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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057274_0001"/>
?he ia0t Carolinian<lb/>
Vol.54No.f A,<lb/>
?rs<lb/>
6 Pages<lb/>
Thursday. July 10. 1980<lb/>
Greenville. VC<lb/>
( imitation 5,(MM)<lb/>
Admission Requirements Show Upward Trend<lb/>
Bv PrNNV AUSTIN<lb/>
vlsllinl N? t (Jlllir<lb/>
Academic requirements for ad-<lb/>
mission into the undergraduate pro-<lb/>
gram at 1 CU arc generally moving<lb/>
upward, according to Walter 1.<lb/>
Bort, directoi ol Admissions.<lb/>
academic requirements fluc-<lb/>
te every year, he said. The re-<lb/>
remenis are based upon a predic-<lb/>
mula the Admissions Office<lb/>
formula is complicated<lb/>
and is composed ol several factors.<lb/>
Each year, the previous freshman<lb/>
class's performance and success is<lb/>
reviewed and analyzed. As an exam-<lb/>
ple oi how this evaluation fits into<lb/>
the prediction formula, Bort said<lb/>
thai if a group oi freshman<lb/>
students, who had ranked in the top<lb/>
ten percent oi their high school<lb/>
class, were tound to have done bel-<lb/>
ter in their freshman year at ECU<lb/>
than a lower ranking class, then the<lb/>
academic requirements would be<lb/>
raised for the succeeding year.<lb/>
Class tank is just one factor in<lb/>
determining the prediction formula.<lb/>
Such indicators as SA I scores and<lb/>
overall high school performance are<lb/>
taken into consideration, he added<lb/>
Since these factors will fluctuate<lb/>
every year, the prediction formula,<lb/>
and consequently the academic re-<lb/>
quirements, will change according-<lb/>
ly, Bort said.<lb/>
Generally speaking, the academic<lb/>
requirements are increasing because<lb/>
ol the upward trend in the factors.<lb/>
ns year s requirements were up<lb/>
over last year's, Bort said. The<lb/>
cnanges arc basically only minor<lb/>
changes, he added.<lb/>
1 C I announced May 5 that in-<lb/>
or cased enrollment demand for next<lb/>
tail had forced the university to<lb/>
place all new freshman applicants<lb/>
on a waiting list. As of Mav 5, the<lb/>
ECU Media<lb/>
Must Reduce<lb/>
Expenditures<lb/>
i Media Board has approved<lb/>
budgets of all the<lb/>
student-operated media, but the<lb/>
iota t new budgets exceed the<lb/>
board's anticipated revenues for the<lb/>
.t fiscal yeai.<lb/>
1 he ? i; ious media will have to<lb/>
trim theii requests m order to<lb/>
balance the books, rhe budget re-<lb/>
quest he photo lab, the Buc-<lb/>
c Rebel. 1 he Easl Caroli-<lb/>
W1B radio station,<lb/>
with the Media Board's<lb/>
ope  ? costs, aJ up to about<lb/>
$195,800 I he revenues from stu-<lb/>
dent tees are expected to total only<lb/>
about $168,000, meaning thai<lb/>
$27,000 tvill have to be cut from the<lb/>
tentative budgets.<lb/>
I he ficures for the tentative<lb/>
rt $72,215 for the Buc-<lb/>
v-4s foi I he I ast Caroli-<lb/>
nian; $30,450 tor WZMB; $15,440<lb/>
the Rebel; $12,350 foi the photo<lb/>
and $15,000 tor the Media<lb/>
Board itself.<lb/>
I he Easl C arolinian plans to help<lb/>
elim ovei a third oi the Media<lb/>
Board's deficit by cutting approx-<lb/>
imately $10,000 from its original re-<lb/>
quest .<lb/>
Other media will also have to<lb/>
make cuts. But according to John<lb/>
Jeter, W MB general manager until<lb/>
August 1. the new radio station may<lb/>
be hurt the most bv further cuts in<lb/>
its budget<lb/>
"We've already cut over SI l.tKK)<lb/>
m our original budget, and that<lb/>
was for things we felt were really<lb/>
needed to get the station on the air<lb/>
?perI vIcier said.<lb/>
rhe Media Board has instructed<lb/>
the media head- that they mav begin<lb/>
spending money tentatively ap-<lb/>
propriated to them. The budgets<lb/>
will be modified and receive final<lb/>
approval alter the board knows ex-<lb/>
actly how much money will becom-<lb/>
ing in from suident tees.<lb/>
Bridgemen Play Ficklen<lb/>
Kh.M bv n I I !? )l)t ss <lb/>
One o the 128 members of the Bridgemen Drum and drum and bugle corps in the nation. Corps members<lb/>
orps performs at Hcklen stadium last Tuesday also directed a band workshop at ECU during their<lb/>
lor the spectacle and precision of their visit, instructing musicians on types of music, drill tor-<lb/>
tile Bridgemen are the only undefeated mations. dance and performance.<lb/>
evening<lb/>
performances<lb/>
London Is Golden, Say ECU Economists<lb/>
U. LI)(V I l l li ??? i . . .<lb/>
By FRAMTINFPFRRV<lb/>
HI ?.?, Ruri ?<lb/>
A study ol I ondon gold prices<lb/>
from 1965 through 1979 reveals a<lb/>
"cubic tune trend an up-and-<lb/>
down scheme, rather than a pro-<lb/>
gressively upward trend, according<lb/>
to two ECU economists.<lb/>
l)rs. Oscar Moore and I ouis in-<lb/>
cone of the economics department<lb/>
oi the School of Business col-<lb/>
laborated on time series analyses of<lb/>
gold prices, working with a<lb/>
Research 1 riangle computer ter-<lb/>
minal base in the School oi<lb/>
Business.<lb/>
Moore and Zincone related gold<lb/>
price fluctuations to such (actors as<lb/>
world tourism, the West German<lb/>
mark.S. dollar exchange rate, gold<lb/>
production and the price of<lb/>
petroleum.<lb/>
Results of this study and observa-<lb/>
tions oi the operations of gold<lb/>
markets in London and Zurich were<lb/>
reported by Moore at the interna-<lb/>
tional meeting of the Eastern<lb/>
Economics Association in Mon<lb/>
trcal.<lb/>
Moore observed that three-<lb/>
fourths of the world's newly-mined<lb/>
gold is sold through the London<lb/>
gold market. This market is com<lb/>
posed of the famous Thrcadneedle<lb/>
Street bank. N.M. Rothschild and<lb/>
Sons, Ltd. and four other merchant<lb/>
banking and bullion brokerage<lb/>
firms.<lb/>
South Africa, the largest pro-<lb/>
ducer oi gold, consigns most oi its<lb/>
output to the Bank oi England,<lb/>
vvhich in turn consigns it to the gold<lb/>
fixing room at Rothschild's.<lb/>
After London, the world's second<lb/>
largest gold market is in<lb/>
Switzerland, where private banks<lb/>
freely make sales in Swiss cities such<lb/>
as Zurich and Geneva. The London<lb/>
market is essentially a wholesale<lb/>
one; the Swiss, a retail one, Moore<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Unlike the London market, the<lb/>
Swiss banks do not fix prices, but<lb/>
offer their gold at the London<lb/>
price Moore stated.<lb/>
Since Switzerland does not issue<lb/>
gold sales figures or gold export-<lb/>
import statistics, Moore said, the<lb/>
volume o Swiss gold trade can be<lb/>
only estimated to be at one-third<lb/>
that of the London market.<lb/>
"Some portion of the gold sold in<lb/>
Switzerland is never in<lb/>
Switzerland according to Moore.<lb/>
"Since much of the Swiss sales are<lb/>
covered by Swiss bank purchases on<lb/>
the London market, an order can be<lb/>
See PROFESSORS, Page 2, col. 1<lb/>
Reagan Films In Demand Once Again<lb/>
Admissions Office had received<lb/>
about 6.(MX) applications foi admis<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
I he university has only a limned<lb/>
number ol student spaces. Bort ex-<lb/>
plained. As those spaces become<lb/>
filled, new applicants are placed on<lb/>
a waning list. I he present volume ol<lb/>
applications and protections tor<lb/>
enrollment are full for next fall, ac-<lb/>
cording to Bort.<lb/>
However, applications for admis-<lb/>
DOE Program<lb/>
sion to ! h<lb/>
are still K I h<lb/>
tiot<lb/>
thud M<lb/>
said. This pa<lb/>
ted into the G<lb/>
d.<lb/>
 hen the Oil f Ad<lb/>
notified it<lb/>
mg. or has I<lb/>
acaden<lb/>
students can I<lb/>
City Seeks Secure<lb/>
Sources Of Energy<lb/>
By TFRRYGRA<lb/>
FCT uses approximately 9 per-<lb/>
cent oi the Greenville community's<lb/>
total energy.<lb/>
The residential sector accounts<lb/>
for one-third of Greenville's energy<lb/>
consumption.<lb/>
Transportation accounts tor<lb/>
about one-fourth of local energy<lb/>
use.<lb/>
1 hese are some o the findings of<lb/>
a 19"S energy audit conducted in the<lb/>
Greenville area bv the federally-<lb/>
funded Greenville Energy Program,<lb/>
one of only 17 such programs in the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
The purpose o the program,<lb/>
started by the U.S. Department ol<lb/>
Energy in 1978, is to allow local<lb/>
communities to develop an energy<lb/>
management plan that is tailor-<lb/>
made to reflect local needs and pro-<lb/>
blems.<lb/>
With a population oi 53,000 in<lb/>
the area covered by the energy<lb/>
audit, and an annual population<lb/>
growth rate of 4 percent, Greenville<lb/>
faces the problem oi making sure<lb/>
that energy supplies will keep pace<lb/>
with growth. The city's loo percent<lb/>
reliance on outside energy resources<lb/>
is part oi a statewide problem, since<lb/>
North Carolina produces only about<lb/>
1 percent of the energy it consumes.<lb/>
"Until now, most oi our work<lb/>
has been in gathering the facts we<lb/>
need to know where we are in terms<lb/>
of energy so we can sec where we're<lb/>
going said Linda Mix. coor-<lb/>
dinator for the program.<lb/>
The 1978 energy audit was the-<lb/>
first project for the energy program.<lb/>
According to the study, energy con-<lb/>
sumption in the residential sector<lb/>
was greater in Greenville than the<lb/>
national average for residential<lb/>
areas. The national average for<lb/>
residential sectors was 19 percent,<lb/>
while Greenville residents accounted<lb/>
for 32 percent o the city's total<lb/>
energy consumption.<lb/>
As a result, the Greenville Energy<lb/>
Program has directed much of its ef-<lb/>
forts towards getting the public<lb/>
aware of and involved in energy<lb/>
consumption, said Hi.<lb/>
In his studv t<lb/>
related beh<lb/>
Avtar Singh, o-<lb/>
ment ol<lb/>
thropol<lb/>
por ? ?<lb/>
energy poli<lb/>
lion is a<lb/>
v o 1 v e s<lb/>
resources and.<lb/>
techniques. 1 ht<lb/>
are ci<lb/>
energy act<lb/>
w rote.<lb/>
V the sat<lb/>
gram is. ?<lb/>
and lawmali<lb/>
sumption. Grec.<lb/>
cess ol devo<lb/>
land us.<lb/>
dinances n<lb/>
building in wav<lb/>
consumption. i<lb/>
ing o houses in<lb/>
Hix explained that<lb/>
basically three w<lb/>
energy consumption. "Vo<lb/>
the example ol a light bulb <lb/>
cut it off when not in use. N<lb/>
improve its efficiency . Or<lb/>
substitute natural ligh<lb/>
alternative source of energ<lb/>
hooking the bulb up<lb/>
generator<lb/>
The use of altt<lb/>
sources in Greenville is a<lb/>
examined. One method<lb/>
production under considei<lb/>
the old fashion windmill. Acc<lb/>
lo Hix, "Ii appears that, on<lb/>
large scale. Greenville doesn't<lb/>
enough wind on a sustained b.<lb/>
for a big application, but tl i<lb/>
might be some smaller applica-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Hix aKo noted that the iis<lb/>
wood is growing in the are<lb/>
warned that this source ol energy <lb/>
Seein . Page 2. col. I<lb/>
Language Student<lb/>
Wins Scholarship<lb/>
Ir.im Srw rk lirm- Kt purK<lb/>
NbW YORK Other candidates<lb/>
for political stardom may have scan-<lb/>
dals lurking in their past, but only<lb/>
Ronald Reagan has Bedtime for<lb/>
Bonzo.<lb/>
Bonzo and many of Reagan's 6<lb/>
other films are in such demand they<lb/>
have to be booked months in ad-<lb/>
vance.<lb/>
"Since Match  there's more ac-<lb/>
tivity, more queries and bookings<lb/>
on Reagan films than ever before<lb/>
said Ray fcttoic, who rents out films<lb/>
for United Artists.<lb/>
"It's easy to say bookings have<lb/>
increased 90 percent in just that<lb/>
small period because nobody<lb/>
wanted these films for years. Now<lb/>
we blow the dust off them and<lb/>
run<lb/>
United Artists bought the<lb/>
distribution rights in the late 1960s<lb/>
for such Reagan films as She's<lb/>
Working Her Way Through Col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
In the film, Reagan defends the<lb/>
right of a burlesque queen named<lb/>
Hot Garters Gertie to earn her tui-<lb/>
tion in an unconventional fashion.<lb/>
However, Universal Pictures<lb/>
owns the distribution rights to the<lb/>
Republican presidential candidate's<lb/>
most popular film. Bedtime for<lb/>
Bono.<lb/>
"Bono is almost a cult film<lb/>
now Univcrsal's Janice Rothbard<lb/>
said oi the 1951 movie. "We have<lb/>
only four prints for each of the four<lb/>
distribution regions and they're all<lb/>
booked solid for the rest of the<lb/>
year<lb/>
Bono was booked at Brown<lb/>
University in April. Graduate stu-<lb/>
dent David William said it was a<lb/>
"wildly enthusiastic success with<lb/>
students hooting and laughing<lb/>
throughout.<lb/>
In the film, Reagan portrays a<lb/>
college professor who believes you<lb/>
can teach a monkey morality by<lb/>
showing him love and kindness.<lb/>
Reagan's films are especially<lb/>
popular with liberals, who want to<lb/>
raise money by showing them and<lb/>
ridiculing him.<lb/>
Berkeley's Democratic<lb/>
assemblyman, Tom Bates, who will<lb/>
run for his third term in November,<lb/>
will show Reagan's That Hagan Girl<lb/>
twice before the election.<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Pamela .1. Diffee, president oi the<lb/>
International Language Organiza-<lb/>
tion, has won $500 in the first ECU<lb/>
Foreign Languages Department<lb/>
scholarship award.<lb/>
The award was made possible bv<lb/>
a $5000 gift from Prof. James L.<lb/>
Fleming. Fleming was chairman oi<lb/>
the ECU Foreign Languages<lb/>
Department for 25 years prior to his<lb/>
retirement in 1970.<lb/>
The award is given "to encourage<lb/>
a student majoring in foreign<lb/>
language to achieve the highest stan-<lb/>
dards of academic and personal<lb/>
growth of which he is capable<lb/>
Diffee, a French major, spent two<lb/>
and a half years of her childhood in<lb/>
Verdun, France. The language came<lb/>
quickly and easily for her. "When<lb/>
you're that young, you develop an<lb/>
ear for it very quickly she said.<lb/>
"My friends, my schoolmates, were<lb/>
French. We spoke French on the<lb/>
playground and when we were shop-<lb/>
ping<lb/>
Diffee, who was also past presi-<lb/>
dent of the ECU French Club, plans<lb/>
to use her fluency in French in the<lb/>
future. "1 plan to go on to graduate<lb/>
school in elementary education<lb/>
she said. "Then 1 want to get in on<lb/>
the ground floor in the foreign<lb/>
languages in an elementary school<lb/>
program<lb/>
Diffee, formerly an an major,<lb/>
discovered her interest in French<lb/>
when she taught the language in a<lb/>
nursery school and kindergarten in<lb/>
Raleigh tor a couple ot vca-s<lb/>
Because of that experience she<lb/>
changed her major to French.<lb/>
Diffee observes that study ot a<lb/>
foreign language in high school and<lb/>
at the college level is "much more<lb/>
formal" and disciplined. But she<lb/>
believes it is increasingly important<lb/>
in today's society to know and have<lb/>
use oi a second or third language.<lb/>
"Study oi a foreign language<lb/>
makes one more appreciative oi and<lb/>
proficient in his own language she<lb/>
says. "And a second language is<lb/>
becoming important in so many<lb/>
tields - business, economics,<lb/>
research ever whim<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
New York Trip 2<lb/>
Moonies 3<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Film Review 5<lb/>
Survival Food 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00057274_0002"/><lb/>
THI EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
III I Y 10. I?M0<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ECU Baseball<lb/>
The ECU Pirates baseball team<lb/>
meets Campbell on July 12 at 6 00<lb/>
p.m. al Harrington Field tor adou<lb/>
ble header. The next home game<lb/>
will be on July t4, when Louisburg<lb/>
comes to Greenville Game lime is<lb/>
7 30 p m Admission is tree to ECU<lb/>
students<lb/>
Discount Day<lb/>
Fridays are savings days at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Prices are 'a OFF every Friday<lb/>
from 1 p.m until 4 p.m. for bowl<lb/>
mg, billiards and table tennis,<lb/>
Make Friday your day to save and<lb/>
have fun too with "Discount Day'<lb/>
at Mendenhall<lb/>
Video Game<lb/>
Asteroids" is here The hottesl<lb/>
new video game is on campus for<lb/>
you Come over to Mendenhall.<lb/>
take a break from the heat and<lb/>
test your space fighting ability<lb/>
Mendenhall's summer hours are<lb/>
8 30 a m. II 00 p m Monday, and<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
8 30 a m<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
5 00 p.m . Tuesday<lb/>
Students completing teacher<lb/>
preparation programs and ad<lb/>
vanced degree candidates m<lb/>
specific fields may lake the Na<lb/>
tional Teacher Examinations on<lb/>
any of three different test dates in<lb/>
1980 81 Educational Testing Ser<lb/>
vice, the nonprofit, educational<lb/>
organization that administers this<lb/>
testing program, said today that<lb/>
the tests will be given Nov 8. 1980,<lb/>
Feb. 2J 1981 at test centers<lb/>
throughout the United States<lb/>
Prospective registrants should<lb/>
contact the school districts in<lb/>
which they seek employment,<lb/>
state agencies m which they seek<lb/>
certification or licensing, their col<lb/>
leges, or the appropriate educa<lb/>
lional association for advice about<lb/>
which examinations to take and<lb/>
when to take them<lb/>
The NTE Bulletin of Informa<lb/>
tion contains a Iis1 of test centers<lb/>
and general information about the<lb/>
examinations, as wen as a<lb/>
registration form Copies may be<lb/>
obtained from college placement<lb/>
officers, school personnel depart<lb/>
ments or direitly from National<lb/>
Teacher Examinations, Box 911,<lb/>
Educational Testing Service,<lb/>
Princeton, N.J 08541<lb/>
Poetry Contest<lb/>
A $1000 grand prize will be award<lb/>
ed in the Sixth Annual Poetry<lb/>
Competition sponsored by the<lb/>
World of Poetry, a quarterly<lb/>
newsletter for poets<lb/>
Poems of all styles and on any<lb/>
subiect are eligible to compete for<lb/>
the grand prize or for 49 other cash<lb/>
or merchandise awards<lb/>
Poetry Editor Eddie Lou Cole<lb/>
states, "We are encouraging<lb/>
poetic talent of every kind, and ex<lb/>
pect our contesi to produce ex<lb/>
citing discoveries like Virginia<lb/>
Bates, a housewife from Wood<lb/>
bine. Md She won our grand prize<lb/>
last year with her poen PIETA<lb/>
Rules and official entry forms<lb/>
are available from World of<lb/>
Poetry. 2431 Stockton Blvd . Dept<lb/>
N Sacramento, Cal 95817<lb/>
Pt.otou MARIANNE BAiNE<lb/>
ECU Professors Study<lb/>
World Gold Fluctuations<lb/>
Signing Group Performs At Convention<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
placed with a London broker in the<lb/>
morning and delivery effected to<lb/>
any point in Europe by air that<lb/>
evening or by the next morning to<lb/>
almost any part of the world<lb/>
Likewise, much gold sold in<lb/>
Switzerland to foreign purchasers<lb/>
never leaves Switzerland.<lb/>
"Many foreigners add their gold<lb/>
purchases to their gold holdings in<lb/>
Swiss banks. Clients of the Zurich<lb/>
gold market reside in Austria,<lb/>
France, Germany, Italy, the Middle<lb/>
East, the Orient, Africa, South<lb/>
America and elsewhere he said.<lb/>
After South Africa, which sup-<lb/>
plied 51 percent of the world's min-<lb/>
ed gold in 1978, or 756 metric tons,<lb/>
the chief suppliers of gold are the<lb/>
Soviet Union (21 percent), Canada<lb/>
(five percent) and the U.S. (three<lb/>
percent).<lb/>
This summer Moore has been up-<lb/>
dating his research on gold prices<lb/>
and supplies during visits to Lon-<lb/>
don, Zurich and gold-mining opera-<lb/>
tions in Alaska. He also visited<lb/>
Yugoslavia to study capitalistic<lb/>
elements in its socialistic system and<lb/>
Japan, and to study trends in that<lb/>
nation's industrial output.<lb/>
Sign language inter-<lb/>
preters from ECU were<lb/>
featured at the centen-<lb/>
nial convention of the<lb/>
National Association<lb/>
of the Deaf in Cincin-<lb/>
nati, Ohio, June<lb/>
29-July 5.<lb/>
Four of the five<lb/>
members of<lb/>
"Fantasy,<lb/>
a touring<lb/>
ensemble which inter-<lb/>
prets the lyrics of<lb/>
popular songs through<lb/>
sign language, bodily<lb/>
movement and facial<lb/>
expression, performed<lb/>
at the convention.<lb/>
"Fantasy" gave its<lb/>
"Evening of Music and<lb/>
Signs" program three<lb/>
times during the con-<lb/>
vention. Among the<lb/>
selections included<lb/>
recording performers<lb/>
as Barbra Streisand,<lb/>
Gordon Lightfoot,<lb/>
Kenny Rogers, Bette<lb/>
were well-known songs Midler, Barry Manilow<lb/>
from such musical and Elvis Presley.<lb/>
dramas as South<lb/>
Pacific and A Chorus<lb/>
Line and a variety of<lb/>
songs by such diverse<lb/>
Director of the<lb/>
"Fantasy" ensemble is<lb/>
James Haslup, a<lb/>
Baltimore, Md native<lb/>
who has been using sign<lb/>
language since the age<lb/>
of nine. He is lead in-<lb/>
terpreter in ECU's Pro-<lb/>
gram for Hearing-<lb/>
Impaired Students.<lb/>
Also from ECU arc<lb/>
staff interpreters<lb/>
Robert Coltrane and<lb/>
Shannon Gillev, alone<lb/>
with Michael Ernest,<lb/>
director off the Program<lb/>
for Hearing-Impaired<lb/>
Student v.<lb/>
The fifth member ol<lb/>
"Fantasy" is Teresa<lb/>
Dixon, sign language<lb/>
interpreter for the<lb/>
Greenville office of the<lb/>
Social Security<lb/>
Court Rules X-Rated<lb/>
Film OK, But Students<lb/>
Complain To Authorities<lb/>
City Seeks Solutions<lb/>
To Future Energy Need<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
not always efficient. He added that<lb/>
deforestation may become a pro-<lb/>
blem if wood is overused. "Right<lb/>
now, more wood is harvested in Pitt<lb/>
County than is being planted, and it<lb/>
is the hardwoods that are being<lb/>
harvested, while softer woods are<lb/>
being planted<lb/>
Solar energy is the city's most<lb/>
promising alternative energy source.<lb/>
With its plentiful year-round sun-<lb/>
shine, Greenville is also a good place<lb/>
From National On-Campus<lb/>
Reports<lb/>
The X-rated movie<lb/>
Deep Throat remains a<lb/>
campus favorite across<lb/>
the country, but its<lb/>
one-night stand at Har-<lb/>
vard U. produced<lb/>
for using solar energy, Hix said. But<lb/>
at this point, most of the work along obscenity charges<lb/>
these lines has been in examining<lb/>
how houses and'buildings may be<lb/>
constructed to use the sun to best<lb/>
advantage. Hix added that active<lb/>
solar systems also have a big poten-<lb/>
tial in the area.<lb/>
The Greenville Energy Program<lb/>
will submit its final recommenda-<lb/>
tions to the city in June next year.<lb/>
City officials will then decide how<lb/>
the recommendations will be put in-<lb/>
to effect, Hix said.<lb/>
against the two<lb/>
students who authoriz-<lb/>
ed its showing.<lb/>
Although a state<lb/>
Superior Court ruled<lb/>
Deep Throat was not<lb/>
obscene two hours<lb/>
prior to its screening in<lb/>
Harvard's Quincy backing, the two<lb/>
House, two female students filed a federal<lb/>
students filed obscenity civil suit against the<lb/>
charges against Carl district attorney and<lb/>
Stork and Nathan<lb/>
Hagen, co-presidents<lb/>
of the Quincy House<lb/>
Film Society. The<lb/>
county district attorney<lb/>
then obtained a grand<lb/>
jury indictment against<lb/>
Stork and Hagen and is<lb/>
expected to prosecute<lb/>
them in September<lb/>
when classes resume,<lb/>
says Alan M. Der-<lb/>
showit7, a Harvard law<lb/>
professor defending<lb/>
Stork.<lb/>
With Massachusetts<lb/>
Civil Liberties Union<lb/>
state troopers, claiming<lb/>
their arrest and the con-<lb/>
fiscation of the film<lb/>
violated the students'<lb/>
civil rights to show the<lb/>
movie after the court<lb/>
ruled it wasn't obscene.<lb/>
The court ruling came<lb/>
when Harvard officials<lb/>
and a local women's<lb/>
group unsuccessfully<lb/>
sought an injunction<lb/>
prohibiting the Deep<lb/>
Throat screening.<lb/>
NY Trip Planned<lb/>
The women's<lb/>
maintained "an<lb/>
mation picket<lb/>
outside Quincy<lb/>
and offered<lb/>
tending the<lb/>
group<lb/>
infor-<lb/>
line"<lb/>
House<lb/>
those at-<lb/>
movie a<lb/>
College Notes<lb/>
From The National On Campus Report<lb/>
YOUTH AIR FARES may once again be of-<lb/>
fered, along with special discounts for other<lb/>
groups. Such fares were banned in the<lb/>
mid-1970s as discriminatory but the Civil<lb/>
Aeronautics Board ruled recently that they are<lb/>
permissible under the 1978 deregulation act.<lb/>
THE CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST<lb/>
leader, Bill Bright, is conducting a $1 billion<lb/>
fund-raising effort for his second media-blitz<lb/>
promotion of Christianity. Bright, whose cam-<lb/>
pus group backed the "1 found it" campaign of<lb/>
the mid70s, reportedly plans a movie, dubbed<lb/>
in 163 languages, and a series of audio casset-<lb/>
tes.<lb/>
HIRING OF NEW GRADUATES is up over<lb/>
the spring of 1979, but doesn't meet last fall's<lb/>
projections, according to the College Place-<lb/>
ment Council. A more conservative hiring trend<lb/>
probably reflects current economic uncertainty,<lb/>
the CPC says in its latest report. There is still an<lb/>
8 percent overall increase over 1978-79 in the<lb/>
number of new college graduates hired or ex-<lb/>
pected to be hired this year. Engineering and<lb/>
technical fields remain strong while business-<lb/>
related fields showed less growth than expected.<lb/>
GEORGIA STATE U. students are calling for<lb/>
a referendum to determine if students favor a<lb/>
proposed $8 per quarter increase in athletic<lb/>
fees. Although two years ago, 6,000 GSU<lb/>
students signed a petition saying they wanted<lb/>
their fees increased to make athletic programs<lb/>
more competitive, some are now sayiftg an $8<lb/>
increase is too much on a campus where 78 per-<lb/>
cent of the students hold jobs and 45 percent at-<lb/>
tend school at night when many athletic events<lb/>
take place. School officials have expressed op-<lb/>
position to any referendum.<lb/>
A SUICIDE VICTIM'S family filed formal<lb/>
complaints with the U. of Texas board of<lb/>
regents recently, claiming that telephone con-<lb/>
versations between the former student and the<lb/>
university counseling service were taped<lb/>
without his permission. Family members say<lb/>
the former student learned that his conversa-<lb/>
tions were taped and used in training sessions<lb/>
and that this knowledge was a contributing fac-<lb/>
tor in his death. The family is not seeking<lb/>
money but wants assurance that future<lb/>
telephone counseling won't be taped without<lb/>
the client's permission.<lb/>
CALORIE COUNTERS gel help at Northern<lb/>
Illinois U. and the U. of Maryland. The NIU<lb/>
food service offers a "skinny meal a balanc-<lb/>
ed low-calorie meal plan listing the caloric con-<lb/>
tent of each item. Two UM students created a<lb/>
"mitridot" system which labels ail high-fat or<lb/>
high-sodium foods with red dots, v Hie putting<lb/>
yellow dots on moderately fattening items and<lb/>
green dots on low-fat, low-sodium items. A<lb/>
listing of food calorie counts is also available.<lb/>
chance to see a slide<lb/>
show on pornography<lb/>
and violence against<lb/>
women before and dur-<lb/>
ing the movie.<lb/>
Despite all protests,<lb/>
film society members<lb/>
decided to show the<lb/>
film after a Quincy<lb/>
House poll showed 72<lb/>
percent of house<lb/>
residents favored show-<lb/>
ing the movie, although<lb/>
49 percent of female<lb/>
residents opposed it.<lb/>
ECU Nes Bureau<lb/>
A four-day tour of<lb/>
New York City,<lb/>
highlighted by Broad-<lb/>
way shows, sightseeing<lb/>
and shopping, will be<lb/>
offered through the<lb/>
ECU Division of Conti-<lb/>
nuing Education this<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
Two musical plays<lb/>
are definitely scheduled<lb/>
for the tour ? the<lb/>
popular A Chorus Line<lb/>
and Sugar Babies, star-<lb/>
ring Mickey Rooney.<lb/>
Other activities include<lb/>
a choice of locations<lb/>
and entertainment<lb/>
events to visit, among<lb/>
them Rockefeller<lb/>
Center, the United Na-<lb/>
tions, Radio City Music<lb/>
Hall, the Empire State<lb/>
Building, the World<lb/>
Trade Center, a boat<lb/>
ride in New York Har-<lb/>
bor to the Statue of<lb/>
Liberty and a<lb/>
"backstage on Broad-<lb/>
way" tour.<lb/>
The tour will be led<lb/>
bv Stuart Aronson of<lb/>
the ECU faculty,<lb/>
playwright and director<lb/>
of Blackbeard: Knight<lb/>
of the Black Flag.<lb/>
Cost for the New<lb/>
York Theater Excur<lb/>
sion is $395 per person,<lb/>
based on double oc-<lb/>
cupancy. This price in-<lb/>
cludes round trip air<lb/>
fare from Kinston to<lb/>
New York, chartered<lb/>
bus, transportation to<lb/>
and from the airport.<lb/>
three evenings1 lodg-<lb/>
ings at the newlv refur-<lb/>
nished Mil ford Plaa.<lb/>
tickets to two plays and<lb/>
tour tickets.<lb/>
Further informa-<lb/>
tion is available from<lb/>
Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education, ECU,<lb/>
telephone 757-6143.<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
Buglers Perform<lb/>
lli b I'l II fool sW <lb/>
The Bridgemen Drum and Bugle Corps go through their paces in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium Tuesday evening. The musicians are the only undefeated drum and<lb/>
bugle corps in the nation.<lb/>
Special Offer To E.C.U.<lb/>
Students<lb/>
KA, KX, TKE, AXf, nK, tKT, AXA,<lb/>
ITT, IN, AIt, B0n<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
INTERTRATERNITY COUNCIL<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
ORIENTATION '80<lb/>
Free Cookout and Musk Monday Afternoon at the Bottom of College Hill<lb/>
SUNDAY'S<lb/>
 AT THE <lb/>
" ATTIC '<lb/>
N.C. ? No. 3 JNIGMTCLUB<lb/>
FRESHMAN A E B E C<lb/>
ORIENTATION PHPP<lb/>
STUDENTS M " ??????<lb/>
JUNE 8, 15<lb/>
JULY 6, 13 22<lb/>
MONDAY'S<lb/>
12<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
25.Zi<lb/>
20<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY'<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
?FREE OR  PRICE<lb/>
AVl?CH<lb/>
 Tuft<lb/>
? MO<lb/>
? 1HUH<lb/>
? MM<lb/>
f.DGf<lb/>
? IHIIIUI<lb/>
? CKfMIMDG(<lb/>
?I. TIM<lb/>
'?miw?auM<lb/>
?? fMWtt<lb/>
M mi<lb/>
11 ?'<lb/>
?met("hii<lb/>
?wet it mii<lb/>
fact imn<lb/>
HMItlHWIIMI<lb/>
? at<lb/>
m mwa<lb/>
It M<lb/>
Mmntwnti ? ?'<lb/>
tmta.ti.mu<lb/>
J WfD<lb/>
1 THU?<lb/>
? mi<lb/>
? ??'<lb/>
? tul<lb/>
? TUII<lb/>
? MO<lb/>
10 TMUW<lb/>
ii mi<lb/>
 t?<lb/>
11 (UK<lb/>
i TIMt<lb/>
11 MID<lb/>
17 f?W?<lb/>
it mi<lb/>
if ui<lb/>
n urn<lb/>
II iu?<lb/>
11 t?A<lb/>
t? tmw<lb/>
n mm<lb/>
M f?l<lb/>
II 11<lb/>
jui itao<lb/>
f.M.l<lb/>
Sun ins coin<lb/>
INIfl.Tlf<lb/>
riG.ftuf i' i<lb/>
MG.tUl 11 1<lb/>
?11'H nun<lb/>
CMOlCf<lb/>
rnotel<lb/>
lul?i<lb/>
luf??<lb/>
KKIIIXH<lb/>
wmio? ??r<lb/>
lUPlRG")<lb/>
fair c?ti?c<lb/>
tlMllUK<lb/>
ITNI1 111!<lb/>
l?l 0?17U HWI'Hft<lb/>
IMttMW<lb/>
CMMU1<lb/>
IIMU<lb/>
uaroaitmio<lb/>
CURltlKRttl<lb/>
till tf.llHIHA'lHV<lb/>
as;<lb/>
last Carolina's Party Center"<lb/>
All Orientation Students<lb/>
Admitted FREE<lb/>
? PLUS<lb/>
An Exclusive<lb/>
"Fashion Show"<lb/>
Sponsored by TMi TRAFFIC UOMT<lb/>
JOIN US AT THE ELSO<lb/>
SUNDAY'<lb/>
?HONDA AFTERNOON<lb/>
. TMf INTtMRATERNITV COUHCU<lb/>
THE EllO<lb/>
We the members of the<lb/>
Church of Jesus Christ<lb/>
of Latter Day Saints<lb/>
would like to offer a<lb/>
free opportunity to all<lb/>
ECU students to bring a<lb/>
peaceful painting of our<lb/>
precious Savior in your<lb/>
home. For your free<lb/>
reproduction of our<lb/>
wonderful Savior ready<lb/>
for framing. Please mail<lb/>
coupon to:<lb/>
Santos<lb/>
904 E 14th St<lb/>
Greenville NC 27834<lb/>
$4.81<lb/>
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$11<lb/>
m KODACOLOR 8<lb/>
k? Developed and Printed<lb/>
$5.53<lb/>
24<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL. ONLY'<lb/>
36<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL. ONLY.<lb/>
$7.97<lb/>
'Slide<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
20 EXPOSURE C 1 QO<lb/>
KODACHROME vl.i4i<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
36 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACMROMI<lb/>
PROCESSING oKy<lb/>
$3.15<lb/>
WtH<lb/>
LOW. LOW PRICES ON<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
PROCESSING<lb/>
$2.11<lb/>
KOOACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
SUPER S AND STAMUei<lb/>
UttlTEP OFF<lb/>
iAJM <lb/>
 A A<lb/>
t<lb/>
.?. ? ?tk .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057274_0003"/><lb/>
Still Loves The Work<lb/>
I HI I ASI C AROI INIAN<lb/>
JUl Y 10. I9W)<lb/>
.<lb/>
Doctor's Day Is From Dawn To Dusk<lb/>
B GEORGETTE<lb/>
HEDRICK<lb/>
M I Mrtiu al W nlrr<lb/>
6:30 a.m. The cor-<lb/>
ridors are quiet and<lb/>
dimly lit as Dr. Karl<lb/>
Hasik salks briskly in-<lb/>
to the physician's en-<lb/>
trance at Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
The labor and delivery<lb/>
the room of a patient<lb/>
from Kinston. He ex-<lb/>
plains to the students<lb/>
that the patient has<lb/>
placenta previa, a con-<lb/>
dition in which the<lb/>
placenta is implanted in<lb/>
the lower segment of<lb/>
the uterus below the<lb/>
baby's head. The<lb/>
mother has stayed in<lb/>
unit is ihe first stop of bed three weeks to pre-<lb/>
the day for Hasik, a vent the placenta from<lb/>
portunity and privilege<lb/>
of serving them he<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Establishing a rap-<lb/>
port with a patient<lb/>
throughout her<lb/>
pregnancy and then<lb/>
delivering her baby<lb/>
gives me a very special<lb/>
feeling Hasik adds.<lb/>
At the clinic, Hasik<lb/>
meets with Dr. Lynn<lb/>
Borchert, a specialist in<lb/>
the Department of<lb/>
Obstetrics and<lb/>
Gynecology. Borchert<lb/>
will be supervising<lb/>
Hasik during the clinic.<lb/>
Between visiting pa-<lb/>
tients, the two physi-<lb/>
cians consult v ith each<lb/>
other in the conference<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Hasik has a busy<lb/>
morning at the clinic.<lb/>
Of the five patients<lb/>
scheduled, four of<lb/>
them are new, and<lb/>
Hasik spends extra time<lb/>
with them discussing<lb/>
their special needs and<lb/>
learning their medical<lb/>
histories. He finds time<lb/>
to eat a hamburger at<lb/>
2:00 p.m. during a final<lb/>
conference with Bor-<lb/>
chert.<lb/>
2:30p.m. Back at the<lb/>
hospital, Hasik is<lb/>
out the condi-<lb/>
a diabetic pa-<lb/>
second- ear resident in<lb/>
obstetrics and<lb/>
gynecology at the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine.<lb/>
He checks to see if<lb/>
an deliveries are due<lb/>
soon and consults with<lb/>
a famil practice resi-<lb/>
dent at<lb/>
lion of<lb/>
tient.<lb/>
" Things are quiet<lb/>
this morning in labor<lb/>
and Delivery says<lb/>
Hasik as he heads for<lb/>
the nursing station on<lb/>
the obstetrics floor.<lb/>
'?But it's a different<lb/>
stor out here on the<lb/>
floor We have 26 pa-<lb/>
tients, and many of<lb/>
them have complicated<lb/>
pregnancies<lb/>
i the nursing sta-<lb/>
tion Hasik meets two<lb/>
students from the ECU<lb/>
medical school. The<lb/>
students are on an<lb/>
eight-week rotation in<lb/>
OB GYN, and Hasik is<lb/>
responsible for<lb/>
teaching them as he<lb/>
lakes his morning<lb/>
rounds.<lb/>
Hasik stops outside<lb/>
rupturing.<lb/>
"We always think of<lb/>
the bad things that<lb/>
could happen ex-<lb/>
plains Hasik. "That<lb/>
way we're prepared for<lb/>
problems. We have two<lb/>
patients ? the mother<lb/>
and unborn baby ?<lb/>
and we must pay<lb/>
meticulous attention to<lb/>
all the details of their<lb/>
care and progress if we<lb/>
are to have a healthy<lb/>
mother and baby<lb/>
9 a.m. Hasik's<lb/>
beeper notifies him that<lb/>
his first patient has ar-<lb/>
rived at the School f<lb/>
Medicine Clinic. Seeing<lb/>
patients at the clinic is a<lb/>
special feature of the<lb/>
residency program at<lb/>
ECU, Hasik explains.<lb/>
This feature was one of<lb/>
the points that at-<lb/>
tracted him after com-<lb/>
pleting medical school<lb/>
at the University of<lb/>
Missouri.<lb/>
"Patients see me<lb/>
here at the clinic just<lb/>
like they would in a<lb/>
local doctor's office,<lb/>
and 1 appreciate the op-<lb/>
IMi.<lb/>
K i K?. 111 WORK K<lb/>
responsible for the<lb/>
day's teaching con-<lb/>
ference. As he enters<lb/>
the auditorium at 2:30,<lb/>
he takes some good-<lb/>
natured kidding from<lb/>
the students, residents<lb/>
and faculty about being<lb/>
late. During the next<lb/>
hour, he gives a detail-<lb/>
ed history of two pa-<lb/>
tients ? one who had<lb/>
an unexpected stillborn<lb/>
delivery, and one<lb/>
whose baby was dead in<lb/>
utero.<lb/>
Faculty physicians<lb/>
lead the discussion con-<lb/>
cerning the causes of<lb/>
the problems, possible<lb/>
treatment and preven-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
3:45 p.m. Hasik<lb/>
returns to the floor to<lb/>
"check on a few pro-<lb/>
blems" and to visit<lb/>
Labor and Delivery. A<lb/>
her fourth delivery, and<lb/>
she has not received<lb/>
any prenatal care.<lb/>
Hasik wonders if the<lb/>
baby is premature.<lb/>
4:00 p.m. Hasik at-<lb/>
tends a grand rounds<lb/>
lecture on transsexuals<lb/>
given by the medical<lb/>
school's specialist in<lb/>
psychosomatic<lb/>
OBGYN, Dr. Paul<lb/>
Mozley.<lb/>
5:00 p.m. Hasik<lb/>
returns to the floor<lb/>
with the attending<lb/>
physician who is on call<lb/>
for the night with<lb/>
Hasik. They are<lb/>
discussing the possible<lb/>
emergency arrival of a<lb/>
21-year-old patient has unit in the labor and<lb/>
just been admitted. It is delivery area. MacKen-<lb/>
patient when Hasik's<lb/>
beeper blares. "Hasik!<lb/>
Labor and Delivery<lb/>
He juns down the cor-<lb/>
ridor, a medical student<lb/>
close on his heels. At<lb/>
the nursing station in<lb/>
the unit, the staff is<lb/>
ready with sterile suits.<lb/>
"How much time do<lb/>
I have?" says Hasik.<lb/>
"None replies the<lb/>
nurse. Seven minutes<lb/>
later a newborn's cry<lb/>
drifts into the hallway.<lb/>
The baby marks about<lb/>
the sixtieth delivery for<lb/>
Hasik since he began<lb/>
his residence less than a<lb/>
year ago.<lb/>
6:30p.m. A critically<lb/>
ill patient with<lb/>
hypertension is<lb/>
transferred to the<lb/>
special fetal-maternal<lb/>
day in Labor and<lb/>
Delivery. He completes<lb/>
another set of rounds<lb/>
closely for the slightest and gives the next resi-<lb/>
change in condition. dent reporting for work<lb/>
For the remainder of an update on special<lb/>
the evening, Hasik<lb/>
spends his time between<lb/>
this patient and those<lb/>
on the floor who re-<lb/>
quire special attention.<lb/>
At 3:00 a.m. he takes a<lb/>
break for a sandwich in<lb/>
the hospital's 24-hour<lb/>
snack bar.<lb/>
4:15 a.m. Hasik goes<lb/>
to the "on call room"<lb/>
provided for residents<lb/>
and faculty physicians<lb/>
problems to watch.<lb/>
7:45 p.m. Hasik<lb/>
leaves the hospital. He<lb/>
has worked over 37<lb/>
hours, and he is tired.<lb/>
"The schedule is as<lb/>
stressful as you would<lb/>
expect says Hasik.<lb/>
"It takes a toll on your<lb/>
personal life, social life<lb/>
? and your sleep. But<lb/>
it is the pressure that<lb/>
helps me develop my<lb/>
who spend their nights judgment and teaches<lb/>
at the hospital. He en- me how to set priorities<lb/>
joys 45 minutes of sleep and make decisions,<lb/>
before being called to After all, dealing with<lb/>
do a delivery, the first problems cooly,<lb/>
of four he will perform smoothly and efficient-<lb/>
during the day.<lb/>
2:00 p.m. After a<lb/>
quick sandwich, Hasik<lb/>
ly is what being a physi-<lb/>
cian means he says.<lb/>
"1 love it<lb/>
Papers Vie For 'Oldest'<lb/>
Not Brainwashed<lb/>
Dr. Karl Hasik and nurses.<lb/>
Student Researches Moonies<lb/>
CH) Noel<lb/>
Weyrich's friends were<lb/>
frightened when they<lb/>
heard the U. of Penn-<lb/>
sslvania student jour-<lb/>
nalist planned to attend<lb/>
a five-day Moonie<lb/>
seminar to research an<lb/>
article on the Unifica-<lb/>
tion Church.<lb/>
"They thought 1<lb/>
would be brainwash-<lb/>
ed says Weyrich.<lb/>
"But 1 was sick o' hear-<lb/>
ing garbage from the<lb/>
Moonies and sick o<lb/>
hearing unreasonable<lb/>
amounts of fear from<lb/>
other people. 1 thought<lb/>
nobody could brain-<lb/>
wash somebody that is<lb/>
satisfied with his lot in<lb/>
life<lb/>
most of the Moonie<lb/>
recruits were people<lb/>
who couldn't deal with<lb/>
the pressure and com-<lb/>
petitiveness of modern<lb/>
life. They were at-<lb/>
tracted to the church,<lb/>
h&amp; maintains, because<lb/>
"the Moonies relieve<lb/>
their two greatest anx-<lb/>
ieties ? they assign you<lb/>
a wife or husband and a<lb/>
job to do, with the feel-<lb/>
ing that you're working<lb/>
for something higher<lb/>
Weyrich says his trip<lb/>
to Florida with<lb/>
members of CARP, an<lb/>
off-shoot of the<lb/>
church, proved his<lb/>
theory correct. He<lb/>
enrolled in the seminar<lb/>
without identifying<lb/>
himself as a journalist,<lb/>
and spent four days<lb/>
listening to lectures,<lb/>
singing, eating and liv-<lb/>
ing with the Moonies<lb/>
and their potential con-<lb/>
verts before being ex-<lb/>
pelled from the camp<lb/>
for asking critical ques-<lb/>
tions. Weyrich is critical of<lb/>
In a three-part series much of the media<lb/>
written for the Daily coverage of the Moonie<lb/>
Pennsylvanian's 34th cult, including a story<lb/>
Street Magazine, in a Florida paper<lb/>
Weyrich says he found aboul a girl who was<lb/>
"rescued" from the<lb/>
same seminar he was<lb/>
attending. The<lb/>
Moonies don't have to<lb/>
kidnap and brainwash<lb/>
people, he insists,<lb/>
"because there are<lb/>
enough troubled people<lb/>
walking around who<lb/>
find some solace in the<lb/>
church<lb/>
Campus reaction to<lb/>
his story was good,<lb/>
Weyrich says, although<lb/>
he still thinks the<lb/>
Moonies are nothing to<lb/>
fear. He received<lb/>
several letters from<lb/>
CARP members after<lb/>
the articles appeared,<lb/>
including one from a<lb/>
seminar leader who<lb/>
said Weyrich was ob-<lb/>
viously a Communist,<lb/>
but had "missed a great<lb/>
opportunity" to be sav-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Bo Derek Playing Basketball?<lb/>
Students Can't Score A '10'<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
GREEN, KY. (CW) -<lb/>
Is Mike Wallace the son<lb/>
of Gov. George<lb/>
Wallace? Does Bo<lb/>
Derek play guard for<lb/>
the University of Ken-<lb/>
tuckv basketball team?<lb/>
Pirates Now Number 2<lb/>
In Summer League Play<lb/>
The ECU baseball because of their pit- and Mike Sage (.378) The Pirates travel to<lb/>
team is entering the last ching depth. They have with their part in keep- Rocky Mount Friday to<lb/>
two weeks of summer four very good pitchers ing the team high in the play N.C. Wesleyan.<lb/>
Apparently some<lb/>
Western Kentucky<lb/>
University students<lb/>
think so, much to the<lb/>
dismay of their English<lb/>
instructor, Robert<lb/>
Wurster. He recently<lb/>
conducted a survey,<lb/>
asking 60 of his<lb/>
students to identify 50<lb/>
people and organiza-<lb/>
tions of current<lb/>
popularity. The<lb/>
average score was 52<lb/>
percent, leading<lb/>
Wurster to conclude<lb/>
that his students make<lb/>
little effort to keep up<lb/>
with current events.<lb/>
Wallace, a CBS<lb/>
newscaster, was also<lb/>
identified as a car<lb/>
dealer and actress<lb/>
Suzanne Somers was<lb/>
described by one stu-<lb/>
dent as "an interna-<lb/>
tional students' ad-<lb/>
viser<lb/>
The least known<lb/>
figure was Bowling<lb/>
Green's mayor while<lb/>
comedian Steve Martin<lb/>
lost a close race for best<lb/>
known personality<lb/>
(CH) ? For some<lb/>
time now, two college<lb/>
newspapers have been<lb/>
quietly billing<lb/>
themselves as the na-<lb/>
tion's oldest. But when<lb/>
both sent letters to a<lb/>
third college newspaper<lb/>
on the same day, the<lb/>
question of whose<lb/>
claim is accurate arose,<lb/>
apparently for the se-<lb/>
cond time.<lb/>
Letters from the<lb/>
Miami Student of<lb/>
Miami U. (Ohio) and<lb/>
the Dartmouth of Dart-<lb/>
mouth U each bearing<lb/>
a letterhead with the<lb/>
"nation's oldest"<lb/>
claim, led the U. of<lb/>
Michigan Daily to<lb/>
report the conflicting<lb/>
claims on its front<lb/>
page. Since then, stu-<lb/>
dent editors for both<lb/>
papers have been trying<lb/>
to determine the<lb/>
legitimacy of their<lb/>
claims.<lb/>
The Dartmouth<lb/>
started publishing in<lb/>
1799, says Executive<lb/>
Editor Brent West,<lb/>
while Paul Furriga,<lb/>
editor of the Miami<lb/>
Student, says that<lb/>
paper's predecessor<lb/>
began in 1826. Furriga<lb/>
adds that the Student's<lb/>
claim is based on being<lb/>
in continuous publica-<lb/>
tion longest, even<lb/>
though it wasn't<lb/>
published from 1873<lb/>
until 1885 while the<lb/>
university itself was<lb/>
closed down. West isn't<lb/>
sure whether the Dart-<lb/>
mouth has been con-<lb/>
tinuously published or<lb/>
not, but says his cur-<lb/>
rent publisher is look-<lb/>
ing into it.<lb/>
This debate arose<lb/>
once before, in the<lb/>
1950s, when a Dart-<lb/>
mouth editor informed<lb/>
the Miami Student that<lb/>
its claim was false.<lb/>
Despite lengthy debate,<lb/>
the issue wasn't resolv-<lb/>
ed then, and it may not<lb/>
be resolved now. unless<lb/>
definitive records of<lb/>
both papers can be ob-<lb/>
tained.<lb/>
coupon coupon coupon coupon coupon coupon<lb/>
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STUDENTS<lb/>
Give Mom a Break<lb/>
Wash your own Clothes at<lb/>
THE WASH HOUSE<lb/>
E. 10th St. &amp; Dickenson Ave.<lb/>
or<lb/>
Kore o-AAat<lb/>
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You'll Enjoy using our Modern<lb/>
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WASH DRY FOLD<lb/>
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at least 2 washers. Valid loth &amp;<lb/>
14th St. Void After wY 2.i9eo<lb/>
league play with a<lb/>
record topped only by<lb/>
first-ranked UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
Wilmington is one<lb/>
game ahead of ECU's<lb/>
13-6 record, and ECU<lb/>
coach Gary Overton<lb/>
said this week that pit-<lb/>
ching has made the dif-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
"Wilmington is the<lb/>
toughest team we've<lb/>
played so far, and it's<lb/>
to rely on, and that has<lb/>
been the difference bet-<lb/>
ween them and the rest<lb/>
of the league Over-<lb/>
ton said.<lb/>
But good pitching<lb/>
has also been important<lb/>
for the Pirates. At 7-0,<lb/>
Overton called ECU<lb/>
pitcher Bill Wilder the<lb/>
"spark plug of the<lb/>
team Overton also<lb/>
credited top hitters<lb/>
Todd Hendley (.433)<lb/>
standings.<lb/>
"We've lost a<lb/>
number of seniors this<lb/>
year and we've been<lb/>
playing with less ex-<lb/>
perienced players, but<lb/>
we're very happy with<lb/>
the season thus far<lb/>
Overton said.<lb/>
The next home game<lb/>
will be Saturday, when<lb/>
Campbell comes to<lb/>
Harrington field for a<lb/>
double-header that will<lb/>
begin at 6 p.m.<lb/>
The ECU team will<lb/>
also meet Louisburg<lb/>
here on July 14 at 7:30<lb/>
Carolina Opry House<lb/>
FIRST BIRTHDAY PARTY<lb/>
Come help us celebrate our<lb/>
Birthday with Country Music-<lb/>
Texas Style.<lb/>
Second Big Week<lb/>
NEXTWEEK<lb/>
L<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Wanted<lb/>
The<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
is now accepting<lb/>
applications for news<lb/>
writers. If you have good<lb/>
basic English skills, we<lb/>
will train you in<lb/>
newswriting techniques.<lb/>
Apply in our office<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Publications Building<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN<lb/>
aAfe-<lb/>
&amp;t<lb/>
r?f<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
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Complete with Idaho King Baked<lb/>
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J908 E. 10th. St. 75&amp;-tt71g<lb/>
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(formerly Side of the Rood Gong)<lb/>
July 15 19<lb/>
Starting Off The WeekTues, and Wed-Only<lb/>
He Tues. July 15th-Ladies Free, ECU Men $1.00<lb/>
 Wed. July 16th-Ladies Free, ECU Men $2.00<lb/>
 Tues. &amp; Wed ECU Students-<lb/>
Ride the Bull $1.00<lb/>
 Thurs. July 17-Ladies $1.00<lb/>
 Free prizes and Specials during both of<lb/>
these greot nights!<lb/>
For Further Information Call: 758-3943<lb/>
Coming Aug. 16th and 17th- First Annual<lb/>
Carolina Cowboy Rodeo-Pitt Co. Fairgrounds<lb/>
is<lb/>
Fosdick's<lb/>
"All You Can Eat"<lb/>
Seafood Buffet<lb/>
Every night from S till closino, we will feature<lb/>
our fabulous new Seafood Juffet ? Delicious<lb/>
Fried Shrimp, Golden Brown Oysters, Fish,<lb/>
Deviled Crab, Shrimp Creole, Fried Chicken,<lb/>
Clam Chowder, Slaw, Hush Puppies and Your<lb/>
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A Great Place for Seafood<lb/>
Lunch Dinner Catering<lb/>
Coming Soon:<lb/>
Oyster Bar<lb/>
Freeh Seafood Mat<lb/>
<pb facs="00057274_0004"/><lb/>
(Ztye ?aat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Richard Grli n, ?????, ??.<lb/>
Robert m. Swaim, mhm ?, Charles Sune, ?? ?? r?.?<lb/>
Nicky Francis. ????? ??, Candi Harrington, ?,? &amp;?<lb/>
GtoRc.t Hn ricH, onMothiw Terry Gray, ???<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, ?w.??? Steve Bachner, ??????<lb/>
1'nnlui.ittin Umavei<lb/>
July 10, 1980<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Abortion<lb/>
High Court Rules Against Poor<lb/>
The Nixon Court has struck again<lb/>
with a ruling that severely com-<lb/>
promises the rights of the poor. The<lb/>
Court upheld the Hyde Amend-<lb/>
ment, which denies federal funding<lb/>
for abortions except in certain cir-<lb/>
cumstances. The most important<lb/>
question is whether government can<lb/>
fund medically necessary pro-<lb/>
cedures, deny funding on another<lb/>
and protect the rights of the poor all<lb/>
at the same time. Justice Potter<lb/>
Stewart, speaking for the majority,<lb/>
said yes.<lb/>
Stewart maintained that abortion<lb/>
is different from other medical pro-<lb/>
cedures "because no other pro-<lb/>
cedure involves the purposeful ter-<lb/>
mination of a potential life He<lb/>
added that no equal protection<lb/>
rights had been infringed because<lb/>
abortion had not been banned ?<lb/>
only federal funding for abortions.<lb/>
In 1973 the Supreme Court ruled<lb/>
in Roe v. Wade that a woman has a<lb/>
constitutional right to an abortion,<lb/>
at least in the early stages of<lb/>
pregnancy. Justice John Paul<lb/>
Stevens wrote in a dissenting opi-<lb/>
nion that government must govern<lb/>
impartially. By enacting the Hyde<lb/>
Amendment, Congress has failed to<lb/>
govern impartially and has denied<lb/>
poor women their constitutional<lb/>
right to an abortion. The Supreme<lb/>
Court put their stamp of approval<lb/>
on the Hyde Amendment and, in ef-<lb/>
fect, has denied poor women their<lb/>
right to an abortion.<lb/>
Medicaid presently pays for<lb/>
almost every type of medical pro-<lb/>
cedure for those who qualify.<lb/>
Everything from hospitalization, to<lb/>
doctor's visits, to drug prescrip-<lb/>
tions, are covered by the federal<lb/>
government. If government has<lb/>
decided that it should fund almost<lb/>
all medical procedures, which it has,<lb/>
then it should be consistent in its<lb/>
funding. It should fund abortions.<lb/>
In defending the majority, Justice<lb/>
Stewart's arguments are ludicrous.<lb/>
Government cannot offer equal<lb/>
protection of the law to poor<lb/>
women when the Court affirms a<lb/>
woman's right to an abortion yet<lb/>
denies the abortion. A poor woman<lb/>
goes to the government for an abor-<lb/>
tion because she cannot afford one.<lb/>
Her ability to get an abortion is<lb/>
severely limited, if not eliminated,<lb/>
when she is denied funding. She is<lb/>
still as poor as she was before the<lb/>
Supreme Court ruling.<lb/>
By ruling as they did, the Court<lb/>
said that some Americans have<lb/>
more rights than others ? a classic<lb/>
case of the "Haves" vs. "The<lb/>
Have-Nots<lb/>
'Senator No' At It Again At<lb/>
The Republican Convention<lb/>
Just when everyone thought Sen.<lb/>
Jesse Helms could embarrass North<lb/>
Carolina no further, he became a<lb/>
delegate to the Republican National<lb/>
Convention in Detroit. Helms'<lb/>
latest move was an attempt to<lb/>
remove endorsement of the Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment from the<lb/>
Republican platform.<lb/>
The Republican party has sup-<lb/>
ported ERA for 40 years; now the<lb/>
Senator from North Carolina<lb/>
wishes to remove any mention of<lb/>
the amendment from the platform.<lb/>
Helms claims to have enough votes<lb/>
for an anti-ERA plank, but he<lb/>
would rather not mention it in the<lb/>
interest of party unity.<lb/>
The Republican Platform Com-<lb/>
mittee voted Tuesday to delete ERA<lb/>
from this year's platform. Of course<lb/>
Helms played an important role in<lb/>
the committee's decision. It now ap-<lb/>
pears that there will be a floor battle<lb/>
over the proposition when the full<lb/>
convention meets next week. Any<lb/>
party unity that has been stressed<lb/>
may now be lost. The Republican<lb/>
Party would be well served if it<lb/>
followed the lead of Helms' col-<lb/>
leagues in the Senate and refused to<lb/>
take his proposals seriously.<lb/>
If the latest polls are correct,<lb/>
Reagan will have few problems<lb/>
defeating President Carter in the<lb/>
fall election. If the party doesn't<lb/>
want to alienate millions of<lb/>
Americans, it should drop Helms'<lb/>
idea. Reagan is already identified as<lb/>
near-reactionary, and any opposi-<lb/>
tion to ERA will drive him further<lb/>
to the right in the eyes of many.<lb/>
Such opposition could force many<lb/>
to reconsider their support for the<lb/>
man who appears to have already<lb/>
clinched the election.<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
Stoned Again; Islamic<lb/>
Justice The Iranian Way<lb/>
For those who have forgotten<lb/>
about Iran, there's an item that may<lb/>
refresh your memory about the peo-<lb/>
ple President Carter has had to deal<lb/>
with over the last eight months. Last<lb/>
week in the city of Kerman, located<lb/>
in southeastern Iran, the first<lb/>
known stoning in recent history<lb/>
took place. (You remember stoning.<lb/>
Think back to 2000 years ago.)<lb/>
Two women and two men were<lb/>
found guilty of prostitution,<lb/>
adultery, sodomy and rape. Islamic<lb/>
law requires harsh punishment for a<lb/>
sexual offense - in this case death.<lb/>
After the convkis were found<lb/>
i<lb/>
guilty they were masked with<lb/>
ceremonial 'hoods of the dead<lb/>
Next each convict was buried in<lb/>
earth up to their chests. The<lb/>
presiding Islamic judge threw the<lb/>
first stone and shortly thereafter<lb/>
five onlookers began bombarding<lb/>
each with stones. Within fifteen<lb/>
minutes all four were dead.<lb/>
Islamic Justice.<lb/>
When one official was asked why<lb/>
stoning had not been used previous-<lb/>
ly, he said: "Perhaps it's because we<lb/>
haven't been following the laws of<lb/>
Islam<lb/>
I<lb/>
'Ever Seen Signed Editorials?9<lb/>
Your July 3, 1980 "Campus Forum"<lb/>
contains a rebuttal from Elmer Meyer<lb/>
Jr Vice Chancellor for Student Life,<lb/>
concerning the WZMB travel controver-<lb/>
sy. My concern is Dr. Meyer's last<lb/>
paragraph, specifically the reference he<lb/>
makes to "those who write Opinion ar-<lb/>
ticles<lb/>
Dr. Meyer, have you ever seen<lb/>
editorial articles signed in any<lb/>
newspaper? 1 wonder if you would make<lb/>
the same comment,  those who write<lb/>
Opinion articles ought to sign their own<lb/>
names to them so they can be held ac-<lb/>
countable to the editors of the News<lb/>
and Observer, Washington Post or The<lb/>
New York Times? 1 think not. Was the<lb/>
implication unintended and unfor-<lb/>
tunate? 1 would like to believe it was.<lb/>
MARKH.HENN1NG<lb/>
Sophmore<lb/>
History Major<lb/>
Textbook Policy Questioned<lb/>
One student told me recently that she<lb/>
had just completed a class that required<lb/>
a brand new, latest-edition textbook,<lb/>
cost $17. She and her classmates were<lb/>
unable to sell their books back to the<lb/>
campus bookstore because the book<lb/>
would no longer be used.<lb/>
The book was discontinued, and the<lb/>
same class will be taught during the se-<lb/>
cond summer session by a different pro-<lb/>
fessor and with a different textbook.<lb/>
No one disagrees with a professor's<lb/>
right to chose the textbook of his choice<lb/>
for a class. But shouldn't a professor<lb/>
consider the right of students?<lb/>
I believe that professors should tell<lb/>
students of the future status of a text.<lb/>
What if the student is taking the course<lb/>
only for elective credit?<lb/>
CHARLIE SHERROD<lb/>
SGA President<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from the library.<lb/>
Letters must include the name, major<lb/>
and classification, address, phone<lb/>
number and signature of the author(s).<lb/>
Letters should be limited to three<lb/>
typewritten pages, double-spaced, or<lb/>
neatly printed. All letters are subject to<lb/>
editing for brevity, obcenity and libel.<lb/>
Letters by the same author are limited to<lb/>
one each 30 days (14 during summer ses-<lb/>
sions).<lb/>
Personal attacks will not be permit-<lb/>
ted. Names of authors will be withheld<lb/>
only when inclusion of the name will<lb/>
cause the author embarrassment or<lb/>
ridicule, such as letters concerning<lb/>
homosexuality, drug abuse, etc. Names<lb/>
will be withheld only on the author's re-<lb/>
quest.<lb/>
Proud To Be An American<lb/>
By ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
This last July 4th saw Americans<lb/>
celebrating 204 years of freedom from<lb/>
tyranny. It was a freedom that was hard<lb/>
fought.<lb/>
All too often today we think in<lb/>
negative terms about our life here in<lb/>
America. Sure, gasoline prices arc<lb/>
higher, but you can still drive, and<lb/>
almost every American has an<lb/>
automobile. Yes, food prices are high,<lb/>
but we still have plenty to eat.<lb/>
There are more Americans at work<lb/>
and for higher pay than ever before. Of<lb/>
course we've always had problems, but<lb/>
we've always had the courage and the<lb/>
determination to overcome them.<lb/>
Gloom never got us anywhere; it s time<lb/>
to get back to enjoying the good life.<lb/>
That is what America is all about.<lb/>
We have the highest standard of living<lb/>
in the world. We are the richest, best<lb/>
fed, and moi comfortable peopk in the<lb/>
world today.<lb/>
In all of history, no dream has exercis-<lb/>
ed so powerful a hold on the human<lb/>
spirit as the American Dream. Basic to<lb/>
that dream is the right of each individual<lb/>
to soar as high as his talents and abilities<lb/>
will take him.<lb/>
We must remember that to continue<lb/>
to enjoy the good life we must work and<lb/>
produce. We must also constantly strive<lb/>
to educate ourselves, for ignorance will<lb/>
be the downfall of our civilization.<lb/>
Remember: "To those upon whom<lb/>
much is bestowed, much is expected<lb/>
We should constantly remind ourselves<lb/>
that everything we have, enjoy, and ever<lb/>
will have is because of the American way<lb/>
of life.<lb/>
Remember: "You reap what you<lb/>
sow If we put a lot into life then wc<lb/>
will get a lot out of it. Those who con-<lb/>
tribute nothing to our society will not,<lb/>
and should not, get anything out of it.<lb/>
It is a lime for a revival of patriotism.<lb/>
In recent ycrs patriotism ?s ait uty<lb/>
word to some, and there were those who<lb/>
tried to taint it with sinister motives and<lb/>
detract from its virtue. But if we don't<lb/>
take pride in ourselves, our great nation<lb/>
and our great state, then what have we?<lb/>
A person without pride and dignity is a<lb/>
hollow person.<lb/>
Let us never forget the many wars that<lb/>
have been fought before and during our<lb/>
lifetime to protect our peopk and our<lb/>
way of life from the onslaught of tyran-<lb/>
ny and dictatorship. By the same token<lb/>
let us not forget the toil and labor of our<lb/>
parents, and their parents before ihem<lb/>
which put us where we are today.<lb/>
Everything that surrounds us is the<lb/>
product of someone's labor and talent.<lb/>
The elements of hard work,<lb/>
patriotism, and a reverence for God are<lb/>
what separate Americans from less for-<lb/>
turtate peopk around the world.<lb/>
Stop and think sometime about what<lb/>
it really means io live in the United<lb/>
States of America, and count your many<lb/>
hkvsings.<lb/>
IIIWW<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057274_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JULY 1980<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Local Poetry Journal Features National Talent<lb/>
By JON VI HAS<lb/>
VMslanl tt-dtun-N Idili.r<lb/>
the tusi time in recent memory, the publication<lb/>
he East Carolina Poetry Forum, "Tar River<lb/>
ry has published only a pair of poets from the<lb/>
enville area. Number 2 of Volume 19 of that journal<lb/>
.is appeared on the shelves of various bookstores, in-<lb/>
ng the Student Supply Store here on campus, and<lb/>
;ontains some o the poetry o leading poets of the con-<lb/>
rar period. l)aid ignatow, Gary Miranda and<lb/>
osla Holub are just three o the literary luminaries<lb/>
se poems grace the pages o this new edition of the<lb/>
illy published journal.<lb/>
Film View<lb/>
Nicholson Shines<lb/>
But Duvall Can't<lb/>
Quite Convince<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
I i .tiurt n f ditof<lb/>
Stanley Kubrick does everything in his films except<lb/>
He finds a story, shapes the script, writes or co-<lb/>
writes the screenplay, chooses all the players, supervises<lb/>
the lighting and costumes, operates he cameras, directs<lb/>
the cast, edits the film, and then supervises the publici-<lb/>
ty, .<lb/>
In 1 S ning, he continues in this tradition while<lb/>
directing Jack Nicholson to one of his best, if not most<lb/>
unique, performances.<lb/>
1 he film, based on the pulp gothic novel by Stephen<lb/>
king, uses only, the essential elements oi plot from the<lb/>
novel and turns them into pure Grand Guignol.<lb/>
I or one of the first limes, at least since Dr.<lb/>
Strangelove, the leading player in a Kubrick film is at<lb/>
is memorable as the photography, and the roots o<lb/>
 ? ckN flaii has proved to be in his skill as a<lb/>
her. 1 ach scent in rhe Shining, for thai mat-<lb/>
h shot, seems to be arranged either for maximum<lb/>
shock effect oi to help build towards that effect.<lb/>
When writer lack 1 orrence (Nicholson) finally loses<lb/>
mind, and he must be completely crazy to explain<lb/>
some oi the more illogical aspects of his sadistic actions,<lb/>
djid takes to his wife (Shelley Duvall) and little boy<lb/>
(Damn 1 loyd) with an axe. there are instances where,<lb/>
a spin second, the action is frozen, as it would be for<lb/>
a sn photograph. Then (he props begin lo move. Add<lb/>
his Kubrick's use ol color and dazzling special ef-<lb/>
the color is stark, without bright tones ? and<lb/>
the perfect transition of vision from mind to<lb/>
e are only two worlds in which life is this stark:<lb/>
1: Kubrick's and the subconscious. As it happens,<lb/>
il interests Kubrick are life's paradoxes, in-<lb/>
iruities, and absurdities - not the stuff that films<lb/>
commonly made o but that hasn't stopped the<lb/>
?ctor thus far and doesn't even slow him down in The<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
Moreover, he is certain that these things will interest<lb/>
other people as well. W hen he decided to make what he<lb/>
Is a "nightmare comedy" about the results o isola-<lb/>
n on the average fellow, he fell il would have enor-<lb/>
See KUBRICK, Pane 6, col 1<lb/>
Holub, a Czech poet of some note, is represented by a<lb/>
marvelous word picture called "The Dam Holub's<lb/>
poetry, skillfully translated by Dana Habova and Stuart<lb/>
Friebert, uses the passing of water oer the dam to<lb/>
represent the passage of time through the lives of us all.<lb/>
The image is particularly powerful in the last lines,<lb/>
"Deep downfish swim in cathedrals.And every one of<lb/>
usis called by name<lb/>
Gary Miranda, a nominee for this year's Pulitzer<lb/>
Prize for Poetry for his "Listeners at The Breathing<lb/>
Place, has three poems in this issue. The first, "Where<lb/>
This listening Could Go opens with a quote from<lb/>
Rilke's "Sonnets to Orpheus" that contains not only<lb/>
the words of the title, but also the sentiment of the<lb/>
poem. The poem seems to be a quest for a place " here<lb/>
this Listening Could Go Included in the poem are a<lb/>
number of images that may seem to be conventional but<lb/>
their juxtaposition is so startling that the effect created<lb/>
is original and supremely fictional. The images of a<lb/>
Haydn symphony and a carpenter's craft occur in the<lb/>
same stanza; both are used to describe the country on<lb/>
the other side of Colin's Gateway, the place that the<lb/>
poet seeks.<lb/>
Miranda's Pulitzer nominated work is reviewed by<lb/>
Philip Raisor(represented in the issue by a poem as well)<lb/>
in a particularly intelligent essay that is only one part of<lb/>
a larger review that attempts to explain the nature of<lb/>
contemporary poetry. The eight pages that Raisor<lb/>
Nicholson attacks Duvall in Kubrick's "The Shining"<lb/>
Nicholson is sublime; Duvall is ridiculous.<lb/>
devotes to five supposedly representative poets are full<lb/>
of vague generalizations about the so-called confes-<lb/>
sional mode and the "Breathing Places' that poets and<lb/>
poetry need.<lb/>
David Ignatow. probably the best-known ol the poets<lb/>
in the anthology, also has three poems in the issue. But<lb/>
his efforts seem to be lacking in the high seriousness of<lb/>
purpose that characterizes his other work. "At Nii!ht"<lb/>
is the only one of the three that is truly outstanding and<lb/>
it is so short that it will probably be overlooked by any<lb/>
but the most careful reader. "As 1 Endure The Silence<lb/>
the firsi of Ignatow pieces, never rises above simple<lb/>
See PROKS, Paye 6. col. 6<lb/>
Kubrick Makes<lb/>
The Ultimate<lb/>
Horror Movie<lb/>
B COLIN DANGAARD<lb/>
l ?pr i-t! I irr, xpitfiiit nt<lb/>
HOLLYWOOD ? Jack Nicholson arches his<lb/>
eyebrows and Hashes that devilish grin. " I OVE being<lb/>
scary he says. "There's nothing like having people<lb/>
take a little step lo the side when they see you com-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Nicholson, then, has good reason to be happy. His<lb/>
latest movie. The Shining, is searing people in sufficient<lb/>
numbers to make it a box-office hit, second onlv to Ihe<lb/>
Empire Strikes Back.<lb/>
For Nicholson. 43. it's his biggesi success since One<lb/>
Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. In the Hollywood poke-<lb/>
game, he is holding a full hand, hut some of the card<lb/>
could be stronger.<lb/>
His longtime girlfriend Anjelica Huston will n<lb/>
marry him ? although he keeps asking ? and despite<lb/>
his popularity he still can't get a job in town for any ol<lb/>
his friends.<lb/>
And even with this movie there is cont ?ers,<lb/>
some people simply tailing to regard chopped children<lb/>
as entertainment.<lb/>
In The Shining, directed by Stanley Kubrick.<lb/>
Nicholson plays a writer who lives with his wife (Sheilev<lb/>
Duvall) and young son (Danny 1 loyd) at a large moun-<lb/>
tain resort closed down foi the winter.<lb/>
It is built on an old Indian burial ground and there are<lb/>
unanswered questions about the last caretaker, who<lb/>
chopped his family to death with an ae. then shot<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
In the same job. and in identical isolation, Nicholson<lb/>
apparently becomes obsessed by the same demons and.<lb/>
drooling at the mouth, axe in hand, sialks his family<lb/>
through a setting where the ghosts materialize as real<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Billed as "the ultimate horror movie it's a fitting<lb/>
follow up lo Cuckoo, in which Nicholson played a crazy<lb/>
of another kind. Obviously he is cornering the market<lb/>
on roles for the demonstratively tormented. Certainly.<lb/>
he is building an unusual following.<lb/>
As he admits: "I have strange fans yeah. 1 gci unusual<lb/>
confrontations in parking lots. A man comes up. invites<lb/>
me to his cave in Laurel Canyon, says he's lorn Mix's<lb/>
alter ego and wants me to see his ghost horse. 1 get that a<lb/>
lot, veah<lb/>
Survival Food Booms In New Hard Times<lb/>
By CONNIE BLOOM<lb/>
Knight Ruldir NcwspjptTx<lb/>
KKON. Ohio As the value oi ihe dollar shrinks,<lb/>
more and more people are sinking their money ? and<lb/>
teeth into long-life "survival foods<lb/>
. ou can't eat gold or silver said an Ohio lawyer<lb/>
who has invested Sfr.iHX) in survival food for his family.<lb/>
' 1 his will be worse than the Great Depression. 1 an-<lb/>
ticipate a complete demise of our monetary system in<lb/>
ihe next few years.<lb/>
?" I here's going lo be looting, panic, rioting and even<lb/>
k iiling (for food) he said. "I've stored ammunition to<lb/>
protect that food and yes. the answer is I'm willing to<lb/>
kill to protect it<lb/>
Storing mass quantities of freeze-dried or dehydrated<lb/>
food is one step in an economic survival plan advocated<lb/>
by financial writer Howard Ruff in his best-selling book<lb/>
How to Prosper During the Coming Bad Years,<lb/>
(Warner paperback, $2.95). Ruff believes imminent<lb/>
depression and social unrest will make individual self-<lb/>
sufficiency a must for daily living.<lb/>
Not all the people buying survival foods have such ex-<lb/>
treme reasons foj doing so. They simply cite rising food<lb/>
prices and the possibility of strikes tying up food sup-<lb/>
plies.<lb/>
In January, a Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, couple made the<lb/>
final purchase on what has become a $3,000, three-year<lb/>
supply of dried and freeze-dried foods with indefinite<lb/>
storage life.<lb/>
"We haven't purchased gold or silver said the hus-<lb/>
band, who ? like others who have purchased the food<lb/>
? declined lo give his name, saying he feared break-ins.<lb/>
"Our investment is based on the economy, inflation,<lb/>
shortage of gas, truck strikes As sure as the sun comes<lb/>
up. these prices are not coming down<lb/>
There are no statistics on how many people are stock-<lb/>
ing their basements and storerooms with cans and<lb/>
pouches of dehydrated edibles, but companies which<lb/>
sell the food say business is booming.<lb/>
Dick Mankamyer and Susie McCulloeh, co-owners of<lb/>
Survival Center and Natural Food Store in Ravenna<lb/>
Township near Akron, sell Mountain House survival<lb/>
foods made bv Oregon freeze Drv Foods in Mbany,<lb/>
Ore.<lb/>
Mankamyer said that in the past si months his sales<lb/>
have quadrupled, and he gets about 300 phone inquiries<lb/>
about the food each week.<lb/>
"A year ago, we would unload deliveries by hand<lb/>
Mankamyer said. "We've grown in sales from an<lb/>
average of 40 cases a month to 160<lb/>
A spokesman for Sam Andy survival foods in River<lb/>
side, Calif agreed the increasing sales are a national<lb/>
trend.<lb/>
See FOOD, Pae 6, col. I<lb/>
Album View<lb/>
Jackson Browne,<lb/>
Newest Effort Is<lb/>
Perhaps His Best<lb/>
B PAT MINCES<lb/>
Jackson Browne is the finest singersongwriter<lb/>
in American music. Though some may have a bet-<lb/>
ici voice or belter compositional skills (Al Jar-<lb/>
reau, Joni Mitchell, or The Boss), few possess the<lb/>
emotional intensity, lyrical dynamism, or social<lb/>
consciousness that Jackson does.<lb/>
He is the most impressive individual to emerge<lb/>
from the previous decade of ambiguous committ-<lb/>
ment to the conception of music as a potent art<lb/>
form as opposed lo the pursuit of material suc-<lb/>
eess. His capacity for self-revelation and lyrical<lb/>
imagery remains unparalleled in popular music<lb/>
and he has become more than just a prestigious<lb/>
musician; he is a spokesman for a whole genera-<lb/>
tion of enlightened adults.<lb/>
Humor<lb/>
Dorm Cooking<lb/>
An Adventure<lb/>
See BROWNf, Page 6, col. 1<lb/>
Browne's finest hour came with The<lb/>
Pretender, released in 1976, which was<lb/>
perhaps the finest album released during<lb/>
that dubious decade. It was a monument<lb/>
to individual perseverenee in the light of<lb/>
tremendous pressure.<lb/>
By DAVID NORK1S<lb/>
Stall Mnu-r<lb/>
Anywhere between zero and five<lb/>
limes a day, ihe average ECU siu-<lb/>
dent prepares a meal, often in the<lb/>
most makeshift kitchens im-<lb/>
aginable. (Any kitchen that consists<lb/>
of a hotplate on the floor and an op-<lb/>
tional toaster-oven on top of the<lb/>
television can safely be considered<lb/>
"makeshift)<lb/>
Many studens arrive at college<lb/>
woefully unprepared for dorm life,<lb/>
unable to cook even a proper ham<lb/>
sandwich, much less complicated<lb/>
hot dishes such as canned ravioli or<lb/>
Spaghetii-o's.<lb/>
A few simple rules and sugges-<lb/>
tions will not only make a student's<lb/>
mealtimes more enjoyable, but also<lb/>
help avoid difficulties such as<lb/>
malnutrition and food poisoning.<lb/>
One thing to remember is to aim<lb/>
for a balanced diet. Try to cat other<lb/>
things besides "Nabs candy bars<lb/>
and beer. Hamburgers often have<lb/>
tomatoes and lettuce on them; piz-<lb/>
zas have all sorts of things like<lb/>
mushrooms and green peppers.<lb/>
These are two painless ways of get-<lb/>
ting those green vegetables needed<lb/>
for growing children like us.<lb/>
TV dinners usually have a variety<lb/>
of foods in them. If you get about<lb/>
three of four, you'll have a fairly<lb/>
good meal.<lb/>
What to have for a meal can often<lb/>
be a perplexing problem. Once in a<lb/>
while, we all get in those moods<lb/>
where we can't make up our mind<lb/>
See i.OCRMEl, Page 6, col. I<lb/>
"??? ????mmmmmmHmi0004?i'4he'<lb/>
?HMMM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057274_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
THI L AST CAROLINI AN J U L Y 10, I980<lb/>
?<lb/>
Kubrick Film Brings<lb/>
New Chic to Genre<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
appeal. The Shining,<lb/>
though its overall im-<lb/>
pact should be credited<lb/>
to the performance of<lb/>
Jack Nicholson, is ob-<lb/>
viously a Kubrick pic-<lb/>
ture, and it illustrates<lb/>
another important<lb/>
aspect of the Kubrick<lb/>
method: he wants his<lb/>
pictures to have the<lb/>
widest possible au-<lb/>
dience.<lb/>
His reasoning is<lb/>
logical. One must get<lb/>
the largest possible au-<lb/>
dience to get the success<lb/>
that allows one to make<lb/>
only the pictures one<lb/>
wants to make. It is a<lb/>
simple philosophy that<lb/>
has worked very well<lb/>
for many a rebel boring<lb/>
from within, but it can<lb/>
be annoying, as it was<lb/>
to Mr. Kubrick when<lb/>
he bowed to real or im-<lb/>
agined threats of cen-<lb/>
sorship and made the<lb/>
film Lolita (1962) less<lb/>
sensual than he envi-<lb/>
sioned it.<lb/>
The Shining has<lb/>
emerged exactly as he<lb/>
envisioned it ? every<lb/>
bit as dark, every bit as<lb/>
moody, every bit as<lb/>
frightening. He has<lb/>
controlled The Shining<lb/>
so completely, in fact,<lb/>
that if he could have<lb/>
found a way, he would<lb/>
surely have willed<lb/>
himself into becoming<lb/>
a camera.<lb/>
If there is any real<lb/>
flaw in this film it is the<lb/>
astonishingly bad per-<lb/>
formance of Shelley<lb/>
Duvall as Wendy Tor-<lb/>
rence ? a pixy that<lb/>
communicates like<lb/>
young Shirley Temple<lb/>
with too many pauses<lb/>
and shortness of<lb/>
breath. For all of her<lb/>
hysteria, hyperventila-<lb/>
tion and crying she is<lb/>
totally unconvincing. It<lb/>
is an exhausted perfor-<lb/>
mance, not an ex-<lb/>
hausting one and<lb/>
enough to drive<lb/>
anyone, no matter how<lb/>
sane in the beginning,<lb/>
stark, raving mad.<lb/>
In many ways, the<lb/>
film as a whole is kind<lb/>
of warped and is at<lb/>
times confusing, at<lb/>
least until the very last<lb/>
shot, but one thing is<lb/>
certain: Nicholson is<lb/>
tremendous. He<lb/>
demonstrates for the<lb/>
first time that he can<lb/>
get his own high going<lb/>
and lift himself single-<lb/>
handedly into slapstick,<lb/>
like a demented, one-<lb/>
man rendition of<lb/>
Laurel and Hardy.<lb/>
But that isn't all that<lb/>
people go to see Jack<lb/>
Nicholson for. He<lb/>
stretched himself right<lb/>
out of the public's<lb/>
range of interest in The<lb/>
Fortune; and in The<lb/>
Passenger, director An-<lb/>
tonioni, who seemed to<lb/>
have no idea what kind<lb/>
of actor Nicholson was,<lb/>
wiped him out until<lb/>
Cuckoo's Nest.<lb/>
Since, in the past,<lb/>
Nicholson hasn't<lb/>
scored playing un-<lb/>
magnetic characters it<lb/>
will be interesting to see<lb/>
just how the public will<lb/>
react to him in this role<lb/>
? one that is about as<lb/>
unsympathetic and un-<lb/>
magnetic as they come.<lb/>
(I didn't want to see the<lb/>
little boy get axed, but I<lb/>
must admit I rooted<lb/>
like hell that Duvall<lb/>
might end up a steak<lb/>
and kidney pie.)<lb/>
The danger in The<lb/>
Shining is that<lb/>
Nicholson will use his<lb/>
boyish shark's grin, the<lb/>
familiar preening,<lb/>
brutal one-up-manship.<lb/>
He's won the audience<lb/>
with his cocky freaks,<lb/>
Food Purchases Anticipate<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
Oregon Freeze Dry Foods is owned by the 7-UP<lb/>
Co.<lb/>
"Sales (of freeze-dried foods) are up substan-<lb/>
tially said Les Zeke, manager of corporate<lb/>
dehydrated (or dried) and freeze dried.<lb/>
Dehydrated foods require soaking and cook-<lb/>
ing, while freeze-dried foods need only the addi-<lb/>
tion of hot or cold water and can be eaten out of<lb/>
the cans.<lb/>
and this is the big one<lb/>
? the bull goose loony.<lb/>
Nicholson can be too<lb/>
knowing about the au-<lb/>
dience, and the part he<lb/>
plays is pure tempta-<lb/>
tion. But Kubrick keeps<lb/>
him in check. Sure, he<lb/>
steals the show, he<lb/>
always does, but for all<lb/>
the right reasons.<lb/>
Nicholson doesn't<lb/>
use the glinting, funny-<lb/>
malign eyes this time;<lb/>
he has a different look<lb/>
? his eyes are farther<lb/>
away, muggy, veiled<lb/>
even from himself. You<lb/>
are never sure what's<lb/>
going on behind them.<lb/>
As Torrence,<lb/>
Nicholson doesn't keep<lb/>
a piece of himself out<lb/>
of the character, guar<lb/>
ding it and making the<lb/>
audience aware that<lb/>
he's got his control<lb/>
center and can turn on<lb/>
the juice. In the early<lb/>
going, he fools us by<lb/>
actually looking very-<lb/>
relaxed, punchy,<lb/>
almost helpless ? you<lb/>
can forget it's<lb/>
Nicholson. Torrence is<lb/>
a tired, baffled man,<lb/>
and with his looney<lb/>
character unresolved he<lb/>
gains depth.<lb/>
If this picture had to<lb/>
be made, and apparent-<lb/>
Nicholson menaces<lb/>
screen<lb/>
wife, ShelK Duvall, in "The Shining<lb/>
he doesn 7 keep a piece of himself out of the character<lb/>
Local Profs Review<lb/>
Both are sold in large gallon cans, in small<lb/>
commumcations for 7-Up. "Generally, we do not packages for outdoorsmen such as backpackers , u ' aPPanfnt-<lb/>
talk figures and in prepackaged units with mixed products. Z- L , WuV? e"<lb/>
Survival loods usually come in two forms: The foods have a shelf life of 13 to 30 years. rsicnotson nad to do it<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
self-pity, although it<lb/>
obviously has ample<lb/>
opportunity to make<lb/>
some kind of state-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
David Sanders, pro-<lb/>
fessor of English here<lb/>
at ECU, contributes a<lb/>
review of Frederick<lb/>
Morgan's "Death<lb/>
Mother and Other<lb/>
Poems The essay is<lb/>
well-written and<lb/>
Sanders presents his<lb/>
case cogently although<lb/>
some of his imaginative<lb/>
leaps are a bit hard to<lb/>
make. He apparently<lb/>
relates the "Lear ex-<lb/>
perience" to a "death<lb/>
consciousness that<lb/>
must come to us all a<lb/>
"primal recognition"<lb/>
that is at the same time<lb/>
distant from morbidity.<lb/>
While this seems Son<lb/>
sequitur to me, that is<lb/>
the nature of<lb/>
metaphor.<lb/>
Norman Rosenfeld,<lb/>
another<lb/>
English<lb/>
reviews<lb/>
"Living<lb/>
Distance<lb/>
professor of<lb/>
at ECU,<lb/>
Ralph Mills'<lb/>
With<lb/>
Rosenfeld<lb/>
spends too much time<lb/>
in an elaborate explica-<lb/>
tion du text but ends his<lb/>
review and the journal<lb/>
with an insightful<lb/>
critical assessment of<lb/>
Mills talents.<lb/>
There is much good<lb/>
reading in this issue of<lb/>
"Tar River Poetry as<lb/>
is evidenced bv the<lb/>
number of nationally<lb/>
reputed poets who have<lb/>
contributed to the<lb/>
volume. Their work, a-<lb/>
well as that of less well-<lb/>
known poets, makes it<lb/>
well worth the S2 cover<lb/>
price, and. if this issue<lb/>
is any promise of things<lb/>
to come, the S4 per year<lb/>
subscription rate is a<lb/>
real baraain.<lb/>
New Browne LP Greatest<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
Emerging from the<lb/>
Los Angeles music<lb/>
scene, Jackson went to<lb/>
New York as a<lb/>
seventeen-year-old and<lb/>
began, oddly enough,<lb/>
playing guitar for Nico<lb/>
and the Electric Circus,<lb/>
who recorded three of<lb/>
his songs on the 1968<lb/>
release Chelsea Girl.<lb/>
Last week, Jackson<lb/>
released an album Hold<lb/>
Out that may ultimate-<lb/>
ly rival The Pretender<lb/>
for its sheer dynamism<lb/>
and potential for<lb/>
critical and artistic suc-<lb/>
cess. It may also<lb/>
become a best seller,<lb/>
but only record mer-<lb/>
chants are concerned<lb/>
with such paltry af-<lb/>
fairs. Hold Out proves<lb/>
to us all that Running<lb/>
on Empty was just a<lb/>
stumble and that<lb/>
Jackson Browne will<lb/>
indeed be a man to<lb/>
reckon with in the<lb/>
eighties. Its flavor<lb/>
ranees from simple<lb/>
melodic beauty of an<lb/>
acoustic ballad to the<lb/>
rocking power and<lb/>
stunning complexity<lb/>
that has made Jackson<lb/>
Browne.<lb/>
All of our old friends<lb/>
are back such as Russ<lb/>
Kunkel, B. H Glaub,<lb/>
David Lyndley, Craig<lb/>
Doerge, and that<lb/>
dynamic duo of<lb/>
vocalists Doug<lb/>
Haywood and<lb/>
Rosemary Butler (Oh, I<lb/>
long for the day when<lb/>
she releases an album).<lb/>
The album also<lb/>
features some pretty<lb/>
noticeable newcomers<lb/>
such as Billy Payne (of<lb/>
Little Feat) and Rick<lb/>
Marotta one of the<lb/>
most prodigious studio<lb/>
drummers in the<lb/>
business.<lb/>
Of course, the<lb/>
musical performances<lb/>
are great (perhaps the<lb/>
best of Jackson's<lb/>
career) and the produc-<lb/>
tion of the album is<lb/>
sparkling. The album<lb/>
most resembles The<lb/>
Pretender in the way it<lb/>
is put together, the way<lb/>
the songs are composed<lb/>
and the overall propen-<lb/>
sity of the effort.<lb/>
The first song,<lb/>
"Disco Apocalypse<lb/>
sounds like something<lb/>
off of The Long Run,<lb/>
and is a scathing indict-<lb/>
ment of many people,<lb/>
particularly some peo-<lb/>
ple right here on this<lb/>
campus. The song deals<lb/>
with how the world<lb/>
could fall apart tomor-<lb/>
row and few would<lb/>
even be concerned,<lb/>
their minds are on that<lb/>
disco beat, Steve Har-<lb/>
dy's party, their next<lb/>
bong hit, the next<lb/>
game, the next beer,<lb/>
their new Pink Floyd<lb/>
album, surfing, their<lb/>
next line, whatever.<lb/>
Apocalypse? Don't<lb/>
bother me, I've got<lb/>
something more impor-<lb/>
tant to do!<lb/>
"HoldOut" follows,<lb/>
a tender ballad that<lb/>
somewhat resembles a<lb/>
song by Prince, and it is<lb/>
in the finest tradition of<lb/>
melodic and lyrical ex-<lb/>
Gourmet Offers Advice On Making<lb/>
Dishes With Limited Equipment<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
about what to eat and either sit in the room for an<lb/>
hour trying to decide, or maybe even drive all<lb/>
around Greenville several times. To save you<lb/>
from this fate, I'm going to print here a few of my<lb/>
favorite recipes.<lb/>
1. "Thirty Minute Pizza Simply select the<lb/>
size and flavor of the pizza you want, and call a<lb/>
fast pizza place. Within thirty minues, a piping<lb/>
hot pizza will arrive at your door.<lb/>
2. "Three Hour Pizza Many beginning cooks<lb/>
accidentally prepare this kind of pizza. The recipe<lb/>
calls for .ordering a pizza from one of the slow<lb/>
pizza places. In three hours, a piping cold pizza<lb/>
will arrive at your door.<lb/>
3. "Charcoal and beans This dish is ap-<lb/>
parently a great favorite here at ECU. Its<lb/>
preparation involves a few easy steps:<lb/>
A. Open a can of pork and beans.<lb/>
B. Heat the hotplate to "high<lb/>
C. Place the can on the red-hot burner.<lb/>
D. Leave the room to go to class or take a<lb/>
thirty minute shower.<lb/>
E. Remember not to use water on electrical<lb/>
fires.<lb/>
4. "Coca-cola and Corn Flakes This is a self-<lb/>
explanatory breakfast dish used by people who<lb/>
don't have any milk. I do not really recommend<lb/>
this recipe.<lb/>
5. "Fried Tea I personally tried this recipe<lb/>
last week, when I was brewing some ordinary tea<lb/>
and wandered off to watch some "Tom and<lb/>
Jerry" cartoons. If you want to try this, cook the<lb/>
tea on high heat for about six cartoons.<lb/>
6. Broiled Piant This is a popular vegetarian<lb/>
dish for wintertime eating.<lb/>
cellence established by<lb/>
Mr. Browne. "That<lb/>
Girl Could Sing" is<lb/>
possibly the catchiest<lb/>
song on the album with<lb/>
its musical and vocal<lb/>
hooks and should be<lb/>
released as a single. I<lb/>
am sure you have heard<lb/>
"Boulevard" on the<lb/>
radio as it weaves its<lb/>
tale of the rough life<lb/>
down on the seamy side<lb/>
of town that you will<lb/>
never see.<lb/>
The second side<lb/>
begins with "Of Miss-<lb/>
ing Persons a<lb/>
delightful song that<lb/>
deals with the loss of<lb/>
one of rock's greatest<lb/>
performers, Lowell<lb/>
George. George and<lb/>
Jackson were good<lb/>
friends and this song<lb/>
deals with the fragile<lb/>
line of existence we all<lb/>
walk and the legacy we<lb/>
leave after we are gone.<lb/>
David Lyndley, whose<lb/>
searing violin is sorely<lb/>
missing from this<lb/>
album, wrote "Call i<lb/>
A Loan" with Jackson<lb/>
and it is the finest<lb/>
ballad on the album,<lb/>
resembling "Love<lb/>
Needs a Heart the<lb/>
sole redeeming song of<lb/>
Running on Empty.<lb/>
"Hold On Hold<lb/>
Out" is by far the<lb/>
greatest song on the<lb/>
album and one of the<lb/>
finest Jackson has ever<lb/>
written, surpassed only<lb/>
slightly by "The<lb/>
Pretender<lb/>
It sails above the<lb/>
other efforts on the<lb/>
album with its message<lb/>
of no matter how down<lb/>
you may be and no<lb/>
matter how the odds<lb/>
are stacked against<lb/>
you, with strength and<lb/>
perserverance, the bat-<lb/>
tle will be yours. If not,<lb/>
it is just the battle and<lb/>
not the war, so just<lb/>
hold on. Listen to<lb/>
this<lb/>
Hold a place for the<lb/>
human race<lb/>
Keep it open wide<lb/>
Give it time to fall or<lb/>
climb<lb/>
But let time decide<lb/>
Sometimes you wonder<lb/>
whafs in this<lb/>
for you<lb/>
But you waif, and you<lb/>
see<lb/>
Cause it's all vou can<lb/>
do<lb/>
Just to hold on.<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Thurs. I CHOICE<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
ROUNDHOUSE<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
BRICESTREET<lb/>
come<lb/>
on,<lb/>
join in<lb/>
come b<lb/>
Mendcnhall. Room 23U<lb/>
m<lb/>
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Thursday Special<lb/>
Pizzas-Buy One<lb/>
Get One Free<lb/>
(same size)<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
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llttlWIEKOF<lb/>
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information call 831 0535<lb/>
(toll ' free number<lb/>
?00 221 251) between <lb/>
A.M. 5 P.M weekdays.<lb/>
Health Oreaniiatien<lb/>
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CONTACT LENSES<lb/>
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Guaranteed Fitting or Your Money Refunded<lb/>
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AVAILABLE<lb/>
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MOM.TUCS.THUem.PPL<lb/>
10 Discount To E.C.U.<lb/>
Students On Glasses.<lb/>
1<lb/>
,?'mb&amp;s<lb/>
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x? SMW'?!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057274_0007"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>