<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057311_0001"/>
Qtoe iEaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. 33<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Thursday , January 15, 1981<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
N.C. Assembly Convenes In Raleigh<lb/>
K Ml lull (UPI) I he 1981<lb/>
General ssembl) convened<lb/>
Wednesda) amid predictions of a<lb/>
tight budget yeai and calls from its<lb/>
leaders for financial restraint<lb/>
tempered with compassion.<lb/>
"1: esponsibilit) must be our<lb/>
h w oii at all nines, especially at<lb/>
1 House Speaker<lb/>
11 Madison, w ho<lb/>
'?a as (d as the House convened.<lb/>
? ? vs? e people) that<lb/>
i - .? nment designed to<lb/>
'not Meed them<lb/>
in his acceptance<lb/>
e, It. Gov. James C.<lb/>
distinguish between that<lb/>
which is necessary and that which is<lb/>
merely desirable.<lb/>
"Resources are not inexhaustible,<lb/>
and it will be our job to see that<lb/>
those valuable resources which are<lb/>
in short supply will get to where they<lb/>
will do the most good he said.<lb/>
During a day devoted primarily to<lb/>
ceremony, both chambers speedily-<lb/>
approved a resolution formally in-<lb/>
viting Gov. James B. Hunt Jr. to<lb/>
deliver his State of the State message<lb/>
to a joint session Thursday night.<lb/>
The session began at noon when<lb/>
Secretary of State Thad Eure gavel-<lb/>
ed the House to order so members<lb/>
could be sworn into office. Green<lb/>
carted the Senate session three<lb/>
minutes later.<lb/>
The first order of business in the<lb/>
House was the election of Ramsey<lb/>
as speaker. The selection officially<lb/>
by a 118-0 margin-was a formality<lb/>
since the 96 House Democrats<lb/>
nominated him last month.<lb/>
Residents of Ramsey's district in<lb/>
the southwestern section of the state<lb/>
packed the galleries to watch him<lb/>
become the first speaker in 80 years<lb/>
from the North Carolina moun-<lb/>
tains.<lb/>
"This General Assembly should<lb/>
direct its efforts toward eliminating<lb/>
empty minds, empty stomachs and<lb/>
empty pockets Ramsey said.<lb/>
"It will not be easy to meet our<lb/>
economic responsibilities. An<lb/>
economc chill is spreading across us<lb/>
and there are no signs of a warming<lb/>
trend he said, and cited the<lb/>
limited resources that would be<lb/>
available.<lb/>
The Legislature must establish<lb/>
priorities, "eliminate any semblance<lb/>
of waste" and end any "unwise, un-<lb/>
wanted and unused" programs he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"North Carolina stands today at<lb/>
a budgetary crossroad he said.<lb/>
"Unless we choose the path of the<lb/>
wisest possible use of our dollars,<lb/>
we will be heading for financial<lb/>
trouble in the very near future<lb/>
Green told the Senate its "biggest<lb/>
challenge will be to continue to pro-<lb/>
vide the goods and services that<lb/>
North Carolina needs and deserves<lb/>
MSC Recovers Some Objects<lb/>
without burdening with excessive<lb/>
taxes those very citiens we are try-<lb/>
ing to help.<lb/>
"We need to continue that North<lb/>
Carolina quality of life for our<lb/>
citizens. Yet we need to do it, and<lb/>
still operate within our existing<lb/>
resources<lb/>
"That does not mean this General<lb/>
Assembly will be devoid of compas-<lb/>
sion. Not at all. I think the money<lb/>
will be there for those important<lb/>
programs so necessary to our less<lb/>
fortunate North Carolinians<lb/>
Green said, but those programs<lb/>
must be examined tor duplication,<lb/>
waste and excessive administration.<lb/>
Green, who in the past feuded<lb/>
with Hunt and with former Speaker<lb/>
Art Stolen From Mendenhall Center<lb/>
Bv NANO MORRIS Htafl Wrili-r<lb/>
have taken place this vear in Mendenhall h;s s years the has been in opera-<lb/>
: plant valued at<lb/>
but latei it was o bean bag chairs<lb/>
? ? in thelake: rhe : but ha Ol a s ision v iew -eves were not ap-the chairs were found dorm on campus dur-<lb/>
two expensive lamps were stolen<lb/>
from gallery lobby, in early<lb/>
November. Mendenhall received an<lb/>
anonymous call informing them of<lb/>
n where the) could pick<lb/>
up ne ol the missing lamps. Thev<lb/>
picked up the lamp which had a note<lb/>
attached to n signed "the ECU<lb/>
thief The thief said the other lamp<lb/>
would be returned after Christmas.<lb/>
Several works of art were stolen<lb/>
from the gallerv walls. Three black<lb/>
and while photographs were stolen<lb/>
from the Forty-second Annual<lb/>
North Carolina Artists Exhibition<lb/>
Traveling Show . "Elk Park. N.C<lb/>
bv lorn Bras well, and "Entitled<lb/>
bv Colin Osborne III were stolen on<lb/>
Eridav, Nov. 21. The photographs<lb/>
were missing as of 3:00 p.m. The<lb/>
theft was reported to campus securi-<lb/>
tv immediately, who then filed their<lb/>
official report.<lb/>
Several high school students were<lb/>
seen in the building, but there is no<lb/>
way of knowing whether or not they<lb/>
were involved in the thefts One<lb/>
piece of art stolen was described as a<lb/>
puddle on a dirt road, and another<lb/>
was a sky scene.<lb/>
"Rake With Shadow by Mark<lb/>
B. Sluder, a picture of a white house<lb/>
with two doors and a rake in bet-<lb/>
ween, was stolen on Nov. 24. At<lb/>
9:(K) the photograph was on the<lb/>
gallery wall. Wanda E. Yuhas, assis-<lb/>
tant program director went to take<lb/>
the show down for shipping to the<lb/>
next date. She went to the gallery<lb/>
prior to removing the show and<lb/>
discovered the piece was missing. At<lb/>
10:00 a.m. campus security was<lb/>
notified.<lb/>
Another piece reported missing is<lb/>
'ICON George Brett's<lb/>
cellophane tape cross on 100 percent<lb/>
rag paper.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Union's Art<lb/>
Exhibition Committee and Randy<lb/>
Osman, director of Gray Art<lb/>
Gallery, are making an investigation<lb/>
into ways of cutting out thefts. The<lb/>
possibility of putting devices on<lb/>
remote side doors so that alarms will<lb/>
go off is one security measure being<lb/>
considered.<lb/>
A receptionist is on duty at all<lb/>
times, but this is obviously not<lb/>
enough. The thefts have been at<lb/>
times with very different travel<lb/>
levels, so special precautions at par-<lb/>
ticular hours might not be a deter-<lb/>
rent.<lb/>
Mendenhall has decided to cancel<lb/>
all shows until the aid of a profes-<lb/>
sional secuntv svstem can be provid-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
See ART, Page 3<lb/>
SRA Holds Leadership Conference<lb/>
B Pl 1COL1 ls<lb/>
s,?,t ttllor<lb/>
nlav anded I a i, then inH 1IUthey each tood tried<lb/>
med<lb/>
other's<lb/>
1- cal ndergarten or<lb/>
me neig iborhood kids<lb/>
I he answer is no. It is<lb/>
lent Residence<lb/>
<lb/>
ke an idiot said Beth<lb/>
Mel I yler Dorm. "1 was really<lb/>
. d<lb/>
"T couldn't even get off the<lb/>
1 Ka Coats, secretary of<lb/>
the College Hill Campus Council.<lb/>
But u all seemed to turn out for<lb/>
the better Tuesday night as the SRA<lb/>
: its firs- leadership conference.<lb/>
I he conference was a real big suc-<lb/>
remarked SRA President<lb/>
Nelson Jarvis. "I didn't hear any<lb/>
complaints<lb/>
The I I school year is the<lb/>
SRA's first vear of existence at East<lb/>
Carolina. The SRA is a result of the<lb/>
merger involving the Men's,<lb/>
Women's and Co-ed Residence<lb/>
Councils.<lb/>
According to SRA Publicity<lb/>
Chairwoman Kim Mack, the old<lb/>
councils were merged to streamline<lb/>
the system. "With ECU starting to<lb/>
have co-ed dorms the SRA is<lb/>
beneficial to everyone, it has more<lb/>
strength than the old councils did<lb/>
The conference was held, Mack<lb/>
said, because the SRA was having<lb/>
difficulty getting input from the<lb/>
students who live in the dorms.<lb/>
"The purpose of the conference was<lb/>
to teach these students how to<lb/>
become good leaders and how to<lb/>
conduct a good meeting<lb/>
The students at the conference in-<lb/>
cluded the officers of the area<lb/>
residence councils and the<lb/>
presidents and vice presidents of the<lb/>
various dorms.<lb/>
The SRA is divided into three<lb/>
area residence councils: the West<lb/>
Campus Council, the Central Cam-<lb/>
pus Council and the College Hill<lb/>
Campus Council. In addition, each<lb/>
dorm has a house council.<lb/>
Each area residence council is the<lb/>
governing body for its area. These<lb/>
councils and the dorms are the<lb/>
primary sponsors of the socials and<lb/>
other activities for dorm students.<lb/>
Each area coun;cil also has a<lb/>
coordinator. These coordinators are<lb/>
full-time professionals employed by<lb/>
the universitv.<lb/>
"The area coordinator is the ad-<lb/>
visor to the council explained<lb/>
Rebecca Martin, the coordinator for<lb/>
the West Campus. "But that's just<lb/>
part of what we do. We also work<lb/>
closely with the directors of the<lb/>
residence halls.<lb/>
"The workshop (leadership con-<lb/>
ference) is similar to what we do<lb/>
with the student staffs of the<lb/>
residence halls she continued.<lb/>
"We're involved in recruitment and<lb/>
training the students who serve as<lb/>
resident advisors in the dorms.<lb/>
Basically we keep abreast of what<lb/>
happens in our area<lb/>
Jarvis noted that the SRA itself<lb/>
was not a major programming body<lb/>
and will not be sponsoring monthly<lb/>
events. "It's mainly a lobbying<lb/>
organization he said.<lb/>
He did note, however, that the<lb/>
SRA would be sponsoring a recrea-<lb/>
tion night Thursday at Memorial<lb/>
Gym.<lb/>
"SRA is a means for students in<lb/>
the dorms to communicate with the<lb/>
administration he said. "Our<lb/>
main function is to lobby to the ad-<lb/>
ministration. At the same time the<lb/>
administration can get information<lb/>
about the dorms from the SRA<lb/>
Jarvis emphasized that the SRA<lb/>
was completely separate from the<lb/>
Student Government Association<lb/>
and stresed that the two should not<lb/>
be confused.<lb/>
Mack echoed Jarvis' feelings<lb/>
about the purpose of the SRA. "It is<lb/>
the voice of the students who live in<lb/>
the dorms. If they have any com-<lb/>
plaints or suggestions that's where<lb/>
they can go<lb/>
Selective Service May<lb/>
Ask For Student Records<lb/>
Director of Housing Dan Wooten, says dorm students can expect a rent in-<lb/>
crease. See page 3 for details.<lb/>
If the Selective Service System<lb/>
decides to use college and university<lb/>
records to track down men who<lb/>
didn't register tor the draft, each<lb/>
school will have to decide for itself<lb/>
if the records can be released, accor-<lb/>
ding to an SSS spokesperson.<lb/>
Estimates of the percentage of<lb/>
non-registration range from the<lb/>
Selective Service's 5 to 7 percent<lb/>
guess, to anti-draft and media<lb/>
reports of 25 percent non-<lb/>
compliance.<lb/>
"Using student records is a<lb/>
possibility we're considering says<lb/>
Betty Alexander, public informa-<lb/>
tion officer for the SSS. Alexander<lb/>
says the SSS doesn't believe the<lb/>
federal privacy law would protect<lb/>
directory information contained in<lb/>
college and university records, but<lb/>
says each school would determine its<lb/>
own privacy standards.<lb/>
"If they (school officials) believe<lb/>
it would be a violation of a student's<lb/>
privacy, then those would be<lb/>
records we couldn't use says Alex-<lb/>
ander. "It's up to them .to decide<lb/>
Some students aren't waiting until<lb/>
Selective Service acts to find out<lb/>
what their school's decision will be.<lb/>
At the U. of California-Santa Bar-<lb/>
bara, over 300 students marched on<lb/>
the chancellor's office demanding<lb/>
that personal information in their<lb/>
university files not be turned over to<lb/>
any outside authorities. The<lb/>
students asked Chancellor Robert<lb/>
Huttenback to accept regulations re-<lb/>
quiring widespread notification of<lb/>
any request to for records and<lb/>
delaying university action on such a<lb/>
request for seven days.<lb/>
Huttenback agreed to notify the<lb/>
student newspaper of any requests<lb/>
for information by outside<lb/>
authorities. He also will contact<lb/>
others who submit written requests<lb/>
for notification. Huttenback refus-<lb/>
ed to guarantee a seven-day delay in<lb/>
furnishing requested information,<lb/>
but did agree to withhold such in-<lb/>
formation until the students involv-<lb/>
ed were notified.<lb/>
Students outside California don't<lb/>
seem to be too concerned about a<lb/>
possible on-campus record hunt.<lb/>
Doug Tuthill, president of the<lb/>
United States Student Association,<lb/>
admits he's heard little discussion of<lb/>
the records release issue in his<lb/>
travels around the country. "I think<lb/>
most students don't think the<lb/>
government will go as far as finding<lb/>
people who didn't register says<lb/>
Tuthill.<lb/>
Carl J. Stewart Jr also issued a<lb/>
for unity, saying there is no room<lb/>
for a conflict between the executive<lb/>
and legislative branches of govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"If we io not do our jobs right,<lb/>
only the citizens of North Carolina<lb/>
will lose nd thev are the very peo-<lb/>
ple we all want to win he said.<lb/>
Green and Ramsey began the pro-<lb/>
cess ol announcing their committee<lb/>
appointments Wednesday. B<lb/>
men named the Appropriation com-<lb/>
mittees that will grapple with the<lb/>
budget, while Ramsey also named<lb/>
the House finance Committee,<lb/>
which considers tax legislation.<lb/>
S't-A<lb/>
yfei<lb/>
t?f-Wr<lb/>
fth<lb/>
'??<lb/>
'?<lb/>
- ?,<lb/>
M'<lb/>
t,ri<lb/>
r-z ??<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
.ri 4<lb/>
George Brett's "ICON" was stolen from Mendenhall.<lb/>
Activism Resurges<lb/>
Following Election<lb/>
The November election heralded<lb/>
the return of power to the conser<lb/>
vatives, but it might also signal the<lb/>
return of organized activism to col-<lb/>
llege campuses.<lb/>
Rather than running scared after<lb/>
the landslide victory of Ronald<lb/>
Reagan and the success of the Moral<lb/>
Majority, some student activists are<lb/>
capitalizing on the conservative<lb/>
threat by marshalling their forces<lb/>
for what they claim will be a four-<lb/>
year seige. Whether they can buck<lb/>
;ampus trends of conservatism and<lb/>
apathy remains to be seen.<lb/>
In mid-November, about 400<lb/>
students from more than 50 schools<lb/>
attended the Progressive Students<lb/>
Conference at Kent State U<lb/>
establishing in the process a loosely<lb/>
knit network of activist groups.<lb/>
"The idea actually came out of<lb/>
the anti-dtaft and anti-nuclear<lb/>
movements says organizer<lb/>
Richard Sax of the Midwest branch<lb/>
of the Committee Against Registra-<lb/>
tion and the Draft. Although con-<lb/>
ceived in pre-election meetings, the<lb/>
conference drew many people who<lb/>
came "because they were concerned<lb/>
about Reagan's election ? they<lb/>
realize it's time for people who<lb/>
think progressively to organize<lb/>
says Sax. "The new conservative<lb/>
trend does represent a real threat<lb/>
The primary theme of the<lb/>
November conference was unity ?<lb/>
combining divergent groups into a<lb/>
single activist movement. The<lb/>
primary problem of the conference<lb/>
was the lack of a unifying issue j?<lb/>
other than opposition to Reagan.<lb/>
The main activity of the Progressive<lb/>
Students Network at present is<lb/>
publication of a newsletter and ex-<lb/>
pansion onto more campuses, says<lb/>
Sax. Also in the works is a<lb/>
demonstration during the Reagan<lb/>
inauguration.<lb/>
Three Harvard University<lb/>
students and former Anderson for<lb/>
President workers also responded to<lb/>
the election by trying to form a<lb/>
liberal coalition, called Students In-<lb/>
volved in National Change<lb/>
(Students, Inc.). The election of a<lb/>
Republican Senate, on top of<lb/>
Reagan's big win, spurred the<lb/>
group's formation, says one of<lb/>
those involved. "The elections<lb/>
scared the hell out of a lot of Har-<lb/>
vard students he says. Student<lb/>
Incs immediate goal is staging civil<lb/>
rights rallies throughout New<lb/>
England on Abraham Lincoln's bir-<lb/>
thday .<lb/>
Issue-oriented campaigns are ex-<lb/>
pected to draw more student in-<lb/>
terest. The Campaign for Political<lb/>
Rights, a Washington-based group,<lb/>
is finding more students interested<lb/>
in the demonstrations it leads<lb/>
against on-campus recruitment bv<lb/>
the Central Intelligence Agency.<lb/>
"Main more universities have<lb/>
organized to raise the issue of covert<lb/>
recruitment, and with Reagan in<lb/>
there, things will get even more ac-<lb/>
tive says CPR's Susan Benda.<lb/>
Doug Tuthill, president of the<lb/>
United States Student Association,<lb/>
says Reagan's election will make it<lb/>
easier for Tuthill to organize<lb/>
grassroots student involvement. But<lb/>
while some activists long for a single<lb/>
issue to galvanize the movement, as<lb/>
the Vietnam War did in the '60s,<lb/>
Tuthill doesn't favor a return to the<lb/>
old ways of action. "We have to be<lb/>
systematic in educating people and<lb/>
in organizing in a rational fashion<lb/>
so that we will go on after Reagan is<lb/>
gone he says. "1 don't think<lb/>
Reagan is the real issue here. If you<lb/>
really look at it, Carter wasn't much<lb/>
better<lb/>
Tuthill also points out that poten-<lb/>
tial organizers must first convince<lb/>
students "they have some control<lb/>
over their lives.<lb/>
On The inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Classifieds 8<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Letters4<lb/>
Sports7<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057311_0002"/><lb/>
THI EASTCAROI INI <lb/>
JANUARY 15, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
JOBSNEEDED<lb/>
Inmates .h' the Maury (<lb/>
tionai Fat iiity are looking for Obs<lb/>
Many inmates nave been recom<lb/>
mended for worK release but Obs<lb/>
aren't available ifyouhavi<lb/>
offer or Know of or<lb/>
7S6 9324<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
PRESIDENT<lb/>
Applications are now tx<lb/>
cepted for the office erf Studi<lb/>
Union pr. e 1981<lb/>
school real Applications<lb/>
taken until Jan '6 1981 ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
dent Centei reformation ? ?<lb/>
FOOD LAB<lb/>
The School of Home Economics<lb/>
IS sponsoring an Advanced Quanti<lb/>
 Food Lab this semester Dm<lb/>
nors are by advance "season<lb/>
ticket ? only Meals are served on<lb/>
Wed from 6 45 7 45 p m There<lb/>
.in' two plans, each consisting of<lb/>
five meals at $22 50 per plan, or<lb/>
both plans for $45 00 per plan<lb/>
For further information contact<lb/>
Ruby Sheridan a' 'he School of<lb/>
Home Econon-<lb/>
PARKING<lb/>
? eenville Parking Authori<lb/>
? iot at 100pm on Jan U<lb/>
? . Mali<lb/>
TRANSPORTATION<lb/>
A.M.A.<lb/>
The ECU chapter of the<lb/>
American Marketing Association<lb/>
is holding a membership drive<lb/>
during the first 30 days of the<lb/>
semester Named the Albert R<lb/>
Conley Chapter the orqrfrwation<lb/>
proposes to br inq together the pro<lb/>
tessional and the student In the<lb/>
field of marketing<lb/>
Applications may be obtained by<lb/>
contacting the officers Mike<lb/>
Mi Mahan W E Iton Boney in A 226<lb/>
Rawi<lb/>
PBL<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda businesslob<lb/>
wil meet at 4 p m on Tuesday<lb/>
Ian 20 n Rawl 103 All members<lb/>
ked 1 ittend<lb/>
CIC FELLOWSHIPS<lb/>
i<lb/>
?. ?<lb/>
inities tellov<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
S'av<lb/>
Field!<lb/>
'<lb/>
?" . Pubhc Transpor<lb/>
n will meet<lb/>
 ? at B pm at the<lb/>
Works Fa<lb/>
FORCES FOR<lb/>
FREEDOM<lb/>
ir 1 " ?' ssued<lb/>
? now<lb/>
BAHAMAS CRUISE<lb/>
, h 6 15th<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
Sjvv 00 Dour<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
POSITIONS<lb/>
-<lb/>
SPRING BREAK TRIP<lb/>
itudeht Union Travel Com<lb/>
milfee has planned two trips clor<lb/>
inq Spring Break One is to Ft<lb/>
I<lb/>
. rta<lb/>
?<lb/>
. by t<lb/>
??<lb/>
:<lb/>
J ?<lb/>
?  ? <lb/>
? '<lb/>
? dom<lb/>
P O B ?<lb/>
Tulut i L ake c ?'? - 8 .<lb/>
INSTRUCTORS<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
rors ari I teacl<lb/>
? .?<lb/>
? ? ?'?<lb/>
rafts T-ia' Stu<lb/>
ior which<lb/>
needed are<lb/>
? 'oom techniques ewi Ii .<lb/>
i Graduate or s" .<lb/>
? - , e who ha<lb/>
know<lb/>
? the areas n<lb/>
 Tana Nobles.<lb/>
? p ?. ? ? . ?<lb/>
????<lb/>
INTERNSHIP<lb/>
N C COI<lb/>
<lb/>
out of stati .? ?. til Fi<lb/>
ipply for thi ? ? ? ??<lb/>
? .? ship<lb/>
? ?'<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
, ? ? ' "<lb/>
? ? ? -<lb/>
? ? r interns ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? i<lb/>
. - '<lb/>
.<lb/>
.<lb/>
.? . .<lb/>
Mice ex . 9b ???? ? e of<lb/>
fice<lb/>
Students interested In the In<lb/>
 '? ' ' ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 y<lb/>
? ,<lb/>
Nc ?<lb/>
?-<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ? . to<lb/>
? ' ' I ?<lb/>
? - :? ? .?' ECU<lb/>
PRE COLUMBIAN<lb/>
Tht pi of Soc .oiogy and<lb/>
" ropologv n cooperation a itt<lb/>
the ECU School of Art is presen<lb/>
ting i ser.es of public lectures on<lb/>
Pre C ' ?' rt<lb/>
The ? ? ? ? ft bi ? fed<lb/>
 ?? urator of me<lb/>
Pre Columbia ? It the<lb/>
. Museum of An<lb/>
?. . rheauditor 'um<lb/>
i ?? . . ? .  ? ? - ter a'<lb/>
ECL ?' ? 'T' ii'n 12 '?n 1v<lb/>
and j .v t<lb/>
? to I<lb/>
? . .  of Civili za'ion<lb/>
Thr  <lb/>
.reatEm<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
 iya One I<lb/>
. ? iv and<lb/>
Thi ? '<lb/>
Pred  ? Other Half ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Therv r remain ng lei<lb/>
 in the ser't-s ana each lee<lb/>
tore ? ?? '<lb/>
. ampIes of Pre<lb/>
Columbia1<lb/>
of published<lb/>
?? and th<lb/>
?, . the a en1 arts of this<lb/>
? . snow thai Pre<lb/>
Columbian art can now take its<lb/>
piai ? ireat an<lb/>
?<lb/>
sau' ? tivethal n ??<lb/>
nave tome to thi ???  ?<lb/>
have sar- . a ' fherl<lb/>
. ti ttl<lb/>
- ? eft i by thi<lb/>
?iave come and<lb/>
SKI CLUB<lb/>
An 11 be a<lb/>
? rig Tuesday Ian 20<lb/>
. m m room 104 Memorial<lb/>
<lb/>
 i ten!<lb/>
trip plan<lb/>
'? ?<lb/>
Any tact Dr<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
ke to si ??? '<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
n Jan 23 arm i<lb/>
Auditions a : ?  v 00 p m<lb/>
For more information, phone<lb/>
S7 6611. e?' 210<lb/>
Another Plus from<lb/>
SIDEWALK SALE<lb/>
Jan. 30 and 31, Fri. and Sat.<lb/>
Sweatshirts ? 12 Price<lb/>
Ladies' Fashion Knits Infant Gripper<lb/>
Football Jerseys Golf Shirts Youth Top Stitch<lb/>
EXERCISE<lb/>
The Dept of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services is ottering<lb/>
classes in Exercise and Weight<lb/>
Control Jan Exercise, Aerobic<lb/>
Conditioning, and Shmnastics<lb/>
Each class is designed to provide<lb/>
information on (l) the purpose of<lb/>
exercise (2) the effective results<lb/>
of activity, (3) weight control and<lb/>
figure improvement, (4) Yoga<lb/>
and relaxation technigues. and (5)<lb/>
various exercises to maintain flex<lb/>
ibihty and muscle tones The<lb/>
structure of each class will be<lb/>
determined in accordance with the<lb/>
express desires of the participants<lb/>
enrolled<lb/>
For additional information con<lb/>
tai t Nancy Mize at 757 6387<lb/>
CRAFTS<lb/>
Crafts workshops are now<lb/>
at the Crafts Center in<lb/>
M i lenhall Pottery, darkroom<lb/>
ti hniqui photography, quilting,<lb/>
?. . ?? be? nnincj ii'Welry and<lb/>
? oor loom weaving,<lb/>
: ?' ? i ned glass and macrame<lb/>
the a rkshops which are<lb/>
All ECU students, student<lb/>
endents, as well as facualty,<lb/>
1 rino their dependents who are<lb/>
MSC members an ? g tile to par<lb/>
must regis'ir<lb/>
Aorkshops at the Crafts<lb/>
Center no later than Saturday,<lb/>
Jan 4 c r.itts Center hours are<lb/>
3 00 P M until 10 00 P M . Mon<lb/>
through Fr, and 12 00 until 5 00<lb/>
p m Sat<lb/>
For further information contact<lb/>
Tan N ? it 757 661!<lb/>
SCI Fl<lb/>
All persons interested m tan<lb/>
tasy, science fiction, comics,<lb/>
films, etc are invited to attend an<lb/>
informal meeting at the Nostalgia<lb/>
Newsstand, 919 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
at 7 00 p m . Wednesday, Jan 21<lb/>
The purpose of this meeting is for<lb/>
local fans to meet with each other,<lb/>
to prepare a directory of local fan<lb/>
dom to be printed, and to an<lb/>
nounce plans for the upcoming An<lb/>
nual Greenville Mini Con to be<lb/>
held March 22 Call 758 6909 for<lb/>
further information<lb/>
FIELD HOCKEY<lb/>
A Field Hockey Club meeting<lb/>
will be held Wednesday Jan 21 at<lb/>
7 00 p m m 221 Mendenhal! for all<lb/>
interested women<lb/>
GYMNASTICS<lb/>
Registration tor the annual<lb/>
children's gymnastics program at<lb/>
ECU is scheduled at 7 p m on Jan<lb/>
20 and Jan 22 and the one hour per<lb/>
week classes will begm Jan 26<lb/>
Registration will be in the gym<lb/>
nasties room at Memorial Gym<lb/>
nasium, ECU, from 7pm until 8<lb/>
p m each evening<lb/>
Cost of the 12 weeks program is<lb/>
$35 The program includes all<lb/>
phases of gymnastics for children<lb/>
aged five through 16 Schedules<lb/>
according to age will be set at time<lb/>
of registration<lb/>
MINI COURSES<lb/>
?-? ?? r today tor a non credit<lb/>
mini course n Wine Tasting Clog<lb/>
 CPR Train,ng or<lb/>
Calligraphy Thesi<lb/>
rVtendenrtall Studi<lb/>
 ?; I tl aH<lb/>
ECU stud ' ' ?" MSC<lb/>
then guests<lb/>
lividua in per<lb/>
at ?? ? Wenoenhall Central<lb/>
' ket Office betweei the hours of<lb/>
10 00 a m and 4 00 pm Mon<lb/>
The first .ourse<lb/>
.? 1981<lb/>
, ? ? ? ? ? . ?<lb/>
'?6611<lb/>
THE EARLY <lb/>
mon k <lb/>
PREPARE FOR<lb/>
MCATLSATGMAT<lb/>
SAT-DAT-GRE CPA<lb/>
Join our "Early Bird" and<lb/>
Summer Classes In Preparation<lb/>
for Your Fall 1980 Exams<lb/>
Permanent Centers open days, evenings and<lb/>
weekends<lb/>
Low hourly cost Dedicated full-time staff<lb/>
Complete TEST-n-TAPE5m facilities for review of<lb/>
class lessons and supplementary materials.<lb/>
Small classes taught by skilled instructors<lb/>
Opportunity to make up missed lessons<lb/>
Voluminous home-study materials constantly<lb/>
updated by researchers expert in their field<lb/>
Opportunity to transfer to and continue study at<lb/>
any of our over 85 centers<lb/>
OTHER COURSES AVAILABLE<lb/>
GRE PSYCH GRE BIO - MAT PCAT<lb/>
OCATVAT TOEFL MSKPNMB<lb/>
VQEECFMGFLEXNDBNLE<lb/>
Educational Center<lb/>
TEST PtEPMATION<lb/>
SPECIALISTS SINCE 131<lb/>
?i-e' Center&amp;<lb/>
SENIOR RECITAL<lb/>
Clarinetist Lawyer Crawford, of<lb/>
Goldsboro, a senior in the ECU<lb/>
School of Music, will perform a<lb/>
recital on Fri . Jan 16, 1981 a'<lb/>
7 30 p m .n the A J Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall<lb/>
Crawford is a candidate for the<lb/>
Bachelor of Music degree in Music<lb/>
Therapy He studies clarinet with<lb/>
Deborah Chodacki cf 'he School of<lb/>
Music faculty<lb/>
Works to be performed are<lb/>
Wilson Osborne's Rhapsody,<lb/>
Saint Saens' Sonata, and Leonard<lb/>
Bernstein s Sonata Crawford will<lb/>
be accompanied by Cynthia Creel<lb/>
pianist The rectal is free and<lb/>
open to the publ.c<lb/>
SRAMEETING<lb/>
The Student Residence Assooa<lb/>
tion will meet Tuesday Jan 20 m<lb/>
Rawl Room 130 at 5 00 P m All<lb/>
members are urged to attend<lb/>
PACE<lb/>
The U S Office of Personnel<lb/>
Management announces that the<lb/>
fling dates tor the Professional<lb/>
and Administrative Career Exan<lb/>
I PACE! arc between Jan 19 and<lb/>
Feb 13 Additional information<lb/>
and applications are ava'lah'i<lb/>
the Career Planning and Pta I<lb/>
ment Center located m the Blcxton<lb/>
House<lb/>
(ACT)<lb/>
The American College Test<lb/>
(ACT will be ?' ECU on<lb/>
Sat . March 28. 1981 Application<lb/>
blanks are to r completed arvi<lb/>
mailed to act Registration p O<lb/>
Box 414. Iowa City Iowa M240<lb/>
Registration deadline is Feb V<lb/>
1981 Applications may be obta.n<lb/>
ed from the ECU Testing C???<lb/>
Speight Bldg Room 10S<lb/>
(AHPAT)<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test wll be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat Man h 7 1981 Ap<lb/>
plication blanks are to be com<lb/>
pleted and mailed to the<lb/>
Psychological Corp. 304 E Jr<lb/>
St New VOTk, NY 10017 to an .?<lb/>
by Feb 7, 198 nblank!<lb/>
are g at the Testing<lb/>
Center pe ht B Room ios<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
SKI TRIP<lb/>
I CU Ski '?<lb/>
over I foi<lb/>
Mar - ?1 Studer <lb/>
credit should enroll in PHYE 1105<lb/>
A room deposit of S10 00 is<lb/>
Jan 27 1981. at IP"<lb/>
Gym. Rm 108 Contact Mrs Jo<lb/>
Saur<lb/>
205 f ? -t'On<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
The first meeting of SO<lb/>
for the ?,<lb/>
herd Thursday Jan 15 al<lb/>
Cultural ' 7pm PI<lb/>
plan to at-<lb/>
BOXING<lb/>
<lb/>
Tournarr.<lb/>
2 4 2 5 and .6 n a-<lb/>
Aud tori<lb/>
Jan 19 at thi<lb/>
7 56 it ?<lb/>
FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
rhe I<lb/>
? '<lb/>
RESIDENCE STAFF<lb/>
A<lb/>
retort!<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
torn ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
Mt St HELENS<lb/>
Dr<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
LACROSSE<lb/>
v<lb/>
CANCER<lb/>
?-<lb/>
SURF CLUB<lb/>
ASSISTANTS<lb/>
Gr ' PS Three<lb/>
ass.sfantshipi able lor<lb/>
ECi. '? ' fed<lb/>
socioeconoi<lb/>
? ? in North<lb/>
Carolina Gra: ' rrom<lb/>
. . t Skills in<lb/>
? "<lb/>
or n ?' <lb/>
' ' ?<lb/>
be paid rhe<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? ?? , ? ntorma<lb/>
?<lb/>
titote I istai and<lb/>
?.???? Re; . ? ? i cu<lb/>
telepi<lb/>
CBP<lb/>
?. ??<lb/>
7 oc i ? Biology N 102 Dr<lb/>
Cheti vvili speak Everyone is .n<lb/>
vi led<lb/>
Can Days Evenings a Weekends<lb/>
Executive Park, Mat! E<lb/>
17M Chapel Hill aivo<lb/>
Durham. NC 17707<lb/>
? m4ae-?7w<lb/>
:? -r Thar 8S MatOl US Cit.es 4 ADroafl<lb/>
Far inforrnatujn about other canton OUTSIDE ? Y STATE CALL TOLL ft-Ei WO 223 1782<lb/>
SALE 40 OFF<lb/>
Ladies'Knit Tops<lb/>
Ladies' Flannel Tops<lb/>
Ladies'Jeans<lb/>
Men's H.I.S. Corduroy Pants<lb/>
Men's MALE Pants<lb/>
gAen's Denim Coat<lb/>
Reg. 12 98 NOW 7.79<lb/>
Reg. 12.98 NOW 7.79<lb/>
Reg. 12.97 NOW 7.78<lb/>
Reg. 21.95 NOW 13.17<lb/>
Reg. H.95 NOW 10.17<lb/>
Reg. 18.98 NOW 15.98<lb/>
MILL OUTLET CLOTHING<lb/>
264 By-Pat in Front of Nichols Hour: MonSt. 9:30 to 6:00<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
KAPPA<lb/>
? TA U-<lb/>
The Parties Start Mon. With a WAMMER JAMMER ot a<lb/>
WILD WEST PARTY<lb/>
From 8:00 ? Until<lb/>
TUES. Come On Over And PARTY Again<lb/>
From 8:00 - Until.<lb/>
WFD. Time To Go Again For More Ot The<lb/>
Same Good Times.<lb/>
(DKT<lb/>
Has Your favorite Beverage<lb/>
At 409 Elizabeht st<lb/>
Catch The Bus To Our House or Call 752-4379<lb/>
flcfytAdt-fin d7L<lb/>
UsnJl<lb/>
9<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
"LADIES-<lb/>
ADMISSION<lb/>
LOCKOUT" - FREE<lb/>
FOR LADIES - LADIES ONLY FROM<lb/>
8:30-10:00 - GUYS ADMITTED<lb/>
AFTER 10:00<lb/>
THURSDAY - SUPER COLLEGE<lb/>
NIGHT - SPONSORED BY THE SIG<lb/>
EPS<lb/>
FRIDAY - HOME COOKIN'<lb/>
"CHICKEN PICKEN" DOORS OPEN<lb/>
AT 3:00 WITH PLENTY FOR ALL!<lb/>
SATURDAY - "LADIES LOCKOUT<lb/>
NO. 2" - WITH THE BEST OF<lb/>
DANCE MUSIC - FREE ADMISSION<lb/>
FOR LADIES FROM 8:00-9:30 -<lb/>
GUYS ADMITTED AT 9:30<lb/>
SUNDAY - PAPA KATZ PRESENTS<lb/>
ROCK-N-ROLL<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
APPLICATION<lb/>
1980-81<lb/>
You have a unique opportunity to become one of<lb/>
the members of an exciting new nightclub for those<lb/>
of us 19 and over.<lb/>
All members will be entitled to 3 guests per even<lb/>
ing. Neat dress and proper identification will be re<lb/>
quired of all members and guests.<lb/>
This special INTRODUCTORY MEMBERSHIP is<lb/>
only $1.00. All applications and dues must be return<lb/>
ed to this address: P.O. Box 1943, Greenville, NC.<lb/>
27834. NC State Law requires a thirty-day member-<lb/>
ship waiting period from date of application for<lb/>
clubs with brown bagging permits.<lb/>
? Kd.<lb/>
Putt<lb/>
758-7912<lb/>
<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
Nome<lb/>
A<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Telephone No.<lb/>
Birthdote<lb/>
1<lb/>
Occupation<lb/>
Hobbies <lb/>
Music preference<lb/>
DATE<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I SIGNATURE<lb/>
1<lb/>
Li<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057311_0003"/><lb/>
HI AST I AKOl INI AN<lb/>
Dorm Students Can Expect Rent Increase Fall Semester<lb/>
KH M HI I I KIN<lb/>
in keeping March 01 April ol this<lb/>
enl rise in year, Wooten said<lb/>
yeai an 1 he need tor an in<lb/>
idence crease in dorm tees will<lb/>
ible be proposed b Wooten<lb/>
con and Associate Dean foi<lb/>
i the increase Residence 1 ite Carolyn<lb/>
ol 1 ulghum. 1 he proposal<lb/>
 will then be approved<lb/>
Is or disapproved by the<lb/>
 detinue vice chancelloi for stu<lb/>
be dent life, Dr. Elmei<lb/>
Mever.<lb/>
?t !his point the pi o<lb/>
posal is reviewed h a<lb/>
student committee and<lb/>
then forwarded to<lb/>
Chancellor Brewei and<lb/>
the Board ol I rustees<lb/>
foi final appi o al.<lb/>
1 he new increase in<lb/>
dorm tees ma possibly<lb/>
include an additional<lb/>
service foi students<lb/>
Wooten staled thai<lb/>
school officials are cur<lb/>
Art Objects Stolen<lb/>
From Mendenhall<lb/>
( ontinu<lb/>
? ?in Patji I<lb/>
j . ?<lb/>
on.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
N ??<lb/>
1 he I asiarolinian<lb/>
ig II<lb/>
? ; ed foi<lb/>
Swtisc r iption Rates<lb/>
s -<lb/>
p"oni  aj?6 636? 630<lb/>
6th Annual TKE<lb/>
Boxing Tournament<lb/>
11 be held<lb/>
in W r Xuditorium<lb/>
24, 25 and 26th, 181<lb/>
Registration begins<lb/>
January I hh at the TKE<lb/>
House - C5I E. 10th Street<lb/>
en 6-9 p.m.<lb/>
S3 General Nutrition Centers<lb/>
IV III M. J-<lb/>
VTTAMIN<lb/>
IC<lb/>
c<lb/>
? ????' I,<lb/>
from Coast to Coast<lb/>
BRAN RAISINS TcT VTTAMIN<lb/>
99 29 s1'9<lb/>
1<lb/>
39 $1? r<lb/>
ggji!?. ll5iiBBriiiB<lb/>
39<lb/>
n "69 M" go<lb/>
liiM:Jlis?-llB9ilv. 5&amp;&amp;fj<lb/>
SENSATIONAL IC SALE<lb/>
STRESS?<lb/>
m ?h, mm, ???? a Oej?<lb/>
?Ml Viavnc. ??,<lb/>
 ? - an Tl-al<lb/>
? ? ' ?- ? -  . <lb/>
B-COMPLEX<lb/>
LOSE RAT<lb/>
Modelettes lysine ?4oo"v?tamTn a214? ?????:<lb/>
ESsS -  SfL?NIUM 2470 IRON zpo<lb/>
.$5" uctose20zinc  2350<lb/>
Save Money on (ft. Fashioned Budget Stretching Favorites:<lb/>
II ?1?.81 ?all 89.if 6ff<lb/>
SiSSSSf ?J;?-w fcgggMjp?aJ -iiimh<lb/>
FRUIT 'PoTd LENTILS<lb/>
rR0MAN<lb/>
vn rnuii ?coSr : Ltw 11<lb/>
Yogurt juices CHIPS, gg<lb/>
10 10c 10'<lb/>
facfcSw ? ? Facn fjcf, la<lb/>
L<lb/>
in<lb/>
C 3 FLOUR<lb/>
49<lb/>
?PRETTFLS MOWET unrip v ROLLED jf CORN<lb/>
I GRAHAMS HUNtY 2 QATS OIL<lb/>
2 t<lb/>
! UUUiZUJ<lb/>
1 ?tXBBHBBr- ' m j -UUHTtM IT -<lb/>
49CI 1<lb/>
32 ai<lb/>
General Nutrition Center<lb/>
Carolina Kast Mall<lb/>
rentl) discussing the<lb/>
idea of including<lb/>
telephone service in<lb/>
each dorm room. ()nl<lb/>
local calls, however,<lb/>
would be covered b<lb/>
the dorm fee.<lb/>
Residence halls at<lb/>
1 c l are capable of<lb/>
housing 5,580 students.<lb/>
At present, about 98<lb/>
percent ol the available<lb/>
housine is being utili<lb/>
ec<lb/>
!<lb/>
I he current fee foi t ol orth arolina art completi rimer<lb/>
 i Kite<lb/>
I HII<lb/>
Housing operations residence hall student<lb/>
at ECU function on a is S21 per semester, system charge ;<lb/>
budget ol about Si I his amount has risen room rent than l l<lb/>
million a yeai with 30 about 50 percei I<lb/>
percent ol the budget 1977 when the fee wa?<lb/>
designated tor utilities S1 pel semestei<lb/>
1 Ins year, however, Energ) rate? ince that for<lb/>
Wooten estimated that yeai have aim<lb/>
approximately S1 .4 doubled<lb/>
million ol the budget<lb/>
' Ml<lb/>
merited that there are<lb/>
additional housii<lb/>
U Ml<lb/>
.<lb/>
would he consumed bv Onk foui ol the I'5 Wooten<lb/>
?<lb/>
111 tut costs.<lb/>
schools in the I niversi alter these ren<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
SOUTHS NO.6<lb/>
KO( K<lb/>
NIOHICl.OB<lb/>
o<lb/>
Subway<lb/>
0KT<lb/>
Afternoon Delight<lb/>
Fri 3:30 - 7:00<lb/>
SAAD'SSHOK<lb/>
RUAIK<lb/>
I M (irandr ve<lb/>
7581228<lb/>
QuhIiU Kt'ixur<lb/>
ABORT lONHt TO<lb/>
in wiik O<lb/>
PKIONANCV<lb/>
I ?6 00 ?ll ?tvtlvt<lb/>
ix?l?? ???' txrt$ con<lb/>
trot ?no protl,m prt90n<lb/>
t? covo??linfl for vmr <lb/>
iniorn?t?o? call ti; 0S)S j<lb/>
I'oii tr nvmhir<lb/>
fK n J4?l! 6wttn t<lb/>
 M ? P M WHtlitrl<lb/>
Ral??f W?a?'t<lb/>
HI WntMarai" ?'<lb/>
??ttl? H f TMHI<lb/>
Rock<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
THURS<lb/>
BADGE<lb/>
FRI<lb/>
3:30-7:00<lb/>
AFTERNOON<lb/>
DELIGHT $KT<lb/>
WSUBWAY<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
SUBWAY<lb/>
SUN SKIP<lb/>
CASTRO<lb/>
siotf<lb/>
DVJG<lb/>
ITEM<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
Each of th?t? acjrtiB?x<lb/>
itofni is roquiraxj to b? raMlly<lb/>
available lor mi m aich Krogax Sav-on<lb/>
? icpt as spocificaity notfrd In thia ad II ? do<lb/>
run oot o' jr txn wa will ofi?f you your chotca o a<lb/>
comparabia ItOtn whan available, reflecting the same savings w a<lb/>
ramcheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertiaed item at the<lb/>
advertieeO price within 30 davs<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thurs . Jan 15<lb/>
thru Sat Jan 1 7. 1981<lb/>
Copyright 1981<lb/>
Kroger Savon<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
s<lb/>
w<lb/>
-1<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
y<lb/>
?v<lb/>
Before, During &amp;<lb/>
After the Game<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
has everything<lb/>
you need!<lb/>
FOR A QUICK SANDWICH<lb/>
Pimento<lb/>
Cheese Spread<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
OPEN SUNOAY<lb/>
9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057311_0004"/><lb/>
J$ftt iEaat (Earoltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Chris Lichok, GmMmmm<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE, &amp;?<lb/>
PaUI LlNCKE, Dvtcto, ?? Ubmrtamt PAUL COLLINS, NtmEdHm<lb/>
Dave Severin, ?.??? mmpi Charles Chandler spem em<lb/>
mta Lancaster, ?.?.?,  umm David Norris, FmEioi<lb/>
THE BAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Januar 15. 1S?S1<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Literacy Tests<lb/>
wdgewes Against Florida<lb/>
The primary aim of the Civil<lb/>
Rights Movement was fairly simple:<lb/>
provide all citizens of the United<lb/>
States with equal opportunity.<lb/>
Somehow, though, the implementa-<lb/>
tion of this idea has been more dif-<lb/>
ficult than might have seemed possi-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
Take for instance a case heard<lb/>
recently in federal circuit court. The<lb/>
case involves a "functional<lb/>
literacy" test the Florida State<lb/>
Legislature decided should be used<lb/>
in the state's high schools. The<lb/>
legislature decided in 1976 that,<lb/>
beginning in 1979, students would<lb/>
be required to pass the test in order<lb/>
to receive a high school diploma.<lb/>
The test was designed to measure<lb/>
basic skills necessary for effective<lb/>
participation in a modern economy.<lb/>
Each student was to have had four<lb/>
chances to pass the test. Those<lb/>
students who failed all four times<lb/>
would have the option of receiving a<lb/>
"certificate of completion" or tak-<lb/>
ing a fifth year o high school with<lb/>
another opportunity for a diploma.<lb/>
The plan seemed straightforward<lb/>
enough, with options to satisfy the<lb/>
needs of a vide range of students.<lb/>
Bui in these legalistic times most<lb/>
anyone could have predicted the<lb/>
next scene as easily as if it had come<lb/>
from some cheap dime-store novel.<lb/>
The Tampa office of the federal<lb/>
government's Legal Services Cor-<lb/>
poration, Bay Area Legal Services,<lb/>
slapped a lawsuit on the State of<lb/>
Florida. The suit filed on behalf of<lb/>
ten black students claimed that their<lb/>
legal rights were being violated by<lb/>
the possibility of diploma denial.<lb/>
The judge agreed and ruled last<lb/>
year that Florida must suspend its<lb/>
test until 1983 since the class of 1979<lb/>
was educated its first four years in<lb/>
segregated schools.<lb/>
The plaintiffs, however, were still<lb/>
not satisfied and recently sought a<lb/>
ruling that would declare the test to<lb/>
be racially biased. The state, they<lb/>
claimed, had not borne the burden<lb/>
in proving that the test was valid<lb/>
and free of racial bias. So the matter<lb/>
has now become even more murky.<lb/>
One fact is clear, however.<lb/>
Students who cannot read or write<lb/>
should not receive high school<lb/>
diplomas. The four-year segrega-<lb/>
tion has undoubtedly resulted in<lb/>
some disparities in the quality of<lb/>
education received, but issuing these<lb/>
students diplomas will not teach<lb/>
them to read and write. Perhaps a<lb/>
fifth year of high school would.<lb/>
The problem of illiteracy among<lb/>
high school graduates is all too com-<lb/>
mon, even here at East Carolina<lb/>
where freshmen struggle with the<lb/>
Grammar Exit Exam, a test design-<lb/>
ed to measure knowledge of the<lb/>
elementary principles of grammar.<lb/>
We should not be giving breaks to<lb/>
high school students; now is the<lb/>
time we should be demanding more<lb/>
of them. To allow them diplomas<lb/>
without proving their literacy fur-<lb/>
ther degrades the value of a high<lb/>
school education and cheats the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
If these students truly desire an<lb/>
equal education they will demand<lb/>
that the test be given and insist that<lb/>
their school equip them with the<lb/>
skills to pass it. Florida's plan seems<lb/>
designed with students in mind and<lb/>
offers sufficient options, including<lb/>
hope.<lb/>
e<lb/>
- Campus Forum<lb/>
Witches Still Exist Today<lb/>
In response to the December 2, 1980<lb/>
article, any changes in witches of today<lb/>
are used to keep up with the times and fit<lb/>
into society, which enables them to go<lb/>
unnoticed. The story and fairy tale im-<lb/>
ages of evil witches have made them ap-<lb/>
pear harmless by society and next to<lb/>
nonexistent. The real witch does exist to-<lb/>
day but not in the stereotyped images of<lb/>
stories and fairy tales as societies in the<lb/>
past were mislead to believe. The witch<lb/>
is very much in existence today and<lb/>
practices so-called harmless practices<lb/>
that are often cover-ups for the real<lb/>
goings-on.<lb/>
New Bern witches seem to have an in-<lb/>
terest in spreading their so-called<lb/>
religion on campus. The Wicca of New<lb/>
Bern were started in Greenville but mov-<lb/>
ed on when their practices were not ac-<lb/>
cepted in the city. Witchcraft tries to<lb/>
identify with other religions for easier<lb/>
acceptance, but the differences are very<lb/>
appearant. Other religions are very open<lb/>
about their practices while witches are<lb/>
very selective about whom becomes a<lb/>
witch and their rites are for witches only.<lb/>
With this in mind, someone could<lb/>
become suspicious of what is really be-<lb/>
ing practiced. Witches believe in a<lb/>
creator diety as the Christians and Jew<lb/>
but the other gods the witches believe in<lb/>
are enimies, as is Satan of Christianity<lb/>
and Judism<lb/>
The Wicca motto is that the) can do<lb/>
anything as long as it causes no harm.<lb/>
They fail to mention what the criteria<lb/>
for harm involves. Their viewpoint of<lb/>
harm leases much to the imagination.<lb/>
Witches want to be left alone to practice<lb/>
the way they wish without any restraint<lb/>
which could cause harm as far as we<lb/>
know. They claim mystical magical<lb/>
powers without ever revealing the source<lb/>
of it. A factual article from a witch who<lb/>
has left the witches could be very objec-<lb/>
tive in showing the real story and un-<lb/>
covering what the witches want to hide<lb/>
from the general public.<lb/>
Name withheld by request<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/>
For purposes oj verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature oj the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. AH 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/>
da vs.<lb/>
MBA's Draw Criticism On Theories<lb/>
Why Foreign Language<lb/>
Many a student has shed tears<lb/>
over the foreign language require-<lb/>
ment here at ECU. Anyone working<lb/>
toward a BA degree must have four<lb/>
units of foreign language, all in se-<lb/>
quence in the same language.<lb/>
We feel that this requirement<lb/>
should be dropped for several<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
Foreign language is of no use to<lb/>
anyone unless they are going to<lb/>
teach that language or work in a<lb/>
field such as international com-<lb/>
merce or government service<lb/>
overseas. Why should anyone be<lb/>
forced to struggle through four<lb/>
courses that they will never be able<lb/>
to use in their careers.<lb/>
The courses are extremely dif-<lb/>
ficult and have been an obstacle in<lb/>
the path of graduation for many<lb/>
ECU students. We've all had a<lb/>
friend or two who had completed all<lb/>
of their requirements for a degree<lb/>
only to be stopped and bogged<lb/>
down by foreign language.<lb/>
Probably the only reason that the<lb/>
requirement has not been dropped is<lb/>
because those who teach foreign<lb/>
language, and their sympathetic<lb/>
brethren who teach other liberal arts<lb/>
courses that are becoming obsolete<lb/>
in our modern society, have been<lb/>
successful over the years in<lb/>
defeating any motion to drop the re-<lb/>
quirement via the faculty senate.<lb/>
Birds of a feather do flock together.<lb/>
It's a game of survival for them.<lb/>
If the requirement were dropped<lb/>
they might find themselves looking<lb/>
for other work, which would be<lb/>
hard to find since their degrees are<lb/>
in foreign language.<lb/>
How many students would sign<lb/>
up for those courses if they were not<lb/>
required? Not very many, it's that<lb/>
simple.<lb/>
We realize that the requirement<lb/>
will probably be around for a long<lb/>
time no matter how much student<lb/>
opposition is raised, and no matter<lb/>
how many editorials are written.<lb/>
Students should still let their<lb/>
voices be heard by writing a letter to<lb/>
the faculty senate, the vice<lb/>
chancellor for academic affairs, and<lb/>
even the chancellor. You never can<lb/>
tell, they might just listen to the<lb/>
students for a change.<lb/>
However, we think that it will see<lb/>
its demise as the demand for liberal<lb/>
arts degrees steadily decreases.<lb/>
Drop-Add<lb/>
Extension<lb/>
Well now that "Drop-Add" is<lb/>
over and the only alternative you<lb/>
have is to drop those courses which<lb/>
you feel you will never be able to<lb/>
pass, isn't it comforting to know<lb/>
that the deadline for adding a<lb/>
course was extended to include<lb/>
Tuesday, January 13?<lb/>
It seems that the administration<lb/>
decided the last day should be after<lb/>
students have had a chance to at-<lb/>
tend each class at leasf once to find<lb/>
out the requirements each instructor<lb/>
had set forth before making it im-<lb/>
possible to change a course load.<lb/>
While this procedure proved<lb/>
beneficial to many East Carolina<lb/>
students including many who failed<lb/>
to secure their schedules before the<lb/>
January 8 and had to add an entire<lb/>
load, it may come as an unpleasant<lb/>
surprise to those students who were<lb/>
previously unaware of the change.<lb/>
Perhaps an advance warning<lb/>
from the administration would be in<lb/>
order in the future.<lb/>
Robert<lb/>
Swaim<lb/>
As increasing numbers of students enroll<lb/>
in MBA programs across the nation, and<lb/>
here at ECU, increasing numbers of critics<lb/>
have been complaining that some of these<lb/>
highly paid graduates do not live up to<lb/>
their billing.<lb/>
Many MBA programs are being<lb/>
challenged by the business and industrial<lb/>
community as too low in quality.<lb/>
Business Week recently detected<lb/>
"disenchantment" with the business<lb/>
schools' product. It reported complaints<lb/>
from businesses about "the inability of ???????-???-?????????-<lb/>
newly minted MBA's to communicate their<lb/>
over-reliance on mathematical techniques of the board in four weeks<lb/>
(quantitative methods) of management Other critics contend that business<lb/>
and  expectations of becoming chairman schools are not turning out enough<lb/>
irV<lb/>
 ANQVJACt Ct<lb/>
uD0NT 0siD?? it &amp;H6lHS) Tfcy TO THWk of if<lb/>
to spwufr wu&amp;SiLF AwrtKn six yewi of<lb/>
toSSl&amp;IUTY OP Y0U4L bill fcAAWb<lb/>
itiocua, M'U Ar nn SMK rmi HUH<lb/>
mt KlPU W LWMMci nAQMdi fit?<lb/>
?ht Eaat (EutalMun<lb/>
graduates with new ideas and the Hair for<lb/>
innovathe change that is needed for shak-<lb/>
ing up existing procedures.<lb/>
William F. May, dean of New York<lb/>
University's Graduate School of Business,<lb/>
said in a recent New York Times interview<lb/>
that business schools have three shortcom-<lb/>
ings:<lb/>
1) The uniformity of their graduates, or<lb/>
the cookie-cutter syndrome.<lb/>
2) Insufficient training for entrepreneur-<lb/>
ship, especially for small business pur-<lb/>
poses.<lb/>
3) Inadequate training in communica-<lb/>
tions in view of the fact that business today<lb/>
must communicate with many different<lb/>
publics, such as government, consumer<lb/>
and the nonpublic sector.<lb/>
Dr. James H. Bearden, dean of the EC I<lb/>
school of business, says that 'he problem<lb/>
of communication is age-old and nation-<lb/>
wide. Dr. Bearden said that this year for<lb/>
the first time communication skills are be-<lb/>
ing incorporated into standards planning<lb/>
for schools of business across the nation.<lb/>
ECU does have a program at the<lb/>
undergraduate level to deal with small<lb/>
businesses and provide entrepreneural<lb/>
training and experience. The program is<lb/>
called SB1, the Small Business Institute. In<lb/>
this program, business students work with<lb/>
small local businesses to obtain first hand<lb/>
knowledge of how a small business works.<lb/>
Dr. Bearden disagrees with those critics<lb/>
who say that there is too much emphasis<lb/>
on quanitative methods and mathematical<lb/>
practices.<lb/>
He says that the major problems that<lb/>
managers will face in the future is handling<lb/>
information, and the nature of that infor-<lb/>
mation is increasingly more quantitative in<lb/>
nature.<lb/>
Business may be dissatisfied to some ex-<lb/>
tent with MBA graduates but according to<lb/>
Bearden the demand for them is high.<lb/>
Bearden is correct in asserting that<lb/>
managers will have to contend with an ever<lb/>
increasing flow of quantitative data, but<lb/>
what about the needs of those graduates<lb/>
who may not go into corporate manage-<lb/>
ment. There are still enough people around<lb/>
who seek a business education to increase<lb/>
their own ability to operate or begin their<lb/>
own small businesses to justify a Hale more<lb/>
emphasis on educating students in en-<lb/>
trepreneurship.<lb/>
? 4fe<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057311_0005"/><lb/>
VAN<lb/>
fy-<lb/>
pages.<lb/>
All let-<lb/>
rfv<lb/>
ies<lb/>
?<lb/>
tre be-<lb/>
ining<lb/>
ii ion.<lb/>
i he<lb/>
mall<lb/>
jral<lb/>
gram is<lb/>
ate. In<lb/>
? AUh<lb/>
si hand<lb/>
works.<lb/>
e critics<lb/>
:h emphasis<lb/>
tathematical<lb/>
ms that<lb/>
 is handling<lb/>
hat infor-<lb/>
luantitative in<lb/>
? some ex-<lb/>
wording to<lb/>
s high.<lb/>
serting that<lb/>
with an ever<lb/>
Ie data, but<lb/>
se graduates<lb/>
Irate manage-<lb/>
Wople around<lb/>
n to increase<lb/>
i begin their<lb/>
a little more<lb/>
ients in en-<lb/>
IHl l AM CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JANUARY 15, 1981 Page 5<lb/>
Miss ECU Pageant<lb/>
Coming This March<lb/>
Dan Ackroyd and John Belushi star in the comedy film The Blues Brothers in this weekend's Free Flick. The movie<lb/>
is showing Friday and Saturday at 5. 7:30 and 10 pm in the Hendrix Theatre in Mendenhall.<lb/>
The Miss East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty Pageant will be held on March 24,<lb/>
1981 in the Hendrix Theatre in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. The<lb/>
pageant is organized by the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma Fraternity and their little<lb/>
Sisters.<lb/>
Organizations on campus ? dor-<lb/>
mitories, sports teams and clubs,<lb/>
fraternities, sororities, school<lb/>
departments or any others ? may<lb/>
sponsor a contestant. Around fifty<lb/>
contestants are anticipated.<lb/>
The Miss East Carolina Pageant<lb/>
Competition will consist of four<lb/>
categories: evening wear, street<lb/>
wear, an interview with the judges,<lb/>
and a personal profile (a two or<lb/>
three minute talk about the contes-<lb/>
tant's goals, ambitions, etc.)<lb/>
Cathy Dreyer<lb/>
Ackroyd And Belushi Star In<lb/>
Free Flick The Blues Brothers<lb/>
This Friday and Saturday night at<lb/>
5, 7:30, and 10 p.m the Student<lb/>
Union Films Committee will present<lb/>
the immortal Jake and Elwood<lb/>
Blues in their first feature-length<lb/>
film extravaganza, "The Blues<lb/>
Brothers The film will be shown<lb/>
m Mendenhall Student C enter's<lb/>
Hendrix Iheatre. Admission is b<lb/>
11) and activity card or MSC<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
The film deals with the Blues<lb/>
Brothers' attempt to get their old<lb/>
band together to raise $5,000 to pay<lb/>
off the taxes on the orphanage<lb/>
where the were raised. In the<lb/>
course of their "mission from<lb/>
God they incur the wrath of the<lb/>
cops, the National Guard, the Nazi<lb/>
Parts, a C&amp;W band of rednecks and<lb/>
a mystery woman played by Carrie<lb/>
i IsJlCl .<lb/>
provides the catalyst<lb/>
n ot an indoor<lb/>
ie bombing of a<lb/>
. I chase reminiscent<lb/>
cene in "The French<lb/>
The abuse<lb/>
for the Test-<lb/>
Connection" and major troop<lb/>
movements in Chicago's Dale)<lb/>
Plaza. The massive scale of produc-<lb/>
tion is laced with wit and invention<lb/>
and Director Jon Landis has once<lb/>
again proven himself, after the<lb/>
smashing success of "Animal<lb/>
House a comic genius.<lb/>
Landis has managed to get laughs<lb/>
without relying too heavily on cheap<lb/>
diversionary tactics and uses his<lb/>
many extras, cars, and car crashes<lb/>
to trie full effect ? and to the full<lb/>
extent of comic law.<lb/>
But best of all, landis uses<lb/>
Aretha Franklin and Cab Callow av<lb/>
to punctuate the film with genuine<lb/>
blues numbers. Franklin piavs a<lb/>
waitress who stops the show with a<lb/>
rocking rendition of "Think and<lb/>
72-year-old C alloway losses of<lb/>
"Minnie the Moocher" with great<lb/>
aplomb.<lb/>
When Franklin sings her number,<lb/>
while wearing a waitress's uniform<lb/>
in the soul-food cafe she runs, she<lb/>
smashes the screen to smithereens.<lb/>
Her presence is so strong she seems<lb/>
to be looking at us while we're look-<lb/>
ing at her. She's so completely<lb/>
there, and so funny, as she waggles<lb/>
a threatening linger at her lover, the<lb/>
cook (Matt "Guitar" Murphy),<lb/>
who's considering leaving her to re-<lb/>
join the brothers, that ou can't<lb/>
come down enough to respond to<lb/>
very much else.<lb/>
Franklin releases every tightly<lb/>
creased ironj of the blues and<lb/>
dispels the old stale atmosphere of<lb/>
patiently endured female sorrow.<lb/>
Lacking even a trace of self-<lb/>
consciousness, she cries out in<lb/>
ecstasy 01 anger, in bewilderment or<lb/>
terror, achieving the beauty of a<lb/>
perfectly realized emotion. Indeed,<lb/>
her naturalness is as much a matter<lb/>
of the spontaneity with which she<lb/>
lets flj ever) phrase as it is of the<lb/>
depth and solidity of her feelings.<lb/>
At another time, in another socie-<lb/>
ty, this complete freedom from<lb/>
emotional restraints might appear to<lb/>
be of dubious value. A Victorian<lb/>
would have called it hysteria, o<lb/>
day, it seems like a state oi grace.<lb/>
"The Blues Brothers" also<lb/>
features a plethora of other real<lb/>
blues greats. James Brown, Rav<lb/>
Charles, and Chaka Khan are on<lb/>
hand as well and are equally well<lb/>
served.<lb/>
This musical slapstick farce, set in<lb/>
Chicago, is, above all, good<lb/>
natured, in a sentimental, folk-bop<lb/>
way, and its big joke is how<lb/>
overscaled everything in it is. One of<lb/>
the film's finest moments features<lb/>
Dan Aykroyd's parody version of<lb/>
the theme song from "Rawhide<lb/>
Also very funny is Henry Gibson's<lb/>
expression of dreamy surprise when<lb/>
the Pinto that he and a sidekick are<lb/>
in is wafted high in the air over the<lb/>
city and slowly drops.<lb/>
Other scenes to look for include<lb/>
the jiveass jumping at the church<lb/>
presided over by James Brown, with<lb/>
John Belushi feeling the power of<lb/>
the Lord and doing handsprings<lb/>
down the center aisle.<lb/>
There is a ten dollar registration<lb/>
fee which the sponsoring organiza-<lb/>
tion should pay. The contestants<lb/>
must meet the following re-<lb/>
quirements:<lb/>
1. They must be female ECU<lb/>
students; either part or full-time<lb/>
2. Between the ages of 17 and 23<lb/>
3. Have no criminal record<lb/>
4. Must have never been married<lb/>
or a mother<lb/>
5. And, must be willing to repre-<lb/>
sent ECU during the next year.<lb/>
The winner of the pageant<lb/>
receives the title, crown, trophy,<lb/>
flowers and a S2(KJ scholarship. All<lb/>
five finalists will receive flowers and<lb/>
scholarships.<lb/>
The current Miss ECU, Cathy<lb/>
Drever, doesn't fit the usual<lb/>
stereotype of a beauty pageant win-<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
Miss Dreyer, a senior physics ma-<lb/>
jor from Montgomery, Alabama,<lb/>
has a 3.8 grade point average. An<lb/>
ROTC student, she plans to enter<lb/>
the Air Force after her graduation in<lb/>
May.<lb/>
Her interests include baton twirl-<lb/>
ing ? she's been a featured twirler<lb/>
with the ECU Marching Pirates for<lb/>
the last four years. (She says one<lb/>
reason for her picking ECU as her<lb/>
college was the marching band.)<lb/>
Besides twirling, she enjoys many<lb/>
other sports and is also interested in<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
Appropriately enough for a<lb/>
future Air Force officer, she likes<lb/>
flying. After graduation she plans to<lb/>
get her pilot's license.<lb/>
During her childhood she built<lb/>
many model airplanes and still en-<lb/>
joys building one now and then.<lb/>
(Her favorite models are of World<lb/>
War II fighter planes such as the<lb/>
P-51 Mustang.) When she was<lb/>
younger, she indulged herself occa-<lb/>
sionally in the traditionally boyish<lb/>
pastime of shooting up oid model<lb/>
planes with her brother.<lb/>
Miss Dreyer's extracurricular ac-<lb/>
tivities, include being an ROTC<lb/>
"I atle General a job that is con-<lb/>
cerned with public relations. She has<lb/>
attended several conventions<lb/>
around the country in connection<lb/>
with this job.<lb/>
See DREYER, page 6. col. 2<lb/>
Anti-Psychiatry Plan<lb/>
Surfaces In America<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO (L'PI) - It<lb/>
was in 1962 that Leonard Roy I-rank<lb/>
, a 28 year old real estate salesman<lb/>
and Army veteran with a degree in<lb/>
business administration from the<lb/>
Universitv of Pennsylvania was<lb/>
declared "mentally ill<lb/>
Disturbed b his newfound<lb/>
religious and political views, his<lb/>
vegetarianism, his refusal to cut his<lb/>
Addressing Some Postal Problems<lb/>
By DAVID NORR1S<lb/>
Although most people don't like<lb/>
to write letters, almost everybody<lb/>
likes to get letters. (I define a letter<lb/>
as anything 1 get in the mail without<lb/>
a bill in it, or that says my name is<lb/>
"occupant)<lb/>
One of the high points of an<lb/>
average day in the dorms is the ar-<lb/>
rival of the mail. When I lived in<lb/>
Umstead, the postman's visit often<lb/>
coincided with the time I got back<lb/>
from classes to eat lunch. If I was<lb/>
lucky, I'd have a letter or a fairly re-<lb/>
cent magazine to read while I was<lb/>
thawing lunch.<lb/>
Word of the postman's arrival<lb/>
travels quickly in a dorm. Often, a<lb/>
couple of dozen people crowd<lb/>
around the mailboxes, waiting for<lb/>
letters. It reminds one of those<lb/>
scenes in war movies where thev<lb/>
hand out letters to a crowd ol<lb/>
troops. (O'Hara! Rizzoli!<lb/>
Jones! Well, that's all the mail<lb/>
"Oh, darn "Don't worry kid ?<lb/>
she'll write)<lb/>
Most of the guys in the war<lb/>
movies never got anything during<lb/>
mail call. That is one case where the<lb/>
movies are like real life, since most<lb/>
of us suffer from empty mailboxes<lb/>
most of the time. Even when<lb/>
something arrives in the mail, it<lb/>
seems like it's always for your<lb/>
roommate (or that guy Occupant or<lb/>
his roommates Resident and Postal<lb/>
Patron Local.)<lb/>
Sometimes I used to get mail ad-<lb/>
dressed to the former inhabitants of<lb/>
my room. Most of it was junk, but<lb/>
once a former resident's income tax<lb/>
forms arrived. Now and then, there<lb/>
would be a letter from one of their<lb/>
old friends. Some people never fill<lb/>
out their change-of-address forms.<lb/>
I filled out a change-of-address<lb/>
form when I moved out of the<lb/>
dorm, but some people at the post<lb/>
office don't believe that I moved<lb/>
and still send mail there.<lb/>
For a time, I was getting letters<lb/>
mailed to a girl living downstairs<lb/>
from me. I took one by her room,<lb/>
and she said thanks and slammed<lb/>
the door in my face. After that, I<lb/>
just slipped them under the door.<lb/>
Every so often, a deluge of junk<lb/>
mail would descend upon the dor-<lb/>
mitories. On those days, the floor<lb/>
bv the mailboxes would be ankle-<lb/>
deep in unread junk mail circulars.<lb/>
(People ought to save the stuff for<lb/>
paper drives.) One of my high<lb/>
school teachers said to write<lb/>
"deceased" on unwanted mail and<lb/>
then send it back. I was always<lb/>
afraid that if 1 did so I would never<lb/>
get any more real mail, either.<lb/>
One unique problem I had with<lb/>
my old mailbox was a loose lock<lb/>
that fell off now and then. It would<lb/>
take forever to coax it open, find the<lb/>
screw that fell out, fix the lock and<lb/>
get out what was usually a letter for<lb/>
my roommate.<lb/>
Some days when I had very little<lb/>
to do, I'd wait around for the mail<lb/>
to arrive. It would be a long wait ?<lb/>
there is a new proverb that says "a<lb/>
watched mailbox never boils" or<lb/>
something like that. And, anytime<lb/>
you wait anxiously for the mail to<lb/>
arrive, you either get nothing at all<lb/>
or a bill.<lb/>
Bills are about the worst thing<lb/>
you can get in the mail. Junk mail<lb/>
can be thrown away with impunity,<lb/>
but throwing away bills causes trou-<lb/>
ble after a month or two. 1 wish that<lb/>
they'd put stamps on bills instead of<lb/>
the usual meter marks or bulk-rate<lb/>
permits ? at least one could put<lb/>
together a stamp collection from<lb/>
paying biJJs.<lb/>
It's too bad that it isn't as hard to<lb/>
send bills as it is to send letters. Just<lb/>
imagine the telephone or electric<lb/>
companies saying, "Sorry I haven't<lb/>
written in six months, but<lb/>
Some of my letters start out with<lb/>
"Sorry I haven't written, but (I<lb/>
guess that's better than not starting<lb/>
them at all.) Then, sometimes I get<lb/>
caught up with my correspondence<lb/>
and start my letters with "Why<lb/>
haven't you written for six mon-<lb/>
ths?"<lb/>
I realize, though, that it is hard to<lb/>
keep writing letters. Even if I finish<lb/>
one, I still have to remember to get<lb/>
to the post office to buy a stamp,<lb/>
and then remember to mail the let-<lb/>
ter. Today, I mailed something I<lb/>
had been carrying inside my sket-<lb/>
See THOUGHTS, page 6, col. 1 EX-MENTAL, page 6, col. 1<lb/>
hair and beard and his apparent<lb/>
disregard for conventional values,<lb/>
Frank's parents consulted a<lb/>
psychiatrist who shared their con-<lb/>
cern. He convinced them their son<lb/>
was insane.<lb/>
A Brooklyn, N.Y native, Frank<lb/>
spent almost two years in three<lb/>
California mental hospitals where<lb/>
he was labeled "paranoid<lb/>
schizophrenic" and subjected to the<lb/>
standard treatment for such<lb/>
"patients" ? insulin coma therapy<lb/>
and electroconvulsive therapv<lb/>
(ECT).<lb/>
After 85 treatments, his disease<lb/>
was declared to be "in remission"<lb/>
and he was released. The cure pro-<lb/>
duced one disturbing side effect: his<lb/>
memory of the last two years was<lb/>
totally wiped out and he retained<lb/>
only partial recall of his early life.<lb/>
Frank's experience prompted him<lb/>
to compile "The History of Shock<lb/>
Treatment the first comprehen-<lb/>
sive history of one of psychiatry's<lb/>
most powerful and controversial<lb/>
weapons. It also made him a<lb/>
dedicatee member of the growing<lb/>
"anti-psychiatry" movement sur-<lb/>
facing in Europe and the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
"In the middle ages, the worst<lb/>
heresy was to deny that yo? were a<lb/>
heretic ? to deny that heresy even<lb/>
existed Frank said in a recent in-<lb/>
terview with UPI.<lb/>
"Today, the worst, the most<lb/>
psychotic delusion  is to denv<lb/>
The College Scream Becomes<lb/>
A New Fad On US Campuses<lb/>
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (CPS) ? If<lb/>
nothing else, December, 1980 exams<lb/>
helped push a somewhat new cam-<lb/>
pus fad half way across the country<lb/>
to St. Louis, where thousands of<lb/>
Washington University students<lb/>
joined a mass Primal Scream during<lb/>
exam time.<lb/>
Developed over a decade ago by<lb/>
Dr. Arthur Janov as an individual<lb/>
therapy, Primal Scream has become<lb/>
a popular exam-time means of ven-<lb/>
ting frustrations among groups of<lb/>
students. Until recently, most of<lb/>
those groups had been at eastern<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
A college Scream consists of<lb/>
anywhere from two to thousands of<lb/>
people gathering together, usually at<lb/>
night, simply to scream away their<lb/>
bottled-up anxieties.<lb/>
Over 2000 students and faculty<lb/>
members gathered in Washington<lb/>
University's common square in St.<lb/>
Louis during last December's finals<lb/>
period, and sustained their screams<lb/>
for half an hour. Dr Max Oken-<lb/>
fuss, a Russian history professor at<lb/>
Washington, told the Associated<lb/>
Press that he hadn't witnessed such<lb/>
cohesive action in a campus situa-<lb/>
tion for over a decade, but back<lb/>
then the issues were not as self-<lb/>
directed.<lb/>
"Involvement in their own ex-<lb/>
aminations is to these students what<lb/>
the war was to the generation of the<lb/>
late '60s he commented. "This is<lb/>
the kind of self-generated therapy<lb/>
that's been missing from campuses<lb/>
since then<lb/>
Not all onlookers take such a<lb/>
cheery view of the activity. Nightly<lb/>
screams involving an average of 500<lb/>
participants at Cornell University<lb/>
prompted charges of harassment<lb/>
from dorm officials and threats of<lb/>
further legal action from townspeo-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
Cornell's Scream began with only<lb/>
seven freshmen leaning out of their<lb/>
dorm windows and yelling to relieve<lb/>
their anxieties. Within a few days, a<lb/>
Primal Scream Club had been form-<lb/>
ed with a few dozen members. After<lb/>
that, recalls David Bremner, one of<lb/>
the original seven, "things got out<lb/>
of hand<lb/>
Soon 500 people were raising their<lb/>
voices in scream for two minutes<lb/>
beginning at 11 p.m. Bremner<lb/>
described the event as "an occasion<lb/>
for crazies to yell out anything they<lb/>
wanted including racial slurs and<lb/>
obscenities. Screamers were charged<lb/>
with harassment, and Ithaca<lb/>
residents threatened worse if univer-<lb/>
sity officials did not put an end to<lb/>
the practice.<lb/>
Other organized screams have re-<lb/>
mained a bit more tame. Colgate<lb/>
University students have established<lb/>
a practice of screaming for about<lb/>
one minute on each night of the<lb/>
three-day reading period that<lb/>
precedes finals. Informally organiz-<lb/>
ed by use of mimeographed an-<lb/>
nouncements, Colgate's Scream<lb/>
usually involves from five to a few<lb/>
See PRIMAL, page 6, col. 1<lb/>
Kenneth<lb/>
Theatre,<lb/>
at 8 pm.<lb/>
Travel Film Showing At Mendenhall<lb/>
Richter, one the documentary film's most stimulating platform personalities, will appear in Hendri<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center on Jan. 20, 1981, to present the new film, Germany. The program will begin<lb/>
Admission for ECU students will be by id and activity cards.<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
w&amp;Mfrtm000mtttmhrt ma<lb/>
mmmnmmtfwnmnm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057311_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 15, 1981<lb/>
Lgumog .isout CoLLatf Tnr H)?? IaJh<lb/>
Bi f)Voip vJoR.Rl5<lb/>
 STILL HAMfW( OLP<lb/>
Hf6ft SCHOOL A 0. Cf?0<lb/>
if you ioma sec it f<lb/>
THIS is Y0tf?.?AfM<lb/>
tth!H!to!M!to!M!<lb/>
 P0AJT<lb/>
THAT fUNviyJ<lb/>
44<lb/>
?J<lb/>
Former Mental Patient Battles Psychiatry<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
Frank, a self-styled<lb/>
Nazarite Jew who<lb/>
spices his observations<lb/>
with frequent<lb/>
references to C.G.<lb/>
Jung, Ghandi,<lb/>
Thoreau, and more<lb/>
contemporary social<lb/>
critics like Thomas<lb/>
Szasz and Ivan Ilich,<lb/>
doesn't like the term<lb/>
"mental illness<lb/>
A volunteer director<lb/>
of the Bay Area Com-<lb/>
mittee for Alternatives<lb/>
to Psychiatry, he<lb/>
argues that the misap-<lb/>
plication of the medical<lb/>
"disease model" to<lb/>
Primal Scream<lb/>
Aids Students<lb/>
In Exam Plight<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
dozen enthusiasts.<lb/>
However, no formal<lb/>
complaints have been<lb/>
made to the university,<lb/>
and no action has been<lb/>
taken. In fact, Colgate<lb/>
students encouraged<lb/>
their neighboring<lb/>
school. Hamilton Col-<lb/>
lege, to take up the<lb/>
practice.<lb/>
Involvement at<lb/>
Hamilton has been<lb/>
minimal, as at Colgate<lb/>
and a few other smaller<lb/>
eastern schools, but to<lb/>
the dedicated<lb/>
screamers, nothing<lb/>
does the trick quite like<lb/>
the Primal Scream.<lb/>
"The Scream is ter-<lb/>
rific said an Indiana<lb/>
student now at<lb/>
Washington Universi-<lb/>
ty. "1 wish everyone<lb/>
could get their frustra-<lb/>
tions and their<lb/>
misunderstandings ex-<lb/>
pelled in this way<lb/>
mental states sends<lb/>
hundreds of thousands<lb/>
of healthy, harmless<lb/>
people annually to in-<lb/>
stitutions where their<lb/>
civil liberties are<lb/>
abrogated and their<lb/>
health and well-being<lb/>
are endangered.<lb/>
People labeled men-<lb/>
tally ill may be pro-<lb/>
foundly troubled, con-<lb/>
fused and subject to<lb/>
delusions, Frank con-<lb/>
ceded, but they should<lb/>
not be forced to<lb/>
undergo treatment of<lb/>
uncertain value unless<lb/>
they demonstrate con-<lb/>
clusively that they are<lb/>
dangerous to<lb/>
themselves or others.<lb/>
"A major premise of<lb/>
such groups as BACAP<lb/>
presupposes that a ma-<lb/>
jor depression or<lb/>
psychosis  is willful<lb/>
observed Dr. Melvin<lb/>
Simonson, a critic of<lb/>
the "anti-psychiatry"<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
But he said in the<lb/>
April 28, 1980 issue of<lb/>
Medical News,<lb/>
"modern psychiatry is<lb/>
ascertaining that these<lb/>
illnesses are a<lb/>
manifestation of<lb/>
altered brain neuro-<lb/>
chemistry or activity<lb/>
and may demand cer-<lb/>
tain intrusive measures.<lb/>
"These groups have<lb/>
great concern that<lb/>
psychiatry not upset<lb/>
nor harm the patient.<lb/>
Yet uncovering<lb/>
psychotherapy  even<lb/>
transfer phenomenon,<lb/>
may be unpleasant,<lb/>
distasteful and disturb-<lb/>
ing. Where do we draw<lb/>
the line?"<lb/>
BACAP and other<lb/>
groups like the Net-<lb/>
work Against<lb/>
Psychiatric Assault and<lb/>
the fast growing Inter-<lb/>
national Network for<lb/>
Alternatives to<lb/>
Psychiatry don't take<lb/>
issue with "talk<lb/>
treatments" or<lb/>
psychotherapy, but<lb/>
they draw the line at in-<lb/>
voluntary drugging,<lb/>
ECT and ? the<lb/>
ultimate weapon in the<lb/>
psychiatric arsenal ?-<lb/>
psychosurgery.<lb/>
Psychiatrists insist<lb/>
the latter practice has<lb/>
been all but abandoned<lb/>
in the United States,<lb/>
but Frank cites surveys<lb/>
which indicate that 200<lb/>
to 600 acts of<lb/>
psychiatric brain<lb/>
surgery occur annually<lb/>
in this country.<lb/>
8 SKI '<lb/>
fflmergreen<lb/>
30 discount<lb/>
on 2 bedroom<lb/>
VIP con-<lb/>
dominium ?<lb/>
Jan. 18-29. Lots<lb/>
of extras. Call<lb/>
752-1015.<lb/>
Peaches<lb/>
Greenville Sq. Shopping Center<lb/>
Welcome Back<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Peaches Presents A Special<lb/>
To Ail ECU Students 50 Admission<lb/>
Plus Thursday is Original Foxy Lady Night<lb/>
Also Join Us tvery Saturday<lb/>
Night When Peaches Presents<lb/>
Steve Hardy's Original<lb/>
Beach Farty<lb/>
For Partv People 19 and over Open<lb/>
All ABC Permits 8:30-1:00am<lb/>
Letter Thoughts<lb/>
Guaranteed Issue Standard Rate<lb/>
Whole Life Insurance<lb/>
100,000 Maximum through Age 50<lb/>
No Waiting Period<lb/>
North Carolina Deferred<lb/>
Compensation Corp.<lb/>
3725 National Drive<lb/>
Koger Executive Center<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27612<lb/>
Phone: 756-1992 Greenville, 781-4300 Raleigh<lb/>
SUB STATION 11<lb/>
All New<lb/>
Delivery Service<lb/>
Delivery on the hour and<lb/>
halt hour<lb/>
M-F 5pm-10pm<lb/>
Store hours: I 1am-l 1pm M-Sat.<lb/>
1 2am-9pm Sundays<lb/>
Our Drivers Carry 215 E. 4 th St.<lb/>
Less 1 han $10.00 Greenville<lb/>
Limited Delivery Area 752-2183<lb/>
No Checks Please<lb/>
C ontinued from page 5<lb/>
chbook for a week,<lb/>
never remembering to<lb/>
place it into one of<lb/>
those handy blue recep-<lb/>
ticles that stand on<lb/>
street corners until 1<lb/>
was at least a quarter of<lb/>
a mile past the the darn<lb/>
thing. Something<lb/>
always came up before<lb/>
1 could mail the thing.<lb/>
I have some sugges-<lb/>
tions that may (or may<lb/>
not) help your own<lb/>
letter-writing. First, try-<lb/>
sending postcards.<lb/>
Postcards have nice<lb/>
pictures, and if you<lb/>
write big enough, you<lb/>
don't have to write<lb/>
much on them.<lb/>
You can try writing<lb/>
four or five letters at<lb/>
once, using the same<lb/>
pieces of news, jokes<lb/>
and odds and ends. It's<lb/>
pretty much like<lb/>
writing the same letter<lb/>
four or five times, but<lb/>
if your friends live far<lb/>
enough apart they<lb/>
won't notice.<lb/>
This probably won't<lb/>
work, but it might be<lb/>
worth a try ? send bills<lb/>
to people and see if<lb/>
they pay. All you need<lb/>
is one or two people to<lb/>
pay once in a while and<lb/>
you'd make a nice pro-<lb/>
fit. You could make<lb/>
enough to hire someone<lb/>
to write letters for you.<lb/>
"<lb/>
J.BS ISLAND<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
cl<lb/>
Dreyer<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
After joining the Air<lb/>
Force as a second<lb/>
lieutenant upon fin-<lb/>
sihing at ECU, Miss<lb/>
Dreyer hopes to work<lb/>
in designing and testing<lb/>
new airplanes. Perhaps<lb/>
it would be an unusual<lb/>
job for a former Miss<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty, but Cathy Dreyer is<lb/>
not your ordinary<lb/>
beauty pageant winner.<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/>
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/>
Buying Cold ? Silver Coins<lb/>
Also Sterling Silver<lb/>
Paying lop $<lb/>
Come in ior KRLt, estimate<lb/>
Carolina Compact<lb/>
Rivergate Shopping Center<lb/>
Price may vary depending on market<lb/>
HiLP<lb/>
YOU!<lb/>
Be An<lb/>
RA<lb/>
Make friends<lb/>
Plan socials<lb/>
Solve problems<lb/>
Be a listener<lb/>
PLICATIONS DUE BM JANUARY 30<lb/>
IWTf<lb/>
DERY<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
SPONSORED<lb/>
ZQE<lb/>
QUALIFIED STUDENTS<lb/>
AND FACULTY<lb/>
REGISTER<lb/>
BY<lb/>
JAN. 19,1981<lb/>
for the<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
CITY MIXED<lb/>
DRINK<lb/>
REFERENDUM<lb/>
Thank You!<lb/>
GREENVILLE RESTAURANT<lb/>
ASSOC.<lb/>
-  h<lb/>
???<lb/>
<pb facs="00057311_0007"/><lb/>
THh I S1 (. AKOl MAN<lb/>
ter<lb/>
k<lb/>
v<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
JANUARY 15, 19KI Page 7<lb/>
Lady Bucs Down Heels<lb/>
On<lb/>
(4<lb/>
The Hill 87-75<lb/>
B JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
hditor<lb/>
It's been a year of ups and downs<lb/>
so far for the Lady Pirate basketball<lb/>
squad who have successfully<lb/>
maneuvered a grueling early-season<lb/>
road marathon, but one of the most<lb/>
surprising of their 10 wins came<lb/>
Iuesdav night in a little town called<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
It's not reallv surprising that they<lb/>
could defeat the Tar Heels of North<lb/>
Carolina, but rather the relative ease<lb/>
with which they handed them an<lb/>
87 75 loss.<lb/>
"When you go to Carmichal<lb/>
(Auditorium) says ECU coach<lb/>
v athy Andruzi, "you never know<lb/>
what the hell's going to happen. We<lb/>
respected them from the beginning<lb/>
ot the game to the end. 1 think we<lb/>
led by about 16 most of the way.<lb/>
"(The margin) kept building up<lb/>
and finally they just were too far<lb/>
behind to catch us. Carolina was<lb/>
playing good, too. We were just<lb/>
playing great<lb/>
Revils<lb/>
Eyes<lb/>
Rematch<lb/>
By WILLIAM YEEY ERTON<lb/>
siuft Wnlrr<lb/>
When ECU takes on Northern<lb/>
Iowa tonight in Minges Coliseum, it<lb/>
probably won't be a typical wrestl-<lb/>
ing match.<lb/>
It might just turn out to be a war.<lb/>
Especially in the 193-pound weight<lb/>
class<lb/>
The Pirates" Butch Revils, ranked<lb/>
fifth in the nation in his weight class<lb/>
(177 pound), will be pitted against<lb/>
rival Joe Gormally, the opponent<lb/>
who knocked him out of the Na-<lb/>
tionals in Revils' sophomore year.<lb/>
"I want to even the score Revils<lb/>
said. "I won't do anything dif-<lb/>
ferent, but 1 will wrestle harder. I'll<lb/>
have to<lb/>
Gormally carries a 9-1-1 record<lb/>
into the match, while Revils is<lb/>
undefeated at 13-0.<lb/>
Gormally is ranked second in the<lb/>
nation in his weight class and is the<lb/>
leader of the Northern Iowa team<lb/>
that carried a 4-2 record into a<lb/>
match with N.C. State Wednesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Northern Iowa's only losses have<lb/>
come to the nation's first and third-<lb/>
ranked teams, Iowa and Iowa State.<lb/>
Revils, who has already captured<lb/>
the Carolina Invitational, the<lb/>
Monarch Open and the W ilkes<lb/>
Open championships, has been<lb/>
moved up to the 193-pound class,<lb/>
according to head coach Hachiro<lb/>
Oishi.<lb/>
Oishi said the move was primarily<lb/>
because there is tougher competition<lb/>
in the 193-pound weight class.<lb/>
"Butch can get more experience for<lb/>
the Nationals he explained.<lb/>
As for the match with Gormally,<lb/>
Revils says that he will have to be<lb/>
mentally ready. "He is very tough<lb/>
Revils said.<lb/>
The I ady Pirates lost their last<lb/>
matchup with the Tar Heels back in<lb/>
1979-80, but before that they had<lb/>
upset UNC 71-68 at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Once again, senior All-America<lb/>
candidate Kathy Riley led the I ady<lb/>
Pirates with 27 points and grabbed<lb/>
five rebounds. Junior forward Sam<lb/>
Jones added 24 points and denied<lb/>
the Heels tour scoring opportunities<lb/>
with steals.<lb/>
Sophomore Mary Denkler poured<lb/>
in 14 points with a perfect seven of<lb/>
seven from the field. Senior point<lb/>
guard Laurie Sikes pumped in 10<lb/>
points despite nursing a sore back.<lb/>
The Pirates shot an above-<lb/>
average 59.1 percent from the floor<lb/>
for the night, while the Tar Heels<lb/>
posted a 53.8 mark.<lb/>
"Both teams shot well said An-<lb/>
drui. "They shot more from the<lb/>
free throw line than we did, but it all<lb/>
worked out in the end. I think, in a<lb/>
wa, that Carolina was surprised by<lb/>
how well we played.<lb/>
"Carolina can be a very in-<lb/>
timidating team she explained.<lb/>
"They were all over us out there.<lb/>
We were especially pleased because<lb/>
it was a solid team effort. I think the<lb/>
girls carried out their assignments as<lb/>
well as they have all season.<lb/>
"They were really talking it up on<lb/>
defense (Tuesday) night. We played<lb/>
good man-to-man defense and did<lb/>
verv well with the full-court press<lb/>
Guard Aprille Shaffer led UNC<lb/>
with 19 points for the night, while<lb/>
Cathy Crawford added 18 and<lb/>
powerful Henrietta Walls was held<lb/>
to 10.<lb/>
"This is not only a victory for<lb/>
Lady Pirate basketball stated An-<lb/>
druzi, "but a victory for East<lb/>
Carolina. Any time a team from<lb/>
East Carolina beats a team from<lb/>
UNC, whether it's basketball or<lb/>
football or whatever, people around<lb/>
here get excited and that's what we<lb/>
want<lb/>
The Tar Heels had recently claim-<lb/>
ed victories over Texas, Penn State,<lb/>
and Virginia, all of whom have been<lb/>
ranked in the Top 20 poll this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates begin a three<lb/>
game home stand Saturday in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum against the In-<lb/>
dians of William and Mary, led by<lb/>
senior forward Lynn Noremburg<lb/>
who returned to the squad recently<lb/>
after an early injury.<lb/>
ECU's first NCAIAW conference<lb/>
matchup of the season will be Mon-<lb/>
day at 7:30 in Minges against the<lb/>
Duke Blue Devils. Duke, led by<lb/>
Barb Krause, handed the Lady<lb/>
Pirates their first loss of the 1979-80<lb/>
season by a score of 76-75 in<lb/>
Cameron Indoor Stadium. The<lb/>
Pirates later defeated Duke 99-65 in<lb/>
the consolation game of the state<lb/>
tournament in Raleigh.<lb/>
The Pirates close out their home<lb/>
stand Wednesday night against<lb/>
West Virginia Univesity.<lb/>
After Shaky Start<lb/>
Lillian Barnes Drives<lb/>
Pirates Defeat A CC<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
y??<lb/>
v<lb/>
The New Kid In Town<lb/>
Despite having played in only six games, Charles Watkins<lb/>
is the ECU basketball team's leading scorer, tallying over<lb/>
16 points per game. Watkins, 24,recently left the Marine<lb/>
Corps. (Photo by Gary Patterson)<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Y dit r<lb/>
The East Carolina basketball<lb/>
team reeled off 14 unanswered<lb/>
points to start the second half and<lb/>
went on to cruise past Atlantic<lb/>
Christian, 81-58, last night<lb/>
(Wednesday) in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The early second half splurge<lb/>
followed a lackadaisical effort in the<lb/>
first half by the Pirates.<lb/>
ECU led the small Wilson-based<lb/>
college by only one point, 35-34, at<lb/>
halftime.<lb/>
The second half was an entirely<lb/>
different matter, though, as the<lb/>
Bucs came out smoking and did not<lb/>
lose enthusiasm once during the<lb/>
final 20 minutes.<lb/>
The Buc lead reached its peak<lb/>
following an arousing dunk by<lb/>
freshman forward Bill McNair, his<lb/>
second slam of the night, that put<lb/>
the margin at 26, 77-51.<lb/>
The ECU starters left the game<lb/>
with about seven minutes remaining<lb/>
and were replaced by head coach<lb/>
Dave Odom's "kiddie corps The<lb/>
five replacements were all freshmen,<lb/>
McNair, Herbert Gilchrist, Mike<lb/>
Fox, Jeff Best and Morris<lb/>
Hargrove.<lb/>
The Pirates opened the second<lb/>
half applying full court pressure, a<lb/>
move that led to the inspirational<lb/>
second-half performance. The ECU<lb/>
defense was superb in the final half,<lb/>
holding ACC to a mere six field<lb/>
goals.<lb/>
"The great second half was<lb/>
definitely ignited by good defense<lb/>
commented Odom following the<lb/>
contest. "We shut them out for<lb/>
about four minutes to start the half<lb/>
and that gave us a chance to run up<lb/>
the margin a little bit<lb/>
Odom commented that, for the<lb/>
first time, his team may have en-<lb/>
joyed a game.<lb/>
"This was definitely our best half<lb/>
of basketball he said. "I think<lb/>
tonight's the first night that we've<lb/>
had fun out there<lb/>
As for his half times chat, Odom<lb/>
said it was a matter of getting the<lb/>
players to realize that they had an<lb/>
obligation.<lb/>
"We played poorly in the first<lb/>
half he said. "I tried at halftime<lb/>
to make them realize that if we ex-<lb/>
pect fan support, we've got to give<lb/>
them something to support.<lb/>
"The fans were blase in the first<lb/>
because of what we gave<lb/>
themnothing. On the other hand,<lb/>
we gave them something in the se-<lb/>
cond half and that became very ex-<lb/>
cited and showed appreciation<lb/>
The second year Pirate mentor<lb/>
noted that the crowd, which became<lb/>
very rowdy in the second half, had a<lb/>
"spirit that we need but has not<lb/>
been present before<lb/>
Charles Watkins, a 24-year old<lb/>
sophomore guard, led the Pirate at-<lb/>
tack with 14 points. Junior forward<lb/>
Mark McLaurin was the onlv other<lb/>
Odom Directs<lb/>
Buc in double figures, tallying 1J<lb/>
Hargrove was the game's leading<lb/>
rebounder, getting nine pulls though<lb/>
playing only 12 minutes.<lb/>
ACC's James I eggett topped all<lb/>
scorers, scoring 15 points though<lb/>
finishing the night six of 21 from the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
The tough Pirate defense had its<lb/>
effect on Leggett's teammates as<lb/>
well, holding ACC to 20 percent<lb/>
shooting in the second half and only<lb/>
30.2 percent for the game.<lb/>
The Bucs, on the other hand, shot<lb/>
50.7 percent while earning their<lb/>
seventh win of the season agauvst<lb/>
eight defeats.<lb/>
Prior to the game with ACC. the<lb/>
Pirates hosted Richmond on Mon-<lb/>
day night and took an 80-63 drubb-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The Bucs were close at halftime<lb/>
? down only 38-34 ? but the more<lb/>
experienced Spiders Totally<lb/>
dominated the second half, outscor-<lb/>
ing ECU 42-29 over the final 20<lb/>
minutes of play.<lb/>
The Pirates fell down :<lb/>
as 23, at 76-53, as All-A<lb/>
didate Mike Perry a:<lb/>
shooting guard John Scl<lb/>
the way.<lb/>
Perry, among the nation<lb/>
scorers, finished the game ith 25<lb/>
points while Schweitz was 'he<lb/>
game's top scorer with 2$<lb/>
Guard Charles Watkins and jr-<lb/>
ward Mark McLaurin led the Pirate<lb/>
scoring with 12 points apiece.<lb/>
The win broke a five-garne lo<lb/>
streak for the Spiders and left<lb/>
with a 6-6 record.<lb/>
ECU now travels to I NC-<lb/>
Charlotte for a contest next Tues-<lb/>
day, January 20. The Pirates then<lb/>
invade ACC country, going to<lb/>
Raleigh on the 24th to face the<lb/>
Wolfpaek of N.C. State.<lb/>
ic i can-<lb/>
sharp-<lb/>
eitz led<lb/>
op ten<lb/>
Karr Striving For Overall Quality<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second and final installment featuring<lb/>
an interview of ECU Athletic Director Ken Karr by The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian.<lb/>
Question: What, in your opinion, does East Carolina need to compete<lb/>
evenly with the Big Four schools of the rival Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference?<lb/>
Karr: We have to improve the quality of our facilities so that we can<lb/>
have a first-class facility to recruit the most highly-skilled athletes<lb/>
available. The success of Division I athletic programs is directly pro-<lb/>
portional to the number of and quality of student athletes you have in<lb/>
your program.<lb/>
We have to identify, design and bring into being on this campus all<lb/>
those things that will aid the recruiting of highly skilled athletesin all<lb/>
our programs. But, most of all, we've got to get that happening in<lb/>
football so that we can hopefully generate adequate income so that<lb/>
football can not only carry itself but also provide some hard dollars to<lb/>
support some of the non-revenue areas that have little or no ability to<lb/>
generate money.<lb/>
Q: Are there any long range plans that you can reveal at this time in<lb/>
hopes of accomplishing the things you 've just mentioned?<lb/>
K: I cannot say other than the fact that we need to identify very sharp-<lb/>
ly what we need and begin making plans for those needs.<lb/>
Q: How much potential to you feel East Carolina has athletically and<lb/>
how long to you see it taking to reach this potential?<lb/>
K: I think this very realistically. We simply have to strive to upgrade<lb/>
the quality of our teams. For us to assume that we're going to be<lb/>
"number onethat mythical "number onein division one foot-<lb/>
ball or basketball in the next decade is not a realistic goal. What we<lb/>
have to strive to do is be competitive as possible and then inch our way<lb/>
up the scale into that so-called higher echelon. At this point in time<lb/>
that is above us. We have not yet reached that level.<lb/>
We simply have to upgrade<lb/>
the quality of our teams. For<lb/>
us to assume that we 're going<lb/>
to be "number one" in divi-<lb/>
sion one football or basketball<lb/>
in the next decade is not a<lb/>
realistic goal.<lb/>
?Dr. Ken Karr<lb/>
Q: You have spoken much about marketing Ficklen Stadium so that<lb/>
home football games will bring in more dollars. What effect do you<lb/>
feel the past football season, which saw ECU post a disappointing 4- 7<lb/>
record, will have on next season's ticket sales.<lb/>
K: I think that obviously people will not be as excited, not as much<lb/>
residual excitement, as would surround having been undefeated last<lb/>
year or participating in a bowl game. What we have to do is overcome<lb/>
this through a good marketing plan and aggressive promotion that will<lb/>
get the tickets sold. If our fans are going to develop a wait-and-see at-<lb/>
titude, well they may be waiting to see in the year 2000. Really, that's<lb/>
the bottom line. We have to recruit all our friends, fans, neighbors<lb/>
and alumni out there to help us project into this future and make it<lb/>
happen. This is not something that's going to happen unless<lb/>
everybody wants it to happen and is willing to buy the ticket and<lb/>
make it happen.<lb/>
Q: The ECU Athletic Department overspent its budget by approx-<lb/>
imately S350.000 last year. How does the budget look for this year and<lb/>
what can be done in the future to prevent such overspending from oc-<lb/>
curring again?<lb/>
K: I can't give you any answer as to what this fiscal year will bring to<lb/>
us. But I think without question until we get definite indications<lb/>
through gate receipts that people are willing to spend the dollars to<lb/>
support the program, we can no longer budget at the level that we<lb/>
have in the past.<lb/>
We're going to have to sharply curtail our budgets and be realistic in<lb/>
terms of the type of football and basketball income that we have<lb/>
generated over the last two years. You cannot build a budget that is<lb/>
based on a selling product if the product doesn't sell. The only way<lb/>
you can do that is if you're in a situation where you have large cash<lb/>
reserves to take care of deficits. At this point and time our program<lb/>
does not have those reserves.<lb/>
Q: Can we take from that statement that our revenue sports' budgets<lb/>
? those for football and basketball ? will be reduced in the future?<lb/>
K: Not necessarily. Being a tight year everybody has to be restricted<lb/>
somewhat. At the same time, if you were in a business you would not<lb/>
totally cut the budget of that business so tight that it couldn't produce<lb/>
the product that's going to get you the gross sales you need. Yes, you<lb/>
can ask everybody to tighten the belt. But there's some areas that are<lb/>
deemed essential that you cannot cut back on.<lb/>
Q: Looking back at your days as San Diego State A D, were the ticket<lb/>
receipts low as is the case here? Did you have to build up a lot there<lb/>
and if so how much?<lb/>
K: We had to build up a lot there too. When 1 came there we were at<lb/>
about 7,000 season tickets. When I left we were at about 22,000 season<lb/>
tickets. There was definitely a buildup of the financial base. Whatever<lb/>
our season ticket package is, and right now our's is about at 5,000, we<lb/>
got a find a way to increase it ? to get that number to 10,000. That's<lb/>
vital to the buildup of our program.<lb/>
tiimtm w mw<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057311_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
I Hi I <lb/>
l XK'i<lb/>
Tracksters Alter Plans Sassms<lb/>
t .VHMU<lb/>
?<lb/>
? participate<lb/>
ihe seats thai slide out port rhey're rig to<lb/>
Cat have ii take all the<lb/>
1I<lb/>
 facility,<lb/>
I i. I<lb/>
Gymnasts At Home<lb/>
I he team wilt, m<lb/>
,ci the traci<lb/>
son explained. "When seats out and redo the<lb/>
I )(? wei ,u' uhole section<lb/>
ll - buildii ted, it "Theii laeilin pro<lb/>
( was discovered that the babl will not be used<lb/>
with seals need more sup the wh on<lb/>
I o gel moi e ex<lb/>
rience foi his<lb/>
1, Cai son de. ided<lb/>
ake the team to<lb/>
( hapel i ?<lb/>
 I didn'1 find out we<lb/>
dn't b<lb/>
mil last<lb/>
I ; ida, C arson .tui<lb/>
"We1<lb/>
work ! i<lb/>
Hill we'll be<lb/>
w 111 b<lb/>
G the unevens onl. d<lb/>
in<lb/>
Rose feeb ' lent<lb/>
U the team , ,k. wholc ft<lb/>
e Radtord.<lb/>
i lore . . '<lb/>
 11 ai 8 Mars a<lb/>
Mad<lb/>
ive h l u.<lb/>
<lb/>
( oncenining the<lb/>
team's performance at<lb/>
the East I ennes<lb/>
State Invitational last<lb/>
weekend, arson said<lb/>
team was nol im<lb/>
pressive, although there<lb/>
were a few brighi<lb/>
"(. arlton Bell, C i<lb/>
Raine and Shawn<lb/>
I ane .il: ran good I<lb/>
in the mile relav <lb/>
lained.<lb/>
Sephas, who ran<lb/>
chor, sas sick and just<lb/>
Hied. He was 20<lb/>
yards ahead ol<lb/>
 Slate runnei <lb/>
( ai son said<lb/>
freshman Ra i: kei<lb/>
son was impressive<lb/>
the 800 "He<lb/>
1:11.6, I he<lb/>
fastesi ;line e ei<lb/>
isi C'aro ! hat<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
MOVING Si<lb/>
buttei ? . . ? eni<lb/>
pit tU' es ?nl ' ond<lb/>
studs garnel<lb/>
? <lb/>
brass rfod i'<lb/>
m a n y m ? s i<lb/>
?6A<lb/>
<lb/>
?.<lb/>
? 9'5 FIAT SPOHT<lb/>
lUSfl 6i<lb/>
C B<lb/>
Fde<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
?<lb/>
H HINI<lb/>
N t <lb/>
. A N ' ?<lb/>
? . C AN <lb/>
- ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
A A s.<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU Swimmers<lb/>
Down Mounties<lb/>
Classified Ad Form<lb/>
I<lb/>
 PRtCS 00 ?or IJ wordt 05 lo<lb/>
? lien ?ddt'ion! word<lb/>
iMikf clu - . ? ?"? The ???<lb/>
! AtK ? ? ? ' ,?'6<lb/>
 t 1 nd ,<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
a . ? . .1 aji<lb/>
c.io Sou'fi Bue'drtg<lb/>
e. N C Uti<lb/>
I<lb/>
- I<lb/>
- I<lb/>
I<lb/>
 I<lb/>
- I<lb/>
I<lb/>
 I<lb/>
 I<lb/>
I<lb/>
A Free Beverage<lb/>
With A Peck<lb/>
( )f (ksteiv<lb/>
OYSTER BAR<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
"A Great<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant'<lb/>
FOSMCKS<lb/>
ismi SeahKtd<lb/>
NEW H<lb/>
Monday -CLOSED<lb/>
Tues. Thurs. 5 00 9 00<lb/>
Fri Sat 5 00 10 00<lb/>
Sunday 5 00900<lb/>
S EVANS SI Ex'<lb/>
-<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
n e e d ? ithoi or<lb/>
e tose i and '?? ,JB<lb/>
'RA CASH!<lb/>
SELL YOUR<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
TO COIN 6 RING MAN! <lb/>
ost everyone has a high school or college class ring<lb/>
they don t wear anymore Check your dresser drawers<lb/>
: urlng yojr ciass ring into Com &amp; Ring Man We're<lb/>
ofessiona! buying service and we guarantee you<lb/>
prices and good service.<lb/>
WI PA Y CASH ON TKISPOT<lb/>
fQB JEWELRY, VALUABLESAMYTHWC<lb/>
MARKED 10K- UK ? 18K.<lb/>
$ GOLD $<lb/>
HMCS NECKLACES ? WATCHES ? DIAHONOS<lb/>
? (USS UNCS ? WIOBIHC SARDS ? OHTM<lb/>
COLO ? BBACILfTS ? MOOCHES 10CMTS<lb/>
? CHAINS ? UCHTIBS ? CUE LINKS ? UBBIWCS<lb/>
PAYING ONTHBSROY<lb/>
CASH FOR IYIA4S MARKID<lb/>
STERLING SILVER<lb/>
RtCARDkllSOFCONDITIOM<lb/>
$<lb/>
Record Bar will get you in free.<lb/>
"The Hugger your ticket to a free can of your favorite<lb/>
and a night of "Arrogance" at the Attic. January 22.<lb/>
Get something that'll hug your cold can and get yo<lb/>
into "Hugger Festival '81" at the same time It's<lb/>
Hugger designed to keep your beverage cold<lb/>
the music's hot It's free to the first 200 people I<lb/>
for one at either Record Bar in Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Pitt Plaza on January 19 Then show your hugger at<lb/>
the Attic Door. January 22. and get in for a free night<lb/>
of music by Arrogance, plus get a free can of your<lb/>
favorite cold beverage, all compliments of the<lb/>
Record Bars in Carolina East Mall and Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Pick up the latest from Arrogance: "Suddenly<lb/>
On sale now through Jan. 24. s5.49 Ip s5.99 tape.<lb/>
M-Efe RECORDS &amp; TAPES m ?<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
Carolina East Mall ? Pitt Plaza<lb/>
j<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057311_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>