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<pb facs="00057309_0001"/>
<lb/>
She l-aat (Earolintan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. 31<lb/>
10 Paes<lb/>
Thursday, January 8, 1981<lb/>
(ireenville. North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
John East Sworn In;<lb/>
May Find Going Rough<lb/>
B PAl IOf I INS<lb/>
: ast, the former East<lb/>
Car. ical science professor<lb/>
who was sworn in Monday as North<lb/>
a's newest senator, has been<lb/>
the inadvertent cause of some em-<lb/>
nenl among his colleagues.<lb/>
?. tte has passed legislation<lb/>
ces the removal of barriers<lb/>
handicapped from public<lb/>
gs all ovei the nation but has<lb/>
rid that the U.S. Capitol is only<lb/>
ble t East, who is<lb/>
a w heelchair.<lb/>
Ea? Id not come down the ai-<lb/>
the swearing-in because<lb/>
the not accessible to<lb/>
i :ed instead bv<lb/>
? person in<lb/>
. i - ?<lb/>
wheelchair can get<lb/>
namber but without<lb/>
l get to the desks at<lb/>
sit. nor into the<lb/>
. atmosphere of the Senate<lb/>
immittee hearing rooms<lb/>
. to wheelchairs, but<lb/>
ro nis hae ramps<lb/>
diases where the<lb/>
: heii aides sit.<lb/>
Similarly<lb/>
thai c<lb/>
the underground tun-<lb/>
ned the Capitol with<lb/>
? buildings present a<lb/>
problem for the handicapped. The<lb/>
tunnels themselves are accessible to<lb/>
the wheelchair-bound, but the sub-<lb/>
way cars are not. Therefore, the trip<lb/>
b wheelchair is a long climb up a<lb/>
gradual incline.<lb/>
People in wheelchairs do get<lb/>
about in the Capitol but only with<lb/>
difficulty, according to John Lan-<lb/>
caster, an attorney for the American<lb/>
Coalition of Citizens with<lb/>
Disabilities. "Things are not real<lb/>
good. 1 find there are steps<lb/>
everywhere he said. "You can get<lb/>
around on a wheelchair if you're<lb/>
good at it, but only if you're good<lb/>
The Senate, he feels, has not lived<lb/>
up to the spirit of the laws it has<lb/>
passed.<lb/>
There is a $2.7 million project<lb/>
underway to make the Capitol<lb/>
barrier-free, but it will not be com-<lb/>
pleted until at ieast 1982.<lb/>
The Architectural Barriers Act oi<lb/>
1968 requires that all buildings con-<lb/>
structed with federal funds be made<lb/>
accessible to the handicapped, and<lb/>
the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 sas<lb/>
that firms or agencies receiving<lb/>
more than $2,500 in federal aid will<lb/>
lose the money if their programs are<lb/>
not accessible to the physically han-<lb/>
dicapped.<lb/>
According to East campaign<lb/>
director Ann May, Sen. East is not <lb/>
encountering too many problems.<lb/>
"There were really very few pro-<lb/>
blems when we were in Washington<lb/>
for Senate orientation a couple of<lb/>
weeks ago she said.<lb/>
According to Capitol architects,<lb/>
only two major renovations will be<lb/>
necessary to accommodate East.<lb/>
Plans are underway to build a lift<lb/>
device so East can get up the three<lb/>
steps to the cloakroom and a<lb/>
specially fitted toilet adjacent to the<lb/>
cloakroom. The cost is about<lb/>
$10,000.<lb/>
Architects had considered putting<lb/>
a ramp on the Senate floor in order<lb/>
to allow the new senator to move up<lb/>
and down the aisle. The idea was re-<lb/>
jected, however, when it was found<lb/>
that the ramp would be unsafe to<lb/>
maneuver on, said Elliott Carroll,<lb/>
an executive assistant to the Ar-<lb/>
chitect of the Capitol.<lb/>
To enter the well of the Senate,<lb/>
East will have to take a roundabout<lb/>
route from his seat in the backrow<lb/>
where all freshman senators sit.<lb/>
East's offices are on the fifth<lb/>
floor of the Dirksen office building<lb/>
and seem to pose no problem of ac-<lb/>
cessibilitv for him.<lb/>
Sen. John Kast, shown here with his family, may encounter some difficulty maneuvering<lb/>
in the Capitol.<lb/>
Publishers Control Textbook Prices<lb/>
B PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
indred dollars foi books.<lb/>
I can't understand it Students at<lb/>
Carolina utter similar cries<lb/>
hundreds of tunes each semester.<lb/>
"It seems to me we're getting<lb/>
ripped-off said Dan McCTintock,<lb/>
an ECU sophomore. "1 don't know<lb/>
if it's the bookstore or what, but 1<lb/>
feel that someone is ripping us off<lb/>
This typdies the attitude of many<lb/>
ECU students, who spent more than<lb/>
$1.1 million last year for textbooks<lb/>
However, students know little about<lb/>
the purchase of textbooks except<lb/>
"We send requisitions to every<lb/>
department said Roger Bullock,<lb/>
assistant manager of the Students<lb/>
particular book has sold in deciding<lb/>
how many to order<lb/>
The Students Supply Store, which<lb/>
includes the bookstore, Wright<lb/>
Soda Shop and the Croatan, is an<lb/>
auxiliary foundation of ECU. This<lb/>
means that the store, although a<lb/>
part of the university, receives no<lb/>
support from the school or state and<lb/>
must be wholly self-supporting.<lb/>
The major alternative to the<lb/>
Students Supply Store is the Univer-<lb/>
sity Book Exchange (U.B.E.),<lb/>
managed b Don Edwards. Located<lb/>
on South Cotanche Street, U.B.E.<lb/>
was established in 1967 as a private<lb/>
business and has no connection with<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
After receiving requisitions and<lb/>
projected course enrollments from<lb/>
the individual departments, the<lb/>
Supply Store, when asked to explain Students Store supplies U.B.E. with<lb/>
what goes in to purchasing tex-<lb/>
tbooks<lb/>
"We u s e projected class<lb/>
enrollments and a history of how a<lb/>
the information.<lb/>
The stores then order the books.<lb/>
"We try to get as many use<lb/>
books as possible Bullock said.<lb/>
"They are the best buy for the stu-<lb/>
dent and really for us too<lb/>
Edwards cited the reasons for try-<lb/>
ing to obtain as high a percentage of<lb/>
used books as possible. "Basically<lb/>
here are three reasons " he explain-<lb/>
ed. 'One is the iower cost to the stu-<lb/>
dent, second is the greater profit on<lb/>
used books and finally there's the<lb/>
fact that the resale price of an old<lb/>
book is the same as that of a new<lb/>
book The resale value of a book<lb/>
remains constant no matter how<lb/>
many times it is used.<lb/>
Both sources obtain used books<lb/>
from two sources: book buy-back<lb/>
and used book wholesalers.<lb/>
If a used book has been requisi-<lb/>
tioned again, sells for more than $2<lb/>
new and is in salable condition, both<lb/>
stores will pay the student 50 per-<lb/>
cent of the new price.<lb/>
The stores then resell the books at<lb/>
75 percent of the original price.<lb/>
"These figures apply as long as the<lb/>
book is used at ECU Bullock ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
Books that are no longer to be us-<lb/>
ed at ECU can sometimes be sold to<lb/>
wholesalers.<lb/>
The price a wholesaler will pay is<lb/>
determined r the book's potential<lb/>
marketability. "For instance<lb/>
Bullock said, "if a new edition<lb/>
comes out, the value of the book<lb/>
drops way down<lb/>
According to Edwards, the use of<lb/>
a book tends to go in cycles of about<lb/>
three years.<lb/>
What the cannot buy in used<lb/>
books, the stores must buy new<lb/>
from the publisher.<lb/>
Bullock estimates that he deals<lb/>
with 250 to 300 publishers each<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The publishers suggest a retail<lb/>
price and give the stores a standard<lb/>
discount of 20 percent. Both U.B.E.<lb/>
and the Students Supply Store use<lb/>
the suggested retail price.<lb/>
Ordering books is a tricky<lb/>
business, according to Bullock.<lb/>
Since publishers will accept only a<lb/>
limited percentage of returns, the<lb/>
stores must be careful not to order<lb/>
too many books.<lb/>
"We want to have a book on<lb/>
hand for every student who wants<lb/>
one Bullock said, "but at the<lb/>
same time, we have to be careful not<lb/>
to have too many books<lb/>
In contrast, U.B.E. orders books<lb/>
for 40 to 50 percent of the projected<lb/>
enrollment at the freshman and<lb/>
sophomore levels. The store<lb/>
generally orders a smaller percen-<lb/>
tage of books for upper-level<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
The publishers deal directlv with<lb/>
teachers and professors. Samples<lb/>
are shown by the publishers, and the<lb/>
teachers then pick from the books<lb/>
available.<lb/>
"We have no control over what<lb/>
books the teachers requisition<lb/>
Bullock said.<lb/>
As part of the university, the<lb/>
Students Supply Store turns over all<lb/>
distributed profit to the Faculty<lb/>
See BOOKS. Page 2<lb/>
Endorsement Effect Minimal<lb/>
South To Need Engineers Soon<lb/>
In the next 10 years, shortages of<lb/>
engineers and other high technology<lb/>
graduates are likely to persist both<lb/>
in the nation and in the South, ac-<lb/>
cording to a new report from the<lb/>
Southern Regional Education Board<lb/>
iSRLB). These manpower shortages<lb/>
may be eased, however, if more high<lb/>
school student take a rigorous set<lb/>
ot math courses and if women and<lb/>
blacks shift to the high technology<lb/>
fields<lb/>
The SREB report focuses on the<lb/>
relationship between the study of<lb/>
mathematics by high school<lb/>
students and the supply oi high<lb/>
technology manpower. "To a con-<lb/>
siderable extent the report main-<lb/>
tains, "the production of engineers,<lb/>
mathematicians, physical scientists,<lb/>
and computer programmers<lb/>
depends on a strong background in<lb/>
mathematics<lb/>
However, women and minorities<lb/>
? who helped to create the recent<lb/>
boom in higher education<lb/>
enrollments ? have not been very<lb/>
inclined to study mathematics in<lb/>
either high school or college. Fur-<lb/>
thermore, one Southern state<lb/>
estimate that only one out of 10 of<lb/>
its recent high school graduates has<lb/>
taken trigonometry, the essential<lb/>
pre-calculus course.<lb/>
The report, entitled Engineering<lb/>
and High Technology Manpower<lb/>
Shortages: The Connection with<lb/>
Mathematics, was prepared by<lb/>
SREB economist Eva C. Galambos,<lb/>
who concludes that the present low<lb/>
level of participation in these high<lb/>
school math courses represents a<lb/>
"fundamental constraint" on a<lb/>
See JOBS, Page 2<lb/>
By BRAD KLTROW<lb/>
North arolina Hrev,<lb/>
Those who argue that editorial<lb/>
endorsements have little, if any, ef-<lb/>
fect on voters can cite the results of<lb/>
this fall's election as convincing<lb/>
evidence. Most of the North<lb/>
Carolina newspapers that endorsed<lb/>
candidates supported incumbent<lb/>
Democrats Jimmy Carter for presi-<lb/>
dent and Robert Morgan for<lb/>
senator, but both were unexpectedly<lb/>
defeated in the state.<lb/>
Of the 53 dailies surveyed by the<lb/>
North Carolina Press Association,<lb/>
15, or 28.3 percent, endorsed Presi-<lb/>
dent Carter. Republican Ronald<lb/>
Reagan was endorsed by nine, or 17<lb/>
percent, and one paper, or 1.9 per-<lb/>
cent, endorsed independent John<lb/>
Anderson. More than haif the<lb/>
papers surveyed ? 28, or 52.8 per-<lb/>
cent ? chose not to endorse can-<lb/>
didates.<lb/>
Robert Morgan was endorsed by<lb/>
22 of the 53 dailies, or 41.5 percent.<lb/>
Republican John East was endorsed<lb/>
by only two papers, or 3.8 percent,<lb/>
and 29, or 54.7 percent, did not en-<lb/>
dorse.<lb/>
Three of the 20 non-daily<lb/>
newspapers surveyed endorsed can-<lb/>
didates, and all supported Carter<lb/>
and Morgan.<lb/>
The state's dailies generally dif-<lb/>
fered with others across the nation<lb/>
on endorsements for president.<lb/>
Reagan was supported by 443, or<lb/>
42.2 percent of the 1,653 dailies<lb/>
surveyed by Editor &amp; Publisher.<lb/>
Carter trailed with 126 en-<lb/>
dorsements for 12 percent, and<lb/>
Anderson was supported by 41<lb/>
papers for 3.8 percent. Again, many<lb/>
of the newspapers surveyed ? 438,<lb/>
or 42 percent ? chose not to en-<lb/>
dorse a candidate.<lb/>
Most of the state's large-<lb/>
circulation dailies, including the<lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer and The<lb/>
Charlotte Observer endorsed both<lb/>
Carter and Morgan. The largest<lb/>
papers to endorse Reagan were the<lb/>
Winston-Salem Journal, The<lb/>
(Winston-Salem) Sentinel and The<lb/>
Greensboro Record.<lb/>
Reagan's editorial support came<lb/>
largely from papers in the western<lb/>
and Piedmont areas of the state. He<lb/>
was endorsed by the Asheville<lb/>
Citizen and Asheville Times, the<lb/>
Asheboro Courier-Tribune, the<lb/>
Concord Tribune and the Kan-<lb/>
See ENDORSEMENTS, Pane 3<lb/>
Hotline To Deal With Sexual Harassment<lb/>
Sociology Professor Ken Wilson<lb/>
By PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
Nmn Editor<lb/>
Sexual harassment of female<lb/>
students by teachers at East<lb/>
Carolina is a problem that has been<lb/>
largely ignored, but two people at<lb/>
ECU would like to change that.<lb/>
An assistant professor of<lb/>
sociology, Ken Wilson, and a<lb/>
graduate student who asked to be<lb/>
identified only as Linda are conduc-<lb/>
ting a sexual harassment hotline<lb/>
beginning today.<lb/>
Conducting the hotline from her<lb/>
home phone, Linda will take calls<lb/>
from students during specified<lb/>
hours. The purpose is to have the<lb/>
students describe their encounters<lb/>
with sexual harassment.<lb/>
All calls will be confidential and<lb/>
will not be used to file complaints<lb/>
against faculty members, according<lb/>
to Linda.<lb/>
Many harassed students do not<lb/>
talk to anyone because they do not<lb/>
know where to turn, she said. "For<lb/>
women who are victims it can be a<lb/>
very emotional thing. The vast ma-<lb/>
jority of the time it happens in the<lb/>
classroom setting, and the students ranging from verbal harassment to<lb/>
have such things as grades and physical assault.<lb/>
teacher recommendations to con-<lb/>
sider<lb/>
Therefore, she added, most cases<lb/>
of harassment go unreported.<lb/>
Wilson and Linda first became in-<lb/>
terested in the subject several years<lb/>
ago when an article on the subject<lb/>
appeared in the campus newspaper.<lb/>
A letter Wilson wrote to the<lb/>
editor put Linda in touch with him,<lb/>
and they then began their research.<lb/>
They have conducted two<lb/>
previous studies in 1979 on the sub-<lb/>
ject. The first study was conducted<lb/>
in the spring of the year by<lb/>
telephone. The survey dealt with<lb/>
touching and propositioning only.<lb/>
The results indicated that about nine<lb/>
The two looked at the results to<lb/>
see if the victims differed<lb/>
significantly from other women<lb/>
students. They found that the vic-<lb/>
tims did slightly better academical-<lb/>
ly, were more socially competent<lb/>
and rated themselves as more<lb/>
physically attractive than did non-<lb/>
victims. "But really Wilson add-<lb/>
ed, "there was not really too much<lb/>
difference<lb/>
In November last year, Wilson<lb/>
and Linda presented their results<lb/>
from these surveys to the Commit-<lb/>
tee on the Status of Women at ECU.<lb/>
Joseph R. Maiolo, chairman of<lb/>
the Department of Sociology and<lb/>
percent of the women surveyed had Anthropology, has also asked them<lb/>
encountered such harassment.<lb/>
The second survey, conducted in<lb/>
the fall, was taken in classrooms<lb/>
and dealt with all forms of sexual<lb/>
harassment. One third of the<lb/>
women surveyed indicated they had<lb/>
been subjected to some sort of sex-<lb/>
ual harassment by a teacher.<lb/>
Seven categories were included,<lb/>
to conduct a symposium on the mat-<lb/>
ter in the spring.<lb/>
The University of California at<lb/>
Berkeley is the only other school in<lb/>
the country to publish studies on the<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
Although the two universities are<lb/>
difficult to compare, Wilson said,<lb/>
his impression is that the situation at<lb/>
Berkelev is "strikingly similar" to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Commenting on the lack of infor-<lb/>
mation about the subject, he said,<lb/>
"I think sexual harassment is being<lb/>
studied, but studies are not being<lb/>
published<lb/>
"It's a new issue Linda added.<lb/>
"The problem has been studied<lb/>
more in the workplace than in col-<lb/>
leges, but it is being studied more<lb/>
They hope that their results will<lb/>
allow them to make constructive<lb/>
recommendations to various ad-<lb/>
ministrative offices at ECU.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Letters4<lb/>
Sports5<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057309_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 8, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
PRE-COLUMBIAN<lb/>
The ECU Dept of Sociology and<lb/>
Anthropology, m cooperation with<lb/>
the ECU School o? Art, is presen<lb/>
ting a series of public lectures on<lb/>
Pre Columbian Art<lb/>
The lectures will be conducted<lb/>
by Paul Clifford, curator of the<lb/>
Pre Columbian Collection at the<lb/>
DuKe University Museum of Art<lb/>
They will be held in the auditorium<lb/>
of the Jenkins Fine Arts Center at<lb/>
ECU at 7 30 p m Jan 1? Jan 19<lb/>
and Jan 26<lb/>
topics to be discussed include<lb/>
Tne Dawn of Civilization<lb/>
Through the Mastercrattsman<lb/>
Period" I Dec 8 The Great Em<lb/>
pires to the Conquest" Uan 12).<lb/>
The Mysterious Maya One Half<lb/>
of the Bow Tie Uan 19) and<lb/>
The Aztec and Their<lb/>
Predecessors The Other Malt of<lb/>
the Bow Tie" (Jan ?6!<lb/>
There are four remaining lee<lb/>
tures m the series, and each lee<lb/>
tures will include slides to depat<lb/>
actual examples of Pre<lb/>
Columbian Art<lb/>
The wealth of published<lb/>
material today and the increasing<lb/>
interest in 'he ancient arts of this<lb/>
hemisphere show that Pre<lb/>
Columbian art can now take its<lb/>
place as one of the great art ex<lb/>
pressions of the world Clifford<lb/>
sa'd It is imperative that we who<lb/>
have come to the New World and<lb/>
have sampled all its other bounties<lb/>
should now accept and protect this<lb/>
rich heritage left us by the high<lb/>
civilizations which nave come and<lb/>
gone "<lb/>
EPISCOPAL WORSHIP<lb/>
An Episcopal service of Holy<lb/>
Communion will be celebrated<lb/>
Tues evening. Jan 13, in the<lb/>
chapel of the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center (5th St across from Gar<lb/>
reft Dorm) The service will be at<lb/>
S 30 p m with the Episcopal<lb/>
Chaplain, the Rev Bill Hadden.<lb/>
celebrating Supper will be served<lb/>
following the service<lb/>
TENNIS<lb/>
All women interested in trying<lb/>
out tor the women's tennis team or<lb/>
anyone interested in the program<lb/>
is invited to come and hear the<lb/>
new coach discuss the upcoming<lb/>
season The meeting will be held in<lb/>
Rm 145 at Mmges, Jan 12 at 3 30<lb/>
SKI TRIP<lb/>
The ECU Ski trip to Snowshoe<lb/>
over Spring break is scheduled for<lb/>
March 8 13. 1981 Students seeking<lb/>
credit should enroll in PHYE 1105<lb/>
A room deposit of J10 00 is due<lb/>
Jan 27, 1981, at 4 p m m Memorial<lb/>
Gym Rm 108 Contact Mrs Jo<lb/>
Saunoers in Memorial Gym Rm<lb/>
205 tor additional information<lb/>
(AHPAT)<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat . March 7, 1981 Ap<lb/>
plication blanks are to be com<lb/>
pleted and mailed to the<lb/>
Psychological Corp 304 E 45th<lb/>
St , New York, NY 10017 to arrive<lb/>
bv Feb 7.1981 Application blanks<lb/>
are also available at the Test.nq<lb/>
Center, Speight Bldg . Room 105,<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
SEMINAR<lb/>
A weekly seminar on the ap<lb/>
plications of group theory to the<lb/>
physical sciences is planned for<lb/>
the Spring Semester This subject<lb/>
should be of special interest to<lb/>
chemists, physicists, geologists<lb/>
and mathematicians The aim of<lb/>
this course of lectures will be not<lb/>
merely to prove a batch of<lb/>
theorems, but rather to acquire an<lb/>
understanding of a language for<lb/>
describing systems and<lb/>
phenomena by their symmetry<lb/>
properties Students and facualty<lb/>
are invited to attend Students and<lb/>
taculty are invited to attend<lb/>
Students who participate may<lb/>
receive one or more semester<lb/>
hours of course credit by register<lb/>
mg the PHYS 6526, Readings m<lb/>
Physics An organizational session<lb/>
for the purpose of arranging a<lb/>
suitable time will beheldinPE213<lb/>
of the Physics Bldg at 4 P M on<lb/>
Mon Jan 12 For further infor<lb/>
mation. contact Dr Terence<lb/>
McEnally at X6894 or 752 3993, or<lb/>
m PE 102 of the Physics Bldg<lb/>
JOBSNEEDED<lb/>
inmates at the Vaury Correc<lb/>
tionai Facilit arc look mg for Obs<lb/>
Many inmate' have bepn recom<lb/>
mendea for work release. bu' iobs<lb/>
aren't available Ifyovha core to<lb/>
offer or know of one please call<lb/>
756 9324<lb/>
(ACT)<lb/>
The American College Test<lb/>
(ACT) will be offered at ECU on<lb/>
Sat, March 28. 1981 Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to ACT Registration P O<lb/>
Box 414, lowa City, lowa 52240<lb/>
Registration deadline is Feb 27,<lb/>
1981 Applications may be obtain<lb/>
ed from the ECU Testing Center.<lb/>
Speight Bldg , Room 105<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
PRESIDENT<lb/>
Applications are now being at<lb/>
ceotert for the office of Student<lb/>
Union president for the 1961 B?<lb/>
school year Applications will be<lb/>
taken until Jan 16. 1981 and are<lb/>
available at the Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
de?t Center information desk if<lb/>
you tav any questions regarding<lb/>
the qualifications for the office,<lb/>
please call 757 6611 Don't hesitate<lb/>
to get involved<lb/>
CIC t-eruLOWSHIPS<lb/>
Until February 1, 198 prospec<lb/>
five applicants from outside In<lb/>
diana may call toil free between<lb/>
9 00 a m and 5 00 p m EST tor in<lb/>
formation or application forms<lb/>
The number is (BOOi 457 4420<lb/>
Now m its fourth year, the CIC<lb/>
Fellowships Program in the social<lb/>
sciences makes awards in an<lb/>
thropology, economics,<lb/>
geography, history, political<lb/>
science, psychology and<lb/>
sociology<lb/>
The humanities fellowships are<lb/>
available to students seeking doc<lb/>
torates m American studies, art<lb/>
history, classics, comparative<lb/>
literature. English, German,<lb/>
linguistics n usi?, philosophy,<lb/>
religion, Romance languages, and<lb/>
Slavic languages<lb/>
Fields covered by the natural<lb/>
sciences, mathematics and<lb/>
engineering program include<lb/>
chemistry, biological sciences,<lb/>
agricultural sciences, physics,<lb/>
and geological sciences We<lb/>
welcome inquiries concerning<lb/>
specific subfields<lb/>
BAHAMAS CRUISE<lb/>
Enter the v rid o' rum - S mii<lb/>
shine "ake a tr , to the Bahar- ;<lb/>
Mart 5ttl T SVjdent U'<lb/>
Travel Committee has already<lb/>
planned your Spring Break for<lb/>
you, so make reservations now at<lb/>
Mendenhall Central Ticket Ofice<lb/>
Quad Hotel Room and Cabin<lb/>
49? 00 Double Hotel RoomQuad<lb/>
Cabin J549 00<lb/>
CRIMINAL LAW<lb/>
A new course. Principles and<lb/>
Procedures of Criminal Law<lb/>
(CorS 4003) will be offered during<lb/>
spring semester at ECU The<lb/>
three semester hour course will be<lb/>
taught on Mon nights from 6 30 to<lb/>
9 30 n m with the first class<lb/>
beginning on Jan 12. 1981<lb/>
The course will focus on the<lb/>
nature, sources and types of<lb/>
substantive criminal law. the<lb/>
classification and analysis of<lb/>
crimes and criminal acts in<lb/>
general, and the examination in<lb/>
detail of selected specific criminal<lb/>
procedures with special emphasis<lb/>
upon responsibilities of criminal<lb/>
lustice professionals<lb/>
Pre requisite for the course is<lb/>
consent of the Department<lb/>
Chairperson Area businessmen,<lb/>
law enforcement officers, private<lb/>
security personnel human service<lb/>
delivery personnel and other in<lb/>
terested persons are encouraged<lb/>
and invited to enroll<lb/>
Registration will begin on Jan<lb/>
8. 1981 and non ECU students<lb/>
should register through ECU Divi<lb/>
sion of Cont Education The<lb/>
course is open to eligible students<lb/>
at ECU interested individuals are<lb/>
encouraged to register for the<lb/>
course and or contact the Depart<lb/>
ment of Social Work &amp;, Correc<lb/>
tionai Services for additional in<lb/>
formation (312 Allied Health or<lb/>
Carol Belk Bldq<lb/>
INTERNSHIP<lb/>
Sophomores, luniors and seniors<lb/>
currently enrolled in a North<lb/>
Carolina college or North Carolina<lb/>
residents attending an out of state<lb/>
college have until February 2 to<lb/>
apply for the institute of Govern<lb/>
ment Summer internship Pro<lb/>
gram in state government<lb/>
Twnety four students wii be<lb/>
selected by an advisory commit<lb/>
tee to participate in a living<lb/>
learning internship in North<lb/>
Carolina state government<lb/>
directed by the Institute of<lb/>
Government The institute of<lb/>
Government interns will work<lb/>
from May 26 through August 7<lb/>
Students W'il wo'k 40 hours ea r<lb/>
week in a responsible position in a<lb/>
state department, participate m<lb/>
evening educational seminars and<lb/>
be paid approximatpiy $130 per<lb/>
week<lb/>
Students interested in the pro<lb/>
gram should secure a brochure art<lb/>
nouncmg the program and a State<lb/>
of North Carolina application form<lb/>
from their college or university<lb/>
placement office or local Job Ser<lb/>
vice office<lb/>
Students interested in the In<lb/>
stitute of Government program<lb/>
should mail an application to the<lb/>
institute of Government Knapp<lb/>
Building 059A, The University of<lb/>
North Caroma, Chapel Hill. North<lb/>
Carolina. 27514 by February 2<lb/>
1981<lb/>
Applicants will be accepted<lb/>
without respect to race. se. color,<lb/>
national or,gin. religion, or nan<lb/>
dicap<lb/>
Lib Johnson, a student of East<lb/>
Carolina University, served as an<lb/>
institute of Government intern in<lb/>
state government during the surr<lb/>
mer of 1980<lb/>
Jobs Plentiful For Engineers<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
rapid ex-<lb/>
pansion of high<lb/>
technology manpower.<lb/>
In addition, main<lb/>
school districts current-<lb/>
ly are plagued by shot<lb/>
lages of math teachers,<lb/>
due in pan to the main<lb/>
better-paying oppor-<lb/>
tunities f o I<lb/>
mathematics graduates<lb/>
elsewhere in the job<lb/>
market. And recent<lb/>
trends in enrollments<lb/>
and degrees make the<lb/>
current shortage ol<lb/>
high school math<lb/>
teachers seem likely to<lb/>
continue. In the South.<lb/>
half as many bac-<lb/>
calaureate degrees in<lb/>
math were awarded in<lb/>
1977-78 than just seven<lb/>
years earlier.<lb/>
The nation's growing<lb/>
concern with industrial<lb/>
productivity a nd<lb/>
technological achieve-<lb/>
ment is likely to spur an<lb/>
even greater demand<lb/>
tor high technology<lb/>
manpower, the report<lb/>
says, mirroring<lb/>
America's reaction to<lb/>
the launch of Sputnik<lb/>
twenty years ago. Vet<lb/>
the traditional source<lb/>
of new scientists and<lb/>
engineers ? young.<lb/>
Bumps Stay<lb/>
(UPI) - Gov. James<lb/>
B. Hunt Jr. had a<lb/>
smooth ride to his re-<lb/>
election last fall, but he<lb/>
will hae to endure<lb/>
some bumps at his in-<lb/>
augural ball Friday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
The ball will be held<lb/>
at Reynolds Coliseum<lb/>
on the North Carolina<lb/>
State University cam-<lb/>
pus, but there are no<lb/>
plans to remove speed<lb/>
bumps on streets<lb/>
leading to the facility.<lb/>
A minor Hap occur-<lb/>
red four vears aso at<lb/>
Hunt's first inaugural<lb/>
when the speed bumps<lb/>
were removed and later<lb/>
replaced ? at a cost of<lb/>
$800 ? in order to pro-<lb/>
vide the governor and<lb/>
other dignitaries a<lb/>
smooth ride to the ball.<lb/>
"No, no, no said<lb/>
Doris G u p t o n , a<lb/>
spokesman for the state<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Transportation, when<lb/>
asked if the DOT had<lb/>
been asked to remove<lb/>
the speed bumps this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Prices Rising<lb/>
C ontinued From Page 1<lb/>
Scholarship Committee<lb/>
for use in the general<lb/>
scholarship fund.<lb/>
Distributed profit is the<lb/>
money that would go to<lb/>
the owners or<lb/>
shareholders in a<lb/>
private business<lb/>
This arrangement is<lb/>
set up by state law, and<lb/>
recently the store has<lb/>
contributed approx-<lb/>
imately $45,000 per<lb/>
year to the fund, accor-<lb/>
ding to manager Joe<lb/>
Clark.<lb/>
With prices virtually<lb/>
the same at both stores.<lb/>
some students have<lb/>
sought alternative<lb/>
means of obtaining<lb/>
books. Many students<lb/>
have eliminated the<lb/>
middle-man by buying<lb/>
and selling books<lb/>
among themselves. A<lb/>
number of dorms hold<lb/>
book co-ops in an ef-<lb/>
fort to save students<lb/>
money.<lb/>
"Why should we pay<lb/>
more than we have to<lb/>
for books?' said<lb/>
sophomore Scott<lb/>
Burnette. "It seems like<lb/>
we're already paying<lb/>
enough for them<lb/>
AtONTIOMCPTO<lb/>
UlkWIIKOf<lb/>
P??NANCY<lb/>
 7 00 -?HMKH?Mv?y<lb/>
praortaAcy tttt. Wrff can<lb/>
trot, and proti?m pr?enan<lb/>
cy cawfuallno Par fvrmar<lb/>
information cat) all S1S<lb/>
(tell ' fraa numher<lb/>
?no m IMIl between <lb/>
am S.M weekjier<lb/>
MM OraaMta'taa ?<lb/>
?17 Watt Mara tt.<lb/>
tlXPLRT STYLING<lb/>
FOR BOTH MLN<lb/>
AND WOMLN<lb/>
BY APPOINTMENT<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
SHIRLEY'S<lb/>
KUT &amp; STYLE<lb/>
301 EVANS ST. MALL<lb/>
MflMGESBLVD. SUITE 206<lb/>
white males ? will be<lb/>
in short supply in the<lb/>
coming years. In fact,<lb/>
the absolute number of<lb/>
all high school<lb/>
graduates in 1985 is ex-<lb/>
pected to be 15 percent<lb/>
lower than 10 years<lb/>
earlier.<lb/>
In the engineering<lb/>
field, where supply and<lb/>
d e m a n d tended t o<lb/>
"roller coaster" ovei<lb/>
the vears. enrollments<lb/>
are surging once again.<lb/>
For example, in 1979,<lb/>
junior-year enrollments<lb/>
were 80 percent greater<lb/>
than in 1973, and some<lb/>
62,IKK) to 67,000 new<lb/>
engineering bac-<lb/>
calaureates are ex-<lb/>
pected annually in the<lb/>
nation during the<lb/>
Eighties.<lb/>
Dr. Galambos shows<lb/>
that the demand for<lb/>
these engineers should<lb/>
remain strong in the<lb/>
near future, but she<lb/>
questions whether the<lb/>
annual supply of new<lb/>
engineers can be main-<lb/>
tained. Many public<lb/>
engineering schools<lb/>
already are at peak<lb/>
capacity, and it is dif-<lb/>
ficult to rapidly shift<lb/>
facult) and other<lb/>
resources to h i g h -<lb/>
demand programs. In-<lb/>
deed, faculty shortages<lb/>
in engineering are<lb/>
alreadv reported. With<lb/>
the starting salaries<lb/>
c o m m a n d ed b <lb/>
engineers, there is little<lb/>
incentive for students<lb/>
to pursue graduate<lb/>
study for an academic<lb/>
career, or for Ph.D's to<lb/>
choose college teaching<lb/>
careers.<lb/>
In the nation and in<lb/>
the South, demand for<lb/>
engineers is expected to<lb/>
outpace supply as the<lb/>
pool of 18-to-21 year<lb/>
olds begins to decline.<lb/>
The many specialists<lb/>
who cross over to<lb/>
engineering from other<lb/>
high technology fields<lb/>
may help fill engineer-<lb/>
ing jobs. But, the<lb/>
overall balance of the<lb/>
nation's technical man-<lb/>
power may be adversely<lb/>
affected because the<lb/>
physical sciences, com-<lb/>
puter science, and other<lb/>
high technology fields<lb/>
are experiencing shor-<lb/>
tages of their own. Dr.<lb/>
Galambos suggests that<lb/>
industry may resolve<lb/>
the impending shortage<lb/>
of engineers by shifting<lb/>
engineering<lb/>
technologists into<lb/>
engineering positions.<lb/>
Yet such a shift would<lb/>
only produce another<lb/>
shortage in the produc-<lb/>
tion and maintenance<lb/>
areas where such<lb/>
technologists are now<lb/>
deployed.<lb/>
Another possible<lb/>
constraint on the supp-<lb/>
ly of engineers and<lb/>
engineering faculty is<lb/>
that the number of<lb/>
students who constitute<lb/>
the potential supply<lb/>
base includes a growing<lb/>
enrollment of foreign<lb/>
students, many of<lb/>
whom are expected to<lb/>
return home after<lb/>
receiving their degrees.<lb/>
The SRFB report notes<lb/>
that in 1978 in the<lb/>
South, over one-third<lb/>
of all engineering doc-<lb/>
torates were awarded to<lb/>
foreign students.<lb/>
She ?aat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Is Now Accepting Applications<lb/>
For Cartoonists And Reporters<lb/>
Only those who can spare the necessary amount of time to do a good<lb/>
job need apply. These positions require a significant amount of input<lb/>
and attention to the reponsibilities that come with the job.<lb/>
CARTOONISTS<lb/>
We are looking for people who have the exceptional ability to draw<lb/>
caricatures in a way that conveys a particular thought and viewpoint<lb/>
with satire and wit.<lb/>
Applicants for cartoonist positions should bring samples of their<lb/>
work.<lb/>
R E<lb/>
O R<lb/>
E R<lb/>
We are seeking students who are knowledgable and have a grasp of<lb/>
basic journalistic writing techniques. Students who have completed<lb/>
Journalism 2100 andor higher level journalism courses are preferred.<lb/>
Assignments will include hard news writing, news feature writing, beat<lb/>
reporting, sports writing, news analysis, investigative reporting, etc<lb/>
Successful and productive reporters will be considered for promotion<lb/>
to higher editorial positions later in the semester. Good work as a<lb/>
reporter will lead to promotion to positions as assistant editors and<lb/>
desk editors.<lb/>
Applicants for reporting positions should bring samples of their<lb/>
previous writing. Samples should be of journalistic writing only; no<lb/>
essays, term papers, or poetry.<lb/>
APPLY IN PERSON AT THE NEWSPAPER OFFICE<lb/>
FROM 5 -6 p.m. ON MONDAY, JANUARY II, 1981.<lb/>
PRISON VISITS<lb/>
Many ECU indents have lonco<lb/>
Maury Correctional Facilities<lb/>
Thursday mght v.Siting progra'r<lb/>
We go trorr 7 30 p m 900pm<lb/>
Car pooling and pick UP S<lb/>
available it's a triendiy at<lb/>
mosphere and enjoyable tor all<lb/>
Let's not tor get these lonel y people<lb/>
during the Hoi'dar Season Can<lb/>
7S6 9324<lb/>
RESIDENCE STAFF<lb/>
Applications are now<lb/>
received by the Dept of Re)<lb/>
Life tor Resident Advisors tc<lb/>
mg Fan Semester Any full I n<lb/>
student who has reserved a<lb/>
residence hal! room and ha<lb/>
overall avg of 2.0 is eligible to ap<lb/>
ply information and applical<lb/>
forms can be obtained from a<lb/>
Residence Hall Director or<lb/>
Residence Life Office, 214<lb/>
Whichard Bidcj<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
POSITIONS<lb/>
Appiica'ions o'p Deng a:i:ep'ea<lb/>
'or Coffeehouse Chairperson and<lb/>
committee members immediate<lb/>
i? P- : tp) cations Mi me Stu<lb/>
dent union O' re Room 234 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Call<lb/>
757 Mil Fxt 2)0<lb/>
SPRING BREAK TRIP<lb/>
The Student union Travel Com<lb/>
m.ttee has planned two trips dur<lb/>
mg Spring Break One is tc Forl<lb/>
Laudfrciaie Fior.da and the other<lb/>
s a Fort LauderdaleBahamas<lb/>
Cruise Pr,res include transpor'a<lb/>
tion, hotel accummodat'ors and<lb/>
the cru'S For more information<lb/>
go hy Mendenhall Central T .<lb/>
Otf.ce or call at 757611 Ft<lb/>
Lflu : Quad<lb/>
not. ? oo Double hotel<lb/>
room J309 00 Ft Lauder<lb/>
dale Bahamas Cru.se Quad<lb/>
hotel room g. quad ur 1499 00<lb/>
Double hole' room &amp; qoad ' ?<lb/>
1549 00<lb/>
INSTRUCTORS<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
instructors are needed '<lb/>
several short term oeiJ.rin.o ,<lb/>
workshops or courses '??? ?'?<lb/>
Crafts Center a' Menoe' I<lb/>
dent Center The areas tor ?<lb/>
instructors are needf<lb/>
darkroom teohn.ques ,ew<lb/>
siikscreen Graduate or f<lb/>
year art students or an ?<lb/>
has sufficien' knowtedge K 'ear'<lb/>
a course m y Of 'he are; ?<lb/>
tioned, may con'ac' Tan ?. ?<lb/>
Crafts and Recreat.on D ?<lb/>
Mendenhall 757 6'<lb/>
EARNING<lb/>
A new program foe<lb/>
Learning Eff in? , ?<lb/>
fereo by Dr George<lb/>
begmn.ng Jar 14 1981 Then a<lb/>
mo groups Or" <lb/>
Mon and Wed at 1.00 ;<lb/>
? . ? . <lb/>
and Thurs at 1 00 p m ?<lb/>
A' gi ' ?'??<lb/>
avaiiabH ? -<lb/>
dance s vOior"ar,<lb/>
?? atioi ? ? i . rea<lb/>
KOH-I-NOOR RAPID0GRAPH<lb/>
Technical Pen Set<lb/>
3076 sp7 7 pen set<lb/>
containing (00,0,1,2,212,3 &amp; 4)<lb/>
$47.00<lb/>
Available At:<lb/>
Studekt Supply Store<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Owned ond Operated by Eost Corol.no Unrversiry<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
PRICES ARE UP!<lb/>
If you need money for fall clothes or football tickets, now Is a<lb/>
good time to sell your gold and silver valuables. And here's a<lb/>
good way to get EXTRA CASH!<lb/>
SELL YOUR<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
$<lb/>
Almost everyone has a high school or college class ring<lb/>
they don't wear anymore. Check your dresser drawers<lb/>
and bring your class ring into Coin &amp; Ring Man. We're<lb/>
your professional buying service and we guarantee you<lb/>
tair prices and good service.<lb/>
Wl PAY CASH ON TNI f POT<lb/>
FOR JIWIUtT, VAIUAIIESANYTHMC<lb/>
MARKED10K - UK - UK<lb/>
S COLD S<lb/>
? IINCS ? NICKUCIS ? WATCHES ? 0IAM0K0S<lb/>
? CLASS IINCS ? WI00INC BANDS ? DINTAL<lb/>
COLO ? IIACILITS ? IROOCNIS ? I.0CKITS<lb/>
? CHAINS ? UCNTIIS ? CUFF LINKS ? lARtlNCS<lb/>
PA VINO ON THI IP?OT<lb/>
CASH FOR ITIMS MAatftlO<lb/>
STERLING SILVER<lb/>
RtOAMUSS OF CONDITION<lb/>
? COFFEE SERVICES ? GOBLETS<lb/>
? RINGS ? SPOONS ? TRAYS ? KNIVES<lb/>
? FORKS?NECKLACES?BRACELETS<lb/>
? FRANKLIN AND HAMILTON MINT<lb/>
MERCHANDISE ?<lb/>
$<lb/>
?? -s ?,? . ? s, ?<lb/>
C0t?&amp;"CAf4<lb/>
401 S.EVANS ST.<lb/>
I S. EVANS ST. OPfcN9 30-S30MUN-?SAI<lb/>
MONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHO N E 752-3866<lb/>
YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER.<lb/>
P<lb/>
( onii<lb/>
l<lb/>
J<lb/>
U,<lb/>
E.<lb/>
1<lb/>
sit) of<lb/>
cher r<lb/>
i<lb/>
nmi<lb/>
l<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057309_0003"/><lb/>
I Ml I AS I K l IN1AN<lb/>
JAM H 8, 1S?K 1<lb/>
Newspaper Endorsements Carry Little Weight<lb/>
Continued I rom Pao? I<lb/>
V<lb/>
J o<lb/>
"sthatcn state's newspapers. lessor of journalism at<lb/>
jvasendon Studies of the effec- the University of North<lb/>
only the Concord tiveness of editorial en Carolina, found that<lb/>
I he dorsements have shown editorial endorsements<lb/>
them to be only slightl) and election results<lb/>
helpful to a candidate<lb/>
in a close race.<lb/>
W hi Cai tei and<lb/>
re expected<lb/>
it is noi<lb/>
thai the<lb/>
si ol the<lb/>
In a 1967 study,<lb/>
Maxwell McCombs,<lb/>
i! an assistant pro<lb/>
were only loosely cor<lb/>
related. He concluded<lb/>
that "endorsements are<lb/>
only one factor in the<lb/>
variables that explain<lb/>
political behavior<lb/>
Judge To Order Testimony<lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
' s A h <lb/>
Oa I's lawyers<lb/>
lid I . iin lias refused<lb/>
. them the names.<lb/>
' Ol Adams,<lb/>
I . is accused by<lb/>
foi POWs of col<lb/>
iting with the<lb/>
b wearing then<lb/>
m, carrying a<lb/>
tpon and helping<lb/>
trd ovei and<lb/>
ite American<lb/>
soners in a scnes of<lb/>
imps in South<lb/>
nam during the mid<lb/>
? <lb/>
tttorneys<lb/>
Gai '? ood was<lb/>
n ane b torture<lb/>
mi that,<lb/>
with emo<lb/>
. instability sooted<lb/>
u n h a p p y<lb/>
ood, caused him<lb/>
pi the ideals and<lb/>
the Vietong<lb/>
' "become a<lb/>
tnamese "<lb/>
e conlend<lb/>
?'?'in 1 Knu<lb/>
UM Study Indicate<lb/>
Extensive Cheating<lb/>
)<lb/>
rm, whereas<lb/>
? Midw j a<lb/>
' ance were<lb/>
to shear on<lb/>
ol the ;<lb/>
?no I fib suggests, Or.<lb/>
said, "thai dil<lb/>
?s' - ferent tpes oi people<lb/>
they were given an op are attracted to dif-<lb/>
? mi types ol situa<lb/>
and that motiva<lb/>
- enhanced when<lb/>
pe pie are in situations<lb/>
? with the type<lb/>
n the a<lb/>
Pei tion in-<lb/>
in part result<lb/>
? lividuals with<lb/>
tii  i ? seleci<lb/>
? which<lb/>
will expose<lb/>
-?re n ves.<lb/>
 selest<lb/>
i n stimulus con-<lb/>
I hey do<lb/>
: ? ite their en-<lb/>
?nmeni to make it<lb/>
compatible with<lb/>
?wn preferences,<lb/>
needs, traits,<lb/>
at til udes. and<lb/>
ll a en sties<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
"WELCOME BACK STUDENTS"<lb/>
$ A 3.88<lb/>
COUP?N-<lb/>
$13.88 J<lb/>
Ot O"<lb/>
<lb/>
 o-ent<lb/>
'<lb/>
c'oopoh-<lb/>
CB?P?r ?rlia?<lb/>
$29.95<lb/>
cil 88?r?g&amp;&amp;'<lb/>
? tor ?U8 ? ' ??? ??? i<lb/>
All size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
available<lb/>
OFFICIAL NORTH CAROLINA STATE INSPECTION STATION<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
FGOOdriCh Coggins Car Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
320 Wtst Bntnilli II<lb/>
OPW MT r?' Sft P" iae am 1-hpji<lb/>
I li5:3l PJ<lb/>
?JJ&amp;TIRE CENTER<lb/>
. ? ?m s ft SERVICE<lb/>
2H 3ft<lb/>
will support their<lb/>
claims that Garwood<lb/>
remained behind in<lb/>
Vietnam because the<lb/>
North V iet n a m e s e<lb/>
refused to release<lb/>
prisoners who were in-<lb/>
sane or suffered severe<lb/>
physical mutilation.<lb/>
" I he people who did<lb/>
become profoundly<lb/>
men tails ill were<lb/>
segregated and not<lb/>
repatriated because the<lb/>
North Vietnamese did<lb/>
not want the world to<lb/>
know that prisoners<lb/>
had been mistreated<lb/>
t h e d e 1 e n s e s a i d<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
1 estifying tor the<lb/>
defense Wednesday<lb/>
were Mar Speet C tab-<lb/>
tree of Covina, Calif<lb/>
(iarwood's childhood<lb/>
s w e e (heart w h o<lb/>
psychiatrists hav e<lb/>
described in earlier<lb/>
testimony as "the only<lb/>
positive thing in his<lb/>
vouth<lb/>
and are by no means<lb/>
the deciding factor.<lb/>
A survey of other<lb/>
research on editorial<lb/>
endorsements bears out<lb/>
McCombs' findings.<lb/>
As John Robinson ol<lb/>
the University ol<lb/>
Michigan Department<lb/>
of Journalism writes,<lb/>
almost m understate-<lb/>
ttient. "newspaper<lb/>
editorials cannot be us<lb/>
ed as predictive tools<lb/>
The most effective<lb/>
editorials seem to be<lb/>
those that support a<lb/>
candidate whose views<lb/>
seem to differ with the<lb/>
newspapers These are<lb/>
called by researchers<lb/>
"unpredictable" edits,<lb/>
and they tend to have<lb/>
more impact on the<lb/>
election An example<lb/>
might be the endorse-<lb/>
ment ol a Democratic<lb/>
candidate by a paper<lb/>
generally thought to be<lb/>
conservative.<lb/>
Perhaps the most<lb/>
significant aspeel oi<lb/>
this fall's NCPA en-<lb/>
dorsement survey was<lb/>
the number of<lb/>
new spapers choosing<lb/>
not to endorse can-<lb/>
didates. Fewer than<lb/>
halt of the state's<lb/>
dailies made en<lb/>
dorsements this year.<lb/>
Mam ot the editors<lb/>
surveyed felt thai<lb/>
oteis ought to be able<lb/>
to decide lot<lb/>
themseKes w ho to vote<lb/>
for, and that it was nol<lb/>
the role of the<lb/>
newspapei to make that<lb/>
decision for them<lb/>
Othei editoi s feel un-<lb/>
comfortable with en<lb/>
dorsements because<lb/>
they can be per. cued a<lb/>
linking the paper with a<lb/>
particular party or can<lb/>
didate. s Phillip<lb/>
Geyelin writes in I he<lb/>
Editorial 1'agc, edited<lb/>
by the Washington<lb/>
Post Writers' Croup,<lb/>
"it puts a bin;<lb/>
stickei on the<lb/>
masthead. It may even<lb/>
have the effect of pmn<lb/>
ing a campaign buti<lb/>
on the newspapei<lb/>
political reporters .<lb/>
coloring, however in<lb/>
directly and insidious-<lb/>
ly, the political repor<lb/>
ting in tile news section.<lb/>
It invites the readers to<lb/>
look for bias and<lb/>
motive, at a time when<lb/>
readers are all too in-<lb/>
clined to do that " In<lb/>
'? 'ttharolina, even<lb/>
more than in the rest nf<lb/>
the nation, most editor s<lb/>
appear unwilling to<lb/>
give readers thai invita<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
I Northarolina<lb/>
papers are owned hv<lb/>
Freedi<lb/>
New spapers group,<lb/>
which has a formal<lb/>
poli mist endors-<lb/>
ing candidates. I he<lb/>
('?? ' wia (razette, New<lb/>
 S in Journal<lb/>
Kinsion Daily free<lb/>
Press, Jacksonville<lb/>
Daily News and the<lb/>
Burlington Daily<lb/>
limes New in owned<lb/>
by Freedom, and thus<lb/>
made no endorser<lb/>
Ihe Fastarolmian<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
- ? ?'  .<lb/>
 ?? ? ?????.<lb/>
-? emmj ?  ?. . .<lb/>
ATTTIC<lb/>
FriSat. The<lb/>
Pedstrians<lb/>
Sun. No Vacancy<lb/>
and Footsball<lb/>
Ovation Rec. Artist Tour. 6:00<lb/>
R0BLnndh??ff0n Tues 3 PM<lb/>
Dd IQ s- o (in the Phoenix Room)<lb/>
h o4 thM adve-tttw)<lb/>
llwns la rmquirmd to b? '?dtly<lb/>
avallabl toe a?l? In Men Kroqae Sav-on<lb/>
? ?c?pi aa apclflcally notaO in thia ad If w? do<lb/>
run out of an Itom w? wt'l oHc you your choca ot al<lb/>
comparabia Ham ??h?n avallabla. reflecting tha a?ma aavinga or al<lb/>
tiinchKk which will antitia you to purchaa tha adv?niad Item at tha<lb/>
adverttawl prlca within 30 daya<lb/>
Items and P'ices<lb/>
E'tective Thurs . Jan 8<lb/>
thru Sat Jan 10 1980<lb/>
19f<lb/>
Copyright 1981<lb/>
Kroger Savon<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
"<lb/>
Before, During &amp;<lb/>
After the Game<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
has everythinp<lb/>
you need!<lb/>
MADE FRESH IN OUR STORE<lb/>
X<lb/>
Pabst Blue Ribbon<lb/>
Extra Light Beer<lb/>
MT. DEW,<lb/>
DIET PEPSI OR<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
AVONDALE<lb/>
Chunk<lb/>
Light Tuna<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
All-Meat<lb/>
Wieners<lb/>
6V2-Oz.<lb/>
Can<lb/>
FLORIDA INDIAN RIVER<lb/>
White<lb/>
Grapefruit<lb/>
$79<lb/>
?slweo to ?ho1<lb/>
jack &amp; J?w<lb/>
Bologna<lb/>
59<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
-fostitos<lb/>
? <lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
MON<lb/>
THRU<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
OPEN SUNOAY<lb/>
9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057309_0004"/><lb/>
QUf? ?aat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
V. HRIS L!( HOK, i.ene'ul tanaiee'<lb/>
Paul Lincke, ???? t,r uhm Paul Collins, seaio,<lb/>
Jimmy Dhpree, e?? Chari es Chandler ??&amp;&amp;??<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, fnkmm mm David Norris, Ft?eo,<lb/>
Dave Severin, ???,?? mm<lb/>
.<lb/>
Januar 8. 181<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Liquor Vote<lb/>
Mixed Drinks Revenue Benefits All<lb/>
On February 17 Greenville will<lb/>
again have the opportunity to vote<lb/>
on liquor by the drink. It will pass,<lb/>
we hope.<lb/>
In June of 1979 there was a<lb/>
county-wide vote and the issue was<lb/>
defeated by a very slim margin.<lb/>
Voters within the city limits voted<lb/>
two-to-one in favor of liquor by the<lb/>
drink in that election. Unfortunate-<lb/>
ly, the voters in little towns like<lb/>
Winterville were able to tip the<lb/>
balance in favor of the dry forces.<lb/>
This time its a new ball game,<lb/>
however. Only voters who reside<lb/>
within the city of Greenville will be<lb/>
allowed to vote. Considering that<lb/>
Greenville residents voted over-<lb/>
whelmingly in favor of it last time<lb/>
there is little doubt that it will pass.<lb/>
Liquor by the drink will provide<lb/>
many benefits to the Greenville<lb/>
community. The quality of life will<lb/>
be ereatlv enhanced. More and bet-<lb/>
ter rebiaui dill.<lb/>
.it lv<lb/>
IC cUiii<lb/>
munity. That is probably the most<lb/>
noticeable benefit aside from the tax<lb/>
revenues.<lb/>
Tax revenue generated by the sale<lb/>
of mixed drinks benefits all in the<lb/>
society, including those who wish to<lb/>
force their archaic morals on others.<lb/>
The increased cost of the liquor-per-<lb/>
drink adds to the prohibitive quality<lb/>
of the system. This should certainly<lb/>
pacify our prohibitionist neighbors.<lb/>
The night life took a definite up-<lb/>
ward turn in Chapel Hill, Raleigh,<lb/>
Greensboro, Charlotte, Wilmington<lb/>
and all the other towns that voted in<lb/>
liquor by the drink.<lb/>
Despite the emotional and<lb/>
rhetorical charges that have been<lb/>
made by some members of the<lb/>
clergy, there will not be imminent<lb/>
death and destruction if this passes.<lb/>
Families will not break up, there<lb/>
won't be drunk drivers at every in-<lb/>
tersection, and there will not be any<lb/>
wholesale moral decay.<lb/>
To hear some of these Neander-<lb/>
thal, holier-than-thou preachers you<lb/>
would think that all the world's pro-<lb/>
blems were rooted in alcohol. Did<lb/>
not Jesus partake wine?<lb/>
The economic and social benefits<lb/>
cannot even bin to be calculated.<lb/>
A more cosmopolitan atmosphere<lb/>
would prevail, Greenville would<lb/>
finally move "Uptown<lb/>
We encourage every faculty and<lb/>
staff member to vote in this referen-<lb/>
dum and support liquor by the<lb/>
drink. Students who are registered<lb/>
to vote should also be sure to turn<lb/>
out. The "university vote" will be<lb/>
crucial to the passaage of LBD.<lb/>
TZ ?TRIKERc) ARE<lb/>
SMUTTING DCVIN MORE<lb/>
FACTORIES-<lb/>
DAMN<lb/>
UNICNg THO&amp;E<lb/>
GREEDY S.O.E:&amp;<lb/>
VIILL DE&amp;TROY ThE<lb/>
Free enTerPRi&amp;e<lb/>
SYSTEM!<lb/>
ft<lb/>
?e .2<lb/>
c<lb/>
IN PULAND.<lb/>
LIKE 1<lb/>
ALWAYS SAY,<lb/>
IT'S NICE To SEE.<lb/>
THE WCRK1N6 MAN<lb/>
gTANpiNG UP<lb/>
For UiS Rights!<lb/>
THAT'S THE<lb/>
SPIRIT OF<lb/>
CAPITALISM<lb/>
ttC<lb/>
c<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
?Iejn'<lb/>
feQft r-TVffcWfi<lb/>
Nuclear Devastation<lb/>
B DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Imagine a place where no birds sing,<lb/>
where streets are drenched in black rain,<lb/>
and wildflowers, their growth stimulated<lb/>
by intense radiation, bloom in cruel beauty<lb/>
even as human beings wither by the<lb/>
thousands. A macabre science fiction<lb/>
scenario? No, this is history ? Hiroshima<lb/>
in 1945, in the aftermath of an attack with<lb/>
a single primitive atomic bomb.<lb/>
What would be the consequences of an<lb/>
all-out war with advanced nuclear weapons<lb/>
in which half a dozen nations were flinging<lb/>
the world's 16,000 nuclear weapons back<lb/>
and forth? Would our side "win"? Would<lb/>
we, as some of President-elect Ronald<lb/>
Reagan's advisors are assuring him, sur-<lb/>
vive a nuclear war and go on to rebuild the<lb/>
country bigger and better than ever? What<lb/>
would life be like if we did make it through<lb/>
the fighting?<lb/>
Those questions were addressed in a re-<lb/>
cent two-day symposium on the medical<lb/>
consequences of nuclear war, held in San<lb/>
Francisco by Physicians for Social Respon-<lb/>
sibility and the Council for a Liveable<lb/>
World Education Fund. The unanimous<lb/>
conclusion of eighteen experts ? including<lb/>
scientists, physicians and retired military<lb/>
officers ? was that the survivors of such a<lb/>
conflict would envy the dead.<lb/>
Howard Hiatt, dean of the Harvard<lb/>
School of Public Health, pointed out that<lb/>
most medical doctors would be killed in-<lb/>
stantly in an atomic explosion, and most<lb/>
hospitals destroyed. Those doctors that<lb/>
survived the bombing, facing ultra-high<lb/>
radiation and nearly-depleted medical sup-<lb/>
plies, would have to work 20-hour days for<lb/>
15 days to see survivors for a maximum of<lb/>
15 minutes in a city the size of San Fran-<lb/>
cisco. The wounded would suffer from<lb/>
radiation sickness, blindness from looking<lb/>
at the blast and deafness from hearing it.<lb/>
They would lack transportation, com-<lb/>
munications media, food and water, and<lb/>
would be beset by hordes of insects better<lb/>
able to withstand radiation. Unlike<lb/>
Hiroshima, which was rebuilt with aid<lb/>
from the outside world, devastated cities<lb/>
would not be reclaimed; there would be no<lb/>
outside world.<lb/>
In light of these facts, the very thought<lb/>
of surviving an all-out nuclear war ? the<lb/>
almost inevitable result of what might<lb/>
begin as a limited nuclear exchange ? is a<lb/>
pathetic delusion. It makes the drills that<lb/>
schoolchildren routinely ran in the fifties<lb/>
? dive under your desk, hands over your<lb/>
head, eyes shut, wait for three bursts on<lb/>
the air raid siren signalling an all-clear ?<lb/>
seem like exercises in madness. Ditto for<lb/>
backyard fallout shelters, a fad of the early<lb/>
sixties, which, according to one speaker,<lb/>
would probably serve as ovens in which<lb/>
people taking refuge would be baked in the<lb/>
extreme heat of an atomic explosion.<lb/>
r-Campus Forum<lb/>
Alumnus Supports Grapplers<lb/>
Upon discovering that East Carolina<lb/>
University (ECU) was dropping its<lb/>
NCAA Wrestling Program, thousands<lb/>
o students, alumni and supporters have<lb/>
become deeply concerned. Now, I must<lb/>
ask why the sport is being dropped?<lb/>
Is not wrestling one of the worlds sic)<lb/>
oldest and best forms of competition? Is<lb/>
this sport not popular in the Olympic<lb/>
games? Is this not a sport that takes<lb/>
more dedication and sacrifice than most<lb/>
others? Have not the ECU wrestling<lb/>
teams oi the past compiled and (sic) im-<lb/>
pressive over-all won-loss record and<lb/>
consistantly beaten the States and<lb/>
Carolinas?<lb/>
1 think one can find the answer to<lb/>
thses questions to be YES. Wrestling is<lb/>
surely one oi the worlds (sic) oldest<lb/>
sports, probably originating more than<lb/>
3,000 years B.C. Even greek (sic) legends<lb/>
explain the popularity of wrestling<lb/>
among ancient heroes, and just as the<lb/>
lighted torch was brought from the<lb/>
plains of Olympta in Elis, Greece more<lb/>
than 2,500 years ago, so was Olympic<lb/>
wrestling.<lb/>
This sport surely takes more sacrifice<lb/>
than most other sports, and I can per-<lb/>
sonally vouch for that. I have par-<lb/>
ticipated in organized basketball,<lb/>
baseball, football, track, the wild and<lb/>
crazy games of rugby and wrestling, and<lb/>
no other sport can compare to the sport<lb/>
now on the verge of ECU extinction. As<lb/>
a recent newspaper article reported, the<lb/>
ECU Wrestling Program compiled an<lb/>
"impressive 86-10-3 dual meet record"<lb/>
from 1966 through 1976. "During that<lb/>
period. East Carolina never lost to any<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference team<lb/>
With wrestling so popular in junior<lb/>
high schools, high schools and small col-<lb/>
leges, it is going to be a disgrace that a<lb/>
growing university such as ECU will not<lb/>
be a participant, and especially at a<lb/>
period when ECl is striving to become<lb/>
equal to the teams of the AC C . Just<lb/>
think how the previous and present<lb/>
wrestlers must feel that los 10 to 2c<lb/>
even 60 pounds to devote their time and<lb/>
talents to ECU. Also, think oi' that<lb/>
could have been ECU Olymian wrestler,<lb/>
that will never be!<lb/>
ATTENTION: Let's go ECU sup-<lb/>
porters, let your voices be heard as the<lb/>
sounds of war are heard, for this is<lb/>
WAR!<lb/>
OSWELL 1 . Mel AMB. JR.<lb/>
1980 ECU Alumnus<lb/>
Prisoner Responds<lb/>
I want to thank you very much for<lb/>
printing my letter in your paper. I have<lb/>
met some really wonderful people from<lb/>
it, so thanks again.<lb/>
Would you run this poem in your<lb/>
paper for me when you have the space. I<lb/>
just want to thank everyone who took<lb/>
their time to drop a line to say they care<lb/>
I write poems all the time so I just<lb/>
thought maybe you would run this one<lb/>
for me. Thank you for the tune you look<lb/>
to print my last letter.<lb/>
A Special Thanks<lb/>
This is a special poem,<lb/>
to all of you out there.<lb/>
Who look ihe precious time<lb/>
to let me know you care.<lb/>
Your many, many letters<lb/>
brighten up my day.<lb/>
So I want to thank each oj you,<lb/>
in this special way.<lb/>
Way the power oj God be with you,<lb/>
A smile be on your face.<lb/>
When they free me from this prison,<lb/>
I know I'll find my place<lb/>
KVR1 P RAYNER<lb/>
Federal Prison<lb/>
Ashland, Kentucky<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 Joyner Library.<lb/>
Tor purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature oj the authorfs). I etters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. Ml let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
i ia s.<lb/>
Helms Addresses Major Issues<lb/>
B Sen. JESSE HELMS<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? A few weeks back,<lb/>
the editor of one of North Carolina's<lb/>
largest daily newspapers sat down and<lb/>
turned out an editorial declaring that I lack<lb/>
compassion for the poor. His editorial<lb/>
distorted my often-stated conviction that<lb/>
the food stamp program, for example,<lb/>
should be confined to the truly needy.<lb/>
By manipulating facts and figures, he<lb/>
sought to convince his readers that there is<lb/>
very little abuse and fraud in the food<lb/>
stamp program. He was not successful ?<lb/>
at least with dozens of his subscribers who<lb/>
clipped the editorial and mailed it to me<lb/>
along with their own comments about<lb/>
what they themselves have personally<lb/>
witnessed.<lb/>
Still, such misleading journalism is not<lb/>
helpful in trying to bring under control the<lb/>
runaway federal programs and their ex-<lb/>
plosive cost to the taxpayers.<lb/>
ANOTHER ? Another big-city<lb/>
newspaper in North Carolina contrived a<lb/>
threat from a New York Congressman that<lb/>
he would fight the tobacco program if 1<lb/>
persisted in my efforts to trim food stamp<lb/>
spending. For three days, headlines in<lb/>
newspapers across North Carolina pro-<lb/>
claimed that I had placed the tobacco pro-<lb/>
gram in peril.<lb/>
The other newspapers had picked up the<lb/>
original story from the Raleigh paper.<lb/>
Nobody checked with me until the contriv-<lb/>
ed story had run its course.<lb/>
I suppose a great many North Caroli-<lb/>
nians still tfo not know that the Con-<lb/>
gressman from New York called me, and<lb/>
assured me that he had no intention of<lb/>
Tighting the tobacco program. He told me<lb/>
that the Raleigh newspaper had contacted<lb/>
him and given him a false account of what<lb/>
1 had actually said about the food stamp<lb/>
program. When he learned what 1 had<lb/>
said, he agreed with me ? and promised<lb/>
his help in trying to limit the program to<lb/>
the truly needy.<lb/>
HEAT ? Harry Truman once said that<lb/>
those who can't stand the heat ought to<lb/>
stay out of the kitchen. I agree with that. I<lb/>
knew, when I ran for the Senate, that 1<lb/>
would be subjected to attacks and criticism<lb/>
by the liberal editors of big-city<lb/>
newspapers in my own state, and<lb/>
elsewhere. This doesn't bother me per-<lb/>
sonally. It does bother me that some<lb/>
editors may be doing great harm to the<lb/>
political process, and to the cause of zood<lb/>
government.<lb/>
At one time or another, I think 1 have in-<lb/>
vited most of the editors in my state to call<lb/>
me if they have questions about something<lb/>
I have done or said. I have yet to receive an<lb/>
inquiry from any of the editors to whom I<lb/>
have extended the invitation. One editor.<lb/>
in fact, published an editorial declaring<lb/>
that I am a "rude" and "crude" man<lb/>
because I commented that I would not be<lb/>
intimidated by the threats of a northern<lb/>
congressman, and because I suggested that<lb/>
the tobacco program is not in any peril.<lb/>
FOOD STAMPS ? I mention all of<lb/>
this, not to pick a fight with the editors<lb/>
who constantly publish their criticism of<lb/>
me, but to suggest again that they may<lb/>
want to call me occasionally and consider<lb/>
both sides of the disagreement ? whether<lb/>
it be in connection with the food stamp<lb/>
program or anything else.<lb/>
Meanwhile, I am convinced that most<lb/>
North Carolinians want me to do what 1<lb/>
have been doing to reduce the cost oi<lb/>
government. And since the food stamp<lb/>
program is at issue now, 1 would mention<lb/>
that just four years ago, this one program<lb/>
alone cost the taxpayers $5.7 billion. For<lb/>
the current fiscal year, it will cost nearly<lb/>
SI 1 billion ? an increase of 90 per cent in<lb/>
"our years.<lb/>
The eligibility requirements for the pro-<lb/>
gram are so loose that one out oi every<lb/>
seven Americans todav is eligible for free<lb/>
food stamps.<lb/>
I've prepared a somewhat detailed state-<lb/>
ment about the program, and my goals to<lb/>
limit it to the truly needy. If you would like<lb/>
a copy, drop me a note<lb/>
I TOLD YOU TO KEEP YOUR WIDE TfEg.<lb/>
 TOLD You TO gAVE THE WIN6HP&amp;.<lb/>
 TOLD YOU TO TOcbcb THE BElHJoTtgmS.<lb/>
BuT, No! YoV Thought the democrats<lb/>
WOULD BE J IN POWER FoREvER!<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057309_0005"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
i HI AM t KOl IN1AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JANUARY 8, 1981<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
History Of ECU To Be Written<lb/>
H Mil 1 AM K.SHIRES<lb/>
Ml m? Bureau<lb/>
When an official histor) oi I asi<lb/>
C arolina t niversit) is written, it will<lb/>
be the fulfillment of a dream of<lb/>
Miss I mma I Hooper, the inn<lb/>
lad who was "unofficial" historian<lb/>
o! the institution's first 60 years.<lb/>
It was a blushing Emma Hooper<lb/>
who. a yeat before her retirement<lb/>
atter M years on the faculty, receiv-<lb/>
ed a kis- on st:c tor having penned<lb/>
a moving historical pageant to mark<lb/>
the school's Golden Anniversary.<lb/>
It was 1 mma Hooper who, dur-<lb/>
' ing English com<lb/>
pos; tnd encouraging literary<lb/>
pre. full) collected<lb/>
and documents<lb/>
whii 'iicw would be invaluable<lb/>
some da in reconstructing East<lb/>
i. a - I) yeai s<lb/>
ci occasions, she was<lb/>
asked i e the histor) herself,<lb/>
and ned in Greenville for<lb/>
two yea i retirement working<lb/>
on the at her own expense.<lb/>
Bv thei - as 70. But after going<lb/>
"home" to Memphis, lenn in<lb/>
1961 i foi another 10<lb/>
- stopped her.<lb/>
Now Miss H 92 years old<lb/>
has donated to the<lb/>
university her voluminous and<lb/>
treasured papers, including an un-<lb/>
finished 1,300-page narrative, in the<lb/>
hope that finally a history will be<lb/>
completed and published.<lb/>
"I wish there were more 1 could<lb/>
do to expedite the plan for comple-<lb/>
tion of a history on the founding<lb/>
and development of the university<lb/>
Miss Hooper says.<lb/>
ECU, in turn, has commissioned<lb/>
a faculty historian. Dr. Mary Jo<lb/>
Bratton, to research and write an of-<lb/>
ficial one-volume history to be com-<lb/>
pleted in 1982, coinciding with the<lb/>
75th anniversary of ECU's foun-<lb/>
ding.<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas B. Brewer<lb/>
has assured Miss Hooper that "your<lb/>
contribution to this momentous<lb/>
project will be suitably com-<lb/>
memorated upon publication of the<lb/>
book.<lb/>
Professor Bratton said Miss<lb/>
Hooper's manuscript and her other<lb/>
materials will be "of great value" in<lb/>
assembling the history.<lb/>
"In the absence of university ar-<lb/>
chives, the initial work in preparing<lb/>
a history of East Carolina has in-<lb/>
volved the discovery, location and<lb/>
identification of various records<lb/>
Or. Bratton said.<lb/>
When shipped here. Miss<lb/>
Miss Kmma 1 Hooper (left), a facult member for 34 years, has donated<lb/>
her papers and manuscripts, records and documents to East Carolina<lb/>
I niersit for preparation of an official historv of the university to be<lb/>
published in 1982. The Mork will be researched and written by Marv Jo<lb/>
Bratton (right), an ECU history professor.<lb/>
Hooper's papers tilled two large<lb/>
boxes ? 15 cubic feet ? and in ad-<lb/>
dition to the manuscript history in-<lb/>
cluded original papers, drafts,<lb/>
notes, clippings, printed materials<lb/>
and other related papers. These<lb/>
have now become the propertv of<lb/>
ECU and are being arranged and<lb/>
will be maintained permanently in<lb/>
the university's Manuscript Collec-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Miss Hooper meanwhile is being<lb/>
kept informed of progress of the<lb/>
project through university officials<lb/>
and friends. She lives in Memphis<lb/>
(at Wesley Highland Manor, a<lb/>
geriatric high rise) with a sister, Lot-<lb/>
tie, who is 97 years old, and a<lb/>
brother, Ervin, who is 87.<lb/>
She was born in Mississippi and<lb/>
graduated from Mississippi State<lb/>
College for Women (MSCW) at<lb/>
Columbus, Miss and taught school<lb/>
in Mississippi. In 1924 after com-<lb/>
pleting her master's degree in<lb/>
English at the University of<lb/>
Virginia, she joined the faculty of<lb/>
what then was East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College under its first<lb/>
president. Dr. Robert H. Wright.<lb/>
She remained on the faculty<lb/>
under five presidents, for 34 years,<lb/>
making her home in faculty apart-<lb/>
ments in Ragsdale Hall where she<lb/>
stored her collection of historical<lb/>
documents in a trunk.<lb/>
In 1958, however, Miss Hooper<lb/>
wrote another, entitled "East<lb/>
Carolina Spade: To Serve a four-<lb/>
episode pageant based on her<lb/>
records and documents. It was<lb/>
presented on May 3 and 4, 1958,<lb/>
and when Miss Hooper was called to<lb/>
take a bow, she was given a hug and<lb/>
kiss by the president, Dr. John D.<lb/>
Messick. Friends recall that she<lb/>
blushed shyly.<lb/>
The spade described in the<lb/>
pageant was the one used by Gov.<lb/>
Thomas J. Jarvis when ground was<lb/>
broken for the first six campus<lb/>
buildings in ceremonies on July 2,<lb/>
1908. The original spade, now a<lb/>
piece of ECU memorabilia, was sav-<lb/>
ed from discard by Miss Hooper's<lb/>
long-time friend, Agnes Barrett of<lb/>
Greenville, who also assisted Miss<lb/>
Hooper's salvage of many papers<lb/>
and records. Mrs. Barrett served as<lb/>
secretary to several East Carolina<lb/>
presidents and as secretary to its<lb/>
Board of Trustees.<lb/>
She recalls that when an ad-<lb/>
ministration of a president changed<lb/>
or a new Board of Trustees came in.<lb/>
many old records were marked to be<lb/>
thrown away. However, she stored<lb/>
them in the trunk of her car for Miss<lb/>
Hooper's use.<lb/>
About a year ago, Miss Hooper<lb/>
wrote to Agnes Barnett that her<lb/>
heart was "full of gratitude for all<lb/>
you have done She was so en-<lb/>
couraged, she wrote, that "I began<lb/>
again my long-held incomplete<lb/>
history of the first sixty years of<lb/>
East Carolina University I am sit-<lb/>
ting now in the midst of what I am<lb/>
trusting will ? I'm afraid to use to<lb/>
the word too soon ? will be the<lb/>
history<lb/>
<lb/>
0 <lb/>
?gpw?<lb/>
"<lb/>
Chance Meeting<lb/>
Soviet Geologist Visits Friend<lb/>
?pBi?? ? ?<lb/>
JTcv<lb/>
- - 'V i<lb/>
A n Old Flame<lb/>
Resembling an old-fashioned bomb, this flare burns near the site of ome repair work on campus.<lb/>
Musical Hit All That Jazz:<lb/>
Semester's First Free Flick<lb/>
light at<lb/>
. Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
11 ndrix T'hcatre, the<lb/>
! ilms Committee<lb/>
with Bob<lb/>
"All That<lb/>
b) student ID<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Membership Card.<lb/>
an awful lot ot<lb/>
i hat la Direc-<lb/>
? ; i- been accused ot<lb/>
in genius to egotism<lb/>
lit) t self-indulgence<lb/>
ness. I hat's all right:<lb/>
iible reaction to this<lb/>
'table movie is a<lb/>
people want ratings: is<lb/>
Grea I ail ' Awful'7 One<lb/>
e's many, showbiz take-offs<lb/>
'All I hat Jazz" is a W review<lb/>
rates movies on a tour ballon<lb/>
1 osse's film is in tact about a<lb/>
who can ide how many<lb/>
tons to give his own disordered<lb/>
who doesn't know how to come<lb/>
to terms with himself. "All That<lb/>
lazz" i n us, reckless, sub-<lb/>
tle, ton, embarrassing: how do<lb/>
you sum up these colliding, con-<lb/>
tradictor) qualities in one rating?<lb/>
Despite I osse's disclaimers, "All<lb/>
I ha? la" is probably the most<lb/>
kedly autobiographical movie<lb/>
ever made, and that's a crucial part<lb/>
? Its here, Joe Gideon<lb/>
(Roj Scheider), is a famous<lb/>
.rapher director in his early<lb/>
I man who's reached the<lb/>
overload point nf too much work,<lb/>
women, booze, cigarettes, uppers<lb/>
and increasing doubts about the<lb/>
value ot his entire life.<lb/>
Gideon is editing his film about a<lb/>
comic, while rehearsing a new<lb/>
Broadway show in which his ex-<lb/>
wife, Audrey (Leland Palmer), is<lb/>
starring. At the same time, he's try-<lb/>
ing to be a reasonable father to his<lb/>
12-year-old daughter, Michelle<lb/>
(Erzsebel Foldi), trying not to hurt<lb/>
his girlfriend Kate (Ann Reinking)<lb/>
too much, and trying to get into the<lb/>
leotards of as many girls as possible,<lb/>
especially Victoria's (Deborah Geff-<lb/>
ner).<lb/>
All this jazz is too much; Joe suf-<lb/>
fers a heart attack and undergoes<lb/>
open-heart surgery. These events<lb/>
echo fosse's own life; he was editing<lb/>
his film "Lenny" and rehearsing his<lb/>
Broadwav show "Chicago starr-<lb/>
ing his ex-wife, Gwen Verdon, when<lb/>
he had a serious heart attack that<lb/>
resulted in open-heart surgery.<lb/>
Fosse is using his own life, his own<lb/>
consciousness, to explore the<lb/>
psychological and moral territories<lb/>
of bad faith and inner conflict.<lb/>
"Ail That Jazz" has another<lb/>
dimension, a fantasy realm presided<lb/>
over by Angelique (Jessica Lange), a<lb/>
mvstenous figure in white who<lb/>
represents Joe Gideon's final com-<lb/>
euppance; she is death seen as<lb/>
Woman, whose beauty and power<lb/>
have always been at the center of<lb/>
Joe's (and fosse's) life and art.<lb/>
With this Felliniesque dream-<lb/>
figure, Gideon revisits his past; we<lb/>
see the 14-year-old Joe at the cheap<lb/>
Burlesque joints where he was a kid<lb/>
dancer, studying Latin backstage<lb/>
and being sexually teased by the<lb/>
vulgar but desirable strippers.<lb/>
This, too, comes out of Fosse's<lb/>
own life; these childhood ex-<lb/>
periences made him deeply am-<lb/>
bivalent about show business, about<lb/>
dancing, about women, about art<lb/>
and sex and desire and love and<lb/>
glory and filth. Some have dismiss-<lb/>
ed "All That .la" as an egotripp-<lb/>
ing, public catharsis, but Joe Gi-<lb/>
deon becomes a representative<lb/>
figure of our time, a man more<lb/>
honest than most in his self-doubt,<lb/>
self-questioning, self-loathing, self-<lb/>
love.<lb/>
By Will 1AM A SHIRES<lb/>
K Sr?s Burrau<lb/>
Ihev worked together last sum-<lb/>
mer beside an icy blue lake rimmed<lb/>
by high mountains in far-off Outer<lb/>
Mongolia and formed a friendship<lb/>
that reached around the globe.<lb/>
And then, by chance, they came<lb/>
together again this Christmas season<lb/>
and reminisced before a freshly-<lb/>
trimmed tree in the warmth of a<lb/>
Greenville home ? Last Carolina<lb/>
University geologist Stan Riggs and<lb/>
Russian scientist Andrei llyin.<lb/>
While llyin was here on a brief,<lb/>
unscheduled visit, he and Riggs<lb/>
toured the phosphate mining and<lb/>
processing complex of Texasgulf<lb/>
Inc at Aurora, N.C and marveled<lb/>
at the contrasts from last summer in<lb/>
Mongolia.<lb/>
Mongolia's phosphates occur in<lb/>
very hard .rocks of Pre-Cambrian<lb/>
geologic age, perhaps 600 million<lb/>
years old, and in a region which,<lb/>
although spectacularly beautiful, is<lb/>
almost inaccessible.<lb/>
North Carolina's phosphate<lb/>
deposits occur in relatively young<lb/>
Miocene age sands, between 13 and<lb/>
17 million years old, which can be<lb/>
scooped with a shovel.<lb/>
"I'm greatly impressed llyin<lb/>
said. "I'm impressed by the abun-<lb/>
dance and location, and by the<lb/>
technology of the many processes<lb/>
and products. It is truly im-<lb/>
pressive<lb/>
Riggs and llyin met for the first<lb/>
time last June when Riggs, a<lb/>
member of a team of world scien-<lb/>
tists studying the earth's phosphate<lb/>
deposits, visited the Soviet Union.<lb/>
Their adventure into remote Central<lb/>
Asia began in Moscow.<lb/>
"I had heard of Dr. Riggs, of<lb/>
course said llyin, research<lb/>
geologist of the Institute of<lb/>
L ithosphere, Moscow. "I had read<lb/>
his works. But I had never met<lb/>
him<lb/>
Via the Trans-Siberian railway,<lb/>
the scientists traveled to Ulan Bator,<lb/>
capital of the Mongolian Soviet<lb/>
Republic, and thence to the pic-<lb/>
turesque Lake Khubsugul region, a<lb/>
zone of mountain taiga at about<lb/>
6,000 feet elevation, reachable only<lb/>
by primitive and muddy trails.<lb/>
"It is one of the most spectacular<lb/>
spots I have ever seen says Riggs.<lb/>
"Incredible beauty<lb/>
llyin was executive secretary for<lb/>
the field seminar in which 40<lb/>
geologists and staff engaged in<lb/>
geological mapping and explora-<lb/>
tions in Mongolia. Half of the<lb/>
dozen lecturers were from the Soviet<lb/>
Union and half from other coun-<lb/>
tries. Some developing nations were<lb/>
also represented.<lb/>
"We put together a super good<lb/>
trip llyin said. "It was a difficult<lb/>
trip to make, but it was well<lb/>
organized<lb/>
The geological project is spon-<lb/>
sored by the International<lb/>
Geological Correlation Program<lb/>
and UNESCO. Earlier studies were<lb/>
conducted in Australia and in<lb/>
February the geologists will go to<lb/>
the lower Baja peninsula in Mexico<lb/>
and next November to India.<lb/>
llyin came to the United States in<lb/>
connection with publication of the<lb/>
seminar proceedings last summer.<lb/>
While in New York, arrangements<lb/>
were made and permission granted<lb/>
for his trip to Greenville and the<lb/>
Pamlico River phosphate operation.<lb/>
The Soviet Union has phosphate<lb/>
reserves bat imports large quan-<lb/>
tities. A contract with U.S. tycoon<lb/>
Armand Hammer of Occidental<lb/>
Petroleum Co. provides for ship-<lb/>
ment of a million tons of Florida<lb/>
phosphates to the Russian port of<lb/>
Odessa. The same ships bring liquid<lb/>
ammonia to the U.S llyin said.<lb/>
In the Khubsugul Lake region of<lb/>
Mongolia, the geologists lived for<lb/>
two weeks in tents. While in the<lb/>
field, they drove jeep-like vehicles<lb/>
which often became stuck in the<lb/>
mud from thawing permafrost.<lb/>
Mongolian riders on shaggy ponies<lb/>
delivered food to the camps and<lb/>
then would laugh at the plight of the<lb/>
scientists trying to pull vehicles from<lb/>
muddy ruts.<lb/>
"Do you remember the sound of<lb/>
our hammers on those rocks?"<lb/>
Riggs asked llyin at an ECU geology<lb/>
departmental Christmas party. "On<lb/>
those very old, very hard rocks, it<lb/>
was a sound like you've never heard<lb/>
before<lb/>
But for a little while, Riggs and ll-<lb/>
yin remembered hearing the ring<lb/>
and reverberation of a hammer<lb/>
striking rock in far-off Mongolia.<lb/>
Southern Cooking:<lb/>
Real Good Eatin'<lb/>
Roy Scheider appears in a fantasy sequence in All That Jazz, this weekend's<lb/>
Free Flick. The moie shows in the Hendrix Theatre at 5,7 and 9 pm this<lb/>
Fridav and Saturday.<lb/>
"I wanna go home. Lord, 1 wan-<lb/>
na go home agin Every time I<lb/>
bite into a Big Mac or another<lb/>
deluxe everything-but-the-kitchen-<lb/>
sink pizza, I long to be back in<lb/>
mama's kitchen.<lb/>
Even when we travel and end up<lb/>
in one of those coat and tie places<lb/>
where the waiters don't speak<lb/>
English and we munch out on beef<lb/>
Wellington or some sort of crazy<lb/>
crepes I still wanna go home.<lb/>
Roast duck, braised lamb, and<lb/>
cherries jubilee make yankees and<lb/>
scalawags (southerners who act and<lb/>
think like yankees) froth and foam<lb/>
at the mouth. But friends, let me tell<lb/>
you what good eaan' really is<lb/>
You get up in the morning (at my<lb/>
house, that's when little brother<lb/>
comes in and says "mama says its<lb/>
time to get up and eat) and smell<lb/>
that country ham frying and you<lb/>
hear the biscuit pan sliding in the<lb/>
stove. Throw in some fried apples, a<lb/>
couple of fried eggs, some good<lb/>
milk gravy (or a little redeye, if you<lb/>
prefer) and some blackberry<lb/>
preserves and any native southerner<lb/>
Robert<lb/>
Swaim<lb/>
thinks he has died and gone to<lb/>
heaven. The hell with eggs benedict<lb/>
and hash browns. Oh, by the way.<lb/>
don't forget the grits.<lb/>
Now that's eatin If your grand-<lb/>
daddy could cure hams like mine,<lb/>
could then you know what I'm talk-<lb/>
ing about.<lb/>
When dinner time (also known as<lb/>
lunch to those of foreign persua-<lb/>
sion) rolls around promptly at<lb/>
noon, you can generally count on a<lb/>
hefty plate or two of some<lb/>
delicacies.<lb/>
Pork and poultry are the<lb/>
mainstays of a true North Caroli-<lb/>
nian's diet. Dinner time might pro-<lb/>
duce tried chicken or maybe some<lb/>
See SOUTHERN, page 6, col. 7<lb/>
<pb facs="00057309_0006"/><lb/>
P THEgAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 8, 1981<lb/>
LeAUitHb 6?jt Cou.eGe mr Hp lwy<lb/>
By Plvip Aloft fits<lb/>
Southern Cooking:<lb/>
Real Good Eatin'<lb/>
Vacation Ends, School Starts<lb/>
By DAVID NORMS<lb/>
imam f-ditor<lb/>
When it rains, it<lb/>
pours. As soon as you<lb/>
get through Christmas<lb/>
and New Year's Day,<lb/>
it's time to travel back<lb/>
to school and start<lb/>
another semester.<lb/>
I had a hard time<lb/>
packing the stuff I<lb/>
wanted to take back<lb/>
with me to school. Part<lb/>
of the trouble was<lb/>
packing books I'd<lb/>
taken home that 1<lb/>
thought I was going to<lb/>
read over the holidays<lb/>
School Of Art<lb/>
Plans To Hold<lb/>
National Show<lb/>
The School of Art,<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty, announces a juried<lb/>
national competition<lb/>
for original works of<lb/>
paper including draw-<lb/>
ings, watercolors,<lb/>
prints, photographs,<lb/>
mixed media and hand-<lb/>
made works on paper.<lb/>
The deadline for en-<lb/>
try of three slides for<lb/>
the competition is Jan.<lb/>
16. Accepted entries<lb/>
must be received bv<lb/>
March 2.<lb/>
Entries should be<lb/>
submitted to: ECU Na-<lb/>
tional Competition:<lb/>
Works on Paper, East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Museum of Art, Fifth<lb/>
Street, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834. Entry fee for up<lb/>
to three slides is $10.<lb/>
Up to $7,000 will be<lb/>
provided by the co-<lb/>
sponsoring ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine for<lb/>
purchase awards.<lb/>
Juried entries will be<lb/>
displayed in a show<lb/>
March 23-April 12 at<lb/>
the ECU School of Art.<lb/>
Juror for the com-<lb/>
petition will be Edward<lb/>
B. Henning, Chief<lb/>
Curator of Modern Art<lb/>
at the Cleveland<lb/>
Museum of Art.<lb/>
Cleveland, O h i o.<lb/>
Richard H. Laing,<lb/>
Dean of the School of<lb/>
Art, said up to 3,000<lb/>
entries are anticipated<lb/>
prior to jurying.<lb/>
It will be the first<lb/>
such national competi-<lb/>
tion conducted by the<lb/>
School of Art, Laing<lb/>
said. "We are en-<lb/>
thusiastic about it and<lb/>
the potential to come<lb/>
down to really good<lb/>
works for the show,<lb/>
and purchase Laing<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Auditions Held<lb/>
For Getting Out<lb/>
Ml Nr?,Burr?u<lb/>
Auditions for the<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse production<lb/>
of Marsha Norman's<lb/>
award-winning Off<lb/>
Broadway drama,<lb/>
"Getting Out will be<lb/>
held on Monday and<lb/>
Tuesday, January 12<lb/>
and 13. Auditions will<lb/>
be conducted in the<lb/>
Studio Theatre at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. each evening.<lb/>
"Getting Out" con-<lb/>
tains roles for 7 men<lb/>
and 5 women. Audi-<lb/>
tions are open to East<lb/>
Carolina students,<lb/>
faculty and staff and to<lb/>
members of the local<lb/>
community.<lb/>
The play is about a<lb/>
once violent young<lb/>
women named Arlene,<lb/>
and her first 24 hours<lb/>
out of prison. Its main<lb/>
character is played by<lb/>
two actresses, each at<lb/>
different stages of her<lb/>
life. Arlene is the older,<lb/>
newly rehabilitated<lb/>
parolee and Arlie is the<lb/>
original Arlene, the<lb/>
young savage teenager<lb/>
who commits murder<lb/>
and is sent to prison.<lb/>
While Arlene tries to<lb/>
deal with her new life,<lb/>
Arlie is exploding in-<lb/>
side her, or ? from the<lb/>
audience's point of<lb/>
view ? all around her<lb/>
on stage. Other<lb/>
characters include Ben-<lb/>
nie, a guard who quit<lb/>
the prison service when<lb/>
Arlene was released<lb/>
and intends to go on<lb/>
keeping her company;<lb/>
Arlene's mother, a<lb/>
violent, selfish woman;<lb/>
Carl, her former lover<lb/>
and pimp who wants<lb/>
her back; and Ruby, a<lb/>
neighbor who has also<lb/>
been in prison and is<lb/>
making the readjust-<lb/>
ment to outside life.<lb/>
"Getting Out" was<lb/>
voted the best new play<lb/>
in 1978 by the<lb/>
American Theatre<lb/>
Critics Association.<lb/>
The ECU Playhouse<lb/>
production is directed<lb/>
by faculty member<lb/>
Cedric Winchell. Per-<lb/>
formances will be<lb/>
February 18-21 and<lb/>
23-28, 1981.<lb/>
Visit<lb/>
THE MUSHROOM<lb/>
Hot A Special Gift For Someone Special<lb/>
"Good thingi for gentle people"<lb/>
On the Mall Downtown Greenville<lb/>
some pleasant things,<lb/>
too. One nice thing is<lb/>
seeing all your old<lb/>
school friends again,<lb/>
and hearing about the<lb/>
various Christmas ex-<lb/>
periences everyone had.<lb/>
My most interesting<lb/>
experience of the entire<lb/>
holiday season didn't<lb/>
occur until I returned<lb/>
to ECU. I found out<lb/>
some friends from here<lb/>
had tried to call me<lb/>
over the holidays while<lb/>
they were visiting my<lb/>
town. They called the<lb/>
operator and asked for<lb/>
my number. The<lb/>
operator insisted that<lb/>
my family did not exist,<lb/>
so my friends never<lb/>
found me. (I think the<lb/>
phone company has it<lb/>
in for us.)<lb/>
Most of the rest of<lb/>
my vacation was fairlv<lb/>
and never opened.<lb/>
(After bringing them<lb/>
back with me, I pro-<lb/>
bably won't read them<lb/>
this semester, either.)<lb/>
I had only limited<lb/>
space for bringing back<lb/>
records, so I had to suf-<lb/>
fer through the heart-<lb/>
breaking task of<lb/>
deciding which records<lb/>
I was going to have to<lb/>
leave at home. It's ter-<lb/>
rible to get an album<lb/>
for Christmas and then<lb/>
not have room to bring<lb/>
it back with you.<lb/>
Although there are<lb/>
depressing sights to be<lb/>
seen in this post-<lb/>
Christmas season (what<lb/>
can be sadder than see-<lb/>
ing dumpsters full of<lb/>
brown Christmas trees,<lb/>
shredded wrapping<lb/>
paper and broken<lb/>
presents?), there are<lb/>
uninteresting. I had<lb/>
planned to draw a<lb/>
pastel picture of the<lb/>
Christmas tree, since<lb/>
the colors and patterns<lb/>
of the lights inspired<lb/>
me. By the time I found<lb/>
my pastels and paper,<lb/>
the tree had been<lb/>
thrown out.<lb/>
I had a strange<lb/>
dream over the<lb/>
holidays. In it, I was<lb/>
thrown in jail, but the<lb/>
jail they took me to was<lb/>
ECU. I'm just glad I<lb/>
wasn't having another<lb/>
nightmare about being<lb/>
back in high school.<lb/>
I also saw a Partridge<lb/>
family show with Far-<lb/>
rah Fawcett in it.<lb/>
Getting back to the<lb/>
old routine of school<lb/>
after the break is going<lb/>
to take some adjust-<lb/>
M o f f i 11' s<lb/>
Magnavox<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
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Expert T.V. Service<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Located At EvansStreet<lb/>
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OYSTER BAR<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
NW<lb/>
a<lb/>
A Great<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
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NEW HOURS<lb/>
Monday ?CLOSED<lb/>
TuesThurs. 5:00-9:00<lb/>
Fri. Sat. 5:00 10:00<lb/>
Sunday 5:009:00<lb/>
FOSDKKS<lb/>
1890 Seafood<lb/>
Party Room Available We'll Fur<lb/>
rush the Cake for Birthdays. An<lb/>
niversries. etc for Parties of 8 or<lb/>
more Call for Reservations<lb/>
754 2011 Catering is A Specialty!<lb/>
2311 S. EVANS ST EXT GREENVILLE<lb/>
A pizza you can't refuse.<lb/>
KtrN 12 80<lb/>
PIZZAS<lb/>
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From tht Salad Bat with a<lb/>
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11 00 AM 4 00 PM<lb/>
Pizza &amp; All The Salad You Can Et<lb/>
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HOT SANDWICHES &amp; CHIPS<lb/>
Ham &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Italian Supreme<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
Beer Mugs &amp; Piti hers<lb/>
Sott Drinks Glasses &amp; P'Uhers<lb/>
Coffee &amp; Ice Tea<lb/>
CARRY-OUT<lb/>
Pizza boc?l for carry-oat<lb/>
25 CKtra Phoa ahead m4 yoar<lb/>
order will he ready tk?a yoa arrive<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
Large or Medium Pizza<lb/>
With Ad<lb/>
Sm Med<lb/>
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incredible ingredients bee sausage, onion, black<lb/>
olive, mushroom and pepperoni on a whole<lb/>
crushed tomato sauce and topped with the finest<lb/>
cheese available5 95 7 95 9 35<lb/>
Hamble Pic ? Pepperoni. sausage, onion, and<lb/>
green pepper covered with a mountain of cheese<lb/>
It'll humility a roaring appetite (Sorry, no<lb/>
substitutions)5 45 7.35 8 85<lb/>
Vegetarian ? Mushrooms, green pepper,<lb/>
onion, black and green olives, sauce from whole<lb/>
tomatoes, and cheese5 20 7 20 8 50<lb/>
10" 13" 15"<lb/>
Sm Med Lg<lb/>
Beef 4 15 5.95 7 35<lb/>
Sausage  4 15 5.95 7 35<lb/>
Canadian Bacon 4.15 5.95 7 35<lb/>
Pepperoni415 5.95 735<lb/>
Bacon Bits 4.15 5.95 7 35<lb/>
Mushrooms 4.15 5 95 7 35<lb/>
Anchovies  4.15 5 95 735<lb/>
BiackObve 4.15 5.95 7.35<lb/>
Green Olive 4 15 595 735<lb/>
Green Pepper 4.15 5 95 7 35<lb/>
Onion 4 15 5.95 7.35<lb/>
Cheese 3.60 5.30 6 60<lb/>
 Cheese, - Other Ingredient<lb/>
 3 90<lb/>
! Combo. 4 One Other Ingredient<lb/>
 5 10 7 20<lb/>
Extra Ingredients60 70<lb/>
5 65 7 00<lb/>
8.50<lb/>
80<lb/>
?703 E<lb/>
GREENVILLE SQUARE<lb/>
SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
GREENVILLE BLVD<lb/>
PHONE 756-9600<lb/>
LLUJ<lb/>
ment. Sleeping until<lb/>
one or two in the after-<lb/>
noon will be difficult<lb/>
without a very unusual<lb/>
class schedule.<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
of that roast pork from supper the<lb/>
night before. Of course, nobody can<lb/>
sit down at the table without some<lb/>
kind of bread. Biscuits and corn-<lb/>
bread are usually the order of the<lb/>
day, both at dinner and supper.<lb/>
Now some greens, either collards or<lb/>
turnips, will sit real nice with that<lb/>
chicken or roast pork. Then, you<lb/>
generally have one or two more har-<lb/>
dy vegetables, like yams, blackeye<lb/>
peas, fresh corn, or maybe some<lb/>
fried okra. Top that off with some<lb/>
real sweet ice tea and some cobbler,<lb/>
peach, cherry, or blackberry.<lb/>
UUUmmmGOOD.<lb/>
Then with your coffee you might<lb/>
have some banana pudding or pecan<lb/>
pie. Follow all of this at the end of<lb/>
the day with a good stiff bourbon<lb/>
and water, or just plain bourbon if<lb/>
you want, and maybe a touch of<lb/>
blackberry wine for the ladies who<lb/>
partake. Friends, that's what you<lb/>
call high Iivin<lb/>
Along about five or six o'clock,<lb/>
it's time for supper, the last<lb/>
hedonistic ritual of the day involv-<lb/>
ing food. Supper is kind of a second<lb/>
dinner since the foods for either<lb/>
meal are interchangeable. You will<lb/>
again have either biscuits or corn-<lb/>
bread, if you're lucky. Then a baked<lb/>
ham, pork chops, or maybe chicken<lb/>
and dumplins (dumplins in the pied-<lb/>
mont, pastry in the east) will be a<lb/>
good starter. Macaroni and cheese,<lb/>
pinto beans cooked with plenty of<lb/>
side meat or fatback, stewed cab-<lb/>
bage, and maybe some peas or corn<lb/>
on the cob wili do you right.<lb/>
Don't it make you wanna go<lb/>
home?<lb/>
STB ST.ATOX 11<lb/>
tF THE SOUTHEAST<lb/>
-V'7<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
mm<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
i f<lb/>
?J LLii<lb/>
25 OFF ANY WHOLE SANDWICH<lb/>
15 OFF ANY HALF SANDWICH<lb/>
OH-EH EXHIHh.S JAA. 31st, 1981<lb/>
,<lb/>
M!LMjfcl!i2!l2EIS3 JSSSMl: ?<lb/>
Sale 40 Off<lb/>
Ladies Corduroy Jeansreg 17.98now 10.79<lb/>
Ladies Sweatersreg 13.99now 8.39<lb/>
Ladies Raincoats black onlyreg 1 1.99now 7.19<lb/>
Men's Sport Coatsreg 36.50now 21.90<lb/>
Men's Flannel Shirtsreg 6.99now 4.19<lb/>
Men's Denim Coatsreg 29.98now 21.90<lb/>
MILL OUTLET<lb/>
264 By-Pass in front of Nichols<lb/>
Hours: Mon-Sat. 9:30 to 6:00<lb/>
BIG 2 for 1 SALE<lb/>
r MllllifH.li: ?<lb/>
'sfc.? ?; ?rfs<lb/>
t vi?5?.i.<lb/>
liir,iimenii?<lb/>
m mmmimm mmm<lb/>
w<lb/>
Buy Mattress At Regular Price<lb/>
And Get The Boxspring FREE<lb/>
Posture Care Bedding by Cottenbelt 15 yr. warranty<lb/>
628 S.Pitt St. 758-7332<lb/>
Open 8:30 a.m6:00 p.m. MonSat.<lb/>
Free Delivery<lb/>
Turner's Sleep Center, Inc.<lb/>
ho<lb/>
to<lb/>
as<lb/>
oral<lb/>
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tii<lb/>
readl<lb/>
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madl<lb/>
time!<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
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fam<lb/>
with<lb/>
man<lb/>
the<lb/>
die-<lb/>
craz;<lb/>
that<lb/>
that<lb/>
presq<lb/>
1 i<lb/>
whid<lb/>
repi;<lb/>
expn<lb/>
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conti<lb/>
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? -m<lb/>
??:<lb/>
<pb facs="00057309_0007"/><lb/>
rHL LAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 8, 1981<lb/>
$ Donna Coleman<lb/>
To Give Recital<lb/>
This Tuesday<lb/>
Ml Sf??Burnu<lb/>
Pianist Donna Col-<lb/>
eman of the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
School of Music faculty<lb/>
will perform Charles<lb/>
Ives's Second Piano<lb/>
Sonata Tuesday, Jan.<lb/>
13, at the Fletcher<lb/>
Music Center Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
The program,<lb/>
scheduled for 8:15<lb/>
p.m is free and open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
The Ives second<lb/>
sonata is not only the<lb/>
Connecticut-born com-<lb/>
poser's longest, but<lb/>
also his "most am-<lb/>
bitious and most<lb/>
demanding work for<lb/>
the piano noted Ms.<lb/>
Coleman.<lb/>
The sonata's subtitle,<lb/>
"Concord, Mass<lb/>
1840-60 suggests in<lb/>
musical sounds the<lb/>
spirit and character of<lb/>
N cw E n c 13 n d<lb/>
Discarded after the end of Christmas festivities, this tinsel-decked tree brings xrons.enpnt i;<lb/>
holidav cheer to a dumpster.<lb/>
Pholo h ION IORIHS<lb/>
Decorated Dumpster<lb/>
philosophy, with each<lb/>
movement named for a<lb/>
major writer of the<lb/>
period. Ives wrote the<lb/>
work between 1902 and<lb/>
1915, but continued to<lb/>
revise it until its<lb/>
publication in the early<lb/>
1920's.<lb/>
An active champion<lb/>
of Ives's music, Ms.<lb/>
Coleman performed<lb/>
the Ives First Sonata<lb/>
for Piano in Alice Tully<lb/>
Hall, Lincoln Center, a<lb/>
program sponsored by<lb/>
the Rockefeller Foun-<lb/>
dation.<lb/>
During the past year<lb/>
she also performed solo<lb/>
concerts and lecture-<lb/>
recitals in Croton-on-<lb/>
Hudson. N.Y Tar-<lb/>
ry town, N.Y. and at<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
She will continue<lb/>
performing and lectur-<lb/>
ing this year at various<lb/>
U.S. campuses, with<lb/>
emphasis upon Ives and<lb/>
other contemporary<lb/>
American composers.<lb/>
Pianist Donna coleman of the ECU School of Music faculty will perfrom Charles Ives' Second Piano<lb/>
Sonata Tuesday, Jan. 13 at 8:15 pm in the Fletcher Music Center Recital Hall.<lb/>
Seventeen Evening Courses Offered<lb/>
H I St?? Burriu<lb/>
A total of seventeen<lb/>
courses will be offered<lb/>
on weekday evenings<lb/>
through East Carolina<lb/>
University College dur-<lb/>
ing spring semester.<lb/>
The courses include<lb/>
freshman, sophomore<lb/>
and junior-senior level<lb/>
classes in English com-<lb/>
position, business ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
In Praise Of Vacations<lb/>
Some Thoughts On Being Out Of School<lb/>
B MIKKHK.HSMUH<lb/>
M?ff V.rtlrr<lb/>
Thank Cod for vacations! The are the best<lb/>
wa to release all those pent up tensions that tend<lb/>
to build up after a semester full of such fun things<lb/>
as tests, reports, projects, homework, quizzes,<lb/>
oral presentations, and static from pi rs.<lb/>
Much of this anxiety is the direct result of the last<lb/>
two weeks of the semester, when the days seem to<lb/>
get much shorter and final exams aie imminent.<lb/>
This is the time of the year when students are busy<lb/>
rushing to accomplish what they have put off un-<lb/>
til the last minute, like finally getting down to<lb/>
reading those 15 chapters t exam in two<lb/>
days. I'm not aware of an studies that have been<lb/>
made on student procrastination, but at exam<lb/>
time it is highly visible here at 1I<lb/>
I'm inclined to believe that more ulcers are<lb/>
caused by final exams than b an other activity<lb/>
that can be imagined. Another majoi anxiety <lb/>
ducer at the end of the semester are those in-<lb/>
famous oral presentations. Pm not too familiar<lb/>
with the other departments, but I've noticed that<lb/>
many Business professors seem to be obsessed<lb/>
with assigning group presentations to be given on<lb/>
the last couple days of the semester, as if we<lb/>
didn't have enough on our minds to drive us<lb/>
crazy. It seems to me that they consciously do<lb/>
that to us so that they can get out oi having to<lb/>
give us lectures on those days. I've also noticed<lb/>
that no matter how well prepared 1 am tor the<lb/>
presentation, my mind will go blank as soon as I<lb/>
step in front of the class<lb/>
I love to sit on the wall and watch the facial ex-<lb/>
pressions of students around exam tune. Faces<lb/>
which were once full of optimism and content are<lb/>
replaced with zombie-eved, almost panic-stricken<lb/>
expressions. Sometimes it is almost difficult to<lb/>
carry on a decent conversation with someone<lb/>
whose only train of thought lies in trying to pull a<lb/>
D average up to a B. 1 have learned from previous<lb/>
experience that it is little benefit to do last minute<lb/>
cramming for an exam, you miss a lot of great<lb/>
parties by having to bury yourself in the books.<lb/>
I'm sure that everyone is familiar with pulling<lb/>
those famous "all nighters where you study<lb/>
continuously through the night and go straight to<lb/>
the exam without getting any sleep. I've only pull-<lb/>
a couple oi those, since I found that I can<lb/>
make it up until about two hours before test time,<lb/>
when it becomes all I can do just to keep from<lb/>
passing out. All nighters tend to mess up your<lb/>
equilibrium, and it takes about two days to get<lb/>
back to normal.<lb/>
Which brings me to the joy of vacations after<lb/>
the agony of exams. I would like to shake the<lb/>
hand of the person who invented the vacation.<lb/>
Without vacations, we would be a hyper, irritable<lb/>
race of human beings; and the word "relaxation"<lb/>
would not be a word in our vocabulary.<lb/>
Different people tend to spend their vacations<lb/>
in different ways. Some people like to travel<lb/>
around, spending money and sightseeing.<lb/>
Although that sounds very nice, it has always<lb/>
been too expensive for me to do. Other people<lb/>
like to 'ravel to a certain place and stay there for a<lb/>
while, like spending a week in Florida. These peo-<lb/>
ple either have buku bucks to blow, or they have<lb/>
friends on the beach that will put them up (or put<lb/>
up with them) for a week. A less expensive means<lb/>
of enjoying a vacation lies in going camping in the<lb/>
mountains, or rock climbing. This form of<lb/>
recreation appeals more to the nature-loving type<lb/>
that enjoys being in the great outdoors. As for<lb/>
myself, I would rather participate in this activity<lb/>
during the warmer weather, such as Spring Break,<lb/>
and use the cold weather vacations for spending<lb/>
some time with the family and old high school<lb/>
buddies.<lb/>
Vacation breaks are the only time I get to spend<lb/>
more than just a weekend back in Fayetteville to<lb/>
catch up on the latest developments of my old<lb/>
high school gang. It seems that every time I make<lb/>
it back home, another one of my friends got mar-<lb/>
ried, or thrown in jail, or joined the army. I've<lb/>
noticed that when I go back home, no matter how<lb/>
much things have changed on the surface, my<lb/>
high school friends that stayed in Fayetteville<lb/>
after graduation are still doing and saying the<lb/>
same things we did and said five and six years<lb/>
ago. I keep trying to tell them that there is more<lb/>
to life than talking about cars, drugs, girls, and<lb/>
going to get more beer.<lb/>
The first few days back home are the best. My<lb/>
parents are glad to see me and I even get to sug-<lb/>
gest a menu of my favorite dinners for my mom<lb/>
to prepare, to sort of get me back in Un i v<lb/>
the home cooking that I've been missing for a few<lb/>
months (she has got to be the greatest cook in the<lb/>
world, or so my taste buds have been telling me).<lb/>
Also, when it comes time to head back to Green-<lb/>
ville, I tend to clean the cupboards and<lb/>
refrigerator bare of all food that isn't nailed<lb/>
down. My mom has come to expect this, so for<lb/>
the past couple of years she has provided me with<lb/>
frozen stuff to bring with me back to Greenville;<lb/>
such as frozen homemade TV dinners, froen<lb/>
spaghetti sauce, vegetables, and other foods that<lb/>
will give me a taste of home away from home.<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson<lb/>
Jewelers<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
SEIKO Watch Headquarters<lb/>
Diamonds Loose and Mounted<lb/>
Gold-Filled, Sterling,<lb/>
and 14K Gold Jewelry<lb/>
Cash Paid for Diamonds and Gold<lb/>
Dealers for J.O. Pollock<lb/>
Fraternity &amp; Sorority Jewelry<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson<lb/>
Mike Robinson<lb/>
Valerie Harris Jo Sparrow<lb/>
Phone 758-2452<lb/>
Independent Jewelers<lb/>
A<lb/>
O. for $2.00 f<lb/>
Arby's Roast Beef Jj<lb/>
Sandwiches 9<lb/>
-X?is2?<lb/>
I<lb/>
11 r<lb/>
IIN - vald with any<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
for $2.22<lb/>
by's Beef N<lb/>
heddar<lb/>
andwiches<lb/>
-imit one coupon per customer Valid through f<lb/>
.5<lb/>
m<lb/>
K0H-I-N00R<lb/>
Drawing Set<lb/>
y<lb/>
s<lb/>
m<lb/>
6 "Compass<lb/>
4V2 "Compass<lb/>
6 "Divider<lb/>
Ruling Pen<lb/>
and Parts<lb/>
$19.00<lb/>
Available First Day Of Class, Jan. 12 At:<lb/>
Studekt Supply Store<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Owned ond Operated by Eost CoroHno Unrverjrty<lb/>
psychology,<lb/>
geography, history,<lb/>
mathematics, art ap-<lb/>
preciation, economics,<lb/>
sociology, health,<lb/>
music appreciation,<lb/>
political science, ac-<lb/>
counting and speech.<lb/>
University College<lb/>
classes are open to full-<lb/>
time and part-time<lb/>
students, and are<lb/>
especially designed for<lb/>
working adults unable<lb/>
ARMY MAW STORE<lb/>
 BiCkMcm ? IS Bomh?r ?<lb/>
 Field, Occk. Flight Snorkel ?<lb/>
Jackets. PhcmIi Parkas.<lb/>
S?ts. CiJRfcat "<lb/>
is s -<lb/>
to attend daytime<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
More than 100 addi-<lb/>
tional evening classes<lb/>
are offered through the<lb/>
regular campus pro-<lb/>
grams, on Monday-<lb/>
Thursday evenings.<lb/>
Further information<lb/>
about University Col-<lb/>
lege courses is available<lb/>
from the Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education,<lb/>
Erwin Hall, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
telephone 757)6324.<lb/>
SAAD'SSHOI<lb/>
1 i Grande -w<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Repaii<lb/>
FRIED<lb/>
CHICKEN<lb/>
TRY OUR FAST<lb/>
DELIVERY SERVICE<lb/>
752-1211<lb/>
241 5 East Tenth Street<lb/>
w, i on the hour and hall hour between 4pm 10<lb/>
p m Sun Thurs and 4 p m 11pm Fri &amp; Sat<lb/>
Mm order J2 00 lOS. Delivery charge<lb/>
Orders over J20.00 Delivered Free<lb/>
r<lb/>
J.BS ISLAND<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
1<lb/>
Serving the finest selections from the sea<lb/>
prepared "island" style. Raw, Steamed, Bak<lb/>
ed and Broiled to your delight.<lb/>
East 10th Street Rivergate Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville 752 1275<lb/>
Open Tuesday<lb/>
thru Sunday<lb/>
BEVERAGES SERVED 4:30<lb/>
till Midnight ? Dining<lb/>
from 5:30 p.m. till 10:30 p.m.<lb/>
?.<lb/>
-?<lb/>
Menu<lb/>
Sot valid with any other coupm Valid mh, paniapannAK - ?<lb/>
$S.v<lb/>
c-?,S<lb/>
?e<lb/>
e<lb/>
eP<lb/>
(C<lb/>
f<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
ce<lb/>
00<lb/>
p?<lb/>
,6 3?<lb/>
vAe<lb/>
 f tf8<lb/>
n?<lb/>
r-<lb/>
All Pizzas Include Our<lb/>
Special Blend of Sauce<lb/>
and Real Cheese<lb/>
Our Superb<lb/>
Cheese Pizza<lb/>
12" cheese $3.85<lb/>
16" cheese $5 60<lb/>
Domino's Deluxe<lb/>
5 items for the price of 4<lb/>
Pepperoni. Mushrooms.<lb/>
Onions. Green Peppers,<lb/>
and Sausage<lb/>
12" Deluxe $6 85<lb/>
16" Deluxe $10.20<lb/>
The Vegi<lb/>
5 items for the price of 4<lb/>
Mushrooms. Olives.<lb/>
Onions, Green Peppers.<lb/>
and Double Cheese<lb/>
12" Vegi $6 85<lb/>
16" Vegi $10 20<lb/>
Additional Items<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Mushrooms<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
Onions<lb/>
Anchovies<lb/>
Green Peppers<lb/>
Olives<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
Hot Peppers<lb/>
Double Cheese<lb/>
Extra Thick Crust<lb/>
12" pizza75 per item<lb/>
16" pizza $115 per item<lb/>
DOMINO'S<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
1 item<lb/>
Any VjVj<lb/>
2 items<lb/>
3 items<lb/>
4 items<lb/>
12"<lb/>
$4.60<lb/>
$4.60<lb/>
$535<lb/>
$6.10<lb/>
$6.85<lb/>
16"<lb/>
6.75<lb/>
6.75<lb/>
790<lb/>
905<lb/>
$10.20<lb/>
Pnces do not include<lb/>
applicable sales tax<lb/>
Our drivers carry less<lb/>
than $10.00.<lb/>
Limited delivery area<lb/>
 1980 Domino's Puz. Inc<lb/>
? i m ? iMweMRv 8 w pweBi n "v<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057309_0008"/><lb/>
Ill 1 sl i. Ki 11 <lb/>
Sports<lb/>
i-<lb/>
??<lb/>
I<lb/>
Giant-Killer Pan Am Here Saturday<lb/>
Pirates Down UNC-W, Host Power<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sport E4ifcH<lb/>
Fresh from a big 72-64 victor) al<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington, the East<lb/>
Carolina basketball team now faces<lb/>
the task ot hosting national power<lb/>
Pan American on Saturday, follow-<lb/>
ing a home matchup with rejuvinanl<lb/>
I N( Asheville tonight (Thursday).<lb/>
I he win over Wilmington was<lb/>
paced by newcomer Charles<lb/>
Watkins, who tallied 21 points, and<lb/>
junioi David I nderwood, who add<lb/>
ed 19 1 orward Mark Mel aurin was<lb/>
the only other Pirate in double<lb/>
figures, scoring 12<lb/>
E I head coach Dave dom said<lb/>
the win wa<lb/>
rl<lb/>
ne<lb/>
Pii a "It's always tough to play<lb/>
at W ilmington h "W e put a<lb/>
lot ot emphasis on the game<lb/>
bee; its timing, it could be the<lb/>
on<lb/>
. the f;<lb/>
I<lb/>
n the<lb/>
thai th<lb/>
ning<lb/>
I w a s v e r <lb/>
pla dun,<lb/>
"We<lb/>
' e<lb/>
-<lb/>
Morris Harerove Rebounds<lb/>
win. "I: was by fai the best full<lb/>
game we've played this year<lb/>
I tie Pirates, now 5 6, host IV<lb/>
Asheville tonight. Asheville is 6-6<lb/>
but has lost several close games,<lb/>
namel) a mere seven-point setback<lb/>
to perenial power I ;N( -Charlotte.<lb/>
Odom is quite familiar with one<lb/>
o! Asheville's prime weapons, 6-10<lb/>
center Pat Jolley. dom recruited<lb/>
Jolley to Wake forest several<lb/>
seasons ago but the big guv decided<lb/>
just bet ore the season began<lb/>
isfer, and now stars foi<lb/>
Asheville.<lb/>
Following the Asheville game,<lb/>
odom Pirates will face giant-killer<lb/>
Pan merican in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Saturday i. - ' ' 1 ipol I time is<lb/>
0 p.m.<lb/>
Pan m, 8 4, had a torrid streak<lb/>
m December in which the club pull-<lb/>
?' a number of surprising<lb/>
els.<lb/>
()n 1 ecembei is. Pan Am went<lb/>
to New Mexi o State and came away<lb/>
a 77-73 win, ending a 2game<lb/>
' - eak for NMSl<lb/>
followed two day<lb/>
len Pan An; dow ried W k<lb/>
N A to irnamem team a<lb/>
b a 83-82 ma:<lb/>
State is now 9 1, a ith the<lb/>
. against Pan Am.<lb/>
P ' n was aKo very im<lb/>
sive in the Rainbow Classic in<lb/>
tic Coastonference<lb/>
Clemson won the Journey<lb/>
Pan Am i<lb/>
 e<lb/>
Pan Am opened the tout ne ??<lb/>
a 7! 70 w Mai<lb/>
quette and then li I lawaii,<lb/>
79 75, in the semi finals. I lie i<lb/>
then came ba ? I 15th-<lb/>
ranked Indiana in th<lb/>
game, 66-60<lb/>
1 hough the t I in<lb/>
the event. Pan An Ken dree;<lb/>
6-9 center-forward, vn led the<lb/>
tourney's MVP. i 1 20<lb/>
points and til<lb/>
the tournamei<lb/>
"I've ' it in<lb/>
the country tha n at<lb/>
: Round Iw draft'<lb/>
(dom noted. "Hi go in<lb/>
Round ():<lb/>
For the sea<lb/>
20 7 po<lb/>
game iua<lb/>
cond leading<lb/>
average<lb/>
New w;<lb/>
Pirates with a:<lb/>
Mel aurin<lb/>
avei .<lb/>
'<lb/>
E<lb/>
<lb/>
was las! se 1'<lb/>
<lb/>
club th<lb/>
<lb/>
"Pe :<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
w r<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
Lady Bucs Impressive<lb/>
In Holiday Tourneys<lb/>
B J1MM DuPKM-<lb/>
??'? ???? athletic<lb/>
consolation  Rley, had I tones<lb/>
"We were very, very i d with tributed 11 to the Pirate ettort.<lb/>
the defense tl 1 asi arolina' l ?pe of a<lb/>
:<lb/>
.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
"Out<lb/>
. .  a as<lb/>
.<lb/>
k foi Hei. '<lb/>
"I ide 11 he Lad a<lb/>
addulai<lb/>
? ' 1 '?? keted the t ina. . 75 66 v icto: Decen<lb/>
nECl point1 ht . Pirates' next adventi<lb/>
via . ? ? Andi ii.Next Week:<lb/>
. '<lb/>
 n u- inten U a<lb/>
nst Indiana He: ' ime and she le ? ic tal1 through an pei iup with Massachusettswith ECU Athletic Din tor ken Karr will ap-<lb/>
: . - the endth an ss 64 victory behind Kathypear in a two-part feature<lb/>
Denkler continued to shine ffe . the I ady Pirate 75 i the Polish National team in 1 semifinals, as she scored 2Riley's season-high 31 tnd Sam lories' 25. 1 he 1 ady Pirates ha hei . . ing Nor! rn in thebeginning Tuesday. Dr. karr will a sonu the controversial matters<lb/>
1 grabbed 14 rebounds.that have arisen in the<lb/>
I he 1 ady Pirates earned a hard-win with Deishort period been<lb/>
76- 75 o ei time icto Wesl (viding late heroics. Denkler I 12;at ('I<lb/>
I ndenvood Sets<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Coaches<lb/>
Resign<lb/>
i a<lb/>
Ed Emor a need I<lb/>
staff, Jim (<lb/>
1 re-<lb/>
ippointing 4<lb/>
he-<lb/>
er :<lb/>
Kathy Riley Puts One I p<lb/>
?r 11 y<lb/>
?<lb/>
ed .<lb/>
on.<lb/>
?' These two coaches have re<lb/>
their positions<lb/>
ortunities<lb/>
"We wish them h<lb/>
and appree i<lb/>
our program<lb/>
working<lb/>
Neither ot the I ??<lb/>
ed, but it is believe<lb/>
is interested in bec<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
1 mory as know<lb/>
"Henry se<lb/>
I asi<lb/>
Emon said. "1 d I ?<lb/>
what he'll do now b<lb/>
- aspira<lb/>
tach somed<lb/>
Emory sa<lb/>
probably remain<lb/>
area and gel into bit<lb/>
No successoi s foi ! v:t v a<lb/>
lions hae bee<lb/>
Newcomer Watkins A Gift For Odom<lb/>
Have a nice C hristmas? II nobody<lb/>
else did there is one man on the<lb/>
It campus that most certainly<lb/>
had an enjoyable holidav.<lb/>
I hat man is Pirate hea ket-<lb/>
ball coach Dave Odor His<lb/>
came in the form of a young man b<lb/>
the name ot Charles Watkins.<lb/>
Watkins will almost surely be a gift<lb/>
Odom may never forget and will<lb/>
Odom<lb/>
always treasure.<lb/>
Watkms entered school at ECU<lb/>
tor the current spring semester on a<lb/>
basketball scholarship. I he 6 3 New<lb/>
Orleans, 1 a native had jusi finish-<lb/>
ed a fout yeai tenure in the I' S.<lb/>
Marine C orps before em oiling here.<lb/>
What Watkms has done in his<lb/>
first four games as a Pirate seem to<lb/>
indicate that his careei at EC U will<lb/>
be one to be remembered for a long<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Watkins saw his first action in the<lb/>
I Imitv Classic on December 2.<lb/>
H !allied nine points and two re<lb/>
bounds in 21 minutes of playing<lb/>
time in the team's 80  loss to Iowa<lb/>
State.<lb/>
In the tourney's consolation game<lb/>
against Brown, Watkins got ins first<lb/>
starting call and tallied 14 points in<lb/>
25 minutes.<lb/>
I he Pirate ame ba k aftei two<lb/>
losses in the tournament to claim<lb/>
wins over Campbell and I N<lb/>
Wilmington. In those two games<lb/>
Watkins scored 22 and 21 points,<lb/>
respectively. He played most of<lb/>
both contests and now leads the<lb/>
team in scoring with a 16.5 average<lb/>
Watkins, 24 years ol age. adds<lb/>
much-needed maturity to the<lb/>
Pirates. His smooth style will awe<lb/>
many an opponent this season.<lb/>
"Charles really has done amaz<lb/>
mglv well Odom said. "Heck, he<lb/>
has played in more games than he<lb/>
has practices. He's not in step with<lb/>
the team vet He and the other<lb/>
players are still feeling each other<lb/>
out. I guess you could say lie's get-<lb/>
ting on-the-job training<lb/>
Odom noted that Watkms has a<lb/>
growing reputation His name is ap-<lb/>
pearing more and more frequently<lb/>
in some of the state's top<lb/>
newspapers. A Raleigh columnist<lb/>
called him a "real prize tor Dave<lb/>
Odom<lb/>
Ot course, one should not become<lb/>
too excited at the recent exploits of<lb/>
Watkins He still has much to go<lb/>
through. As his reputation grows,<lb/>
so will the intensity of opposing<lb/>
players defending him.<lb/>
No doubt, though, Watkins has<lb/>
enormous potential. One long-time<lb/>
1I fan called him "potentially the<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
-<lb/>
best thing Easl Carolina basketball<lb/>
has ever had<lb/>
I he question ol whether Watkins<lb/>
can continue his exploits and reach<lb/>
such potential will begin to be<lb/>
answered this Saturday night when<lb/>
the Pirates host national power Pan<lb/>
American.<lb/>
1 CU's January 24 meeting with<lb/>
N.C. State takes on a new look with<lb/>
the Pirates' signing of Watkins. The<lb/>
ECU newcomer will most likely be<lb/>
matched up against State star guard<lb/>
Sidney I owe I hat duel could be a '<lb/>
dandy.<lb/>
When Pat Dye left East Carolina<lb/>
last winter and became the head<lb/>
football coae ng,<lb/>
speculation grew oul west that the<lb/>
formet Pir; te n ei u i did not y<lb/>
to stick with theowboys vei long.<lb/>
Well, that speculation turned into<lb/>
reality over the holidays as Dye<lb/>
resigned his post al Wyoming and<lb/>
landed the hea il uburn.<lb/>
Dye was available foi the Auburn<lb/>
iob because he only committed<lb/>
himself to the Cowboys foi one<lb/>
season He planned to continue to<lb/>
sign with W yoming on tl s. it<lb/>
is believed<lb/>
Dve, 48 18 1 in sv seasons at<lb/>
I i U and 6-5 at Wyoming last vear.<lb/>
now has one ol the op coaching<lb/>
positions in the country He has a<lb/>
four-year comtas' al uburn and<lb/>
will earn approximately $600,000<lb/>
during that span.<lb/>
Many of Dye's I c I assistants<lb/>
will accompany him to the Alabama<lb/>
school. Frank Orgel. defensive<lb/>
coordinator under Dve and a Clem-<lb/>
son assistant this past season is go-<lb/>
ing, as are former ECU aids Wayne<lb/>
Hall and b bbv Wallace<lb/>
It is also rumored thai tormer<lb/>
I . I offensive cooi<lb/>
Kupec, currently an N.C S<lb/>
will go to Auburn<lb/>
1 he naming of formei 1<lb/>
tant Ai Kincaid to replace D<lb/>
Wyoming also speaks M<lb/>
formei Pirate stafl.<lb/>
Kincaid served foi<lb/>
under Dve as quarterback coa<lb/>
Dye<lb/>
<pb facs="00057309_0009"/><lb/>
I HI I AM AKOI IN1AN<lb/>
JANUARYS, 1981<lb/>
ter<lb/>
,r<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
Kl dtiard Barry Wrightlears I ane<lb/>
ECU Grappler Is<lb/>
Wilkes Champion<lb/>
H1<lb/>
K<lb/>
II 1 1 AM<lb/>
<lb/>
Chri<lb/>
Butch Re<lb/>
Will<lb/>
w .1 s<lb/>
ning<lb/>
Mill.<lb/>
I hi<lb/>
lament,<lb/>
heduled foi<lb/>
2' was moved<lb/>
?9 and <lb/>
powers as Missouri, the<lb/>
tourney's champion<lb/>
and Nebraska, the<lb/>
runner-up. Other teams<lb/>
participating included<lb/>
Ohio Stale. Perm State.<lb/>
I ehigh and<lb/>
Bloomsburg State.<lb/>
The seven ECU<lb/>
wrestlers did not fare<lb/>
well, as all were<lb/>
defeated in the first<lb/>
round except foi<lb/>
Revils.<lb/>
"Butch has been<lb/>
wrestling very well<lb/>
Oishi said. "His op-<lb/>
ponents in this tourna-<lb/>
ment were ver big and<lb/>
verj good<lb/>
Revils. ranked fifth<lb/>
in the nation in his<lb/>
weight class, defeated<lb/>
Burt Matucci oi Tren-<lb/>
Swimmers Return To Action<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPRKK<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
It's been quite a<lb/>
while since East<lb/>
Carolina's swimming<lb/>
teams took to the water<lb/>
in competition, but the<lb/>
rest ? if you can call it<lb/>
that ? comes to an end<lb/>
tonight for the men and<lb/>
Saturday for the<lb/>
women. The Pirates<lb/>
host Maine at Minges<lb/>
Natatorium tonight at<lb/>
7:00, while both ECU<lb/>
squads host Ap-<lb/>
palachian State Satur<lb/>
day at 1 p.m.<lb/>
"Maine alwavs has a<lb/>
good team says<lb/>
Pirate head coach Ray<lb/>
Scharf, "but we've<lb/>
seemed to get by them<lb/>
most of the prior<lb/>
meets. They always<lb/>
give us a good meet.<lb/>
The divers will hopeful<lb/>
ly give us some points.<lb/>
Under the cir-<lb/>
cumstances, we ate<lb/>
looking for the third<lb/>
places<lb/>
1 he men are still<lb/>
looking tor their first<lb/>
win ot the season after<lb/>
a pair of pre-hohdav<lb/>
defeats, while the<lb/>
women will be looking<lb/>
to improve on their 2-1<lb/>
record.<lb/>
"In the past,<lb/>
(Appalachian State)<lb/>
has not been that<lb/>
strong stated Scharf.<lb/>
" 1 hev have a new<lb/>
coach tins year, Jim<lb/>
kcllv. I hey went 10 4<lb/>
last year, but I have to<lb/>
sav 1 have not seen<lb/>
much on them "<lb/>
The teams have gone<lb/>
through a rigorous<lb/>
training program over<lb/>
the past few weeks, but<lb/>
Scharf admits there are<lb/>
still some who haven't<lb/>
reached peak condi-<lb/>
tion. He says, though,<lb/>
that the team is ready<lb/>
for the remainder of<lb/>
the schedule.<lb/>
"1 think we have, for<lb/>
the most part (gotten<lb/>
into condition)<lb/>
Scharf ays. "There are<lb/>
still some that are lagg<lb/>
mg behind, but they'll<lb/>
come around. We've<lb/>
had a lot of sickness,<lb/>
mostly colds and such.<lb/>
We'll be going double<lb/>
workouts up to the day<lb/>
of the meet<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will<lb/>
not have the services of<lb/>
Ail-American Susan<lb/>
Hanks after she had to<lb/>
have a knee operation<lb/>
over the break. The<lb/>
sophomore from<lb/>
Hickorv is one of four<lb/>
returning A11 -<lb/>
Americans from a vear<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
A total ol n men<lb/>
swimmers posted quali-<lb/>
fying tunes for the<lb/>
Pastern Inter :ieg;ate<lb/>
Swimming and Di<lb/>
Championship; ai<lb/>
recent South ,<lb/>
live<lb/>
Jnv itationa I<lb/>
women's relay<lb/>
posted natioi<lb/>
tying times al the<lb/>
Relavs<lb/>
te im?<lb/>
quali-<lb/>
Sampson Leading In THE EARLY<lb/>
Scoring, Rebounding<lb/>
PREPARE FOR<lb/>
ton State tor the<lb/>
193 -pound champion-<lb/>
ship. The win improved<lb/>
his season record to<lb/>
12-0.<lb/>
Even though Oishi<lb/>
said the rest ot" the team<lb/>
didn't do too well, he<lb/>
was fairly pleased with<lb/>
the performance oi<lb/>
freshmen left 1 eaf at<lb/>
118 pounds. Tony Mit-<lb/>
chel at 134, and An-<lb/>
drew Hefner at 16<lb/>
"All their opponents<lb/>
were highly-seeded<lb/>
Oishi pointed out.<lb/>
Oishi stressed the<lb/>
competition in the<lb/>
alwavs tough Wilkes<lb/>
Open. "Bill Hill<lb/>
(former ECU great)<lb/>
never won this tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
O R I ENSBORO<lb/>
(UPI) Virginia<lb/>
center Ralph Sampson,<lb/>
averaging 20.6 points<lb/>
and 12.2 rebounds a<lb/>
contest, is the top<lb/>
scorer and rebounder in<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference m statistics<lb/>
released Wednesdav.<lb/>
Gene Banks of Duke<lb/>
is second with a 19.2<lb/>
scoring average.<lb/>
Maryland's Albert<lb/>
King and Buck<lb/>
Williams are third and<lb/>
fourth King with an<lb/>
18.8 point pet game<lb/>
average and Williams<lb/>
averaging 18 points.<lb/>
King was the AC C<lb/>
scoring champion last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
frank Johnson ot<lb/>
Wake forest, who did<lb/>
not play last season<lb/>
because of a leg injury,<lb/>
is tied with Virginia's<lb/>
Jeff 1 amp for the fifth<lb/>
highest scoring posi-<lb/>
tion. Both are averag-<lb/>
ing P.6 points per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Sampson took over<lb/>
the rebounding lead<lb/>
from Williams, who i:<lb/>
averaging 11 re-<lb/>
bounds a game James<lb/>
 ort h v of North<lb/>
Carolina, who sat out<lb/>
much of last season<lb/>
aftei breaking his<lb/>
ankle, is the league's<lb/>
third leading rebounder<lb/>
with nine rebounds a<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Maryland's Greg<lb/>
Manning, the con-<lb/>
ference's best free<lb/>
throw shooter last<lb/>
season, leads m that<lb/>
categorj again this<lb/>
season. Manning<lb/>
made 38 out ol 42 free<lb/>
throw attempts<lb/>
Clem son's<lb/>
Gilliam is second in<lb/>
tree throw accuracy,<lb/>
making 34 ot 38 at-<lb/>
tempts.<lb/>
Sidney 1 ow e ot<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
leads the league in<lb/>
assists, averaging 9.2 a<lb/>
game. Johnson is se<lb/>
cond with seven assists<lb/>
a game.<lb/>
In team statistics.<lb/>
Wake forest is the<lb/>
league's top scoring<lb/>
club while Virginia has<lb/>
the best defensive<lb/>
statistics.<lb/>
I he Demon Deacons<lb/>
ate averaging 86.9<lb/>
points a game. Virginia<lb/>
is giving up onlv mi<lb/>
poin me.<lb/>
S u i p r i s i n g 1 v ,<lb/>
Georgia lech is the<lb/>
league's third best<lb/>
defensive club, giving<lb/>
up 62.6 points a game.<lb/>
C iei gia rech is 3-8 tor<lb/>
the season and is the<lb/>
onlv C club with a<lb/>
? besl<lb/>
t : ,ii -hooting<lb/>
club, hitting .551 of its<lb/>
shots. Clemson has the<lb/>
best tree throw pel sen<lb/>
tage at 41.<lb/>
W ake 1 oresl has the<lb/>
best scoring margin in<lb/>
the league. I he Demon<lb/>
Deacons are averaging<lb/>
24.2 points more than<lb/>
opponents. Clemson<lb/>
leads m rebounds per<lb/>
game with a 40 7<lb/>
average.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT Nice two<lb/>
bedroom aportment M?rt and water<lb/>
rutnuhed Phon 7S6-10SO<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT Nice f-o<lb/>
bedroom apotmen! HmI ond woter<lb/>
? urnuhed Phone 7 5. I 050<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Grod Stu<lb/>
dent non imoker preferred Furnnhed<lb/>
opt 3 blockt h-om cemput low rent<lb/>
itihtiei Call Jan 757019 85<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
BEST OFFER Portoble Typewriter <lb/>
celknt condition Coll 746-6851 ottec<lb/>
6 00<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
SUNSHINE STUDIOS will b oHettng<lb/>
clone in bollet iaix eirc and<lb/>
yoga tor o ? ?pciol N?? Yeo rote<lb/>
2 to. fW price o 1' To enroll coll<lb/>
7S6-7235 o. 7S8-07J<lb/>
MCATLSATGMAT<lb/>
SATDATGRECPA<lb/>
Join our "Early Bird" and<lb/>
Summer Classes In Preparation<lb/>
for Your Fall 1980 Exams<lb/>
Perrnanent Centers open days, evenings and<lb/>
weekends<lb/>
Low hourly cost Dedicated full-time staff<lb/>
Complete TEST-n-TAPE5' facilities for review of<lb/>
class lessons and supplementary materials<lb/>
Small classes taught by skilled instructors<lb/>
Opportunity to make up missed iessons<lb/>
Voluminous home-stjdy materials constantly<lb/>
updated by researchers expert in their field<lb/>
Opportunity to transfer to and continue stua? i<lb/>
any of Our over 65 centers<lb/>
OTHER COURSES AVAILABLE<lb/>
GRE PSYCH GRE BIO MAT PCAT<lb/>
OCATVAT TOEFL MSKPNMB<lb/>
VQE ? ECFMG ? FLEX NDB ? NLE<lb/>
JBtMF ? i ") ?'? ?ys Evenings K aio<lb/>
EiKiNi'i-i B d? E<lb/>
7M ChApai Hid ftwd<lb/>
Dvirn.m N C J'70?<lb/>
(?t?!4??7W<lb/>
TEST PtEPMATIO<lb/>
SPECIALISTS SINCE 1111<lb/>
For information itout other ccntirt OUTSIDE 0 T SHU C?i. 10U Flf &amp;0G H3 V.<lb/>
ALWAYS FRESH<lb/>
DAIRY FOODS<lb/>
i<lb/>
jtA<lb/>
"Home of Greenville's Best Meats"<lb/>
WE WOULD LIKE TO WELCOME BACK ECU<lb/>
STUDENTS WITH THESE OVER TON SPECIALS<lb/>
jKs3<lb/>
h ROPICANA PURE<lb/>
ORANGE<lb/>
JUICE<lb/>
Vi gallon jug 99c<lb/>
COCA COLA &amp; PEPSI<lb/>
2 LORE BOTTLE<lb/>
NO LIMIT<lb/>
981<lb/>
A<lb/>
?SqfiriPtetff<lb/>
SOFT &amp; PRETTY j<lb/>
TOILET TISSUE &amp;&amp;<lb/>
LIMIT 2 WITH WfM<lb/>
7.50 FOOD ORDER<lb/>
4 roll pkg. 88t<lb/>
2.<lb/>
 KRAFT MIRACAL WHIP<lb/>
i 32 oz. bottle .98<lb/>
I with this coupon and $7.50 food order excluding<lb/>
advertised specials. Without coupon $1.59.<lb/>
limit one per stoEjpto, ' 1U-8<lb/>
JOHN MORRELL BACON<lb/>
1 2 oz. pkg.<lb/>
99<lb/>
RUTABAGAS OR WHITE<lb/>
POTATOES<lb/>
14 lb.<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
MACARONI &amp; CHEESE<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
7 oz. box 3 for a1.00<lb/>
GRADE A POT CO.<lb/>
JUMBO EGGS<lb/>
79 doz.<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
WHOLE FRYERS<lb/>
48C per lb.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057309_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
1 HI t AM I KOl ININ MM Ak" 8, 1981<lb/>
OUR BIGGEST<lb/>
USED<lb/>
INVENTORY<lb/>
EVER!<lb/>
IENCE<lb/>
-???<lb/>
nATH<lb/>
xWl<lb/>
Xi<lb/>
V<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
x<lb/>
V<lb/>
N<lb/>
xx<lb/>
:uZ O<lb/>
:<lb/>
xv<lb/>
v -<lb/>
0 v <lb/>
X<lb/>
0<lb/>
s<lb/>
s<lb/>
? ? .<lb/>
? ? A -<lb/>
Wm<lb/>
-NN-<lb/>
<lb/>
JJV<lb/>
:?<lb/>
-<lb/>
X<lb/>
? -ii l-i Ti<lb/>
<lb/>
rv<lb/>
??-1 <lb/>
. .yi<lb/>
r w<lb/>
- iri?-4<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
! ?<lb/>
r.<lb/>
Our December Book Buy Back Bonanza has produced the largest<lb/>
used textbook inventory in the history of the U.B.E. We've got 50<lb/>
more used texts in our store than in Jan. of 1980.<lb/>
Check Downtown First for all your books and supplies.<lb/>
SHOP EARLY FOR BIGGEST<lb/>
SELECTION OF USED<lb/>
TEXTBOOKS!<lb/>
Extended hours 8:00am - 9:00pm Mon.<lb/>
Jan. 12, Tues. Jan. 13.<lb/>
FREE PEPSI'S ALL DAY TODAY<lb/>
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY<lb/>
528 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057309_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>