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<pb facs="00057314_0001"/>
lEaat (Earnlintan<lb/>
S<lb/>
w<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 No<lb/>
A<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, January 27 1981<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 10,(KM<lb/>
Directors Name Maxwell As<lb/>
New Student Union President<lb/>
By PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
The Student Union Board of<lb/>
Directors announced Thursday its<lb/>
choice tor 1981-82 union president,<lb/>
and for the first time a minority stu-<lb/>
dent has been selected to till the<lb/>
position.<lb/>
Ronald Maws ell, a junior major-<lb/>
ing in music and arts management,<lb/>
will succeed outgoing president<lb/>
Karen MeLawhorn on March 20.<lb/>
Maxwell is currently chairman of<lb/>
the Minority Arts Committee and<lb/>
has served on the committee since<lb/>
the fall of 1979. He is also chairman<lb/>
of the University Union Committee.<lb/>
"I feel pretty good about it (being<lb/>
named president). I've wanted to<lb/>
hold the position of president since<lb/>
mv freshman year said Maxwell.<lb/>
"I'm looking forward to a good<lb/>
year<lb/>
On being the first black president<lb/>
Maxwell said, "I think it's an ac-<lb/>
complishment for the university.<lb/>
The university is making progress; I<lb/>
think we're moving ahead.<lb/>
"1 feel really good being the one<lb/>
to achieve it. I just hope I won't be a<lb/>
single case. We've come a long way,<lb/>
but we have a long way to go<lb/>
Maxwell did not feel that being<lb/>
black would affect his performance<lb/>
as Student Union president. "I have<lb/>
been involved in the Student Union<lb/>
far beyond my position as chairman<lb/>
o! Minority Arts he said, "and I<lb/>
have not encountered any opposi-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
During the next tew weeks Max-<lb/>
well will be involved in selecting<lb/>
chairmen for the union committees<lb/>
and will help formulate budget pro-<lb/>
posals for the upcoming year. "I<lb/>
think we'll have a young union he<lb/>
said. "A lot of people who are cur-<lb/>
rently chairpersons are<lb/>
graduating<lb/>
Maxwell said he has two main<lb/>
goals for next year, to establish the<lb/>
University Union and to bring a<lb/>
broader cross section of students in-<lb/>
to union activity.<lb/>
"I think people working in the<lb/>
Student Union could represent a<lb/>
broader cross section. We need to<lb/>
bring more minorities in<lb/>
Maxwell added that he would also<lb/>
like to see more lecture and theater<lb/>
presentations on campus.<lb/>
Maxwell will be attending a con-<lb/>
ference in San Antonio in February<lb/>
that will deal with general opera-<lb/>
tions of student unions. "I think<lb/>
this can be very important, especial-<lb/>
ly if we go under the University<lb/>
Union plan<lb/>
This plan would unite the Student<lb/>
Union and Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center into a single entity. "I think<lb/>
that can be a big accomplishment of<lb/>
the next year Maxwell remarked.<lb/>
Maxwell was chosen over two<lb/>
other candidates in a closed meeting<lb/>
of the board of directors, according<lb/>
to MeLawhorn. The other can-<lb/>
didates were Adam Smith, a<lb/>
member of the films committee, and<lb/>
Angelia Bnnn, an assistant editor of<lb/>
the Rebel.<lb/>
MeLawhorn felt that Maxwell<lb/>
was chosen because of his ex-<lb/>
perience. "It was a tough decision<lb/>
she said, "but Ron has had the ex-<lb/>
perience.<lb/>
"Ron will be an excellent presi-<lb/>
dent<lb/>
Ronald Maxwell was appointed as the new Student Union<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Kidney Transplant Nearly A Reality A t ECU<lb/>
ECU Medical School's New Program Brings Hope To Many<lb/>
By GEORGETTE F. HEDRK'k<lb/>
A new prog: am at the Last<lb/>
Carolina University School of<lb/>
Medicine and Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital will bring the hope ol a<lb/>
kidney transplant closer to home for<lb/>
citizens in eastern North Carolina<lb/>
with end-stage renal disease.<lb/>
Medical center officials were<lb/>
notified this week that approval to<lb/>
implement renal transplantation ser-<lb/>
as been granted b the Health<lb/>
ancing Administration of the<lb/>
Department of Health and Human<lb/>
Services. The program w:ll be<lb/>
directed by the ECU Department of<lb/>
Surgery.<lb/>
The medical school's Office ol<lb/>
Health Services Research and<lb/>
Development estimates that 168 pa-<lb/>
tients in the region will be medically<lb/>
eligible for a transplant in 1981. The<lb/>
Depart men! of Surgery expects to<lb/>
pert cm in 25 procedures during the<lb/>
first year of the program.<lb/>
Dr. frank Thomas, professor of<lb/>
surgerv and director of renal<lb/>
transplantation, said the new service<lb/>
would make renal transplantation<lb/>
"more accessible and convenient"<lb/>
to many patients who now depend<lb/>
on dialysis to rid their bodies of<lb/>
harmful wastes because their<lb/>
kidneys have tailed.<lb/>
"ECU and Pitt Memorial have<lb/>
excellent physicians, facilities,<lb/>
laboratories and staff to support<lb/>
renal transplantation here said<lb/>
Thomas. "We expect to perform<lb/>
our first transplant bv the end of<lb/>
January<lb/>
Thomas said surgeons at Pitt<lb/>
Memorial have removed more than<lb/>
30 pairs of kidneys during the last<lb/>
year. The kidneys have been<lb/>
transported to Duke Medical<lb/>
Center, headquarters for the<lb/>
Southeastern Regional Organ Pro-<lb/>
curement System that serves 18<lb/>
states.<lb/>
A computer connects the ECU<lb/>
transplantation program with the<lb/>
network of 136 medical centers<lb/>
across the nation that participate in<lb/>
the system. The computer is used to<lb/>
match a donoi kidney with a com-<lb/>
patible recipient, a process that<lb/>
usually takes place within 36 to 48<lb/>
hours after a kidney is removed.<lb/>
Potential organ donors are usual-<lb/>
Iv victims of strokes or severe head<lb/>
injuries who have irreparable brain<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
Thomas said a patient requesting<lb/>
a kidney transplant will first have an<lb/>
educational consultation with a<lb/>
nephrologist and a transplant<lb/>
surgeon to discuss the risks and<lb/>
benefits of dialysis and transplanta-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The next step will be to determine<lb/>
if a kidney is available from a living<lb/>
related donor � either a brother,<lb/>
sister, father, mother, son or<lb/>
daughter. Thomas said that 90 per<lb/>
cent of transplants from living<lb/>
related donors are successful and<lb/>
that the survival rate declines as low<lb/>
as 65 percent for recipients with<lb/>
unrelated donor grafts.<lb/>
Tissue matching, drug therapy<lb/>
and immunological monitoring<lb/>
Communications Major Being Developed<lb/>
determine the recipient's chances of<lb/>
successfully accepting the new<lb/>
kidney.<lb/>
rhomas said a kidney transplant<lb/>
usually takes about two hours. The<lb/>
recipient and living related donor<lb/>
will be in adjoining operating<lb/>
rooms, and once the kidney is<lb/>
removed from the donor, it will be<lb/>
rinsed with a cold solution and<lb/>
transplanted immediately.<lb/>
A patient who is not compatible<lb/>
with a living related donor may<lb/>
spend up to two years on a waiting<lb/>
list before a suitable kidney is<lb/>
located thn ugh the organ procure-<lb/>
ment system Organs identified<lb/>
through the computer network will<lb/>
be transported to Greenville in a<lb/>
special preservation machine that<lb/>
will protect the kidney until surgerv<lb/>
is performed.<lb/>
Before and alter surgerv, a pa-<lb/>
tient is treated with immunosup-<lb/>
pressive drugs to block the body's<lb/>
natural rejection of the new kidney.<lb/>
Careful monitoring allows physi<lb/>
cians to modify drug therapy, an ac-<lb/>
tion which mav reverse a patient's<lb/>
initial rejection of an organ.<lb/>
Most paitents remain in the<lb/>
hospital 30 days to test kidney func-<lb/>
tion and modify drug therapy. After<lb/>
leaving the hospital, patients will<lb/>
visit the transplantation clinic for<lb/>
additional immunological monitor-<lb/>
ing. If a kidney is not rejected in 60<lb/>
davs, Thomas said there is a 90 per-<lb/>
cent chance for a successful graft.<lb/>
In addition to permitting patients<lb/>
with end-stage renal disease to lead<lb/>
more normal lives, Thomas said<lb/>
thai Transplantation is also more<lb/>
effective than dialysis. Accor-<lb/>
ding to a study in the NEW<lb/>
ENG1 AND JOURNAL OF<lb/>
MEDICINE, over a 10-year period,<lb/>
transplantation is approximately six<lb/>
times less expensive than dialysis<lb/>
performed in a medical center and<lb/>
nearly tour times less expensive than<lb/>
dialysis performed at home.<lb/>
See KIDNEY, Paye 3<lb/>
BHADBIFKK1N<lb/>
siManl Nr� dtlor<lb/>
 degree in communications will<lb/>
be available for ECU students in the<lb/>
fall of 1981, "that is if things go as<lb/>
planned said Gerry Haskins,<lb/>
assistant professor of drama and<lb/>
speech.<lb/>
Haskins is chairman of an ad hoc<lb/>
committee for the communications<lb/>
major, a committee appointed by<lb/>
Angele Volpe, dean of arts and<lb/>
sciences to lay out the recommenda-<lb/>
tions for the major.<lb/>
Also serving on the ad hoc com-<lb/>
mittee are John Warren, Sally Brett<lb/>
and Bill Borden of the Department<lb/>
of English, and Jim Reese and<lb/>
Carlton Ben from drama and<lb/>
speech.<lb/>
In addition to laying out the<lb/>
course work for the major, the com-<lb/>
mittee is responsible for putting<lb/>
together a description of the major<lb/>
for the catalog, and for insuring<lb/>
that the program meets university<lb/>
policies and requirements. The final<lb/>
task of the committee will be to<lb/>
prepare the authorization materials<lb/>
for approval by the University of<lb/>
North Carolina system.<lb/>
"All functions of the committee<lb/>
will, hopefully, be completed by the<lb/>
end of February and we should have<lb/>
final approval for the program by<lb/>
fall semester of 1981 Haskins<lb/>
stated.<lb/>
The committee has also recom-<lb/>
mended two new staff positions for<lb/>
the communications major, one for<lb/>
speech and one for journalism.<lb/>
During fall semester of 1980 a<lb/>
survey was conducted by the com-<lb/>
mittee among students on campus.<lb/>
Seventy-five of the students<lb/>
surveyed expressed interest in the<lb/>
major. Also during this time, 90<lb/>
newspapers, radio stations and<lb/>
television stations in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina were surveyed by the com-<lb/>
mittee. Of those responding to the<lb/>
survey, two-thirds said they would<lb/>
accept practicum students under the<lb/>
program and one-half stated they<lb/>
would pay practicum students a<lb/>
salary.<lb/>
The communications major will<lb/>
have a core curriculum involving 17<lb/>
hours of course work required for<lb/>
all students. This curriculum in-<lb/>
volves fundamental courses in jour-<lb/>
nalism and broadcasting. The major<lb/>
will then offer two tracks of study to<lb/>
the student, a print track, which<lb/>
concentrates in newspapers, and an<lb/>
electronics track which concentrates<lb/>
in radio and television. After com-<lb/>
pleting the core curriculum, the stu-<lb/>
dent should have a good idea about<lb/>
which track to pursue.<lb/>
"After receiving the degree, a stu-<lb/>
dent should be able to switch from<lb/>
print to broadcast or vice-versa<lb/>
without much trouble Haskins<lb/>
stated.<lb/>
"From a public relations stand-<lb/>
point, a major in communications<lb/>
will be more valuable than a major<lb/>
in journalism John Warren add-<lb/>
ed. Warren also stated that over the<lb/>
next five years, 400 jobs in com-<lb/>
munications will become available<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
The program, when implemented,<lb/>
will be headed jointly by the Depart-<lb/>
ment of English and the Department<lb/>
of Drama and Speech. An ad-<lb/>
ministrator of the major will be ap-<lb/>
pointed and will act as a liaison bet-<lb/>
ween the two departments.<lb/>
Students with ideas or sugges-<lb/>
tions, or those with interest in the<lb/>
program should contact Gerry<lb/>
Haskins at 757-6629.<lb/>
Helms Tells Iran<lb/>
To Take A Walk<lb/>
WASHINGTON UP1 � Sen.<lb/>
Jesse Helms invited Iran to "take a<lb/>
long walk off a short pier" Monday<lb/>
and said the United States should<lb/>
not consider itself bound by the<lb/>
agreement worked out between the<lb/>
Carter administration and "a bunch<lb/>
of bums<lb/>
"I don't think the national honor<lb/>
of the United States hangs on the<lb/>
thin thread of living up to anything<lb/>
involving a bunch of bums the<lb/>
conservative North Carolina<lb/>
Republican told reporters after a<lb/>
McCallum Assumes Infirmary Post<lb/>
Pho?o By JON JORDAN<lb/>
James H. McCallum<lb/>
By OTIS ROBINSON<lb/>
Staff Wrilr<lb/>
After serving 33 years as director<lb/>
of Student Health Services at East<lb/>
Carolina University, Dr. Cary F.<lb/>
"Fred" Irons has stepped down,<lb/>
and a new head has been named.<lb/>
"My hobby has been my work<lb/>
said Irons, who remains as a physi-<lb/>
cian. "It has been very rewarding<lb/>
and very satisfying. I just wanted to<lb/>
step down as director<lb/>
Irons joined the ECU staff as<lb/>
director of the Student Health<lb/>
Center (infirmary) in July 1947 after<lb/>
serving as a medical officer in<lb/>
World War II. He served as director<lb/>
of the student health facility until<lb/>
Jan. I, 1981.<lb/>
"I have found it most interesting<lb/>
and challenging said Irons. "It<lb/>
has been a very valuable experience.<lb/>
The staff has been exceedingly<lb/>
cooperative. The administration has<lb/>
been most helpful<lb/>
Assuming directorship of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Center is James H. Mc-<lb/>
Callum Jr who has practiced<lb/>
pediatrics in Williamston for the<lb/>
past 20 years. "I am pleased with<lb/>
Dr. McCallum Irons said. "I<lb/>
believe he will do a fine job<lb/>
Though McCallum assumed<lb/>
directorship of the student health<lb/>
facility on Jan. 5, he said his<lb/>
predessor cannot be replaced. "I'm<lb/>
not replacing Dr. Irons he said.<lb/>
"You can't replace an institution.<lb/>
He's an institution in himself. I'm<lb/>
only relieving him of some of his<lb/>
responsibilities<lb/>
According to Kay Van Nortwick,<lb/>
administrative manager of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Center, a formal search<lb/>
committee was used to locate the<lb/>
new director. "I think he's outstan-<lb/>
ding commented Van Nortwick.<lb/>
"We're very fortunate to get him<lb/>
McCallum is a Wake Forest<lb/>
University alumnus and received his<lb/>
M.D. from Bowman Gray School of<lb/>
Medicine.<lb/>
He completed an internship at the<lb/>
U.S. Naval Hospital in Pensacoia,<lb/>
Florida, and pediatrics residences at<lb/>
N.C. Memorial Hospital in Chapel<lb/>
Hill, and the Duke University<lb/>
Medical Center in Durham.<lb/>
The new official said he is op-<lb/>
timistic about the future of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Center. He said: "Dr.<lb/>
Irons has done an excellent job. I<lb/>
was fortunate enough to step in on a<lb/>
fine program. My goal is to make a<lb/>
good program even better. I want<lb/>
this Student Health Center to be the<lb/>
best in the state<lb/>
The Student Health Services<lb/>
staff, which McCallum will super-<lb/>
vise, includes four physicians, a<lb/>
consulting psychiatrist, an ad-<lb/>
ministrative manager, two nurse<lb/>
practitioners, 14 nurses, laboratory<lb/>
technicians, a part-time pharmacist<lb/>
and supporting clerical staff.<lb/>
meeting in the Oval Office with<lb/>
President Reagan.<lb/>
"As far as I'm concerned they<lb/>
can take a long walk off a short<lb/>
pier<lb/>
Helms said he did not discuss the<lb/>
agreement with Reagan at Mon-<lb/>
day's meeting, but had earlier<lb/>
registered such sentiments with the<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Helms also said the Senate<lb/>
Foreign Relations Committee will<lb/>
hold hearings Wednesday on the<lb/>
terms of the agreement between Iran<lb/>
and the United States for release of<lb/>
the now free 52 American hostages.<lb/>
Reagan and Helms discussed per-<lb/>
sonnel, economics, and other mat-<lb/>
ters, said Helms.<lb/>
Helms said his opposition to<lb/>
Reagan's Defense Department<lb/>
leaders is abating somewhat with<lb/>
what Helms said was the imminent<lb/>
appointment of Fred Ikle to a top<lb/>
post in the department.<lb/>
Helms charged that Secretary<lb/>
Casper Weinberger and Deputy<lb/>
Secretary Frank Carlucci knew<lb/>
"scarcely anything" about defense.<lb/>
But with the "arrival of Ikle and<lb/>
others 1 think that will be<lb/>
remedied he said.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
I Jitonals4<lb/>
Classifieds10<lb/>
I eatures  5<lb/>
I etters4<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
I ntcrtainment7<lb/>
A<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057314_0002"/><lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN I M ARY 27. 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
KARATE CLUB<lb/>
A very imporlant meeting ot the<lb/>
Karate Club will be held Thurs ,<lb/>
Jan 2V in the Memorial Gym Doio<lb/>
Please be there at 7 30 sharp<lb/>
soc<lb/>
There will be a meeting ot the<lb/>
SociologyAnthropology Club or.<lb/>
Wednesday Jai 28 at 7 00 p m m<lb/>
BrewSter D 302 All are welcome<lb/>
to attend It will be a short<lb/>
meeting to organize the club for<lb/>
the spring semester<lb/>
Refreshments will be served Call<lb/>
Jim at 7S6 5004 for information<lb/>
EPISCOPAL WORSHIP<lb/>
An episcopal service of Holy<lb/>
Communion will be celebrated<lb/>
Tuesday evening. Jan 27 in the<lb/>
chapel of the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center i5lh Street across from<lb/>
Gar reft Dorm) The service will<lb/>
be at 5 30 p m with the Episcopal<lb/>
Chaplain, the Rev Bill Hadden,<lb/>
celebrating<lb/>
TO-NIGHT<lb/>
The event that could be the Turn<lb/>
mg point in your life Mendennail<lb/>
Theatre 8 00 p m Don't miss it<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
inter varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will meet Thursday<lb/>
n.ght at 7 30 in the Methodist Stu<lb/>
dent Center This week's topic is<lb/>
the fulfillment of end time pro<lb/>
phecy Everyone is welcome<lb/>
WOMEN'S RUGBY<lb/>
Women's rugby team meets<lb/>
Tues. Wed. &amp; Thurs. 4 6pm on<lb/>
the rugby fields behind the Allied<lb/>
Health Building No experience<lb/>
needed, anyone is welcome For<lb/>
more info Nancy 7S8 1160 or<lb/>
Kim 752 6388<lb/>
DELTA ZETA<lb/>
t et freedom r,ng Delta .ela<lb/>
toms the whole nation m welcom<lb/>
mg home 52 brave Americans We<lb/>
would like to remind all members<lb/>
of our big brother organization<lb/>
that there is a meeting at 4 p m<lb/>
Wed Jan 28 at the house Please<lb/>
it possible, bring your spring ac<lb/>
tivify tee<lb/>
GUITAR<lb/>
instruction in playing the guitar<lb/>
and banio will be offered on Wed<lb/>
evenings at ECU. beginning Feb<lb/>
11<lb/>
Each hour long class, meeting<lb/>
tor 10 sessions, will give bas I<lb/>
sfruction m playma styles care of<lb/>
the instruments and music fun<lb/>
aamentals<lb/>
banjo class will meet from<lb/>
6 30 to 7 30 p m . and the guitar<lb/>
c iass from 7 30 to 8 30 p m<lb/>
According to instructor Roy<lb/>
Kennedy, little or no previous e�<lb/>
perience with the instruments is<lb/>
required although participants<lb/>
should br.ng their own banios or<lb/>
guitars to class<lb/>
Further information about these<lb/>
other non credit evening<lb/>
courses is available from the Of<lb/>
? ice of Non Credit Programs. Oivi<lb/>
Sion ot Continuing Education<lb/>
ECU Greenville, NC telephone<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
The Society of United Liberal<lb/>
Students is sponsoring an essay<lb/>
contest in celebration of Black<lb/>
History Month The topic is<lb/>
"WAKE UP BLACK AMERICA<lb/>
The essay should be at least 3<lb/>
double spaced typed pages The<lb/>
deadline for entry is Feb 10. 1981<lb/>
1st Prize $50 00 2nd Prize<lb/>
J25 00. 3rd Prize $15 00 If you<lb/>
have any questions please call<lb/>
Gracie Wells at 752 9802 or Eula<lb/>
Moore at 752 8981<lb/>
CAREER DAY<lb/>
The History Department of ECU<lb/>
will be holding its third annual<lb/>
Career Day program on<lb/>
Thursdasy, Jan 29. in Brewster<lb/>
B 102 from 2 00 5 00 From 2 3, the<lb/>
topic will be "Business Oppor<lb/>
tunities for History Majors,<lb/>
which will concern various fields<lb/>
including retail merchandising,<lb/>
trucking, restaurant and food<lb/>
merchandising, and banking<lb/>
From 3 4 the topic w.ll be "The<lb/>
Mechanics of Seeking a Job"<lb/>
which will include tips on how to<lb/>
do well in interviews resume<lb/>
writing, and testing on the job<lb/>
From 4 5 the topic will concern<lb/>
public history and public service<lb/>
of the history maior There will be<lb/>
a questions and answers session at<lb/>
the end of each topic discussed All<lb/>
history and humanities maiors are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
GAY COMMUNITY<lb/>
The East Carolina Gay Com<lb/>
munitv will hold its weekly<lb/>
meeting Tuesday Jan 27 at 5 00<lb/>
P m The ECGC meets at 953 E<lb/>
10th St at the bottom ot College<lb/>
Hill New members are welcome<lb/>
and we hope you will attend<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will hold<lb/>
its first meeting of the semester<lb/>
this Thursday night, January 29th.<lb/>
beginning at 7 30 pm mtheMuIti<lb/>
Purpose room of Mendenhall<lb/>
The speaker Thursday night will<lb/>
be Don Hicks the new North<lb/>
Carolino Public Defender, who<lb/>
will discuss his position and the<lb/>
creation of the office Also, a short<lb/>
business meeting will be held prior<lb/>
to his speaking<lb/>
All interested students are urg<lb/>
ed to attend, and new members<lb/>
are accepted at any time Thespr<lb/>
mg semester will be an active one<lb/>
for the club a trip to UNC Law<lb/>
School is planned for February<lb/>
20th, a trip to Washington, D C is<lb/>
planned, and a Law Day event will<lb/>
be sponsored by the Law Society<lb/>
For additional information, one<lb/>
may contact Lynn Calder at<lb/>
757 6611. ext 218 (9 00 5 00) Or<lb/>
758 9923<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
The Fountain of Lite Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will meet each Wed<lb/>
night at 7 p m m the Ledomas<lb/>
Wright Afro American Cultural<lb/>
Center Come out and enioy some<lb/>
good Christian fellowship<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
The Psychology Honor Society<lb/>
will meet Wed Jan 28 at 7 00 in<lb/>
Sp 112 Plans for spring semester<lb/>
will be discussed All members<lb/>
are urged to attend<lb/>
FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
The Fnsbee Club will meet m<lb/>
room 248 in Mendenhall on Jan 29.<lb/>
1�80 at 7 p m All interested are in<lb/>
vited to come<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
The Office of Handicapped Stu<lb/>
dent Services has employment op<lb/>
portunities tor students interested<lb/>
m becoming attendants to<lb/>
wheelchair students For details<lb/>
come to Whicharo Building, room<lb/>
211 or call 757 6799<lb/>
HARASSMENT<lb/>
HOTLINE<lb/>
The East Carolina Proiect on<lb/>
Sexual Harassment t Dept of<lb/>
Sociology and Anthropology)<lb/>
wants to talk with students who<lb/>
have had problems with an East<lb/>
Carolina teacher If you have ever<lb/>
been offended by sexual looks.<lb/>
comments suggestions, or<lb/>
touches, we want to near about<lb/>
your experience Your confiden<lb/>
tiality is guaranteed Your<lb/>
sTatements will not be used to file<lb/>
complaints agamst faculty<lb/>
members Mon Thurs 2 p m 10<lb/>
pm Fri Sat 12pm 4p.m Sun 4<lb/>
p m 10 p m Call Linda Today<lb/>
752 3484<lb/>
A.M.A.<lb/>
The ECU chapTer of The<lb/>
American MarkeTing AssooaTion<lb/>
is holding a membership drive<lb/>
during the first 30 days of the<lb/>
semester Named the Albert R<lb/>
Conley Chapter the organization<lb/>
proposes to bring TogeTher the pro<lb/>
fessionai and the student m the<lb/>
field of markefmg<lb/>
Applications may be obtained by<lb/>
contacting the officers Mike<lb/>
McManan or Elton Boney in A 226<lb/>
Rawi<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda will meet on<lb/>
Tuesday Jan 27 a' 4 00 p m in<lb/>
Rawl 103 Attendance is man<lb/>
datory tor all members<lb/>
TRAFFIC<lb/>
The ECU Tratl<lb/>
presently beng. revised In<lb/>
dividual a x' rtg v suggi 1<lb/>
changes are requested to subm.t<lb/>
Their suggesTions in wr.Ting to the<lb/>
Traffic Department attention O'<lb/>
ficer j A Karpovich no later than<lb/>
Jan 31<lb/>
(ACT)<lb/>
The American College Test<lb/>
(ACT) will be offered at ECU on<lb/>
Sa' March 28. '98! Application<lb/>
blanks are To be compleled and<lb/>
mailed to ACT Registration P O<lb/>
Box 414, lowa City. Iowa 52240<lb/>
Registration deadline is Feb 27.<lb/>
1981 Applications may be obtain<lb/>
ed from the ECU lestmu Center<lb/>
Speight Bidg Room 105<lb/>
MSC<lb/>
Applications tor Rooms are<lb/>
available aT The MeThodisT STudenT<lb/>
Center tor occupancy next sum<lb/>
mer and fan For more informs<lb/>
tion and application forms come<lb/>
by the office between 8 30 and 2 30<lb/>
weekdays<lb/>
MeThodisT Worship sevices are<lb/>
held on Sunday evenings m the<lb/>
Chandler Chapel at the Methodist<lb/>
Center. 501 East Fifth street The<lb/>
services are informal and last for<lb/>
30 m,nutes ViS'tors are welcome<lb/>
Student Loans Up to $700 are<lb/>
available tor members of the<lb/>
United Methodist Church atten<lb/>
dmq ECU For more information<lb/>
contact Nancy Owens at 758 2030<lb/>
or stop bv the office at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center<lb/>
Wednesday even-nq fellowship<lb/>
supper is held each week at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center begmn<lb/>
ing at 5 30 p m Cost per person is<lb/>
$2 for all you can eat There is a<lb/>
short program following the meal<lb/>
"Religion and Poliics is the<lb/>
theme for the winter retreat spon<lb/>
sored by the Wesley Foundation<lb/>
STudenT Program Council The<lb/>
retreat will be held in Washington<lb/>
DC and will include visits wiTh<lb/>
legislaT.ve personnel FurTher in<lb/>
formafion is available from Dan<lb/>
Earnhardt by calling 758 20j0<lb/>
(AHPAT)<lb/>
The Allied Healfh Professions<lb/>
Admission Tesf will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat . March 7. 1981 Ap<lb/>
plication Dlanks are to be com<lb/>
pleted and mailed to the<lb/>
Psychological Corp 304 E 45th<lb/>
St . New York NY 10017 to arrive<lb/>
by Feb 7 1981 Application blanks<lb/>
are also available at Tne TesTmg<lb/>
Cenier SpeighT Blog . Room 105.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Kidney Transplant<lb/>
Nears Reality<lb/>
Continued From Page I<lb/>
In addition 10<lb/>
Thomas, ECU physi<lb/>
cians Walter J. Pories,<lb/>
Charles Rob and Ed-<lb/>
ward G. Flickinger are<lb/>
members of the<lb/>
transplantation team.<lb/>
The team also includes<lb/>
surgery residents Carl<lb/>
Haisch and Robert<lb/>
Deepe, surgical<lb/>
transplant coordinator<lb/>
Dennis Blessing,<lb/>
medical transplant<lb/>
coordinator Sandra<lb/>
Bullock, and nurse<lb/>
practitioner Diane<lb/>
Meelheim.<lb/>
Drs. Alfred L.<lb/>
Ferguson, Thomas E.<lb/>
Burkart and Wayne<lb/>
Kendrick, clinical pro-<lb/>
fessors of medicine,<lb/>
will serve as nephrology<lb/>
consultants along with<lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
Scripts are now on reserve in<lb/>
Joyner Library for the upcoming<lb/>
Dinner Theatre production "And<lb/>
Miss Reardon Drinks A Little"<lb/>
directed by Steve Finnan There<lb/>
are roles for five women and Two<lb/>
men AudiTions will be held on<lb/>
Feb 6 from 7 30 p m until 10 00<lb/>
pm and Feb 7 from 2 00 pm un<lb/>
til 5 00 p m<lb/>
CHEERLEADING<lb/>
The tape that served as East<lb/>
Carolina University's entry into<lb/>
the national cheerleadmg contest,<lb/>
sponsored by the Inter national<lb/>
Cheerleader Foundation, will be<lb/>
shown n Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center on Friday, Feb 6, 1981 The<lb/>
tape is scheduled to be viewed in<lb/>
the newspaper reading section<lb/>
from 6 30 to 7 30 and from 8 30 to<lb/>
9 00 Everyone is mvited The tape<lb/>
was produced by Dave Batch and<lb/>
Jake Postma of the Audio Visual<lb/>
Service Center of the School of<lb/>
Medicine<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
Mr John S Childers. Director,<lb/>
ECU Testing Center announced<lb/>
that the new Medical College Ad<lb/>
mission Test (MCAT) application<lb/>
packets have arrived in the<lb/>
Testing Center. Speight 105 The<lb/>
test dates for 1981 are April 4 1981<lb/>
and September 12, 1981 The<lb/>
deadline date tor the Apr,I 4 test is<lb/>
March 6 1981 and the deadline<lb/>
date for submitting application for<lb/>
the September 12, 198! test is<lb/>
August 14 1981<lb/>
TWIG FELLOWSHIP IS:<lb/>
People learning the Bible, so we<lb/>
will know The principles ot living<lb/>
The Word of God sefs forth Then<lb/>
as we apply these principles To Our<lb/>
lives, we learn how To help people<lb/>
help Themselves and enioy life i<lb/>
T.m 6 17. John 10 10 Join us in our<lb/>
quesT To learn The Word of God.<lb/>
which is The Will of Goo Every<lb/>
Monday and Thursday aT 7 30 PM<lb/>
Rm 212 Mendenhall STudent<lb/>
entei<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
The Sign Language Club will<lb/>
have its regular bi monThiy<lb/>
meeTinq at 6 p m on Sunday. Feb<lb/>
I in the multi purpose room of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center There<lb/>
will be a covered dish dinner<lb/>
before the meeting and a caption<lb/>
ed film afterward This weeks<lb/>
film will be "Dr Zhivago'<lb/>
All members are urged to aT<lb/>
�� � : Any rtteresl . � � � a i<lb/>
. �� � you need noT be a<lb/>
� ber<lb/>
JOB SEARCH<lb/>
A series of workshops will be<lb/>
conducfed by The Career Planning<lb/>
and PlacemenT Office in the areas<lb/>
ot interviewing techniques and<lb/>
resume design "Interviewing<lb/>
Techn.ques" is scheduled tor<lb/>
Tuesday. Jan 27, and Wednesday<lb/>
Feb 4 Resume Design will be<lb/>
discussed on Wednesday Jan 28<lb/>
and Tuesaa, Feb 3 There will be<lb/>
two sessions each day one aT 2<lb/>
pm and another at 3 p m n Rawl<lb/>
102 All seniors s'o invited to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
AMA<lb/>
The Albert R Conley Chapter of<lb/>
the American Market.ng Assooa<lb/>
lion will hold ts first meeting for<lb/>
the Spring semester on Wednes<lb/>
day. Jan 28, 1981 in Rawl 130 at<lb/>
5 00 Mr Frank Longmo of the<lb/>
Allen and Longmo Advertisinu<lb/>
firm will be the spea �<lb/>
INTRAMURAL<lb/>
There will be an ECU In<lb/>
tramural Council meeting held on<lb/>
Tuesday. Feb 3 at 4 30 p m in<lb/>
Memorial 104 All representatives<lb/>
are encouraged to attend For fur<lb/>
ther information contact the in<lb/>
tramural Office Ext 6387<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS<lb/>
The Co op Office 313 Raw t.<lb/>
757 6979 6375. has applications and<lb/>
iob descriptions tor sum" � �<lb/>
employment opportuni' .<lb/>
government Students are en<lb/>
couraged to apply This program<lb/>
offers stipends ot approx.m.r.<lb/>
$125 p weefc rOf 125 ntern pro<lb/>
� Is and students will work 40<lb/>
hours per week for 10 weeks<lb/>
CO OP JOBS<lb/>
The Co op Office has current m<lb/>
formation concern.nq career<lb/>
related work experiences for both<lb/>
undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
students during su" mer, fa<lb/>
spring semesters w ��<lb/>
and private ag uding the<lb/>
Pentagon Dept of the inter,or.<lb/>
Fish and Wildlife Service. Dept of<lb/>
Energy Federal Prison Sys<lb/>
and Social Security Admimstra<lb/>
t.on Private organizations include<lb/>
IBM Duf Power Co . Burroughs<lb/>
Wellcome ana of i i<lb/>
Students are urged tc come by<lb/>
the Co op Office to review Ob<lb/>
descriptions and to talk to a Co op<lb/>
coordinator concerning iob<lb/>
posS'b'lities Man, positions' .<lb/>
approaching deadlines Therefore<lb/>
�sted sTudents should not<lb/>
RECITAL<lb/>
SChool ot Music seniors John<lb/>
Moore and Allen Pettit will appta'<lb/>
in recital Thursday Jan 29 at 7 30<lb/>
p m in the A j Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall For his portion of the pro<lb/>
gram Moore will perform the<lb/>
following trumpet works Haydn's<lb/>
Concerto for Trumpet BEr<lb/>
nard Fitzgerald's Ballad and<lb/>
James F Burke s Mao<lb/>
Trumpet Moore will be accom<lb/>
panied on piano by Melissa Usery<lb/>
Ptt,t will perform, on French<lb/>
Horn. Mozart's Horn Concerto<lb/>
No 3 Gliere s "intermezzo<lb/>
Hartley s Meditation Cooke s<lb/>
"Rondo in B Hat and Desportes'<lb/>
Sicilienne et Allegro " Accompa<lb/>
r.y.ng him on piano wil be Danny<lb/>
Dial The final work on the pro<lb/>
gram will be John Cheetham's<lb/>
Brass Quintet Piece featuring<lb/>
Moore and Pettit assisted by<lb/>
Steve Anderson. Glenn Johnson<lb/>
and John Jones Moore, a native of<lb/>
Woodbridge, VA is a student of<lb/>
James Sean of the ECU music<lb/>
faculty. Pettit from Winston<lb/>
Salem studies w.th James<lb/>
Parneii Both are pursing the<lb/>
Bachelor of Music degree m Music<lb/>
Education<lb/>
EXERCISE<lb/>
� . Dept ot intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services is offering<lb/>
classes in Exercise and Weight<lb/>
Control Jazz Exercise. Aerobic<lb/>
Conditioning, and Slimnastics<lb/>
Each class is designed to provide<lb/>
information on (I) the purpose of<lb/>
exet ��� . the effective results<lb/>
of activity, (3) weight control and<lb/>
figure improvement 4 Yoga<lb/>
and relaxation techniques andiSi<lb/>
various exercises to maintain flex<lb/>
ibiiity and muscle tones The<lb/>
sTrucfure of each class will be<lb/>
determined m accordance a �� <lb/>
express desires of the participants<lb/>
enrolled<lb/>
For additional information con<lb/>
TacT Nanc y M'Ze aT 757 6387<lb/>
RECITAL<lb/>
Catherine Styron sophomore in<lb/>
the ECU School of Music, will pre<lb/>
sent a recital of piano music on<lb/>
Friday Jan 30 at 9 p m in the<lb/>
A J Fletcher Recital Hall Miss<lb/>
Styron is pursuing a Bachelor ot<lb/>
Mush degree program m piano<lb/>
performance<lb/>
A native of Davis NC she<lb/>
studies piano with Dr Henry<lb/>
Doskey of the ECU Keyboard<lb/>
laculty For her program Miss<lb/>
Styron will perform Scarlatti's<lb/>
"Sonata m E Maior" and Sonata<lb/>
m G Ma,or  Beethoven's<lb/>
Sonata Opus 110 and Brahms<lb/>
Eight Piano Pieces Opus 76<lb/>
There is no admission charge<lb/>
and the public is invited to attend<lb/>
FOOD LAB<lb/>
The School of Home Economics<lb/>
is sponsoring an Advanced Quanti<lb/>
ty Food Lab this semester Din<lb/>
ners are by advance "season<lb/>
ticket only Meals are served on<lb/>
Wed from 6 45 7 45 p m There<lb/>
are two plans, each consisting of<lb/>
five meals at $22 50 per plan, or<lb/>
both plans for $45 00 per plan<lb/>
For further information contact<lb/>
Ruby Sheridan at the School of<lb/>
Home Economics<lb/>
FORCES FOR<lb/>
FREEDOM<lb/>
Bracelets similar tc those issued<lb/>
for P O W s in Vietnam are now<lb/>
available for the men involved in<lb/>
the aborted rescue attempt m<lb/>
Iran Bracelets are $3 each and<lb/>
proceeds from sales will go to<lb/>
establish a college fund for the<lb/>
children ot these men<lb/>
The address is<lb/>
Forces for Freedom<lb/>
PO Box 2501<lb/>
Tuluca Lake, CA 91602<lb/>
NURSERY<lb/>
The Nursery School Program<lb/>
operated at the ECU Dept of Child<lb/>
Development and Family Rela<lb/>
tions is now accepting applications<lb/>
for the 1981 82 school year Ap<lb/>
plication deadline is Feb 13<lb/>
Open to children who have third<lb/>
or fourth birthdays by Oct 15. the<lb/>
program has limited spaces<lb/>
available Any parent of a three<lb/>
or four year old may apply Fur<lb/>
ther information about the pro<lb/>
gram is available m Rm 128 of the<lb/>
ECU Home Economics Bldg or by<lb/>
telephone. 757 6926 or 757 6908<lb/>
PHYSICS<lb/>
Tuesday. Jan 27 at 7 30 pm there<lb/>
will be a meeting of the Society of<lb/>
Physics Students Dr Joseph Nor<lb/>
wood will be the featured speaker<lb/>
and give a talk on reality Topics<lb/>
of the meeting will include future<lb/>
SPS planned excursions and elec<lb/>
tions All members and prospec<lb/>
five members are urged To aTTend<lb/>
The meeTmg will be held m Room<lb/>
E303<lb/>
SENIOR<lb/>
SHOW<lb/>
Dale Nance ot Boonviile. NC. a<lb/>
senior studenT m The ECU School<lb/>
ot Art. will be having a show ot<lb/>
pamlings in the Jenkins Fine Art<lb/>
Center Foyer Jan 25 through Feb<lb/>
1 A candidate for a B S degree in<lb/>
art education Nance plans to<lb/>
enter the M S program m art<lb/>
education with a minor in pam<lb/>
tmg<lb/>
OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
The city of Greenville Public<lb/>
Works Dept cordially inv.tes you<lb/>
to an open house honoring the<lb/>
opening of it's new facility on Sun .<lb/>
the first day of Feb . 1981. Two<lb/>
O'clock unlil four o'clock, 15O0<lb/>
��. street<lb/>
SKI<lb/>
Ski Snowshoe, West VA during<lb/>
Spring Break 5 days and 5<lb/>
nights A $10 deposit is due Tues<lb/>
, Jan 27 at 4 p m . Memorial<lb/>
Gym Final payments are due on<lb/>
Thursday. Feb 12, at 4 p m in<lb/>
Memorial Gym 108 For more in<lb/>
formation contact Mrs Jo<lb/>
Saunders at 757 6000. or come by<lb/>
room 205 Memorial Gym<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
POSITIONS<lb/>
Ap; �� ns are being accepted<lb/>
tor Coffeehouse Chairperson and<lb/>
committee members immediate<lb/>
. Pick up applications m the Stu<lb/>
dent union 0ce Rm 234 m<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Can<lb/>
757 661! Ext 210<lb/>
SPRING BREAK TRIP<lb/>
The StudenT Union Travel Com<lb/>
miTTee has planned two Trips dur<lb/>
mg Spring Break One is to Ft<lb/>
Lauderdale Fla and The oTher is<lb/>
a Ft Lauderdale Bahamas<lb/>
Cruise Prices include transporta<lb/>
tion. hotel accommodations, and<lb/>
the cruise For more information<lb/>
go by Mendenhall Central Ticket<lb/>
I ��� ce or call at 757 66H Ft<lb/>
Lauderdale, Fla Trip Quad<lb/>
hotel room $219 00 Double hotel<lb/>
room $309 00 Ft Lauder<lb/>
dale Bahamas Cruise Quad<lb/>
hotel room &amp;, quad cabm, $499 00<lb/>
Double hotel room &amp; quad cabm,<lb/>
$549 00<lb/>
ASSISTANTS<lb/>
Graduate assistanfships Three<lb/>
assistantships are available for<lb/>
ECU graduate students interested<lb/>
in working on socioeconomic<lb/>
studies ot fisheries m North<lb/>
Carolina Graduate students from<lb/>
any field may apply but skills in<lb/>
social science research methods<lb/>
or natural resource management<lb/>
or computing and statistical<lb/>
analysis are sought a stipend of<lb/>
$450 per month will be paid The<lb/>
assistantships commence m<lb/>
February. 1981 Further mforma<lb/>
tion can be obtained from Mrs<lb/>
Stack institute for Coastal and<lb/>
Marine Resources ECU<lb/>
telephone 757 6220<lb/>
 C'U physician Richard<lb/>
Merrill. Drs. J. Richard<lb/>
Gavigan, Edward O.<lb/>
Janosko and Emmett J.<lb/>
Walsh Jr clinical pro-<lb/>
fessors of surgery, will<lb/>
share responsibility for<lb/>
the removal of kidneys.<lb/>
Donor testing and<lb/>
tissue matching will be<lb/>
performed by Dr.<lb/>
Robert Hanrahan,<lb/>
assistant professor of<lb/>
pathology and<lb/>
laboratory medicine.<lb/>
Before joining the<lb/>
medical school in<lb/>
August, 1979, Thomas<lb/>
was a member of the<lb/>
renowned kidney and<lb/>
heart transplantation<lb/>
team at the Medical<lb/>
College of Virginia. He<lb/>
is a founding member<lb/>
of the American Socie-<lb/>
ty of Transplant<lb/>
Surgeons.<lb/>
BOXING<lb/>
The Sixth Annual TKE Boxing<lb/>
Tournament will be held on Feb<lb/>
24. 25. and 26 in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium Registration begins<lb/>
Jan 19 at the TKE house The<lb/>
event is sponsored by Miller Call<lb/>
758 7699 for information<lb/>
PRISON<lb/>
VISITS<lb/>
Every Thursday a group of ECU<lb/>
students visit Mavry Prison as<lb/>
part of the Yokefellow program<lb/>
THp men there really appreciate<lb/>
our visits Prison is a lonely place<lb/>
You can help bring some hap<lb/>
pmess to someone's life WE leave<lb/>
at 7 p m p.ck up service<lb/>
available For more information<lb/>
call 758 4906 or 756 9324<lb/>
2 for $2.00 fttncas<lb/>
Arby's Roast Beef beef rx<lb/>
Sandwiches pS vfe<lb/>
ihrough February 7, 1981 �if H i<lb/>
only at participating Arbys 5I1 f" <lb/>
2T6r"$273YSrTcaS<lb/>
rby's Super 2JJL<lb/>
Roast Beef gfV<lb/>
I imit one couoor oer customerVahd throughrvhruanj 7 1981 fl f S<lb/>
iLimit one coupon per customer Valid throughTebruary 7. 1981<lb/>
N6t valid w ith any other coupon Valid onlv at participating Arbys<lb/>
sir!<lb/>
1<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of thasa advartiMd Hams Is required to bo raadlly avallabla for sue at or<lb/>
bolow tho advartlsad prtco in ��ch AAP Stora, axcapt as specifically notad<lb/>
In this ad <lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT JAN. 31, 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 Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
EXCLUSIVE AT A&amp;P . .<lb/>
Beautiful Diane China<lb/>
This Week's<lb/>
Feature Item<lb/>
Saucer<lb/>
79<lb/>
c<lb/>
each<lb/>
50' COUPON<lb/>
Save 50 on<lb/>
Diane China<lb/>
LIMIT PKG OF TWO<lb/>
WITH THIS<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Salad Plates 634<lb/>
WITH EACH $5.00 purchase ��<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT JAN 31 IN ALL A&amp;P STORES<lb/>
IN N C �SC EXCEPT AIKEN &amp; BEAUFORT S C<lb/>
FRESH FRYER<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH � ql �TflC<lb/>
2 In A Bag, Limit 2 Bags c�jcen J3<lb/>
Whole Fryers<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY CORN FED<lb/>
Pork Roast<lb/>
CENTER RIB<lb/>
Pork<lb/>
Chops<lb/>
lb<lb/>
Loin<lb/>
End<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
In 5 Lb.<lb/>
Roll<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
MARVEL .<lb/>
Sliced Bacon 9o<lb/>
i<lb/>
Coca-Cola, Mello Yello, Sprite<lb/>
Mr. Pibb, Tab, Grape Crush, Orange Crush<lb/>
99 <lb/>
Litre Plastic Bottle<lb/>
37 COUPON<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
APP<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON<lb/>
QQC<lb/>
V2gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
II<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
631 I<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT JAN 31 AT AtP IN GREENVILLE. N C<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
40&amp;COUPON<lb/>
"JBStf<lb/>
APP<lb/>
37Q!<lb/>
630 I<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT , JAN 31 AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE N C<lb/>
30 COUPON<lb/>
AP<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND, RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
Eight O'clock Bean Coffee<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT , JAN Jl. AT AAP IN GREENVILLE, NC.<lb/>
1-lb.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
199;<lb/>
632 !<lb/>
fO� FftfSMMESS AMD SAVINGS<lb/>
CALIFORNIA CRISP ICEBERG<lb/>
Lettuce<lb/>
large<lb/>
head<lb/>
EASTERN RED DELICIOUS<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
U.S. Extra<lb/>
Fancy<lb/>
3<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
99<lb/>
c<lb/>
BUTTERY RICH<lb/>
California Avocados<lb/>
00<lb/>
Large<lb/>
14 Size<lb/>
39�<lb/>
5<lb/>
30 size<lb/>
only<lb/>
I<lb/>
ail pr<lb/>
�<lb/>
enter<lb/>
Natioi<lb/>
Educi<lb/>
Jem<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057314_0003"/><lb/>
THt I AS! C AROl INIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 27, 1981<lb/>
1<lb/>
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A<lb/>
Student Population Increase Upsets Predictions<lb/>
(C PS) - In a rever-<lb/>
sal of recent trends and<lb/>
in defiance of almost<lb/>
all predictions, white<lb/>
males again have taken<lb/>
over as the majority of<lb/>
entering college<lb/>
students, according to<lb/>
Andrew Pepin of the<lb/>
National Center for<lb/>
Education statistics<lb/>
(NCES).<lb/>
During the 1979-80<lb/>
academic year, women<lb/>
tor the first time com-<lb/>
prised more than 50<lb/>
percent of the<lb/>
American student<lb/>
population. While<lb/>
women are still in the<lb/>
majority, men are now<lb/>
apparently catching up.<lb/>
Part-time students,<lb/>
in addition to full-time<lb/>
minorities and women,<lb/>
were the factors that<lb/>
really kept the enroll-<lb/>
ment of the last decade<lb/>
up there Pepin says.<lb/>
"Hut now the men are<lb/>
the major factor<lb/>
Statistics from the<lb/>
American Association<lb/>
oi State Colleges and<lb/>
Universities (AASCU)<lb/>
confirm that the male<lb/>
student population has<lb/>
grown by 10.6 percent<lb/>
in the lav i academic<lb/>
year, while the female<lb/>
increase has been 8.5<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
Predictions made<lb/>
five years ago by<lb/>
almost every education<lb/>
observer, including the<lb/>
NCES, suggested that<lb/>
college enrollments in<lb/>
general would start a<lb/>
decade-long slide in<lb/>
1980, but schools in-<lb/>
stead are finding<lb/>
themselves with an<lb/>
average enrollment in-<lb/>
crease of 3.2 percent.<lb/>
An earlier University of<lb/>
Alabama estimate put<lb/>
the population jump at<lb/>
5.1 percent. Enrollment<lb/>
would have been push-<lb/>
ed up more by the in-<lb/>
flux of white males if<lb/>
not for a sharp drop in<lb/>
part-time students, ex-<lb/>
plained the AASCU's<lb/>
Jacob Stampen.<lb/>
Pepin adds that the<lb/>
inaccuracy of the<lb/>
predictions was due not<lb/>
to miscalculation, but<lb/>
to an inability to<lb/>
foresee the drastic ef-<lb/>
fect of the economy on<lb/>
enrollment.<lb/>
Pepin himself an-<lb/>
ticipated a drop in col-<lb/>
lege enrollment propor-<lb/>
tionate to the drop in<lb/>
the number of high<lb/>
school graduates, but<lb/>
his formula, which pro-<lb/>
ved dependable in the<lb/>
seventies, is too<lb/>
simplistic now because<lb/>
of monetary factors, he<lb/>
cedes.<lb/>
"The tight job<lb/>
market influences the<lb/>
immediate futures of<lb/>
high school graduates<lb/>
most profoundly he<lb/>
explains.<lb/>
"An 18-year-old<lb/>
man or woman will<lb/>
often decide to go to,<lb/>
school full-time when<lb/>
they cannot find a job<lb/>
in order to put off the<lb/>
job hunt until the<lb/>
market opens up Ad-<lb/>
ditionally, he says,<lb/>
many young people<lb/>
find it more and more<lb/>
necessary to have better<lb/>
training in order to get<lb/>
a job at all.<lb/>
The job market is<lb/>
particularly small for<lb/>
ex-military personnel,<lb/>
Stampen says.<lb/>
"The Vietnam war<lb/>
drained the college<lb/>
population somewhat<lb/>
in the seventies he<lb/>
says. "Veterans are still<lb/>
coming back from ex-<lb/>
tended duty, and<lb/>
they're finding it im-<lb/>
possible to get a job,<lb/>
t h e v go back to<lb/>
school<lb/>
"This accounts<lb/>
much of the increase in<lb/>
male students, I would<lb/>
estimate Stampen<lb/>
theorizes.<lb/>
In the same category,<lb/>
Pepin says that college-<lb/>
age men and women<lb/>
are finding enlistment<lb/>
"even less of a choice<lb/>
right now With the<lb/>
draft over and male<lb/>
military enlistment<lb/>
slowly decreasing, the<lb/>
male student enroll-<lb/>
ment will naturally go<lb/>
up.<lb/>
Judith Stich, of the<lb/>
American Council on<lb/>
Education, attributes<lb/>
the jump in the<lb/>
numbers of male<lb/>
students to new campus<lb/>
recruiting. New<lb/>
methods have resulted<lb/>
in an older student<lb/>
population. Stich says<lb/>
that half the nation's<lb/>
college students this<lb/>
year are over the<lb/>
"traditional college<lb/>
ages" of 18 to 22. She<lb/>
also holds the economic<lb/>
situation responsible<lb/>
for the new trend.<lb/>
"If you're out of a<lb/>
job, then you're not<lb/>
giving up anything to<lb/>
go to school she says.<lb/>
"People who get laid<lb/>
off especially like to<lb/>
return to school to im-<lb/>
prove their skills so<lb/>
they won't get laid off<lb/>
again. A lot of college<lb/>
drop-outs are going to<lb/>
finish school, par-<lb/>
ticularly at community<lb/>
colleges, for this<lb/>
reason<lb/>
"Even those who are<lb/>
in a financially good<lb/>
position � the majori-<lb/>
ty of whom are males<lb/>
statistically � find that<lb/>
they must get another<lb/>
degree in order to sur-<lb/>
vive the competition<lb/>
she contends.<lb/>
Colleges are fully<lb/>
aware of the trend<lb/>
toward older students,<lb/>
Stich says, and they're<lb/>
trying to encourage it<lb/>
by making their institu-<lb/>
tions more accessible<lb/>
by offering night and<lb/>
weekend classes in<lb/>
vocational areas. She<lb/>
says there is still a<lb/>
"great deal of potential<lb/>
to increase<lb/>
enrollments" by way of<lb/>
such "non-traditional"<lb/>
schedules.<lb/>
But if college enroll-<lb/>
ment has increased by<lb/>
3.5 percent, the drop-<lb/>
out rate is going up at<lb/>
"twice that rate<lb/>
Pepin points out.<lb/>
"It's also a problem<lb/>
of economics again<lb/>
he explains. "People go<lb/>
to school and soon find<lb/>
out that they simply<lb/>
can't afford the new<lb/>
tuitions, in addition to<lb/>
the fact that they can't<lb/>
make it academically<lb/>
when enrollments are<lb/>
so large<lb/>
"Because so many �<lb/>
usually minorities �<lb/>
are forced to drop out,<lb/>
schools want to make<lb/>
up for the loss of one<lb/>
particular student's tui-<lb/>
tion with tuition from<lb/>
another student. They<lb/>
have to keep recruiting<lb/>
all the time<lb/>
The drop-out rate of<lb/>
poor and minority<lb/>
students has, in turn,<lb/>
also helped leave<lb/>
schools with an unex-<lb/>
pectedly high propor-<lb/>
tion of white males<lb/>
among<lb/>
bodies.<lb/>
their student<lb/>
In light of how<lb/>
wrong most enrollment<lb/>
projections have been,<lb/>
Pepin and Stampen<lb/>
agree that it is<lb/>
"impossible" to tell<lb/>
what direction future<lb/>
trends will go. Stitch<lb/>
says schools can com-<lb/>
pensate for the loss of<lb/>
18-22 year-old students<lb/>
if they "recruit effec-<lb/>
tively" in the<lb/>
"non-traditional"<lb/>
areas, but she said<lb/>
she'd make no predic-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"We're all just going<lb/>
to have to wait and see.<lb/>
These predictions are<lb/>
becoming a dangerous<lb/>
business says<lb/>
Stampen.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
SfrvtttH ' � munily<lb/>
Published every Tuesday ana<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
.ny the summer<lb/>
The Eas' Carolinian is the o�<lb/>
t cial newspaper o� Eas'<lb/>
Carolina University owned<lb/>
operated and published tor and<lb/>
by the students ot East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Hates<lb/>
Busii'i S3S yearly<lb/>
All others $25 1- �' .<lb/>
Second class postage paid a'<lb/>
Iirei rrville N C<lb/>
The East Carolinian ottcev<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus ot ECU<lb/>
r,r. envilM N C<lb/>
Telephone 757 614 617 �30�<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY<lb/>
HUNTER FISHER<lb/>
iimmi<lb/>
� - '<lb/>
SAAD'SSHOt;<lb/>
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2r�5 �<lb/>
'Oir. ���n� S<lb/>
��! 1"?<lb/>
0D0�<lb/>
for<lb/>
Authorities Find<lb/>
Hydroponic Grass<lb/>
Better Than Best<lb/>
(from)<lb/>
CHAPEL WHERE<lb/>
NOVATO, Calif. �<lb/>
The technological<lb/>
revolution continues in<lb/>
agriculture. 1 he latest<lb/>
breakthrough is in the<lb/>
marijuana sector.<lb/>
Police in this San<lb/>
( ransico suburb recent-<lb/>
ly raided a warehouse<lb/>
rented in an industrial<lb/>
park and found a<lb/>
"sophisticated" state-<lb/>
of-the-art setup for<lb/>
u ing the weed<lb/>
hydroponicall) .<lb/>
Hydroponics, the<lb/>
science of growing<lb/>
plants in soil-free,<lb/>
mineral-rich solutions,<lb/>
is commonly used for<lb/>
indoor cultivation of<lb/>
tomatoes and<lb/>
:mbers.<lb/>
The 2(X) plants under<lb/>
cultivation were "lush,<lb/>
bushy and potent" and<lb/>
"appeared to be grow-<lb/>
ing faster than nor-<lb/>
mal police said. The<lb/>
plants were four feet<lb/>
tall. Walter Sears a<lb/>
special agent for the<lb/>
Drug Enforcement<lb/>
genc. points out that<lb/>
the hydroponically pro-<lb/>
duced pot contained<lb/>
"at leat twice as much<lb/>
I H C<lb/>
(tetrahydrocannibol:<lb/>
the active ingredient) as<lb/>
the best Columbian<lb/>
grass<lb/>
The market value of<lb/>
the raided crop is put at<lb/>
more than S200.000.<lb/>
Officials glumly<lb/>
speculate that commer-<lb/>
cial cultivation of mari-<lb/>
juana is moving in-<lb/>
doors, and gaining<lb/>
scientific finesse. "This<lb/>
is the first major<lb/>
hydroponic operation<lb/>
we've come across, but<lb/>
we're definitely going<lb/>
to see more of them<lb/>
Mr. Sears predicts.<lb/>
Pot -gi owing is big<lb/>
business. The DEA<lb/>
estimates that 1,000<lb/>
tons of sinsmilla, the<lb/>
top quality domestic<lb/>
variety, was produced<lb/>
in the US in 1979. The<lb/>
market value of that<lb/>
crop was more than S4<lb/>
billion, though 1,000<lb/>
tons was just over 7<lb/>
percent of the mari-<lb/>
juana consumed in the<lb/>
US that year.<lb/>
The marijuana<lb/>
growers need to protect<lb/>
their livelihoods.<lb/>
"They're moving in-<lb/>
doors to hide plants<lb/>
from the law, and, not<lb/>
so incidentally, from<lb/>
rip-off artists says<lb/>
Mr. Sears. Fran<lb/>
McDcrmott, California<lb/>
state coordinator of the<lb/>
National Organization<lb/>
for the Reform of<lb/>
Marijuana Laws, says<lb/>
"Hydroponic p o t -<lb/>
farming is definitely the<lb/>
wave of the future,<lb/>
assuming that cultiva-<lb/>
tions remains illegal<lb/>
Half a dozen makers of<lb/>
hydroponic gear adver-<lb/>
tise their wares in<lb/>
� 'High Times'<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
Myron Gilbert,<lb/>
special agent supervisor<lb/>
for the California<lb/>
Justice Department,<lb/>
says seizures of indoor<lb/>
gardens growing<lb/>
commercial<lb/>
quanitites" doubled to<lb/>
more than 20 last year<lb/>
in Humboldt and Men-<lb/>
docino counties, he<lb/>
says the agency is plan-<lb/>
ning to bust at least 20<lb/>
more indoor gardens.<lb/>
� <lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
3 CONTACT<lb/>
� LENSES<lb/>
Soft Contacts . . . .<lb/>
. V?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
79<lb/>
95<lb/>
10<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
on<lb/>
glasses<lb/>
6th Annual TKE<lb/>
Boxing Tournament<lb/>
will be held<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
February 24, 25 and 26th, 1981<lb/>
GirTCompetition February lOatElbo<lb/>
HEAT UNIT INCLUDED<lb/>
Guaranteed Fitting Or Your Money Refunded<lb/>
SEMI SOFT &amp; HARD LENSES AVAILABLE<lb/>
-EYEGLASSES-<lb/>
SINGLE VISION<lb/>
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ANYTlT 0 TT<lb/>
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GREENVILLE. N C<lb/>
PMYSICIANSQUADR ANGLE<lb/>
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Ad lo E C�rolm� Eve Clime<lb/>
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Gracnfrti Store Only<lb/>
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7� 14<lb/>
OFFICE HOURS<lb/>
9am 5 JO p m<lb/>
Mon , Tuei . Thun<lb/>
, am lpm Wednctday<lb/>
Fri<lb/>
Registration begins<lb/>
January 19th-Feb.6th<lb/>
at the TKE House-951 El 10th St<lb/>
between 6-9 p.m.<lb/>
Ring Girl Info CaB 757-3156<lb/>
?<lb/>
Valentine<lb/>
Messages<lb/>
for 1 st 15 words<lb/>
each additional word � 5C<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS SOLD<lb/>
M-F 2:00-4:00<lb/>
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INFLATION FIGHTER SPECIALS<lb/>
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Take Out Service<lb/>
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FAST<lb/>
Soup &amp; Salad<lb/>
$J99<lb/>
Chicken Filet<lb/>
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Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
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&amp; EASY DELICIOUS LUNCHES<lb/>
i<lb/>
Diet Plate<lb/>
4 oi Chop Sirloin<lb/>
Cottage Cheese fc Fruit<lb/>
$199<lb/>
1<lb/>
Child's Plate<lb/>
4 01 Chopped Sirloin<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
Toast<lb/>
Steerburger &amp;<lb/>
Bowl of Chili<lb/>
$199<lb/>
No Potato<lb/>
Steak Sandwich<lb/>
Potato &amp; Salad<lb/>
J99<lb/>
N<lb/>
0<lb/>
RIB SPECIAL<lb/>
Two Jumbo BBQ Beef Ribs,<lb/>
Homemade Biscuit, French Fries and Coleslaw<lb/>
From 5 p.m. 'til 9 p.m.<lb/>
CHICKEN SPECIAL<lb/>
Two Pieces of Southern Fried<lb/>
Chicken, Homemade Biscuit, French Fries<lb/>
From 5 p.m. 'til 9 p.m.<lb/>
ft<lb/>
S129SJ79<lb/>
DARK WHITE<lb/>
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Steerburger<lb/>
With Baked Potato<lb/>
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Without Potato<lb/>
BISCUIT SPECIAL<lb/>
Steak Biscuit Country Style<lb/>
Gravy and French Fries or Chicken Biscuit with French Fries<lb/>
From 5 p.m. 'til 9 p.m.<lb/>
$1 29<lb/>
Banquet &amp; Party<lb/>
Facilities<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Plain Ptpprrt t Omont<lb/>
or MjiKroom Gravy<lb/>
Bak�4) Poialoor French fr<lb/>
129<lb/>
Soup<lb/>
89<lb/>
SPECIALS DAILY "SSSiTKEE?<lb/>
m ndoy A Wadnctdov<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
D�ily ipetnit itr.wl oiiri band potato or 'renchjri�t l�flL<lb/>
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sjs�<lb/>
DELICIOUS 30 ITEM SALAD BAR<lb/>
MEET AT<lb/>
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And Enjoy Delicious Home Cooked Meals<lb/>
At Inflation Fighting Fricestll<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057314_0004"/><lb/>
Sije iEaat (Ear0liman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
CHRIS IHOK,  tm<lb/>
Jlln DuPREI . i<lb/>
Paui I inc ki . ; . Paul Collins, Mmedii�<lb/>
Dave Si w rinw.��� Chari esChandler spomi<lb/>
M! I M S11 k. f,  � tm DU'll) N( )kklS, F�yrrs �t,tor<lb/>
W8BRSW8�&amp;W WMM<lb/>
lanuan Z . Wi<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Student Fees<lb/>
Media Increase Desperately Needed<lb/>
The time has come for the ECU<lb/>
Media Board to request a student<lb/>
fee increase.<lb/>
When the board was created in<lb/>
1978 the Board of Trustees<lb/>
allocated exactly 50 of SGA's<lb/>
SI2.75 per-student-per-semestcr ac-<lb/>
tivity fee to the media board. That<lb/>
activity fee has not been increased<lb/>
since 1970.<lb/>
It is most difficult to operate in<lb/>
the 1980's on 1970 dollars, everyone<lb/>
knows what inflation has done to<lb/>
the dollar in the last ten years.<lb/>
The media board must fund three<lb/>
printed publications, one<lb/>
photography lab, and a radio sta-<lb/>
tion. At present the board receives<lb/>
only about SI50,(XX) a year in stu-<lb/>
dent fees.<lb/>
The needs of the newspaper,<lb/>
literary magazine, yearbook, radio<lb/>
station, and photo lab far exceed<lb/>
that amount.<lb/>
A fee increase is needed not only<lb/>
to make up for ground that has been<lb/>
lost to inflation but also to hedge<lb/>
against future inflation.<lb/>
The cost of printing has soared<lb/>
astronomically over the past five<lb/>
years, primarily because so many<lb/>
products used in the printing in-<lb/>
dustry are derived from oil.<lb/>
The cost of paper itself has gone<lb/>
up dramatically. Newsprint, the<lb/>
cheapest paper made, increased in<lb/>
price by over 300 during a 12<lb/>
month period in 1978-79. In 1977-78<lb/>
the cost of printing this newspaper<lb/>
was roughly $29,000. This year the<lb/>
costs of printing may exceed<lb/>
S60,000, double the costs of three<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
Chemicals and film are two pro-<lb/>
ducts that have become increasingly<lb/>
more expensive as the price of oil in-<lb/>
creases.<lb/>
Things are not going to get any<lb/>
cheaper, the prices of materials can<lb/>
only go up.<lb/>
The costs of production materials<lb/>
used to produce this newspaper<lb/>
have doubled in price in the last 18<lb/>
to 24 months.<lb/>
The media board should look not<lb/>
only at what it needs now to cope<lb/>
with rising costs, but they must also<lb/>
consider what the needs of the<lb/>
media will be five years down the<lb/>
road.<lb/>
TTmE FoLLoWlNG BROADCAST CONTAfN&amp;<lb/>
i g)CENE� �F Explicit sexuality.<lb/>
DUE. TO MATURE &amp;UB0ECT MATTER<lb/>
I PARENTAL P1&amp;CRETION &amp; ADVI&amp;ED.<lb/>
BLVJE0EANS<lb/>
COMMERCIAL.<lb/>
'WEASE SIR. I WANT SOME MORE!<lb/>
TH� EAST CAKOUNIAN<lb/>
r- Campus Forum<lb/>
Foreign Language Aids Students<lb/>
I am writing in reference to a letter<lb/>
that appeared in the Thursday, January<lb/>
15 issue of the East Carolinian. The arti-<lb/>
cle implied that there is no longer a need<lb/>
for (or maybe never was a need for) the<lb/>
study of foreign language. Actually the<lb/>
author's arguments seemed very weak.<lb/>
first of all. it seems highly improbably<lb/>
that simply a group o foreign language<lb/>
"brethren" would be able to keep the<lb/>
foreign language requirement alive.<lb/>
Furthermore, it is somewhat im-<lb/>
mature to say that a course should be<lb/>
eliminated simply because it is an<lb/>
"obstacle' that is supposedly unrelated<lb/>
to one's major. Were this a valid argu-<lb/>
ment 1 could say that, as a Spanish ma-<lb/>
jor. Math 1065 should be eliminated<lb/>
from requirements because an inter-<lb/>
preter does not need to know how to<lb/>
work out a binomial expansion problem.<lb/>
I also disagree with the article that<lb/>
foreign language courses are not<lb/>
"extremely difficult Learning another<lb/>
language is relatively simple if one first<lb/>
has a mastery of his own language,<lb/>
which every college student who has<lb/>
taken English 1100 and 1200 should<lb/>
have.<lb/>
All it takes is attentiveness in class and<lb/>
a little practice, just like most other<lb/>
classes. Also, learning another language<lb/>
can broaden one's English vocabulary.<lb/>
So many English words come from<lb/>
foreign words andor have prefixes or<lb/>
suffixes from ther languages.<lb/>
More important, though, than the<lb/>
mere fact that every student will even-<lb/>
tually take a course that does not appear<lb/>
useful, is that know ledge of a foreign<lb/>
language is not only desireable but ex-<lb/>
tremely advantageous. Anyone that<lb/>
takes notice of today's business trends<lb/>
would see the strong influence there is<lb/>
from other countries. Business<lb/>
endeavors are no longer confined to na-<lb/>
tional relations, but are now on an inter-<lb/>
national scale.<lb/>
Many businesses have offices in other<lb/>
countries or need products manufac-<lb/>
tured in other countries. Surely any one<lb/>
who wants to get ahead in the business<lb/>
world would want to speak the language<lb/>
of his associates.<lb/>
A lack of communication can often<lb/>
cause extreme confusion, which can cost<lb/>
a company precious time and money.<lb/>
Even those people not in the field of<lb/>
"international commerce or government<lb/>
service overseas" would benefit from<lb/>
being able to communicate on an in-<lb/>
telligent level with the many foreigners<lb/>
in this country today. Contrary to what<lb/>
the author wrote, foreign language can<lb/>
be used in almost every career.<lb/>
Store owners, doctors, secretaries and<lb/>
lawyers, along with other professionals<lb/>
will eventually cross paths with a person<lb/>
from another country. Also, anyone<lb/>
who looks down on foreign language has<lb/>
apparently never applied for a job.<lb/>
Almost all job applications ask<lb/>
whether or not the applicant can speak a<lb/>
foreign language. And since the Euro-<lb/>
pean languages are often similar in many<lb/>
aspects, knowing one language can<lb/>
allow one to partially understand<lb/>
another language without having any<lb/>
prior knowledge of the language.<lb/>
Hopefully 1 have made my point of the<lb/>
importance of foreign languages in col-<lb/>
lege requirements very clear. And for<lb/>
those who never do take a foreign<lb/>
language, I hope that he or she never has<lb/>
to travel abroad; but fine wine; enter in-<lb/>
to an international business firm; visit<lb/>
New York, California, Florida or Loui-<lb/>
siana; go to an opera, watch Sesame<lb/>
Street (even little kids learn Spanish);<lb/>
purchase products made only in foreign<lb/>
countries; or cross paths with any one of<lb/>
the 200,000 non-English speaking people<lb/>
in the United States as of 1976 (the latest<lb/>
figure), a number which has surely in-<lb/>
creased tremendously in the last 5 years.<lb/>
CAROLYN GERMAN<lb/>
Sophomore, Spanish<lb/>
The editorial concerning the study of<lb/>
foreign languages at ECU displayed<lb/>
both arrogance and ignorance, the fight<lb/>
against which is one of the missions of a<lb/>
Foreign Language Department on any<lb/>
campus. Articles such as these are the<lb/>
best argument for the study o foreign<lb/>
language since they only reemphasize all<lb/>
the points made in the recent report of<lb/>
the President's Commission on Foreign<lb/>
Languages, the Senate of ECU showed<lb/>
its support of the study of foreign<lb/>
languages years before the above report<lb/>
pointed out the provincial attitude and<lb/>
tragic isolation of the USA resulting<lb/>
from a decade of nonchalant attitude<lb/>
toward foreign languages.<lb/>
The present lack of foreign language<lb/>
specialists in business (last summer<lb/>
Chase Manhattan Bank paid S480 week<lb/>
to MBA candidates with know ledge of<lb/>
1 rench to do their internship in Interna-<lb/>
tional Business), foreign service, the<lb/>
military, civil service, etc hd forced<lb/>
the academic world to re-evaluate its<lb/>
priorities. As a result ol it, foreign<lb/>
languages are now being reinstated in<lb/>
those schools which had neglected them<lb/>
in the past two years. A reflection of this<lb/>
process is clearly felt at E l where, in<lb/>
the past two years, the enrollment in<lb/>
language classes has boomed.<lb/>
If foreign languages were oi no value,<lb/>
the Civil Service job application form<lb/>
would not contain slots for anything<lb/>
from French to Russian and the Military<lb/>
would not spend millions each year on<lb/>
language training in their National<lb/>
Defense schools m Colorado and<lb/>
California. There, just as at ECU. the<lb/>
knowledge o a foreign language cannot<lb/>
be acquired b swallowing a magic cap-<lb/>
sule i.e. by cramming before exams. It is<lb/>
a study that does require time and great<lb/>
discipline, but then, isn't that what the<lb/>
pursuing of a true education is all<lb/>
about? For those who cannot or will not<lb/>
tackle such a challenge, there is a great<lb/>
variety of B.S. programs in which the<lb/>
study of a foreign language has been<lb/>
deleted.<lb/>
Maria B. Malbv<lb/>
Professor,<lb/>
Dept. of German &amp; Russian<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points oj new. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner I ibrary.<lb/>
For purposes oj verification, alt letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature o) the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are muted to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neath printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permuted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author arc limited to one ea. I<lb/>
da vs.<lb/>
t<lb/>
Reagan Inauguration Brings Back Memories For Senior Senator<lb/>
WASHINGTON � It has occured to<lb/>
me, so many times during the eight years<lb/>
that I've been in the Senate, that the Lord<lb/>
has blessed me with the privilege of wat-<lb/>
ching a great deal of history unfold. Not<lb/>
all of it has been pleasant, but in the<lb/>
decades ahead historians will still be<lb/>
pondering the events of our time.<lb/>
That is why, I suppose, a hundred<lb/>
thoughts raced through my mind on<lb/>
January 20, as I watched Ronald Reagan<lb/>
become President of the United States.<lb/>
There he was, just a few feet away, right<lb/>
arm uplifted, pledging his faithfulness to<lb/>
an anxious nation and his commitment to<lb/>
its Constitution and its principles. He will<lb/>
try, not always successfully, but he will try.<lb/>
He will do his best.<lb/>
THOUGHTS � One of my friends in<lb/>
the Senate asked me what I thought about<lb/>
during the ceremony on the Capitol steps.<lb/>
Jesse<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
That was easy, 1 told him; I was thinking<lb/>
of something Ray House 'old me long ago.<lb/>
And who, the Senator asked, was Ray<lb/>
House. He was my high school principal,<lb/>
the man who told the members of the<lb/>
senior class that we could achieve almost<lb/>
anything we wanted in this country � if we<lb/>
worked hard enough.<lb/>
I told that story four or five years ago to<lb/>
Ronald Reagan. I remember how he smil-<lb/>
ed. There had been a man who had in-<lb/>
spired and encouraged him, also, many<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
REAGAN � I remember so many per-<lb/>
sonal vignettes involving Ronald Reagan<lb/>
� a blur of cities and towns and states in<lb/>
1976, and again in 1980, where we attend-<lb/>
ed campaign dinners and rallies. That cold,<lb/>
sleeting night in Greensboro in 1976 when<lb/>
he came down the ramp of the plane that<lb/>
had brought him from New Hampshire. A<lb/>
day in the mountains of North Carolina, a<lb/>
quick trip to Kinston, the ear-splitting rally<lb/>
in Burlington when Jimmy Stewart came<lb/>
to "speak for Ron and Nancy<lb/>
I remember the defeat in Kansas City in<lb/>
1976, the visit in the Reagan home in Los<lb/>
Angeles in 1973, the late evening telephone<lb/>
calls through the years.<lb/>
But most of all, I remember how this<lb/>
man choked up every time he tried to talk<lb/>
about his love for America.<lb/>
PEOPLE � I do not suggest that all<lb/>
Americans will agree with everything their<lb/>
new President does or says. I may not<lb/>
myself. But one thing cannot be denied<lb/>
him: He has great faith in the American<lb/>
people. How many times have I heard him<lb/>
say, All too many people are elected to<lb/>
govern. We should remind them that we<lb/>
are elected to serve<lb/>
I am convinced that this belief was<lb/>
stamped indelibly upon his consciousness<lb/>
long ago. It is not a cliche; it may somehow<lb/>
prove to be his undoing. There is a fine line<lb/>
between governing the people and serving<lb/>
them. The latter will require that the peo-<lb/>
ple be asked to sacrifice. That is not the<lb/>
way to win popularity.<lb/>
ADVICE � What advice would you<lb/>
give President Reagan? I have given him<lb/>
mine: Stick with the principles you've been<lb/>
espousing all these years. Level with the<lb/>
people. Talk with them. Explain to them,<lb/>
over and over again, why the country is in<lb/>
trouble today, and spell out the onlv means<lb/>
of solving the great problems of our time.<lb/>
Deep down, the American people want<lb/>
to be free. 1 believe that, and I also believe<lb/>
that they don't want socialism, and that<lb/>
they don't really expect things of their<lb/>
government that no government can or<lb/>
should do. In fact, 1 remember countless<lb/>
occasions when I have spoken in almost all<lb/>
of the states of the union, and the au-<lb/>
diences always nodded in agreement when<lb/>
I mentioned Thomas Jefferson's well-<lb/>
known advice � that the best government<lb/>
is the least government.<lb/>
So Ron Reagan, a friend, has now<lb/>
become President Ronald Reagan, Chief<lb/>
Executive of the greatest nation in history.<lb/>
We will see how he handles this awesome<lb/>
assignment. He has our prayers, and our<lb/>
best wishes.<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
ill<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
�<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057314_0005"/><lb/>
Sc?<lb/>
r<lb/>
� hen<lb/>
vell-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
now<lb/>
hief<lb/>
ttor.<lb/>
Jsome<lb/>
our<lb/>
I HI t si i k�) im <lb/>
Features<lb/>
I AM MO 27, 1981<lb/>
Campus Sociologists Survey<lb/>
ECU Students' Dating Habits<lb/>
Dating behavior of university<lb/>
students is the subject of a new<lb/>
study by noted East Carolina<lb/>
Univesity sociologists David Knox<lb/>
and Kenneth Wilson.<lb/>
Using a random sample of 334<lb/>
E U students and a 21-question<lb/>
survey, the researchers discovered<lb/>
several interesting facts, some of<lb/>
which may be news to parents of<lb/>
college-aged students:<lb/>
Most students said they usually<lb/>
met potential dating partners<lb/>
through friends, rather than at par-<lb/>
lies or in class.<lb/>
Cioing cnit to eat, to a special<lb/>
event (such as a football game), to a<lb/>
patty and then back to one of the<lb/>
partner's rooms is the typical dating<lb/>
evening,<lb/>
"Our relationship" is the most<lb/>
popular topic o' conversation,<lb/>
followed by talk about studies and<lb/>
I his pie seems suspended in midair as it hurtles toward its victim at the annual Sigma Sigma Sigma Pie I hrow last mutual friends. Sex was discussed<lb/>
Friday night at Chapter V less than five percent of the time.<lb/>
An Impending Splatter<lb/>
Photo by GAPY PATTERSON<lb/>
� Half of the women surveyed<lb/>
and 70 percent of the men believed<lb/>
that first-date kisses are ap-<lb/>
propriate. By the fourth date, all<lb/>
but three percent of the women felt<lb/>
that kissing should take place.<lb/>
�Almost half of the men in-<lb/>
dicated a belief that sexual inter-<lb/>
course is appropriate by the fifth<lb/>
date, and 25 percent o the women<lb/>
agreed.<lb/>
�While most students believe six<lb/>
or more dates should precede the<lb/>
partners' engaging in sex, eight per-<lb/>
cent of each sex said intercourse<lb/>
could "appropriately" take place<lb/>
with no previous dates.<lb/>
The Knox-Wilson report also ex-<lb/>
amined the role of alcohol and mari-<lb/>
juana in dating behavior.<lb/>
"Over half of the students said<lb/>
they drank alcohol on their last<lb/>
date, with fewer reporting use of<lb/>
marijuana noted Knox. "One<lb/>
quarter of the men and 20 percent of<lb/>
the women said they smoked mari-<lb/>
juana on their last date<lb/>
I he study also concerned<lb/>
students' feelings about parental in-<lb/>
volvement in their dating-mating<lb/>
behavior.<lb/>
"Women were more likely than<lb/>
men to report that their parents<lb/>
tried to influence those they dated<lb/>
Wilson said.<lb/>
"And, when asked, 'To what<lb/>
degree have your parents interfered<lb/>
with your dating relationships?' the<lb/>
same pattern held � women were<lb/>
significantly more likely to say that<lb/>
their parents interfered<lb/>
Although 25 percent of the<lb/>
students responding said they felt<lb/>
"negative" or "very negative"<lb/>
about their parents' attempts to in-<lb/>
fluence or interfere in their<lb/>
datemate selection, most students<lb/>
"regard their parents' involvement<lb/>
See DATING, page 6, col. 4<lb/>
Lennon Items Selling Well<lb/>
Fans Seek Souveniers Of Ex-Beatle<lb/>
By JOAN WEY1 IK<lb/>
2<lb/>
en nor i<lb/>
SUt<lb/>
in 7 bu<lb/>
John 1 ennon was murdered on<lb/>
Decembet 8, 1980, and soon came<lb/>
the inevitable wave of merchandise<lb/>
designed to cash in on the ti<lb/>
Special record sales.<lb/>
tons, posters, 1 mums, and in<lb/>
numerable one-shot magazines<lb/>
only a pan of the mac i<lb/>
memorabilia to<lb/>
these items ha . others<lb/>
locally,<lb/>
lilts<lb/>
have not. I<lb/>
and what do<lb/>
themselves, (hose<lb/>
material, think al<lb/>
downtown Greet<lb/>
the toliowing results:<lb/>
Pipe Dreams I aniasy .mts on 5th<lb/>
Street was selling a variety of heart-<lb/>
shaped 1 ennon and Beatles but)<lb/>
and a Beatles I shirt. Da id R<lb/>
on duty at the store, said, "As a<lb/>
business major i can see ii from the<lb/>
person's standpoint; that<lb/>
. t because people do<lb/>
items. Hut as a consumer I<lb/>
don't like it<lb/>
He went on 10 s;�v that personally<lb/>
imeone's death<lb/>
explained the<lb/>
angle. It's all a matter i)'<lb/>
� demand, he said. It peo<lb/>
The ECU Percussion Knsemhle has been invited to perform for the Per-<lb/>
cussive Arts Society Convention in Washington, D.C. on January 27.<lb/>
Percussionists Perform<lb/>
The East Carolina University Per<lb/>
cussion Ensemble has been invited<lb/>
to perform for the Percussive Arts<lb/>
Society Convention in Washington,<lb/>
D.C on January 27, 1981. The<lb/>
January performance marks the se-<lb/>
cond appearance of the Percussion<lb/>
Ensemble at a PAS convention<lb/>
within the past five years. T he group<lb/>
also performed for the 1977 PAS<lb/>
convention in Knoxville.<lb/>
Other performances on the tour<lb/>
include Indian River High School in<lb/>
Chesapeake. Washington High<lb/>
School in Norfolk. Garfield High<lb/>
School in Woodbridge and Her-<lb/>
mitage High School in Richmond.<lb/>
Musical selections scheduled for<lb/>
performance by the ensemble in-<lb/>
clude contemporary original percus-<lb/>
sion works, solo selections and<lb/>
transcriptions of ia compositions.<lb/>
The Ensemble will be directed by<lb/>
Harold A. Jones of the East<lb/>
Carolina University faculty and<lb/>
graduate students Marks Shelton<lb/>
and Tim Haley.<lb/>
pie did not want to buy the I ennon<lb/>
items, then other people wouldn't<lb/>
sell them.<lb/>
Rav Bryan, managei ol Apple<lb/>
Records, reported a sudden surge in<lb/>
the selling of "Double Fantasy<lb/>
Lennon's last album, which was<lb/>
released shortly before his death. It<lb/>
and oldei Beatles albums were<lb/>
selling real well, Bryj ted. On<lb/>
display were a new I ennon<lb/>
memorial I -shirt, and an old 1960's<lb/>
Beatles fan magazine. Bry �<lb/>
that while he was not necessarily<lb/>
looking to sell the rare magazine, he<lb/>
would if he was ottered enough<lb/>
1 ike main others ,<lb/>
Bryan commented on the hug<lb/>
mercialization of Eh is Presley<lb/>
occurred aftei Ins death m 19" and<lb/>
still continues today. Comparing w<lb/>
to the 1 ennon "legacy he said. ' !<lb/>
don't think it (1 ennon's death) will<lb/>
be merchandised neat as much as<lb/>
Elvis, 'cause I ennon's fans<lb/>
smarter  I just think tl will<lb/>
not support it. "<lb/>
I he Book Bat n was selling<lb/>
poster, and a very recent . back,<lb/>
"Strawberry fields Forever; lohn<lb/>
Lennon Remembered ' He pro<lb/>
bablv wasn't even in his grave<lb/>
before they came out with<lb/>
book Meted Pattv Broglio,<lb/>
working at the bookshop, fellow<lb/>
employee Sheri Lawrence com-<lb/>
mented, "1 didn't like him to begin<lb/>
with, so it didn't make a bit of dif-<lb/>
me  I think it's a waste<lb/>
of money<lb/>
The c entral New and Card<lb/>
Shop, on ill, selling at<lb/>
least six one shot specialty<lb/>
magazines about 1 ennon. a woman<lb/>
working there, who asked not to be<lb/>
tified, said that the magazines,<lb/>
' the new all-Lennon issue of<lb/>
"Rolling stone" were selling well.<lb/>
she noted that she found the<lb/>
"Rolling Stone" cover, a bizarre<lb/>
to showing a nude 1 ennon curl-<lb/>
iround In- wife, YokoOno, to be<lb/>
"disgusting She reported no in-<lb/>
crease in the sale ol Beatles books<lb/>
that were already on stock before<lb/>
mooting.<lb/>
I la Mushroom, also on the mall.<lb/>
- ied no I ennon material.<lb/>
Man ! )onna Fabar said she<lb/>
would consider selling such items it<lb/>
it was ii i taste, but, "I'm not<lb/>
gung ho about something like<lb/>
He left a lot of good music<lb/>
d vibes and 1 think that<lb/>
d be enough.<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
New Wave Night<lb/>
New wave fans enjoy a niyhi of dancing to their music at JJ's.<lb/>
Preparing Steak Can Be Easy<lb/>
By KATHY WEYLER<lb/>
si�fl U nlrr<lb/>
Probably some o' the most<lb/>
magical words to any student, on oi<lb/>
off campus, are "Come over for<lb/>
steak tonight These words, we<lb/>
would all agree, are wonderful to<lb/>
hear, but they are equally wonderful<lb/>
to say because cooking steaks can be<lb/>
almost as easy and as much tun as<lb/>
eating them.<lb/>
When you plan to cook steaks,<lb/>
the first thing you must do is buy<lb/>
them. This is the hardest part. After<lb/>
all, meat is expensive these days, so<lb/>
don't expect to breeze into your<lb/>
favorite supermarket and walk out<lb/>
with two steaks for less than about<lb/>
$6.(X). You can however, get the<lb/>
most for that S6.00 if you know the<lb/>
ropes.<lb/>
Be very observant of the meat<lb/>
department in your supermarket. If<lb/>
any of the beef is very gray or, God<lb/>
forbid, greenish, hasten to another<lb/>
store. I his means the beef is old and<lb/>
the department manager doesn't<lb/>
care who knows it. Good steaks<lb/>
should be blood red, perhaps with a<lb/>
slight brownish tinge, and the fat on<lb/>
them should appear soft and moist.<lb/>
Once you've found some nice-<lb/>
looking meat, start reading labels.<lb/>
Chances are this will be confusing if<lb/>
you haven't done it before. In<lb/>
genet al. all stores put the following<lb/>
information oi meat labels: cut of<lb/>
meat, grade ot meat (indicator of<lb/>
quality � hopefully "A"), price per<lb/>
pound, pounds in the package, and<lb/>
total price of the package. Be sure<lb/>
you can tell which is which as it is<lb/>
very embarrassing to reach the cash<lb/>
register and realize that 1.35 is the<lb/>
weight of the meat, not the price.<lb/>
"How do I know what to buy?"<lb/>
you may wail in despair. The<lb/>
amount you want to spend is most<lb/>
likely going to be the determining<lb/>
figure. I have preference for rib-eye<lb/>
steak because it is not too horribly<lb/>
expensive, has no bones and not too<lb/>
much fat, and two nb-eyes fit nicely<lb/>
into the broiling pan in my toaster<lb/>
oven.<lb/>
Sirloin and T-bone are other good<lb/>
choices; however, thev have bones<lb/>
Attic Most Popular Nightclub<lb/>
In Recent Student Survey<lb/>
A recent poll of Fast<lb/>
Carolina students con-<lb/>
ducted by Preston Pro-<lb/>
ductions showed the<lb/>
Attic to be the most<lb/>
popular club fre-<lb/>
quented by the<lb/>
students. The survey,<lb/>
taken from a random<lb/>
selection of listings in<lb/>
the student directory,<lb/>
was done in two time<lb/>
periods. A total of 209<lb/>
students were polled:<lb/>
75 in April of 1980 and<lb/>
the remaining 134 in<lb/>
November of this year.<lb/>
A total of twelve<lb/>
questions were asked,<lb/>
the first four categoriz<lb/>
ing the student by sex,<lb/>
dorm or off-campus<lb/>
residency, classifica-<lb/>
tion, and major. The<lb/>
remaining eight ques<lb/>
tions were as follows:<lb/>
(1) Do you evet go to<lb/>
the nightclubs in<lb/>
Greenville?<lb/>
(2) How many times<lb/>
pet month on the<lb/>
average?<lb/>
(3) How many<lb/>
nightspots do you<lb/>
usually visit pet night?<lb/>
(4) Name your three<lb/>
favorite nightspots in<lb/>
order of preference.<lb/>
(5) What is your<lb/>
favorite live band that<lb/>
plays the local<lb/>
nightspots9<lb/>
(6) Which radio sta-<lb/>
tion do you listen to the<lb/>
most?<lb/>
(7) How do you<lb/>
usually find out what's<lb/>
happening at the<lb/>
Cireenville nightspots in<lb/>
the way of specials,<lb/>
bands, concerts, etc.?<lb/>
See DOWNTOWN, page 6<lb/>
CLUBTotal1st2nd3rd<lb/>
ATTIC116662723<lb/>
ELBO ROOM82353314<lb/>
PANTANA BOB'S98214334<lb/>
JOLLY ROGER42171114<lb/>
JJ'S MUSIC HALL43171016<lb/>
CHAPTER X22868<lb/>
SUNSET11065<lb/>
CAR. OPRY HOUSE3512158<lb/>
PEACHES3021<lb/>
PAPA KATZ15735<lb/>
TREE HOUSE266812<lb/>
RATHSKELLER10136<lb/>
NEW HORIZON5401<lb/>
and bones are waste unless you have<lb/>
a dog. When meat is weighed, bones<lb/>
and fat are part of the total weight,<lb/>
so buying steaks with a lot of bone<lb/>
and fat is just feeding your<lb/>
wastebasket. Some fat is desirable<lb/>
since it keeps the meat from being<lb/>
loo tough.<lb/>
Do not be deceived into buying<lb/>
round steak or flank steak because<lb/>
of its lean appearance and affor-<lb/>
dable price tag. It requires a lot ot<lb/>
tenderizing to be palatable.<lb/>
So now you've bought your<lb/>
steaks and you're ready to cook<lb/>
them. There are dozens of ways to<lb/>
cook steaks. 1 recommend broiling<lb/>
because it is fairly fast and better for<lb/>
you than frying. When you broil a<lb/>
steak, much of the cholesterol-<lb/>
packed fat cooks out.<lb/>
lo broil steaks, you will need a<lb/>
toaster oven that broils or a regular<lb/>
oven, and a broiling pan. This is a<lb/>
deep pan with a slotted or per-<lb/>
forated rack that fits on top o' it.<lb/>
Hopefully your toaster oven has<lb/>
one.<lb/>
If not, steaks can be broiled in a<lb/>
casserole dish, though the fat will<lb/>
not cook out very well this way. The<lb/>
same goes for a regular oven,<lb/>
although if you have this kind of<lb/>
oven, you can improvise a broiling<lb/>
pan from a baking dish with a cake<lb/>
rack fitted on top. Before broiling,<lb/>
put about two tablespoons of water<lb/>
in your broiling pan.<lb/>
Depending on the condition of<lb/>
your oven, you will probably need<lb/>
to broil your steaks eight to fifteen<lb/>
minutes on each side, keeping in<lb/>
mind that thick steaks take longer to<lb/>
cook. After broiling both sides at<lb/>
least eight minutes each, cut into a<lb/>
Meak to test the center. "Doneness"<lb/>
is a matter of personal preference,<lb/>
but remember that it may be<lb/>
dangerous to eat undercooked meat.<lb/>
I prefer a medium-done steak, with<lb/>
the center a pale pinkish-gray.<lb/>
See PREPARING, page 6, col. 1<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057314_0006"/><lb/>
HI si K()I INI AN<lb/>
I AM K 27, 1981<lb/>
LtfMAjAJG .bout CollCgc Thc H)tc lAjy<lb/>
6Y Df)V M)tfis<lb/>
Audio-Visual Portfolios<lb/>
Help Job Applicants<lb/>
Julius Caesar A uditions<lb/>
Auditions for the<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse production<lb/>
of Shakespeare's epic<lb/>
tragedy "Julius<lb/>
Caesar" will be held<lb/>
Thursday and Friday,<lb/>
Feb. 5-6.<lb/>
Auditions will be<lb/>
conducted at ECU's<lb/>
Brewster Building,<lb/>
Room C-103, from<lb/>
7:30 to 10:30 each even-<lb/>
ing, or by appointment<lb/>
with Edgar Loessin,<lb/>
director. Loessin may<lb/>
be reached at the ECU<lb/>
drama and speech<lb/>
department, 757-6390.<lb/>
Each auditioner is<lb/>
asked to prepare a long<lb/>
speech or soliloquy<lb/>
from the script, which<lb/>
need not be memoriz-<lb/>
ed. Copies of the pla<lb/>
are available in the<lb/>
reserve room of ECU's<lb/>
Joyner Library.<lb/>
"Julius Caesar" per-<lb/>
formances are schedul-<lb/>
ed for April 7-11.<lb/>
Dating Habits Surveyed<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
in positive terms the report said.<lb/>
Drs. Knox and Wilson plan to<lb/>
present the results of their campus<lb/>
dating study at a meeting of the<lb/>
Southern Sociological Society in<lb/>
Louisville, Ky in March.<lb/>
The April issue of the journal<lb/>
"Family Relations" will carry an ar-<lb/>
ticle based on the research.<lb/>
Knox, author of several books on<lb/>
family life and numerous articles in<lb/>
popular magazines and professional<lb/>
journals, is director of a marriage<lb/>
counseling program at ECU. He<lb/>
also practices as a private marriage<lb/>
counselor.<lb/>
Wilson is developing a book.<lb/>
"Sexual Harassment with col-<lb/>
league Linda Kraus. He has col<lb/>
laborated with his wife, Christa<lb/>
Reiser, also of the ECU sociology<lb/>
faculty, on previous research pro<lb/>
jects.<lb/>
BALTIMORE, Ml) (CPS) - No,<lb/>
he has no connection � physical or<lb/>
spiritual � to the video dating in<lb/>
dustry, he says.<lb/>
But Eugene Williams, a dean at<lb/>
Sojourner-Douglas College here,<lb/>
wouldn't mind putting a little show<lb/>
business m a similarly personal area<lb/>
of students' lives: the job interview.<lb/>
Williams thinks students should<lb/>
be going to job interviews with a<lb/>
complete audio-visual presentation<lb/>
of themselves, all the better to sell<lb/>
themselves to prospective<lb/>
employers.<lb/>
"We're not trying to help that<lb/>
prospective teacher who has some<lb/>
beauty and shiny teeth Williams<lb/>
explains. "We're trying to give peo-<lb/>
ple the opportunity to demonstrate<lb/>
their abilities<lb/>
The "opportunity" comes in<lb/>
something Williams calls I he<lb/>
Audio-Visual Portfolio, which he's<lb/>
no trying to market to students na-<lb/>
tionally.<lb/>
The student who bins � prices<lb/>
start at S42.95 � will get the chance<lb/>
to present work samples, an<lb/>
autobiography and even a profes-<lb/>
sional philosophy through a slide<lb/>
presentation, accompanied by an<lb/>
audio cassette<lb/>
"It a person is applying tor a<lb/>
teaching position Williams sas,<lb/>
"the pictures will show him working<lb/>
witli students, interacting with<lb/>
parents and the community.<lb/>
through the tapes, the employer<lb/>
can hear what the person actually<lb/>
sounds like in the classroom<lb/>
Ruth Parcell, of UCLA's career<lb/>
office, likes the idea. "Ans way a<lb/>
student can present himself more<lb/>
imaginatively would be good she<lb/>
enthuses. "And it certainly would<lb/>
be interesting to try<lb/>
But reaction from other plase<lb/>
ment counselors is less sanguine.<lb/>
"I would sa anything that would<lb/>
help in presenting yourself long<lb/>
distance should be tried say-<lb/>
counselor Mary Compstone<lb/>
Portland State Universit)<lb/>
"However she adds, "I can<lb/>
see the value ot delivering this <lb/>
local employer tor an inter<lb/>
Why put anything between you<lb/>
the employer it you can helj<lb/>
1 rank Hallgreen, director<lb/>
Career Placement at the I rtivei<lb/>
of Nebraska, sees "no particular ad<lb/>
vantage" i the a ppr o a(<lb/>
"Personal interviews are crucial<lb/>
Students have to learn how to pre<lb/>
sent themselves<lb/>
An audio-visual presentatii<lb/>
Hallgreen adds, may not be flexible<lb/>
enough.<lb/>
"Each situation is different<lb/>
Hallgreen argues "A fixed presen<lb/>
tation doesn't allow for change It<lb/>
sort ot like a touched-up picture<lb/>
"We primarily see people goinj<lb/>
to management, business, health<lb/>
and human servies as a<lb/>
spokeswoman tor Harvard's C areer<lb/>
Placement Service. "1 Jn't think<lb/>
that it (an audio-visual presentation)<lb/>
would be appropriate at this le<lb/>
or that employers would find it<lb/>
useful<lb/>
'<lb/>
Downtown Survey Taken<lb/>
Photo by JON JORDAN<lb/>
I his work b Professor Donald Sevauer is on display with other works in<lb/>
the annual ECU School of Art Faculty Show in the Gray Gallery in the<lb/>
Jenkins fine Vrts (enter<lb/>
Preparing A Steak<lb/>
Can Be Simple<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
is more to cooking a steak,<lb/>
. than just sticking it into<lb/>
the broiler for a few minutes. Part<lb/>
of the art of cooking a steak is<lb/>
enha - its flavor, thereby<lb/>
g the need foi steak sauce.<lb/>
I -i - ire a few tried-and-true<lb/>
MlS.<lb/>
Sa peppei � your tablet op<lb/>
diments are necessities tor a<lb/>
:ak. Sprinkle about one-<lb/>
ispoon on each side before<lb/>
ng sail � available in the<lb/>
n of any supermarket.<lb/>
Sprinkle lightly on each side before<lb/>
broiling.<lb/>
Lemon-pepper � a remarkable<lb/>
seasoning brought to my attention<lb/>
mst last summer. Buy it in the spice<lb/>
section of any supermarket and<lb/>
sprinkle lightly on each side before<lb/>
broiling.<lb/>
The absolute best way I've ever<lb/>
tound � On each side before broil-<lb/>
ing: Pour about one tablespoon of<lb/>
Worcestershire sauce, sprinkle light-<lb/>
ly with lemon-pepper, finish with<lb/>
about one-half teaspoon chopped<lb/>
chives (find them in the good old<lb/>
spice section) and a pinch of dried<lb/>
parsley.<lb/>
Now enjoy your steaks with a<lb/>
special guest and cross steak sauce<lb/>
off your shopping list forever!<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
The results of the<lb/>
data compiled was<lb/>
f r o tii 113 dorm<lb/>
students and off-<lb/>
campus residents; 103<lb/>
males and 1()6 females;<lb/>
46 freshman, 40<lb/>
sophmores, 49 juniors,<lb/>
64 seniors and 10<lb/>
graduate siudents.<lb/>
Of the 209 polled,<lb/>
188 students visited<lb/>
nightclubs while 21 did<lb/>
not. Visits per month<lb/>
averaged 7.86 per stu-<lb/>
dent and an average of<lb/>
1.63 clubs were visited<lb/>
per student per night.<lb/>
The favorite club for<lb/>
first choice preterence<lb/>
was by far the Attic<lb/>
with 35 percent of the<lb/>
votes. The Elbo Room<lb/>
was second with 19 per-<lb/>
cent and Pantana Bobs<lb/>
with 11 percent ranked<lb/>
third. The Attic also<lb/>
clearly ranked first in<lb/>
overall votes with Pan-<lb/>
tana's second and the<lb/>
Elbo Room third.<lb/>
The favorite bands in<lb/>
order of preference<lb/>
were as follows:<lb/>
(1) Brice St.<lb/>
(2) Sidewinder<lb/>
(3) Super Grit<lb/>
(4) Jesse Bolt<lb/>
(5) Lain't (Pegasus)<lb/>
(6) The Nighthawks<lb/>
and<lb/>
(7) Badge.<lb/>
It must be noted that<lb/>
only seven of the tour-<lb/>
teen clubs on the survey<lb/>
use live entertainment<lb/>
all or part of the time.<lb/>
The top six radio sta<lb/>
tions in order ot<lb/>
preference were: WITN<lb/>
with 24 percent,<lb/>
WQDR with 20 per<lb/>
cent, WOOW with 13<lb/>
percent, WRQR with<lb/>
13 percent and WMYK<lb/>
with 8 percent. WSF1<lb/>
and WRA1 both<lb/>
received 7 percent each.<lb/>
As tor advertising,<lb/>
alter word ot<lb/>
mouth most of those<lb/>
surveyed tound out<lb/>
"what was going on"<lb/>
by calendars, The East<lb/>
c arolinian, posters,<lb/>
and tadio in that order.<lb/>
Mitchell's<lb/>
Hairstyling<lb/>
and Beauty Salon<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
Cut-Blow Drv and<lb/>
Condition<lb/>
Keg. $15.00 Now $9.95<lb/>
(�(xd I'hru Jan. 23-r"eb.7<lb/>
7 16-2950 756-4042<lb/>
A�OT0Nt If TO<lb/>
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FRtCMANCY<lb/>
pre�Acr ttft. txrlf c<lb/>
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cr owrmltng Pgr fvrffwr<lb/>
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tno Ml ISM) b�r�.n <lb/>
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luwtn mmmmft<lb/>
fnwmH$m�m9t.<lb/>
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MALPASS<lb/>
MUFFLER SHOP<lb/>
2616 E. 110th St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
758-7676<lb/>
Custom Exhaust Systems<lb/>
Tune-ups, Brake Service<lb/>
American and Foreign<lb/>
Car Parts<lb/>
TKE<lb/>
Little Sister<lb/>
HH<lb/>
Raw Egg Eating,<lb/>
and Chugging<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
Reduced Beverage<lb/>
Prices and Door Prices<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
TUES JAN. 27th<lb/>
25 ADVANCED 50C DOOR<lb/>
King Sandwich<lb/>
&amp;Deli<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK<lb/>
for Student Convenience<lb/>
Daily Hours:<lb/>
Monday-Thursday 11:00-8:00<lb/>
Friday-Saturday 11:00-9:00<lb/>
Sunday 12-6<lb/>
Daily specials for ECU Students<lb/>
from 5:00 p.m. till closing.<lb/>
Check Out This Great Savings<lb/>
Call ahead for take-outs<lb/>
752-4297<lb/>
(Colonial Heights Shopping Center)<lb/>
ATTIC 61<lb/>
, ELECTRI ASYLUM RfCOROlMG ARTISTS<lb/>
EPIC RECORDING ARTISTS<lb/>
Tilt . TO II. KOfSTIPfO . lay 97<lb/>
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JAN.29<lb/>
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uarniuuni . iuiuhuhu artist<lb/>
FRI.<lb/>
JAN. 30<lb/>
SAT.<lb/>
JAN.31<lb/>
WED, JAN. 28 MUG NIGHT<lb/>
with<lb/>
STRATUS<lb/>
INFO:AT<lb/>
GIFT GALLERY<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
� m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057314_0007"/><lb/>
w<lb/>
is<lb/>
ice<lb/>
In<lb/>
rts<lb/>
mi<lb/>
.�<lb/>
IN 29<lb/>
IN. 31<lb/>
I HI 1 SAkoi INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
M H 27, IVM<lb/>
Clint's 'Bronco Billy'<lb/>
Free Weekend Film<lb/>
This Friday and Saturday night at<lb/>
5,7:15 and 9:30 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
the Student Union films Committee<lb/>
will present Clint Eastwood's<lb/>
critically acclaimed "Bronco Billy<lb/>
Admission is by ID and activity card<lb/>
oi MSC Membership.<lb/>
"Bronco Billy" has onl) one star.<lb/>
but surely one is enough when he is<lb/>
among the biggest box-office attrac-<lb/>
tions in the world. Here, though,<lb/>
1 astwood plays handsomely against<lb/>
type, replacing his "Dirty Harry"<lb/>
figure with a good-as-gold rodeo<lb/>
stai who refers to his fans as "little<lb/>
pards prays for them not to "ae!<lb/>
tangled up with hard liquor and<lb/>
cigarettes" and hopes his wild West<lb/>
show will make enough money to<lb/>
pa for a ranch "where city kids can<lb/>
come out and see what the West was<lb/>
really like He lavishes his kind-<lb/>
ness on everyone from runaway<lb/>
heiresses to Vietnam deserts, from<lb/>
one-handed cowboys to pregnant<lb/>
Indians. He is stirred to righteous<lb/>
anger only when a bad guy mauls his<lb/>
best gal or breaks a little boy's piggv<lb/>
bank. He is too good to be true �<lb/>
except in a sweet-sou led dime-novel<lb/>
movie like this here<lb/>
Eastwood plays the platitudinous<lb/>
Billy with tongue firm in his lean<lb/>
Clint Eastwood has acted in six of the last seven films that he has<lb/>
directed.<lb/>
Malcolm McDowell:<lb/>
Hates US Television,<lb/>
Enjoys New Play<lb/>
B KENNETH R.CLARK<lb/>
l Pi 1 Hep MM<lb/>
NlW YORK UP1 - Malcolm McDowell, an English actor whose<lb/>
yardstick quite naturally is the BBC, took a break in the labor oi fret-<lb/>
ting over the impending arrival oi his first born last week to sav a tew<lb/>
words about American television.<lb/>
Words like "drivel "pulp" and "abysmal<lb/>
McDowell's latest role � that of the volcanic Jimmy Porter in John<lb/>
Osborne's "1 ook Back in Anger" � will premiere Eeb. 24 to a poten-<lb/>
tial television audience oi 1.6 million. But only because cable televi-<lb/>
sion does not lie beneath the baleful glare oi the Nielsen ratings.<lb/>
McDowell did the play last year to critical acclaim Oft Broadway.<lb/>
He'll do it now for Showtime Pay Ielevision Service which serves Ns<lb/>
cable systems nationwide.<lb/>
�"None ol the networks would have touched us with a barge pole<lb/>
he said. "It's this dreaded word 'ratings It totally controls the pro-<lb/>
grams ol the Big 3 so whal you get is pulp � the son of thing in which<lb/>
you can go and get a cup of coffee and come back and it really doesn't<lb/>
make much difference.<lb/>
"I've seen extraordinarv programs on television here � mixed in<lb/>
with all that drivel we're made to watch most nights . . . But I just wish<lb/>
one prime time hour per week would be used bv the networks for a<lb/>
"Masterpiece Theater" or something.<lb/>
"Network executives think the viewer has got the mind oi a child of<lb/>
seven and as long as they think of it that way then the programming is<lb/>
going to be abysmal<lb/>
I hat oft his chest, McDowell returned to the two subjects nearest<lb/>
his heart � his play and his pregnant wife, American actress Mary<lb/>
Stenburgen, star oi "Ragtime" and winner oi her own flock oi<lb/>
theatrical awards.<lb/>
"The due date is the 26th McDowell said, "but it could happen<lb/>
any time mm. Mary intuitively feels it will be a boy, but I don't care.<lb/>
Just as long as we have a healthy child. This is just the biggest thing in<lb/>
my lite right now<lb/>
"Look Back in Anger" and the thrill of recreating it for television is<lb/>
a solid runner up. "1 talk nonstop in that play and on television the<lb/>
camera can go oft and do reaction which is verv good he said. "On<lb/>
stage, it's difficult to know where the audience is looking. On TV you<lb/>
can control what you want the audience to see . . . Cable is an amaing<lb/>
phenomenon. It's going to make a dent in the networks and I think it's<lb/>
going to be very good competitionwise<lb/>
McDowell is less eager to talk about his last foray into filmmaking.<lb/>
He starred brilliantly as the Roman emperor Caligula in the Bob<lb/>
Ciuccione movie oi the same name � a film that turned out to be a<lb/>
multi-million dollar extravaganza of sex, sodomy and slaughter.<lb/>
"It was written by Gore Vidal, who's a very respected writer<lb/>
McDowell said ruefully. "It had a lot of very respectable names<lb/>
associated with it � John Gielgud and Peter O'Toole. And also, it<lb/>
was a marvelous part. I tried to bring a new slant to the character �<lb/>
Caligula, the original anarchist. Unfortunately, it was all lost . . . it's<lb/>
verv difficult to find the performers in all the mire that was put in later<lb/>
bv the producers who were just trying to make a quick buck � which<lb/>
they've done. They've made a fortune out of it<lb/>
For a while after release of the film, McDowell went on the televi-<lb/>
sion at every opportunity to excoriate it. But no more. "1 finally<lb/>
realized that the more I said about it, the more people wanted to go<lb/>
and see it, so 1 don't really talk about it very much now he said.<lb/>
The eagerly awaited McDowell offspring arrived Friday � an 8<lb/>
pound 3 ounce girl named Lilly Amanda.<lb/>
That he'll talk about.<lb/>
cheeks, but the mock sentimentality<lb/>
is only a cover tor the movie's ge-<lb/>
nuine sentimentality about becom-<lb/>
ing the person you really want to be.<lb/>
Billy, you see. was a New Jersev<lb/>
shoe salesman who decided that he<lb/>
wanted to be a cowboy. In fact, no<lb/>
one in his troupe � from the snake-<lb/>
dancing Indian to the baby-faced<lb/>
roper � is what he seems to be.<lb/>
A character like Billy McCoy,<lb/>
who makes Rockv Balboa sound as<lb/>
cynical as Celine, has not graced<lb/>
movies since John Wayne's<lb/>
"Singin' Sandv" westerns of the<lb/>
mid-30s. His nemesis turned<lb/>
girlfriend recalls the snooty mad-<lb/>
caps ot the old screwball comedies.<lb/>
It was George Orwell who wrote:<lb/>
"A I 50, everyone has the face he<lb/>
deserves " Orwell was dead at 46;<lb/>
but Eastwood, who turned 50 on<lb/>
May 31. keeps trucking manfully<lb/>
through middle age with the face his<lb/>
movies deserve � sun-burnished,<lb/>
granite hard, seamed and serene.<lb/>
(lint Eastwood rivals The Electric Horseman' in this woo fin shuckin critically acclaimed horse opera.<lb/>
Eastwood On Film Directing<lb/>
Clint Eastwood is the number one<lb/>
box office attraction in the world.<lb/>
In his film "Bronco Billy he con-<lb/>
tinues to broaden his popular ap-<lb/>
peal, following the unprecedented<lb/>
success ot both "Every Which Way<lb/>
But Loose" and "Escape From<lb/>
Alcatraz<lb/>
Clint EAstwood, the director, is<lb/>
no less a film presence than Clint<lb/>
Eastwood the actoi and siar. Tins<lb/>
interview took place just as<lb/>
Eastwood was preparing "Bronco<lb/>
Billv" tor its final version, involving<lb/>
himseli with both the editing and<lb/>
soundtracks oi the film.<lb/>
In addition to your tremendous<lb/>
success as an actor, you've also<lb/>
made quite a reputation tor yourself<lb/>
as a director. What led to your deci-<lb/>
sion to direct film?<lb/>
"I feel that directing is the logical<lb/>
extension of acting if you want to<lb/>
move into a lota! concept oi film,<lb/>
rather than limiting yoursell to just<lb/>
one component of the process. Ob-<lb/>
viously, as the director, you can<lb/>
maneuver the whole show. You're<lb/>
not the creative artist, so to speak.<lb/>
the writer gets that credit, but<lb/>
you're the interpretive artist, work-<lb/>
ing with the writer's intent.<lb/>
"It just otters more of a challenge<lb/>
to me after 200 hours of a television<lb/>
series and numerous movies, and I<lb/>
really do enjoy the work and diversi-<lb/>
ty of filmmaking, particularly from<lb/>
behind the camera<lb/>
Are there any directors you<lb/>
especially admire or use as examples<lb/>
for your own technique1<lb/>
"I've admired a lot o' directors,<lb/>
but mainly for individual shows. 1<lb/>
always liked Lord's The Quiet<lb/>
Man for example, or Kurosawa's<lb/>
early Samurai films like 'Yojimbo'<lb/>
and 'Redbeard But 1 don't think<lb/>
I've ever been an afficionado of one<lb/>
particular director. I've always liked<lb/>
various directors for certain efforts<lb/>
o theirs<lb/>
Do you feel that you have your<lb/>
ow n v isual style?<lb/>
"I try to have a different style for<lb/>
every picture. 1 probabiy do have a<lb/>
Style, which is more of an approach,<lb/>
really, thai I rely on to get specific<lb/>
kinds of effects. However, I like to<lb/>
let the picture dictate what I might<lb/>
choose lo do.<lb/>
"I know that I'm learning more<lb/>
as a director, and that I've made a<lb/>
lot oi change- in the transition<lb/>
from, sav, 'Play Mistv lor Me' to<lb/>
' I he Outlaw Josey Wales' or 'The<lb/>
Gauntlet It just seems that each<lb/>
production unfolds in a different<lb/>
wav <lb/>
Which film was the most difficult<lb/>
for you as a director<lb/>
"I think that 'The biger Sane!ion'<lb/>
was the toughest, technically,<lb/>
because n took place in Switzerland<lb/>
on the side oi one of the most<lb/>
treacherous mountains in the Alps.<lb/>
That made the logistical aspects of<lb/>
the production very tricky in terms<lb/>
of our shooting schedule, in addi-<lb/>
tion to being physically difficult<lb/>
What do you look for in a scrip<lb/>
"1 look for entertainment value.<lb/>
When I read a script it should enter-<lb/>
tain me, like a hook. It should<lb/>
create visual pictures and be able to<lb/>
hold my interest, either through ac-<lb/>
tion, suspense, humor, or whatever<lb/>
device the writer is working with. It<lb/>
sounds simple, but finding a good<lb/>
scrip! is verv tedious work<lb/>
How do you get the best perfor-<lb/>
mance from an actor or actress<lb/>
"1 think the best performances<lb/>
come from the best working en-<lb/>
vironments. Actors become very in-<lb/>
secure verv easilv, due to the nature<lb/>
ol the profession, so you need to set<lb/>
up that positive atmosphere.<lb/>
"There are a lot of critics or film<lb/>
buffs who like to project the idea<lb/>
that directors evoke great perfor-<lb/>
mances out of actors, which I think<lb/>
is baloney. I he actors have the in-<lb/>
strument and the ability, if they're<lb/>
smart. to do the job that the director<lb/>
wants to see. What's needed is bas<lb/>
communication in a comfortable<lb/>
setting, preceeded by good casting, I<lb/>
might add<lb/>
Do you find it difficult, as in yo<lb/>
current film "Bronco Billy to<lb/>
both act and direct simultaneously?<lb/>
"Well, this is the seventh film<lb/>
thai I've directed, and out oi the<lb/>
seven, I've acted in six of them, with<lb/>
'Breezy1 being the only exception.<lb/>
Anne Eambert plays Miranda in Peter Weir's exquisite 'Picnic At Hanging Rock A<lb/>
mysteriously beautiful girl described as a 'Botticelli angel' by her teacher, Miranda believes<lb/>
that 'everything begins and ends at exactly the right time and place The picnic is no picnic<lb/>
in this rich Australian film of 1979.<lb/>
Peter Weir Corner<lb/>
Aussies<lb/>
In Hendrix<lb/>
This W'ednesdav nigh! at S p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Hendrix Theatre, the Student<lb/>
Union films Committee presents Peter Weir's<lb/>
amazing "Picnic At Hanging Rock Admission<lb/>
is free with ID and activitv card or MSC Member-<lb/>
ship Card.<lb/>
Following the film, coffee and doughnuts will<lb/>
be served in the Multi-Purpose Room, downstairs<lb/>
in the student center. Students, faculty and staff<lb/>
interested in discussing he film with others are in-<lb/>
vited to attend.<lb/>
"What we see and what we seem are but a<lb/>
dream � a dream within a dream I his line,<lb/>
spoken under a mist-shrouded volcanic cliff, sets<lb/>
the ethereal, mystical tone ol "Picnic At Hanging<lb/>
Rock" right from the start. As he did m "The<lb/>
I ast Wave his excursion into the occult world of<lb/>
aborigines, Australian director Peter Weir i- set-<lb/>
ting you up: behind his Ivrical surfaces he means<lb/>
to unearth a reality ordinarv folks know not of.<lb/>
"Hanging Rock made in 1975, leaves no doubt<lb/>
thai Weir is unusually good at this sort o' thing,<lb/>
one of the strongest talents m the booming<lb/>
Australian movie industry.<lb/>
The setting is a proper Australian boarding<lb/>
school for girls, run bv one Mrs. Applevard<lb/>
(Rachel Roberts), an imposing figure oi Victorian<lb/>
authority. On St. Valentine's Day. 1900, her<lb/>
white-clad charges go oft tor an outing at Hanging<lb/>
Rock. Led by the angelic-iooking Miranda (Anne<lb/>
Lambert), four oi the girls wander in the primeval<lb/>
wilderness. One returns sereaming in terror. The<lb/>
other three vanish.<lb/>
What happened to them on the cliff? The ques-<lb/>
tion obsesses the schoolgirls, the surrounding<lb/>
community and the young gentleman (Dominic<lb/>
Ciuard) who spied on them with erotic interest as<lb/>
they started their ascent. Were Miranda and her<lb/>
followers seeking a sexual apotheosis on Hanging<lb/>
Rock, an escape from the life-denying restraints of<lb/>
the world? After all, just before she disappeared,<lb/>
didn't she enigmatically remark: "Everything<lb/>
begins and ends at exactly the right time" � as if<lb/>
she knew what her fate would be?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
r.�.  . wtapMMMI<lb/>
<pb facs="00057314_0008"/><lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Lady Bucs 19th, To Host State<lb/>
and n<lb/>
B Jl1n DuPRl V<lb/>
I Jil.ir<lb/>
It's been a long ume in coming<lb/>
iow that it's finally arrived,<lb/>
ECl head basketball coach Cath<lb/>
 . and hei 1 ady Pirates just<lb/>
luite know how to react.<lb/>
Knd uzzi has worked since hei ai<lb/>
rival ai Eastarolina to form a win<lb/>
ning team thai deserved national<lb/>
recognition. 15 3 record thus tar ting corps, but thus fai hei statistics<lb/>
inthel98 - reason and a weekend are shorl oi those she establisl<lb/>
victory ovei nationally 15th ranked prioi to a 1979 back<lb/>
Virg brougl ndruzzi one step Riley continues I<lb/>
ei ultimate goal. Pirates with an 18 8 its pei game<lb/>
1 he 1 ady Pirates moved into the average Jones follows with a stead)<lb/>
19th position in the Associated 14 7 average with Denklei<lb/>
Press Women's Basketball lop 20 tributing 12.3 and centei Ma<lb/>
� was announced Monday. Girven 10.3 Girven lead<lb/>
d i 84 78 Sunday Pirates in rebounding with 9 1 pet<lb/>
Charlottesville to push the outing, with Denkler grabbing 6.1<lb/>
the 17th slot in tins Andruzzi looks forward to the<lb/>
t v<lb/>
e ava<lb/>
w eek<lb/>
NC 1 - matchup wii<lb/>
k in said Siae. but noi in regard I na<lb/>
a Monda i oon tional P'1 aspe<lb/>
"We do have an<lb/>
 sn i s :ij now. improve on oui record, I ays<lb/>
until aftei we've "If we improve in the poll, we im<lb/>
r�la v State " P'ove in 'nc P �<lb/>
TT Pirate mentoi '�State lost to Mai a<lb/>
ample reason to worry, as the (80-60) and they're<lb/>
Wolfpack brings a national rating down here hottei thai<lb/>
0j 3th to Minges Coliseum haven't been challenged<lb/>
Wednesda at 7:30 p.n lasi Carolina before rhey'n<lb/>
tune the 1 ad 1' d an this game lightly.<lb/>
N. Stat� : was bet "1 think they're<lb/>
Wo mg and well prepared<lb/>
,9 5 ictorv in the not be as strong as<lb/>
1972 ; teams have been, but th<lb/>
seasoi Sine N(-s ! cadv<lb/>
"<lb/>
is an 4 83 Aftei the 1 ,d Pirai<lb/>
75<lb/>
i Is over the past<lb/>
N.C. St;<lb/>
vill be tin rest b.<lb/>
(�iren (.els Jump<lb/>
Wrestlers<lb/>
Fall To<lb/>
Tar Heels<lb/>
Hi WII 1 I M M-l VERTO.N<lb/>
24 '�<lb/>
-<lb/>
NC-CH - � stit<lb/>
. should be called<lb/>
: Can lina no at K). 1 he Lady<lb/>
time 6-1 juni I ri H<lb/>
 sie I hoi . n na Maria 1 ope.<lb/>
Mi-America Kathv Ha<lb/>
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�s an M .iding su<lb/>
"US(<lb/>
 olfpae k now Andi uzzi "Tl<lb/>
I l ace to fill the tenders. e'n<lb/>
departed stars Genia tough inside<lb/>
Beaslex. K La wii<lb/>
d Pirates<lb/>
Wolfpack star- some to speculate as I<lb/>
Coach Andruzzi (left). Players Celebrate Another Win<lb/>
�s -A 1!<lb/>
a<lb/>
see '<lb/>
bt it<lb/>
help us a<lb/>
says<lb/>
e will be .<lb/>
20 meai i<lb/>
druzzi admits, but continues, "It br-<lb/>
a great deal of publicity<lb/>
univesity as a whole Every!<lb/>
profits, and 1 think more pe<lb/>
start to rally behind<lb/>
- etball at 1 asiai<lb/>
" hen 1 came nere, we ��<lb/>
build a great ;<lb/>
"S e've taken it si ��p -�<lb/>
a<lb/>
Andi �. . ' a � �i ha<lb/>
<lb/>
.�<lb/>
a<lb/>
.<lb/>
vt<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
:<lb/>
e ECl<lb/>
tcr-<lb/>
eason.<lb/>
11 i beat a<lb/>
a as hobbled bv in-<lb/>
� dn'l<lb/>
ipp-<lb/>
.<lb/>
Heels jumped out to a<lb/>
w inning the t irsl<lb/>
. P � ites never<lb/>
ki � tted I C 's sieve Gib-<lb/>
111 ni the 177-pound<lb/>
Pirate Ali-<lb/>
pponent<lb/>
ccurred.<lb/>
Revils' success, says<lb/>
()islu, is not onlv<lb/>
m in matches,<lb/>
ompei in practice.<lb/>
forn :h here,<lb/>
lives in Greenville and works out<lb/>
B<lb/>
A (<lb/>
<lb/>
1I<lb/>
h Oishi said, "as doe<lb/>
it up. w !n' w ,is onci<lb/>
is tor<lb/>
11 16-9<lb/>
 sophomort<lb/>
r he I IniversitN ot<lb/>
and in the eves oi (hshi is<lb/>
team's 'leaders along with<lb/>
trai<lb/>
Mai<lb/>
on <lb/>
Re.<lb/>
Mendell ryson also performe<lb/>
well tor the Puates bv winning the<lb/>
hcav- - . :lass with a pin oi Jack<lb/>
- 2 oi the match. "He is<lb/>
still learning Oishi pointed out,<lb/>
"and will gel better when he cor<lb/>
recis his mistakes<lb/>
Gary Webb also turned in a good<lb/>
performance tor the Pirate ai 142<lb/>
pounds bv tying Pete Pierce. "He's<lb/>
the best recruit from last year<lb/>
Oishi noted, "and has shown much<lb/>
improvement<lb/>
Wrestling at 167 pounds was a<lb/>
first for James Ellison. Oishi said,<lb/>
even though the Pirate wrestler was<lb/>
defeated bv Ian Michaels. Ellison<lb/>
had to lose 10 pounds for the match,<lb/>
a mat.h that Oishi called a good ex-<lb/>
perience for his wrestler.<lb/>
"We wanted to win this match<lb/>
very badly Oishi stressed. "They<lb/>
had beaten us three or four times in<lb/>
a row. but our team was jus) too<lb/>
weak because of the injuries and the<lb/>
sickness<lb/>
The Pirates take a 14 record into<lb/>
this Friday night's match of<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
Underwood Scores 22<lb/>
Bucs Edge Baptist<lb/>
UH VKI 1st HAMM 1 K<lb/>
i<lb/>
Bap isi o poini<lb/>
period late<lb/>
Pirates tallied<lb/>
i 65 59 i tvei<lb/>
Monda) night in Minces<lb/>
ed be junioi<lb/>
Underwood's 22<lb/>
hi spot in a<lb/>
a ECl 's lackadaisical<lb/>
plav almosi result in utter embarass<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Bar tist, a small college<lb/>
Charleston, S.(  battled from a<lb/>
one-poii time deficit to take a<lb/>
seven point lead halfway through<lb/>
the second period, 47-40, before the<lb/>
Buc defense got tough.<lb/>
I he Pirates scored eight straight<lb/>
and took the lead at 48-47 at the<lb/>
when I nderwood con-<lb/>
nected on a 15-foot jumpei.<lb/>
1 he clubs exchanged buckets to<lb/>
leave the Bucs up, 52 51, before<lb/>
tI guard Battv V right went to<lb/>
the line with a one-and-one oppor-<lb/>
tunitv.<lb/>
I he Portsmouth, Va. native can-<lb/>
ned the tnd miss <lb/>
as the Pirate - tun ed the ball ove<lb/>
Baptist with 22<lb/>
I ECl up, 53 51.<lb/>
 15 tooter bv McKithei B I<lb/>
two secoi ds remaining I<lb/>
contest and sent it into overtin<lb/>
gain I ndei w ood was the bt ij<lb/>
spot, scoring six overtime points as<lb/>
Pirates w<lb/>
 ictoi '�<lb/>
� .<lb/>
E( 1 head coav h )a Odom<lb/>
nutted aftei the contest that his club<lb/>
had not had a stellar performance,<lb/>
but ,uk that something good may<lb/>
come out ol the game.<lb/>
��I told the players that behind<lb/>
ever) cloud is something bright he<lb/>
�� l his is the first time we've<lb/>
been that tar behind a team we<lb/>
should beat and came bask to win.<lb/>
Out guys hung in there and that is a<lb/>
good sign<lb/>
I he Pirates continued their<lb/>
somewhat poot shooting oi late, hit-<lb/>
ting on onlv 44.9 percent of then<lb/>
field goals. Contrastly, Baptist<lb/>
ned 55.1 percent.<lb/>
I he big stat, though, comes from<lb/>
the free throw hue. where EC I<lb/>
outscored the vistiors 21-5<lb/>
;<lb/>
"We did<lb/>
" r v .<lb/>
-<lb/>
�<lb/>
Odom<lb/>
L'nde<lb/>
"Ba<lb/>
Dav�<lb/>
<lb/>
clute<lb/>
e. H e<lb/>
competitiv c<lb/>
Od<lb/>
Pirates, now l l. we<lb/>
"It I<lb/>
about this<lb/>
said "Mosi ev<lb/>
a pei iod<lb/>
and eatlv Febi ai I I<lb/>
victim oi that<lb/>
I he Pii ates ne -<lb/>
 ednesdav, whei<lb/>
Domin<lb/>
with the Monarchs.<lb/>
Perry, Parzych Star<lb/>
After State Loss<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sports dtlor<lb/>
Walkins Fires Over Fern<lb/>
Phiiln H hjr<lb/>
Stales Walts Boards<lb/>
I nderuood Fires<lb/>
RA1 EIGH � N.C. State shot a<lb/>
blistering 75 percent in the second<lb/>
hall and got a school-record 15<lb/>
assists from reserve guard Max<lb/>
Perry to turn back last Carolina<lb/>
77 52 in Reynolds Coliseum Satur-<lb/>
day night.<lb/>
I he Pirates stayed close tor most<lb/>
oi the early part oi the game and<lb/>
were down bv onlv vine, 22-21. with<lb/>
six minutes remaining before inter-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
lhe Wolfpack went on a flurry,<lb/>
though, and were up 32-25 at the<lb/>
hall<lb/>
lhe Pack put any chances the<lb/>
underdog Bucs had of pulling an<lb/>
upset to test at the outset of the se-<lb/>
cond period.<lb/>
State outscored the Pirates 16-2<lb/>
during the first six minutes of the<lb/>
final penod and set the stage for<lb/>
what was to be termed by Pack<lb/>
coach Jim Valvano the best o halt<lb/>
ol basketball played bv N'CSU all<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The dominant force for those<lb/>
crucial six minutes was6-11 forward<lb/>
I hurl Bailey. lhe Seat Pleasant,<lb/>
Md. native scored six of the 16<lb/>
points, four coming on layups and<lb/>
the other two on a slam dunk.<lb/>
In comtast to State's incredible<lb/>
shooting second half, 1 C I shot on<lb/>
lv 32.4 perceni despite taking a I<lb/>
lv good selection oi shots<lb/>
"We didn't take bad shots to si<lb/>
the second halt Pirate coach Dave<lb/>
Odom said, "they just wouldn't go<lb/>
down. We couldn't seem to get<lb/>
anything to fall. When that happens<lb/>
you begin to get frustrated<lb/>
1 qually frustrating tor the Pirates<lb/>
all evening had to be the plav ol two<lb/>
Wolfpack reserves. Perry and for-<lb/>
ward Scott Parzych.<lb/>
Perry filled in foi injured star<lb/>
Sidney I owe. going on to break the<lb/>
record oi 14 assists in a game that<lb/>
was held jointly bv I owe and ex<lb/>
State star Monte I owe.<lb/>
Paryeh roamed inside and out ol<lb/>
the Pirate defense almost at will,<lb/>
scoring a game-high 22 points and<lb/>
pulling down seven rebounds in onlv<lb/>
23 minutes of plaving time.<lb/>
The 6-7 junior connected on 9 ol<lb/>
12 from the field and four ol six<lb/>
from the free throw line.<lb/>
The Wolfpack lead reached a high<lb/>
�� 26 points on sev ei al oc.<lb/>
late in the game be<lb/>
from both sides began see<lb/>
1 : e Pii ates � scoring by<lb/>
sophomore guai d Charle Wat!<lb/>
who tallied 12 poit<lb/>
forward Morris H c wl<lb/>
finished with 10.<lb/>
Odom said that the loss<lb/>
disappointing one foi him and I<lb/>
players but added thai tl e Bucs put<lb/>
out the effort needed to w<lb/>
"dames like this coa ike the<lb/>
responsibility for said. <lb/>
long as the players give you good t<lb/>
tort you can't be upset And we got<lb/>
that tonight<lb/>
Odom said the team, though -<lb/>
mg bv 25. was much bettet than it<lb/>
had been earlier in the vear He also<lb/>
gave warning oi next year's visit to<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
"There's no doubt he claimed,<lb/>
"that we'te a much better team than<lb/>
we played over at Duke (in Iron<lb/>
Duke Classic) this year.<lb/>
"And next vear when we come in<lb/>
here our guvs will be a vear older.<lb/>
Heck, thevMI all be shaving regulari-<lb/>
ty bv then. We'll be a much better<lb/>
team then<lb/>
I w<lb/>
f� into'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057314_0009"/><lb/>
rHE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 27,1961 9<lb/>
3<lb/>
i<lb/>
r He also<lb/>
s ISlt tO<lb/>
claimed,<lb/>
cam than<lb/>
(in Iron<lb/>
come in<lb/>
ar older<lb/>
k regulari-<lb/>
h better<lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
Prepare For Longwood College<lb/>
Pirate Gymnasts Drop Two<lb/>
Flying High<lb/>
By CANDICE<lb/>
MATHEWS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU's women's<lb/>
gymnastics team went<lb/>
on the road last week,<lb/>
gymning against two<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference teams. On<lb/>
Wednesday, the Pirate<lb/>
gymnasts met with<lb/>
Duke, losing by a score<lb/>
of 129.1-117.85. Then<lb/>
on Friday the Lady<lb/>
Pirates traveled to<lb/>
Maryland, losing again<lb/>
bv a score of<lb/>
134.6-113.1.<lb/>
Duke and Maryland<lb/>
are both strong gym-<lb/>
nastics teams, and the<lb/>
ECU gymnasts did not<lb/>
really expect to win<lb/>
either of the meets. In-<lb/>
stead they concentrated<lb/>
on hitting their routines<lb/>
cleanly and on reaching<lb/>
their point goal for this<lb/>
year of 120.00 total<lb/>
points per meet.<lb/>
In Wednesday's meet<lb/>
against Duke, the<lb/>
Pirate gymnasts came<lb/>
pretty close to achiev-<lb/>
ing both of these goals.<lb/>
On the vault, Louise<lb/>
Matthews, performing<lb/>
a handspring-full<lb/>
twisting vault, set a new<lb/>
Daniel Named Outstanding Athlete;<lb/>
Rogers Captures Collegiate Honor<lb/>
CHARLOTTE<lb/>
I I'l) 1 ormer Fur-<lb/>
in 1 niversit) goiter<lb/>
who last<lb/>
-c.i e first<lb/>
. , on the 1 PGA<lb/>
lour to earn more than<lb/>
0,000 in one year,<lb/>
been named profes-<lb/>
al athlete of the<lb/>
u in the Carolinas by<lb/>
ottt Athletic<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
Daniel, � lives in<lb/>
Charleston, S.C was<lb/>
competing in a tourna-<lb/>
ment in Florida and<lb/>
was unable to attend a<lb/>
banquet Tuesday night<lb/>
to receive the award.<lb/>
She aeeepted in a film-<lb/>
ed presentation.<lb/>
Daniel earned<lb/>
5231,000 last season<lb/>
and was named<lb/>
1 PGA's 1980 Golfer of<lb/>
the Year.<lb/>
Runner-up in the<lb/>
professional category<lb/>
was stock car driver<lb/>
Dale Earnhardt.<lb/>
Heisman Trophy<lb/>
recipient G e o rg eI<lb/>
Roeers of the Universi-<lb/>
ty o South Carolina us<lb/>
named college athlete<lb/>
of the year b the<lb/>
Charlotte organization.<lb/>
Rogers rushed for<lb/>
5,019 yards in his<lb/>
career.<lb/>
Other finalists in the<lb/>
collegiate category were<lb/>
N orl h Ca r oli n a<lb/>
linebacker Laurence<lb/>
Taylor and Stump Mit-<lb/>
chell, a running back<lb/>
for The Citadel.<lb/>
Lexington running<lb/>
back Joe Mclntosh,<lb/>
who scored 19<lb/>
touchdowns and rushed<lb/>
for more than 10 yards<lb/>
per carry as a senior,<lb/>
was named high school<lb/>
athlete of the year.<lb/>
Other finalists were<lb/>
William Perry, a defen-<lb/>
sive standout from<lb/>
Aiken, S.c, and Kan-<lb/>
napoiis quarterback<lb/>
Ethan Horton.<lb/>
Art and Camera<lb/>
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The Navy Officer Information Team will visit campus<lb/>
on 27,28,29 January An information desk will be set up<lb/>
tside the Book Store An interview or test can be ar<lb/>
ranged by calling 1 800 662 7568 toll free I 9jSt<lb/>
������������" JjfL .<lb/>
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Small classes taught by skilled instructors<lb/>
Opportunity to make up missed lessons<lb/>
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updated by researchers expert in their field.<lb/>
Opportunity to transfer to and continue study at<lb/>
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WWfffW<lb/>
ECU vaulting record<lb/>
and claimed second<lb/>
place with a score of<lb/>
8.95. Elizabeth Jackson<lb/>
and Claudia Hauck<lb/>
also executed clean<lb/>
vaults, receiving scores<lb/>
of 8.3 and 8.1, respec-<lb/>
tively.<lb/>
On the uneven bars,<lb/>
Claudia Hauck took<lb/>
fourth place with a<lb/>
score of 7.25. Jennifer<lb/>
Bell and Elizabeth<lb/>
Jackson also perform-<lb/>
ed well, receiving scores<lb/>
of 7.15 and 7.05 for<lb/>
their routines.<lb/>
Lisa Tamarru ex-<lb/>
ecuted a clean beam<lb/>
routine, claiming se-<lb/>
cond place with a score<lb/>
of 7.7.<lb/>
On the floor exercise,<lb/>
Claudia Hauck and<lb/>
Elizabeth Jackson tied<lb/>
for fourth with scores<lb/>
of 7.7. Lisa Tamarru<lb/>
was awarded fifth place<lb/>
and a score of 7.45 for<lb/>
her routine.<lb/>
ECU's final score,<lb/>
117.85 points, was their<lb/>
highest thus tar this<lb/>
season. According to<lb/>
coach Jon Rose, "The<lb/>
score for the Duke meet<lb/>
ranks us about 10th in<lb/>
the nation among Divi-<lb/>
sion II teams<lb/>
Friday night at<lb/>
Maryland the Lady<lb/>
Pirates didn't do quite<lb/>
as well as they had<lb/>
hoped. Still striving for<lb/>
120.00 points, ECU<lb/>
was only able to score<lb/>
113.1 points.<lb/>
On the vault, the<lb/>
Pirate gymnasts again<lb/>
executed clean vaults.<lb/>
Claudia Hauck took<lb/>
fifth place with a score<lb/>
of 8.15. Louise Mat-<lb/>
thews and Susan<lb/>
Lawrence also scored<lb/>
well, receiving an 8.1<lb/>
and an 8.05.<lb/>
ECU had no major<lb/>
falls on the uneven<lb/>
bars, and Claudia<lb/>
Hauck received a 7.5<lb/>
for her routine.<lb/>
The ECU gymnasts<lb/>
didn't do as well on the<lb/>
beam as they did at<lb/>
Duke. "We were very<lb/>
shaky, which hurt the<lb/>
over-all score badly<lb/>
said Rose. Lisa<lb/>
Tamarru claimed third<lb/>
place on the event with<lb/>
a score of 7.1.<lb/>
ECU has two weeks<lb/>
to prepare for their<lb/>
next meet, traveling to<lb/>
Longwood College on<lb/>
Feb. 7.<lb/>
Photographer<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
for Photo Lab<lb/>
Apply with the<lb/>
Media Board Secretary<lb/>
ECU Gymnastics Action<lb/>
Saw fl Carolina East Mall<lb/>
m Serving Daily 11 00 AM -8:00 PM<lb/>
�t i i o-7 Fri. ft Sit. Till 8-30<lb/>
Tuesday, January 27<lb/>
Lunch- Salisbury Steak. 2 vegetables � ��$1.99<lb/>
Supper- Braised Beet Stew on rice ���$ 1.99<lb/>
Wednesday, January 28<lb/>
Lunch- Stuffed Green Pepper. 2 vegetables$1.79<lb/>
Supper- Corned Beet with Cabbage $1.99<lb/>
Thursday, January 29<lb/>
Lunch- Chicken n Dumplings. 2 vegetables$1.79<lb/>
Supper- Veal Parmesan, tossed salad w dressing$2.39<lb/>
Friday, January 30<lb/>
Lunch- Ham and Macaroni. 2 vegetables �$1.79<lb/>
Supper- 1 rout Almondine. slaw, hushpuppies$2.49<lb/>
Saturday, January 31<lb/>
All Day- eal Parmesan, tossed salad with dressing  $2.39<lb/>
Sunday, February 1<lb/>
All Day- Baked Ham with hot potato salad$2.19<lb/>
Monday, February 2<lb/>
Lunch- Salisburv Steak, 2 vegetables$1.99<lb/>
Supper- Smothered Chicken, mashed potatoes.pan gravy $1,89<lb/>
"East Carolina's Party Center<lb/>
<lb/>
January - February Calendar of Events<lb/>
January<lb/>
Tues. 27th TKE Fund Raiser<lb/>
Wed. 28th Dorm Special - Gents Nite<lb/>
Thurs. 29th Kappa Sig Fund Raiser 7:00 - 9:00<lb/>
February<lb/>
rd Delta Sig Pi Male Best Chest Contest<lb/>
th 1st Elbo Space Invaders Tourn. &amp; Gents Nite<lb/>
-th Sig. Ep. Fund Raiser<lb/>
Ith 1st Annual Mens All Campus Arm Wrestling<lb/>
th Ladies Nite Valentines wPeter Adonis!<lb/>
th Kappa Sig Lil Sis Fund Raiser<lb/>
�ith Mens Arm Wrestling Semi Finals<lb/>
9th Beta Lil Sis Fund Raiser 7:00 - 9:30<lb/>
Wed. 25th Finals Mens All Campus Arm Wrestling<lb/>
Watch for further details on these and other upcoming event-<lb/>
including - Mud Wrestling - Best Legs - Bikini Contests and More<lb/>
Call 758-4591 for more info.<lb/>
ELBO SEMESTER MEMBERSHIPS NOW ON SALE<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057314_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
1 HI 1 S1 (. K()I IN1AN<lb/>
JAN1 AKY 27. lyhl<lb/>
Sampson, Virginia Dominate Ohio St.<lb/>
(UPl) - Ohio State<lb/>
learned Sunday why<lb/>
most teams generally<lb/>
opt for zone defense<lb/>
against second-ranked<lb/>
Virginia.<lb/>
Allowed to roam in-<lb/>
side against a man-to-<lb/>
man, 7-4 sophomore<lb/>
Ralph Sampson scored<lb/>
a career-high 40 points<lb/>
and pulled down 16 re-<lb/>
bounds to lead the<lb/>
undefeated Cavaliers to<lb/>
an 89-73 drubbing o<lb/>
the Buckeyes.<lb/>
Sampson sprained an<lb/>
ankle and missed a tew<lb/>
minutes ear!) in the<lb/>
game. But when he<lb/>
returned, he poured on<lb/>
a variety o dunks and<lb/>
12-fool lumpers to key<lb/>
15-point halftime lead.<lb/>
Sampson had 24 points<lb/>
in the first half.<lb/>
"Ohio State was not<lb/>
crowding a whole<lb/>
bunch of people in<lb/>
there said Virginia<lb/>
coach Terry Holland.<lb/>
' W e go to him<lb/>
(Sampson) when we<lb/>
can. Our offense is<lb/>
geared to get the ball to<lb/>
him<lb/>
In other weekend<lb/>
games m the Atlantic<lb/>
C oast Con fere nee<lb/>
Saturday, I8th-ranked<lb/>
North Carolina smash-<lb/>
ed Georgia Tech<lb/>
KK)-60; Duke took a<lb/>
?5-5 wm over Clem-<lb/>
m'ii; seventh-ranked<lb/>
Maryland lost 73-70 to<lb/>
the Cavaliers to a !3th-ranked Notre<lb/>
Swimmers<lb/>
Sail Past<lb/>
Seahawks<lb/>
B TIM WILLIAMS<lb/>
Mafl Wnirr<lb/>
Even with the flu bug<lb/>
keeping some swim-<lb/>
mers out oi action and<lb/>
hindering other's per-<lb/>
formances, both ECU<lb/>
swim teams managed<lb/>
fairl) easj victories<lb/>
Saturdav against UNC-<lb/>
The women romped<lb/>
by with a i()l -46 score<lb/>
while the men won<lb/>
"0-43. outswimming a<lb/>
supposed!) tough<lb/>
Wilmington team<lb/>
which had beaten Old<lb/>
Dominion earlier in the<lb/>
season 1 C I lost to<lb/>
ODl . although n was<lb/>
because of disqualifica<lb/>
tion in one event.<lb/>
"1 s' a lot ol them<lb/>
being sick, I thought<lb/>
the swam fail 1 well<lb/>
ECUacl R i) Scharf<lb/>
said. "We had onlv ten<lb/>
people a ice<lb/>
rhursdav because<lb/>
kness, so under those<lb/>
:um stances 1 was<lb/>
pleased with our per<lb/>
formance<lb/>
The Pirates were<lb/>
without the services of<lb/>
their best sprinter,<lb/>
Moria McHugh, se-<lb/>
cond best breast<lb/>
stroker, Brian Duncan,<lb/>
and back stroker Bjorn<lb/>
Johansen.<lb/>
Rick Michaels was<lb/>
sick and still took se-<lb/>
cond place in the 100<lb/>
Freestyle which Coach<lb/>
Scharf said was an im-<lb/>
portant race because it<lb/>
"broke" the meet<lb/>
open. ECU's Jack<lb/>
C iowar claimed first in<lb/>
that race.<lb/>
Clowar finished se-<lb/>
cond in the 50 Freestyle<lb/>
by .01 of a second in a<lb/>
race which he appeared<lb/>
to have won but he<lb/>
touched near the gutter<lb/>
on the timing pad in-<lb/>
stead of in the middle.<lb/>
Doug Nieman (200<lb/>
11 and 200 Backstroke<lb/>
winner) and Jan<lb/>
Wiklund (1000 and 500<lb/>
Freestyle winner) were<lb/>
also very impressive for<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
Other ECU winners<lb/>
in the men's competi-<lb/>
tion were Matt<lb/>
McDonald (200 Breast)<lb/>
and the 400 Medlev<lb/>
relay team (Nieman.<lb/>
McDonald, Kevin<lb/>
Richards, Clowar).<lb/>
Norwegian Dordi<lb/>
Henriksen was outstan<lb/>
ding for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates, winning three<lb/>
races (50 Butterfly, 200<lb/>
Butterfly, and 100<lb/>
1 reestyle). Jennifer<lb/>
laves broke the varsity<lb/>
record in the 50<lb/>
Backstroke with a time<lb/>
of 29  She also on<lb/>
the 200 Backstroke.<lb/>
Other two-race win-<lb/>
ners were Sally Collins<lb/>
(200 and 500 Freestyle),<lb/>
ramrm Putnam (100<lb/>
and 400 1M). and Julie<lb/>
Malcolm (100 Free<lb/>
Style and 200 Breast).<lb/>
Lori McQueston won<lb/>
the 50 Free Style.<lb/>
in the diving com-<lb/>
petition, in which EC I<lb/>
has no coach, Kim<lb/>
Lowe was very im-<lb/>
pressive winning both<lb/>
one meter and three<lb/>
meter events. Coach<lb/>
Scharf stated that with<lb/>
proper coaching Kim<lb/>
could possibly qualify<lb/>
for the National Cham-<lb/>
pionships. Jn the men's<lb/>
competition, Mike<lb/>
Aman took two second<lb/>
place finishes.<lb/>
Both teams swim<lb/>
against national power<lb/>
N.C. State today at 6<lb/>
P.M. in Raleigh<lb/>
Buying Gold � Silver Coins<lb/>
Also Sterling Silver<lb/>
Paying lop $<lb/>
Come in lor rRLL estimate<lb/>
Carolina Compact<lb/>
Kivergate Shopping Center<lb/>
Price mav vary depending on market<lb/>
SophomoresJuniorsSeniors<lb/>
EARN OVER $850 PER MO.<lb/>
DURING LAST TWO YEARS<lb/>
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Get a head start on an exciting, challenging<lb/>
position after graduation. While you finish<lb/>
school, we will pay you over $850 per month to<lb/>
study and maintain good grades. We have the<lb/>
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in the world and math, physics, chemistry,<lb/>
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can qualify. U.S. citizens less than 27 years<lb/>
old, a 3 0 GPA or better, and good health are<lb/>
the requirements. We offer a projected salary<lb/>
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For more information send college transcript<lb/>
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OR CALL 1-800 662 7568<lb/>
Dame; fourth-ranked<lb/>
Wake Forest raeed past<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Asheville, 99-68; and<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
trounced East<lb/>
Carolina, 77-52.<lb/>
Ohio State, playing<lb/>
its third game in lour<lb/>
days, narrowed the<lb/>
margin to 53-47 in the<lb/>
second half, hut Jeff<lb/>
Jones hit a three-point<lb/>
pla; to pull Virginia,<lb/>
now 16-0, out o trou-<lb/>
ble. Buckeye center<lb/>
Herb Williams then<lb/>
fouled out and the<lb/>
Cavaliers were able to<lb/>
expand their lead.<lb/>
"We w ere i he<lb/>
straight man in the<lb/>
comedy act today<lb/>
said Ohio State coach<lb/>
Eldon Miller. "The<lb/>
fouls took the game<lb/>
avav from us and we<lb/>
can't play with our<lb/>
centei on the bench,<lb/>
especially a gainst<lb/>
Sampson<lb/>
Nort h c arolina<lb/>
coach Dean Smith said<lb/>
he expected his Tar<lb/>
HeeK, coming ofl a key<lb/>
win on the road against<lb/>
Wake Forest, to relax<lb/>
some agamst Georgia<lb/>
Tech Saturdav.<lb/>
"1 didn't ex peel<lb/>
anything like this. I was<lb/>
worried about a let-<lb/>
down after the the<lb/>
Wake Forest game<lb/>
Smith said. "But the<lb/>
players got themselves<lb/>
read) to p!av<lb/>
Senioi W WooCi<lb/>
scored 24 points and<lb/>
Freshman Sam Perkins<lb/>
added 18 to pace the<lb/>
lai Heels, who moved<lb/>
with ease through the<lb/>
lech defense and forc-<lb/>
ed 29 turnovers on<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
"I thought in the<lb/>
first 10 minutes our<lb/>
defense dictated the<lb/>
way the game went<lb/>
Smith said. Yellow<lb/>
Jacket coach Dwane<lb/>
Morrison called the I at<lb/>
Heels "awesome<lb/>
I" Durham, Duke<lb/>
got its newly adopted<lb/>
deliberate offense<lb/>
working and posted its<lb/>
second straight AC C<lb/>
win over Clemson<lb/>
behind Vince Taylor's<lb/>
20 points.<lb/>
Blue Devil coach In College Park, Kcl-<lb/>
Mike kiyewski said ly Tnpucka hit six free<lb/>
he was more pleased throws in the final two<lb/>
with his team's defense,<lb/>
while (lemson's Bill<lb/>
1 oster admitted the<lb/>
Tigers "didn't plav<lb/>
with a lot of en-<lb/>
thusiasm or a lot of in-<lb/>
tensity<lb/>
minutes, including two<lb/>
with five seconds left,<lb/>
to give the lighting<lb/>
Irish the win over<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
The Terps trailed b<lb/>
eight points with just<lb/>
under six minutes to<lb/>
Play, but Buck<lb/>
Williams hit five<lb/>
straight points and<lb/>
bac k -1 o-bac k fast<lb/>
breaks by Greg Mann-<lb/>
ing and Albert King cut<lb/>
the Irish lead to 65-64<lb/>
with just under three<lb/>
minutes left and set up<lb/>
the race the the finish.<lb/>
Wake fores! bounc-<lb/>
ed bad from its first<lb/>
loss of the sea'on<lb/>
agamst UNC-Asheville<lb/>
as five Deacons hit for<lb/>
double figures and a<lb/>
tight man-to-man<lb/>
defense forced 24 tur-<lb/>
novers.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
U��' 4<lb/>
v-<lb/>
lI Swimming Action<lb/>
Fosdick's Seafood Savers<lb/>
Nighth H � l<lb/>
Tues. Fish Fry- All The Fish You Can rial With A Mug<lb/>
CM Your Kavorite Beverage$3.99<lb/>
Wed. Shrimp Treat- Delicious Calabash Shrimp W ith Krench<lb/>
Fries. Cole Slaw and Our hamous 1 hishpuppies$3.99<lb/>
Thur. Family Night A Seafood Sampler W ith Calabash<lb/>
Shrimp, fried Fish, Oysters and Deviled Crab$4.99<lb/>
Tues,Wed,Thur(Oyster Bar Only) ! Doz. 1 lalrsheH<lb/>
Oysters (Steamed or Raw) And A Mug Ot "i our Favorite Beverage<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
-si<lb/>
FOSSICKS<lb/>
Ph. 756-2011<lb/>
�r I S. EVANS ST EXT GREENVILLE<lb/>
ALL SKI WEAR FOR MEN,<lb/>
WOMEN &amp; CHILDREN<lb/>
25 to 60 OFF<lb/>
INCLUDES: JACKETS, VESTS. HATS.<lb/>
BIBS. OUTFITS, LONG JOHNS AND SOCKS<lb/>
GLOVES 20 to 50 OFF<lb/>
ALL SKI POSTERS - BUY ONE<lb/>
GET ONE FREE<lb/>
CREST LINED WIND-BREAKER JACKETS 12 OFF<lb/>
ALL TENNIS &amp; JOGGING SHOES 50 OFF<lb/>
ALL SNOW BOOTS - REDUCED AS MARKED<lb/>
ALL SKI &amp; TOTE BAGS 25 OFF<lb/>
ALL SOP SKI BOOT TOTES WERE $10.00<lb/>
now $6.00<lb/>
ALL SNOW SKI'S<lb/>
REDUCED FROM 25 to 60 OFF<lb/>
SKI i RIP : O SNU WSHOE - MARCH 5MARCH 8<lb/>
ROOM AND BUS - 4 TO A ROOM<lb/>
APPROXIMATELY $110.00 - TIMBERLINE LODGE<lb/>
ALLGOU BALLS S13.00Doi.<lb/>
ALL GOLF CLUB &amp; REPAIRS - 12 NOW UNTIL FEB Ut<lb/>
CLOSEOUT ON ALL 1ZOD SWEAT Es<lb/>
GORDON FULPS<lb/>
GOLF AND SKI SHOP<lb/>
LOCATED AT GREENVILLE COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
OFF MEMORIAL DR.<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - 8:00 A.M. TIL DARK<lb/>
756-0504<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
NAVY BLUE 1968 Volvo 144 for<lb/>
sale Needs owner that is willing<lb/>
to do repair Call 7S8 974?<lb/>
FOR SALE Mi�ata Americana 10<lb/>
(peed, perfect condition one year<lb/>
old 5145 Call 758 589<lb/>
FOR SALE Becker speakers.<lb/>
new. 32 watt Superscope power<lb/>
amp Total value 5375. sell tor<lb/>
1150 758 1773<lb/>
FOR SALE Nine week old female<lb/>
puppy Half Irish setter and half<lb/>
German shepard Is paper trained<lb/>
and wants a good home Call<lb/>
758 5825 after 4 3D p m<lb/>
FOR SALE V W bug. FM radio,<lb/>
good rubber Just inspected<lb/>
Runs great Clear title 757 1478<lb/>
FOR SALE Parade drum<lb/>
Premeir, Chrome Excellent con<lb/>
dition Call 757 3210<lb/>
FOR SALE Two bedside tables<lb/>
525 each Call 758 5585 after 5 30<lb/>
FOR SALE Twin sue mattress<lb/>
512 00 Will deliver if necessary<lb/>
Call 7S2 4487<lb/>
FOR SALE Two Bolivar<lb/>
Speakers made fey JBL 5120 for<lb/>
Iht pair Call 758 3753<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
SUNSHINE STUDIOS Will be of<lb/>
lei "ig classes in ballet ian exer<lb/>
Cise and yoga for a very special<lb/>
New Tear s rate 2 for the price of<lb/>
1! To enroll call 758 0736<lb/>
COUNSELORS For western<lb/>
North Carolina co ed summer<lb/>
camp Room meals laundry<lb/>
salary and travel allowance Ex<lb/>
perience not necessary but must<lb/>
enioy living and wui ng with<lb/>
children. Only clean cut non<lb/>
smoking college students need ap<lb/>
ply For application and brochure<lb/>
write Camp Pinewood 1801<lb/>
Cleveland Rd  Miami Beach, Fl<lb/>
33141<lb/>
NEED TYPING Professional<lb/>
full time typing, IBM typewriter<lb/>
Call 758 5301 or 756 1062<lb/>
WANTED A ride to Charlotte and<lb/>
back this weekend Call David<lb/>
nights 752 0652<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED To northern<lb/>
Virginia Friday 30th Will pay hail<lb/>
o� entire cost Tom at 758 7277<lb/>
LADIES Our furniture will be<lb/>
here Friday GPJ CWM<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
WANTED Female roommate to<lb/>
share three bedroom house Big<lb/>
tront and back yard. Garage.<lb/>
Electric heat and only half mile<lb/>
form the mall and one mile form<lb/>
Pitt Community College Only 580<lb/>
Mo plus utilities Call Anita or<lb/>
Ann at 756 9on or leave message<lb/>
at 757 6366<lb/>
NICE Two bedroom apartment<lb/>
Heat and water furnished Phone<lb/>
756 1050<lb/>
APARTMENT For rent Two<lb/>
rooms modern bath and kitchen<lb/>
study Call 752 3020 after 6 00 p m<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE Wanted<lb/>
to share two bed-oom Tar River<lb/>
Apartment Call I ,sa ;2 0653 or<lb/>
758 5629<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEED<lb/>
ED To share large house Walk<lb/>
mg distance to campus 570 rent<lb/>
plus fraction or utilities Call<lb/>
752 3444<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT 575 per<lb/>
month utilities included for info<lb/>
call 752 3480<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
to share two bedroom King's Row<lb/>
Apartment Half rent and<lb/>
utilities Call 752 0865 or leave<lb/>
message at 758 9707<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE Needed for<lb/>
two bedroom duplex at 1312 B E<lb/>
14th St<lb/>
FOR RENT One and two<lb/>
bedroom apartments water and<lb/>
cable included All kitchen ap<lb/>
plianced pool ECU bus every �<lb/>
hour Call 758 4015<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE Wanted to<lb/>
share a two bedroom Eastbrook<lb/>
apt Half rent and ut.iities Anon<lb/>
smoker please Call 752 4443<lb/>
HOUSEMATE WANTED Own<lb/>
room plus s'udy studio Room m<lb/>
house two blocks from art<lb/>
building 587 50 plus half utilities<lb/>
Call 758 33C8<lb/>
LIBERAL MINDED MALE To<lb/>
shrirt on bedroom apt 575 00 mo<lb/>
plus halt utilities Mike 752 3501<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
Eastbrook two bedroom kitchen<lb/>
den bath 5100 00 deposit. 5107 50<lb/>
plus utilities Call 758 6693<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE Wanted<lb/>
for 3 bedroom duplex on W 4th St<lb/>
$65 00 month 7S8 7532<lb/>
FOR RENT Small apts tor<lb/>
males Near campus<lb/>
590 00 5125 00 utilities included<lb/>
752 2615 days<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED 575 00 mo Private<lb/>
room one third utilities Tar River<lb/>
Estates 758 5854<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED Two story apt with a<lb/>
private bedroom full bath kit<lb/>
Chen and den I'm a quiet person<lb/>
and gone on weekends 756 '882<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS CAN BE PUR<lb/>
CHASEDFROM2 00 4 00 M FAT<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OF<lb/>
FICE<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
OnUt HI W. 4th St, Qr��nvttf. N C REPAIR<lb/>
Jowntown Qr�nv Across From Bount-Hsrvsy Parking In Front ft BsdcjMH Of Shop J$<lb/>
phonf ;Jj<lb/>
758-0204 lifllrV<lb/>
i I<lb/>
Date: Jan. 27-30<lb/>
ECUOFFICIALCLASS RING"<lb/>
Place' Student Supply Store<lb/>
Lobby, Wright Building<lb/>
Deposit Required MasterCard or Vii accepted<lb/>
I mi ArtCarved Class Rings f,h<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
 . .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057314_0011"/>
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