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<pb facs="00057312_0001"/>
ttfte<lb/>
roltntan<lb/>
Vol. 55<lb/>
?7<lb/>
<lb/>
Serving the Lust Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, January 20. 1981<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Hostage Release Hits Snag<lb/>
Again<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) Presi-<lb/>
dent Carter announced early today<lb/>
sn agreement with Iran to free the<lb/>
2 U.S. hostages, but it appeared at<lb/>
midday some snags were holding up<lb/>
his departure for Germany to meet<lb/>
the Americans at the end of their<lb/>
443 da ordeal.<lb/>
Vter a nearly all-night vigil<lb/>
waiting for documents covering the<lb/>
rtent to be signed in Tehran<lb/>
patched to Algiers, Carter,<lb/>
looking somber and weary,<lb/>
delivered a nationally televised<lb/>
statement in the White House press<lb/>
.enter shortly before 5 a.m. EST.<lb/>
"We have now reached an agree-<lb/>
ment with Iran which will result, 1<lb/>
believe, in the freedom of our<lb/>
American hostages he said.<lb/>
The president said a few<lb/>
documents still had to be signed<lb/>
"before the money (Iran's frozen<lb/>
assets) is actually transferred and<lb/>
the hostages released But he add-<lb/>
ed: "We are prepared to move as<lb/>
rapidly as possible<lb/>
The president planned to fly to<lb/>
Wiesbaden, West Germany the site<lb/>
of a U.S. Air Force hospital where<lb/>
the hostages will be cared for once<lb/>
the Americans have been flown out<lb/>
of Iran. Several sources confirmed<lb/>
that the hostages had been taken<lb/>
early today at the Tehran airport.<lb/>
But it appeared that there were<lb/>
some snags holding up Carter's<lb/>
departure. And as the hours passed,<lb/>
with no word that the hostages had<lb/>
yet left Tehran, some of the<lb/>
euphoria that had filled the predawn<lb/>
hours appeared to fade.<lb/>
Former chief of staff Hamilton<lb/>
Jordan and White House counsel<lb/>
Lloyd Cutler were grim faced when<lb/>
they conferred shortly after 10 a.m.<lb/>
EST with press secretary Jody<lb/>
Powell.<lb/>
Asked whether the hostages<lb/>
would be freed soon, Cutier said,<lb/>
"We don't know. We're still<lb/>
waiting. We'll find out<lb/>
Jordan also told reporters: "1<lb/>
don't know anything yet<lb/>
Earlier, an administration official<lb/>
said that one of the documents con-<lb/>
cerning instructions by the Bank of<lb/>
Iran to the Bank of England to<lb/>
create an escrow account had not<lb/>
yet been signed off.<lb/>
There also was concern at the<lb/>
State Department over the safety of<lb/>
the two Algerian jetliners if they<lb/>
were to take off after dark from the<lb/>
airport, which is in a mountainous<lb/>
area.<lb/>
At the State Department, Mrs.<lb/>
Louisa Kennedy, wife of hostage<lb/>
Moorehead Kennedy, said, "My<lb/>
prediction is that they may have to<lb/>
spend another night (in Tehran)<lb/>
She told reporters, "Evidently it<lb/>
is a bit dangerous to fly out of Iran<lb/>
after dark. It might be wise if it goes<lb/>
too long to hold off for another<lb/>
day<lb/>
There is 8 hours time difference<lb/>
between Washington and Iran.<lb/>
Carter had hoped to return to<lb/>
Washington in time for the Tuesday<lb/>
noon inauguration after flying to<lb/>
Germany to greet the hostages.<lb/>
Thirty minutes after Carter's ear-<lb/>
ly morning statement announcing<lb/>
the agreement with Iran, White<lb/>
House press secretary Powell an-<lb/>
nounced additional documents had<lb/>
been signed to set in motion the<lb/>
transfer of some $9 billion in gold<lb/>
and cash to an escrow account in<lb/>
London.<lb/>
ECU Students Hit With Flu<lb/>
B I'M LCOLLINS<lb/>
News Y ditor<lb/>
The East Carolina Student Health<lb/>
( enter (infirmary) has reported a<lb/>
cant increase in patients with<lb/>
flu-type symptoms in the past week.<lb/>
According to Ka van Nortwick,<lb/>
trative manager of the infir-<lb/>
10 percent of the center's out-<lb/>
id ast week were people<lb/>
pe of flu symptom.<lb/>
? the patients were critically<lb/>
last week was the first one<lb/>
i vacation we thought it<lb/>
rse, and it did van<lb/>
: She reported that the<lb/>
load of flu cases had gotten heavier<lb/>
over the weekend and was even<lb/>
heavier Monday.<lb/>
Van Nortwick added that no ex-<lb/>
act figures were available yet.<lb/>
The type of flu most frequently<lb/>
seen has been a viral infection<lb/>
lasting from two to three days, infir-<lb/>
mary sources indicated. The symp-<lb/>
toms include chills, fever, sore<lb/>
throat and congestion.<lb/>
Van Nortwick indicated that the<lb/>
outbreak of flu had not put a strain<lb/>
on infirmary services. "I don't want<lb/>
anyone to think we have an<lb/>
epidemic on our hands she said.<lb/>
"There are plenty of beds<lb/>
available<lb/>
Some students, however, reported<lb/>
long waiting periods to see a doctor.<lb/>
"I'm sick, and I've been waiting<lb/>
here for over an hour to see the doc-<lb/>
tor said one student who asked<lb/>
not to be identified. "It's hard<lb/>
waiting out here when you're sick<lb/>
The infirmary does not issue writ-<lb/>
ten excuses to students who have<lb/>
been ill, van Nortwick wished to re-<lb/>
mind faculty members. "It is<lb/>
against our policy to issue written<lb/>
excuses to students, but we welcome<lb/>
phone calls from instructors who<lb/>
wish to verify that a student has<lb/>
been ill<lb/>
A number ot professors indicated<lb/>
that increased absences were<lb/>
noticeable in their classes but in<lb/>
most cases were not overwhelming.<lb/>
Davidson College was forced to<lb/>
close for two das last week because<lb/>
of a flu epidemic that hit campus.<lb/>
As many as 500 of Davidson's 1,400<lb/>
students were hit with the flu, and<lb/>
the school was not able to resume<lb/>
classes until Wednesday.<lb/>
United Press International<lb/>
reported Monday that several cam-<lb/>
puses in the L'NC system, including<lb/>
Appalachian State. UNC-Charlotte<lb/>
and N.C. State, have been struck<lb/>
with outbreaks of flu.<lb/>
Steakscam' Results In Indictment Of Ten<lb/>
Bv STEVE LEVIN<lb/>
 rt.rn 1 hi Vews and Observer<lb/>
u Bl RN - THe hottest issue<lb/>
Mew Bern since November has<lb/>
b eye steaks,<lb/>
e meat has resulted in a<lb/>
hi the indictment of 10 per-<lb/>
son- grand jury charges<lb/>
;e, a request for a federal grand<lb/>
investigation, a state Justice<lb/>
Department audit and accusations<lb/>
mismanagement at the county<lb/>
hospital ti the tune ol $50,000 to<lb/>
groups providing the<lb/>
ai e the (raven County<lb/>
Hospital administration and the<lb/>
New Bern newspaper. The Sun-<lb/>
Journal. They've been trading can-<lb/>
nonades in public and in print since<lb/>
it was revealed Oct. 31 that three<lb/>
hospital employees ? who are<lb/>
among the 10 later indicted ? had<lb/>
been dismissed in connection with<lb/>
thousands of pounds of missing<lb/>
meal and fish.<lb/>
The Craven County Board of<lb/>
Commissioners has called for the<lb/>
hospital's boare. of trustees to fire<lb/>
the hospital's top administrator,<lb/>
Lonnie E. Moore. But the trustees<lb/>
last week voted unanimously to re-<lb/>
tain Moore. The commissioners will<lb/>
meet Monday amid promises that<lb/>
the issue is not dead.<lb/>
SGA Votes Support Of<lb/>
Kappa Delta Sorority<lb/>
B PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
News Ir dil?tr<lb/>
The SGA voted by acclamation<lb/>
Monday to support Kappa Delta<lb/>
Sorority in its fight to purchase a<lb/>
house on East Fifth Street.<lb/>
Kappa Delta, which is presently<lb/>
housed at 2101 E. Fifth St has<lb/>
tried to purchase a house in the 1800<lb/>
block of the street but has been<lb/>
blocked by the Greenville Board of<lb/>
Adjustments.<lb/>
Fhe matter came before the board<lb/>
last October, after Kappa Delta had<lb/>
reached an agreement with the<lb/>
owners of the house.<lb/>
"We thought it was cut and<lb/>
dried said Flo Cammon, president<lb/>
of the Kappa Delta Corporation for<lb/>
the local chapter. "But at the<lb/>
meeting on Oct. 23 they had scads<lb/>
of people there for the other side<lb/>
I he board denied Kappa Delta's<lb/>
efforts to buy the house, saying that<lb/>
the sorority would cause a hazard by<lb/>
increasing'traffic and noise in the<lb/>
area, Gammon said.<lb/>
The sorority gave notice of ap-<lb/>
peal, but a series of injunctions and<lb/>
petitions has further complicated<lb/>
the situation.<lb/>
As the situation now stands the<lb/>
Board of Adjustments has been<lb/>
ordered to rehear the matter. The<lb/>
residents of the neighborhood have<lb/>
filed an injunction against Kappa<lb/>
Delta to stop the hearing and pro-<lb/>
duced a petition calling for the area<lb/>
to be rezoned so as to exclude all but<lb/>
single family dwellings.<lb/>
The hearing on the injunction will<lb/>
be Thursday morning and will deter-<lb/>
mine what further action must be<lb/>
If a new hearing is called, it will<lb/>
take place Thursday night.<lb/>
Gammon said that the sorority<lb/>
decided to move because its present<lb/>
house is too small and too far from<lb/>
campus. "Some people don't realize<lb/>
that we want to be part of the<lb/>
neighborhood and make a contribu-<lb/>
tion. I just don't see how we can<lb/>
win<lb/>
Vice President Lynn Calder noted<lb/>
at the SGA meeting that the Inter-<lb/>
Fraternity Council, Chancellor<lb/>
Brewer and other members of the<lb/>
administration had all expressed<lb/>
support for Kappa Delta.<lb/>
In other business President<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod said that the Board<lb/>
of Trustee's workshop held in<lb/>
Raleigh last weekend "was a good<lb/>
one for students<lb/>
According to Sherrod, the<lb/>
trustees discussed a number of<lb/>
issues affecting students including<lb/>
problems with drop-add and the<lb/>
School of Business. These discus-<lb/>
sions, Sherrod said, were informal.<lb/>
He did say, however, that the<lb/>
trustees voted unanimously that<lb/>
they would make the final decision<lb/>
regarding a change in student<lb/>
seating at football games.<lb/>
"1 don't think they (the trustees)<lb/>
were convinced that Ken Karr's plan<lb/>
was the right remedy Sherrod<lb/>
said.<lb/>
SGA member Russell Oberman<lb/>
announced that he met Friday with<lb/>
the Faculty Calendar Committee,<lb/>
which indicated that it would poll<lb/>
the faculty on a fall break using ap-<lb/>
proximately the same questions ask-<lb/>
ed of students.<lb/>
He added that if approved the<lb/>
first fall break would be during the<lb/>
1983-84 school year unless a special<lb/>
change sought.<lb/>
The bone of contention is rib eve<lb/>
steak, or the lack of it. Since 1978,<lb/>
the hospital has bought more than<lb/>
40,000 pounds of rib eyes from<lb/>
three meat vendors.<lb/>
During fiscal year 1980, the<lb/>
hospital bought 22,220 pounds of<lb/>
steaks ? enough for 120 half-pound<lb/>
servings of steak every day that<lb/>
year, in a hospital with a capacity<lb/>
for 248 patients.<lb/>
Hospital officials said the meat is<lb/>
served to patients five times during<lb/>
every 21-day period and to hospital<lb/>
staff twice during every 21-day<lb/>
period. But reporters from The Sun-<lb/>
Journal, in interviews at the<lb/>
hospital, could find only one patient<lb/>
who could remember being served<lb/>
rib eye steak.<lb/>
An investigation by the SBI,<lb/>
Craven County Sheriffs Office and<lb/>
the hospital's security force has<lb/>
resulted in the indictments of 10<lb/>
men on charges of embezzlement,<lb/>
conspiracy to embezzle, larceny<lb/>
conspiracy to commit larceny,<lb/>
possession of stolen or embezzled<lb/>
property and conspiracy to possess<lb/>
stolen or embezzled orooertv.<lb/>
Those indicted include the three<lb/>
hospital employees, two local<lb/>
grocers, four meat truck delivery<lb/>
drivers and a New Bern resident.<lb/>
The investigation has revealed<lb/>
that $600 worth of steaks destined<lb/>
for the hospital on one day never<lb/>
were served by the county-owned<lb/>
facility. An audit by the hospital's<lb/>
public accounting firm concluded<lb/>
that "the actual loss may be indeter-<lb/>
minable due to the fact that food<lb/>
usage documentation is not retained<lb/>
in the ordinary course of the<lb/>
hospital's business<lb/>
The Sun-Journal has reported<lb/>
that as much as S100.000 worth of<lb/>
meat a year never was served by the<lb/>
hospital, up to $400,000 worth over<lb/>
a five-year period.<lb/>
"We see the taxpayers' money be-<lb/>
ing wasted, and we want to do<lb/>
something about it said Publisher<lb/>
Eugene X. Bryan in an interview.<lb/>
But there are those who think the<lb/>
newspaper has been less than fair.<lb/>
"It upsets me because of the<lb/>
adverse and untrue publicity we've<lb/>
See STEAK, Page 3<lb/>
Phao bv MH SLOAN<lb/>
Students waiting at the infirmary. A flu wave has hit both North Carolina<lb/>
and ECU.<lb/>
Student Spending<lb/>
Reaches $28 Million<lb/>
Hhoto t? JON JOKDA.S<lb/>
Students gathered in front of the Student Store last Thursday for a moment<lb/>
of silence to observe Martin Luther King's birthday.<lb/>
By GEORGE THREEWITTS<lb/>
K t Nr?o Bureau<lb/>
More than S28 million in retail<lb/>
purchases in the city of Greenville<lb/>
were made by East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity students in 1980, nearly doubl-<lb/>
ing what students spent three years<lb/>
ago, an ECU study reveals.<lb/>
The reasons for the increase, says<lb/>
Dr. Charles T. Ziehr, an assistant<lb/>
professor of Geography and Plann-<lb/>
ing, were inflation and a larger ECU<lb/>
enrollment.<lb/>
Ziehr, who directed the economic<lb/>
impact study as a class project in<lb/>
Urban Geography, said the higher<lb/>
expenditures also may result from a<lb/>
somewhat higher living standard<lb/>
among students. He noted,<lb/>
however, that no empirical data on<lb/>
living standards was obtained.<lb/>
The project closely parallels<lb/>
similar studies conducted by ECU in<lb/>
1974 and 1977. In these studies, stu-<lb/>
dent expenditures totaled S15<lb/>
million in 1977 and $7.5 million in<lb/>
1974.<lb/>
Student enrollment at the time of<lb/>
the studies rose from 8,327 in 1974<lb/>
to 10,891 in 1977. There were 13,165<lb/>
students on campus when the 1980<lb/>
survey was compiled.<lb/>
In conducting the study, a ques-<lb/>
tionnaire was distributed which<lb/>
sought students' weekly expen-<lb/>
ditures in Greenville for the 43.5<lb/>
weeks that ECU is in session. Pur-<lb/>
chases during the period were divid-<lb/>
ed into six retail categories; food,<lb/>
clothing, entertainment, auto ex-<lb/>
penses, personal hygiene items and<lb/>
other expenses. Lodging and phone<lb/>
costs were excluded.<lb/>
In addition, each student was ask-<lb/>
ed to indicate the retail source area<lb/>
in which the largest proportion of<lb/>
each item was purchased.<lb/>
The ECU computer was used to<lb/>
analyze the results.<lb/>
Of the 716 students that respond-<lb/>
ed, 334 were female and 382 were<lb/>
males. Nearly half of those respon-<lb/>
ding lived in dormitories while the<lb/>
remainder resided in either frater-<lb/>
nities or sorority houses or lived<lb/>
away from campus.<lb/>
Average weekly expenditures for<lb/>
the students raneed from $54.58 to<lb/>
$74.13. As might be expected,<lb/>
students who are employed full-time<lb/>
spent the most money followed<lb/>
closely by students who live in<lb/>
fraternities and sorority houses.<lb/>
Dormitory students had the lowest<lb/>
weekly average expenditures.<lb/>
An interesting feature of the<lb/>
study shows how students distribute<lb/>
their expenditures across six retail<lb/>
categories. Food was first with<lb/>
weekly averages of $21.88. The<lb/>
others wre entertainment, $11.37;<lb/>
auto expenses, $8.57; other ex-<lb/>
penses, $7.98; clothing, $6.44; and<lb/>
personal hygiene items, $4.91.<lb/>
"Women spent more than men<lb/>
for clothing and personal hygiene<lb/>
items, while men had greater expen-<lb/>
ditures in all other categories. Food<lb/>
and entertainment categories show-<lb/>
ed the greatest contrast between<lb/>
men and women with men spending<lb/>
an average of $4.62 more per week<lb/>
for food and $4.29 more for enter-<lb/>
tainment the report said.<lb/>
The largest percentage of students<lb/>
surveyed picked the Pitt<lb/>
Plaza Greenville Square area to<lb/>
shop for food and hygiene items.<lb/>
Carolina East Mall was the major<lb/>
choice for clothing purchases while<lb/>
downtown absorbed the largest<lb/>
amount of dollars spent for enter-<lb/>
tainment.<lb/>
The $28 million that ECU<lb/>
students spent in Greenville area is<lb/>
about 8.23 percent of overall retail<lb/>
sales. The Greenville Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce listed retail sales of<lb/>
$340,962,543 for the fiscal year<lb/>
1979-80.<lb/>
Surveys taken in 1974 and 1977 by<lb/>
Urban Geography classes were<lb/>
directed by Dr. Ralph Birchard.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Classifieds9<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Letters4<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
?<lb/>
m t" r ?<lb/>
? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057312_0002"/><lb/>
1HI I AS I CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 20, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
POSITIONS<lb/>
Applications are being a.<lb/>
tor CoHeelKMJSe Chairperson and<lb/>
embers immediate<lb/>
'v ?? jv applications in the stu<lb/>
e,v ??? Rn . M in<lb/>
Vi idenhail STodenf i "??? Can<lb/>
S611 Exf<lb/>
FOOD LAB<lb/>
tomics<lb/>
5 jp, 1 Quanti<lb/>
t,r Dm<lb/>
season<lb/>
. V -<lb/>
I<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
? rntai I<lb/>
<lb/>
SCI Fl<lb/>
n tan<lb/>
?. - Avenue<lb/>
I  ? ?? eeting is foi<lb/>
SRAMEETING<lb/>
The Student Residence Associa<lb/>
lion will meet Tuesday Jan 20 in<lb/>
Rawl Room 130 at 5 00 p m All<lb/>
members are urged to attend<lb/>
CHESSBACKGAMMON<lb/>
Every Tues night at 7 00 pm<lb/>
chess and backgammon players<lb/>
get together m the Coffeehouse at<lb/>
Mendenhall tor some friendly<lb/>
competition People with different<lb/>
levels of ability participate so<lb/>
come on over and play a few<lb/>
games<lb/>
.<lb/>
?<lb/>
FIELD HOCKEY<lb/>
?  .<lb/>
HARASSMENT<lb/>
HOTLINE<lb/>
aDOuT<lb/>
? ? " I<lb/>
. . mteeo vour<lb/>
?o fiU<lb/>
I '<lb/>
v<lb/>
BOXING<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
The spring semester deadline to<lb/>
apply to maior m social work or<lb/>
corrections is Jan ?6 W8i Twom<lb/>
ews with members of the<lb/>
faculty must be held prior to Feb<lb/>
9<lb/>
?us who have completed a<lb/>
'i-n.mum of 34 semes'er hours of<lb/>
genei i allege courses, have a<lb/>
? n um grade point average of<lb/>
2 5 and who have had at least one<lb/>
social work course are eligible to<lb/>
. ,  , i'ions are available<lb/>
Health Bido i"<lb/>
lerested students are encouraged<lb/>
to apply a soon as possible For<lb/>
mor, formal call 751 69A1<lb/>
? ?'<lb/>
GUITAR<lb/>
instruction in playing the guitar<lb/>
? .? .?. be offered on Wed<lb/>
Qmn,ng Feb<lb/>
n<lb/>
riss meeting<lb/>
? ? s will give basic m<lb/>
n playing styles care Ol<lb/>
's and music fun<lb/>
damei<lb/>
. meet from<lb/>
. m and the guitar<lb/>
s from 7 30 to 8 30 p m<lb/>
g to instructor Roy<lb/>
Ki  ttle or no previous ex<lb/>
pei enc wtt me instruments is<lb/>
required although participants<lb/>
"? ii own banjos or<lb/>
lass<lb/>
f-ijr" - ation about these<lb/>
and other non credit evening<lb/>
courses is available from the Of<lb/>
? , ? Non Credit Programs. Divi<lb/>
sion of Continuing Education.<lb/>
FCU Greenville N C telephone<lb/>
i!43<lb/>
FRENCH<lb/>
Evening classes in conversa<lb/>
?ionai German and French will be<lb/>
offered at ECU for adults who<lb/>
wish to review previous language<lb/>
? . . r tor beg oners pianmna<lb/>
n Europe<lb/>
Conversational German" will<lb/>
? on Tuesdays Feb 10 April<lb/>
Conversational French<lb/>
' ? ?soas, Feb 12 April 23<lb/>
iss s scheduled for 7 8 30<lb/>
? ? er will teach<lb/>
language course<lb/>
?  . taught by Patricia<lb/>
GYMNASTICS<lb/>
We are pleased to announce the<lb/>
continuation of the Children's<lb/>
Gymnastics Instructional Pro<lb/>
gram this spring Registration for<lb/>
children's gymnastics will be held<lb/>
on Tues Jan 20. and Thurs Jan<lb/>
22 m the gymnastics room m<lb/>
Memorial Gym at 6 00 p m<lb/>
Classes will start on Monday<lb/>
evening, Jan 26. si 6 15 p m<lb/>
There will be a 12 week session<lb/>
? rtg S35 There will be two<lb/>
classes per night, starting at 6 15<lb/>
and another class at 7 15 Each<lb/>
child will be permitted to attend<lb/>
one class per week<lb/>
Classes are under the supervi<lb/>
Sion of Jon Rose, gymnastics<lb/>
coach at ECU He will be assisted<lb/>
by Donna Pendley and members<lb/>
of the women's qymnastics team<lb/>
The rest of the teaching staff will<lb/>
consist of physical education ma<lb/>
lors gaining practical experience<lb/>
in gymnastics<lb/>
If you child has already pre<lb/>
registered, just send a check for<lb/>
S3S with them on their first night of<lb/>
c lass<lb/>
PHYSICAL<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
The Dept of Health, Physical<lb/>
Education, Recreation and Safety<lb/>
will admm.ster a motor and<lb/>
physical fitness competency test<lb/>
on Feb U, W81. at 10 00 or 11 00<lb/>
am m Mmges Coliseum All<lb/>
students planning to deciare<lb/>
Physical Education as a maior<lb/>
this semester and all mators plan<lb/>
rung to student teach in the spring<lb/>
or fall semester ot 1981 must take<lb/>
the test during one of the two test<lb/>
periods Come prepared for<lb/>
physic al a Hvitv such as running,<lb/>
lumping, e'v For more mtorma<lb/>
tion call 757 644!<lb/>
ACSSA<lb/>
The American Chemical s<lb/>
Student Attmates will hold an m<lb/>
portant businei g Jan 20<lb/>
1981. at 7 00 p m in Flanagan<lb/>
Rm 202 AM members and Othei<lb/>
interested persons are urged to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
DO m'<lb/>
Further<lb/>
ana Otl<lb/>
redit curses<lb/>
Office of<lb/>
.ition about these<lb/>
spr nq semester non<lb/>
s available from<lb/>
Non Credit Pro<lb/>
RUGBY<lb/>
All men interested m playing<lb/>
Rugby should meet behind the<lb/>
Allied Health Bidg at 4 p m<lb/>
Tues , Jan 20 Subseguent prac<lb/>
tices will be held Tues through<lb/>
Thurs at 4 p m The basics of the<lb/>
game and conditioning will be em<lb/>
phasized during the first two<lb/>
weeks of practice so don't worry<lb/>
about not having any exper ?<lb/>
or being out of shape For addi<lb/>
tional information call Keith Dix<lb/>
on at 7S8 1662 or Pete Dockery at<lb/>
752 2447<lb/>
SYCHRONIZED<lb/>
SWIMMING<lb/>
Synchronized swimming a<lb/>
sport rising steadily m inters! It is<lb/>
an AlAW varsity sport and will be<lb/>
included in the 1984 Olympics tor<lb/>
the first time it is a sport jirr<lb/>
to gymnastics and figure skating<lb/>
using the water as the medium<lb/>
Synchronized swimming will help<lb/>
keep you slim and trim as well as<lb/>
qive you the opportunity to ?<lb/>
form m shows and compx I I<lb/>
Anyone who is interested It s<lb/>
club, please meet on Wed . Jan<lb/>
21st, at 7 p m m Rm 104<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
GAY COMMUNITY<lb/>
The East Carolina Gay Com<lb/>
munity will hold 'Is weekly<lb/>
meeting Tues Jan 20. at 5 00<lb/>
p m The meetings are held at 953<lb/>
E 10th St at the bottom of College<lb/>
Hill This week we are plannma'o<lb/>
meet at the above address and go<lb/>
out tor salad and pua At 7 00 we<lb/>
will attend a hearing concerning<lb/>
the disposal ot harmful waste<lb/>
materials by companies in the<lb/>
N C area The hearing will be at<lb/>
the North pitt High School H w<lb/>
give the local community a Cham e<lb/>
to air its opinions concerning toxi<lb/>
waste disposal ano what regula<lb/>
tions should be applied to it<lb/>
FITNESS<lb/>
Classes for faculty and staff<lb/>
fitness will begin Jan 21 12 00<lb/>
p m in Memorial Gym, Rm 108<lb/>
Classes will meet on Mon W<lb/>
and Fn Aerobics Da' erizi<lb/>
Slenderize A special emphasis<lb/>
will be placed on the program for<lb/>
men including new varied a<lb/>
t.vities weights, aerobics.<lb/>
games and running Contact Mrs<lb/>
Jo Saunders. Memorial Gym. Rm<lb/>
205, 7S7 6000. for more mforma<lb/>
tion<lb/>
A.M.A.<lb/>
The ECU chap'er 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/>
Conli y Chapter the organization<lb/>
proposes to bring together the pro<lb/>
fessional and the student n the<lb/>
field of marketing<lb/>
Applications may be obtained by<lb/>
contacting the officers, Mike<lb/>
McMahan or Elton Bone in A 226<lb/>
Rawl<lb/>
ART SHOW<lb/>
The Sixth Annual Art Show will<lb/>
be held Jan 24 31 at the Green<lb/>
Museum of Art Artists must<lb/>
deliver work between 12 00 8 00<lb/>
Jan 23 to room 1105 Jenkins $1 00<lb/>
non refundable entry fee ECU<lb/>
registered students only More in<lb/>
formation at M ? '??? tx ffici<lb/>
BKA<lb/>
Beta Kappap Alpha the Bank<lb/>
ing and Finance Fraternity will<lb/>
hold its Jan meetmg Thurs I I<lb/>
22, 1981. at 4 00 in Rm 221<lb/>
Mendenhall The field trip, ban<lb/>
quet and other activities planned<lb/>
for this semester will be discuss<lb/>
ed The guest speaket ? lit from<lb/>
F.rst Federal Savings and Loan<lb/>
All inlted in 'sons are invited<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi Na<lb/>
tional Honor Fraternity will n<lb/>
at 6 00 p rr  132 Austin<lb/>
WOMEN'S RIGHTS<lb/>
How well do women fa'<lb/>
N C laws' Attorney Jud H<lb/>
Kornegay will discuss curn<lb/>
legislation coming before the N C<lb/>
ieneral Assembly this session on<lb/>
Jan 20th at 8 p rr<lb/>
Presbyterian Chun h<lb/>
uth sts Addressing<lb/>
Women Voters si e?<lb/>
followmu pieces ? ? ? a'<lb/>
wh<lb/>
woo  imen's Prop<lb/>
Rights. Day Care Fair Employ<lb/>
meol, and Tax Funded Abort<lb/>
aii interest persons are invited<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
SAAD'SSHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
I I 3 GianoV Ave.<lb/>
759-1228<lb/>
QualityRepair<lb/>
CBP<lb/>
qrams Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education ECU Greenville, N C<lb/>
telephone ?S7 6143<lb/>
TRUSTEES<lb/>
SKI CLUB<lb/>
ot ECU<lb/>
19 a the<lb/>
?<lb/>
AgHtricajoa stb??L<lb/>
Americas<lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
PBL<lb/>
NURSERY<lb/>
The Nursery School Program<lb/>
?? ? it tin ECU Dept of Child<lb/>
? and Family Rela<lb/>
tions is nov ng applications<lb/>
for the 1981 82 school year Ap<lb/>
? on deadline 'S Feb 13<lb/>
Open to children who have third<lb/>
? " days by Oct 15 "<lb/>
:? )ram has I m.ted spaces<lb/>
? An, parent of a three<lb/>
? ? ? t'gr old may appiy Fur<lb/>
?? . ? ? irmation about the pro<lb/>
available m Rm 128 of the<lb/>
ECU Home Economics Bldg or by<lb/>
? one 75? 6926 or 757 6908<lb/>
SKI CLUB<lb/>
FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
There a tM Bi<lb/>
s? tub meet oc 'ta? jao 20 at<lb/>
5 00 P m . Rm 104 Memorial<lb/>
 ? -? iers and non skiers are all<lb/>
,lted 1 ?'? 'A Feo 13th<lb/>
 ? it Amtergreen is plann<lb/>
?  ed The season is great so<lb/>
every rte come and iom the c'ub<lb/>
,a t0 if you have guest.ons contac' Dt<lb/>
Edwards in the "iramurai office<lb/>
for $2.00 roast<lb/>
fArby's Roast Beefbeef (S<lb/>
andwiches<lb/>
I'Limit one coupon per customer Valid through Februarv 7 1981<lb/>
HNot valid with any other coupon Valid only at participating Arby -<lb/>
j2T5i$2.22<lb/>
lArby's Beef 'N<lb/>
?Cheddar<lb/>
Sandwiches<lb/>
Limit one coupon per customer Valid through February 7. 1981 ft? i V<lb/>
Sot valid with any other coupon Valid only at participating Arby s ?. ?<lb/>
THE EARLY<lb/>
PREPARE FOR<lb/>
MCAT-LSATGMAT<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 lull-time staff<lb/>
? Complete TEST-n-TAPE,m 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/>
VQE ? ECFMG FLEX - NDB - NLE<lb/>
Call Days Eveninf s t Weekends<lb/>
Lambda CHI Alpha<lb/>
FRATERNITY<lb/>
500 Eli Habrt h ?t.<lb/>
rush!<lb/>
your<lb/>
it's<lb/>
BEST<lb/>
hot<lb/>
ixa party<lb/>
Executive Park. BM? <lb/>
I'M Chat Mill ?lve<lb/>
DvrMm. N C UW<lb/>
I fit! ?t-?7M<lb/>
Educational Center<lb/>
TEST MEPMATION<lb/>
SPECIALISTS SINCE IMI<lb/>
 i.t 0VW Ceiteu i" Wok Tr-ar 85 M?iO' US<lb/>
iNiaa &amp; Abroad<lb/>
far Nrtereutiea a?aal ather ceaterj OUTSW M SUTt Call TOU. Fitt HO ffl-WM<lb/>
Tiths. 20&amp; 9Ol<lb/>
ReKjhing Rooms!<lb/>
ws6.2sl 9!02<lb/>
p. I. party<lb/>
i<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of th??? adv?iiMd itomt I roqulrad to b r??dtly available) for tale at or<lb/>
balow tha advartlaad prlca In aach A4P Stora. axcapt a tpaclflcalty notad<lb/>
in thai ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT JAN. 24, AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO<lb/>
OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
Highway 264 By-Pass<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Coca-Cola,<lb/>
Meilo Yello,<lb/>
Tab, Sprite,<lb/>
Sugar Free Fresca,<lb/>
Mr. Pibb, Orange Crush,<lb/>
Grape Crush<lb/>
2<lb/>
Litre<lb/>
Plastic<lb/>
Bottle<lb/>
99<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
Jeno's<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
?109<lb/>
?Hamburger (12 oz.)<lb/>
?Pepperoni (11.75 oz.)<lb/>
?Sausage (12 ox.)<lb/>
?Combination (12.5 oz<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
WHOLE BONELESS 18 To 21 lb avg<lb/>
Shoulder Roast<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
(5 lbs. or more)<lb/>
Fryer Legs<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
(5 lbs. or more)<lb/>
Ground Chuck<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY (BUTT PORTION lb. 1.08)<lb/>
Shank Portion<lb/>
Smoked Ham<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
98<lb/>
NORTHERN<lb/>
Bathroom Tissue<lb/>
99c<lb/>
Assorted<lb/>
Colors<lb/>
Save 4 roll<lb/>
20e pkg.<lb/>
ANN PAGE FROZEN<lb/>
Look-Fit Ice Milk<lb/>
Save v2gal.<lb/>
16? ctn.<lb/>
1<lb/>
19<lb/>
( 60 COUPON )<lb/>
ALL GRINDS<lb/>
Maxwell House Coffee<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT . JAN 24. AT A4P IN GREENVILLE, N C<lb/>
16 oz<lb/>
bag<lb/>
199<lb/>
629<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
50 COUPON<lb/>
p<lb/>
PLAIN ? UNBLEACHED ? SELF-RISING<lb/>
Red Band Flour 5<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT JAN 24 AT A&amp;P I N GR E ENVILLE, N C<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
79<lb/>
626 j<lb/>
40' COUPON<lb/>
CONTAINS RICH BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
Eight O'Clock Instant Coffee<lb/>
AT<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT JAN 24. AT AP IN GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
6?7<lb/>
fj- fO fK??H?ss IMC MviNGS -p ??? AFh wm<lb/>
4 GOLDEN YELLOW T<lb/>
1' Dole Bananas 4 I<lb/>
FLORIDA CRISP SOLID<lb/>
Green Cabbage<lb/>
h lbs.<lb/>
only<lb/>
100<lb/>
BUTTERY RICH<lb/>
California Avocados<lb/>
Large<lb/>
14 Size<lb/>
39C<lb/>
5<lb/>
30 size<lb/>
only<lb/>
1<lb/>
oo<lb/>
,?w<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057312_0003"/><lb/>
! HI I S,K) IM <lb/>
.1 VSt H 20, I S? 1<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
29 '<lb/>
te26<lb/>
9<lb/>
627<lb/>
OS<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch Plan May Soon Double Profits<lb/>
Rfpi inicd From Ihr<lb/>
NallSueci lournal<lb/>
If Anheuser-Busch<lb/>
isn't careful, its success<lb/>
in the beer business will<lb/>
turn into an embarras-<lb/>
ment of riches b 1985.<lb/>
By then the brewer<lb/>
plans to have com-<lb/>
pleted a $2 billion, five-<lb/>
year expansion pro-<lb/>
gram that will increase<lb/>
its capacity 40 percent<lb/>
and add significantly to<lb/>
its 29 percent share o'<lb/>
the beer market. Fro-<lb/>
nts may well be double<lb/>
1980s expected Si 69<lb/>
million.<lb/>
But what will<lb/>
Anheusei Busch, which<lb/>
derives more than 90<lb/>
percent of its net in-<lb/>
come from brewing, do<lb/>
tor an encore'1 The St.<lb/>
I ouis concern is trving<lb/>
to find an answer by ex-<lb/>
perimenting in several<lb/>
new consumer markets.<lb/>
Its choices, however,<lb/>
have competitors and<lb/>
analysts puzzled.<lb/>
Consider Anheuser-<lb/>
Busch's first "learning<lb/>
probe as the com-<lb/>
pany calls its diver-<lb/>
sification experiments,<lb/>
into the soft-drink<lb/>
business. From the<lb/>
start, the test was the<lb/>
subject of considerable<lb/>
second-guessing.<lb/>
"Would Coke and Pep-<lb/>
si enter the beer in-<lb/>
dustry from scratch<lb/>
and go up against<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch and<lb/>
Miller?" asks a skep-<lb/>
tical rival brewer. "I<lb/>
think the answer would<lb/>
be no<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch's<lb/>
answer, after two years<lb/>
of testing, also may be<lb/>
no. "We've learned it's<lb/>
a competitive jungle<lb/>
out there says August<lb/>
Busch 111, chairman,<lb/>
"just like us and Miller<lb/>
in the brewing in-<lb/>
dustry<lb/>
His experience stems<lb/>
primarily from Root 66<lb/>
root beer and another<lb/>
version, which have<lb/>
been sold in five cities<lb/>
since the summer of<lb/>
1979. Mr. Busch says<lb/>
the drinks have "a<lb/>
respectable market<lb/>
Ten Indicted<lb/>
( oatinued from Page 1<lb/>
had hospital Trustee<lb/>
Mane F. W hit ford said<lb/>
in a telephone inter-<lb/>
view. "So many things<lb/>
they've reported have<lb/>
been innuendo and par-<lb/>
tial truths that would<lb/>
lead people to believe<lb/>
son : that isn't<lb/>
true<lb/>
fireworks began<lb/>
when the newspaper re-<lb/>
quested a list of the<lb/>
hospital' food ven-<lb/>
dors. The hospital<lb/>
ret used, saving the list<lb/>
could harm its own in-<lb/>
ternal lnv . a on of<lb/>
the missing meat.<lb/>
The paper sued to get<lb/>
the docun<lb/>
v. it<lb/>
dv and the<lb/>
public in-<lb/>
A District<lb/>
. ed and<lb/>
pital to<lb/>
I cuments<lb/>
i Journal.<lb/>
The documents<lb/>
showed that massive<lb/>
: meat had<lb/>
tinel)<lb/>
through the office ol<lb/>
the food services direc-<lb/>
h a puhnc be<lb/>
records a;L<lb/>
formation.<lb/>
(our;<lb/>
tor, but that employees<lb/>
and not the director<lb/>
had signed for the<lb/>
meat. The joint law en-<lb/>
forcement investigation<lb/>
has revealed that the<lb/>
meat would be left on<lb/>
trucks and never<lb/>
delivered to the<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
The meat remaining<lb/>
on the truck would be<lb/>
transferred to two local<lb/>
grocery stores for<lb/>
future sale.<lb/>
An audit by accoun-<lb/>
tants hired by the<lb/>
newspaper revealed the<lb/>
hospital had overspent<lb/>
its 1980 food budget bv<lb/>
$124,000 and its 1979<lb/>
food budget by<lb/>
$9000. The hospital<lb/>
also was paying more<lb/>
per pound for meat<lb/>
than it cost customers<lb/>
in local grocery stores.<lb/>
This month, it was<lb/>
revealed that the<lb/>
hospital bought more<lb/>
than $65,000 worth of<lb/>
fish last year, enough<lb/>
to serve fish to every<lb/>
patient in the hospital<lb/>
twice a day, year-<lb/>
round.<lb/>
share but com-<lb/>
petitors contend it was<lb/>
achieved mostly<lb/>
through cents-off dis-<lb/>
counts offered to con-<lb/>
sumers.<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch's<lb/>
first foray into soft<lb/>
drinks was the ill-fated<lb/>
Chelsea, a citrus<lb/>
beverage that could<lb/>
have had the snob ap-<lb/>
peal and profit margin<lb/>
of Perrier. Introduced<lb/>
in September 1978,<lb/>
Chelsea was hooted off<lb/>
the market by nurses<lb/>
and others who ob-<lb/>
jected to the alcoholic<lb/>
content (0.4 percent)<lb/>
and beer-like ap-<lb/>
pearance of the<lb/>
"not-so-soft soft<lb/>
drink<lb/>
Company officials<lb/>
are reluctant to disclose<lb/>
much about the pro-<lb/>
spects for their<lb/>
"learning probes but<lb/>
last year Jerry E. Rit-<lb/>
ter, vice president-<lb/>
finance and treasurer,<lb/>
acknowledged that<lb/>
"beer earnings and<lb/>
share growth may slow-<lb/>
as we approach our<lb/>
long-term 40 percent<lb/>
market share goal<lb/>
The brewer is planning<lb/>
for that day, he said, by<lb/>
"getting our feet wet in<lb/>
new business areas, not<lb/>
massive diversification<lb/>
efforts<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch<lb/>
hopes to trade on its<lb/>
established strengths. It<lb/>
knows a lot about<lb/>
manufacturing and<lb/>
packaging beverages<lb/>
and then marketing<lb/>
them (ad spending last<lb/>
year was about SI90<lb/>
million). Its most<lb/>
powerful asset is its<lb/>
distribution system:<lb/>
950 beer wholesalers<lb/>
with fleets of trucks<lb/>
and sales links to bars,<lb/>
restaurants, super-<lb/>
markets and liquor<lb/>
stores.<lb/>
Beer distributors<lb/>
were used for the soft-<lb/>
drink test and also for a<lb/>
look at the snack<lb/>
business, where<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch is sell-<lb/>
ing its new Eagle line in<lb/>
bars. One sign of suc-<lb/>
cess: distribution is be-<lb/>
ing widened to 24 cities<lb/>
from a handful.<lb/>
The third "learning<lb/>
probe less prominent<lb/>
than snacks or soda but<lb/>
more encouraging to<lb/>
several followers of<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch, is the<lb/>
company's develop-<lb/>
ment of Sesame Place<lb/>
educational parks in<lb/>
c o n jii n c t i o n with<lb/>
Children's Television<lb/>
Workshop, producers<lb/>
of "Sesame Street<lb/>
With no rides and<lb/>
only three to four acres<lb/>
I he Fast Carolinian<lb/>
Published pvery Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday du' ng " . i i<lb/>
nfr ano every Wednesday dur<lb/>
?' ? E ast Carolinian is the of<lb/>
' . ai newspaper ot Eas'<lb/>
?a University owni<lb/>
?<lb/>
by the student I Eas1 Molina<lb/>
' Sity<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Busi S3 .? ? .<lb/>
au others $2S  ?? .<lb/>
d class postao paid at<lb/>
ireenv ? N C<lb/>
Tnp East Ca'Oi.n  ?? .<lb/>
are located in the Old S<lb/>
. ? " ? impus ot ecu<lb/>
? N C<lb/>
Telephone 757 6366 6367 630<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
 N.C, No. 3(jNIGHTCLUB <lb/>
TUES ? Grammy Award Winning<lb/>
CAPITAL RECORDING ARTIST<lb/>
DON SCHLITZ<lb/>
in the Phoenix Room<lb/>
HARVEY DALTON<lb/>
ARNOLD<lb/>
i Former members ot the Outlaws.<lb/>
Super Grit &amp; GnnderswitchI<lb/>
THURS. ? Warner Bros. Rec. Artist<lb/>
ARROGANCE<lb/>
Record Bar Hugger Festival<lb/>
Eric Binford<lb/>
lives for the<lb/>
movies<lb/>
Sometimes<lb/>
he kills<lb/>
for them,<lb/>
too!<lb/>
DENNIS CHRISTOPHER<lb/>
? compared to at least<lb/>
100 acres for such<lb/>
theme parks as<lb/>
Disneyland or the<lb/>
brewer's two Busch<lb/>
Gardens ? Sesame<lb/>
Place doesn't require<lb/>
too much capital. The<lb/>
first park, complete<lb/>
with Big Bird bridge en-<lb/>
tranceway, opened last<lb/>
summer near<lb/>
Philadelphia. The com-<lb/>
pany says its major<lb/>
concern so far has been<lb/>
that people stayed five<lb/>
hours, instead of a pro-<lb/>
jected two and one-<lb/>
half, to play the games.<lb/>
A fourth diversifica-<lb/>
tion experiment, which<lb/>
requires even less<lb/>
capital and could pay<lb/>
off sooner than the<lb/>
others, is overseas ex-<lb/>
pansion of the brewing<lb/>
business. International<lb/>
sales account for less<lb/>
than 1 percent of<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch's beer<lb/>
volume. Earlier last<lb/>
year Canadian brewer<lb/>
John Labatt Ltd. began<lb/>
manufacturing<lb/>
Budweiser and impor-<lb/>
ting Michelob for sale<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Industry experts see<lb/>
obvious problems in all<lb/>
these attempts. Foreign<lb/>
protective tariffs and<lb/>
laws would make ex-<lb/>
ported beers or brews<lb/>
that might be produced<lb/>
in an Anheuser-Busch<lb/>
plant overseas high-<lb/>
priced. Licensing<lb/>
foreign brewers to<lb/>
make Anheuser-Busch<lb/>
products might be the<lb/>
only feasible alter-<lb/>
native. And, asks one<lb/>
beer marketing expert,<lb/>
"What makes them<lb/>
think foreigners crave<lb/>
American beer<lb/>
The big sales and<lb/>
profits in snacks are in<lb/>
supermarkets, which<lb/>
the King of Beers<lb/>
hasn't tackled yet; it<lb/>
would find a vigorous<lb/>
defense there from<lb/>
snack king Irito-l.ay.<lb/>
Entertainment parks<lb/>
may work, but would<lb/>
they add significantly<lb/>
to the company's<lb/>
revenue, estimated at<lb/>
$3.3 billion last year<lb/>
A likely possibility is<lb/>
that Anheuser-Busch<lb/>
will use its knowledge<lb/>
from the experiments<lb/>
to guide it in future ac-<lb/>
quisitions. "We'll have<lb/>
acquired a hase of per-<lb/>
sonnel and experience<lb/>
to use Mr. Ritter<lb/>
said. "We aren't under<lb/>
the gun to diversify for<lb/>
the next five years<lb/>
But analysts say that<lb/>
large acquisitions will<lb/>
be tough to finance.<lb/>
1 he company's heavy<lb/>
load of debt would<lb/>
make it hard to add<lb/>
more, and much ot<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch's cash<lb/>
before 1985 will have to<lb/>
pay off current brewery<lb/>
expansion. The com<lb/>
pany's conservative<lb/>
management probably<lb/>
would be reluctant to<lb/>
dilute earnings by using<lb/>
its stock lor an acquisi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
What about<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch's<lb/>
rival, Miller Brewing,<lb/>
which faces similar pi<lb/>
blems down the road as<lb/>
beer industry growth<lb/>
slows?<lb/>
Welcome Back<lb/>
Student Special<lb/>
All You Can Lat Trout<lb/>
With Your Favorite Beverage<lb/>
$3.59<lb/>
1 uesday Only<lb/>
OYSTER BAR<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
"A Great<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant"<lb/>
?l<lb/>
FOSDKKS<lb/>
1890 Stated<lb/>
NEW HOURS<lb/>
Monday ?CLOSED<lb/>
TuesThurs. 5:00 9:00<lb/>
FriSat. 5:00-10:00<lb/>
Sunday 5:00-9:00<lb/>
2311 S EVANS ST EXT GREENVILLE<lb/>
Flamingo Discoteque<lb/>
" Thursday Night Live"<lb/>
11 you want something to do on 1 hurs-<lb/>
day Nights, If you want someone to do<lb/>
it with, 11 you want someplace to go<lb/>
where you can do what you want to<lb/>
do. We've got the time. We've got<lb/>
the place. We've got the people and<lb/>
We ve got the entertainment.<lb/>
1 he Hamingo Disco proudly<lb/>
presents 1 hursdav Night Live<lb/>
Lntertainment guaranteed to please.<lb/>
Students get in tree until 1 1:00. "The<lb/>
Thursday Night Gang" We do it on<lb/>
1 hursdav too. hor into call 752-7331<lb/>
H.L. Hodges-Bond's<lb/>
Sporting Goods<lb/>
50<lb/>
Ski-Wear<lb/>
Aspen ?White Stag<lb/>
20 to 50 Oh<lb/>
Warmups by Adidas<lb/>
Court Casual,Loom lops<lb/>
I<lb/>
Don't Cheat Yourself Out Oi 1 he Lxpert Knowledge<lb/>
Onlv Years Ol Service Can Oiler. Shop At H.L.<lb/>
Hodges and Bonds. Not New. But Still The Best<lb/>
This Weeks Special<lb/>
Zipper Hooded Jacket<lb/>
Reg. $12.95 Now $6.95<lb/>
IRWIN YABLANS ? SYLVIO 1ABET . s<lb/>
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, . . IRWIN YABLANS . SYLVIO TABET . GEORGE G BRAUNSTEIN - RON HAMADY<lb/>
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CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
They're Like<lb/>
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If you want to<lb/>
BUY, SELL,<lb/>
TRADE, or GIVE<lb/>
anything away.<lb/>
Classifieds will<lb/>
get the job done!<lb/>
AN AMERICAN jsx CINEMA RELEASE i?m????cw.rwic.n1 ? i.( mt?n<lb/>
Opening Soon At A Theatre Near You<lb/>
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Classified Advertizing Rates:<lb/>
1 to 3 Lines $1.00<lb/>
Each Addition Line<lb/>
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iMlHIIMMjIllll m ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057312_0004"/><lb/>
Stye lEast (Earolmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Chris LiCHOK, G?awtkumm<lb/>
Jimmy DuPrl-e, ??<lb/>
Paul Lincke, ;???.? un Paul Collins, f?u?<lb/>
Dave Severin. ?? m. Charles Chandler ????<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, pro tar David Norris, ????<lb/>
January 20, W81<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Cheerleaders<lb/>
h Aeed Of Sufficient Help<lb/>
Much talk has arisen lately con-<lb/>
cerning the need for growth in the<lb/>
ECU Athletic Department. Many<lb/>
areas have been criticized for their<lb/>
weaknesses.<lb/>
One area that has not been men-<lb/>
tioned but certainly deserves it is<lb/>
cheerleading.<lb/>
Any person who has attended the<lb/>
men's basketball team's home<lb/>
games on a regular basis this season<lb/>
would probably not speak highly of<lb/>
the cheerleading squad.<lb/>
The American Heritage Dic-<lb/>
tionary defines a cheerleader as<lb/>
"one who leads group cheering<lb/>
Judging by performances at most<lb/>
home basketball games, there is no<lb/>
way under the sun that the ECU<lb/>
squad fits this description.<lb/>
The squad has often seemed to<lb/>
lack the zeal and enthusiasm re-<lb/>
quired to lead a large group of peo-<lb/>
ple in cheering.<lb/>
There are reasons why this group<lb/>
is not performing up to standards.<lb/>
It should be mentioned at this point,<lb/>
by the way, that help has come from<lb/>
within the administration and the<lb/>
cheerleaders have done their job<lb/>
much better than before in recent<lb/>
games. Much is still left to be<lb/>
desired, though.<lb/>
Money is one big problem for the<lb/>
group. The cheerleaders are allotted<lb/>
less than $1,000 annually, for all<lb/>
sports.<lb/>
Also, there is no awards banquets<lb/>
for the cheerleaders as there is for<lb/>
many groups on campus. The squad<lb/>
also does not earn monograms for<lb/>
their service during the athletic year.<lb/>
All these things detract from the<lb/>
enthusiasm that a cheerleader might<lb/>
have. Still, the group should have<lb/>
enough zeal to carry them, and the<lb/>
ECU fans, through.<lb/>
There is a real problem here,<lb/>
though. The cheerleading squad<lb/>
seems to lack sufficient supervision.<lb/>
Leadership is not afforded the<lb/>
squad as it should be.<lb/>
The supervisor of this group<lb/>
should make sure that the squad<lb/>
does its job, that being to cheer.<lb/>
Rather than having the squad<lb/>
simply go through a number of<lb/>
gymnastic routines, the supervisor<lb/>
should have this group around the<lb/>
bleachers, in the bleachers ?<lb/>
anywhere they are needed ? to lead<lb/>
the fans in cheering.<lb/>
You might say that one of the<lb/>
cheerleaders, perhaps the lead,<lb/>
should take over and correct all that<lb/>
is wrong. Well, there is little that<lb/>
can be done by this person if there<lb/>
are roadblocks on the higher rungs<lb/>
of the totem pole.<lb/>
The morale on such a group as<lb/>
this should always be high. Since the<lb/>
squad is partly responsible for the<lb/>
enthusiasm of the fans, this squad<lb/>
itself should be enthusiastic.<lb/>
Well, folks, morale is often not<lb/>
high on the ECU cheerleading<lb/>
squad. One member quit the squad<lb/>
recently. Another missed a game<lb/>
assigment due to a date. Now really.<lb/>
Morale? Afraid not.<lb/>
Something must be done, and<lb/>
soon, concerning the supervision of<lb/>
the Pirate cheerleaders. This group<lb/>
needs professional help and<lb/>
deserves it.<lb/>
The cheerleaders are earnestly<lb/>
trying to improve their performance<lb/>
at home games. Since ad-<lb/>
ministrative help came on the scene,<lb/>
the squad has been much more in<lb/>
evidence.<lb/>
Recent men's home games with<lb/>
Richmond and Atlantic Cristian<lb/>
saw the squad begin to branch out<lb/>
of their "cubby hole" behind the<lb/>
basket. The squad made more con-<lb/>
tact with the fans and, at times,<lb/>
moved into the stands stomping,<lb/>
clapping and leading cheers.<lb/>
Whoever has tried to change the<lb/>
direction of the cheerleading squad<lb/>
has begun something positive. The<lb/>
reasoning behind this editorial is to<lb/>
encourage further changes ? big<lb/>
changes.<lb/>
After all, if the football team suf-<lb/>
fered through several miserable<lb/>
years, something would be done to<lb/>
remedy the situation. Why not do<lb/>
something about the cheerleaders?<lb/>
Meanwhile, though, there are<lb/>
things we must all remember. The<lb/>
cheerleaders are improving,<lb/>
students. There are being restruc-<lb/>
tured to a certain degree. One thing<lb/>
they don't need is student apathy.<lb/>
They need student support. Let's all<lb/>
give it to them. Let's join with them<lb/>
and be enthusiastic at our home<lb/>
games. Student and fan enthusiasm<lb/>
at games can spread to cheerleaders,<lb/>
too. They have enough problems<lb/>
without the student body supplying<lb/>
another.<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
Student Input Urged<lb/>
In December I wrote a letter to the<lb/>
East Carolinian expressing my opposi-<lb/>
tion to Ken Karr's "marketing plan" for<lb/>
Ficklin Stadium. The point that I tried<lb/>
to make in the letter was that only a year<lb/>
ago we saw a substantial increase in our<lb/>
"fees" which was supposed to overcome<lb/>
the problems in the Athletic Department<lb/>
and now we're told that not only did the<lb/>
increased fees not do the job but they<lb/>
need more income that could only be<lb/>
provided by students buying tickets to<lb/>
the games.<lb/>
I received two letters in response to<lb/>
my own. Neither letter, however, ad-<lb/>
dressed itself to wha. 1 felt to be the key<lb/>
issue: that is the fact that those least able<lb/>
to pay and with the least voice were be-<lb/>
ing asked to pay more and more for their<lb/>
athletic program.<lb/>
The bottom line of all this brings up a<lb/>
question: can ECU afford Division I<lb/>
athletics in the 1980's? You've already<lb/>
seen the demise of the wrestling team.<lb/>
What's next?<lb/>
Now, I have always been of the opi-<lb/>
nion that it's much easier to criticize<lb/>
than it is to 'solutionize' and that all<lb/>
things in life come full cycle. Now it<lb/>
turns out that one of my classes in the<lb/>
MBA program has been charged with<lb/>
the project "Save the Pirates<lb/>
The idea is to develop a marketing<lb/>
plan that will increase the sales of season<lb/>
tickets. This involvees identifying and<lb/>
reaching various groups that are not<lb/>
presently Pirate fans and convincing<lb/>
them to buy season tickets. All this must<lb/>
be done on a budget so small that if a<lb/>
thief could steal it he wouldn't bother.<lb/>
So, since we've been asked to help<lb/>
we're turning to you the student body<lb/>
and asking for your help. To start with<lb/>
we need your thoughtful comments and<lb/>
suggestions on ways to increase atten-<lb/>
dance at the games. We've all been given<lb/>
a chance here to help save ECU<lb/>
athletics. At the risk of having my pun<lb/>
license revoked ? we've been given the<lb/>
ball; let's run with it.<lb/>
Send your letters to:<lb/>
Donald Pack<lb/>
Dept. of Economics<lb/>
Rawl Building<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
Uhfce up schouak ? th cHeeftUAoeRs ? a&amp;outto vo met oesr 9$uruj&amp;<lb/>
McLuhan Left Mark In The 1960's<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Marshall McLuhan's death on<lb/>
December 31 marked the passing of a man<lb/>
who was, in his way, as much a part of the<lb/>
optimism and epic sweep associated with<lb/>
the sixties as were John Lennon and the<lb/>
Beatles. An author who proclaimed the<lb/>
eclipse of print, McLuhan celebrated a<lb/>
"global village" joined by electronic<lb/>
media, in which people around the world<lb/>
shared experiences ? John Kennedy's<lb/>
televised funeral, for example ? as in-<lb/>
timate and profound as the tribal rituals of<lb/>
earlier ages. In McLuhan's reckoning, the<lb/>
changes induced by the media were ex-<lb/>
plosive, evolutionary.<lb/>
Like other sixties culture heroes ?<lb/>
Buckminster Fuller, Andy Marhol, the<lb/>
Yippies, rock and roll shamans ?<lb/>
McLuhan championed process over struc-<lb/>
ture, the present over the past, intuition<lb/>
over the rational, linear thinking he<lb/>
associated with print. And, like his pop<lb/>
peers, McLuhan was an exemplary<lb/>
showman, issuing sermons on contem-<lb/>
porary culture as though from the Mount.<lb/>
"Electronic media circuitry is Orien-<lb/>
talizing the West McLuhan wrote, refer-<lb/>
ring to Eastern mystical traditions. "The<lb/>
contained, the distinct, the separate ? our<lb/>
Western legacy ? are being replaced by<lb/>
the flowing, the unified, the fused To<lb/>
young people who used the flowing, unify-<lb/>
ing, fusing properties of yoga and<lb/>
psychedelic drugs as rites of passage, such<lb/>
a conception of media came easily. They<lb/>
adopted the lanky, loquacious Toronto<lb/>
professor as a wise elder of Hip.<lb/>
In recent years, the countercultural trap-<lb/>
pings fell away from McLuhan, whose<lb/>
pronouncements on the miracles of media,<lb/>
particularly television, became conven-<lb/>
tional wisdom ? sometimes with dismay-<lb/>
ing consequences. Last year, at a party, I<lb/>
met a former member of Kennedy's<lb/>
cabinet. When he learned 1 was a jour-<lb/>
nalist, the politician held forth on how TV<lb/>
had ended the Vietnam war by beaming the<lb/>
brutality of war into evryone's living room<lb/>
and making it impossible to ignore. While<lb/>
the politician didn't cite McLuhan as an<lb/>
authority, his remark was in keeping with<lb/>
McLuhan's cheery view that the dissemina-<lb/>
tion of media technology, by itself,<lb/>
enhances communication, sharpens our<lb/>
understanding of social reality and pro-<lb/>
duces greater understanding.<lb/>
Unfortunately, that's not true, far from<lb/>
bringing the Vietnam war ? or any other<lb/>
war into people's homes, TV delivered a<lb/>
stylized representation of war, complete<lb/>
with commercials, that may, through<lb/>
repetition, have hardened viewers to the<lb/>
fighting. Vietnam, to many tube addicts,<lb/>
was a spaghetti Eastern, not a revelation. 1<lb/>
wager that the American peace movement<lb/>
and, especially, the Vietnamese revolu-<lb/>
tionaries had more to do with ending the<lb/>
war than did Walter Cronkite. At that, it<lb/>
took 14 years, making the Vietnam conflict<lb/>
the longest war in American history.<lb/>
McLuhan notwithstanding, if merely ex-<lb/>
tending the means of mass communication<lb/>
could create a mystical media democracy,<lb/>
it would have happened long ago ? when<lb/>
the telephone was introduced, for exam<lb/>
pie. But the phone, while it is unques-<lb/>
tionably a useful device, has not made<lb/>
America more democratic merely by being<lb/>
there. Phone users who call one another to<lb/>
commiserate about the bland sameness of<lb/>
presidential candidates move no closer to<lb/>
controlling the political process that pro-<lb/>
duces those candidates by talking on<lb/>
marvelous equipment rented from a<lb/>
monopolistic utility.<lb/>
McLuhan's technological determinism<lb/>
? his belief that the introduction of<lb/>
sophisticated tools, rather than the clash of<lb/>
political interests, shapes history ? proved<lb/>
as attractive to establishmentarians in the<lb/>
seventies as it had to youthful radicals in-<lb/>
fatuated with the potential of video in the<lb/>
sixties. In his later years. McLuhan was a<lb/>
celebrity for hire, leading expensive<lb/>
seminars on media manipulation for cor-<lb/>
porate executives and saying nothing about<lb/>
the increasing concentration of media<lb/>
outlets among fewer and fewer owners.<lb/>
His increasing fame led to a short, funny<lb/>
appearance playing himself in Annie Hall<lb/>
and guest spot on TV talk shows. I last<lb/>
saw him airily lecturing on the right and<lb/>
left hemispheres of the brain to Tom<lb/>
Snyder, who pretended to understand.<lb/>
If Marshall McLuhan was often a<lb/>
myopic visionary, he was also an influen-<lb/>
tial one. His thesis thai the medium is the<lb/>
message, while overstated and ultimately<lb/>
misleading, drew attention to the ways thai<lb/>
media shapes messages. With his pla<lb/>
punning ? he titled one ol his books The<lb/>
Medium Is the Massage  he underscored<lb/>
how media combine to form an informa-<lb/>
tion environment that envelopes<lb/>
kneads us. Mel uhan's influence sun<lb/>
his passing, much as Beatles' mu -<lb/>
vives the assassination of John I ei<lb/>
it resonates from the radios M<lb/>
described as the world "<lb/>
David Armstrong, aulh<lb/>
Journal is a syndici .<lb/>
lege newspapers.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes lei<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 of the author)s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All 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/>
Carter Liberals Add To Legacy<lb/>
Jimmy Carter and the liberals in his ad-<lb/>
ministration are on their last legs. In the<lb/>
waning days of the Democratic administra-<lb/>
tion, the Carterites have been busy little<lb/>
mischief-makers. They are swinging wildly<lb/>
in an attempt to leave a final inprint on the<lb/>
country before January 20.<lb/>
Over at the Department of Justice they<lb/>
have just signed, despite objections from<lb/>
Reagan transition officials, a consent<lb/>
decree bowing the demands of civil rights<lb/>
groups for affirmative action (reverse<lb/>
discrimination) policies in hiring federal<lb/>
professional and administrative personnel.<lb/>
For many years government hiring has<lb/>
been based on the civil service exams which<lb/>
test people on their merits and not their<lb/>
color. Under the civil service merit exams<lb/>
all applicants were treated equally and fair-<lb/>
ly. Government workers were hired on the<lb/>
basis of their ability to perform a job. That<lb/>
consent decree has just been invalidated<lb/>
and tossed in the gutter hiring based on<lb/>
merit and ability.<lb/>
Then just a few blocks away at the<lb/>
Department of Labor, liberal Secretary of<lb/>
Labor Ray Marshall signed a new regula-<lb/>
tion that witholds federal contracts from<lb/>
firms that pay membership fees for<lb/>
employees who belong to clubs that engage<lb/>
in "discrimination How utterly<lb/>
ridiculous can the government get It is no<lb/>
business of the government what private<lb/>
club anybody belongs to. Is there no sanc-<lb/>
tuary of privacy0<lb/>
Hopefuly the administration of Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan will be able to undo these acts<lb/>
Robert M.<lb/>
Swaim<lb/>
ir- 4 ?l )i?<lb/>
of tyranny that are the result of the last<lb/>
vestiges of liberalism.<lb/>
OSHA, an overzealous body of<lb/>
regulatory bureaucrats, has been busy put-<lb/>
ting the last minute screws to American<lb/>
business. Once again, over the objections<lb/>
of Reagan transition officials, they have<lb/>
issued new "work safety rules No one<lb/>
objects to a safe environment for workers.<lb/>
Workers are usually shielded from danger<lb/>
by management that doesn't like the costs<lb/>
of accidents that result in increased costs<lb/>
of workmen's compensation and lost work<lb/>
time. These new regulations are just<lb/>
another load of federal red tape and ex-<lb/>
cessive paperwork.<lb/>
The Department of Energy, destined for<lb/>
dismantlement by President Reagan and<lb/>
Governor Edwards, energy secretary<lb/>
designate, has imposed several hundred<lb/>
million dollars in fines on oil companies.<lb/>
These fines were imposed because the oil<lb/>
companies could not understand the in-<lb/>
tricate and contradictory price rules that<lb/>
the energy department wrote several years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
The EPA, another legendary legacy of<lb/>
red tape, has issued new water pollution<lb/>
standards that will cost the pulp and paper<lb/>
industry 1.8 billion dollars in control costs<lb/>
by 1984. Guess who the pulp companies<lb/>
are going to pass that increased cost on to?<lb/>
The hard working American taxpayers<lb/>
are footing the bills not only for the in-<lb/>
creased costs of consumer goods due to<lb/>
costly regulations being imposed on<lb/>
business, but we are also suffering from<lb/>
decreased productivity and industrial<lb/>
development that would create jobs were it<lb/>
not for the outrageous costs that American<lb/>
industry and businesses incur in complying<lb/>
with ridiculous regulations.<lb/>
When will this idiocy end? Hopefully on<lb/>
January 20 when President Reagan takes<lb/>
office.<lb/>
 we're beginning to ignore the<lb/>
sacredness of the individual. If we keep go-<lb/>
ing in that direction there can be one out<lb/>
come: our surrender to a totally govern-<lb/>
ment planned and controlled society. And<lb/>
when it happens it will be called the<lb/>
'fulfillment of the liberal dream But in<lb/>
fact it will be fascism, because that's what<lb/>
fascism is: private ownership with total<lb/>
government control so said President<lb/>
Reagan in 1976.<lb/>
Government must once again be made<lb/>
the slave of the people rather than the<lb/>
master it has become over the past 50 years<lb/>
of liberal Democratic control and socialist<lb/>
drift.<lb/>
t<lb/>
4t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057312_0005"/><lb/>
TU&amp; V<lb/>
HI I si . Kol I MAS<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JANUARY 20, 1981<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Washington: Preoccupied With Social Games<lb/>
l rom I Iw N vcrri<lb/>
One Kissinger is worth two<lb/>
Brzczinskis. A George S ill oi an Al<lb/>
Haig outweighs a doen liberal col-<lb/>
umnists or a cloakroom ol<lb/>
Democratic senators.<lb/>
Suddenly Sen Strom I"hurmond.<lb/>
the upcoming chairman of the<lb/>
Judiciary Committee, is one of the<lb/>
mosl sought-after men in town. Sen.<lb/>
Howard Baker, the new majority<lb/>
leader, could show up at the open-<lb/>
ing ol a car wash and the<lb/>
Washington, papers would dispatch<lb/>
a photographer and two social<lb/>
reporters to cover him.<lb/>
Even now. the courtiers are press<lb/>
ing at the White House gates. Forget<lb/>
Jod) Powell and Gerry Rafshoon.<lb/>
Does anyone here know Beis<lb/>
Bloomingdale? In the Washington<lb/>
social power game, it is never too<lb/>
earl) to begin one's moves.<lb/>
Washington is always preoc-<lb/>
cupied with the social power game,<lb/>
but never more so than at the onset<lb/>
ol a new administration. The game<lb/>
is crucial to how the city operates,<lb/>
from court appointments to foreign<lb/>
aid. Henry Kissinger nourished dur-<lb/>
ing the Nixon years, in part, b<lb/>
playing the game well. Zbigniew<lb/>
Brzezinski tried but was clumsy.<lb/>
Jimmy i arter never even<lb/>
understood the rules. But Ronald<lb/>
Reagan. Ah, Mr. Reagan! On his<lb/>
tirst full evening in town after the<lb/>
election, he wooed the souls oi 50 of<lb/>
Washington's most influential<lb/>
leaders over veal piecata at the ex<lb/>
elusive F Street Club.<lb/>
I ooks, charm, wealth, intellect ?<lb/>
alone they count for little in<lb/>
Washington. Power is all. What<lb/>
really matters is: Whom do you<lb/>
know What have you done? And<lb/>
what can you do for me? Ciuests<lb/>
don't get invited out in Washington<lb/>
because they've got twinkly blue<lb/>
eves<lb/>
One can disapprove of the game.<lb/>
One can laugh at it. One can, as Mr.<lb/>
Reagan's speechwriter Anthony R.<lb/>
Dolan did recently, call it pagan.<lb/>
But if one wants to succeed in<lb/>
Washington, one cannot dismiss it.<lb/>
Nobody among the 2,500 men<lb/>
and women who make up the inner<lb/>
village oi pol i t i c a 1 - soc i a 1<lb/>
Washington goes anywhere just for<lb/>
fun. "It's really a continuation of a<lb/>
day's wrok says 1 orraine Cooper,<lb/>
a veteran hostess and wife of former<lb/>
Sen. John Sherman Cooper. The<lb/>
advantages oi parties and the ac-<lb/>
quaintances made there are substan-<lb/>
tial and particular.<lb/>
Sen. Claiborne Pell: "You can<lb/>
better perceive where areas of com-<lb/>
promise might be on a difficult issue<lb/>
than you can in a general meeting<lb/>
Joan Braden, lobbyist and<lb/>
hostess: "When you go to testify, it<lb/>
is much easier to get your point of<lb/>
view across if you know someone<lb/>
(on the congressional committee)<lb/>
Alejandro Orfila, secretary<lb/>
general ot the Organization of<lb/>
American States: "You can advance<lb/>
the goals of your country<lb/>
Some Washington figures have<lb/>
exercised power for years without<lb/>
ever going out at all. Senate majori-<lb/>
ty leader Robert C. Byrd and the<lb/>
conservative columnist James J.<lb/>
Kilpatrick, to name two, are rarely<lb/>
seen on the social circuit. But they<lb/>
are exceptions. I ew can afford to do<lb/>
without the sometimes dramatic op-<lb/>
portunities parties offer.<lb/>
ITEM: At a dinner at the<lb/>
Austrian Embassy last July,<lb/>
presidential counsel I lovd V Cutler<lb/>
took Attorney General Benjamin R.<lb/>
Civiletti aside and told him the<lb/>
president had misremembered a<lb/>
conversation with Civiletti concern-<lb/>
ing Billy Carter's relationship with<lb/>
I ibya. The following day, Civiletti<lb/>
disclosed the new information at a<lb/>
press conference.<lb/>
ITEM: At a dinner party given in<lb/>
1977 by Barbara Walters, who<lb/>
though based in New York is a<lb/>
regular on the Washington social<lb/>
scene, the Israeli and Egyptian am-<lb/>
bassadors chatted cordially about<lb/>
their countries' mutual efforts<lb/>
toward peace. They had never<lb/>
before officially acknowledged each<lb/>
others' existence.<lb/>
Such historic moments are,<lb/>
however, less typical of the social<lb/>
power game than the night-in,<lb/>
night-out collective judgments that<lb/>
are rendered regarding<lb/>
Washington's leaders. Who's OK?<lb/>
Who's not OK? Who's moving up?<lb/>
Who's on his way out?<lb/>
The end result of that process can<lb/>
drastically alter the way a diplomat<lb/>
or administrator or senator is<lb/>
perceived. It can make him win, or<lb/>
lose, the favor of his pecs. And<lb/>
who can estimate the usefulness of a<lb/>
friendship, formed or cemented<lb/>
under such auspices? Do columnists<lb/>
write critical pieces about their<lb/>
friends? Do bureaucrats stand in the<lb/>
way of their friends' projects? Do<lb/>
senators grill their friends in com-<lb/>
mittee hearings?<lb/>
When Richard Helms was under<lb/>
fire several years ago tor his ac-<lb/>
tivities while director of the CIA,<lb/>
several important friends petitioned<lb/>
the then attorney general, Griffin B<lb/>
Bell, to go easy on him. Would<lb/>
some officials of the U.S. govern-<lb/>
ment and members of the<lb/>
Washington press corps have viewed<lb/>
the Shah of Iran somewhat dit<lb/>
ferently had they not been such<lb/>
regular guests at the Iranian Em-<lb/>
bassy? Ambassador Ardeshir<lb/>
Zahedi's lavish entertainments and<lb/>
generous supplies of caviar made<lb/>
him one of the town's most popular<lb/>
hosts.<lb/>
To gain the approval of<lb/>
Washington's inner village, to win<lb/>
the friends who can help, one must<lb/>
work at it, and nobody played the<lb/>
game better than Henry Kissinger.<lb/>
He was powerful, brillant, witty and<lb/>
accessible, and from the earliest<lb/>
days of the Nixon administration he<lb/>
was everywhere ? catching a movie<lb/>
with Kay Graham, lunching at his<lb/>
While House office with former<lb/>
Ambassador W. Averell Harnman,<lb/>
See WASHINGTON. page 7, col. 1<lb/>
or<lb/>
pages.<lb/>
due to<lb/>
re the<lb/>
we keep go-<lb/>
be one out<lb/>
illy govern<lb/>
ociety. And<lb/>
called the<lb/>
im But m<lb/>
at's what<lb/>
nth total<lb/>
President<lb/>
in be made<lb/>
rr than the<lb/>
50years<lb/>
id socialist<lb/>
Directions For Cooking<lb/>
Some Tastier Meals<lb/>
Bv klll WEYl IK<lb/>
mong the : ew and<lb/>
whelming experiences novice<lb/>
college students may have is the task<lb/>
of providing themselves with decent<lb/>
J. W he:tie; on-campus<lb/>
the op- ire pretty much<lb/>
same: the various ( I dining<lb/>
establishments, the v<lb/>
v ille dm iments, or<lb/>
prep I ;n oui doi m i<lb/>
i part men t. At some time or<lb/>
' ,T whatever reasons, the<lb/>
ns will probably be<lb/>
unsuitable foi everv student. When<lb/>
this happens, he can (1) live on<lb/>
peanut butter and or lunchmeat<lb/>
sandwiches oi (2) learn to cook.<lb/>
Do noi lei. reader,<lb/>
at the pos cooking, It is<lb/>
surp- simple - and wonder-<lb/>
fully cheap compared to eating out.<lb/>
It you can read this article you<lb/>
?so<lb/>
ic skills necessarv to bake<lb/>
broil or fry any number ot delicious<lb/>
nly cooking limitation<lb/>
plac, I students is pr <lb/>
ly a lack ot space and ap-<lb/>
pliances, and even this problem is<lb/>
fairly easily to oercome.<lb/>
1 o ook, at least one appliance is<lb/>
needed. Having only one appliance<lb/>
will limit m oils; two or more<lb/>
sources is terrific. I he most useful<lb/>
are as follows:<lb/>
A hot plate or burner - il foi<lb/>
boiling, frying, and heating canned<lb/>
foods.<lb/>
A hot pot aimosi as is a<lb/>
hot plate, but not suitable for fry-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
 toaster oven - perfect tor hak-<lb/>
toasting, and. I e mode! ?<lb/>
mits, broiling I consider this i<lb/>
indispensible. It you do not possess<lb/>
one, put it on your "gimme" list tor<lb/>
birthdays and I I<lb/>
With these three items, it js possi<lb/>
ble to prepare a fantastic meal<lb/>
without a kitchen. It you live off<lb/>
campus and have a kitchen, that is<lb/>
even better. I tie square thing with a<lb/>
door on the front and four circular<lb/>
objects on top is an oven. Do not be<lb/>
afraid to use it. But don<lb/>
small appliances from your dorm<lb/>
room davs. toaster oven will Jo<lb/>
almost anything a regular men will<lb/>
Jo and uses less electricity, ton.<lb/>
Once small appliances have been<lb/>
acquired, a tew accessories are need<lb/>
ed to help you use them, rhese are<lb/>
known collectively as pots and pans.<lb/>
Assuming you have at least two<lb/>
plates and cups or glasses, the<lb/>
following is a bate minimum oi<lb/>
what vou will probably need to turn<lb/>
out a nice me,<lb/>
')ne or, better vet, two cooking<lb/>
pots ot at least a one quart capac<lb/>
One might be a frying pan.<lb/>
 of<lb/>
MS Et<lb/>
w i?, 1.945<lb/>
SS<lb/>
<lb/>
 ? tamo<lb/>
aH,f 1<lb/>
C, t(<lb/>
! IKS IN<lb/>
Monuments Of The Past<lb/>
These tombstones rest in a pile in a weed-covered corner of the courtyard of<lb/>
the old East Cafeteria Building.<lb/>
 , ' " S<lb/>
? . b. -<lb/>
A casserole dish of at least a one<lb/>
and  I a ' quart capacity. I prefer<lb/>
glass otorningware. Corningware<lb/>
can be used on top of a burner.<lb/>
 can opener ? manual is just as<lb/>
good as electric.<lb/>
 measuring cup and measuring<lb/>
spOl ?<lb/>
V leasl two spoons and forks and<lb/>
e knife preferably sharp.<lb/>
rhings that come in handy but<lb/>
vou can manage without: a grater, a<lb/>
colander, bowl serapers, a loaf pan,<lb/>
pie pan. baking dish (square or rec-<lb/>
baking sheet, rolling pin,<lb/>
and sifter.<lb/>
Alter vou have acquired all the<lb/>
items necessary lor your makeshift<lb/>
kitchen (watch the dollar specials at<lb/>
discount stores foi bargains on these<lb/>
items), you are ready to cook. Ac-<lb/>
tually lumping m and preparing<lb/>
tood from scratch is a little scarv at<lb/>
. so let's ease into it with some<lb/>
See UPS, page 7, col. 1 Luckily, the worst part off the semester book-buying rush has suosiaed. making shopping for textbooks<lb/>
Applying To Princeton<lb/>
<lb/>
Browsing For Textbooks<lb/>
t ??? GAKV: PAT! ?<lb/>
quiet<lb/>
PRIN( 1 ION. N.J. (CPS) ?<lb/>
Ciod has applied to Princeton.<lb/>
Hoping to be accepted to the<lb/>
(lass oi 1985. God wrote a<lb/>
"personal statement" sent in<lb/>
December to the Princeton Admis-<lb/>
sions Office that He would like to<lb/>
"experience first-hand what college<lb/>
life is presently like He added that<lb/>
it did not seem right that He listen in<lb/>
on courses that He has not been ad-<lb/>
mitted.<lb/>
The application was brought to<lb/>
the attention oi James Wickenden,<lb/>
director oi admissions, who<lb/>
reported to the Princeton Weekly<lb/>
Bulletin that the candidate entered<lb/>
his name only as "God In describ-<lb/>
ing Himself, God checked both<lb/>
male and female for gender and<lb/>
checked all possible ethnic origins,<lb/>
in addition to writing "You name<lb/>
it next to the ethnic origin<lb/>
response marked "other<lb/>
W ickcnden said he was not sur-<lb/>
prised at the applicant's test scores,<lb/>
which included perfect 800s on both<lb/>
the math and verbal portions of the<lb/>
SAT. However. He hadn't fared<lb/>
quite as well on the College En-<lb/>
trance Examination Board's<lb/>
achievement tests. An error on the<lb/>
relativity question on the physics<lb/>
achievement test dropped the score<lb/>
to only 760. On the application,<lb/>
though, Ciod resolutely maintained<lb/>
"Einstein is wrong perhaps prov-<lb/>
ing that to err is divine.<lb/>
In biology, He scored 770 because<lb/>
His answers on the evolution ques-<lb/>
tion were also marked as incorrect.<lb/>
In the essay portion of the ap-<lb/>
plication, Ciod wrote His academic<lb/>
and intellectual interests included<lb/>
It's Almighty Hard To Get In<lb/>
"discreetly helping people and<lb/>
listening to prayers.<lb/>
"1 take advantage ot dreams and<lb/>
apparent accidents or mistakes (the<lb/>
realization oi the structure of<lb/>
benene and the discovery oi<lb/>
penicillin are good examples oi<lb/>
each) and get to be oi service to<lb/>
mankind he elaborated.<lb/>
Also included in his<lb/>
"non-academic activities" were<lb/>
"arranging the weather which<lb/>
takes up 168 houts each week, as<lb/>
does "listening to prayers Addi-<lb/>
tionally, God reported spending 14<lb/>
hours per week "turning day into<lb/>
night" and another 14 "turning<lb/>
night into day<lb/>
Although a federal privacy statute<lb/>
dictates that Wickenden cannot<lb/>
release any information contained<lb/>
in admissions applications, he told<lb/>
the Weekly Bulletin he thought it<lb/>
appropriate in this case to "be<lb/>
responsive to a higher law He<lb/>
acknowledged that this application<lb/>
was "the first of its kind" that he<lb/>
had seen.<lb/>
"A couple of fictitious applica-<lb/>
tions have been submitted over the<lb/>
years he said, "but those were of<lb/>
a different nature because thev in-<lb/>
volved human applicants<lb/>
The admissions office has no idea<lb/>
where the application came from.<lb/>
but said that the question received<lb/>
much speculation from students.<lb/>
"Everyone regarded it for what it<lb/>
was: a clever ruse he said. "I hope<lb/>
it made people laugh<lb/>
In releasing the information<lb/>
about the candidate. Wickenden<lb/>
noted that a separate application<lb/>
had been included in the envelope<lb/>
Even God, it seems, cannot escape<lb/>
certain human conditions. He ap-<lb/>
plied for financial aid.<lb/>
Crafts Workshops Offered Now<lb/>
Two different programs of non-<lb/>
credit short courses are now being<lb/>
offered for Spring Semester by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Crafts<lb/>
workshops, available through the<lb/>
Crafts Center, and mini-courses on<lb/>
several subjects, available for<lb/>
registration at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, make up the short course<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Crafts workshops are available to<lb/>
all ECU students, student<lb/>
dependents, faculty, staff and their<lb/>
dependents, who are Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center members, may par-<lb/>
ticipate.<lb/>
Payment of a $10.00 semester<lb/>
Crafts Center membership fee<lb/>
allows an individual to register for<lb/>
one workshop. All persons must<lb/>
register in person at the Crafts<lb/>
Center during regular operating<lb/>
hours, 3:00 PM until 10:00 PM,<lb/>
Monday through Friday, and 12:00<lb/>
N until 5:00 PM, Saturday.<lb/>
The final day to register is Satur-<lb/>
day, January 24 and class space is<lb/>
limited. No fees will be refunded<lb/>
after the registration deadline.<lb/>
Workshops available include<lb/>
silkscreen, stained glass, macrame,<lb/>
beginning jewelry and metalwork<lb/>
batik, quilting, photography, floor<lb/>
loom weaving, pottery and<lb/>
darkroom techniques.<lb/>
Individuals who would like to<lb/>
participate in a mini-course must<lb/>
register in person at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Central Ticket Office between the<lb/>
hours of 10:00 AM and 4:00 PM,<lb/>
Monday through Friday. Registra-<lb/>
tion fees will be accepted through<lb/>
the day prior to the first class<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Each mini-course has a maximum<lb/>
and a minimum enrollment. No<lb/>
refunds of course fee's will be made<lb/>
after the registration deadline unless<lb/>
the course is cancelled due to lack of<lb/>
enrollment.<lb/>
Each registrant must show<lb/>
hisher ECU ID or driver's license<lb/>
and ECU Activity Card or<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Membership, with the exception of<lb/>
a spouse or a guest who must be<lb/>
registered by the participating card<lb/>
holder.<lb/>
The mini-courses now being of-<lb/>
fered are CPR training, wine<lb/>
tasting, clogging and calligraphy.<lb/>
t<lb/>
T<lb/>
t <lb/>
-<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057312_0006"/><lb/>
1 HI I. AS I CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Ua??<lb/>
JAM ARV. 20, 1MH1<lb/>
I'age h<lb/>
<lb/>
Weekend Film Brings<lb/>
'Shining' To Campus<lb/>
Shis Friday and Saturday night,<lb/>
anu i 24, at 5, 7:45, and<lb/>
10:30 p.m. in the Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
lent Union Films Committee<lb/>
Si tnley Kubrick's "The<lb/>
as the third weekend<lb/>
film of the semester. Ad-<lb/>
II) and activity card or<lb/>
all Student Center<lb/>
Card.<lb/>
ey Kubrick docs everything<lb/>
  act. He finds a<lb/>
M, writes or co-<lb/>
nplay, chooses all the<lb/>
s vises the lighting and<lb/>
ites the cameras,<lb/>
it, edits the film, and<lb/>
 the publicity.<lb/>
nopula<lb/>
Me<lb/>
nbei<lb/>
shining, he continues in<lb/>
while directing .lack<lb/>
to one of his best, if not<lb/>
le, performances.<lb/>
on the pulpy<lb/>
ohen King, uses<lb/>
? t<lb/>
v<lb/>
' ui<lb/>
sential elements of plot<lb/>
vel and turns them into<lb/>
uignol.<lb/>
? the first times, at least<lb/>
angelove, the leading<lb/>
Kubrick film is at least as<lb/>
able as the photography, and<lb/>
' Kubrick's Hair has pro-<lb/>
to be in his skill as a<lb/>
tographer. Each scene in The<lb/>
or that matter each shot,<lb/>
either for max-<lb/>
? to help build<lb/>
Jack Torrence<lb/>
(Nicholson) finally loses his mind,<lb/>
and he must be completely crazy to<lb/>
explain some of the more illogical<lb/>
aspects of his sadistic actions, and<lb/>
takes to his wife (Shelly Duvall) and<lb/>
little boy (Danny Lloyd) with an<lb/>
axe, there are instances where, for a<lb/>
split second, the action is frozen, as<lb/>
it would be for a still photograph.<lb/>
Then the props begin to move. Add<lb/>
to this Kubrick's use of color and<lb/>
dazzling special effects ? the color<lb/>
is stark, without bright tones ? and<lb/>
you get the perfect transition o vi-<lb/>
sion from mind to screen.<lb/>
There are only two worlds in<lb/>
which life is this stark: Mr.<lb/>
Kubrick's and the subconscious. As<lb/>
it happens, what interests Kubrick<lb/>
are life's paradoxes, incongruities,<lb/>
and absurdities ? not the stuff that<lb/>
films are commonly made of, but<lb/>
that hasn't stopped the director thus<lb/>
far and doesn't even slow him down<lb/>
in The Shining.<lb/>
Moreover, he is certain that these<lb/>
things will interest other people as<lb/>
well. When he decided to make what<lb/>
he calls a "nightmare comedy"<lb/>
about the results of isolation on the<lb/>
average fellow, he felt it would have<lb/>
enormous appeal. The Shining,<lb/>
though its overall impact should be<lb/>
credited to the performance of Jack<lb/>
Nicholson, is obviouslv a Kubrick<lb/>
picture, and it illustrates anothei<lb/>
important aspect of the Kubrick<lb/>
method: he wants his pictures to<lb/>
have the widest possible audience.<lb/>
His reasoning is logical. One must<lb/>
get the largest possible audience to<lb/>
get the success that allows one to<lb/>
make only the pictures one wants to<lb/>
make. It is a simple philosophy that<lb/>
has worked very well for many a<lb/>
rebel boring from within, but it can<lb/>
be annoying, as it was to Mr.<lb/>
Kubrick when he bowed to real or<lb/>
imagined threats of censorship and<lb/>
made the film Lolita (1962) less sen-<lb/>
sual than he envisioned it.<lb/>
In many ways, the film as a whole<lb/>
is warped and is at times confusing,<lb/>
at least until the very last shot, but<lb/>
one thing is certain: Nicholson is<lb/>
tremendous.<lb/>
The danger in The Shining is that<lb/>
Nicholson will use his boyish<lb/>
shark's grin, the familiar preening,<lb/>
brutal one-up-manship. He's won<lb/>
the audience with his cocky freaks<lb/>
and this is the big one ? the bull<lb/>
goose loony. Nicholson can be too<lb/>
knowing about the audience, and<lb/>
the part he plays is pure temptation.<lb/>
But Kubrick keeps him in check.<lb/>
Sure, he steals the show, he always<lb/>
does, but for all the right reasons.<lb/>
Nicholson giving screen wife, Duvall, the axe in a<lb/>
scene from 'The Shininghis eyes are farther away,<lb/>
muggy, veiled even from himself. The danger in 'The<lb/>
Shining' is that Nicholson will use his boyish shark's<lb/>
grin, the familiar preening, and his brutal one-up-<lb/>
manship.<lb/>
Capra Double Feature Topical<lb/>
Richter's New Film<lb/>
Explores Germany<lb/>
Kenneth k one o the documentarv film's most stimulating plat-<lb/>
? ties, will appear in Hendrix Theatre, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
? n 20 1981, to present the new film, Germany. The program<lb/>
Admission for ECU students will be by ID and activi-<lb/>
new film is an exploration of a country that, despite the stur-<lb/>
man<lb/>
k against a weak dollar, is still an affordable travel<lb/>
pro ne plans carefully. Such planning is well wor-<lb/>
Germany is beautiful to visit, with the gloss ot a pro<lb/>
led b any nation on earth.<lb/>
voted several segments of the film to examine some of<lb/>
r uties. He focuses on the special problems and status ot<lb/>
in' divided by a wall. In Munich the film shows Nymphenburg<lb/>
Park and the English Gardens, two favorite relaxation spots tor<lb/>
Mumchers<lb/>
Ric<lb/>
Ucrmanv<lb/>
This Wednesday night, January<lb/>
21. in Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre, the Student Union<lb/>
films Committee will supplement<lb/>
today's inauguration proceedings<lb/>
with a special Inauguration Double<lb/>
feature highlighted by frank<lb/>
Capra's classic film of 1939. "Mr.<lb/>
Smith Goes to Washington The<lb/>
film will be shown at 9 p.m. only.<lb/>
Rounding out the double bill is<lb/>
another great Capra film. "Mr.<lb/>
Deeds Goes to I own" (1936), starr-<lb/>
ing Gary Cooper in the title role as<lb/>
the legendarv i ongfellow Deeds<lb/>
"Mr. Deeds" will run at 7 p.m. onlv<lb/>
and there will be a short break bet-<lb/>
ween the two films.<lb/>
Admission for the movies is free<lb/>
with student ID and activity card or<lb/>
MSC Membership Card.<lb/>
Frankapra has gone after the<lb/>
greatest game o all, the Senate, in<lb/>
"Mr. Smith Goes to Washington<lb/>
In doing so, he is operating, ot<lb/>
course, under the protection of that<lb/>
unwritten clause in the Bill o Rights<lb/>
entitling every voting citizen to at<lb/>
least one free swing at the Senate.<lb/>
Mr. Capra's swing is from the floor<lb/>
and m the best of humor; if it fails<lb/>
to rock that august body to its heels<lb/>
? from laughter as much as injured<lb/>
dignitv ? it won't be his fault but<lb/>
the Senate's and we should really<lb/>
begin to worry about the upper<lb/>
house.<lb/>
For Mr. Capra is a believer in<lb/>
democracy as well as a stout-hearted<lb/>
humorist. Although he is subjecting<lb/>
the Capitol's bill-collectors to a deal<lb/>
of quizzing and to a scrutiny which<lb/>
is not alwavs tender, he still regards<lb/>
them with affection and hope as the<lb/>
implements, however imperfect they<lb/>
may be, o our kind o government.<lb/>
Most directors would not have at-<lb/>
tempted to express that faith other-<lb/>
wise than in terms o drama or<lb/>
melodrama. Capra, like the juggler<lb/>
who performed at the Virgin's<lb/>
shrine, has had to employ the only<lb/>
medium he knows. And his comedy<lb/>
has become, in consequence, not<lb/>
merely a brilliant jest, but a stirring<lb/>
and even inspiring testament to<lb/>
liberty and treedom, to simplicity<lb/>
and honest).<lb/>
The magic of frank Capra is evi-<lb/>
dent in the 1936 classic "Mr. Deeds<lb/>
Goes to Town" ? perhap- the<lb/>
director's best film ot a long and<lb/>
prosperous career.<lb/>
The directing-writing combina-<lb/>
tions which functioned sN suc-<lb/>
cessfully in "It Happened One<lb/>
Night and "Broadway BUI" has<lb/>
spiced Clarence Budington<lb/>
Kelland's storv with wit. novelty<lb/>
and ingenuity.<lb/>
Longfellow Deeds is the hero<lb/>
the occasion and Longfellow Deeds<lb/>
becomes one ot our favorite<lb/>
characters under the attentive<lb/>
handling of Mr. Cooper, who prov-<lb/>
ed himself one ot the best light com<lb/>
edians in Hollywood. Mr. Deeds is<lb/>
the poet laureate ot Mandrake falls,<lb/>
Vt. He writes greeting-da) verses,<lb/>
limericks and Edgai Guestian<lb/>
jingles with equal facility, and he<lb/>
plays the tuba in the town band<lb/>
Then an uncle dies, leaving his<lb/>
$20,000,000 estate to the Vermont<lb/>
innocent, and Mr. Deeds, slightly<lb/>
dazed but unimpressed bv his sud-<lb/>
den riches, is tossed willynilly and<lb/>
tuba into scheming New York.<lb/>
Crooked lawvers beset him. the<lb/>
hoard ot the opera elects him chair-<lb/>
man, a girl reporter gains his con-<lb/>
fidence and then headlines him as<lb/>
the "Cinderella Man Crushed,<lb/>
derided, deceived and disillusioned,<lb/>
the lean I ongfellow prepares to<lb/>
share the wealth bv establishing a<lb/>
collective farm colony and then,<lb/>
crudest jest o all, he is hailed<lb/>
bet ore a lunacy commission and on-<lb/>
lv bv the narrowest ot margins and<lb/>
the love ot Miss Arthur, the repen-<lb/>
tant sob sister, e being<lb/>
Iged a manic depressive<lb/>
1; this is the storv in outline, it<lb/>
Joes not attempt to capture the gay,<lb/>
harebrained but eniireiy ingratiating<lb/>
quality of the picture. To appre<lb/>
that, you will have to watch Mi<lb/>
?per struggling with the tuba.<lb/>
Mr. Stander fighting ofl apoplexy,<lb/>
Ravmond W alburn (that most<lb/>
perfect gentleman's gentleman) rais-<lb/>
ing his voice against an echo. and.<lb/>
ultimately, the scene ot the lunacy<lb/>
commission's hearing which Is a<lb/>
perfect spoof of alienists.<lb/>
Nicholson In<lb/>
His Element<lb/>
In 'Shining'<lb/>
By COLIN DANCAARI)<lb/>
HOI I YVYOOD ? Jack Nicholson arches his<lb/>
evebrows and flashes that devilish grin. "I LOVE be-<lb/>
ing sarv he says. "There's nothing like having<lb/>
people take a little step to the side when they see you<lb/>
coming <lb/>
Nicholson, then, has good reason to be happy. His<lb/>
it movie. The Shining, is scaring people in suffi-<lb/>
cient numbers to make it a box-office hit, second on-<lb/>
lv to The Empire Strikes Back.<lb/>
For Nicholson, 43, it's his biggest success since<lb/>
 lew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. In the Hollywood<lb/>
s holding a full hand, but some of<lb/>
:ould be stronger.<lb/>
His longtime girlfriend Enjelica Huston will not<lb/>
marrv him although he keeps asking ? and<lb/>
despite his popularity he still can't get a job in town<lb/>
lor any oi his friends.<lb/>
nd even with this movie there is controversy, with<lb/>
some people simply failing to regard chopped<lb/>
as entertainment.<lb/>
In The Shining, directed by Stanley Kubrick,<lb/>
Nicholson plays a writer who lives with his wife<lb/>
(Shelley Duvall) and young son (Danny Lloyd) at a<lb/>
large mountain resort closed down for the winter.<lb/>
It is built on an old Indian burial ground and there<lb/>
are unanswered questions about the last caretaker,<lb/>
who chopped his family to death with an axe, then<lb/>
shot himself.<lb/>
In the same job, and in identical isolation,<lb/>
Nicholson apparently becomes obsessed by the same<lb/>
demons and, drooling at the mouth, axe in hand,<lb/>
stalks his family through a setting where the ghosts<lb/>
materialize as real people.<lb/>
Billed as "the ultimate horror movie it's a fitting<lb/>
follow-up to Cuckoo, in which Nicholson played a<lb/>
cra?y of another kind. Obviously he is cornering the<lb/>
market on roles for the demonstratively tormented.<lb/>
Certainly, he is building an unusual following.<lb/>
As he admits: "I have strange fans yeah. I get<lb/>
unusual confrontations in parking lots. A man comes<lb/>
up, invites me to his cave in Laurel Canyon, says he's<lb/>
Tpm Mix's alter ego and wants me to see his ghost<lb/>
horse. I get that a T?t, yeah<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
The Juilliard String Quartet features Robert<lb/>
Mann, violin; Earl Carlyss, violin; Samuel<lb/>
Rhodes, viola; and Joel Crosnick, cello. This<lb/>
unique American ensemble of four ideally<lb/>
matched virtuosi has set a standard of ex-<lb/>
cellence for an entire generation.<lb/>
Artists Series<lb/>
Big Four<lb/>
At Hendrix<lb/>
On Thursdav, January 22, 1981, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center's Hendrix Theatre will be graced by the sounds of the<lb/>
world's highest ranking string quartet. The Juilliard String<lb/>
Quartet, commonlv referred to as "the first family ot<lb/>
chamber music will take the stage at 8:00 P.M. for what<lb/>
promises to be a truly exciting performance.<lb/>
This unique American ensemble of four ideally matched<lb/>
virtuosi has set a standard of excellence for an entire genera-<lb/>
tion. In addition to serving as Quartet-in-Residence at the<lb/>
Juilliard School of Music (where its members have trained a<lb/>
number of the most successful up-and-coming chamber muM,<lb/>
groups) and Quartet-in-Residence at the Library of Congress<lb/>
in Washington, D.C. (where it gives an annual series of 20<lb/>
concerts on the priceless Stradivarius instruments willed to<lb/>
the people of the United States by Mrs. Gertrude Clark Whit-<lb/>
tall), the Juilliard String Quartet has to date played more than<lb/>
3,000 sold-out concerts, not only in all of the major cities of<lb/>
the United States and Canada, but throughout South and<lb/>
Central America, Europe, and the Near East and the Far<lb/>
East.<lb/>
"Better quartet playing cannot be found today said<lb/>
Harold C. Schonberg of The New York Times.<lb/>
The Quartet's repertoire thus far has included more than<lb/>
375 works, over 150 of them by 20th Century composers, and<lb/>
it is expecially noted for its championship of American com-<lb/>
posers, having premiered more than 35 works by Copeland,<lb/>
Foss, Piston, Carter, Babbitt, Sessions, Mennin and<lb/>
Schuman among others. In the summer of 1948 it made na-<lb/>
tionwide headlines for the performance of the complete Bar-<lb/>
tok Quartets at the Berkshire Music Festival in Tanglewood.<lb/>
It is also identified with the gigantic undertaking of presen-<lb/>
ting the complete cycle of Beethoven quartets, and it has<lb/>
repeated each of these two cycles more than 25 times and<lb/>
presented one or both of them not only in the leading cities of<lb/>
the United States, but also in Edinburgh, Berlin, London,<lb/>
Stockholm, Vienna and Tokyo.<lb/>
Under three major record labels (Columbia, Epic and RCA<lb/>
Victor Red Seal), the Quartet has made more than 80 major<lb/>
recordings, including two complete Bartok cycles, the com-<lb/>
plete cycle of Beethoven String Quartets, all the string<lb/>
quartets of Schoenberg, most of the string quartet staples,<lb/>
and such "specials" as the Copeland Trio, Piano Quartet and<lb/>
Sextet with the composer.<lb/>
WE<lb/>
AJ0 Pi<lb/>
(<lb/>
Wa<lb/>
( ontinud ti<lb/>
charming <lb/>
Joan B<lb/>
pla<lb/>
little<lb/>
favorite<lb/>
restaur<lb/>
while.<lb/>
worku j<lb/>
tiu,<lb/>
dropp.<lb/>
cemen<lb/>
somew<lb/>
Tip<lb/>
Sotrii<lb/>
Continued<lb/>
ds alre<lb/>
to a<lb/>
c v I<lb/>
You<lb/>
of ma<lb/>
xrw-<lb/>
a<lb/>
salt.<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
macar<lb/>
mix a c i<lb/>
package<lb/>
(You'll ne<lb/>
and a pc<lb/>
?<lb/>
oven i<lb/>
so<lb/>
While<lb/>
he<lb/>
tuna<lb/>
please,<lb/>
wastebasl<lb/>
it in:<lb/>
and cl<lb/>
flake<lb/>
i<lb/>
clumps<lb/>
teaspoon<lb/>
mixture<lb/>
well.<lb/>
!<lb/>
O f I<lb/>
alum <lb/>
bake<lb/>
minu:<lb/>
will prol<lb/>
the<lb/>
Rus<lb/>
Sch<lb/>
R;<lb/>
frat<lb/>
MonWi<lb/>
hou'<lb/>
The b<lb/>
the top tj<lb/>
Fl<lb/>
q<lb/>
? Expl<lb/>
-?? ? ??<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
'? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057312_0007"/><lb/>
IMF I MAKOI INI AN<lb/>
JANUARY 20, 1981<lb/>
Lc7)?ajQG Afiojnr CotuGf T Haw (YMy<lb/>
51 Daw A)ofitt<lb/>
WELL, THCflE'SJUbT<lb/>
ILL sty Got t Hmcut<lb/>
jvjmtk VHP Hty<lb/>
7;<lb/>
TO TUflrJ 6)C v)TD<lb/>
HifVf <lb/>
Washington: Preoccupied With Social Games<lb/>
C ontinued from page 5<lb/>
charming guests at<lb/>
Joan Braden's house,<lb/>
playing host at intimate<lb/>
little dinners at his<lb/>
favorite Chinese<lb/>
restaurant. And all the<lb/>
while, Killinger was<lb/>
working: picking up a<lb/>
tidbit of news here,<lb/>
dropping an item there,<lb/>
cementing a contact<lb/>
somewhere else.<lb/>
All of this effort paid<lb/>
off generously. Presi-<lb/>
dent Nixon had plann-<lb/>
ed to fire Kissinger<lb/>
from his post as na-<lb/>
tional security adviser,<lb/>
but when Watergate<lb/>
hit, Kissinger was nam-<lb/>
ed secretary of state in-<lb/>
stead. Presidential<lb/>
aides said later that<lb/>
Nixon apparently<lb/>
hoped to ease his other<lb/>
problems by choosing<lb/>
Tips for Cooking<lb/>
Some Tastier Meals<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
foods already familiar<lb/>
to a lot of students.<lb/>
EASY TUNA<lb/>
CASSEROLE<lb/>
You'll need: One box<lb/>
of macaroni and cheese<lb/>
mix. one can of tuna, a<lb/>
casserole dish, a little<lb/>
salt.<lb/>
Prepare the<lb/>
macaroni and cheese<lb/>
mix according to<lb/>
package directions.<lb/>
(You'll need a hot plate<lb/>
and a pot for this.)<lb/>
Now turn your toaster<lb/>
oven on to about 350?<lb/>
so it can pre-heat.<lb/>
While the oven's<lb/>
heating up, drain the<lb/>
tuna (into a sink,<lb/>
please, not the<lb/>
wastebasket) and mix<lb/>
it into the macaroni<lb/>
and cheese. Be sure to<lb/>
flake the tuna; that is,<lb/>
don't leave it in big<lb/>
clumps. Add about one<lb/>
teaspoon of salt to the<lb/>
mixture and mix in<lb/>
well.<lb/>
Loosely cover the top<lb/>
of the dish with<lb/>
aluminum foil and<lb/>
bake for about 30-40<lb/>
minutes. The timing<lb/>
will probably vary on<lb/>
the age, quality and<lb/>
Rush Bus<lb/>
Scheduled<lb/>
Rush Bus Service for<lb/>
fraternity rush:<lb/>
M onWed. operating<lb/>
hours: 8:30 12 pm.<lb/>
The bus leaves from<lb/>
the top of College Hill.<lb/>
condition of your oven.<lb/>
For a different taste,<lb/>
mix in one of the<lb/>
following before bak-<lb/>
ing: one small can<lb/>
(drained) of mushroom<lb/>
stems and pieces OR<lb/>
one small can (drained)<lb/>
of peas.<lb/>
This dish will serve<lb/>
two to four people<lb/>
depending on amount<lb/>
of hunger, so invite a<lb/>
friend to dinner. Shar-<lb/>
ing your cooking ef-<lb/>
forts with friends is<lb/>
always advisable as it<lb/>
assures you of ap-<lb/>
preciative tastebuds,<lb/>
dinner conversation ?<lb/>
and help with the dishes<lb/>
afterwards.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
To Begin<lb/>
The Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee will beein<lb/>
the 1981 Spring<lb/>
Semester with auditions<lb/>
on January 23 and 24.<lb/>
Performances for the<lb/>
semester will be chosen<lb/>
from these auditions,<lb/>
which will be held in<lb/>
Room 15 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center from 9 to 11<lb/>
P.M. Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day. Admission is free.<lb/>
The Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee offers a<lb/>
variety of contem-<lb/>
porary music entertain-<lb/>
ment and attractions<lb/>
suitable for a relaxed<lb/>
atmosphere. Free<lb/>
snacks are served in ad-<lb/>
dition.<lb/>
such a respectable can-<lb/>
didate, a man who was<lb/>
so much a part of the<lb/>
Washington establish-<lb/>
ment. Those connec-<lb/>
tions became apparent<lb/>
when Kissinger's<lb/>
nomination reached<lb/>
Capitol Hill and little<lb/>
of the expected opposi-<lb/>
tion from liberal<lb/>
quarters in the press<lb/>
and Congress<lb/>
materialized.<lb/>
Few in the Carter ad-<lb/>
ministration could<lb/>
count on friends in<lb/>
Washington. In<lb/>
February 1976, Jimmy<lb/>
Carter was introduced<lb/>
to the Washington<lb/>
establishment at the<lb/>
home of the columnist<lb/>
Clayton Fritchey and<lb/>
his wife, Polly.<lb/>
Everyone was impress-<lb/>
ed with the attractive<lb/>
newcomer who had<lb/>
recently captured the<lb/>
Iowa caucus. Yet<lb/>
Carter never managed<lb/>
to build on those initial<lb/>
social contacts.<lb/>
Carter's aides took<lb/>
their cue from their<lb/>
boss. Their initial at-<lb/>
tempts at socializing<lb/>
outside their own circle<lb/>
were infrequent and<lb/>
often misfired. Later in<lb/>
the administration,<lb/>
when some Carter staff<lb/>
people did try to reach<lb/>
out, it was too late. In<lb/>
the words of one<lb/>
famous Georgetown<lb/>
host, the Carterites<lb/>
were perceived as<lb/>
"little lOth-rate<lb/>
drugstore cowboys<lb/>
The people who<lb/>
wieldsoialjpowerare, tion<lb/>
for the most part, noi<lb/>
household names out-<lb/>
side Washington and<lb/>
they do not, like so<lb/>
many of their guests,<lb/>
ebb and flow with the<lb/>
changes in administra-<lb/>
D,<lb/>
Cteax-<lb/>
0PTICIANS<lb/>
3 CONTACT<lb/>
. 5?<lb/>
V <lb/>
J<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
I<lb/>
Soft Contacts<lb/>
79<lb/>
95<lb/>
10<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
on<lb/>
glasses<lb/>
HEAT UNIT INCLUDED<lb/>
Guaranteed Fitting Or Your Money Refunded<lb/>
SEMI SOFT &amp; HARD LENSES AVAILABLE<lb/>
-EYEGLASSES-<lb/>
single vision<lb/>
PLASTIC OR GLASS<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
(SELECT AAQC<lb/>
GROUP OF V9'<lb/>
FRAMES ?i 4<lb/>
UP TO PLUS OR MINUS 5D<lb/>
Any Tint 36.95<lb/>
EYEGLASSES<lb/>
BIFOCALS<lb/>
PLASTIC OR GLASS<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
5495<lb/>
UP TO PLUS OR MINUS 50<lb/>
(SElFCr GROUP<lb/>
OF FRAMES<lb/>
ANY TiNt,<lb/>
CLEAR VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N C<lb/>
PHYSICIANS QUADRANGLE<lb/>
BLOG A 1705 W TH ST<lb/>
Adi to E Carolina Eye Clinic<lb/>
G'en?ili? Stce Only<lb/>
VISA'<lb/>
m no<lb/>
OFFICE HOURS<lb/>
9am 5 30 p m<lb/>
Mon . Tues . Thors , Fri<lb/>
? a m i p m Wednesday<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
POINTER<lb/>
SISTERS<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
TICKETS will go on<lb/>
sale Thurs Jan. 22,<lb/>
at Apple Records,<lb/>
and at both Record<lb/>
Bars in Greenville.<lb/>
Photographer<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
for Photo Lab<lb/>
For More Information<lb/>
Call Chap Gurley at<lb/>
757-6994<lb/>
ig<lb/>
:0<lb/>
FREE FRIES<lb/>
with the purchase of<lb/>
a large Chili<lb/>
n<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
2<lb/>
:more meat than mama's chili<lb/>
OXJD FASHIONED<lb/>
HAMBURGERS<lb/>
Good at all participating Wendy's<lb/>
ExDres 131-H cheese fxtra<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Saturday, January 20<lb/>
Lunch- Chicken n' Dumplings, 2 vegetables ??????????.$1.79<lb/>
Supper- Ham Steak v pineapple ring,candied vams $2.29<lb/>
Wednesday, January 21<lb/>
Lunch- Liver c Unions. 2 vegetables?pl.o9<lb/>
Supper- hried Shrimp with hushpuppies $3.10<lb/>
Thursday, January 22 .<lb/>
Lunch- Meat L?ar with Spaghetti. 2 vegetablesJpl.yy<lb/>
Supper- Roast Beet with oven brown potatoes$2.29<lb/>
Friday, January 23<lb/>
Lunch- Salmon Pattv. 2 vegetables$1.99<lb/>
Supper- Trout Almondine, slaw, hushpuppies$2.49<lb/>
Saturday, January 24<lb/>
All Day- ' - Baked Chicken with yellow rice$2.59<lb/>
Sunday, January 25<lb/>
All Day- Country Stvle Steak with rice 1.99<lb/>
RlfiGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
111 W. 4th St<lb/>
QraanvNFa, N.C<lb/>
towntown QraanvWa<lb/>
Across From<lb/>
Bount-Harvoy<lb/>
Parking In<lb/>
Front &amp; Sac<lb/>
Of Shop<lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
758-02Q4<lb/>
MOFFITTS MAGN A VOX<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Magnavox 19" Color TV<lb/>
SQQQ00<lb/>
Sale Price OOZJ<lb/>
X. One Year Parts 6c Labor Warranty<lb/>
Lxpert TV Service Repair Available<lb/>
756-8444<lb/>
Located on Lvans Street Lxt.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY IS NOW<lb/>
nip<lb/>
TACOS<lb/>
25 Draft All Day Thursday<lb/>
1ST-<lb/>
Serving Daily 11:00 A M8:00 P.M.<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat Till 8:30<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Corpet Steam Cleaning<lb/>
&amp; Deodorizing<lb/>
I V O discount wcoupon<lb/>
Phone 752-3960 after 3:00<lb/>
Free Estimates<lb/>
E<lb/>
Located at 512 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(next to Tarheel Toyota)<lb/>
756-2072<lb/>
Dinner On Sundays!<lb/>
Free Delivery All Over Town<lb/>
Your Best Pizza and Sandwich<lb/>
Famous Pizza<lb/>
A NNUAL<lb/>
 nr IMPCW <lb/>
COmE THROW A ? AT<lb/>
THE SlGfnA OF YOUR CHOICE <lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 23<lb/>
:tiMPfERX<lb/>
330 p.?. REI2UCIB BEVERAGES<lb/>
EXCEPTIONAL<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
We Offer Current Opportunities<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
Small<lb/>
Nuclear<lb/>
Engineering<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Management<lb/>
Aviation.Law<lb/>
Nursing<lb/>
1 Medical School<lb/>
Scholarships<lb/>
i Civil<lb/>
1 Engineering<lb/>
' Shipboard<lb/>
Operations<lb/>
? Intelligence<lb/>
Most Liberal Arts Major Eligible<lb/>
The Navy Officer Information Team will visit campus<lb/>
on 27,28,29 January An information desk will be set up<lb/>
outside the Book Store An interview or test can be ar-<lb/>
ranged by calling 1 800 662-7568 toll free<lb/>
starting salary up to<lb/>
$18,000 increases over<lb/>
$30,00 m 4 years<lb/>
30 days paid vacation an<lb/>
nually<lb/>
fully financed graduate<lb/>
programs<lb/>
superior family health plan<lb/>
more responsibility and<lb/>
leadership opportunities<lb/>
world wide travel and<lb/>
adventure<lb/>
Prestige and personol<lb/>
growth potential<lb/>
Tomato&amp;Cheese3.00<lb/>
Onion3.20<lb/>
Peppers3.20<lb/>
Pepperoni3.40<lb/>
Mushroom?3.00<lb/>
Hamburgerm 3.40<lb/>
Sausage3.40<lb/>
2 Wav3.70<lb/>
3 Way4.00 <lb/>
House Special4.75<lb/>
Subs Small<lb/>
Meatball2.35 <lb/>
Sausage2.35<lb/>
Pastrami2.50<lb/>
Ham2.35<lb/>
Italian2.35<lb/>
Turkey2.35 <lb/>
Roast Beef2.50 t<lb/>
Super Sub2.50 <lb/>
Steak2.50<lb/>
Salads<lb/>
Tossed  .25<lb/>
Greek2.60<lb/>
Chef's ? 2.60<lb/>
Call for free<lb/>
Delivery 758-5982<lb/>
or 758-5616<lb/>
We're The Best<lb/>
Large<lb/>
 3.00<lb/>
3.00<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.00<lb/>
3.00<lb/>
3.00<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
3.50<lb/>
Famous Pizza<lb/>
now serving<lb/>
Greek Food<lb/>
Lunch Special<lb/>
Gyros 2.25<lb/>
Free Tea<lb/>
What's A Gyro?<lb/>
Gyros is a lean Blend of<lb/>
specially selected meats that<lb/>
are lightly seasoned and cooked<lb/>
to seal the flavor inside<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057312_0008"/><lb/>
1 HI EAS1 CAROl INI N<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANIAKY 20. 19X1<lb/>
Page H<lb/>
Tough Road Ahead<lb/>
ECU Defeats Devils<lb/>
By t HARIJES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports I ditor<lb/>
The East Carolina women's<lb/>
basketball team jumped to a quick<lb/>
20-point lead and held on as Duke<lb/>
battled back to down the Blue<lb/>
Devils 79-69 in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Monday night.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates outscored Duke<lb/>
22-4 during one six-minute span in<lb/>
the opening half to gain their biggest<lb/>
lead, at 30-10, following a Marcia<lb/>
Girven field goal at the 10:36 mark.<lb/>
Following Girven's bucket the<lb/>
Lady Devils called for a timeout and<lb/>
made some adjustments that paid<lb/>
big dividends.<lb/>
Duke went on a tear and got the<lb/>
ECU lead as low as eight, at 42-34,<lb/>
before going to the locker room at<lb/>
halftime down by 13, 47-34.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates opened the se-<lb/>
cond half much as they did the first,<lb/>
racing out to a 17-point advantage,<lb/>
at 53-36.<lb/>
Duke again settled down and<lb/>
began to chip away at the lead. The<lb/>
Ladv Devils got the ECU lead down<lb/>
to six, at 69-63, with 4:02 remain-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The Ladv Pirates then recaptured<lb/>
their poise" and ran off six straight<lb/>
points to push the lead to 12 and<lb/>
asure themselves of victory.<lb/>
"1 thought we really showed a lot<lb/>
of poise there at the end said ECU<lb/>
coach Cathy Andruzzi. "In the final<lb/>
two minutes, when we really needed<lb/>
to play well, we did. I'm very, very<lb/>
proud of that<lb/>
The win pushed the Lady Pirate<lb/>
record to 12-3 on the season and,<lb/>
more importantly perhaps, 1-0 in<lb/>
the NCA1AW standings. Duke fell<lb/>
to 7-8 and 0-1.<lb/>
"This was truly a great win for<lb/>
us added Andruzzi. "It's especial-<lb/>
ly big because its our first con-<lb/>
ference win. We definitely need to<lb/>
win these conference games<lb/>
The Lady Pirates turned to their<lb/>
inside game in gaining the win over<lb/>
Duke. Forward Mary Denkler was<lb/>
the game's leading scorer, tallying<lb/>
23 points, most coming on short<lb/>
turh-around jumpers.<lb/>
"Marv is doing a super job for<lb/>
us Andruzzi said. "(Duke) was<lb/>
closing up on Kathy (Riley) and Sam<lb/>
(Jones) alot. So we went inside. We<lb/>
can't just be an outside ballclub.<lb/>
You'll get nowhere being a<lb/>
perimeter team<lb/>
Aiding Denkler inside was senior<lb/>
center Marcia Girven, who finished<lb/>
with 17 points, 13 of which came in<lb/>
the first half.<lb/>
Denkler was nearly the complete<lb/>
ECU offense for a six-minute period<lb/>
in the second half. During that<lb/>
span, she scored 11 of 13 Lady-<lb/>
Pirate points.<lb/>
Jones and Riley also scored in<lb/>
double figures for ECU, tallying 14<lb/>
and 10 points, respectively.<lb/>
Husky forward Barb Krause led<lb/>
the Duke attack with 13 points.<lb/>
Center Stacy Hurd and guard Claire<lb/>
Rose added 12 apiece.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates now face a<lb/>
grueling scheduling that could bring<lb/>
the club into the national spotlight,<lb/>
should some big wins occur.<lb/>
The team hosts West Virginia this<lb/>
Wednesday in a 7:30 tilt and then<lb/>
travels across state's borders to play<lb/>
at James Madison on Saturday.<lb/>
The club then will take on a<lb/>
challenge that could lead it into the<lb/>
national rankings.<lb/>
Beginning on Sunday, Jan. 25 the<lb/>
team will take on three nationally-<lb/>
ranked teams in a five-day period.<lb/>
The team travels to 15th-ranked<lb/>
Virginia on Sunday and then returns<lb/>
home to take on number 12 N.C.<lb/>
State next Wednesday, Jan. 28.<lb/>
Tenth-ranked Southern Califor-<lb/>
nia follows on Friday, Jan. 30. Both<lb/>
the State and Southern Cal games<lb/>
will be played in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
with a 7:30 p.m. starting time set for<lb/>
both.<lb/>
Are<lb/>
IfMM t" C.?r?<lb/>
Pillcrvwi<lb/>
ECU'S Mar Denkler<lb/>
BILLIAMKLKRl)N<lb/>
SUfl Wrilrr<lb/>
Overall, the last leu days haven't<lb/>
been too good for the ECl wrestl-<lb/>
ing squad.<lb/>
This past weekend the Pirates<lb/>
ventured to Lynchburg, Va to par<lb/>
ticipaie in the I ibert) Baptist 1 out<lb/>
nament. They came awaj with a<lb/>
fourth-place finish and suffered<lb/>
three injuries to ke wrestlers, said<lb/>
head coach Hachiro Oishi.<lb/>
Injured are 118-pound Jeff 1 i<lb/>
who will probably be out six weeks<lb/>
and 167-pounder Andy Hefner, who<lb/>
probably will be out for at least a<lb/>
month.<lb/>
In the 150-lb, class Chris Files was<lb/>
also hurt, but it wasn't believed to<lb/>
be serious.<lb/>
I ast I hursda night the Pirates<lb/>
were upended h Northern Iowa,<lb/>
24-1 in Minges Coliseum. The<lb/>
much-anticipated rematch between<lb/>
Joe Gormall and Butch Revils in<lb/>
the 190 pound class ne er<lb/>
materialized.<lb/>
??Gormall) was defeated by Jerry<lb/>
Rodriquez oi N.C . State in a match<lb/>
before the one with us Oishi ex-<lb/>
plained. "He was probably mentalK<lb/>
upset and knew he would have a<lb/>
tough match with Revils, so he<lb/>
didn't wrestle<lb/>
Gormally, who is ranked second<lb/>
nationally in the lsX)-pound class,<lb/>
defeated Revils. the fifth-ranked<lb/>
wrestler in the nation at<lb/>
177-pounds. in the nationals two<lb/>
vears ago<lb/>
In the 190-pound class, Revils<lb/>
defeated Northern Iowa's Mark<lb/>
Johnson 14-7 to extend his unbeaten<lb/>
record to 14-0.<lb/>
(Photo by Orrw ??????<lb/>
Girven Boards<lb/>
Lewis<lb/>
Named<lb/>
l ast Carolina University<lb/>
tootball coach Ed Emory an-<lb/>
nounced today that Terry<lb/>
Lewis, former offensive line<lb/>
coach at Southern University,<lb/>
will become offensive line<lb/>
coach tor the Pirates<lb/>
1 ewis, 32, also coached<lb/>
linemen at Western Michigan<lb/>
and Illinois.<lb/>
??With his background in<lb/>
coaching offensive line we<lb/>
think Terry is the best coach<lb/>
on the market tor what we're<lb/>
looking tor Emor said.<lb/>
"We went after him and we<lb/>
fee! verv lortunate to ha'e a<lb/>
man of his caliber with us.<lb/>
A Dream Comes True For Watkins<lb/>
B CHARLES (HANDLER<lb/>
The young man say; it's like a<lb/>
dream. His coach feels the same<lb/>
way. May they both live happil)<lb/>
ever after.<lb/>
 es, the tale of how one Charles<lb/>
Watkins arrived on the scene (jusl<lb/>
the knick of time) to lead the 1 ast<lb/>
Carolina basketball team in scoring<lb/>
reads like a fairy tale.<lb/>
Watkins, a 6-3 guard, was recent-<lb/>
ly released from the U.S. Marine<lb/>
Corps. Upon his release. Watkins<lb/>
came to ECU and began to work<lb/>
wonders for coach Dave Odom's<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
The 24-year old sophomore join-<lb/>
ed a team in December that included<lb/>
six freshmen and only one senior. In<lb/>
onlv his second game, Watkins was<lb/>
a starter and now, atter playing<lb/>
eight games, is the team's leading<lb/>
scorer with a 16.1 points per game<lb/>
average.<lb/>
All this is amazing enough. But<lb/>
the most amazing thing about<lb/>
Watkins' story is the way in which<lb/>
he arrived on the Pirate scene.<lb/>
The story begins in the spring of<lb/>
The Watkins Jumper<lb/>
1980, following the 79-80 Pirate-<lb/>
cage season.<lb/>
"It was sometime near the end oi<lb/>
March recalls Odom. "One<lb/>
Saturday afternoon my sons and I<lb/>
were riding around.<lb/>
One o them asked if we could<lb/>
stop by Memorial Gym and watch<lb/>
our guys, who usually play there on<lb/>
the weekends during the off-<lb/>
season1<lb/>
Little did Odom know what was<lb/>
in store for him when his son asked<lb/>
to visit the gym.<lb/>
"We got there and two cross-<lb/>
court games were in progress the<lb/>
second-year coach said. "1 noticed<lb/>
one of the guys across the way. He<lb/>
was all over the court, dunking and<lb/>
everything.<lb/>
"1 asked Mike Gibson who he<lb/>
was and he said he was a Marine<lb/>
from Cherry Point<lb/>
The following Saturday Odom<lb/>
was back in Memorial, as was the<lb/>
talented Marine. This time Watkins<lb/>
was playing with the other Pirates,<lb/>
and performing especially well.<lb/>
"He looked even better than<lb/>
before Odom remembers "1<lb/>
talked to him and asked him if he'd<lb/>
ever thought about school. He said<lb/>
'Yeah coach, that's all I ever<lb/>
wanted He told me he'd heard 1<lb/>
might be there that day and he<lb/>
thought he'd try to impress me if 1<lb/>
was.<lb/>
Watkins was not offered a<lb/>
scholarship until the summer, when<lb/>
he was visiting with a number of the<lb/>
incoming freshmen.<lb/>
Even after the matter of the<lb/>
scholarship was completed, Odom<lb/>
still had to go through the process of<lb/>
clearing such an unusual deal<lb/>
through the NCAA because<lb/>
Watkins was not to be released from<lb/>
the Marines until January.<lb/>
January became December,<lb/>
though, because the New Orleans<lb/>
native had 40 days of leave saved<lb/>
up, making him eligible for play at<lb/>
the beginning of the spring<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
Watkins' first game came in mid-<lb/>
December in the Elm City Classic.<lb/>
He saw limited duty, but still<lb/>
managed to score nine points in a<lb/>
72-63 loss to Iowa State.<lb/>
Watkins drew his first starting<lb/>
assignment of his collegiate career in<lb/>
the consolation game of the<lb/>
tourney. The former Marine tallied<lb/>
14 points in 25 minutes of playing<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Watkins' third game was a home<lb/>
matchup with Campbell. The<lb/>
Minges debut was a smash. Watkins<lb/>
scoring 22 as the Pirates won, "5-65.<lb/>
Since that time Watkins has not<lb/>
been out o double figures, scoring<lb/>
21, 18, 19, 12 and 14 points in the<lb/>
last five games.<lb/>
"Charles' adjustment has really<lb/>
been amazing says Odom. "He<lb/>
has played in more games than he<lb/>
has been in practices. He doesn't<lb/>
know our system well at all. It's<lb/>
been really amazing<lb/>
Odom notes that Watkins has<lb/>
given the Pirates several dimensions<lb/>
that were badly needed: speed, scor-<lb/>
ing, and especially maturity.<lb/>
"He's very exciting; a very<lb/>
acrobatic player Odom noted.<lb/>
"But he'll be a much better player<lb/>
once he gets more practice time<lb/>
Watkins. too, feels there are some<lb/>
big improvements that must be<lb/>
made in his play.<lb/>
"I've got to work on my ball-<lb/>
handling and defense says<lb/>
Watkins.<lb/>
Suprisingly enough, ECU is not<lb/>
the first college that Watkins has at-<lb/>
tended. After graduating from high<lb/>
school in New Orleans, he took off<lb/>
for Louisiana Tech, where he stayed<lb/>
a year and a half.<lb/>
"1 just wasn't ready for school<lb/>
yet Watkins says o his decision to<lb/>
quit Tech and join the Marines. "I<lb/>
wasn't mature enough and 1 felt the<lb/>
military was a good place to get that<lb/>
maturity<lb/>
After a while in the Marines,<lb/>
Watkins learned what he wanted to<lb/>
do after his four-year duty was com-<lb/>
pleted.<lb/>
"I realized that you are nothing<lb/>
out there unless you've got an<lb/>
education. 1 knew that 1 did not<lb/>
want to stay in the military ? not<lb/>
because it's that bad, but because 1<lb/>
felt 1 was ready for school<lb/>
For the last several years of his<lb/>
military stint, Watkins was station-<lb/>
ed at Cherry Point, N.C. It was here<lb/>
that he was to meet the person that<lb/>
he would eventually plan to marry<lb/>
and the person who would lead him<lb/>
to ECU.<lb/>
Watkins began to see a young<lb/>
ECU student, Pamela Lane. He<lb/>
began to make visits to Greenville to<lb/>
see her and, meanwhile, began to<lb/>
get attached to the town's universi-<lb/>
ty' A<lb/>
Miss Lane, now a senior, and<lb/>
Watkins are now engaged and plan<lb/>
to marry after both are finished in<lb/>
school. Watkins is academically a<lb/>
freshman, as only eight hours<lb/>
transfered from La. Tech. He says<lb/>
Miss I ane plans to go on to<lb/>
graduate school, hopefully at UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Watkins leaves little doub: about<lb/>
why he chose ECU. "Pamela was<lb/>
the main reason he said. "I've<lb/>
really been looking forward to get-<lb/>
ting back to North Carolina to see<lb/>
her, plus 1 really like it at East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
It was during the stint in the<lb/>
Marines, Watkins says, that his<lb/>
basketball skills were honed.<lb/>
"1 played for one year in high<lb/>
school he said, "but 1 wasn't very<lb/>
good<lb/>
Once in the Marines Watkins<lb/>
played basketball almost habitually,<lb/>
starting out in the intramural ranks<lb/>
and eventually moving up to the<lb/>
Marine Corps varsity team.<lb/>
"On the varsity team you get<lb/>
college-level coaching Watkins<lb/>
explained. "1 learned a great deal<lb/>
from that experience<lb/>
The Marine varsity team is based<lb/>
in Camp Pendleton, Calif, and com-<lb/>
petes against area junior college and<lb/>
NAIA schools.<lb/>
The Marine team got little atten-<lb/>
tion, though Watkins says an assis-<lb/>
tant coach from San Diego State<lb/>
and other schools approached him<lb/>
about playing collegiately.<lb/>
Attention has been all in Watkins'<lb/>
direction, though, since he arrived<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
"1 can't believe this is happening<lb/>
to me Watkins said. "It's like a<lb/>
dream come true. I had the idea in<lb/>
my head that I'd like to go back to<lb/>
school and play basketball but I<lb/>
never saw it like this.<lb/>
"Everything has just fallen in<lb/>
place. Heck, I have never been in<lb/>
the newspaper in my life. I come<lb/>
here and I read about myself in the<lb/>
papers and I'm on television. It's<lb/>
really like a dream<lb/>
Watkins says he is not about to let<lb/>
the bubble burst either, expressing<lb/>
confidence both in himself and his<lb/>
teammates.<lb/>
"There's a lot of talent on this<lb/>
team. It's just very young. Even-<lb/>
tually we're going to jell and this is<lb/>
going to be a great team<lb/>
One might doubt how long a man<lb/>
in his mid-20's could stick around a<lb/>
university and play basketball with<lb/>
vounger players.<lb/>
"That's not a problem assures<lb/>
Watkins. "I love it here. I messed<lb/>
up at Tech but I'm not going to let it<lb/>
happen again. You know, four<lb/>
years of military make you realize a<lb/>
lot of things<lb/>
ECU sophomore guard Charles Watkins slams one<lb/>
home during a recent home game with Pan American.<lb/>
Since arriving on the Pirate squad following a four-year<lb/>
stint in the Marines, Watkins has become ECU's leading<lb/>
scorer with a 16.1 average. (Photo by Drew Rumbley)<lb/>
G<lb/>
L<lb/>
BV<lb/>
MALM<lb/>
stiff<lb/>
1 ne 1 <lb/>
gymnasticsi<lb/>
two n I<lb/>
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Hit I ASK AkOI INI AN<lb/>
JANl KV 20, 1 SH 1<lb/>
1<lb/>
lams one<lb/>
merican.<lb/>
tour-ear<lb/>
s leading<lb/>
umble)<lb/>
Gymnasts<lb/>
Lose Two<lb/>
u (AN DICE<lb/>
MAHHKWS<lb/>
suit Writer<lb/>
The ECU women's<lb/>
gymnastics team hosted<lb/>
two meets this week-<lb/>
end in Minges Col<lb/>
iscum, losing both by<lb/>
slim margins.<lb/>
Friday night the<lb/>
Pirate gymnasts met<lb/>
with Had lord and<lb/>
William &amp; Mary Had<lb/>
ford surprised<lb/>
everyone, however,<lb/>
winning the meet with a<lb/>
score of US.6. ECU<lb/>
and Wiiliam &amp; Mary<lb/>
finished with 116.05<lb/>
and 1065 points.<lb/>
respectivel).<lb/>
The 1 ad Pirates did<lb/>
extremely well in the in-<lb/>
d i v i d u a 1 s c o r1 n g .<lb/>
finishing with second,<lb/>
third, and fourth places<lb/>
in several events.<lb/>
In the vault, ECU<lb/>
gymnasts Joanie Ford<lb/>
and I muse Matthews<lb/>
contributed fine perfor-<lb/>
mances, tying for thud<lb/>
place with scores of<lb/>
8.2.<lb/>
In the balance beam,<lb/>
Jennifer Bell took se-<lb/>
cond place with a score<lb/>
o 7.55. The Pirates<lb/>
also took third and<lb/>
fourth place in the<lb/>
event with 1 i s a<lb/>
lamarru scoring a 7.2<lb/>
and Elizabeth Jackson<lb/>
receiving a 7.05.<lb/>
In the floor exercise,<lb/>
routines by Joanie Ford<lb/>
and Lisa lamarru<lb/>
claimed second and<lb/>
third place, with scores<lb/>
ot 8.2 and 7.95.<lb/>
"We were really sur-<lb/>
prised to beat William<lb/>
&amp; Mary said coach<lb/>
Jon Rose. "With fewer<lb/>
mistakes we eould've<lb/>
beaten Radford<lb/>
Saturday afternoon<lb/>
the Pirate gymnasts<lb/>
met with Madison, los-<lb/>
ing bv a score o 114.9<lb/>
to 113.83.<lb/>
i he 1 dd Pirates<lb/>
were not entirely disap-<lb/>
pointed bv their loss.<lb/>
Rainey Takes 2nd<lb/>
By WILLIAM<lb/>
YELVERTON<lb/>
Stiff Wrilrr<lb/>
1 he last Carolina<lb/>
track team found the<lb/>
going tough in Chapel<lb/>
Hill Saturdav as they<lb/>
finished behind UNC-<lb/>
CH and South Carolina<lb/>
in a tri-meet.<lb/>
The Tar Heels led the<lb/>
way with 64 points,<lb/>
followed by South<lb/>
Carolina with 56, while<lb/>
the Pirates tallied 15.<lb/>
EC IPs point total<lb/>
was deceiving,<lb/>
however, as the team<lb/>
onlv participated in the<lb/>
quarter mile, the<lb/>
6(H)-vatd run and the<lb/>
mile relav.<lb/>
Craig Rainey was a<lb/>
bright spot for the<lb/>
Pirates, finishing se-<lb/>
cond in the 600 with a<lb/>
time of 1:13.21. Team-<lb/>
mate Ray Dickerson<lb/>
was third with a time of<lb/>
1:14.0.<lb/>
Tar Heel Walter<lb/>
Miller was the winner<lb/>
with a time of 1:11.7.<lb/>
Head coach Bill Car-<lb/>
son was pleased with<lb/>
the efforts of Dicker-<lb/>
son and Rainey. "They<lb/>
both ran good times for<lb/>
that track. They are on-<lb/>
lv freshmen, but thev<lb/>
ran well UNC's<lb/>
Miller qualified for the<lb/>
Nationals last year.<lb/>
"We really lost to<lb/>
some good people in<lb/>
that event<lb/>
As for the mile-relay,<lb/>
Carson said that the<lb/>
time wasn't too bad for<lb/>
the type of track, which<lb/>
is boarded. The Pirates<lb/>
finished second behind<lb/>
UNC with a time of<lb/>
3:22.0, one second off<lb/>
the Tar Heels' pace.<lb/>
"Carlton Bell didn't<lb/>
start well, and he also<lb/>
collided with a IS(<lb/>
runner on the second<lb/>
curve Carson pointed<lb/>
out. "We were hoping<lb/>
for a 15-20 yard lead,<lb/>
bui could onlv manage<lb/>
a five yard one<lb/>
Overall, we ran fairly<lb/>
consistently<lb/>
The ECU head men-<lb/>
tor says he is looking<lb/>
tor more improvement<lb/>
when the team travels<lb/>
to Philadelphia to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the<lb/>
Philadelphia Track<lb/>
Club Invitational this<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
"At this meet teams<lb/>
will be divided into two<lb/>
groups. We'll probably<lb/>
be in the second group,<lb/>
but last year Maryland<lb/>
wa in the same one<lb/>
and they won it (ar-<lb/>
son said. "It's going to<lb/>
he a good meet<lb/>
( arson indicted that<lb/>
his team is "lookin<lb/>
little better now ,<lb/>
Dickerson is getting<lb/>
better andharlie<lb/>
Wat kins has shown a<lb/>
whole lot ot improve-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
iPhotn b (,?r PaMrrscni<lb/>
ECU Gymnastics Action<lb/>
however. "To come<lb/>
within one point of<lb/>
beating a Division 1<lb/>
team like Madison is<lb/>
pretty good said<lb/>
Rose. "We definitely<lb/>
have a good shot at the<lb/>
Regional Champion<lb/>
ship<lb/>
E C U again had<lb/>
several outstanding in-<lb/>
dividual performances.<lb/>
On the uneven bars, the<lb/>
Pirate gymnasts per-<lb/>
formed five out of six<lb/>
perfect routines.<lb/>
Claudia Hauck claimed<lb/>
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second place with a The Lady Pirates'<lb/>
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On the balance night at Duke.<lb/>
LSUDefeats<lb/>
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Willie Sims scored 22<lb/>
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Auditorium, February 24 26<lb/>
1 his ccnt has attracted man) not<lb/>
only from EC U, but from all<lb/>
around eastern North Carolina to<lb/>
sec exciting amateui bovine. I he<lb/>
Millei Brewing Company is spon<lb/>
ii this yeai and is pro<lb/>
viding all the trophies for the win-<lb/>
ners<lb/>
! he 1 Kl Bo namenl<lb/>
? 1976 as a ;ollaborative<lb/>
e Anpala<lb/>
chapter ot 1 kl 1<lb/>
mi State<lb/>
o! ihe funds<lb/>
?em to<lb/>
v hildren's Hospital.<lb/>
St. Jud ? the national philanthropy<lb/>
foi I an Kappa 1 psilon as<lb/>
Damn rhomas i- the 1 KI luni-<lb/>
977, 1 Kl a: I CU took<lb/>
ind has been i unn-<lb/>
1 a ? something interesting<lb/>
see u ' ? event. 1 asl<lb/>
. bin Plaj mate Jams<lb/>
Schmiti v! Greenville and wa<lb/>
the ring i the tournament.<lb/>
I his year, I Kh in holding a<lb/>
"?Ring Girl" competition at the<lb/>
"Elbo Room They are asking all<lb/>
fraternities, sororities, and dorms to<lb/>
sponsor a girl tor the competition.<lb/>
Any girl can also enter by herselt.<lb/>
1 he winner will be the "ring girl"<lb/>
tor the tournament and receive<lb/>
$100.00 in prie money.<lb/>
The tournament will also have a<lb/>
"Most Valuable Boxer" award to<lb/>
be voted on by the referee and<lb/>
another judge. The referee, b the<lb/>
way, will be an AAU sanctioned ol<lb/>
ficial.<lb/>
1 here will be nine weight classes<lb/>
stalling at 123 lbs on up to the<lb/>
heavyweight division of 2(2 lbs and<lb/>
above with tout boxers in each<lb/>
weight class. All equipment in-<lb/>
cluding 14 oz. gloves, headgear, and<lb/>
mouthpiece will be provided.<lb/>
Iheic will be reduced prices tor<lb/>
tickets thi year; $1.00 toi the semi-<lb/>
final nights and SI .50 on champion-<lb/>
ship night.<lb/>
Registration tor boxers will run<lb/>
January 19 through February 20<lb/>
between 6-9 p.m. at the 1 Kl house,<lb/>
951 E. lenth St at the bottom of<lb/>
the Hill.<lb/>
1 ot more information about the<lb/>
tournament or the "Ring Girl Com-<lb/>
petition call 758-7699'<lb/>
SPEC1ALGET ACQU Al N TE D OF F E R<lb/>
With This Coupon Good to Jan 3'<lb/>
Shampoo, Cut &amp; Blowdry Styling<lb/>
I<lb/>
EG<lb/>
RICE<lb/>
12<lb/>
so<lb/>
Tmo00'<lb/>
EXPERT STYLISTS<lb/>
FREE CONSULTATION<lb/>
I<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
SO50<lb/>
I<lb/>
LATEST EASY CARE<lb/>
STYLES AND PERMS<lb/>
NO APPOINTMI N<lb/>
NECI <lb/>
ill<lb/>
1111111<lb/>
irolma Edit Mrfll 7S6 8694 Mrs 10 9 Mon Sal<lb/>
AftORTIONtUFTO<lb/>
IftftWIIKO<lb/>
1 -?? 71M??NANCY<lb/>
1 "? 00 ??II H?ctv)??<lb/>
1p?t?ft?ft? H?t trt c?n<lb/>
1 f1 'SP' ,??f o. and problem prtynan<lb/>
 TuZ 1cy counting For fwrlrwr<lb/>
ti intortrtttor call 112 ?SIS (tall ' fraa nwmhar ino 77) mi) fettwttn t<lb/>
??<lb/>
iv"?lAMI p M waa?dar? NaMflh ?????'? MaaMi Oraamiaian firwMlNtaraaalt<lb/>
<lb/>
Buying Gold ? Silver Coins<lb/>
Also Sterling Silver<lb/>
Paying I op $<lb/>
Come in for KREL estimate<lb/>
Carolina Compact<lb/>
Kivergate Shopping Center<lb/>
Price may vary depending on market<lb/>
Available<lb/>
All Day<lb/>
Every Day<lb/>
Open<lb/>
1 1 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Sun. thru Thurs<lb/>
 a.m. 10p.m.<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat.<lb/>
Steer<lb/>
'pomi'y<lb/>
3005 E<lb/>
10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
(Behind Hastings Ford)<lb/>
Take Out Service<lb/>
Available<lb/>
758-8550<lb/>
FAST &amp; EASY DELICIOUS LUNCHES<lb/>
Swimmers Finish 2nd<lb/>
Soup &amp; Salad<lb/>
$199<lb/>
B IIMWU.I.lVMs<lb/>
Mafl VV nlrr<lb/>
lite ECl Women's swim team<lb/>
soundly defeated William c'v Mary in<lb/>
Saturday, by an<lb/>
82 48<lb/>
"I thought William &amp; Mar was<lb/>
one ot the better Division II MAW<lb/>
teams, but ? mr girls reall) mopped<lb/>
ip ECU coach Raj Scharf<lb/>
e case even though<lb/>
mes were not bet-<lb/>
lennifei I ayes did<lb/>
the qua ? . ne tor the<lb/>
-1 VA . ? . ps in<lb/>
kstroke with a<lb/>
??on the 2(X!<lb/>
r baci<lb/>
cd in first in the KM) and 2(H) meter<lb/>
butterfly.<lb/>
Other winners for the 1 ad<lb/>
Chicken Filet<lb/>
Sandwich<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
$199<lb/>
Diet Plate<lb/>
4 oz. Chop Sirloin<lb/>
Cottage Cheese &amp; Fruit<lb/>
$199<lb/>
Pirates were Maria McHugl<lb/>
HX)<lb/>
(<lb/>
11<lb/>
?'? cp;<lb/>
. <lb/>
? who rac<lb/>
treestyle, 56), Tammy Putnam<lb/>
(400 Individual Medley. 5:00.6),<lb/>
McQueston (50 freestyle, 26.1). and<lb/>
the 4(K) medley rela team (Jayco,<lb/>
Malcolm. Hennckson. McHugh).<lb/>
Coach Scharl stated that in the<lb/>
upcoming meet on Saturday, .Ian<lb/>
24. a: UNC-W, it was important<lb/>
that the girls did not have a let down<lb/>
because William and 1ur has<lb/>
beaten I MW alread) this year.<lb/>
I he meet also includes Virginia<lb/>
Common wealth University,<lb/>
las; Saturday's meet lett the<lb/>
1 ad) Pirates with a -1 avoid I n<lb/>
the season with the onl loss coming<lb/>
? ? North, Carolina, sixth place<lb/>
? s in the A1AW Nationals last<lb/>
Child's Plate<lb/>
4oz. Chopped Sirloin<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
Toast<lb/>
-69<lb/>
Banquet &amp; Party<lb/>
Facilities<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Steerburger &amp;<lb/>
Bowl of Chili<lb/>
$199<lb/>
Potato &amp; Salad<lb/>
$199<lb/>
No Potato<lb/>
Steak Sandwich<lb/>
Plain, Peppors &amp; Onions,<lb/>
or Mushroom Gravy<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
$029<lb/>
Steerburger<lb/>
With Baked Potato<lb/>
or French Fries<lb/>
Without Potato<lb/>
SPECIALS DAILY<lb/>
Mondoy &amp; Wednesday<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
$229<lb/>
Daily specials served with baked potato or french fries &amp; toast<lb/>
NO TAKE OUT ORDERS<lb/>
ON DAILY SPECIALS<lb/>
Tuesday &amp; Thursday<lb/>
8 oz. Chop Sirloin<lb/>
$"89<lb/>
DELICIOUS 30 ITEM SALAD BAR<lb/>
Home of Greenville's Best Meats'<lb/>
Overtoil's Super Coupon<lb/>
 ?? i <lb/>
COCA COLA &amp; PEPSI A<lb/>
2 LITRE BOTILK ISi<lb/>
NO LIMIT PEPSI<lb/>
98<lb/>
TROPICANA PURE<lb/>
ORANGE<lb/>
JUICE<lb/>
Vi gallon jug 99<lb/>
TIlrlMM<lb/>
iii'imh<lb/>
ouih y<lb/>
JUICI<lb/>
mitt: m<lb/>
SOU1 &amp; PRETTY<lb/>
TOILET TISSUE <lb/>
4rollPkg.gg$ &amp;?<lb/>
Fab Detergent Qt. Box 98$ with<lb/>
this coupon and $7.50 food order<lb/>
excluding advertised specials. Without<lb/>
coupon ? $1.79. Limit one per customer.<lb/>
Expires 1-17-81<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
16 oz. ctn. ol 8<lb/>
$1 38<lb/>
plus deposit<lb/>
No Limit<lb/>
1<lb/>
Overton's Finest<lb/>
Full Cut<lb/>
Round Steak<lb/>
$1 89<lb/>
1 Lb.<lb/>
California<lb/>
Large Head<lb/>
Lettuce<lb/>
38e<lb/>
4<lb/>
Morrell Pride Sirloin or<lb/>
T-Bone Steaks<lb/>
$029<lb/>
Del Monte Catsup<lb/>
Qt. Bottle<lb/>
78<lb/>
"W<lb/>
EATSUP<lb/>
<pb facs="00057312_0011"/>
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