
THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
Tftfo Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
No To Increases<lb/>
Several student leaders met with<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas Brewer this past<lb/>
Monday on proposed student fee in-<lb/>
creases for ECU students, which are<lb/>
due to go into effect in the fall. Dr.<lb/>
Brewer and Vice Chancellor for Stu-<lb/>
dent Life Elmer Meyer fielded ques-<lb/>
tions from students from a wide<lb/>
range of campus life, and found<lb/>
that most dissent in the group<lb/>
resulted from rate increases in the<lb/>
areas of athletics and health ser-<lb/>
vices.<lb/>
In the areas of athletics, students<lb/>
questioned the wisdom of spending<lb/>
money on a program which had<lb/>
already received an increase in the<lb/>
allotment of student fees this year.<lb/>
The spending of extra money on<lb/>
athletics differs sharply from the ex-<lb/>
penditure for certain programs<lb/>
(such as Student Union) which have<lb/>
never gotten a fee increase. Clearly,<lb/>
the priorities are set: there are cer-<lb/>
tain areas on campus which receive<lb/>
greater emphasis than do others.<lb/>
We are all for the expenditure of<lb/>
money to build a sound and suc-<lb/>
cessful athletic program, and we<lb/>
feel that students should contribute<lb/>
something to the effort. We do not<lb/>
feel, however, that student fees<lb/>
should rise year after year.<lb/>
Think of it. The transit system<lb/>
has financial difficulties, the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union has never received a fee<lb/>
increase since its inception, and yet<lb/>
athletics seems to be the one pro-<lb/>
gram that never has any trouble get-<lb/>
ting full funding, year after year.<lb/>
We feel that with the current in-<lb/>
flation rate skyrocketing the way it<lb/>
is, and the fact that President Carter<lb/>
has asked us all to limit spending, it<lb/>
is ill-advised to increase spending in<lb/>
the athletic department.<lb/>
We would propose, then, that the<lb/>
athletic department make plans to<lb/>
budget their funds so that even if<lb/>
student fee increases are needed in<lb/>
the years ahead, these increases can<lb/>
be held to a minimum. It would be<lb/>
easy for runaway inflation to<lb/>
necessitate a large hike in fees every<lb/>
year, so one choice might be to limit<lb/>
the already large athletic budget to a<lb/>
certain small increase per year.<lb/>
Another choice might be to rely<lb/>
more heavily on outside sources,<lb/>
such as independent alumni giving<lb/>
to athletics, or other sources such as<lb/>
the Pirates Club. Some fundraising<lb/>
would have to be done, but with the<lb/>
ever-increasing number of active<lb/>
alumni, we feel that it is possible.<lb/>
Student Health Services<lb/>
Another huge chunk of the pro-<lb/>
posed student fee hikes will go to<lb/>
maintain and upgrade Student<lb/>
Health Services, i.e. the infirmary.<lb/>
We can see the need of upgrading<lb/>
service at the infirmary, but at least<lb/>
part of the monies requested will go<lb/>
for such things as automobile<lb/>
maintenance, advertising, and the<lb/>
payment of utilities.<lb/>
Automobile maintenance should<lb/>
not be paid for out of student fees,<lb/>
period. There should be some sort<lb/>
of state allotment for this purpose.<lb/>
We think, then, that the state<lb/>
government should be approached<lb/>
about remedying this situation,<lb/>
perhaps through action taken at the<lb/>
next session of the General<lb/>
Assembly.<lb/>
In terms of advertising, it was<lb/>
reported that this will cover the ex-<lb/>
pense off the printing of a brochure.<lb/>
We feel that this is unnecessary,<lb/>
because any information on the in-<lb/>
firmary that anyone wants can be<lb/>
found in existing publications.<lb/>
Also, the members of the infirmary<lb/>
staff are very cooperative in giving<lb/>
out information over the phone.<lb/>
Utilities are the biggest gripe.<lb/>
Vepco, which some have accused of<lb/>
having some of the highest electric<lb/>
rates in the free world, supplies the<lb/>
infirmary with electrical power. We<lb/>
are against the use of student fees<lb/>
for the payment of these exorbitant<lb/>
rates, and we feel the general fund<lb/>
of the university should pay for it.<lb/>
Today, during the morning<lb/>
classes, a survey form will be hand-<lb/>
ed to you. You are asked to fill it<lb/>
out and return it to your professor,<lb/>
so that Melvin will have informa-<lb/>
tion which he can present to the<lb/>
Board of Trustees next week, who<lb/>
will ultimately decide whether or<lb/>
not the increases will go into effect.<lb/>
Also, there will be a meeting this<lb/>
afternoon at 4:30 in room 244 of the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Representatives from each depart-<lb/>
ment requesting fee increases will be<lb/>
on hand to explain why they need<lb/>
the increases they say they do.<lb/>
Make your voice heard on this<lb/>
issue. If enough voices are heard,<lb/>
then there is a greater chance that<lb/>
your student fees will not climb as<lb/>
much, as fast.<lb/>
U. S. Priorities Need Examination<lb/>
By REBECCA CHRISTIAN<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
There is a lot to be shocked about in the<lb/>
newspapers, what with prisoners blow-<lb/>
torching one another and Muhammed Ali<lb/>
learning for the first time that black South<lb/>
Africans don't like the U.S. very well.<lb/>
But what really caught my eye lately was<lb/>
the news that 44 of the residents of the<lb/>
state I live in thinks oil is worth going to<lb/>
war over. That's a little like having half of<lb/>
Paris ready to do combat for perfume.<lb/>
Incredible, silly and funny if it weren't so<lb/>
frightening. Last summer, I lived in the<lb/>
East at the height of the gas shortage. It was<lb/>
as though everyone but me was in on a col-<lb/>
lective practical joke. People were waiting<lb/>
in lines for gas for over an hour with their<lb/>
engines running and their air conditioners<lb/>
on. Instead of parking their cars and walk-<lb/>
ing a few yards into the bank lobby, they<lb/>
snaked through a tortuous, 45-minute line<lb/>
to do transactions at the drive-in window<lb/>
with their engines running and their air con-<lb/>
ditioners on.<lb/>
r-Letters To The Editor<lb/>
Amazing, this penchant for sitting on<lb/>
one's butt in a culture where health spas<lb/>
and diet aids do a land office business.<lb/>
Perhaps I am out of step with the rest of<lb/>
America, but a car has always seemed to me<lb/>
only a conveyance ? much like a bus, a<lb/>
train, one's feet or one's bike ? to get from<lb/>
point A to point B. Confining at best, frigid<lb/>
in winter, sizzling in summer and reeking<lb/>
always of stale tobacco and take-out food.<lb/>
Driving just for recreation seems peculiar<lb/>
to me. Maybe that's because every Sunday<lb/>
afternoon of my adolescence my father<lb/>
gathered the family ? every protesting but<lb/>
the eagerly slobbering bulldog ? into the<lb/>
Chevy and lead-footed it some 40 miles to<lb/>
the Red Rock Dam. Before it even became a<lb/>
dam, he drove us to the future site of the<lb/>
Red Rock Dam. It was, we all agreed, a<lb/>
dam site too far. I also had on two occa-<lb/>
sions the distinction of being with a boy<lb/>
who was ticketed for making excessive muf-<lb/>
fler noise while scooping the loop. Same<lb/>
boy both times. You'd think one of us<lb/>
would have learned.<lb/>
It seems I am missing some crucial point.<lb/>
I have a friend ? a highly intelligent,<lb/>
civilized friend ? who speaks of his 280Z<lb/>
with a solicitude absent from his oioe when<lb/>
he speaks of his infant daughter. I'm begin-<lb/>
ning to think James Baldwin was on targe:<lb/>
in one of his novels when he described a<lb/>
Harlem Saturday night ritual: men clears<lb/>
ing the hoods of their cars as tenderly a<lb/>
they would cleanse their own foreskins.<lb/>
Whatever the passions that tie people to<lb/>
their autos, the love affair has become self-<lb/>
destructive. Free flowing gas is not our bir-<lb/>
thright. Federal energy officials are whistl-<lb/>
ing in the dark about coal, gasohol and<lb/>
solar energy. Wonderful ideas certainly, but<lb/>
unlikely to satiate our gluttony for cheap.<lb/>
available energy in the immediate future.<lb/>
There comes a time when even the most<lb/>
devoted lover has to face the facts. The best<lb/>
way to avoid holocaust over an absurd issue<lb/>
is to recognize our lust for gasoline asthe<lb/>
unrequited passion it's bound to remain.<lb/>
SGA President Solicits Students Help<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
On Tuesday, March 25, 1980 there will<lb/>
oe a Board of Trustees meeting. The main<lb/>
topic of business at this meeting will be<lb/>
the proposed student fee increase. Tomor-<lb/>
row morning (Friday, March 21) during<lb/>
the 10:00 class period, your professor has<lb/>
been asked to assist in the taking of a<lb/>
survey so that I might better represent the<lb/>
views and opinions of the entire student<lb/>
body on this issue.<lb/>
It is hoped that as many students as<lb/>
possible will have the opportunity to par-<lb/>
ticipate in this survey. This year we the<lb/>
students at ECU face the largest fee in-<lb/>
crease that I can remember, a total stu-<lb/>
dent fee increase of $58.00. This money is<lb/>
to be divided up between Athletics, In-<lb/>
tramurals, the SGA, the Student Union,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, and Student<lb/>
Health Services. There are numerous<lb/>
reasons for the requested fee increase,<lb/>
with the high rate of inflation and cost of<lb/>
energy as the primary reasons.<lb/>
This afternoon at 4:30 in room 244 of<lb/>
MSC you will have the opportunity to<lb/>
listen to representatives from each depart-<lb/>
ment explain their reasoning for the<lb/>
necessity of a fee increase, and to ask<lb/>
them questions pertaining to this increase.<lb/>
Your attendance will be welcomed as it<lb/>
will assist me in the way that I present<lb/>
your views to the Board of Trustees. Your<lb/>
participation in tomorrow's survey is also<lb/>
needed to assist me in my final decision in<lb/>
the Board meeting.<lb/>
The survey and question-answer period<lb/>
were made possible through the assistance<lb/>
of numerous individuals. Their<lb/>
assistance, and yours, is greatly ap-<lb/>
preciated in this matter.<lb/>
Brett Melvin<lb/>
Student Bodv President<lb/>
Afghanistan May<lb/>
American Closet<lb/>
By STEPHEN WOHL<lb/>
Fear of unfavorable comparison with the<lb/>
Soviet Union is the real reason the United<lb/>
States government is pushing for a boycott<lb/>
of the Moscow Olympics.<lb/>
The pretext offered to justify a boycott<lb/>
would fall apart if any reporter allowed into<lb/>
the presence of Jimmy Carter would have<lb/>
the guts to ask Carter to swear that the U.S.<lb/>
was nor organizing forays into Afghanistan<lb/>
from Pakistan prior to 1980, and if Carter<lb/>
would be asked to swear that the CIA had<lb/>
never had liason with Afghanistan's<lb/>
General Amin, who was assassinated in<lb/>
December 1979. The anti-communist Amin<lb/>
had killed the leader of Afghanistan only<lb/>
three months earlier, and was then in turn<lb/>
killed by his own people. Amin never issued<lb/>
a plea for world help against a Soviet<lb/>
"invasion" because he was already out of<lb/>
power before that "invasion" took place.<lb/>
Soviet troops were called into Afghanistan<lb/>
by the government of Afghanistan under<lb/>
terms of the Afghan-Soviet treaty of<lb/>
December 5, 1978, and helped Afghanistan<lb/>
resist the mounting pressure from<lb/>
U.Scquipped raiding forces which have<lb/>
been dispatched out of dictator Zia's<lb/>
Pakistan for the past two years (the U.S.<lb/>
also makes itself an enemy of Pakistan's<lb/>
people by arming and propping up Zia, the<lb/>
brute who traitoriously overthrew, jailed,<lb/>
and eventually murdered the Pakistani's<lb/>
democratically elected and loved president,<lb/>
Ali Bhutto). In any case, the U.S. certainly<lb/>
can have no objection to one country sen-<lb/>
ding military assistance to another, having<lb/>
imposed 540,000 U.S. troops on Vietnam,<lb/>
having changed puppet governments in<lb/>
Saigon mmt than a dozen tiroes during the<lb/>
U.Ss long Vietnam occupation, and hav-<lb/>
ing napalmed daily the resisting population<lb/>
as witnessed on our television screens. Jim-<lb/>
my Carter sees nothing wrong with main-<lb/>
taining 50,000 U.S. troops in South Korea<lb/>
to this day. His protestations reek with<lb/>
hypocrisy.<lb/>
In Korea, Guatemala, the Congo, Viet-<lb/>
nam, the Dominican Republic, and Cam-<lb/>
bodia, massive physical battle by the local<lb/>
citizenry against the entering U.S. soldiers<lb/>
was horribly plain to see; but all the many<lb/>
reporters in Afghanistan, including<lb/>
numerous American camera crews at the<lb/>
turn of the year, have not been able to even<lb/>
catch glimpse of such battle against Soviet<lb/>
soldiers because there is no such battle, or-<lb/>
dinary Afghanistanis evidently being pleas-<lb/>
ed by the riddance of Amin, by the opening<lb/>
of the prisons, by the return to programs<lb/>
redistributing property and wealth, and by<lb/>
the new security against Pakistan-based<lb/>
marauders.<lb/>
As to the real motives for the boycott ef-<lb/>
fort: the American Olympic athletes as a<lb/>
team would again lose, and probably would<lb/>
not even take second place. But much more<lb/>
important, U.S. leaders fear what will<lb/>
follow if they allow great numbers of<lb/>
Americans ? particularly young Americans<lb/>
? to see, with their own eyes, an alternative<lb/>
social system that by contrast is working.<lb/>
Personal witness of the constantly rising<lb/>
standard of living of the Soviet Union is<lb/>
dangerous to the U.S. power structure at a<lb/>
time when the American standard of living<lb/>
is collapsed to a level lower than in 1968,<lb/>
and is dangerous to that power structure<lb/>
when the American people are getting<lb/>
poorer each and every year (poorer because<lb/>
almost no-one's paper-dollar income is in-<lb/>
creasing as fast as prices).<lb/>
How would U.S. leaders explain to<lb/>
shocked Olympic tourists and participants<lb/>
the high-rise apartment buildings popping<lb/>
up like mushrooms all around Moscow and<lb/>
the movement of 11 million Russians into<lb/>
brand new homes in 1979, while U.S. hous-<lb/>
ing starts fell from 2 million in 1978 to 1.4<lb/>
million in 1979? How would they explain<lb/>
why rent in the USSR, including all utilities,<lb/>
cost no-one more than 5 percent of monthly<lb/>
income; why a ride on the giant and expan-<lb/>
ding Moscow subway costs the same 5<lb/>
kopecs as in 1935; why a loaf of bread costs<lb/>
the same 10 kopecs as in 1948; why medical<lb/>
care, dental care, and university education<lb/>
are all free; why four times as many<lb/>
engineers graduate from Soviet universities<lb/>
each year as from American universities;<lb/>
why retirement with full economic security<lb/>
and dignity is at age 60 for men and 55for<lb/>
women, while Americans can no longer af-<lb/>
ford to retire even at age 70; why paid year-<lb/>
ly vacations for Soviet workers are lengthier<lb/>
than those for American workers; why<lb/>
Aeroflot is the largest airline in the world,<lb/>
with the lowest passenger fares in the world;<lb/>
why the USSR consumer price index<lb/>
decreases from year to year while wages<lb/>
alone go up; why Soviet youth are healthier<lb/>
and involve themselves more in sports than<lb/>
their American counterparts; whv fewer<lb/>
Russians than Americans are forcibly con-<lb/>
fined in prisons and mental institutions;<lb/>
why Soviet steel and oil and wheat produc-<lb/>
tion already surpasses that of the U.S why<lb/>
zero unemployment and a labor shortage<lb/>
allow every Soviet worker to select from<lb/>
among many always-available jobs; and<lb/>
why slums in the USSR would have to be<lb/>
looked for with a magnifying glass! ?<lb/>
A disproportionately large percentage of<lb/>
U.S. Olympic competitors are black and<lb/>
poor: when they return from Moscow to<lb/>
American reality, to the decay, poverty,<lb/>
and hopelessness of American cities, how<lb/>
are you going to keep them from talking to<lb/>
the neighbors and the press? If the entire<lb/>
portrait of the Soviet Union proves to be a<lb/>
lie, how are you going to keep most<lb/>
Americans, who learn of a different Russia,<lb/>
from wondering what other fairy tales their<lb/>
heads have been Filled with? Having<lb/>
become aware of alternative economic<lb/>
possibilities, how are you going to convince<lb/>
them to contain their rage as the new<lb/>
depression deepens and as oil companies,<lb/>
war companies, and other high thieves grab<lb/>
ever-increasing super-profits and attach str-<lb/>
ings to ever-increasing numbers of politi-<lb/>
cians?<lb/>
Far safer to keep the kids and the tourists<lb/>
home, even if you have to threaten to<lb/>
revoke their passports if they dare try to go<lb/>
see Russia for themselves! Far safer to pro-<lb/>
tect and preserve intact the cartoon image<lb/>
of the Soviet Union so carefully<lb/>
disseminated by the American information<lb/>
media ? the media totally owned by and<lb/>
totally controlled by comfortable<lb/>
capitalists. Capitalist economies are going<lb/>
through a much-needed tear-up for war;<lb/>
the last thing capitalists now want is<lb/>
Olympic-scale direct meeting and com-<lb/>
munication between American human be-<lb/>
ings and Russian human beings, demystify-<lb/>
ing "The Enemy" (the looming and in-<lb/>
human and ominous image of The Enemy<lb/>
thrives on ignorance; the mass get-together<lb/>
at Moscow will dispel ignorance; altering<lb/>
the image of Russia and Russians in die<lb/>
minds of many Americans, turning many<lb/>
away from preconceived animosity; hence<lb/>
war psychology will become difficult to<lb/>
propagate, war taxes will become difficult<lb/>
to collect, and war-industry profits will<lb/>
become difficult to justify ? especially in<lb/>
hard times).<lb/>
Moves by the U.S. to sabotage the<lb/>
Twenty-Second Olympiad and to limit<lb/>
Soviet-American contact got diligently<lb/>
under way in 1974 ? the year Moscow was<lb/>
awarded the games over U.S. objection ?<lb/>
and these moves have since become more<lb/>
and more blatant. Doing its part, Pan Am,<lb/>
the U.Ss only airline regularly carrying<lb/>
passengers into the Soviet Union,<lb/>
unilaterally cancelled and ended all its<lb/>
flights to fhe USSR just before the onset of<lb/>
heavy Olympics-preparatory traffic, on Oc-<lb/>
tober 29, 1978.<lb/>
To go or not to go to Moscow:<lb/>
Afghanistan, when facts are looked at, pro-<lb/>
vides no reason whatever to put up bar-<lb/>
ricades. The reverse: does our planet need<lb/>
still more separation of peoples and still<lb/>
more tension? What BETTER time than<lb/>
right now for youth from varying<lb/>
backgrounds to get together to pursue<lb/>
challenges all have in common and in pro-<lb/>
cess to grow toward appreciation and<lb/>
tolerance of one another? ? precisely the<lb/>
Olympic ideal, that the powers in the U.S.<lb/>
so abhor.<lb/>
A judge should seek out the full story<lb/>
from both sides before rendering a<lb/>
righteous judgement. Isn't each of us sup-<lb/>
posed to be a judge? Who is trying to pre-<lb/>
vent us from seeing the evidence? The pro-<lb/>
spect of our exposure to first-hand informa-<lb/>
tion at Moscow worries and frightens some,<lb/>
lest our judgement not come down on the<lb/>
side of capitalism and war. Too bud. WhOe<lb/>
we stiil have some freedom of<lb/>
boycott, no way!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057255_0005"/><lb/>
Other Opinion<lb/>
USSR Eyes Nicaragua<lb/>
By RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
Copy Editor<lb/>
For all those optimists who think<lb/>
Soviet expansionism is nothing to worry<lb/>
about, cast a glance southward to the<lb/>
little Central American country that was<lb/>
recently a hotbed of revolution:<lb/>
Nicaragua. Leaders of the Sandinista<lb/>
Liberation Front are meeting with<lb/>
Kremlin leaders in Moscow to discuss<lb/>
"economic and cultural cooperation<lb/>
Deposed Nicaraguan President<lb/>
Anastasio Somoza and his family were<lb/>
placed in power and supplied with arms<lb/>
by the United States to protect<lb/>
American business interests, a situation<lb/>
similar to the U.S. role in Iran. Both<lb/>
countries have since deposed their<lb/>
tyrant rulers anJ are trying to install<lb/>
governments that will be able to rebuild<lb/>
their nations. In monetary terms the<lb/>
situation in Nicaragua is less important<lb/>
than our oil fix in the Middle East, but<lb/>
it is more important to the national<lb/>
security of the United States.<lb/>
Nicaraguan leaders describe the talks<lb/>
which began Tuesday as "friendly and<lb/>
cordial Tass, the official Soviet news<lb/>
agency, said, "The Soviet side wished<lb/>
the people of Nicaragua further success<lb/>
in the implementation of political and<lb/>
socio-economic transformations under<lb/>
the leadership of the Sandanista Na-<lb/>
tional Liberation Front Put simply,<lb/>
the Soviets are trying to sell war-<lb/>
ravaged Nicaragua on communism, an<lb/>
alternative could be easy for that coun-<lb/>
try to accept.<lb/>
In many parts of Middle America and<lb/>
especially in Nicaragua, Fidel Castro is<lb/>
considered a hero. Many Nicaraguans<lb/>
discard the fact that there is no real<lb/>
freedom or individualism in Cuba. In-<lb/>
stead they see few people starving and<lb/>
substantial education and health care,<lb/>
things that most Nicaraguans have<lb/>
never had under Somoza. That country<lb/>
may well decide to forego the luxuries<lb/>
of freedom and democracy for the<lb/>
necessities of food, clothing, housing,<lb/>
education and health care.<lb/>
And who could blame them? Not the<lb/>
United States, who helped put them<lb/>
their present predicament. As standard<lb/>
rule, U.S. administrations overlooked<lb/>
the atrocities of Somoza and the ex-<lb/>
shah to avoid rocking the little U.S.<lb/>
boats. But the citizens of those coun-<lb/>
tries finally overthrew their tyrant rulers<lb/>
in attempts to establish governments<lb/>
capable of helping those nations.<lb/>
Whether or not they will be successful<lb/>
remains to be seen, but the United<lb/>
States will be the last one asked for<lb/>
help.<lb/>
The United States has burned too<lb/>
many bridges behind it, and the Soviets<lb/>
are rebuilding those bridges as quickly<lb/>
as possible. We gave Russia an open<lb/>
shot at Afghanistan by refusing aid to<lb/>
that country a few years ago, and now<lb/>
we want to protest by boycotting the<lb/>
Olympics? Why didn't we send arms to<lb/>
the Afghanistan rebels when they need-<lb/>
ed help ? a poignant plea for aid went<lb/>
unanswered.<lb/>
The United States should have of-<lb/>
fered massive aid to Nicaragua (and<lb/>
Afghanistan and Iran) when they need-<lb/>
ed it in an attempt to apologize for near-1<lb/>
ly destroying their country. It may not<lb/>
be too late, but President Carter has<lb/>
sworn he will not apologize to Iran, so it <lb/>
is unlikely he would do so even tacitly to I<lb/>
Nicaragua.<lb/>
The Soviets would like nothing better<lb/>
than to gain another sympathetic<lb/>
satellite in Middle America, especially<lb/>
Nicaragua. Remember: Nicaragua was<lb/>
the second choice to Panama for a<lb/>
water Toute across the isthmus. A<lb/>
navigable river extends more than<lb/>
halfway across Nicaragua, but the<lb/>
technology was not available to com-<lb/>
plete the canal at that time. Should the<lb/>
Nicaraguans consider a second canal in<lb/>
Central America, the Soviets might con-<lb/>
sider it a good investment. But that's<lb/>
another story.<lb/>
The United States must meet the<lb/>
Soviet challenge not only by strengthen-<lb/>
ing the armed forces but by using com-<lb/>
mon sense in realizing possible threats<lb/>
before they surface. A major step in<lb/>
that direction would be to treat the peo-<lb/>
ple of other countries as we would<lb/>
Americans instead of pushing them,<lb/>
around blindly at the whims of big j<lb/>
businesses and nearsighted politicians.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 20, 1980<lb/>
STUDENT UKidff<lb/>
USf cmouna m mmm<lb/>
ART&amp;CAMERA PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
526S.CotancheSt.<lb/>
Down Town<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
756-0088<lb/>
cinema V2m3<lb/>
PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
- STARTS FRIDAY<lb/>
"SUPERB<lb/>
IAN EIGHT- COURSE FEAST THAT LEAVES<lb/>
1<lb/>
rlLT<lb/>
SP<lb/>
ecials<lb/>
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KODACOLOR<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
12<lb/>
EXPOSURE fcQ O-<lb/>
ROLL ONLY ?POtOr<lb/>
?kzy-<lb/>
? w ?"? 3T<lb/>
Golden Age Of Luxury Is Over<lb/>
Bv CHARLES<lb/>
GRIFFIN<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
Returning to the past<lb/>
isn't as easy as you<lb/>
might think. In fact,<lb/>
the past of history and<lb/>
legend is gone forever.<lb/>
I am betting that<lb/>
technology, for better<lb/>
or vorse, will provide<lb/>
us with heat, transpor-<lb/>
tation, and a<lb/>
livelihood.<lb/>
But the golden age of<lb/>
individual luxury will<lb/>
be gone.<lb/>
Yes, I said golden<lb/>
age. Do you think a<lb/>
world of billions of<lb/>
interlocking circle. other hand, am<lb/>
The rest of humanity building up a small<lb/>
will have to make do arsenal of weapons and<lb/>
with whatever crumbs<lb/>
the big boys throw tljeir<lb/>
way. Mothers will<lb/>
stand in line for milk'<lb/>
and staple fdods.<lb/>
Fathers will be<lb/>
ammunition. My<lb/>
bookshelf contains<lb/>
volumes on home cann-<lb/>
ing, living off the land,<lb/>
tanning hides, medical<lb/>
care, organic gardening<lb/>
proved sources of don't plan and prepare!<lb/>
energy. That every for the future, then we<lb/>
avenue be carefully can damn well be ready<lb/>
studied before it is ac- for the lights to go out<lb/>
employed by the system and anything else that<lb/>
with incomes based on offers me advice on<lb/>
credit for utility ser-<lb/>
vices and authorized<lb/>
mouths per family unit.<lb/>
All children will be<lb/>
wards of the state, but<lb/>
each family will be<lb/>
allowed responsibility<lb/>
for a proper number.<lb/>
Excess children will be<lb/>
people with liitteor no asusi8ned t0 faumily u"its<lb/>
who are short, but<lb/>
fossil fuel is going to<lb/>
allow non-producing<lb/>
youth to have high-<lb/>
powered personal<lb/>
transport? Other na-<lb/>
tions already have<lb/>
curfews and rationing<lb/>
of public utility ser-<lb/>
vices. How much<lb/>
longer will we have<lb/>
electric canopeners and<lb/>
dishwashers or hot<lb/>
water 24 hours a day?<lb/>
There will always be<lb/>
the rich and the power-<lb/>
ful. Oil company ex-<lb/>
ecutives have been<lb/>
engaged in diversifica-<lb/>
tion procedures since<lb/>
1972, when they firmed<lb/>
up their plans for the<lb/>
1973 oil shortage in<lb/>
order to drive up prices<lb/>
and profits. They will<lb/>
not suffer.<lb/>
Neither will politi-<lb/>
cians. Each passing<lb/>
year sees the odds<lb/>
against an average per-<lb/>
son being able to<lb/>
achieve any significant<lb/>
public office on his<lb/>
own merit grow even<lb/>
greater. Money and<lb/>
power have created an<lb/>
survival.<lb/>
That is for when the<lb/>
worst<lb/>
Remember,<lb/>
ting the worst will not<lb/>
come to pass. But I<lb/>
believe in hedging my<lb/>
bets, just in case.<lb/>
If the lights go out<lb/>
for a generation now<lb/>
living, it will be very<lb/>
hard on almost<lb/>
everyone. Very few<lb/>
people have maintained<lb/>
the kinds of skills that<lb/>
our grand-<lb/>
parents. Some people<lb/>
will go hungry until<lb/>
they adjust to simple<lb/>
foods and simple<lb/>
methods of producing<lb/>
it. Some people will<lb/>
starve.<lb/>
Acquiring shelter will leges and universities<lb/>
be back-breaking, can produce organiza-<lb/>
are<lb/>
overproducers will be<lb/>
fined. The black<lb/>
market in babies will<lb/>
grow, but the price will<lb/>
be depressed from cur- supported<lb/>
rent rates.<lb/>
In rural areas,<lb/>
gardening will come<lb/>
back in vogue. Wood-<lb/>
cutting will deplete<lb/>
many forested areas,<lb/>
forcing owners of wood<lb/>
stoves to convert to<lb/>
burning dried dung or<lb/>
using fresher animal<lb/>
and plant refuse to<lb/>
cook up alcohol or<lb/>
make methane gas for<lb/>
use as fuels. Animal<lb/>
husbandry will once<lb/>
more become an impor-<lb/>
tant field of study, regulations<lb/>
With petroleum as<lb/>
precious as gold,<lb/>
animals will provide fat may well become what<lb/>
for candles and soap, a man says it is while he<lb/>
excreta for fuel and fer- holds a gun on you.<lb/>
tilizer. What is the alter-<lb/>
I can hear you native?<lb/>
laughing. That enough honest<lb/>
That's good. Laugh people put pressure on<lb/>
while you are young congress and industry<lb/>
and carefree. I, on the to search for new or im-<lb/>
cepted or rejected.<lb/>
Because of a lot of<lb/>
bad publicity, nuclear<lb/>
power is being con-<lb/>
demned at the moment.<lb/>
The problem is not<lb/>
nuclear power. The<lb/>
problem is nuclear by-<lb/>
products and waste,<lb/>
happens. Having created a power<lb/>
I am bet- source, research has<lb/>
been slowed. Research<lb/>
and development of<lb/>
systems of energy pro-<lb/>
duction must be made.<lb/>
An animal is a system<lb/>
of production, adapted<lb/>
by nature. We must try<lb/>
to adapt our power<lb/>
sources to imitate<lb/>
nature. There must be a<lb/>
better use for radioac-<lb/>
tive waste than simply<lb/>
poisoning the earth.<lb/>
While we have the<lb/>
means available to us,<lb/>
we should try to run<lb/>
younger and more<lb/>
idealistic people for<lb/>
public office. If col-<lb/>
and for a dog-eat-dog<lb/>
? or man-eat-dog ?<lb/>
existence.<lb/>
Shows daily at<lb/>
2:45-5:00-7:15-9:30<lb/>
MSTMCTtD -S-<lb/>
uaOED 7 HSOUiMS tCCOMMintcl<lb/>
PMKIT 0 UUIT GUATOtU<lb/>
NoFore.qn EXPOSURE ft A ft 1<lb/>
ROLL. ONLY?P?VJ <lb/>
i$$$$$$$$$S$$SSS$S$<lb/>
KODACOLOR<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
yXg EXPOSURE fcC CO<lb/>
K ROLL. ONLYVUtOO<lb/>
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F.im ROLL ONLYV I ? 7 J<lb/>
!$$$$$$$$$$?,??$$$$$$$$$?<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
finger smashing and<lb/>
dirty. Life will be hard<lb/>
and the zoning<lb/>
authorities will be<lb/>
laughed at if they try to<lb/>
enforce compliance to<lb/>
mid-twentieth century<lb/>
tions that make model<lb/>
UNs or mock con-<lb/>
gresses on a nationwide<lb/>
basis, if students can<lb/>
provide the manpower<lb/>
to work the campaigns<lb/>
of established politi-<lb/>
cians, then why can't<lb/>
Society will undergo they join forces and<lb/>
radical change. Law promote one of their<lb/>
own ? or many of<lb/>
their own ? to run for<lb/>
those same public of-<lb/>
fices.<lb/>
If we don't get fresh<lb/>
blood in the govern-<lb/>
ment, if we don't begin<lb/>
to control utilities and<lb/>
natural resources, if we<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
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EAST CAROLINIAN regrets any inconvenience that<lb/>
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OVERTON'S SUPERMARKET<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057255_0006"/><lb/>
Features<lb/>
MARCH 20. 1980 Page 6<lb/>
Students Question College Requirements<lb/>
By BOB ALBANESE<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
Today is the second day of hear-<lb/>
ings on possible changes in ECU<lb/>
general college requirements, and<lb/>
Pirate students are not short on<lb/>
ideas for those changes.<lb/>
Malcolm Nunn, a freshman from<lb/>
Clarksville, Va voiced the peren-<lb/>
nial ECU complaint: "Foreign<lb/>
language is unnecessary. 1 just don t<lb/>
see when I'll need it<lb/>
Irdie Williams, an ECU student<lb/>
from Fort Bragg, said, "All the re-<lb/>
quired courses I'm taking now are<lb/>
fine with me. I like it just the way it<lb/>
is. I don't want to take any foreign<lb/>
language though. I took it in high<lb/>
school, and it's just too technical.<lb/>
You just learn enough to say 'hello<lb/>
and 'goodbye' and beyond that, you<lb/>
just don't know anything else<lb/>
Sandy Jackson, a Parks and<lb/>
Recreation major from Mount<lb/>
Olive, gave foreign language<lb/>
another nay. "I think they ought to<lb/>
dump it. There are very intelligent<lb/>
people in other curricula that<lb/>
shouldn't have to study something<lb/>
they're not going to use. Some good<lb/>
students have probably failed or<lb/>
dropped out of school because of<lb/>
it<lb/>
Edith Fekete, a sophomore<lb/>
biology major from Richmond,<lb/>
Virginia, does not agree. "I think<lb/>
there should be foreign language re-<lb/>
quirements for all majors. It's in the<lb/>
news now about how Americans<lb/>
don't know much foreign language,<lb/>
and this is a detriment to us.<lb/>
"The purpose of the general col-<lb/>
lege requirement is to make us well-<lb/>
rounded people, and foreign<lb/>
language can always help us in the<lb/>
future, in our careers<lb/>
Sophomore Mike Watkins of<lb/>
Elizabethtown agrees. "Language<lb/>
leads to a better understanding of<lb/>
other peoples, and no matter who<lb/>
you are, that's helpful in today's<lb/>
society<lb/>
One accounting major had a more<lb/>
specific complaint. "They ought to<lb/>
make the social science requirement<lb/>
12 instead of 13 hours. You have to<lb/>
take five courses instead of just four<lb/>
because almost all of the courses are<lb/>
three credit hours<lb/>
"I'd like to see more required<lb/>
science courses and less required<lb/>
humanities said Michael<lb/>
Kirkland, an ECU biology major.<lb/>
"For a serious science student there<lb/>
are some required courses that are<lb/>
not as important as others. I'm 24<lb/>
and about to graduate, and it seems<lb/>
silly to me that I still have to take<lb/>
p'E. before I can get out.<lb/>
"Some general college re-<lb/>
quirements should be more standar-<lb/>
dized. There's too much difference<lb/>
in the instructors of those courses<lb/>
Sophomore Tammy Harrell said,<lb/>
"The art and music appreciation<lb/>
courses are boring. You just<lb/>
memorize everything. Only one<lb/>
course like that should be enough<lb/>
"I think they ought to require a<lb/>
little more math said freshman<lb/>
David Ward. "You get algebra in<lb/>
high school, and if you're going to<lb/>
have to take the same thing here,<lb/>
opportunity to have<lb/>
you might as well not even bother " he7rd lf they remain<lb/>
And they ought to cut the English ?f? ght find little sym-<lb/>
requirements a bit. One semester of<lb/>
freshman English would be enough.<lb/>
I don't have much use for poetry.<lb/>
East Carolina students are not<lb/>
short of opinions on the subject, but<lb/>
no students were present at yester-<lb/>
day's General College Committee<lb/>
hearing.<lb/>
There will be another hearing of<lb/>
the General College Committee to-<lb/>
day in Brewster B-102, 3:30 p.m.<lb/>
"Students can make a difference<lb/>
says General College Committee<lb/>
Chairman Dr. Henry Ferrell. "I<lb/>
have found in the past that students<lb/>
often have more impact on required<lb/>
courses than the faculty<lb/>
Students who are dissatisfied with<lb/>
requirements as they stand now<lb/>
nute, they might find little sym<lb/>
pathy for their complaints later on.<lb/>
Nuclear Power Plants<lb/>
tinder Construction or in<lb/>
The Planning Stages<lb/>
?<lb/>
Nuclear Pcver Plants<lb/>
In Operation-<lb/>
Now you can spend a couple of<lb/>
months sailing and get college credit<lb/>
0 at the same time.<lb/>
" It's easy ? all you have toi do is<lb/>
pay $3,200. That's your tuition and<lb/>
fees for a Southampton College<lb/>
"SeaMester<lb/>
Your classroom is the 100-foot<lb/>
schooner, Harvey Gamge. If<lb/>
you're registered for fall semester,<lb/>
you'll go from Boothbay Harbor in<lb/>
Maine to Chesapeake Bay to the<lb/>
Bahamas. The spring semester will<lb/>
take you from New York to Savan-<lb/>
nah to the Virgin Islands. These are<lb/>
just some of the spring-fever ports<lb/>
of call aboard the SeaMester.<lb/>
Though the program may seem<lb/>
like a "sunshine" course, the stu-<lb/>
'Seamester' Provides<lb/>
Classroom Adventure<lb/>
dent can earn up to 16 semester<lb/>
hours in accredited college courses.<lb/>
Previous participants in the<lb/>
SeaMester program have been ma-<lb/>
joring in Art, Biology, English,<lb/>
History and Marine Biology among<lb/>
others.<lb/>
Courses offered are Ichthyology,<lb/>
Natural History of the Atlantic and<lb/>
Caribbean Coasts, Field Work in<lb/>
Coastal Ecology and American<lb/>
Maritime History. Also offered are<lb/>
Literature of the Sea, Navigation<lb/>
and Seamanship, and Sail-<lb/>
ingPhysical Education.<lb/>
About thirty students can par-<lb/>
ticipate in the course during a<lb/>
semester. They live on the ship, and<lb/>
are divided into three "watches<lb/>
each responsible for a four-hour du-<lb/>
ty period every 12 hours. Duties in<lb/>
elude steering and navigation, log<lb/>
entries, lookout duty, and raising<lb/>
and lowering the anchor.<lb/>
It's important to remember that<lb/>
this course is not simply a relaxation<lb/>
cruise. Many human comforts vs. ill<lb/>
disappear with the horizon. Hours<lb/>
on deck can be in the rain or cold, or<lb/>
both, as well as in the warm.<lb/>
tropical sun. Sleeping hours are in<lb/>
terrupted by watch, and one must<lb/>
always expect "All hands on deck<lb/>
The program offers great rewards<lb/>
to those who perservere this exciting<lb/>
and pleasurable challenge. Student<lb/>
See SEAMESTER Page 7, Col. 6<lb/>
Nuke Plants Flourishing In NC<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There is a whole world full of<lb/>
perspectives out there. They live in<lb/>
trees, under rocks, behind lattice-<lb/>
work, all of them different and uni-<lb/>
que, which is good because that's<lb/>
one of the things that makes for an<lb/>
interesting world. Indeed, a variety<lb/>
of perspectives affords us plenty of<lb/>
options. But sometimes we are forc-<lb/>
ed to choose one over several others,<lb/>
and that's when life gets com-<lb/>
plicated.<lb/>
As of now North Carolina has<lb/>
two nuclear power reactors, but<lb/>
nine more are either under construc-<lb/>
tion or on the drawing boards,<lb/>
which would give the state a total of<lb/>
eleven. This woutd make "North<lb/>
Carolina one of the four most<lb/>
nuclear-ized states in the country.<lb/>
Only Illinois, with fourteen, would<lb/>
have more reactors, and New York<lb/>
and Tennessee, with eleven apiece,<lb/>
would be tied with North Carolina<lb/>
for second place in the "nuclear<lb/>
proliferation" race.<lb/>
Four of these plants would be<lb/>
located in the eastern plains region<lb/>
of the state, which would make<lb/>
Greenville subject to all of the en-<lb/>
vironmental and health hazards that<lb/>
have been associated with atomic<lb/>
energy since its inception.<lb/>
Nuclear power is not an isolated,<lb/>
far removed phenomenon. It is<lb/>
here, leaking radioactive gases into<lb/>
the air and filling our water and<lb/>
oceans with waste.<lb/>
It has been established that radia-<lb/>
tion, even low-level radiation that<lb/>
atomic reactors emit in their usual<lb/>
course of operation, can cause<lb/>
cancer, premature aging and,<lb/>
through the destruction of the gene<lb/>
pool, the overall deterioration of<lb/>
human health. A single errant<lb/>
radioactive atom or ray can damage<lb/>
the structure of a cell and its<lb/>
"message center the genetic<lb/>
coding by which normal growth is<lb/>
regulated.<lb/>
See NUKE PLANTS Page 8, Col. 3<lb/>
The Harvey Carnage<lb/>
spending a semester at sea<lb/>
Different Light Shed On Greek Week<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Fraternities at their very best can<lb/>
be splendid organizations, full of<lb/>
deep devotion and respect for<lb/>
brothers, and providing ties that are<lb/>
not just profound during the college<lb/>
experience, but for the entirety of<lb/>
one's life.<lb/>
They can be powerful organiza-<lb/>
tions that provide social, personal,<lb/>
and academic growth, though I<lb/>
sometimes doubt the validity of that<lb/>
last proposal. It can be a productive<lb/>
time when one learns to benefit<lb/>
from his own capabilities and to<lb/>
work cooperatively with individuals<lb/>
from diverse conceptions of the<lb/>
world and familial backgrounds.<lb/>
At their very worst, fraternities<lb/>
can be a virtual breeding ground for<lb/>
the worst aspects of human<lb/>
responses ? teaching one to hate,<lb/>
envy, and possess a dispassionate<lb/>
lack of respect for another while<lb/>
maintaining the bond of<lb/>
brotherhood. Houses can become<lb/>
virtual dens of decadence with all<lb/>
sorts of sordid sexual escapades and<lb/>
so-called fraternity boy pranks such<lb/>
as taking sorority girls to the Flappa<lb/>
Trappa beach, which is sticking the<lb/>
poor girl's head in the John. (Hear<lb/>
the ocean roar?)<lb/>
It can also be a time when one<lb/>
learns to utilize the most devious<lb/>
characteristics of his personality and<lb/>
to use an organization and in-<lb/>
dividuals for his personal needs. It<lb/>
ttwte by JOHN OROGAM<lb/>
Greek Week Gives Students a Chance to Relax<lb/>
can be the training ground for cor<lb/>
porate bosses and senators.<lb/>
The most serious mistake that an<lb/>
individual not associated with the<lb/>
Greek system can make is to<lb/>
stereotype Greeks and make gross<lb/>
generalizations about what con-<lb/>
stitutes a "frat rat The key is that<lb/>
Greek organizations are composed<lb/>
of individuals, and that the same<lb/>
fallacies which beset fraternal<lb/>
organizations consistenly occur in<lb/>
almost every type of organization.<lb/>
Some of the finest individuals I<lb/>
have ever met and some of the most<lb/>
worthwhile endeavors I have taken<lb/>
part in happened to me when I was<lb/>
involved with the fraternity system<lb/>
right here on campus. Then again,<lb/>
some of the biggest assholes and<lb/>
some of the most disgusting acts I<lb/>
have ever witnessed supposedly<lb/>
educated individuals partake in oc-<lb/>
curred at some sort of co-Greek ac-<lb/>
tivity.<lb/>
Spring semester is a really big<lb/>
time for Greeks, with all sorts of<lb/>
outdoor and indoor activities such<lb/>
as Greek Week (next week), Hell<lb/>
Week (for pledges ? as if every<lb/>
week weren't), the blood drive, ban-<lb/>
quets, charitable drives, and last but<lb/>
certainly not least, INITIATION. It<lb/>
is really the best time to be involved<lb/>
with Greeks, for almost everything<lb/>
that is big fun for the Greeks is held<lb/>
during this time  and there are a<lb/>
lot of wild fantasies in the minds of<lb/>
non-Greeks about what goes on at<lb/>
these various events.<lb/>
I though it would be fun if I could<lb/>
shed a little light on what goes on at<lb/>
these events for the unacquainted,<lb/>
while poking a little fun (harmless, I<lb/>
hope) at the idiosyncrasies involved<lb/>
with such.<lb/>
The week begins at Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Field Day on Hooker Road, and this<lb/>
is spirited fun between fraternities<lb/>
and sororities involving the same<lb/>
old things that were made popular<lb/>
at your elementary school, such as<lb/>
egg-throwing, pie eating contest,<lb/>
three legged race, and Mr. and Ms.<lb/>
Beautiful. Most people start drink-<lb/>
ing about sunrise and continue until<lb/>
the sun is sinking gingerly into the<lb/>
west.<lb/>
Everybody gets to show off their<lb/>
Easter tan and the winner of the col-<lb/>
lection of events gets points toward<lb/>
the best whatever on campus.<lb/>
Usually the most fun event is The<lb/>
See Who We Can Throw In The<lb/>
Lake Contest, which usually ends<lb/>
up a draw after 50 percent of the<lb/>
people get thrown in, and a smaller<lb/>
few have their own amateur boxing<lb/>
contest. It is a day without com-<lb/>
parison, at least until next Saturday.<lb/>
Tuesday is really the most athletic<lb/>
event of the week when the Greeks<lb/>
hold their annual Greek games, held<lb/>
at the track field at ECU, in which<lb/>
everyone participates in the more<lb/>
traditional track and field events.<lb/>
Everybody gets real sweaty, and if<lb/>
you wanna see people sweat that<lb/>
you never thought could, then this is<lb/>
your day. And no beer is consumed,<lb/>
dispelling all ideas that Greeks can't<lb/>
collect without a keg.<lb/>
If you want to see what is hip in<lb/>
the spring fashion collection, then<lb/>
show up at the IFC banquet, which<lb/>
is perhaps the most dynamic<lb/>
assemblage of undergraduates that<lb/>
is held on this campus, other than a<lb/>
sporting event. All of the awards,<lb/>
such as Scholarship Awards, Best<lb/>
Pledge Class and best whatever, are<lb/>
presented at this banquet. Everyone<lb/>
gets all dressed up and pays big<lb/>
bucks to eat bland, institutional<lb/>
roast beef and listen to some vita!<lb/>
individual discuss the issues at hand.<lb/>
Mosier's Farm closes out Greek<lb/>
Wwk. and it usually is the most fun<lb/>
and features the most non-reek<lb/>
participation, which certainly will<lb/>
be true this year because they are<lb/>
featuring Brice Street, N.Cs most<lb/>
copied band. The highlight of this<lb/>
event is some inspired mid-day<lb/>
drinking, usually resulting in some<lb/>
inspired midday gatoring and even-<lb/>
tually a few more amateur bouts. To<lb/>
close the day out, the revelers are<lb/>
greeted on their way home by seem-<lb/>
ingly half the highway patrol force<lb/>
of North Carolina. So, if you drive,<lb/>
don't drink, and if you drink, don't<lb/>
drive. AARGH-AARGH<lb/>
I bet millions of you out there are<lb/>
wondering what Hell Week and In-<lb/>
itiation are all about, so I will<lb/>
foresake all fraternal vows (which<lb/>
will probably result in my excom-<lb/>
munication) and lay it on the line.<lb/>
There usually is such BS as the old<lb/>
grape in the doody-hole trick, or<lb/>
seeing how much beer you can drink<lb/>
as in Lampoon. It usually involves a<lb/>
little cleaning up of the old house<lb/>
and some high spirited hi-jinks.<lb/>
Every once in a while some delirious<lb/>
nut goes overboard and makes you<lb/>
do some silly thing like doing sit-up<lb/>
on an orange or grabbing bananas<lb/>
out of the John.<lb/>
Initiation usually involves an all<lb/>
night affair where you have to put<lb/>
up with some pretty heavy physical<lb/>
and psychological harassment, but<lb/>
nothing so extreme that it would en<lb/>
danger your physical or<lb/>
See DIFFERENT Page 7, Col. 2<lb/>
and pmrif everpd? far m week<lb/>
<pb facs="00057255_0007"/><lb/>
-<lb/>
t(-if?rb<lb/>
? . r ? <lb/>
Greenville Area Has<lb/>
Colorful History<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Bv TOM KETRING<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If you think Green-<lb/>
wile gets wild<lb/>
nowadays, just check<lb/>
into the local history at<lb/>
the turn of the century.<lb/>
Of course, the discos<lb/>
and beer bars didn't<lb/>
adorn Fifth Street in<lb/>
Washington's day, but<lb/>
the town was not<lb/>
without its hot spots.<lb/>
Although much of<lb/>
early Greenville was as<lb/>
coming for<lb/>
were forced to make<lb/>
house calls because<lb/>
their female customers<lb/>
were afraid to walk<lb/>
past the barrooms.<lb/>
At times, things got a<lb/>
little violent.<lb/>
An article in the<lb/>
September 14, 1894 edi-<lb/>
tion of the Greenville<lb/>
Index told the story of<lb/>
one Turner Smith, a History has, for<lb/>
notorious desperado some people, acquired<lb/>
who finally met his the rather unfortunate<lb/>
match in Greenville. reputation of being a<lb/>
On the preceding dry and tedious bore.<lb/>
Dusty old grade school<lb/>
surely<lb/>
blood.<lb/>
That evening, Smith<lb/>
arrived at Page's home<lb/>
with murder on his<lb/>
mind. Page repeatedly<lb/>
warned Smith to keep<lb/>
his distance, but Smith<lb/>
kept advancing.<lb/>
quiet and simple as the Saturday, Smith's son<lb/>
stereotypical home in-law, John Page,<lb/>
came to Greenville to<lb/>
get a peace warrant<lb/>
because Smith had<lb/>
threatened to kill him.<lb/>
The issuing of the war-<lb/>
rant was postponed<lb/>
over the weekend, and<lb/>
Page was instructed to<lb/>
wait at his home. On<lb/>
Sunday he received<lb/>
word that Smith was<lb/>
town, some areas<lb/>
boasted a rowdy<lb/>
reputation. During the<lb/>
late 1800's, Evans<lb/>
Street was wilder than<lb/>
downtown Fifth Street<lb/>
is today. It became so<lb/>
notorious for drunken-<lb/>
ness, profanity and<lb/>
gambling that some<lb/>
nearby shop owners<lb/>
teachers who assigned<lb/>
page upon page of<lb/>
unbearably uneventful<lb/>
reading and who spoke<lb/>
in multi-syllabic words<lb/>
have dulled quite a few<lb/>
appetites for the sub-<lb/>
ject.<lb/>
History doesn't have<lb/>
to be dull; it can be<lb/>
fascinating, even right<lb/>
here in Greenville.<lb/>
Renowned Dancer<lb/>
To Be Featured In<lb/>
Dance Workshop<lb/>
MARCH 20,1980<lb/>
SeaMester Offered<lb/>
Continued from Page 6<lb/>
Disney Stage Manager<lb/>
Joins ECU Drama Staff<lb/>
Renowned American dancer Ed-<lb/>
ward Villella will be featured at<lb/>
ECU's fourth annual "Day of<lb/>
Dance" workshop on Sunday,<lb/>
March 30.<lb/>
The event is for dancers of all<lb/>
ages arid levels of training with ses-<lb/>
sions in beginning, intermediate and<lb/>
advanced ballet.<lb/>
Villella will conduct higher level<lb/>
master classes in ballet.<lb/>
A principal with the New York<lb/>
furthering the arts in America.<lb/>
The beginning ballet master class<lb/>
will be taught by Juan Anduze,<lb/>
artist-in-residence this year with the<lb/>
ECU dance faculty, and leading<lb/>
dancer, choreographer and an<lb/>
associate director for the Ballet de<lb/>
San Juan, Puerto Rico.<lb/>
Modern dance participants will be<lb/>
led by Gretchen Harding, who<lb/>
taught at Cabrillo College in<lb/>
California six years before joining<lb/>
prescribed study; independent study<lb/>
is available.<lb/>
will study Atlantic fishes in their en- The 1978-79 tuition of $3200 is<lb/>
vironments, and they will study the subject to change. Any state or<lb/>
sea-going novels of Joseph Conrad federal financial aid is applicable to<lb/>
and Herman Melville. And perhaps SeaMester. The fee includes lab fees<lb/>
best of all, they will gain mastery of and accomodations, but students<lb/>
small-boat sailing. are responsible for their own texts,<lb/>
To be eligible for the SeaMester, the titles of which are supplied by<lb/>
students must have completed at Southampton College,<lb/>
least one semester of undergraduate For information, call or write to<lb/>
education. There is no requirement Christina Stromsky, Special Ses-<lb/>
for sailing experience, although the sions Office, Southampton College<lb/>
program welcomes those with ex- of Long Island University,<lb/>
perience. It is not absolutely Southampton, N.Y. 11968, (516)<lb/>
necessary that the student follow the 283-4000.<lb/>
Scott Jackson<lb/>
Parker, former stage<lb/>
manager of the Walt<lb/>
Disney World Enter-<lb/>
tainment Division, has<lb/>
loined the ECU<lb/>
Department of Drama<lb/>
and Speech as general<lb/>
manager of the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse and assistant<lb/>
professor of drama.<lb/>
An alumnus of<lb/>
Gilford College, with<lb/>
master's degrees from<lb/>
C-Chapel Hill and<lb/>
the University of<lb/>
Virginia, Parker has<lb/>
been involved in pro-<lb/>
fessional theatre in<lb/>
everal states, as con-<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Hosts<lb/>
Career<lb/>
Day<lb/>
sultant, director, stage<lb/>
manager and designer.<lb/>
His previous career<lb/>
has included an assis-<lb/>
tant technical director-<lb/>
ship with the Cherokee<lb/>
outdoor drama Unto<lb/>
These Hills and con-<lb/>
slihantships with three<lb/>
other North Carolina<lb/>
outdoor dramas, as<lb/>
well as direction l .<lb/>
technical direction of<lb/>
plays by Shakespeare,<lb/>
Williams, Coward,<lb/>
Miller, Pinter, Wilde,<lb/>
Hellman, O'Neill,<lb/>
Ibsen, Albee, Brecht<lb/>
and Ionesco at theaters<lb/>
and campuses in North<lb/>
Carolina and Virginia.<lb/>
In his position at<lb/>
Walt Disney World,<lb/>
Parker worked with<lb/>
such major entertain-<lb/>
ment figures as<lb/>
Diahann Carroll, Chita<lb/>
Rivera, Anna-Maria<lb/>
Alberghetti, Vic<lb/>
Darhone, Roger<lb/>
Williams, Pat Boone<lb/>
and Patti Page.<lb/>
His teaching ex-<lb/>
perience has included<lb/>
courses in stagecraft,<lb/>
creative dramatics, ac-<lb/>
ting and production at<lb/>
City Ballet since 1960, Villella has the ECU faculty last fall,<lb/>
performed around the world with Jazz dance classes will be taught<lb/>
such companies as the National by Michele Mennett, former ap-<lb/>
Ballet in Washington and the Royal prentice at the Alvin Ailey School of<lb/>
Winnipeg Ballet in Canada, and has Dance who has taught in private<lb/>
appeared at the New York City studios throughout the eastern U.S.<lb/>
Opera and the Bolshoi Theater in<lb/>
Moscow.<lb/>
He has performed a number of<lb/>
Balanchine roles and in 1975 receiv-<lb/>
ed an Emmy award for his CBS-TV<lb/>
children's ballet Harlequin. He is at<lb/>
present involved in dance education Playhouse,<lb/>
and maintains an active interest in 757-6390.<lb/>
Dancers 10 years old and above<lb/>
are eligible to participate. Further<lb/>
information about the "Day of<lb/>
Dance" is available from Scott<lb/>
Parker, General Manager, ECU<lb/>
ECU, Telephone<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
Duke University.<lb/>
and<lb/>
He also worked in<lb/>
television production<lb/>
with the U.S. Con-<lb/>
tinental Army Com-<lb/>
mand Engineer School<lb/>
at Fort Belvoir, Va.<lb/>
Parker is the son of<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. John W.<lb/>
Parker of 127 Carol<lb/>
Woods, Chapel Hill,<lb/>
and a native of Ft.<lb/>
Bragg.<lb/>
Different Light<lb/>
Continued from Page 6<lb/>
Ninety-eight students<lb/>
and professional in-<lb/>
terior designers from<lb/>
the Carolinas par-<lb/>
ticipated in a recent<lb/>
"Career Day"<lb/>
workshop hosted by the<lb/>
ECU School of Art and<lb/>
the ECU student<lb/>
chapter of the<lb/>
American Society of<lb/>
Interior Designers.<lb/>
Special guests at the<lb/>
event were interior<lb/>
design students from<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro;<lb/>
Randolph Technical In-<lb/>
stitute, Asheboro; and<lb/>
Winthrop College,<lb/>
Rock Hill, S.C. where<lb/>
other student AS1D<lb/>
chapters are located.<lb/>
Featured speaker at<lb/>
the event was lighting<lb/>
designer Raymond<lb/>
Grenald of<lb/>
Philadelphia, whose<lb/>
career has included ar-<lb/>
chitectural lighting for<lb/>
Carlsbad Caverns, the t<lb/>
Atlanta Subway and<lb/>
the National Gallery of<lb/>
Art in Washington,<lb/>
DC.<lb/>
He is noted as an ex-<lb/>
pert on the effects of<lb/>
interior lighting and ar-<lb/>
chitectural design upon<lb/>
human behavior and<lb/>
response.<lb/>
Career Day included<lb/>
informal meetings bet-<lb/>
ween participating<lb/>
students and profes-<lb/>
sional designers and a<lb/>
session on the qualify-<lb/>
ing examination ad-<lb/>
ministered by the Na-<lb/>
tional Council on In-<lb/>
terior Design.<lb/>
Student ASID<lb/>
chapters also met for a<lb/>
regional board meeting<lb/>
and were guests at an<lb/>
afternoon reception<lb/>
given by ECU<lb/>
Chancellor and Mrs.<lb/>
Thomas Brewer.<lb/>
the pun, you are taken almost any entity they<lb/>
into the fold and given have their weak points<lb/>
psychological well- your glorious that w all can ap-<lb/>
being. You usually brotherhood pin, which predate as being a uni-<lb/>
Ihave to endure some you will cherish until que part of our human<lb/>
sensory deprivation for the day you give it to existence.<lb/>
periods of time and some girl and she loses If we learn to laugh<lb/>
have to take a lot of sil- it in the lake at Pi Kap at our own idiosyn-<lb/>
ly tests that you haven't field day. cracies, then we can<lb/>
the ghost of a chance of In conclusion, it real- ealize that we are just<lb/>
Dassing ly is a lot of fun, and if the same as the ones we<lb/>
After you are com- I have offended any of laugh at, and as long as<lb/>
pletely reduced to little you Greeks out there, I there is a little laughter,<lb/>
more than a shivering, offer my most sincere we can't be fighting,<lb/>
blubbering bundle of apology. But you above And remember that<lb/>
nervous energy, you are all realize that though I every fraternity and<lb/>
told that you failed the may have exaggerated sorority is responsible<lb/>
test, and probably that things, there is at least a for sending five<lb/>
you are the only person little validity in what I members out to<lb/>
ever to do so. Then as say. The Greeks are as Mosier's Farm at noon<lb/>
the sun rises on a new fine as organization as for clean up on<lb/>
day, if you will pardon any on campus, but like day.<lb/>
Sun-<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
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t i t <lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 20, 1980<lb/>
Housekeeper Wins Awards<lb/>
ByJANEENNIS<lb/>
High Point Enterprise<lb/>
HIGH POINT, N.C.<lb/>
(AP) ? Johnsie<lb/>
Hughes is an expert<lb/>
housekeeper. She is so<lb/>
efficient she has won<lb/>
five awards from the<lb/>
state Labor Commis-<lb/>
sion for her work.<lb/>
Mrs. Hughes is safe-<lb/>
ty officer for Guard-<lb/>
sman Chemicals Inc.<lb/>
and the only woman in<lb/>
the manufacturing sec-<lb/>
tion of the plant, which<lb/>
employs 85 people.<lb/>
Joining the company<lb/>
in 1971, she advanced<lb/>
from switchboard<lb/>
operator to her present<lb/>
position in four short<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"1 worked at almost<lb/>
every job in the of-<lb/>
fice said the attrac-<lb/>
tive brunette. "Then,<lb/>
in 1975 when the safety<lb/>
officer was promoted,<lb/>
Ben Preslar, our plant<lb/>
manager, asked me if I<lb/>
was interested in filling<lb/>
that vacancy.<lb/>
"The company had<lb/>
never had a female<lb/>
safety officer before;<lb/>
they didn't even have a<lb/>
woman working in<lb/>
manufacturing. I was<lb/>
scared because I didn't<lb/>
know anything about<lb/>
the job, but I wasn't<lb/>
too scared to accept the<lb/>
challenge<lb/>
Moving from clerical<lb/>
work to manufacturing<lb/>
was a drastic change<lb/>
for Mrs. Hughes. For<lb/>
weeks, Preslar accom-<lb/>
panied her around the<lb/>
chemical plant,<lb/>
familiarizing her with<lb/>
features of the building<lb/>
which would influence<lb/>
her work and instruc-<lb/>
ting her on accident<lb/>
prevention and<lb/>
housekeeping.<lb/>
She spent weekends<lb/>
at home reading Oc-<lb/>
cupational Safety and<lb/>
Health Administration<lb/>
manuals to learn the<lb/>
laws concerning in-<lb/>
dustrial safety.<lb/>
That study paid off,<lb/>
because, since she ac-<lb/>
cepted the new posi-<lb/>
tion, the company has<lb/>
won five safety awards.<lb/>
A routine work day<lb/>
for Mrs. Hughes in-<lb/>
cludes inspection tours<lb/>
to ensure all safety<lb/>
guidelines are followed.<lb/>
She checks raw<lb/>
materials, tests the<lb/>
quality of manufac-<lb/>
tured goods, analyzes<lb/>
air quality and checks<lb/>
Students Are<lb/>
Less Apathetic<lb/>
for hazards. She also<lb/>
serves as the plant<lb/>
nurse, relying on her<lb/>
training as a certified<lb/>
emergency medical<lb/>
technician.<lb/>
Each week, she<lb/>
writes a report detailing<lb/>
problems which have<lb/>
ocurred. When she sees<lb/>
someone violating a<lb/>
safety rule, she is quick<lb/>
to correct him.<lb/>
"We have never had<lb/>
any problems, but we<lb/>
realize there could be<lb/>
an emergency at any<lb/>
time because we work<lb/>
with so many<lb/>
chemicals Mrs.<lb/>
Hughes said. "We are<lb/>
very cautions. I try to<lb/>
be fair, but if someone<lb/>
is guilty of carelessness,<lb/>
he will hear about it<lb/>
right away. I'm strict<lb/>
because I know if there<lb/>
Nuke<lb/>
Power<lb/>
is an explosion, I go<lb/>
too.<lb/>
"As another part of<lb/>
my job I try to make<lb/>
the community aware<lb/>
that our company is<lb/>
careful, too. We owe it<lb/>
to the neighbors to<lb/>
keep them informed so<lb/>
they aren't fearful of<lb/>
being blown up. That is<lb/>
one of the reasons we<lb/>
have safety kick-offs<lb/>
March is safety<lb/>
month for the com-<lb/>
pany. For the event,<lb/>
Mrs. Hughes has ar-<lb/>
ranged a special day of<lb/>
activities Tuesday to<lb/>
mark the beginning of<lb/>
the company's drive for<lb/>
their sixth annual safe-<lb/>
ty award from the N.C.<lb/>
Labor commission.<lb/>
Beginning at 7 a.m<lb/>
area firemen, joined by<lb/>
Smokey the Bear, will<lb/>
distribute leaflets con-<lb/>
taining safety hints to<lb/>
visitors of the com-<lb/>
pany. At noon a lun-<lb/>
cheon will be held for<lb/>
employees, their<lb/>
families and several<lb/>
distinguished guests,<lb/>
including state<lb/>
representatives Mary<lb/>
Seymour and Howard<lb/>
Coble.<lb/>
Despite a full<lb/>
schedule at Guard-<lb/>
sman, Mrs. Hughes still<lb/>
has time for her family<lb/>
and hobbies. Married<lb/>
to a Thomasville<lb/>
fireman, T.J. Hughes,<lb/>
she has five children<lb/>
and two grandchildren.<lb/>
For relaxation she<lb/>
writes religious plays<lb/>
which she produces in<lb/>
churches across the<lb/>
state. Her most famous<lb/>
play is "Sorry I Never<lb/>
Knew You '<lb/>
Classified Ads<lb/>
Work For You<lb/>
Buy, Sell or Trade<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Can Help<lb/>
HANOVER, NH (CPS) ? Col-<lb/>
lege students, who in earlier<lb/>
presidential skirmishes in the cam-<lb/>
paign have hinted they're becoming<lb/>
le?s apathetic about politics, turned<lb/>
out in huge numbers in the recent<lb/>
New Hampshire primary.<lb/>
While an astonishing 55 percent<lb/>
of the 12,000 eligible students voted,<lb/>
their choices suggest that the tur-<lb/>
nout reflects concern about foreign<lb/>
policy rather than anti-draft or anti-<lb/>
nuclear feelings that some can-<lb/>
didates tried to exploit.<lb/>
Republican students in the four<lb/>
major college voting sectors in the<lb/>
state barely favored George Bush<lb/>
over Ronald Reagan and John<lb/>
Anderson. Bush received 31 percent<lb/>
of the college Republican vote,<lb/>
while Reagan captured 27 percent<lb/>
and Anderson 26 percent.<lb/>
The remainder of the Republican<lb/>
1 pack trailed far behind. Sen.<lb/>
I Howard Baker was closest, with 12<lb/>
I percent of the campus vote.<lb/>
I On the Democratic side, the col-<lb/>
I cge vote defied most predictions<lb/>
I that the issue of draft registration<lb/>
I would turn eampuses against Presi-<lb/>
dent Jimmy Carter.<lb/>
Both Sen. Edward Kennedy and<lb/>
Gov. Edmund Brown criss-crossed<lb/>
the state's campuses emphasizing<lb/>
their opposition to President<lb/>
Carter's proposal to begin draf<lb/>
registration for all 18-20 year olds.<lb/>
Brown also stressed his long-time<lb/>
opposition to nuclear power in a<lb/>
state in which the student anti-<lb/>
nuclear movement is one of the<lb/>
most vigorous in the country.<lb/>
Students didn't respond. Kennedy<lb/>
and Brown did better on campuses<lb/>
than they did in other areas in the<lb/>
state, but President Carter still took<lb/>
48 percent of the student vote.<lb/>
Kennedy came in second among<lb/>
the student Democrats, with 35 per-<lb/>
cent. Brown attracted 16 percent of<lb/>
the vote, which was much better<lb/>
than the campus support he received<lb/>
in the Iowa caucuses in Januarv<lb/>
The Iowa student turnout had<lb/>
been also surprisingly heavy. Stu-<lb/>
dent Republicans endorsed Bush,<lb/>
with Reagan and Anderson coming<lb/>
in second and third, respectively.<lb/>
Democrats gave Carter close to a 2-1<lb/>
lead over Kennedy, Brown was ex-<lb/>
pected to do better on campuses,<lb/>
but his last-minute request that his<lb/>
supporters remain uncommitted<lb/>
made an exact measure of his<lb/>
popularity difficult.<lb/>
In New Hampshire, Brown spent<lb/>
the last week of the campaign<lb/>
repeatedly referring to his anti-<lb/>
nuclear stance. New Hampshire, of<lb/>
course, is the stie of the controver-<lb/>
sial Seabrook nuclear plant.<lb/>
Similarly, Kennedy devoted much<lb/>
of the final two weeks of the race to<lb/>
campus visits, during which he call-<lb/>
ed for a two-year moratorium on<lb/>
nuclear plant construction. He also<lb/>
repeatedly reminded student au-<lb/>
diences of his opposition to draft<lb/>
registration.<lb/>
Bush and Anderson's Hanover<lb/>
visits elicited the most excitement<lb/>
amont all the repeated candidate<lb/>
visits. While Bush won at Dart-<lb/>
mouth, which is generally con-<lb/>
sidered one of the nation's most<lb/>
conservative large campuses,<lb/>
Anderson did better (35 percent)<lb/>
there than in other college precincts.<lb/>
Reagan could only manage seven<lb/>
percent of the Dartmouth vote.<lb/>
Among the campuses, Reagan<lb/>
was most popular at Plymouth State<lb/>
College, where he took 62 percent of<lb/>
the vote. He also won at New<lb/>
England College, with 46 percent.<lb/>
President Carter did best at New<lb/>
England, too, taking 63 percent of<lb/>
the student vote. He captured 53<lb/>
percent of the Dartmouth vote. His<lb/>
42 percent at the University of New<lb/>
Hampshire was good enough to<lb/>
win, but only barely against Ken-<lb/>
nedy's 38 percent. It was Kennedy's<lb/>
best campus performance in New<lb/>
Hampshire.<lb/>
Plants<lb/>
Continued from Page 6<lb/>
If its gene structure is<lb/>
mutated, a single cell<lb/>
can multiply out of<lb/>
control. Instead of<lb/>
reproducing normally, I<lb/>
the damaged cell goes I<lb/>
wild, creating millions<lb/>
of useless, malignant<lb/>
cells like it, crippling<lb/>
the body and eventually<lb/>
leading to a cancerous<lb/>
death. The attack of<lb/>
radiation on our cells is<lb/>
cumulative. The more<lb/>
we get, the greater our<lb/>
chances of incurring<lb/>
cancer.<lb/>
Those worried are<lb/>
not only scientists, but<lb/>
people from all groups<lb/>
across the country.<lb/>
An organization call-<lb/>
ed the Student Caucus<lb/>
for Progressive Reform<lb/>
has been formed and<lb/>
officially registered at<lb/>
ECU. The group is now<lb/>
promoting "A Festival<lb/>
for a Humanitarian<lb/>
Renaissance ten-<lb/>
tatively scheduled for<lb/>
April 10. Members are<lb/>
saying that the purpose<lb/>
of this festival will be to<lb/>
raise student con-<lb/>
sciousness about issues<lb/>
like nuclear energy and<lb/>
the huge anti-nuclear<lb/>
rally planned for April<lb/>
26-28 in Washington,<lb/>
DC.<lb/>
Pamphlets and infor-<lb/>
mation regarding the<lb/>
Coalition may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the Student<lb/>
Caucus for Progressive<lb/>
Reform.<lb/>
We Want<lb/>
You!<lb/>
Staff Writers<lb/>
Needed!<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
The decision may well be difficult . . .<lb/>
but the aoortion itself doesn'thave to be.<lb/>
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REG. SALE<lb/>
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18" $32.00 $17.99<lb/>
24? $40.00 $21.99<lb/>
HEAPING<lb/>
PORTIONS.<lb/>
tiny<lb/>
price.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Here To<lb/>
Serve<lb/>
You<lb/>
rout Almondine. Golden Fried Shrimp. Veal Parmesan. Barbecue<lb/>
1 ibs. Rare Roast Beef.<lb/>
There's a selection like this at S&amp;S Cafeterias ? more than 100<lb/>
delicious things to eat, homemade fresh from scratch every day!<lb/>
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Mmmm  S&amp;S! Get a taste of the feast you can afford on these<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057255_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MARCH 20, 1980 Page 9<lb/>
tfMk<lb/>
Pirate Coaching Staff On The Road Recruiting<lb/>
Dave Odom<lb/>
? Now Wat his first season is finish-<lb/>
ed and a success, ECU head basket-<lb/>
ball coach Dave Odom has set his<lb/>
sights strictly on recruiting.<lb/>
Though the Pirates finished<lb/>
16-11, Odom must hit the recruiting<lb/>
road hard due to the losses of five<lb/>
seniors who contributed heavily to<lb/>
the first winning season at ECU<lb/>
since 1975.<lb/>
Gone will be the top three scorers<lb/>
in George Maynor, Herb Gray and<lb/>
Herb Krusen in addition to top<lb/>
reserves Kyle Powers and Frank<lb/>
Hobson. "They will leave quite a<lb/>
void Odom has said on many oc-<lb/>
casions.<lb/>
Quality replacements are hard to<lb/>
come by for a school that must<lb/>
recruit in the shadow of the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference, but Odom and,<lb/>
his staff refuse to be intimidated.<lb/>
Already on the Pirate bandwagen<lb/>
for next season is 6-2 guard Qwan<lb/>
Roseboro, a transfer from Florida<lb/>
and a graduate of Fayettville<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
Seventy-First High School.<lb/>
Roseboro signed with the Gators<lb/>
when John Lotz was the head<lb/>
coach, but transfered after experien-<lb/>
cing dissatisfaction with the pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Roseboro is called by Odom as<lb/>
possibly the best athlete of all the<lb/>
Pirates, including the five retiring<lb/>
seniors. His leaping ability is un-<lb/>
canny, as is his versatility as he can<lb/>
play either the point or shooting<lb/>
guard positions.<lb/>
Beyond Roseboro, things are at<lb/>
the guessing stage. There are several<lb/>
top notch recruits that the Pirate<lb/>
staff feels they have a chance at.<lb/>
The number one priority for the<lb/>
staff is the acquisition of a big man.<lb/>
Charles Pittman, a 6-9 junior col-<lb/>
lege prospect in California, would<lb/>
fit the bill to a tee. Pittman a five-<lb/>
star rating on a scale of five by one<lb/>
well-known scouting agency and<lb/>
could almost single-handidly assure<lb/>
the Pirates of a successful 1980-81<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The drawback is that many top<lb/>
schools, including Maryland, want<lb/>
Pittman's services. One advantage<lb/>
for the Pirates lies in the fact that<lb/>
the big guy's mother lives in North<lb/>
Carolina and reportedly would like<lb/>
her son to play close to home. It is<lb/>
this that the Pirates base their hopes<lb/>
of pulling of the recruiting coup.<lb/>
Another big guy Odom and Co.<lb/>
are eyeing is 6-9 Anthony Teachey<lb/>
of Goldsboro. A super talent,<lb/>
Teachey is being sought by several<lb/>
ACC and SEC schools. Rumor has<lb/>
it that the 6-9 phenom would prefer<lb/>
to play in the ACC, but the ECU<lb/>
staff has other plans.<lb/>
Supposedly already a shoe-in<lb/>
signee is 6-8 Jeff Best from C.B.<lb/>
Aycock High School.<lb/>
Another apparent future Pirate is<lb/>
6-0 point guard Herbert Gilchrist<lb/>
from West Harnett H.S. Called a<lb/>
"Super person as well as player" by<lb/>
one member of the Pirate staff,<lb/>
Gilchrist has recently named to the<lb/>
3-A All-East first team by The<lb/>
Raleigh News and Observor .<lb/>
The Pirates are also in hot pursuit<lb/>
of a couple of forwards in Harold<lb/>
Thompson of Raeford and Cecil Ex-<lb/>
xum of Goldsboro. Thompson was<lb/>
listed before this past season as one<lb/>
of the top 50 players in the country<lb/>
by The ACC Handbook and was<lb/>
being courted heavily by N.C. State<lb/>
before Norm Sloan's defection to<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
Exxum has the top player on<lb/>
Southern Wayne's 4-A state cham-<lb/>
pionship squad. Exxum has been in<lb/>
the shadow of Teachey for some<lb/>
time in the battle for the top player<lb/>
in Goldsboro, but may actually be<lb/>
? the better prospect. Both are blue-<lb/>
chippers.<lb/>
Odom stated after the season<lb/>
finale with Milwaukee-Wisconsin<lb/>
that his major concern was<lb/>
recruiting a player to fill Maynor's<lb/>
spot at the shooting guard position.<lb/>
Dean Shaffer of Fork Union (Va.)<lb/>
Military Academy would do just<lb/>
fine.<lb/>
The only problem is that many<lb/>
schools feel the same way. Old<lb/>
Dominion and North Carolina are<lb/>
two of tne other schools that Shaf-<lb/>
fer is considering.<lb/>
Shaffer, son of ex-Tar Heel star<lb/>
Lee Shaffer, said recently that his<lb/>
decision was still up in the air and<lb/>
that he would visit ODU and UNC<lb/>
among others before deciding. He<lb/>
has already been to Greenville.<lb/>
So there you have it, some of the<lb/>
outstanding prospects that Odom<lb/>
and his staff are spending their time<lb/>
on. The signing of even half of<lb/>
them would be a super boost<lb/>
In NCAA Finals<lb/>
Revils, Joyner Fall<lb/>
By EDDIE -<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The NCAA wrestling champion-<lb/>
ship at Corvallis, Oregon, were<lb/>
held March 13-15, and found two<lb/>
hast Carolina Pirates coming up<lb/>
short in their bids for All-American<lb/>
honors.<lb/>
The two wrestlers representing the<lb/>
Bucs were Butch Revils (177-pound<lb/>
a eight class) and heavyweight D.T.<lb/>
loyner. The two advanced to the<lb/>
Nationals by winning their respec-<lb/>
weight classes at the NCAA<lb/>
hast Regional.<lb/>
Both wrestlers were not up to par<lb/>
tor the tournament, according to<lb/>
Pirate Head Coach Ed Steers. Revils<lb/>
had been nursing a bad ankle which<lb/>
inhibited his conditioning prior to<lb/>
the Nationals. Joyner, on the other<lb/>
hand, had been wrestling with strep<lb/>
throat or the flu weeks before the<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
"His?(Joyner's) strong suit is his<lb/>
super conditioning Steers remark-<lb/>
ed. "He conditions harder than<lb/>
most heavyweights do. The lack of<lb/>
workouts detracted from his condi-<lb/>
tioning<lb/>
Revils, seeded twelfth in the Na-<lb/>
tionals, lost to Ben Hill of Ten-<lb/>
nessee 11-10 in the first round.<lb/>
Revils was ahead in the match by<lb/>
four points when he injured his ribs.<lb/>
"He couldn't protect himself<lb/>
(fr m the injry) Steers said. "He<lb/>
was fortunate to finish the match<lb/>
Hill eventually went on to become<lb/>
an All-American.<lb/>
Joyner, seeded eighth in the tour-<lb/>
nament, took on Don Wagner of<lb/>
Kent State. Wagner weighed in at<lb/>
280 pounds on his 6-6 frame, com-<lb/>
pared to Joyner's 6-1, 235 build.<lb/>
Wagner jumped ahead 3-0 in the<lb/>
match, but Joyner fought hard and<lb/>
prevailed 6-3.<lb/>
"He (Joyner) did a great job<lb/>
said an impressed Steers.<lb/>
Joyner advanced into the next<lb/>
round to wrestle Mike Evans of<lb/>
LSU. Evans eventually won 4-3,<lb/>
scoring two points on a duck-under<lb/>
takedown with twenty seconds left<lb/>
in the match.<lb/>
"On a different day, I think D.T.<lb/>
could've beaten him badly Steers<lb/>
said. "But he had to pace himself to<lb/>
keep from getting tired (due to the<lb/>
illness). Consequently, that kept the<lb/>
score close and in the end he lost<lb/>
Steers said Revils was eligible to<lb/>
wrestle in the consolation matches<lb/>
(wrestlebacks), but the rib injury<lb/>
wouldn't allow him.<lb/>
Joyner was ineligible for the<lb/>
wrestlebacks because Evans did not<lb/>
advance in the tournament after<lb/>
defeating him, according to Steers.<lb/>
Revils finished the season ranked<lb/>
ninth in the nation in the 177-pound<lb/>
weight class. He compiled an<lb/>
outstanding 37-4 record.<lb/>
Joyner, 36-3, ended the season as<lb/>
the seventh nationally-ranked<lb/>
heavyweight.<lb/>
As for the Pirate season as a<lb/>
whole, Steers said, "We got a good<lb/>
effort from some spunky guys. We<lb/>
won a couple of tournaments that I<lb/>
felt were significant. We had quite a<lb/>
few individual wins. And we were<lb/>
third in the Eastern Region.<lb/>
"It was a fairly successful year<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
The Pirates ended the season with<lb/>
an 8-6-1 mark.<lb/>
As for next year, Steers claimed,<lb/>
"We're going to be prepared to<lb/>
fight with the best<lb/>
Pirates Fall 9-0<lb/>
ECU Wrestling Action<lb/>
NCSU Spoils Opener<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
It has often been used as an excuse that the score did<lb/>
not indicate the outcome of the match, but the state-<lb/>
ment can especially be used in reference to the East<lb/>
Carolina 9-0 loss yesterday at the hands of perrenial<lb/>
ACC power N.C. State.<lb/>
With the fact that through the first five singles mat-<lb/>
ches the Pirates managed only 17 games, it could easily<lb/>
be considered a walk-over. But the young ECU netters<lb/>
fought to the final point of each match.<lb/>
Senior Kenny Love dropped the his first flight match<lb/>
to Andy Andrews 6-4, 6-1. In other singles action,<lb/>
sophomore Keith Zengel fell to Matt McDonald 6-3,<lb/>
6-1; senior Henry Hostetler lost to Scott Fleming 6-3,<lb/>
6-0; freshman Ted Lepper was downed by Andy<lb/>
Wilkison (brother of touring professional Tim Wilkison<lb/>
of Shelby) 6-1, 6-1; Mark Byrd was aced by Tim<lb/>
Downey 6-1, 6-2; and sophomore Norm Bryant faught<lb/>
hard but lost to Brad Smith 6-4, 6-4.<lb/>
"I think we played fairly well said ECU coach Jon<lb/>
Rose. "I think we're going to be all right this year.<lb/>
"The competition within the team to get in the top six<lb/>
spots has been hectic. We held an intrasquad round-<lb/>
robin and the results of that basically determined that<lb/>
six<lb/>
??<lb/>
In doubles, the team of Love and Hostetler fought off<lb/>
a talented Wolf pack duo of Andrews and McDonald,<lb/>
but fell 6-4, 6-2 in what was one of the most evenly<lb/>
grouped matches of the afternoon.<lb/>
The second flight pair of Zengel and Lepper proved<lb/>
little challenge as they were disposed of 6-3, 6-0 by the<lb/>
NCSU team of Fleming and Wilkison. Downey and<lb/>
Smith captured the final event of the afternoon with a<lb/>
6-4, 6-4 rally over Bryant and Barry Parker.<lb/>
"It's going to be a tough two weeks for us coming<lb/>
up explained veteran N.C. State coach J.W.<lb/>
Isenhour. "We have North Carolina coming up Satur-<lb/>
day and I was a little concerned that the players might<lb/>
look ahead.<lb/>
"I'm glad that wasn't the case, though. The matches<lb/>
were much tougher than the scores indicate<lb/>
Isenhour, himself a top player in North Carolina<lb/>
mens rankings and considered one of the best collegiate<lb/>
coaches in the nation, added that regular number three<lb/>
and four flight competitors John Joyce and Mark<lb/>
Dillon did not make the trip.<lb/>
N.C. State now stands at 9-2, with losses to powerful<lb/>
Georgia Southern and Florida. ECU travels to UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington today to make up a Tuesday rain out.<lb/>
Lady Bucs Open<lb/>
Oliver Mack.<lb/>
Ex ECU star guard Oliver Mack is shown here is a Los Angelas Laker<lb/>
uniform, one that he wore for mueh of the present NBA season. A recent<lb/>
tZe, though, sent him to the Chicago Bulls. Since the trade, Mack has<lb/>
m several sierUng performances, scoring 21,18 and 16 points m his top<lb/>
three outmgs. i??<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
When the Lady Pirate softball<lb/>
team takes to the field to initiate<lb/>
their 1980 campaign Saturday at 10<lb/>
a.m. at the diamond adjacent to<lb/>
Harrington field on Charles Street,<lb/>
coach Alita Dillon will have a pair<lb/>
of luxeries absent in previous<lb/>
outings: depth and experience.<lb/>
ECU will open the round-robin<lb/>
tournament against the Lady Moun-<lb/>
taineers of Appalachian State,<lb/>
followed by matchups with UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill at 12:30 p.m Western<lb/>
Carolina at 2:30 and the closing<lb/>
game against UNC-Greensboro at S<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Also participating in the event but<lb/>
not scheduled to face East Carolina<lb/>
is the Wolfpack of N.C. State. All<lb/>
teams will play a four game rota-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Senior pitcher Mary Bryan<lb/>
JCarlyle is scheduled to be on the<lb/>
mound, but the remainder of the<lb/>
Pirate lineup is a combination of<lb/>
new faces and old faces in new posi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Tenative startc for Dillon are<lb/>
senior catcher Jan McVeigh,<lb/>
sophomore first baseman Shirley<lb/>
Brown, freshman second sacker<lb/>
Ginger Rothermel, senior third<lb/>
baseman Cindy Meekins, junior<lb/>
shortstop Mary Powell and in the<lb/>
outfield junior tranfer Kathy Riley<lb/>
from Middle Tennessee State and<lb/>
freshmen Yvonne Williams, Mitzi<lb/>
Davis and Cynthia Shepard.<lb/>
Absent from the opening card are<lb/>
1979 regulars Teresa Whitley at<lb/>
first, Jatus Parion at second and<lb/>
outfielder Robin Faggart.<lb/>
"We've gone through and looked<lb/>
at their fielding and hitting and<lb/>
that's what our decisions were based<lb/>
on explained Ditton. "W? have<lb/>
the depth now that we've nwfe&amp; for<lb/>
along tune.<lb/>
"There's not as much difference<lb/>
between the starters and the<lb/>
backups as there used to be<lb/>
Also on hand to see regular action<lb/>
are freshmen Fran Hooks who will<lb/>
split duties at catcher and shortstop,<lb/>
outfielder Terry Andrews and pit-<lb/>
cher Angie Humphrey.<lb/>
Further reserve support is provid-<lb/>
ed by junior N.C. State transfer<lb/>
Judy Ausherman at pitcher,<lb/>
Maureen Buck at third and Lillion<lb/>
Barnes in the field.<lb/>
"We decided to assign each<lb/>
player a specific backup role to con-<lb/>
centrate on said Dillon. "That<lb/>
way they don't worry about what<lb/>
everyone else is doing, just the other<lb/>
person at their position<lb/>
"We're a little rusty on the in-<lb/>
field Dillon admits. "But that w?<lb/>
come with time. They know we have<lb/>
the abtity to do well. We're looking<lb/>
forward to a good season<lb/>
<pb facs="00057255_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN!<lb/>
I<lb/>
Duke Taps Krzyzewski<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
DURHAM (AP) - responded.<lb/>
Duke basketball fans "I don't think so. I<lb/>
who struggled with the look at people. I look<lb/>
name Gmmski for the at results. The boy the<lb/>
past four years have a young man has<lb/>
new tongue-twister to<lb/>
contend with:<lb/>
Krzyzewski.<lb/>
It's pronounced<lb/>
Kreh-cheh-skee.<lb/>
And Duke athletic<lb/>
Director Tom Butters<lb/>
said Tuesday night the<lb/>
name belongs to the<lb/>
"brightest young<lb/>
coaching talent in<lb/>
America today<lb/>
The full name is<lb/>
established a good<lb/>
track record<lb/>
Butters said<lb/>
Krzyzewski was a con-<lb/>
census choice and the<lb/>
only person interviewed<lb/>
to receive an offer for<lb/>
the Blue Devil job.<lb/>
"He's my No.l<lb/>
choice Butters said.<lb/>
Krzyzewski, who<lb/>
played basketball as a<lb/>
student at West Point,<lb/>
ftsasar tieonwasoffered,heposi- ss&amp;ra-EE ? Mis?,<lb/>
The dark-haired "I was no, shocked, has Teevague abou Tuesday mornZ <lb/>
slenderly built I felt this was a position his reasons for leaving uesday mornin?-<lb/>
SA ?f' Jref,y r'8ht for me he ?id- Duk?. and Butters said<lb/>
Martha<lb/>
with the Duke players<lb/>
Tuesday night, express-<lb/>
ing pleasure with his<lb/>
reception. He noted<lb/>
that Army assistant<lb/>
Bobby Dwyer, a 1974<lb/>
Wake Forest graduate<lb/>
who will also come to<lb/>
Duke, had filled him in<lb/>
His selection was the<lb/>
second surprise in re-<lb/>
cent weeks for Blue<lb/>
Devil fans, who had<lb/>
seen their team go to<lb/>
the NCAA playoffs<lb/>
three times during<lb/>
Foster's six-year reign<lb/>
as head coach and hold<lb/>
on the perils of Atlantic ?oftv nn?r <lb/>
Coast Conference y P?sit,0ns m the<lb/>
basketball E P? The Blue<lb/>
?. ?w?.wi, "i thint r?i,0 Uev?'s, who slumped in<lb/>
coach TThekuesd ?n UP? 79 record at basketball is excellent Reason, came back<lb/>
SK?l e Army including two has been excellent and lAn"season to win the<lb/>
I hone to canting that ACX P?st-season tour-<lb/>
Military Academy for<lb/>
the past five years. His<lb/>
selection as a successor<lb/>
to Bill Foster may have<lb/>
surprised some, but<lb/>
Butters was adamant in<lb/>
his praise of<lb/>
Krzyzewski.<lb/>
Asked if he con-<lb/>
sidered the 33-year-old<lb/>
Chicago native a gam-<lb/>
ble for Duke's tradi-<lb/>
tionally strong basket-<lb/>
ball program, Butters<lb/>
appearances in the Na-<lb/>
tional Invitational<lb/>
Tournament. His teams<lb/>
had three winning<lb/>
seasons, including a<lb/>
20-8 record in his se-<lb/>
cond year and a 19-9<lb/>
mark the third year.<lb/>
His college coaching<lb/>
career includes one year<lb/>
as an assistant at In-<lb/>
diana under head coach<lb/>
Bobby Knight. He also<lb/>
served as an assistant to<lb/>
I hope to continue that<lb/>
tradition he said.<lb/>
Krzyzewski, who<lb/>
said the university<lb/>
made the initial contact<lb/>
about the Duke job,<lb/>
visited the Durham<lb/>
campus three times<lb/>
during the interview<lb/>
period. He said the job<lb/>
was offered to him<lb/>
Monday night.<lb/>
He conceded some<lb/>
degree of surprise that<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
Foster shocked some<lb/>
Duke followers with his<lb/>
announcement at<lb/>
season's end that he<lb/>
was leaving to succeed<lb/>
Frank McGuire at<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
Butters said Foster<lb/>
was still on the Duke<lb/>
campus and had given<lb/>
no indication as to<lb/>
Negoiator Seeks Agreement<lb/>
Scales Withdrawn<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ?<lb/>
With dramatic sud-<lb/>
deness, negotiators for<lb/>
major league baseball<lb/>
hae dropped one of<lb/>
their key proposals in<lb/>
an attempt to reach<lb/>
"It's a little like<lb/>
you've been beating<lb/>
your wife and children<lb/>
for years noted Mar-<lb/>
vin Miller, executive<lb/>
director of the Players<lb/>
Association. "Then<lb/>
contract peace with the you stop and now vou<lb/>
Pa-Vers- want a medal because<lb/>
But there is some you stopped<lb/>
question how much ef- A medal isn't<lb/>
feet Tuesday's necessary, but Rav<lb/>
withdrawal of the puo- Grebey, chief<lb/>
posed salary scales will negotiator for the<lb/>
really have on the so-<lb/>
far stalled talks.<lb/>
Bruins'<lb/>
Puts<lb/>
owners, would like a<lb/>
contract agreement and<lb/>
Brown<lb/>
ether<lb/>
Tog<lb/>
Winning Team<lb/>
know when the future<lb/>
would be said Brown<lb/>
Tuesday. "I feel very<lb/>
good that people con-<lb/>
tinued to come to look<lb/>
at UCLA and saw the<lb/>
By<lb/>
JACK STEVENSON<lb/>
AP Writer<lb/>
LOS ANGELES<lb/>
(AP) ? Larry Brown<lb/>
was used to working<lb/>
with the professionals<lb/>
so it came as a surprise<lb/>
when the first-year<lb/>
coach of the UCLA<lb/>
Bruins came up with<lb/>
fuzzy-cheeked<lb/>
freshmen in his<lb/>
backcourt.<lb/>
He truly did try not<lb/>
to do it. It wasn't his<lb/>
original idea.<lb/>
Brown started with<lb/>
lettermen sophomores<lb/>
Tony Anderson and<lb/>
Tyren Naulis at the<lb/>
guard spots.<lb/>
Then Rod Foster and<lb/>
Michael Holton began<lb/>
taking control with<lb/>
Foster the shooter and<lb/>
Holton setting up the avSTl. k<lb/>
offense for the young fi 8ii8, 1M pomts<lb/>
Bruins, who b'arely Fo fom 2 ?<lb/>
made it into the NCAA SCT -<lb/>
tournament after a S nn" ,s qu,ck<lb/>
finishing fourth in P ?bIe t0 fet the fa<lb/>
Pacific-10. fnreak away ,ike "ghtn-<lb/>
The guards set things cncr<lb/>
up but another move by 6 L?J ?L ?nly<lb/>
Brown, moving 6-foot-l and 160, .s 19,<lb/>
6-foot-6 Mike Zanders wh!1(LHolton. 6-3<lb/>
to the high post despite Md ,84' ,S StiH iust ,8'<lb/>
his lack of size put the<lb/>
Bruins on their winning<lb/>
he believes the move-<lb/>
ment in talks Tuesday<lb/>
set the stage for that. '<lb/>
Asked if he con-<lb/>
sidered the proposal's<lb/>
withdrawal a<lb/>
breakthrough, Grebey<lb/>
said, "I never use<lb/>
descriptive adjectives<lb/>
But it was clear that<lb/>
Grebey felt progress<lb/>
had been made in the<lb/>
31: hour meeting in<lb/>
Fort Lauderdale, the<lb/>
final negotiating ses-<lb/>
sion in Florida. The<lb/>
two sides will next meet<lb/>
again Wednesday<lb/>
March 26, in Scott-<lb/>
sdale, Ariz.<lb/>
"We feel it's enough<lb/>
of a development to<lb/>
provide a settlement<lb/>
Grebey said.<lb/>
But that may not be<lb/>
the view of the players.<lb/>
From the start they<lb/>
have considered the<lb/>
free agent compensa-<lb/>
improvement they con- !i?n ProP?sal a more<lb/>
tinued to exhibit this dan8er?us Pt of the<lb/>
year owners' package than<lb/>
"I've told my kids to the sa,ary ales.<lb/>
feel god about what<lb/>
they have accomplished<lb/>
this year, but now that<lb/>
we've made the Final<lb/>
Four, we should go<lb/>
after it, because I've<lb/>
always believed in this<lb/>
team all year.<lb/>
"I want them to ap-<lb/>
preciate what they have<lb/>
accomplished, but I<lb/>
want them to go out<lb/>
and play the way they<lb/>
are capable of play-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Freshman Foster is<lb/>
After the scales pro-<lb/>
posal was withdrawn,<lb/>
the players indicated<lb/>
willingness to amend or<lb/>
withdraw some of their<lb/>
proposals. But that<lb/>
movement is predicated<lb/>
on the owners dropping<lb/>
their proposal on free<lb/>
agent compensation.<lb/>
"We don't intend to<lb/>
do that said Grebey.<lb/>
"We intend to bargain<lb/>
on it<lb/>
The owners' plan<lb/>
contains a formula set-<lb/>
ting compensation bas-<lb/>
ed on the number of<lb/>
teams selecting a free<lb/>
agent. A team signing a<lb/>
player selected in the<lb/>
re-entry draft by more<lb/>
than eight teams would<lb/>
protect 15 players and<lb/>
then allow the club los-<lb/>
ing the free agent to<lb/>
receive an amateur<lb/>
draft pick, plus a major<lb/>
or minor league player<lb/>
unprotected<lb/>
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They've lost only<lb/>
three times since that<lb/>
switch.<lb/>
And they are looking<lb/>
forward to meeting<lb/>
Purdue in the<lb/>
semifinals of the<lb/>
NCAA championships<lb/>
which they dominated<lb/>
with 10 championships<lb/>
between 1964 and 1975.<lb/>
Those were the John<lb/>
Wooden teams but<lb/>
nobody expected<lb/>
Brown, in his first<lb/>
season and without a<lb/>
conference champion,<lb/>
to come close. Yet in<lb/>
the playoffs, the Bruins<lb/>
beat Old Dominion,<lb/>
DePaul, Ohio State and<lb/>
Clemson to reach the<lb/>
Final Four.<lb/>
"I always felt we had<lb/>
a future, but I didn't<lb/>
1<lb/>
JOLLY<lb/>
ROGER<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
?LY DECORATED<lb/>
-SOUNDS<lb/>
-SCHEDULE<lb/>
SUN-GUYS NIGHT THURSECU NIGHT<lb/>
WEDLADIES NIGHT FRITGIF 4-6:30<lb/>
he still did not unders-<lb/>
tand the move,<lb/>
although he wished<lb/>
Foster well in his new<lb/>
job.<lb/>
"Bill has his reasons,<lb/>
but I've never walked<lb/>
in those shoes (as a<lb/>
coach) Butters said.<lb/>
"But by necessity,<lb/>
we needed to start<lb/>
anew, to start fresh<lb/>
Butters said there<lb/>
was never a question in<lb/>
the final days about<lb/>
Krzyzewski, although<lb/>
"There was one very<lb/>
clear cut first, and the<lb/>
rest tied for second<lb/>
Butters said of the pro-<lb/>
spects.<lb/>
Butters declined to<lb/>
discuss what terms were<lb/>
agreed to with<lb/>
krzyzewski, or to say<lb/>
what period they<lb/>
covered. But, he said,<lb/>
Krzyzewski "is not in-<lb/>
terim<lb/>
Other coaches kown<lb/>
to have been interview-<lb/>
ed by Duke included<lb/>
Tom Davis of Boston<lb/>
Holde<lb/>
the selection committee College, curren Duke<lb/>
kept up its interviews of Assistant Bob Wenzel<lb/>
other prospects. One of<lb/>
the others, Bob<lb/>
and Paul Webb of Old<lb/>
Dominion.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057255_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 20, 1980<lb/>
11<lb/>
lee<lb/>
er<lb/>
March 22<lb/>
l I p.m.<lb/>
hssion 5CK<lb/>
le Snacks<lb/>
m<lb/>
w<lb/>
fNT UNION<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
29<lb/>
,2-1446<lb/>
p R<lb/>
Mass NCAA Recruiting Scandal Upcoming?<lb/>
Bv l). ALAN<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
NCAA long Range<lb/>
Planning Committee<lb/>
"Mr. Williams<lb/>
predicted 'a monstrous<lb/>
scandal' (will occur)<lb/>
within the next five<lb/>
years in college basket-<lb/>
hall, citing 'heavy<lb/>
cheating' in such areas<lb/>
as falsifying<lb/>
transcripts, use of<lb/>
agents and recruiting<lb/>
abuses by coaches and<lb/>
alumni  the possibili-<lb/>
ty of a major basketball<lb/>
scandal may be more<lb/>
imminent than long-<lb/>
range. "<lb/>
NCAA long<lb/>
K a n g e<lb/>
Planning Com-<lb/>
mittee Minutes<lb/>
June 18-19, 1979<lb/>
Prophetic words, too<lb/>
photic as events<lb/>
Alv proved. Did I<lb/>
or the other committee<lb/>
nbers have special<lb/>
inside information?<lb/>
Wore we jaware of in-<lb/>
vestigations underway?<lb/>
No. We were just alert,<lb/>
informed persons<lb/>
harged with looking at<lb/>
he long-range trends in<lb/>
jollege athletics.<lb/>
For us. the signs were<lb/>
everywhere we looked<lb/>
spring: increasing<lb/>
dia attention to high<lb/>
school basketball<lb/>
recruits; prospects<lb/>
ivhose transcripts ap-<lb/>
ieared to leave them in-<lb/>
eligible at one Division<lb/>
I school turning up<lb/>
sewhere with the re-<lb/>
site credits and<lb/>
ide-point average;<lb/>
schools scrambling for<lb/>
ids to combat<lb/>
calating costs and<lb/>
covering that basket-<lb/>
bail had unexpected<lb/>
jw revenue sources;<lb/>
allege coaches return-<lb/>
ig from high school<lb/>
all-star games telling<lb/>
oi r ADs that the<lb/>
games had become<lb/>
"obscene a "flesh<lb/>
market" where agents<lb/>
wore literally peddling<lb/>
their clients; faculty<lb/>
members watching a<lb/>
state high school tour-<lb/>
ament and observing<lb/>
colelge coaches careful-<lb/>
choreographing<lb/>
moves so that they<lb/>
?just happened to<lb/>
bump" into prospects<lb/>
and their parents.<lb/>
The rumors of<lb/>
unethical conduct by<lb/>
individual coaches,<lb/>
players, alumni and<lb/>
boosters were familiar;<lb/>
the accelerating pace of<lb/>
the charges and viola-<lb/>
tions was the real cause<lb/>
for our concern.<lb/>
However, what really<lb/>
concerned us was an<lb/>
awareness about the<lb/>
degree and per-<lb/>
vasiveness to which<lb/>
some institutions<lb/>
themselves were involv-<lb/>
ed admitting<lb/>
students with the barest<lb/>
of academic achieve-<lb/>
ment in high school,<lb/>
jnrelated to what is re-<lb/>
quired and expected at<lb/>
hat college; accepting<lb/>
third-party transcripts,<lb/>
often from an assistant<lb/>
coach; guaranteeing<lb/>
coaches a number of<lb/>
admissions slots out-<lb/>
side the regular admis-<lb/>
sions procedure; hiring<lb/>
"winning coaches"<lb/>
from other schools at<lb/>
salaries far out of pro-<lb/>
portion to faculty, ad-<lb/>
ministrators and<lb/>
prevailing coaches'<lb/>
salaries (total packages<lb/>
of $150,000 per year<lb/>
are not uncommon this<lb/>
year) and then giving<lb/>
them a "make us a win-<lb/>
ner" mandate, or hir-<lb/>
ing coaches, assistant<lb/>
coaches and even<lb/>
academic advisors who<lb/>
have had a history of<lb/>
getting institutions on<lb/>
probation.<lb/>
Above all else, we are<lb/>
concerned about the<lb/>
number of institutions<lb/>
that have made inter-<lb/>
collegiate athletics an<lb/>
instrument of institu-<lb/>
tional policy for achiev-<lb/>
ing "instant recogni-<lb/>
tion" by making it in<lb/>
the "big time" (i.e<lb/>
Division I). Basketball<lb/>
is the intercollegiate<lb/>
sport in which this<lb/>
quick success, recogni-<lb/>
tion and financial<lb/>
bonanza of television<lb/>
and NCAA basketball<lb/>
tournament revenues is<lb/>
most possible. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, that very-<lb/>
potential for success<lb/>
makes college basket-<lb/>
ball the sport most<lb/>
susceptible to corrup-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Committee members<lb/>
see recurring patterns<lb/>
and student profiles<lb/>
which portend trouble,<lb/>
patterns that go back at<lb/>
least as far as the<lb/>
basketball scandals of<lb/>
the 1950s that ended in<lb/>
gambling and point-<lb/>
shaving. Among these<lb/>
are:<lb/>
?Squads which have<lb/>
a high number of<lb/>
students from outside<lb/>
the traditional area<lb/>
from which students<lb/>
come to that college; a<lb/>
high percentage of<lb/>
marginal, high-risk<lb/>
students, and a number<lb/>
of transfer students.<lb/>
?Admission of<lb/>
students outside the<lb/>
regular admissions pro-<lb/>
cess in which profes<lb/>
sionals predict<lb/>
students' chances for'<lb/>
academic success. The;<lb/>
expectation that<lb/>
marginal students who<lb/>
need to devote their full<lb/>
attention to the<lb/>
classroom to survive<lb/>
academically can withs-<lb/>
tand both athletic and<lb/>
academic pressures is a<lb/>
fallacy that has led<lb/>
straight to academic<lb/>
cheating, chicanery or<lb/>
the total disregard for<lb/>
the athlete as a student.<lb/>
?Real athletic control<lb/>
and responsibility not<lb/>
being lodged with the<lb/>
president or chief ex-<lb/>
ecutive officer but with<lb/>
an outside group or<lb/>
even directly with the<lb/>
college board of<lb/>
trustees.<lb/>
?Coaches who are<lb/>
hired and report out-<lb/>
side regular institu-<lb/>
tional channels (i.e<lb/>
separate athletic<lb/>
associations) or who<lb/>
receive a major portion<lb/>
of their salaries from<lb/>
noninstitutional<lb/>
sources.<lb/>
?The hiring of<lb/>
coaches, assistant<lb/>
coaches and athletic<lb/>
directors who previous-<lb/>
ly have been involved in<lb/>
serious and repeated<lb/>
violations of NCAA<lb/>
rules and standards of<lb/>
ethical conduct.<lb/>
Throughout our<lb/>
deliberations ran a con-<lb/>
cern for the reassertion<lb/>
of institutional control<lb/>
of intercollegiate<lb/>
athletics. That, of<lb/>
:ourse, is easier said<lb/>
:han done, for at least<lb/>
two compelling<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
First, at the Division<lb/>
1 level, intercollegiate<lb/>
athletics has been<lb/>
treated like the un-<lb/>
wanted child left on the<lb/>
doorstep of academia<lb/>
? to be tolerated, not<lb/>
accepted; to be<lb/>
separately funded,<lb/>
separately ad-<lb/>
ministered. The com-<lb/>
monwealth of Virginia<lb/>
puts it very succinctly<lb/>
by classifying inter-<lb/>
collegiate athletics as<lb/>
an auxiliary enterprise.<lb/>
Second, it is not only<lb/>
in athletics that colleges<lb/>
and universities are<lb/>
beset with the loss of<lb/>
institutional control.<lb/>
Witness the onslaught<lb/>
of state and federal<lb/>
legislation, state boards<lb/>
of higher education,<lb/>
court decisions, ac-<lb/>
crediting agencies, the<lb/>
scramble for research<lb/>
funds and the utiliza-<lb/>
tion of education as an<lb/>
agency of social<lb/>
change.<lb/>
In the popular mind,<lb/>
institutional control<lb/>
means control from the<lb/>
president's office, an<lb/>
end to autonomy of<lb/>
athletic departments. It<lb/>
is unlikely that<lb/>
presidents, beset as<lb/>
they are by a myriad of<lb/>
problems, can or<lb/>
should control the day-<lb/>
to-day operations of<lb/>
athletic departments to<lb/>
any greater extent than<lb/>
for any other part of<lb/>
the college. What they<lb/>
need and should seek is<lb/>
accountability for the<lb/>
program and its con-<lb/>
duct.<lb/>
It is here that com-<lb/>
mittee members believe<lb/>
that faculty athletic<lb/>
representatives and the<lb/>
faculty members of the<lb/>
athletic advisory board<lb/>
or committee should<lb/>
play a vital role in<lb/>
asserting institutional<lb/>
control.<lb/>
In most Division 1 in-<lb/>
stitutions, the faculty<lb/>
representative is the<lb/>
president's represen-<lb/>
tative. The committee<lb/>
foresees the faculty<lb/>
athletic representative<lb/>
becoming an increas-<lb/>
ingly important person<lb/>
in providing the presi-<lb/>
dent with objective and<lb/>
relatively disinterested<lb/>
advice and evaluation<lb/>
of the program. To that<lb/>
end, the committee is<lb/>
recommending to the<lb/>
Council the develop-<lb/>
ment of a manual or<lb/>
handbook for faculty<lb/>
athletic representatives.<lb/>
Nothing was more<lb/>
distressing to faculty<lb/>
members than an<lb/>
awareness, now sadly<lb/>
borne out in fact, that<lb/>
the sanctity of the<lb/>
transcript, the very<lb/>
heart of academic in-<lb/>
tegrity, had been<lb/>
breached. There is<lb/>
nothing that needs to<lb/>
be undertaken more<lb/>
rapidly than for institu-<lb/>
tions to take security<lb/>
measures to confirm<lb/>
the validity of the<lb/>
transcript. That this is<lb/>
not a matter related<lb/>
primarily to athletics<lb/>
should be obvious. It is<lb/>
central to the whole<lb/>
educational process.<lb/>
In the same manner,<lb/>
the wholesale fabrica-<lb/>
tion of extension<lb/>
courses, grades and<lb/>
enrollments is only the<lb/>
tip of a scandal far<lb/>
broader than athletics.<lb/>
The coaches and<lb/>
athletic academic ad<lb/>
visors did not inven<lb/>
these courses; the<lb/>
discovered them. It i;<lb/>
part of teacher cer<lb/>
tification ? the nearb<lb/>
universal requiremen<lb/>
that teachers take addi<lb/>
tional hours for reten<lb/>
tion or advancement t<lb/>
the next rung on thi<lb/>
pay scale.<lb/>
Colleges and facultv<lb/>
<lb/>
ifiCKDANIED<lb/>
ilGINAb<lb/>
U V E R<lb/>
JET BAND<lb/>
A delightful evening of music and theatre,<lb/>
focused upon a gazebo, a thirteen piece turn<lb/>
of the century small town band, and a<lb/>
yarn-spinning PerfessorConductor<lb/>
March 24 8 p.m.<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Student Union Special<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
tUT CAMUU UWVfMITT<lb/>
Attractions<lb/>
At<lb/>
Thursday Night<lb/>
TIMKREKEL<lb/>
and<lb/>
THE SLUGGERS<lb/>
Hot and Happy Rock'n Roll From<lb/>
An ex- Jimmy Buffet Lead Guitarist<lb/>
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY<lb/>
TOMMY G and COMPANY<lb/>
Come Join Us Friday<lb/>
Starting At 4:00 And<lb/>
Have A Happy !<lb/>
willingly meet the de-<lb/>
mand ? it's a lucrative<lb/>
business. The sad part<lb/>
is that most of these<lb/>
courses cannot be used<lb/>
for regular degree<lb/>
credit on the home<lb/>
campus, but they can<lb/>
be converted into ac-<lb/>
ceptable courses at<lb/>
another institution.<lb/>
Athletics has exposed<lb/>
the problem. The<lb/>
NCAA and the con-<lb/>
ferences will move<lb/>
quickly to restrict<lb/>
severely the use of ex-<lb/>
tension courses, but the<lb/>
real educational traves-<lb/>
ty will continue unless<lb/>
colleges and univer-<lb/>
sities are willing to con-<lb/>
front the whole exten-<lb/>
sion course<lb/>
"business<lb/>
Finally, there is a<lb/>
larger issue at hand. It<lb/>
is the acceptance of the<lb/>
concept that to com-<lb/>
pete, one must cheat ?<lb/>
the "everybody does<lb/>
it" syndrome.<lb/>
Well, everybody<lb/>
doesn't do it. I is time<lb/>
for those who don't,<lb/>
and those who don't<lb/>
want to, to reassert<lb/>
themselves fully and<lb/>
forcefully.<lb/>
The NCAA is not a<lb/>
monolith in Kansas Ci-<lb/>
ty; it is a voluntary<lb/>
association made up of<lb/>
"us Unfortunate-<lb/>
ly,as Pogo said a long<lb/>
time ago, "I has seen<lb/>
the enemy, and he is<lb/>
us And unless we in<lb/>
the Nf a A are willing<lb/>
to face the athletic ana ????? m<lb/>
academic issues head- !? TT m'm"v ?f <lb/>
on, greater scandals in 2S2 ?f "  Serv,n?<lb/>
basketball will follow. dSLSST president of the<lb/>
and associate professor Atlantic Coast Con<lb/>
Alan Williams, a ?f h'5t0rV al lhe Serenct.<lb/>
member of the NCAA<lb/>
HEXAMM<lb/>
DROPPKK<lb/>
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CLASSIFIED AD FORM<lb/>
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CAROLINIAN<lb/>
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1-3 lines $1.00<lb/>
Each additional line<lb/>
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<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057255_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
N(ARCH 20,1980<lb/>
Don t Mix Booze And Sports<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
By<lb/>
WILLGRIMSLEY<lb/>
AP Special Correspondent<lb/>
Booze and baseball<lb/>
? mix 'em and weep.<lb/>
That's the sermon<lb/>
big Don Newcombe is<lb/>
carrying to the ears of<lb/>
every major league<lb/>
player willing to listen<lb/>
in a baseball-sponsored<lb/>
tour of all the training<lb/>
camps in Florida,<lb/>
Arizona and Califor-<lb/>
nia.<lb/>
"Not just baseball ?<lb/>
booze and any kind of<lb/>
business don't mix<lb/>
warns the gargantuan<lb/>
former pitcher of the<lb/>
old Dodgers, both<lb/>
Brooklyn and Los<lb/>
Angeles variety.<lb/>
"Nobody knows that<lb/>
better than I do<lb/>
The 6-foot-4,<lb/>
240-pound onetime Cy<lb/>
Young winner is like a<lb/>
barnstorming<lb/>
evangelist as he moves<lb/>
from one site to<lb/>
another preaching the<lb/>
evils of Demon Rum<lb/>
and other spirits.<lb/>
"I was a wild one in<lb/>
my day he recalls.<lb/>
"Some people are<lb/>
sophisticated drinkers.<lb/>
Some just sit and soak<lb/>
up the stuff. Others get<lb/>
belligerent. Me? I was<lb/>
just a damn drunkard.<lb/>
"I never wanted to<lb/>
go home after a<lb/>
ballgame. I wanted to<lb/>
go some place and live<lb/>
it up. I was a happy-go-<lb/>
lucky, free-wheeling<lb/>
drunk. I was heavy on<lb/>
both booze and broads.<lb/>
"It shortened my<lb/>
career. It bankrupted<lb/>
me in business. Worst<lb/>
of all, it almost broke<lb/>
up my home. My mar-<lb/>
riage at one time hung<lb/>
by a very slender<lb/>
thread. I am lucky my<lb/>
whole life wasn't ruin-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Newcombe managed<lb/>
to right himself before<lb/>
tragedy struck and, as a<lb/>
result, became one of<lb/>
the most militant<lb/>
spokesmen against<lb/>
alcohol abuse in<lb/>
baseball or any other<lb/>
endeavor.<lb/>
At the baseball<lb/>
winter meetings in<lb/>
Hawaii in 1977 he made<lb/>
a presentation to team<lb/>
physicians. Dr. Frank<lb/>
Jobe, renowned or-<lb/>
thopedic surgeon of<lb/>
Los Angeles, was so<lb/>
impressed that he per-<lb/>
suaded the Dodgers to<lb/>
set up an Alcoholic<lb/>
Rehabilitation Pro-<lb/>
gram. Assistance was<lb/>
provided by the Union<lb/>
Oil Co.<lb/>
News of the good<lb/>
work achieved in the<lb/>
Dodgers' program<lb/>
reached the office of<lb/>
Commissioner Bowie<lb/>
Kuhn in New York.<lb/>
Kuhn named<lb/>
Newcombe a consul-<lb/>
tant to work with Leslie<lb/>
C. Gray, a staff<lb/>
member of the Na-<lb/>
tional Institute on<lb/>
Alcohol Abuse and<lb/>
Alcoholism in<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
Newcombe and Gray<lb/>
made their first tour of<lb/>
the spring training<lb/>
camps two years ago,<lb/>
appearing before 25 of<lb/>
the 26 clubs.<lb/>
Only the New York<lb/>
Yankees were missed.<lb/>
"Billy Martin didn't<lb/>
want us to appear<lb/>
Newcombe said.<lb/>
The pair gave its<lb/>
message to the world<lb/>
champion Pittsburgh<lb/>
Pirates in Bradenton,<lb/>
Fla Monday and clos-<lb/>
ed the Florida portion<lb/>
of the tour in the camp<lb/>
of the Boston Red Sox<lb/>
today in Winter Haven.<lb/>
Then it's off to the<lb/>
West where this time<lb/>
they may find little ob-<lb/>
jection from the sub-<lb/>
dued Martin, new<lb/>
manager of the<lb/>
Oakland A's. Billy an-<lb/>
nounced to the world<lb/>
last week that he is off<lb/>
the juice for a month.<lb/>
"This will be good<lb/>
for my health said<lb/>
Billy.<lb/>
The crusade is<lb/>
already reaping<lb/>
dividends. Bob Welch,<lb/>
one of the Dodgers im-<lb/>
pressive young pit-<lb/>
chers, took a treatment<lb/>
over the winter in<lb/>
Arizona. A couple of<lb/>
weeks ago Newcombe<lb/>
was asked to rescue a<lb/>
former pitcher who had<lb/>
locked himself in a<lb/>
room and was reported<lb/>
"drinking himself to<lb/>
death<lb/>
Newcombe, director<lb/>
of community relations<lb/>
for the Dodgers, recall-<lb/>
ed how excessive drink-<lb/>
ing had fumed a<lb/>
brilliant career into<lb/>
disarray back in the lat-<lb/>
ter days of the "Boys<lb/>
of Summer<lb/>
"I was Rookie of the<lb/>
Year with a 17-8 record<lb/>
in 1949 he said.<lb/>
"Then I won 17, 19 and<lb/>
20 games in succession<lb/>
before going into<lb/>
military service. "My<lb/>
first full season after<lb/>
that, in 1955 I was 20-5<lb/>
and in 1956 I was 27-7,<lb/>
named the National<lb/>
League's Most<lb/>
Valuable Player and<lb/>
winner of the Cy<lb/>
Young Award.<lb/>
"In four years I was<lb/>
virtually on Skid Row.<lb/>
I won only seven games<lb/>
in 1958. I was traded to<lb/>
Cincinnati. I was<lb/>
through with baseball<lb/>
at age 33. I operated a<lb/>
successful cocktail<lb/>
lounge in Newark but I<lb/>
almost lost my wife and<lb/>
three kids.<lb/>
"My wife, Billie,<lb/>
told me, 'When you<lb/>
don't drink, you are a<lb/>
beautiful man. When<lb/>
you drink, you are an<lb/>
animal, and I don't<lb/>
want to live with that<lb/>
kind of an animal She<lb/>
was ready to pack her<lb/>
bags<lb/>
That was when Newk<lb/>
turned over a new leaf.<lb/>
"Right now, if I took<lb/>
a thimble and filled it<lb/>
with beer, she would<lb/>
walk out on me he<lb/>
said "I don't want that<lb/>
to happen to<lb/>
anybody<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
KING SIZE WATERSIO:<lb/>
tttermostat contrite ftoatar am<lb/>
custom built frame Practically<lb/>
tIMtrbMtetftr 7S ?W<lb/>
FOB SALE<lb/>
Amp ?<lb/>
Past Guitar<lb/>
Gwtar<lb/>
All M<lb/>
? US.<lb/>
Call<lb/>
Keitu at 7MJUI<lb/>
FOR SALE: ?M pair at OHM<lb/>
3 way speakers, like new. still<lb/>
under warranty value of S47S. ?er<lb/>
sale at UN. Call Will at 7S2-4H.<lb/>
VASQUE HIKERS: far sale<lb/>
Ladies site IH. Excellent condi-<lb/>
tion. Call 7S4 Sin<lb/>
FOR SALE: Got those term paper<lb/>
blues Quality. Class typewriter<lb/>
with Sanlonite carrying case<lb/>
(aoino. cheap). Call Bill at 174<lb/>
after llrMp.m.<lb/>
GREAT DEAL: on Sylvania<lb/>
Multi-play turntable and 35 watt<lb/>
apeakers. SIS. 7St-S3a.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 17 Cordoba fully<lb/>
loaded. Yellow with-Landau top.<lb/>
Will sacrifice for S3SM. Call<lb/>
I (tit) 734 3171 or I (tit) 734 70.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
NEED FEMALE ROOMMATE;<lb/>
to share three aiiraam apartment<lb/>
at Easthroak Apartments. SM<lb/>
month plus one-third utilities For<lb/>
summer and fall. Call Rhana at<lb/>
7Se-etS3.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: to share<lb/>
two bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Eastbrook Apartments startina at<lb/>
end of this semester. Call Will<lb/>
7SI-47S.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIOING: Day or<lb/>
Nioht. individual or oroups. Tn<lb/>
County StaMes Gnmesiand Call<lb/>
7S2-ORM.<lb/>
BEST PRICES: paid tar class<lb/>
rnei, oo?d and sterling Man's<lb/>
medium class rmo. SS S7 Sterl<lb/>
if?f fork SI. Call John after 1 M<lb/>
ffMBtt.<lb/>
TYRING dissertations, theses.<lb/>
and term papers excellent skills<lb/>
and reasonable rates. Call<lb/>
7SM7W.<lb/>
ANT WITNESES to the accident<lb/>
Sunday at 3 OS p.m at loth and<lb/>
College Mill Brown Honda and<lb/>
White Monte Carlo Please can<lb/>
7 SI 171<lb/>
WIN SS0 CASH tor your vacation<lb/>
this summer No oblicatton To<lb/>
receive entry form send self ad<lb/>
dressed stamped envelope to Sum<lb/>
mer Sweepstakes P O Box 73<lb/>
Coeur d'Alene Idaho 3M<lb/>
RIDER NEEOEO to share ex<lb/>
senses and oood t.mes Lea. 'a<lb/>
tor N.E New Mexico n m i Mj?<lb/>
Return in August Call 7s: m<lb/>
after ? 8 P m<lb/>
Student Union Films Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Fratianne Signs<lb/>
LOS ANGELES<lb/>
(AP) ? Figure skater<lb/>
Linda Fratianne, who<lb/>
announced Tuesday she<lb/>
was signing a profes-<lb/>
sional contract with the<lb/>
Williams Morris Agen-<lb/>
cy, said turning pro is<lb/>
"going to be a whole<lb/>
new world for me<lb/>
Fratianne, a 19-year-<lb/>
old from Northridge,<lb/>
Calif who won the<lb/>
silver medal in the Lake<lb/>
Placid Olympics, has<lb/>
not yet signed with an<lb/>
ice show. However,<lb/>
Norman Brokaw, vice<lb/>
president of the Morris<lb/>
Agency, said, "All of<lb/>
the ice shows have ex-<lb/>
pressed interest. She<lb/>
has a very bright future<lb/>
ahead of her, including<lb/>
television and movies<lb/>
Fratianne admitted<lb/>
she felt somewhat sad<lb/>
about ending her<lb/>
1 l-ye?r amateur career.<lb/>
"It's kind of sad<lb/>
knowing I will never<lb/>
compete again she<lb/>
said, but I have a<lb/>
whole new life ahead of<lb/>
me<lb/>
Fri. &amp; SatMarch 21 &amp; 22<lb/>
7 &amp; 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theater<lb/>
Admission: ID &amp; Activity Card<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Now, in America!<lb/>
A Unique Way to<lb/>
PLAN<lb/>
A<lb/>
TAN<lb/>
This type system has been very popular<lb/>
in Europe for 12 years.<lb/>
We are very excited about what's happen-<lb/>
ing! Everybody wants a tan. We are proud<lb/>
to announce we now have a custom designed<lb/>
tanning booth to give you that desirable tan<lb/>
any time of the year.<lb/>
The Ultra Tan also offers added protec<lb/>
tion, so that you can stay out in the sun for<lb/>
longer periods of time without burning, and<lb/>
you will tan much easier than ever before.<lb/>
TOTO<lb/>
We've got more going for you.<lb/>
5 P.M - 'til - CLOSING<lb/>
?.wyiKas<lb/>
April 17 8pm Minges Coliseum<lb/>
NOTHING<lb/>
BEATSA<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
Tickets:$5.00 ECU Students(in advance)<lb/>
$7.00 Public<lb/>
$7.00 at the door<lb/>
Tickets go on sale March 31st!<lb/>
GET INVOLVED<lb/>
SGASPRING ELECTIONS<lb/>
Free Pizza<lb/>
Every Thursday<lb/>
ScryJ.Pzzavowchoice (?ff?<lb/>
2nd p!? Free<lb/>
ggtfftQzztt<lb/>
IWlNiRS) S<lb/>
NOTHING<lb/>
BEATSA<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
Y0UI<lb/>
CH0IC? ptzZA<lb/>
mmi Sicilian hizas<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
ONION<lb/>
GREEN PEPPER<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
FRESH SAUSAGE<lb/>
GROUND BEEF<lb/>
10"<lb/>
$2.90<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
President<lb/>
Secretary<lb/>
Vice-President Treasurer<lb/>
Filing date: March 17-24th in the<lb/>
SGA Office Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
OLIVEIBIack or Graen 3 50<lb/>
ANCHOVY 3.50<lb/>
MUSHROOM 3.50<lb/>
HAM 3.50<lb/>
ADDITIONAL ITEMS .60<lb/>
CHANELO'S SUPREME 5.50<lb/>
Papparoni.ltalian Sauaao. Mushrooms. Onions. Groan<lb/>
Groan Ottva, Anchovy on rtquett.<lb/>
14"<lb/>
4.45<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
.75<lb/>
7.75<lb/>
16"<lb/>
5.30<lb/>
625<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
6.25<lb/>
95<lb/>
9.50<lb/>
20"<lb/>
7.70<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
896<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
8.95<lb/>
1.26<lb/>
12.70<lb/>
"THICK CRUST. EXTRA CHEESE<lb/>
10"<lb/>
$3.50<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
4.10<lb/>
14'<lb/>
16'<lb/>
20'<lb/>
ttNMMCNES<lb/>
BREAD BAKED FRESH DAILY<lb/>
Short Loaf ? $2.00<lb/>
Long Loaf ? ?2.95<lb/>
UBMAT<lb/>
to<lb/>
I Long Loaf<lb/>
SUBMARINE<lb/>
Salami, Ham,<lb/>
HAM and CHEESE<lb/>
? Motrd,Ham,Lattws?,Tomato.Choa?<lb/>
HOAGIE<lb/>
Mu?tardlavonnaiaa.Salamitam,LattMoa<lb/>
Tom?o,OI?vt Oil<lb/>
ITALIAN SANDWICH<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
ONION<lb/>
GREEN PEPPER<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
FRESH SAUSAGE<lb/>
GROUND BEEF<lb/>
OLIVE(Black or Groan) 410<lb/>
ANCHOVY 4.10<lb/>
MUSHROOM 4.10<lb/>
HAM 410<lb/>
ADDITIONAL ITEMS .80<lb/>
SICILIAN SUPREME 6.10<lb/>
Poppoioni.ltalian Sausaoa.Mushroomv Onion.Groan<lb/>
Groan Otiv?, Anchovy on roquait.<lb/>
Wtmfs<lb/>
Spaghetti &amp; Moat Sauce. Hot Garlic Broad 2.50 Fat Fe? Pm. afto<lb/>
Spaghetti &amp; Me? Bolts. Hot Garlic Broad Z9S ?Il??X<lb/>
Lasagne with Hot Garlic Bread 3.B0 Pl?y Service<lb/>
Extra Meet BeM$<lb/>
5.20<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.96<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
.75<lb/>
8.50<lb/>
625<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
7.20<lb/>
.95<lb/>
10.45<lb/>
&amp;95<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
1020<lb/>
1020<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
10.20<lb/>
1.25<lb/>
13 95<lb/>
'Sfjaa<lb/>
OwUng Room or Order to Go<lb/>
VEGETARIAN SANDWICH<lb/>
Onion.Groan Pepper, Moahroom .Sauce,<lb/>
Coke-Root Beer-Sorite<lb/>
Tab - Iced Tea - Coffee<lb/>
Sm. .35 Lg. .50 Qt. .8<lb/>
1<lb/>
?2<lb/>
-t<lb/>
VERSUVIAN STEAK<lb/>
11<lb/>
11<lb/>
12 Mi.<lb/>
Chef. Salad<lb/>
Dinner Salad<lb/>
Oarik Bread<lb/>
.79<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Wholesome Nutritional Food<lb/>
Served At Its Very Best<lb/>
Contributes To The Full Rich Life<lb/>
"Why Settle For Less"<lb/>
CALLCHANELOS<lb/>
788-7400<lb/>
THE HOT LINE<lb/>
?H-rlN CJ 5<lb/>
I - L 1<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
&amp;07E.14th$tr?t<lb/>
JMemrlttov N.fe<lb/>
you mmm rm n&amp;ikmh<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057255_0013"/>
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