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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057316_0001"/>
She iEaat (EaroHntan<lb/>
$<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
ol. 55 No. Al<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Tuesda, February 3, 1981<lb/>
(?reenville, Northarolina<lb/>
Circulation 10,(00<lb/>
Local Attorney Relates<lb/>
Memories Of Watergate<lb/>
Bv Oils ROBINSON<lb/>
si?H Wnlrr<lb/>
 mei Deputy Secretary of<lb/>
Christopher said,<lb/>
ol the people in the<lb/>
es is the greatest resource<lb/>
ave1 he was making an<lb/>
?; about eastern<lb/>
ans. One Greenville<lb/>
vei stands out in the<lb/>
 4 Malcolm J. Howard, who<lb/>
Howard, Vin-<lb/>
?uoi ne s at I aw<lb/>
vcn himself as a man of<lb/>
d will. He credits deter-<lb/>
rte kc to success.<lb/>
forget the first tour<lb/>
hal 1 was m practice said<lb/>
 "For four months I<lb/>
- 25 I had two children and a<lb/>
d to myself then. 'It is go-<lb/>
long, tough road but 1<lb/>
i k e it<lb/>
did. Since he<lb/>
September 1974, Howard's<lb/>
as grown to five attorneys<lb/>
? legal assistants. He<lb/>
andles about 500<lb/>
and estimated the<lb/>
? ?. to be between<lb/>
freedom has not<lb/>
foi Howard.<lb/>
man ol will, he ex-<lb/>
maji i desires is to<lb/>
-  "I cat a living<lb/>
. - and mvsell he said.<lb/>
"But Christianity comes first. M<lb/>
work is second<lb/>
Howard is active in many civic<lb/>
and community affairs. He serves<lb/>
on several boards in Greenville.<lb/>
Amongh them are the Area<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce, the East<lb/>
Carolina Vocational Center, and the<lb/>
Kennedy Home Baptist Orphanage<lb/>
He is also on the board of deacons<lb/>
at The Memorial Baptist Church.<lb/>
The Kinston native attended The<lb/>
Citadel in Charleston, S.C. for one<lb/>
year and then was appointed to the<lb/>
United States Mihltary Academy at<lb/>
West Point where he graduated and<lb/>
then spent 10 years as an army of-<lb/>
ficer.<lb/>
"1 thoroughly enjoyed my days at<lb/>
West Point he commented. But I<lb/>
do love my work here. I know how<lb/>
the law is made and how it is inter-<lb/>
preted. I will work on the average of<lb/>
12 to 14 hours a day, six days a<lb/>
week<lb/>
Howard graduated from Wake<lb/>
Forest University School of Law in<lb/>
1970. He served as legislative<lb/>
Counsel to the U.S. Congress for<lb/>
the Secretary of Armv during the<lb/>
period 197 1-1972 He was<lb/>
nominated for Secretary of the Ar-<lb/>
my in 1980 by the Reagan Ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
Howard spent eight months with<lb/>
the Nixon Administration as Chief<lb/>
Assistant to Special Counsel in the<lb/>
W atereate Dcfeuse. "T he<lb/>
Watergate case was a very eye-<lb/>
opening experience he explained.<lb/>
"It was a very intriguing process<lb/>
He added that he was able to meet<lb/>
President Nixon personally and<lb/>
found him to be "a pleasant<lb/>
gentleman<lb/>
The attorney offered advice for<lb/>
students planning to enter the legal<lb/>
field. "I suggest that anyone in-<lb/>
terested in pursuing a career in law<lb/>
to develop a good English<lb/>
background. Whether written or<lb/>
spoken, you are constantly using<lb/>
words. Being able to communicate<lb/>
is essential<lb/>
Though Howard has been practic-<lb/>
ing law for only six years, he says he<lb/>
is content with his practice and is<lb/>
not looking forward to retirement.<lb/>
"In my judgement, the lawyer really<lb/>
doesn't top out until he is 65 he<lb/>
stated. "Remember this is a<lb/>
business that experience really, real-<lb/>
ly counts.<lb/>
Howard is married to the former<lb/>
Eloise McGinty, daughter of<lb/>
Retired Air Force Colonel Robert P.<lb/>
McGinty, and they have two<lb/>
children, Shannon Fee, 11, and<lb/>
Joshua, 6.<lb/>
"Mr. Howard is a fine man. He is<lb/>
very devoted to his wife and family<lb/>
and he is a very determined young<lb/>
man says Chief Assistant U.S. At-<lb/>
torney Weldon Hollowell o Eden-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
? ? By JON JORDAN<lb/>
Malcolm Howard practices law in this building on the corner of Third and Cotanche Streets.<lb/>
Defense Claims Garwood Not<lb/>
Responsible For His Actions<lb/>
! alwell Versus Penthouse<lb/>
Judge Refuses Reverend's Suit<lb/>
I v's.v HBl RG, Va. tUPl) A<lb/>
federal judge today refused to ex-<lb/>
? banning the distribu-<lb/>
te Magazine, ruling<lb/>
? : al right to free<lb/>
lar ? ige to<lb/>
lerry 1 ell t fial may<lb/>
erview in the<lb/>
asl evangel;<lb/>
Majority, ob-<lb/>
rdei Friday<lb/>
! 5 million<lb/>
e that contain-<lb/>
 ! ? well -aid was ob-<lb/>
etenses.<lb/>
I  lames C.<lb/>
to grant a<lb/>
junction extending<lb/>
I the public interest<lb/>
vimatelv K) million<lb/>
? Penthouse each month is<lb/>
pei relief is to seek com-<lb/>
. es after the fact<lb/>
restraint Turk<lb/>
use ol a 90-minute hear-<lb/>
irtroom filled with spec-<lb/>
: ? t porters.<lb/>
? irst Amendment case<lb/>
i ei.<lb/>
? Penthouse said the<lb/>
lid lose up to S14<lb/>
were forced to stop<lb/>
law yet - argued the case<lb/>
did not involve free speech, but in-<lb/>
stead was a case of "commercial ex-<lb/>
ploitation" in which the magazine<lb/>
used I alwell's picture and opinions<lb/>
to increa -e its circulation<lb/>
I alwell testified that he was upset<lb/>
because free-lance writers Andrew<lb/>
Duncan and Sashti Brata promised<lb/>
when they interviewed him last year<lb/>
the taped conversations would be<lb/>
used for a book and a London<lb/>
newspaper and would not be sold to<lb/>
"pornographic" magazines.<lb/>
"There'd be no problem here if<lb/>
they had said 'we stole this in-<lb/>
terview Rev. I alwell knew nothing<lb/>
about it I alwell said.<lb/>
I alwell said it his followers "are<lb/>
left believing that we gave such an<lb/>
interview, it will damage irreparably<lb/>
our financial support<lb/>
1 alwell conferred with his lawyers<lb/>
after Turk's ruling and said he<lb/>
would not appeal.<lb/>
"We won Penthouse lawyer<lb/>
Rov Grutman of New York said.<lb/>
"Another blow for freedom has<lb/>
been struck. The republic is safe for<lb/>
a while<lb/>
Falwell, however, said he intend-<lb/>
ed to pursue a S10 million damage<lb/>
suit filed in U.S. District Court in<lb/>
Roanoke against Penthouse, Brata<lb/>
and Duncan.<lb/>
After Turk issued the temporary<lb/>
restraining order Fridav, Penthouse<lb/>
publisher Bob Guccione said copies<lb/>
of the March issue already had been<lb/>
distributed to wholesalers and news<lb/>
agents and were to be available to<lb/>
"he public beginning today in most<lb/>
areas ol the country and foreign<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
At the outset of today's hearing,<lb/>
lalwell's lawyer, lorn Phillips Jr<lb/>
said the whole question may be<lb/>
moot because distribution already<lb/>
apparently was out of Penthouse's<lb/>
hands.<lb/>
CAMP I FlIT NE (UPI) A<lb/>
Marine Corps prosecutor told a jury<lb/>
of Vietnam veterans Monday Pfc.<lb/>
Robert R. Garwood chose tit help<lb/>
his Viet Cong captors rather than<lb/>
other Americans who were dying in<lb/>
the "muck and the mire" ol a com-<lb/>
munist prison camp.<lb/>
Garwood, his starched dress<lb/>
uniform decorated with good con-<lb/>
duct and Vietnam service medals,<lb/>
showed no emotion as Maj. Werner<lb/>
Flelltner, the duet prosecutor, told<lb/>
the five-member jury the defense'<lb/>
claim Garwood was driven insane<lb/>
bv torture is a "smoke-screen" that<lb/>
should be quickly rejected.<lb/>
Garwood is charged with col-<lb/>
laboration with the enemy during<lb/>
almost 14 years in Vietnam. He is<lb/>
also accused of striking an<lb/>
American prisonet in a jungle POW<lb/>
camp.<lb/>
Garwood, the only Vietnam-era<lb/>
serviceman ever to stand trial for his<lb/>
actions in a prison camp, could<lb/>
it  ??'<lb/>
New Amendment Moves<lb/>
Up Fall Election Date<lb/>
Bv PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
s.e?s Kdllor<lb/>
SGA legislature ratified an<lb/>
? nent Monday, reducing the<lb/>
number of hours needed to run for<lb/>
president, vice president or<lb/>
tsurer.<lb/>
1 he amendment lowers the<lb/>
number ol hours from 48 to 45. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Rules and Judiciary<lb/>
Chairman Russell Overman the<lb/>
amendment will allow more<lb/>
students to participate in student<lb/>
government.<lb/>
The new provision will allow par-<lb/>
ticipation by students whose majors<lb/>
allow them to average fewer than 16<lb/>
hours per semester.<lb/>
According to SGA Secretary<lb/>
Marianne Edwards half the students<lb/>
on campus fall into this category.<lb/>
The legislature also ratified a<lb/>
number of other amendments to the<lb/>
election rules including one that will<lb/>
make polling hours uniform across<lb/>
campus.The new hours are 9 a.m.<lb/>
until 6 p.m. and were extended to<lb/>
allow students who do not return to<lb/>
their dorms until after 5 p.m. to<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
The date for fall elections was<lb/>
also moved up to the third Wednes-<lb/>
day after fall classes begin.<lb/>
These amendments will take af-<lb/>
fect after spring semester.<lb/>
In other business, the legislature<lb/>
passed by acclamation a commenda-<lb/>
tion to the lady Pirates for their<lb/>
performances against three na-<lb/>
tionally ranked opponents last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
President Charlie Sherrod also<lb/>
noted that the SGA will be running<lb/>
shuttle buses at four more basket-<lb/>
ball games this semester.<lb/>
Buses will run from in front of<lb/>
W hite And Clement Dorms for the<lb/>
women's games against North<lb/>
Carolina and Wake Forest and for<lb/>
the men's games against UNC-W<lb/>
and Deleware State.<lb/>
Sherrod said that running buses<lb/>
to and from the USC game Friday<lb/>
night was a success. "The buses<lb/>
were packed he said.<lb/>
The SGA also voted to accept two<lb/>
new members, one day student<lb/>
legislator and a Greene dorm<lb/>
representative.<lb/>
receive a life prison sentence if con-<lb/>
victed by the jury of Marine Corps<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
Hellmer urged the jury to accept<lb/>
the testimony of eight former POWs<lb/>
who said they encountered Gar-<lb/>
wood in the jungle POW .amps of<lb/>
South Vietnam, carrying a weapon,<lb/>
wearing the uniform of the com-<lb/>
munists and acting as a guard and<lb/>
interrogator<lb/>
"They were there, gentlemen.<lb/>
they were there Hellmer said.<lb/>
Defense attorneys did not dispute<lb/>
the allegations made by the former<lb/>
POWs. Instead they presented four<lb/>
medical experts who testified Gar-<lb/>
wood suffers from a severe mental<lb/>
disorder caused by torture, isolation<lb/>
and childhood poverty.<lb/>
The defense claims Garwood was<lb/>
not responsible for his actions<lb/>
because of that mental illness.<lb/>
But Hellmer said Garwood was<lb/>
responsible enough to follow certain<lb/>
rules.<lb/>
"He could abide by the rules of<lb/>
the Vietnamese but he could not<lb/>
abide by the rules that were the laws<lb/>
of the United States government<lb/>
Hellmer said.<lb/>
He said it was the other POWs.<lb/>
and not Garwood, who were sub-<lb/>
letted to the deprivation and tor-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
"They were down in the com-<lb/>
pounds dying, gentlemen, in the<lb/>
muck and the mire Hellmer said<lb/>
Hellmer said Garwood was sane<lb/>
enough to do what he believed was<lb/>
needed for him to survive.<lb/>
'it all boiled down to survival ol<lb/>
the fittest in that compound he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Hellmer also said the other POWs<lb/>
have described Garwood a<lb/>
"rational<lb/>
"He was aware of who he was, he<lb/>
was aware of where he was<lb/>
Hellmer said.<lb/>
"He was able to make a choice<lb/>
Hellmer also questioned the<lb/>
motives of defense psychiatrists.<lb/>
"The government (psychiatrists)<lb/>
don't intend to write any books or<lb/>
articles Hellmer said. "What kind<lb/>
of psychial 1st would do that.<lb/>
gentlemen self-serving, self-<lb/>
serving<lb/>
Garwood disappeared near Da<lb/>
Nang in 1965. He surfaced in Hanoi<lb/>
in 1979 when he passed a note to a<lb/>
foreign visitor, saying he wanted to<lb/>
return to the U.S<lb/>
ECU Placement Office<lb/>
Effectiveness Questioned<lb/>
Firing Over The Force<lb/>
ECU women's basketball stalwart Kathy Riley (right)<lb/>
shoots over Southern Cal center Paula McGee. McGee, a<lb/>
6-3 freshman sensation, led the eighth-ranked Trojans to a<lb/>
77-73 win over the then-19ih-ranked Lady Pirates. A<lb/>
record 4,500 fans witnessed the contest. For more infor-<lb/>
mation, see page 8. (Photo by Gary Patterson)<lb/>
ByCHADBLFFKIN<lb/>
Auultnl N?? l-dilor<lb/>
"1 don't know any students who<lb/>
have got a job as a direct result of<lb/>
working with the campus placement<lb/>
office, however 1 am working with<lb/>
them now and 1 sure hope that I will<lb/>
be an exception. They gave me a<lb/>
packet of information that was<lb/>
useful in helping me to write a<lb/>
resume and get some interviews<lb/>
Statements similar to the one<lb/>
above are heard frequently on cam-<lb/>
pus every year about this time as<lb/>
prospective graduates begin their<lb/>
frantic searches for jobs. Many<lb/>
seniors don't exactly know what to<lb/>
expect from the Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement Service on campus.<lb/>
"Will they get me some inter-<lb/>
views? What do I have to do The<lb/>
answer is yes. They will get you<lb/>
some interviews if you go over and<lb/>
sign up.<lb/>
"But I thought they were suppos-<lb/>
ed to find me a job Well, they are<lb/>
capable of doing that too but there<lb/>
is a 99 percent chance that it won't<lb/>
be the kind of job you're looking<lb/>
for. W;hat they can do is show you<lb/>
how to go about getting the job you<lb/>
want.<lb/>
The philosophy and purpose of<lb/>
the Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Service is to prepare students to<lb/>
make the transition from the world<lb/>
of education to the world of work.<lb/>
"Most students have a misconcep-<lb/>
tion of our office said Furney<lb/>
James, Director of Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement. "Our function is<lb/>
not to get people jobs. We teach<lb/>
people how to get jobs<lb/>
Each year the service arranges for<lb/>
approximately 80 different com-<lb/>
panies, agencies and school systems<lb/>
to come to campus for the purpose<lb/>
of interviewing and recruiting<lb/>
students. During the month of<lb/>
February, 32 firms and seven school<lb/>
svstems will have representatives on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
In addition to arranging and<lb/>
scheduling students for interviews,<lb/>
the service teaches students how to<lb/>
prepare for interviews, how to con-<lb/>
struct a proper resume and also how<lb/>
to build self-confidence.<lb/>
According to James, about 75<lb/>
percent of the students who use the<lb/>
service and properly follow the ad-<lb/>
vice call back to say they have found<lb/>
the kind of job they want.<lb/>
Student resumes are kept on file<lb/>
in the Career Planning and Place-<lb/>
ment office for 10 years. Currently<lb/>
about one half of all ECU seniors<lb/>
and about 400 alumni use the service<lb/>
each year.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Letters4 je<lb/>
Sports8t<lb/>
Entertainment j<lb/>
? -  , - ? . v.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057316_0002"/><lb/>
THE LAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY J, 181<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
The deadline tor submitting an<lb/>
nouncements is Friday at 5 p m<lb/>
tor the Tuesday issue and Tuesday<lb/>
at noon tor the Thursday issue An<lb/>
nouncements submitted after<lb/>
these deadlines will not be printed<lb/>
All announcements should be dou<lb/>
ble spaced and typewritten or<lb/>
neatly printed on 8 by 1! men<lb/>
paper Messages should oe Kept as<lb/>
short as possible and contain only<lb/>
essential information The person<lb/>
submitting the announcement<lb/>
should include his name and<lb/>
telephone number at the bottom ot<lb/>
the page<lb/>
PES<lb/>
E ta Sign<lb/>
LDS<lb/>
The LDS Student Association m<lb/>
vii-s you to join them at an in<lb/>
stitute class on Wednesday nights<lb/>
at 6 15 p m in Brewster B 102<lb/>
This class is taught by Bro Bill<lb/>
EvenhuiS, Seminary Institute<lb/>
Director tor the Kinston. N C<lb/>
Stake of The Church of Jesus<lb/>
Christ of Latter day Saints In this<lb/>
class discussion centers on maior<lb/>
Christian Religions in America as<lb/>
well as their doctrine and how they<lb/>
relate to Mormon doctrine On oc<lb/>
iasion guest speakers will discuss<lb/>
their own religious affiliation and<lb/>
answer any questions concerning<lb/>
their retig ? "? l y0ne<lb/>
welcome This class will be held<lb/>
  (; th? remainder of<lb/>
M<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
The Office of Handicapped Stu<lb/>
dent Services has employment op<lb/>
portvnltie tor students interested<lb/>
m becoming attendants to<lb/>
wheelchair students For details<lb/>
come to Whicnara Building, room<lb/>
311 or rail 757 6799<lb/>
221<lb/>
HOW DO YOU<lb/>
SPELL RELIEF?<lb/>
 not so re ? i<lb/>
. ulptures<lb/>
student Ce<lb/>
READING<lb/>
NURSING<lb/>
ii extra room in<lb/>
vour home Ma '5 July 30. 1981'<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
ooking for rooms and apart<lb/>
ments for nursing students study<lb/>
n Greenville this summer<lb/>
? ? , students are senior level<lb/>
ting students from throughout<lb/>
tie united States who will receive<lb/>
r of their clinical experience<lb/>
. rt Memorial it you would like<lb/>
'are your home with one or<lb/>
several ? ?'? rns IhtS summer ail<lb/>
?? . nurse recruiting office from<lb/>
? M Monday through Friday<lb/>
CHEERLEADING<lb/>
The tape that served as East<lb/>
Carolina University's entry into<lb/>
me national cheerleadmg contest<lb/>
sponsored by the Inter national<lb/>
Che, ounoatjpn. will be<lb/>
shown in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center on Friday, Feb 6, 1981 The<lb/>
tape is SCl W 0e viewed in<lb/>
newspaper reading section<lb/>
trom 6 30 to 7 30 and from 8 30 to<lb/>
9 00 Ev n ?i ted T he<lb/>
I bv Dave Balch and<lb/>
Jfli . t the Audio Visual<lb/>
. Center of the School of<lb/>
Mec<lb/>
MYRTLE BEACH<lb/>
Take a break through us the<lb/>
Student union Travel Committee<lb/>
Be on your way to wild, wonderful<lb/>
and beautiful Myrtle Beach on<lb/>
April 17, 1981 You will arrive at 10<lb/>
p m on the 17th for an indulging,<lb/>
exciting evening Just think of lav<lb/>
ing out catching rays of sun and<lb/>
whatever shall come your way for<lb/>
three illustrious sun filled days<lb/>
Myrtle Beach is the place to be<lb/>
during Easter Break, especially at<lb/>
the Holiday Inn Downtown So<lb/>
much to do. so many to meet1 It's<lb/>
all yours for $79 (subiect to price<lb/>
increase) You may sign up at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office by March 2<lb/>
The surt and the sun are calling<lb/>
you Make your deposit today<lb/>
 iuse of limited space<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi Na<lb/>
tional Honor Fraternity will meet<lb/>
at 6.00 pm Wednesday Feb 4<lb/>
The dinner meeting will be held at<lb/>
the Western Steer restaurant at<lb/>
3O05 E 10th St<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
There will be a Cor so meeting on<lb/>
Monday, Feb 9 at 5 00 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center room<lb/>
247 All corrections and social<lb/>
work majors and intended maiors<lb/>
are urged to attend New<lb/>
members are welcome1<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY<lb/>
Two photography courses will<lb/>
be offered on Tuesday evenings at<lb/>
East Carolina University this<lb/>
semester<lb/>
Camera I ' the basic COUTM<lb/>
will meet Feb 10 March 17 and<lb/>
"Camera II meets March 31<lb/>
April 28 Class sessions in each<lb/>
course are set for 7 9pm on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Participants in each course<lb/>
should have their own cameras<lb/>
preferably 35 millimeter or large)<lb/>
information and registration<lb/>
materials for these and other<lb/>
evening course offerings are<lb/>
available from the Office of Non<lb/>
Credit Programs Division ot Con<lb/>
tinuing Education ECU Green<lb/>
ville N C , telephone TS1 4143<lb/>
CSO<lb/>
It<lb/>
INVESTING<lb/>
ADVERTISING<lb/>
?  ? ?. rnship program<lb/>
A , . , . ? f summer by<lb/>
edmont Ti ?<lb/>
Purpose of the<lb/>
prouram ,s ' winningstg<lb/>
ence in the<lb/>
ig marketing or<lb/>
?uoent from<lb/>
. . ????.<lb/>
compel ? ?'?' severa " ?<lb/>
ersitii<lb/>
' ?v<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
Mr john s Childers, Dif<lb/>
ECU Testing Center announced<lb/>
that the new Medical College Ad<lb/>
mission Tes' (MCAT) application<lb/>
packets have arrived in the<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight 105 The<lb/>
test dates for 1981 are April l 1981<lb/>
and September 12. 1981<lb/>
deadline date for the ApriU test is<lb/>
March 6, 1981 and the deadline<lb/>
date for submitting application tor<lb/>
September 12. 198' test is<lb/>
Auciu' U. '98!<lb/>
Co rec bowling entry dates open<lb/>
Jan 26 and continue through Feb<lb/>
10 Play begins on Feb 16 A team<lb/>
captain's meeting will be held on<lb/>
Feb 12, at 7 00 p m m the<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling Center For<lb/>
further information please contact<lb/>
the intramural Office, Ext 6387 or<lb/>
Gregg Melton, Ext 6443<lb/>
POETRY<lb/>
ECU Poetry Forum will meet<lb/>
Thursdsay. Feb 5th in Mendenhall<lb/>
248 Anyone interested m reading<lb/>
poetry and getting feedback on<lb/>
hisher work is invited to attend<lb/>
Bring six or eight copies of the<lb/>
poems for other members of the<lb/>
workshop<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
I nter varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will meet Thursday<lb/>
night at 7 30 m the Methodist Stu<lb/>
dent Center This week's topic is<lb/>
the fulfillment of end time pro<lb/>
phecv Everyone is welcome<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Each Tuesday at 5 30 P m<lb/>
there is a Fellowship Supper at Ac<lb/>
Baptist Studenl Union mext to<lb/>
Wendy s on 10th Street) Cost tor<lb/>
the meal is 1 75 Tonight, follow<lb/>
ing supper, is game night bring<lb/>
your favorite! So come on out and<lb/>
indulge in good good, fellowship<lb/>
and fun1<lb/>
SKI SNOWSHOE<lb/>
Additional space has been made<lb/>
available for the Spring Break tr.p<lb/>
to Snowshoe, West Virginia For<lb/>
information contact Mrs Jo<lb/>
Saunders at 757 6000 in Memorial<lb/>
fW 205 The deadline has been<lb/>
. .?. ?? ' I eb 12 Final tees will<lb/>
be collected on this date at 4 00<lb/>
p m in Memorial Gym room 108<lb/>
WOMEN'S RUGBY<lb/>
Women's rugby team meets<lb/>
Tues, Wed, 8. Thurs, 46 pm on<lb/>
the rugby fields behind the Allied<lb/>
Health Building No experience<lb/>
needed, anyone is welcome For<lb/>
more info Nancy 758 1160 or<lb/>
Kim 752 6388<lb/>
PAUSE<lb/>
Thursday night at Baptist Stu<lb/>
dent Union Inexl to Wendy s on<lb/>
10th Street' is a time ot eel-<lb/>
tion and n Met I on Th.s w ?<lb/>
topic is "Simplicity Beg.ns at<lb/>
7 00 We hope to see you there<lb/>
If you are pursuing a maior in<lb/>
allied health, nursing, pre<lb/>
medicine, pre dentistry or<lb/>
medicine you may quality for<lb/>
COST FREE services made<lb/>
available through the Center for<lb/>
Student Opportunities (CSO).<lb/>
School ot Medii ine<lb/>
Current openings exist tor<lb/>
studei ' ' in v i<lb/>
tutorial services Eligible students<lb/>
can also participate in in<lb/>
dividual, ion Of group learning<lb/>
skills sessions (organizing l hire<lb/>
notes effective reading, memoriz<lb/>
ing and test taking techniques)<lb/>
Professional counseling services<lb/>
include career planning<lb/>
Stance personal, academic,<lb/>
? ,i anx.efy<lb/>
. ling<lb/>
it you would like to be con<lb/>
sidered for participation m an, of<lb/>
?' ? COST FRET services contact<lb/>
Or Fr, 'or Student Op<lb/>
port, i ' ?  ' I B I<lb/>
ca'l for an appomtmc<lb/>
? . . 6075 or 6081<lb/>
SPEED READING<lb/>
 tor<lb/>
persons in<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ? ????? si on.<lb/>
? on Thursd ? -<lb/>
?ngs at Fast KCarolma University<lb/>
Pel 1J April '6<lb/>
The class will meet from 7 to 9<lb/>
pm Continuing Education units<lb/>
? g proles<lb/>
ible<lb/>
Further information and<lb/>
registration forms are<lb/>
Office of Non Credit '<lb/>
grams Division of '<lb/>
? n ECU. Grei e, N.C<lb/>
? 757 6143<lb/>
REVENGE<lb/>
Chemistry class frustrating?<lb/>
Come and release that pent up<lb/>
anger and throw a pie at the<lb/>
chemistry faculty of our cho.ee<lb/>
The America- Chemical Society<lb/>
Student Affiliates is sponsoring a<lb/>
Cnerrstr, Faculty P.emthe<lb/>
 Thursda Feb 5 730 9 30<lb/>
pm at the fc mo Room Adm,s<lb/>
s,on IS 50c along with reduced<lb/>
pnees on party beverages So<lb/>
come and seel- ? nge"<lb/>
AED<lb/>
Alpha EPS.ion Delta preprotes<lb/>
s.onai societ, will hold a special<lb/>
meeting on Thursday, Jan 30 at<lb/>
7 30 p m in Flanagan 307 Tillet<lb/>
Mills a repn i rt'vi ' ,nt<lb/>
UNC CH Schools of Med ine anci<lb/>
Dentstr , Wedi al f du? ation<lb/>
,? ,e, pn ? I I Program iMED<lb/>
, ii spt all ?'? Wl D.sai<lb/>
Hcally designed to prei<lb/>
lergraduate students fof<lb/>
medical education AH ? '<lb/>
? '? '<lb/>
FILM<lb/>
Cor?? ' <lb/>
doc. ?'<lb/>
lory of f ram laegerst "?<lb/>
? ?, ?.  peasant beheaded in<lb/>
??????<lb/>
 Htary forces of Han Ger-<lb/>
. ,  rerested<lb/>
poss.oility ot conscientious obiec<lb/>
tion to war and military set<lb/>
and or alter- itivi<lb/>
. ,  tl film and<lb/>
,om the discussion follow<lb/>
ninety mil ' n G?<lb/>
won<lb/>
. . ? ? ?. t directot<lb/>
p?? ' a Venn. I<lb/>
film i<lb/>
3S from 1 to 9 pm a- ?? ?<lb/>
?er locate ?' -<lb/>
? . . ?? ?<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
TneNC Coastal D-str . o H .<lb/>
AtinrifltiOn Of SO<lb/>
Na0nd meet Jan 79 a-<lb/>
m n the Caroi Be.k Audito.<lb/>
Sn the East Carolina Unlver. ty<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Addressing 'he<lb/>
?, t.rvial workers<lb/>
u,censmg of So-<lb/>
jTll be Or Tom ScutHun of UNC<lb/>
n.poro and Dr Constantme<lb/>
Tot me ECU Oepartmen<lb/>
o, Social work and Cor-<lb/>
Services<lb/>
A.l soca. workers and<lb/>
terested persons are mv.ted to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
Pi kapps '?<lb/>
.   wone to then<lb/>
do ?<lb/>
Thui " :<lb/>
, ?? reduci<lb/>
beverages Cor-<lb/>
favor '<lb/>
a ?vav?  ? ' " v<lb/>
CO OP JOBS<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
I<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
<lb/>
:<lb/>
TWIG FELLOWSHIP IS:<lb/>
ESSAY<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
I i ? ? to announc. " ?<lb/>
nuai Paul Farr Memoria<lb/>
Con ' infest iS Opt<lb/>
undergradu<lb/>
Enii The entru<lb/>
?<lb/>
no research papers<lb/>
and should havi been ' "en in<lb/>
? ? menl of an En .<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
?? . . ' ' -<lb/>
 ? ??. ? '<lb/>
.<lb/>
HOTLINE<lb/>
The East Carolina Proiect on<lb/>
Sexual Harassment Dept of<lb/>
Soc iOl ? ? and Anfhr open 05 .<lb/>
Mants 1 talk Witt students who<lb/>
haa problems with an East<lb/>
Carolina teacher. If you have ever<lb/>
by sexual looks<lb/>
igestions. or<lb/>
.?.ant to hear about<lb/>
,ou. es Your contiden<lb/>
ity is guaranteed Your<lb/>
?  - nts vi not b use I to (e<lb/>
? .<lb/>
Thurs 2 p.m. 10<lb/>
 -? :<lb/>
JEWISH STUDENTS<lb/>
Come see Rabbi Groner of the<lb/>
Lubav.tch Rabbin.cal Society ot<lb/>
N C He w.ll speak on too<lb/>
Jewsh society Thursday. Feb 5 at<lb/>
7 00 at the synagogue 1420 East<lb/>
U'h Street For more mfo or rides<lb/>
caH Jerry 752 5942 or Dr Resn.ck<lb/>
?S6 5640<lb/>
btiNfNIL 3<lb/>
CITCO<lb/>
WRECKER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Front End<lb/>
Alignment<lb/>
All Types of<lb/>
Auto Repair<lb/>
Foreign &amp; Domestic<lb/>
Reasonable Rates<lb/>
2900 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Phone 758 4224<lb/>
111 Happy Q) Situ<lb/>
r)Bia ii mAiici<lb/>
OPIM 14 HOUlt<lb/>
Wholesale &amp; Retail<lb/>
Ice Sales<lb/>
 SPECIAL REG OQc<lb/>
 8-LB BAG 89- ?3<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
Expires April 1. 1981<lb/>
f eg Ice Delive'y<lb/>
r? n I'l'lllll<lb/>
ARMY NAVY STORE<lb/>
. Backpacks. ? U. Bomber.<lb/>
it F.eW. Oeck. Fi.etit. Snorkel<lb/>
m<lb/>
 jackets. Peaceats, Parkas. <lb/>
? Shoes, Combat Roofs. Plus. <lb/>
t tstt sevens Streat r<lb/>
?tt?HttfH???<lb/>
I<lb/>
tormat.on concert-<lb/>
related wor exper.e-<lb/>
undergraduate a'<lb/>
students dui<lb/>
sprmu ?<lb/>
and ;<lb/>
Pentagon D<lb/>
Wildlife Set<lb/>
Energy Federa' Pi<lb/>
and Socai Security Ad<lb/>
tion private organuatioi<lb/>
f Duke Power (<lb/>
nfelli ?" ?  "<lb/>
Stu ?<lb/>
o op Ot to rev ?'?<lb/>
nptionsand totalk to a '<lb/>
coordinator coi i i<lb/>
pos- <lb/>
approach.ng deadlines I<lb/>
mteres ?? shoui<lb/>
de(a?<lb/>
SAAD'SSHO !<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
I 1 J Gr.imlf Ave.<lb/>
758 12:<lb/>
Qua I If. Kp<lb/>
CAREER CHOICE<lb/>
BLOOD DRIVE<lb/>
Itte Word of<lb/>
"<lb/>
 hot<lb/>
.<lb/>
: ? ' ' '<lb/>
on .<lb/>
ion E -<lb/>
?<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
<lb/>
keep .<lb/>
?<lb/>
ORIENTATION<lb/>
 <lb/>
'<lb/>
school<lb/>
nay part<lb/>
? . I rvt  i ? the first g<lb/>
 Feb. : these<lb/>
10 and 26<lb/>
groups ?'? meet from 3 00<lb/>
pm 5 00 0 m .n 201 VVr.ght An<lb/>
ROTC A roriuri<lb/>
? rtg Campbell Vocational In<lb/>
 -  ??- a ' ??<lb/>
participant<lb/>
 <lb/>
trong Can<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
.<lb/>
ind epiored<lb/>
  . . - ?<lb/>
<lb/>
? tents mat "<lb/>
 ' i<lb/>
?? on Nop'<lb/>
. ? ? ??? patel<lb/>
 ??. first Jroup meeting of<lb/>
.<lb/>
(ACT)<lb/>
ACT) ? ? " CU or<lb/>
.? ? ,i ? 1981 App<lb/>
. are to be completed and<lb/>
to ACT Reg.strat.on P O<lb/>
Bon 414, Iowa City. Iowa 52240<lb/>
Regfstrartlon deadttfw ? <lb/>
198) Appl '? be obta.n<lb/>
? '<lb/>
oom 105<lb/>
(AHPAT)<lb/>
  sions<lb/>
?  . <lb/>
ECi' ?' "?' ? " ' ;yt"<lb/>
'<lb/>
. ?. ? mailed '?<lb/>
it 45th<lb/>
?  ? ? ? ?. ? 10017 to art ??<lb/>
? on blanks<lb/>
,t,ng<lb/>
foom 105.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
( o! united Liberal<lb/>
Stu ' ponsoring an i'ssa,<lb/>
? it.on ot I-<lb/>
 . <lb/>
I - kWERICA<lb/>
It lea '<lb/>
double spaced typed page;<lb/>
deadline for entry is Feb 10, 198'<lb/>
1st Pn?e SS0 00 2nd Pr.re<lb/>
S2S00 3rd Prize S15 0C it you<lb/>
riavv an, quest.ons please call<lb/>
Grace Wells at 752 9802 or Eula<lb/>
Voore at 752 S9R 1<lb/>
TheEast Carolinian<lb/>
?<lb/>
1923<lb/>
Pubishea every Tuesday and<lb/>
ThursC. " . academic<lb/>
? ?. dur<lb/>
. " ?<lb/>
East Caroi.n.an is the of<lb/>
?newspaper of East<lb/>
Carol.na Un.versity. owned.<lb/>
published tor and<lb/>
students ot East Carolina<lb/>
FOOD IS<lb/>
BACK<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Rathskeller<lb/>
GOOD FOOD -<lb/>
GOOD PRiChS<lb/>
FRENDLY ATMOSPHERE<lb/>
12 p m. ? 1 a<lb/>
109 L 5th Street<lb/>
752-1361<lb/>
r<lb/>
Summer Job Oppertunities<lb/>
In Camping For<lb/>
rfa<lb/>
Counselors<lb/>
? Guards<lb/>
CraHs<lb/>
Sailing<lb/>
Nurses<lb/>
Salary<lb/>
Roorr. 8. Be<lb/>
Benc ? '<lb/>
N.C United Methodist Camps<lb/>
interviews and information February 9, 1981<lb/>
2 30 5 00pm at Wesley Foundation<lb/>
Test Influence Exaggerated<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business 5 ?? ?' ?<lb/>
All others 25 yearly<lb/>
rtd class postage paid at<lb/>
N C<lb/>
Tr,t East Carolinian off ? s<lb/>
ti .n the Old South<lb/>
Blcl.ng on the campus ot ECU<lb/>
N C<lb/>
Telephone 757 6366. 6367 6309<lb/>
OPTICIANS on<lb/>
Contact Lenses<lb/>
ch<lb/>
$79.95<lb/>
Money Back It Not Satisfied<lb/>
OIHO. MRS.<lb/>
clam 5:30pm.<lb/>
Mon I ues 1 hurvlri<lb/>
9am ? 1pm.<lb/>
W ednesdai<lb/>
Ph. 732-1446<lb/>
Physicians Quadrangle<lb/>
Buildinii A<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
(C PS) ? Standardiz-<lb/>
ed test scores are not as<lb/>
important for getting<lb/>
into college as test<lb/>
critics claims, a new<lb/>
stud of admissions<lb/>
procedures suggests.<lb/>
A report by the Col-<lb/>
lege Entrance Examina-<lb/>
tion Board, which<lb/>
sponsors the Scholastic<lb/>
Aptitude Test, and the<lb/>
rVmerican Association<lb/>
of Collegiate Registrars<lb/>
and Admissions Of-<lb/>
ficers says admissions<lb/>
procedures are diverse<lb/>
enough to allow<lb/>
minority students to get<lb/>
into college even if<lb/>
"grade averages, class<lb/>
ranks, or admission test<lb/>
scores were significant-<lb/>
ly lower than those of<lb/>
other applicanis<lb/>
In recent years<lb/>
stnadardied test critics<lb/>
have claimed the tests<lb/>
plav too large a role in<lb/>
deciding college ap-<lb/>
plicants1 tales. 1 hose<lb/>
criticisms have led to<lb/>
truth-in-testing laws in<lb/>
several states.<lb/>
T h e laws give<lb/>
students access to test<lb/>
answers, and have been<lb/>
opposed bv test-makers<lb/>
like the College Board<lb/>
as inefficient, un-<lb/>
necessary and expen-<lb/>
sive. College Board<lb/>
President George Han-<lb/>
ford, among others,<lb/>
has argued that the<lb/>
laws assume that ad-<lb/>
missions officers weigh<lb/>
standardized tests in<lb/>
determing who gets in-<lb/>
to school more than<lb/>
other factors.<lb/>
One reason the Col-<lb/>
lege Board undertook<lb/>
the just-released studv<lb/>
ol admissions pro-<lb/>
cedures, Han ford says,<lb/>
was to help support its<lb/>
anti-truth-in-testing<lb/>
law arguments.<lb/>
"Sure we wanted to<lb/>
prove what we were<lb/>
saving Hanford says.<lb/>
"And 1 think we've<lb/>
done so in a dispas-<lb/>
sionate, scientific<lb/>
way<lb/>
The two-year survey<lb/>
was of nearly 1500 col-<lb/>
lege admissions offices.<lb/>
More than half the<lb/>
admissions operations<lb/>
"actively recruit<lb/>
students with<lb/>
characteristics other<lb/>
than academic talent<lb/>
Hanford pointed out in<lb/>
a written introduction<lb/>
to the report results.<lb/>
Mitchell's<lb/>
Hairstyling<lb/>
and Beauty Salon<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
STUDENT SPECIAL<lb/>
Cut-Blow Drv and<lb/>
Condition<lb/>
Keg. $13.00 Now $9.95<lb/>
Good 1 hru Jan. M K-b.7<lb/>
756-2950 7-4042<lb/>
BISCUIT TOWNE<lb/>
INFLATION FIGHTER SPECIALS<lb/>
1011 Charles Street Phone 752-1373<lb/>
AftORTIONtVPTO<lb/>
IWMIItO<lb/>
PKtONANCY<lb/>
ii h oo ???! tttrntmr<lb/>
prvfAancy Mt, Wr c?n<lb/>
trw, and puMw tw?W<lb/>
c? ??WI Pw ?????<lb/>
lft?ors?tton call Ml MIS<lb/>
t?n ' ?rt? numtar<lb/>
?no ?t mt b?tw??o <lb/>
A.W.f.M WMMy<lb/>
NMMtOrtMlUHM ?<lb/>
tUWMlMMMtt.<lb/>
I<lb/>
fi&amp;<lb/>
s<lb/>
WE WANT TO SHOOT YOU!<lb/>
N<lb/>
1&amp;<lb/>
The 1981 BUCCANEER portroits<lb/>
will be taken through the month of<lb/>
February. All students, faculty, and ad-<lb/>
ministration are invited to have their<lb/>
portraits made. Tradition bust poses<lb/>
will be made free of sitting fee charge.<lb/>
A contemporary package offer (34<lb/>
length, close-ups, profile shots, etc.)<lb/>
will be available for a $3.00 sitting fee<lb/>
charge. Portraits will be made from 10<lb/>
a.m5 p.m. No appointment is<lb/>
necessary. All seniors having their por-<lb/>
traits mode will have their 1981 BUC-<lb/>
CANEER delivered tree of charge in<lb/>
the fall. <lb/>
<lb/>
M<lb/>
O<lb/>
N<lb/>
D<lb/>
A<lb/>
Y<lb/>
T<lb/>
U<lb/>
E<lb/>
S<lb/>
D<lb/>
A<lb/>
Y<lb/>
W<lb/>
E<lb/>
D<lb/>
N<lb/>
E<lb/>
S<lb/>
D<lb/>
A<lb/>
Y<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/>
,vVi<lb/>
99<lb/>
SI 29<lb/>
1<lb/>
FEB. 2-6 FLETCHER DORM<lb/>
CHICKEN SPECIAL<lb/>
Two Pieces of Southern Fried<lb/>
Chicken, Homemade Biscuit, French Fries. Coleslaw rAARK<lb/>
From 5 p.m. 'til 9 p.m.<lb/>
????????? M1r<lb/>
BISCUIT SPECIAL SVE<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
up<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE OF THREE J3?<lb/>
Steak BiscuitCountry Style Gravy and French Fries or<lb/>
Chicken Biscuit with French Fries or<lb/>
Biscuit Burger and French Fries<lb/>
From 5 p.m. 'til 9 p.m.<lb/>
MEET AT<lb/>
BISCUIT TOWNE<lb/>
Arid Enjoy Delicious Home Cooked Meals<lb/>
At Inflation Hghting Fricesll!<lb/>
90?<lb/>
29<lb/>
Drive<lb/>
Thru<lb/>
Window<lb/>
Rep<lb/>
(CPS) ? 1<lb/>
I<lb/>
enten<lb/>
uall<lb/>
at t<lb/>
?<lb/>
Bu<lb/>
J<lb/>
rape<lb/>
i<lb/>
Tk? Haft.<lb/>
' I :? m ' r? ?-?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057316_0003"/><lb/>
I Ml I AS I I AROl IMAN FEBRUARY 3, 1981<lb/>
?<lb/>
Reports Of Campus Rape Increase<lb/>
(C PS) - rwo years<lb/>
ago t h i v m0nth,<lb/>
1 h e o d o r e B u n d ?<lb/>
entered the Chi Omega<lb/>
sororit) house on the<lb/>
campus ot Florida<lb/>
State I lni jrsitj, se<lb/>
ualk assaulted and<lb/>
then killed two women,<lb/>
and beat two othti <lb/>
who ultimate!) Mitn<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Since then Bund has<lb/>
been caught and COP<lb/>
victed of the crimes,<lb/>
and lite ai the Chi<lb/>
Omega house ha<lb/>
assumed a vi i:l! ied<lb/>
calm.<lb/>
But the women at<lb/>
Florida State have .<lb/>
parent!) become one ol<lb/>
the tew groups ot<lb/>
its this yeai who<lb/>
not talking about<lb/>
violence aeauM women<lb/>
on campus ollege<lb/>
security ; s say<lb/>
; hat. nationally,<lb/>
rumors and reports ot<lb/>
rapes have seemingly<lb/>
.leased at a mu<lb/>
than campus<lb/>
crime itself ovei the<lb/>
first halt ot the sch<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"lt- been highly<lb/>
unusu.il say<lb/>
police chief<lb/>
uls: coast unrv<lb/>
His department got<lb/>
"six or se en" ieports<lb/>
a week oi tap sex-<lb/>
ual assauli during Oc<lb/>
?er. although "the<lb/>
been as<lb/>
auiel a- a h as far<lb/>
as actual committed<lb/>
crimes of that nature<lb/>
go<lb/>
"Rape says lames<lb/>
McGovern ot the Inter-<lb/>
national Asssociation<lb/>
of C ampus I aw En-<lb/>
forcement d<lb/>
ministrators m Atlanta,<lb/>
?'is a relatively infre-<lb/>
quent crime on college<lb/>
campuses. The in-<lb/>
cidence of rape and<lb/>
homicides is very low<lb/>
compared to assault,<lb/>
robbery, a nd<lb/>
burglary<lb/>
Still, rape is also a<lb/>
"highly emotional"<lb/>
crime, and one "that<lb/>
receives a great deal ot<lb/>
publicity he notes.<lb/>
Consequently one<lb/>
repotted incident ?<lb/>
true or not ? can lead<lb/>
to something like<lb/>
par<lb/>
I ot example. a<lb/>
reported sexual assault<lb/>
a University ot<lb/>
Maryland dorm in k-<lb/>
lober (the report was<lb/>
later withdrawn) lead<lb/>
nol onlv to a campus-<lb/>
wide Rape Awareness<lb/>
Day but to "a spurt"<lb/>
of subsequent rape<lb/>
allegations "through<lb/>
November according<lb/>
to Captain Robert<lb/>
Anderson of the cam<lb/>
pus police.<lb/>
Anderson said the<lb/>
major problem has<lb/>
been in denying that a<lb/>
rape epidemic was<lb/>
under way.<lb/>
George Huntington,<lb/>
police chief at Indiana<lb/>
University, agrees that<lb/>
his hardest job of the<lb/>
school year has been<lb/>
dispelling "rampant<lb/>
rumors" of a<lb/>
tranvestite knifing and<lb/>
raping women in one<lb/>
campus area, and so-<lb/>
meone else lurking in<lb/>
the woods behind the<lb/>
Student Union.<lb/>
Though "we've had<lb/>
just three formal<lb/>
reports, down from last<lb/>
year Huntington says<lb/>
he's gotten calls from<lb/>
worried parents "from<lb/>
half the states in the<lb/>
union<lb/>
At the University of<lb/>
Idaho and the Universi-<lb/>
ty of Vermont, the ac-<lb/>
tivities of peeping<lb/>
Toms during the fall<lb/>
semster led to pained<lb/>
denials by campus<lb/>
police who, when con-<lb/>
tacted by College Press<lb/>
Service, still weren't<lb/>
sure anyone believed<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Clemson University<lb/>
police called for and<lb/>
got a special session of<lb/>
the Student Senate in<lb/>
order to deny rumors<lb/>
that "several" rapes<lb/>
had occurred on the<lb/>
campus within a two-<lb/>
week period in early<lb/>
November.<lb/>
Earlier in the fall, a<lb/>
police denial o' sexual<lb/>
assaults at the Universi-<lb/>
ty of Oklahoma ap-<lb/>
parently left one cam-<lb/>
pus women's group un-<lb/>
convinced. It staged a<lb/>
"Take Back the Night"<lb/>
rally which ended when<lb/>
eight demonstrators<lb/>
were physically sluwed<lb/>
around b v so m e<lb/>
unidentified men, who<lb/>
also shouted sexual<lb/>
epithets at them.<lb/>
The cycle of rumor-<lb/>
denial-disbelief-more<lb/>
rumors has begun again<lb/>
with the re-opening of<lb/>
schools after break. An<lb/>
Ann Arbor women's<lb/>
group has spray-<lb/>
painted 150 sites<lb/>
around the city with the<lb/>
claim that "A woman<lb/>
was raped her<lb/>
University of Michigan<lb/>
police say that, while<lb/>
they encourage rape<lb/>
awareness programs,<lb/>
they fear this one may<lb/>
cause unnecessary<lb/>
alarm.<lb/>
Part of the reason<lb/>
police denials don't<lb/>
always calm the nerves<lb/>
of campus women is<lb/>
the ambiguity of most<lb/>
campus crime statistics.<lb/>
The "only compila-<lb/>
tion" of college crime<lb/>
statistics. says<lb/>
McGovern, is done by<lb/>
the FBI, and campus<lb/>
law enforcement of-<lb/>
ficials themselves<lb/>
A<lb/>
Western Steer.<lb/>
Fomily<lb/>
STEJIKHOUSS<lb/>
3005 E<lb/>
10tb Street<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
Take Out Service<lb/>
Ava.ioble<lb/>
7588550<lb/>
FAST &amp; EASY DELICIOUS LUNCHES<lb/>
Tie Ham g) Stow<lb/>
Savin -otitB 8 ? ?<lb/>
O L?0? v.<lb/>
Soup &amp; Salad<lb/>
$19<lb/>
t? i?' I<lb/>
W- ?? I<lb/>
 ? ? ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
. I. tf<lb/>
1<lb/>
-int MM S<lb/>
J<lb/>
Chicken Filet<lb/>
Sandwich<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT FEB. 7, AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057316_0004"/><lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Chris Lichok, GMMiMMfi<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE. ?,<lb/>
Pv 1 I im ki. ),rll.??f  Paul Coi i ins. ?,&amp;?<lb/>
Davi St vfrin. ?,? m. Chari i s Chandi eh v ??<lb/>
Ami I m si i r.<lb/>
'lutl'?<lb/>
David Norris. <lb/>
 itllOl<lb/>
February J, iwi<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Liquor Debate<lb/>
Faction Distorts Real Issues<lb/>
There is an anonymous group in<lb/>
the Greenville area circulating<lb/>
leaflets that indicate there will be<lb/>
more teen drinking, crime, child<lb/>
abuse, prostitution, and various<lb/>
other signs of moral decay if the bill<lb/>
on Liquor-by-the-Drink is passed<lb/>
on February 17th. These drastic<lb/>
predictions are far-fetched and<lb/>
ridiculous.<lb/>
Statistics do indicate a rise in li-<lb/>
quor consumption and alcohol<lb/>
related incidents in areas where this<lb/>
bill has become effective. However,<lb/>
to insinuate that a thing like pro-<lb/>
stitution, for example, is directly<lb/>
related to the legality of purchasing<lb/>
liquor by the drink instead of<lb/>
brown-bagging is outrageous.<lb/>
Another example of the kind of<lb/>
logic that clouds the true issue was<lb/>
in the letter to the editor that ap-<lb/>
peared in this paper on Thursday,<lb/>
January 29, from the Concerned<lb/>
Citizens Committee. It stated that<lb/>
"New York City has more bars per<lb/>
capita than any other city in the<lb/>
world, but New York City is in<lb/>
bankruptcy The letter goes on to<lb/>
conclude that, "Liquor does not<lb/>
help develop a community, but in<lb/>
fact destroys it This kind of<lb/>
reasoning is not only faulty, but<lb/>
confuses the issue.<lb/>
The pamphlets that were<lb/>
distributed conclude with the mot-<lb/>
to, "More drinks equal more<lb/>
drunks However, an individual<lb/>
classified as a "drunk" will pro-<lb/>
bably be a drunk whether the liquor<lb/>
is sold by the bottle or by the drink.<lb/>
Restaurants wishing to par-<lb/>
ticipate in Liquor-by-the-Drink<lb/>
sales must pay an additional $10 per<lb/>
gallon tax on any bottle of liquor<lb/>
they purchase. This will help the<lb/>
state of North Carolina to fulfill its<lb/>
legal requirement of a balanced<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
Liquor-by-the-Drink will put<lb/>
social, public drinking in a more<lb/>
controlled atmosphere. It is not a<lb/>
major factor in the overall moral<lb/>
decline o the community, as the<lb/>
anonymous group circulating this<lb/>
kind of propaganda is trying to in-<lb/>
dicate.<lb/>
ANNOYED BY THE ENERGY CRUNCH?<lb/>
FURIOUS ABOUT SUBSIDIES 7e FAILING<lb/>
AUTOMAKERS? ENRAGED W WE CANT<lb/>
SEEM TO BUILD AN EFFICIENT CAR?<lb/>
YOU'LL LOVE THE NEVldTOCAR! IT<lb/>
RUNS CN AMERICA'S MOST PLENTIFUL<lb/>
ENERGY SOURCE?ANGER<lb/>
!5<lb/>
?JN'8?<lb/>
RQCK? MTN<lb/>
NfcWg) ?<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
Mub-B-7HE-DRINK MLL LEAP TOPROSTIlWOMNf<lb/>
CHILDaSuSE. TOBACCO ON&amp; CAUSBS LUNG CANCER<lb/>
rCampus Forum<lb/>
Student Defends Cheerleaders<lb/>
In regard to the recent editorial which<lb/>
maliciously criticized a lot of peoples'<lb/>
hard work, I must say there were a few<lb/>
ideas which were obviously not reflected<lb/>
upon long enough.<lb/>
Before the ECU cheerleading squad<lb/>
can fit the description as defined by your<lb/>
American Heritage Dictionary as "one<lb/>
who leads group cheering there must<lb/>
first be a group present for the<lb/>
cheerleaders to lead. Surely you do not<lb/>
expect the cheerleaders to magically fill<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Now, moving along to your concern<lb/>
of the cheerleaders not having any<lb/>
supervision. Our varsity cheerleaders,<lb/>
which are made up of mostly up-<lb/>
perclassmen, are both old enough and<lb/>
mature enough to function effectively<lb/>
without supervision. By the way, how<lb/>
many supervisors hang around The East<lb/>
Carolinian?<lb/>
According to you, and 1 quote. "The<lb/>
supervisor  should make sure that the<lb/>
squad does its job, that being to cheer<lb/>
I can't for the life of me figure out what<lb/>
you think the cheerleaders are doing at<lb/>
each game. Every game that I have been<lb/>
to, 1 have found the cheerleaders to be<lb/>
cheering.<lb/>
Your remark concerning professional<lb/>
help for the ECU cheerleading squad<lb/>
may be a good idea, but with a budget of<lb/>
SI,000, who can afford it.<lb/>
Now finally as to your "cubby hole"<lb/>
analogy: The only sensible area for the<lb/>
cheerleaders to situate themselves in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum is behind one o' the<lb/>
baskets. If you think about it long<lb/>
enough, where do most of the collegiate<lb/>
and professional basketball cheerleaders<lb/>
position themselves?<lb/>
Thanks for your time, and next time<lb/>
use your head!<lb/>
Bob Benson<lb/>
Senior, Psychology<lb/>
King Remembered<lb/>
On January 15, 1981 Martin Luther<lb/>
King Jrs birthday was celebrated on<lb/>
campus. A full program was planned in<lb/>
recognition of this great civil rights<lb/>
leader. The program started at twelve<lb/>
noon. The Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity<lb/>
did a step in his honor. The step was<lb/>
followed by a moment of silence. Martin<lb/>
Luther King's famous speech "1 Have A<lb/>
Dream" was played in remembrance of<lb/>
this magnetic speaker. Five hundred<lb/>
students marched to the Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Afro-American Cultural Center singing<lb/>
"We Shall Overcome rhese students<lb/>
were holding hands as they marched to<lb/>
promote the feeling o' unity. The Negro<lb/>
National Anthem was sung proudly. The<lb/>
Fountain ol 1 ife Christian Fellowship<lb/>
Choir sung two selections. A brief<lb/>
biography was done b Micheal<lb/>
1 ockamy o Dr. King. Mar Williams,<lb/>
acquisition librarian, gave the crowd a<lb/>
tew remarks about the ceremony.<lb/>
This program was covered by Channel<lb/>
9 here in Greenville. 1 was disappointed,<lb/>
to say the least, by the coverage provid-<lb/>
ed bv our student paper THE FAS 1<lb/>
CAROl INI AN. On Tuesday, January<lb/>
20, 1981 a photograph appeared at the<lb/>
bottom o' the 1st page with twenty-one<lb/>
little words about the program provided<lb/>
by the students remembering Martin<lb/>
1 uther King.<lb/>
It is sad thai this great man is gone. It<lb/>
will be even sadder if he is ever forgot-<lb/>
ten.<lb/>
Grade A. Wells<lb/>
President of S.O.U.I .S.<lb/>
Senior, Political Science<lb/>
Intelligence Insulted<lb/>
Normally my critical urges stay buried<lb/>
Jeep within my bosom by the realization<lb/>
that their manifestations fall only upon<lb/>
already decided, monotonic ears;<lb/>
however, the article in the East Caroli-<lb/>
nian's Jan. 27th issue entitled<lb/>
"Preparing Steak Can Be Easy" urges,<lb/>
invites, instigates, simply pleads and<lb/>
begs ridicule. Statements such as "When<lb/>
you plan to cook steaks, the first thing<lb/>
you must do is buy them "Be very<lb/>
observant of the meat department in<lb/>
your supermarket thick steaks<lb/>
take longer to cookDoneness' is a<lb/>
matter of personal preference these in-<lb/>
sult the intelligence of a college student.<lb/>
Surely better filler material can be<lb/>
found; if not, this paper is in dire trou-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
KEITH DAN1E1<lb/>
Senior, Chemistry<lb/>
Library Unbearable<lb/>
What's this 1 hear about an energy<lb/>
crisis? That can't be true judging from<lb/>
Joyner Library's all-out efforts to turn<lb/>
East Carolina campus into a tropical<lb/>
paradise. Sure, we all like warm<lb/>
weather, but 85 degrees in midwinter is<lb/>
slightly overdoing it.<lb/>
After passing through the entrance to<lb/>
the library, the heat becomes almost<lb/>
unbearable to the average human being,<lb/>
who has just emerged from a very c<lb/>
fortable environment on the outside<lb/>
I he sudden adjustment that the body is<lb/>
forced to make is a shock to the human<lb/>
anatomy.<lb/>
But aside from the fact that this ex-<lb/>
treme contrast in environments could<lb/>
cause the students bodily harm, such as<lb/>
colds, flu, pneumonia, etc it is a se ?re<lb/>
waste of an expensive, nor to mention<lb/>
scarce, supply of energy. If the last<lb/>
C arolina University budget cannot sup-<lb/>
port two worthwhile sports like wrestl-<lb/>
ing and women's field hockey, it is<lb/>
amaing to me that there is enough<lb/>
money available to overheat such a huge<lb/>
building as Joyner Library.<lb/>
The atmosphere is not very com-<lb/>
plementary to studying, but it does have<lb/>
a great deal to offer those interested in<lb/>
catching up on lost sleep. Don't despair,<lb/>
though, something has been done to<lb/>
remedy the situation. The library doors<lb/>
are spread open wide to generously<lb/>
disperse the excess heat to other needy<lb/>
parts o campus, namelv the outdoors.<lb/>
It may seem too complicated, but what<lb/>
would be wrong with an alternate solu-<lb/>
tion of turning the thermostat down a<lb/>
few degrees? Forgive me if thai is too<lb/>
much to ask o' university officials.<lb/>
1 am sorry to see an upstanding<lb/>
university, such as ours, totally ignore<lb/>
the need to conserve the world's ex-<lb/>
haustible energy supply. Waste, o<lb/>
anything, but especially of something as<lb/>
essential to survival as energy, is a sad<lb/>
practice. Until the library can be cooled<lb/>
down a bit, the students and the environ-<lb/>
ment will continue to suffer.<lb/>
How much more effort would a few<lb/>
steps to lower the temperature o Joyner<lb/>
take, compared to the amount of monev<lb/>
that could be saved? Maybe ECU<lb/>
students would like to go to a library to<lb/>
study instead of a sauna. If America can<lb/>
put a man on the moon, why can't East<lb/>
Carolina University keep its library at a<lb/>
sensible temperature?<lb/>
Lana Ginn<lb/>
Junior, Business<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
Foreign Relations Committee Carefully Studied Nomination<lb/>
WASHINGTON - 1 learned long ago<lb/>
that it's risky business to proclaim any<lb/>
event as the longest or oldest or shortest in<lb/>
history. Still, it's a fairly safe conclusion<lb/>
that the hearings by the Senate Foreign<lb/>
Relations Committee, in connection with<lb/>
the nomination of General Alexander M.<lb/>
Haig as Secretary of State, probably broke<lb/>
all records in terms of time consumed.<lb/>
We began on Friday, January 9, and met<lb/>
alt day, and into the night. We met all day<lb/>
Saturday. The sessions on Monday, Tues-<lb/>
day and Wednesday of the following week<lb/>
began at 9 a.m and sometimes ran until<lb/>
after 9 p.m. Finally, on Thursday morn-<lb/>
ing, January 15, the Foreign Relations<lb/>
Committee voted, 15-2, to approve the<lb/>
Haig nomination and to report it to the full<lb/>
Senate.<lb/>
HAIG ? I have known General Haig<lb/>
since I arrived in Washington as a new<lb/>
Jesse<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
Senator in January 1973. He impressed me<lb/>
from the outset as an able man. When<lb/>
President-Elect Reagan announced that he<lb/>
had decided to nominate Al Haig to be<lb/>
Secretary of State, I immediately met at<lb/>
length with General Haig in my office.<lb/>
We discussed every aspect of foreign<lb/>
policy, and I was totally satisfied with the<lb/>
assurances that he gave me. He will be his<lb/>
own man as Secretary of State; he will not<lb/>
permit the Department to be taken over by<lb/>
any second-level advisors, or anyone on<lb/>
the outside. 1 may as well put it frankly: I<lb/>
was concerned, and told General Haig so,<lb/>
that Henry Kissinger might be "lurking in<lb/>
the wings 1 was given every assurance<lb/>
that this would not happen.<lb/>
I have nothing against Mr. Kissinger<lb/>
personally, but this so-called "detente"<lb/>
with the Soviet Union bothered me when<lb/>
he was Secretary of State. There were<lb/>
many other things that bothered me, as<lb/>
well<lb/>
FRIENDS ? As U.S. Secretary of<lb/>
State, Al Haig will immediately seek to<lb/>
strengthen U.S. alliances with non-<lb/>
communist nations around the world. In<lb/>
recent years, the tendency has been for the<lb/>
U.S. to ignore our potential friends. In<lb/>
fact, we have too often disavowed our<lb/>
friends in an attempt to pacify communist<lb/>
nations.<lb/>
My feeling is that the United States<lb/>
should move to regain our position as a<lb/>
beacon of hope for the millions of people<lb/>
around the world who are today oppressed<lb/>
by communism. That does not mean that<lb/>
we should pick fights with anyone, but<lb/>
surely we should be standing up for<lb/>
freedom.<lb/>
FOLLY ? Our foreign policy for the<lb/>
past two decades has been largely a bipar-<lb/>
tisan folly. I believe that Secretary of State<lb/>
Haig will be attentive to people like<lb/>
Solzhenitsyn who have repeatedly sounded<lb/>
warnings about the takeover of the world<lb/>
by communism.<lb/>
America must once again become a<lb/>
strong nation ? morally and spiritually;<lb/>
we must have a superior defense capability<lb/>
to deter the threat of war; we must have an<lb/>
economy strong enough to encourage full<lb/>
productivity by our people.<lb/>
We have been cutting corners for too<lb/>
long. We have compromised our principles<lb/>
and our priorities. It won't be easy to<lb/>
regain our position in world leadership,<lb/>
but we have no alternative to making the<lb/>
sacrifices to do it.<lb/>
Alexander Haig convinced me that this<lb/>
will be his goal. That is why 1 supported his<lb/>
nomination vigorously. I was pleased, of<lb/>
course, when the lengthy hearings failed to<lb/>
produce anything other than an assessment<lb/>
that General Haig is an honorable,<lb/>
dedicated American. Not everyone will<lb/>
agree with him as he goes about his duties<lb/>
as Secretary of State. But if he lives up to<lb/>
the principles he and I discussed ? and I<lb/>
am convinced he will ? America will be a<lb/>
stronger and more highly respected nation.<lb/>
A<lb/>
Sa<lb/>
pre <lb/>
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und<lb/>
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Sa: ?<lb/>
Jacl<lb/>
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D;<lb/>
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to<lb/>
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and <lb/>
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removed dl<lb/>
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T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057316_0005"/><lb/>
n<lb/>
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Table,<lb/>
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tcted nation.<lb/>
lilt 1 M c Akol IN1AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
i 1 BKl KY i. IWI<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
A Decade Of Underground Comics<lb/>
San Francisco - Ten years ago the Rip Off Press was<lb/>
just a wild-eyed scheme, involving Texans, printing<lb/>
pi esses and comic books. 1 oday, with a little help from<lb/>
the 1 -icak Brothers, it's one of the nation's greatest<lb/>
underground comic book publishing houses. Fred<lb/>
Todd, President of Rip Off Press, Inc talks about the<lb/>
early days and the days ahead.<lb/>
Q: It all started ten years ago. How did it begin?<lb/>
V Well, there was a batch o' Texans who had come<lb/>
to San Francisco from Austin. It was the 60s and<lb/>
everything was happening. More of it was happening in<lb/>
San 1 ranciso so the tour Texans who were to become<lb/>
the Rip Ofl Press ended up here.<lb/>
Jack lack son was thinking about how to get his<lb/>
pioneer underground comic Cod Nose reprinted.<lb/>
Gilbert Shelton made a trip out from Austin with a<lb/>
spring breaking load of beds &amp; Heds, his comic.<lb/>
Dave Moriaty kinda stood in the middle and said,<lb/>
"vice, let's get all this together . . . let's buy a printing<lb/>
press Moriat) was living in my Oat in the space where<lb/>
a washing machine would have been if 1 could have af-<lb/>
forded a washing machine. He had decided that the key<lb/>
to the universe was a printing press<lb/>
Q: So you decided to become a publisher, distributor<lb/>
and printer ot comic books?<lb/>
 Right. 1 threw in some money because 1 was the<lb/>
one with the downtown job as a computer programmer,<lb/>
and. consequently, the money. These other guys were<lb/>
just crazy hippies. We bought a little Davidson press for<lb/>
nething like a hundred bucks apiece down. It was<lb/>
rea!l just a glorified mimeo machine.<lb/>
Our first job was a tour-color poster on coated paper.<lb/>
We threw away two-thirds of the press run  we had<lb/>
to pull the sheets off the press . . . they made this terrible<lb/>
ripping noise. (Sigh!) 1 didn't really like that phase of<lb/>
the Rip Off Pi ess . . when we were all being gentleman<lb/>
printers. (1 aughtei.)<lb/>
Q: Where was Rip Off Press' first home?<lb/>
fOtmm ?, 5 i<lb/>
Pfflk<lb/>
A: It started o at Mowry's Opera House at Laguna<lb/>
and Grove in San Francisco. It was an incredible place'<lb/>
Don Donahue, the mad printer of Apex Novelties was<lb/>
up there printing Snatch Comics on this old Multilith<lb/>
and heating up his brandy and sake on a little electric<lb/>
stove. It was a big old place with a porno movie maker<lb/>
in one part, and a couple of rock bands practising.<lb/>
It ended when a building down the street burned and<lb/>
our attic caught fire, too. Fortunately the firemen were<lb/>
just down the street and they came and put it out real<lb/>
quick. But, the ceiling came down. It ruined the first<lb/>
press run of our first publication, R. Crumb's Comics &amp;.<lb/>
Stories. So, we took the printing press apart and carried<lb/>
it down three flights o stairs and threw it in the back of<lb/>
my Falcon.<lb/>
Q: Where next<lb/>
A: Jaxon was the art director and accountant for the<lb/>
Family Dog, which had just folded, so we moved into<lb/>
their old office, right past the eviction notice on the<lb/>
door. The building was owned by the urban renewal<lb/>
agency, which took on the responsibility oi resettling us<lb/>
. into a soon-to-be-demolished building  a corner<lb/>
store on the filth busiest intersection o town! I consider<lb/>
this one the golden periods. The sun shine in the win-<lb/>
dows . . .we paid S60 a month rent for the place, in-<lb/>
cluding an apartment in which six people lived.<lb/>
Bv this time we were doing about one third publishing<lb/>
and two thirds job printing. Our first year we published<lb/>
Crumb's little comic, and his first Motor City Comics.<lb/>
Gilbert's Hydrogen Bomb was one of the early ones . . .<lb/>
perhaps the first dollar comic. But pretty much it was<lb/>
living on ten dollars a week and if somebody came in<lb/>
and bought some comix we'd eat lunch.<lb/>
The urban renewal folks finally decided to tear down<lb/>
our building and make it into a parking lot, so we mov-<lb/>
ed to our present home at the foot ot San Francisco's<lb/>
scenic Potrero Hill. Things started happening. We got<lb/>
this monster press, the Ebco, made bv the Electric Boat<lb/>
Company after they gave up making submarines. It was<lb/>
a terrible machine  ill maintained and not wonderful<lb/>
to begin with . . . the printers cursed it regularly. We got<lb/>
a two-color Solna press. Then we bought a web press.<lb/>
There's two parts to a comic book. There's the cover,<lb/>
which we were already printing on our Solna. Then<lb/>
there's the insides which are printed on newsprint by a<lb/>
web press. These presses are huge capital investments<lb/>
. they're 6() to 70 feet long, ten feet high, five feet wide,<lb/>
taking five or six people to operate, working real hard in<lb/>
unison after great training. A press capable of eating<lb/>
trainloads of paper.<lb/>
Well, our gang of clowns would go out there and<lb/>
fumble around and try to remember what it was they did<lb/>
last time we made comic books, ruin a couple three<lb/>
plates and chew up half a forest of paper.<lb/>
Then along came the great newsprint shortage ot 19"3<lb/>
at about the same time we started a magazine, the Rip<lb/>
Off Review of Western Culture. Between the web and<lb/>
the magazine we soon owed a potful of money to all the<lb/>
paper companies in town. The sheriff came and<lb/>
repossessed the web and it took two days to get it out of<lb/>
the building.<lb/>
The only thing selling for us then was the first two<lb/>
issues of the Freak Brothers comix. We'd print ten or<lb/>
twenty thousand at a time  as many as we could con-<lb/>
vince some printer we could pay for. We'd truck 'em to<lb/>
our warehouse and sell 'em and wait for the money.<lb/>
Then we'd do it again. We very carefully did nothing<lb/>
but that for two years.<lb/>
Sometime along in the darkest part of all that, Gilbert<lb/>
came in one morning, pulled a stool up to a light table<lb/>
and began drawing a Freak Brothers strip. There had<lb/>
been some talk about him being tired of drawing the<lb/>
brothers and we all thought maybe the world had seen<lb/>
the last of those hairy dudes. But what he started that<lb/>
morning became Freak Brothers Comix .<lb/>
Q: Two quick last questions: Are you rich?<lb/>
A: Hah! Sears hasn't given me a credit card yet!<lb/>
0 Are you happy?<lb/>
A: Am I happy0 Well, some days.<lb/>
Spice Up Your Canned Foods<lb/>
With Some Tasty Recipes<lb/>
? HA I :l KiUV<lb/>
I ast Friday<lb/>
removed all<lb/>
A Friday Morning Surprise<lb/>
s snowstorm took many ECU students by surprise. The weather over the next couple of days quickly<lb/>
traces of this blizzard. Oh, welleasy come, easy snow.<lb/>
By KVlin WEYLER<lb/>
sufl W nier<lb/>
If you live in a dorm room or<lb/>
small apartment, you know how lit-<lb/>
tle storage space you have. Phis.<lb/>
you probably have an almost<lb/>
miniature refrigerator, l! this is the<lb/>
case, keeping fresh food in your<lb/>
room is a problem, fter all. a tiny<lb/>
'elrigerator fills up awfully fast.<lb/>
Do not despair. Canned food is a<lb/>
handy invention for people in such<lb/>
circumstances. At the mention ot<lb/>
canned food, visions of tuna fish<lb/>
and ravioli probably dance through<lb/>
your head, right? Wrong! Almost<lb/>
anything you can buy fresh, you can<lb/>
buy in a can. Next time you have an<lb/>
hour or so to kill, go browse in your<lb/>
local supermarket if you don't<lb/>
believe me. You'll find an amazing<lb/>
variety of foods in cans, and a wide<lb/>
variety o prices as well.<lb/>
When buying canned food ? or<lb/>
anything for that matter keep in<lb/>
mind that the costliest isn't<lb/>
necessarily the best. All grocery<lb/>
stores carry nationally and or local-<lb/>
Friends Of Felines<lb/>
'Cat People' Are An Interesting Breed<lb/>
Iv known brands, the kind you see<lb/>
advertised on TV. Many, however,<lb/>
carry their own brands. This means<lb/>
the name of the store will appear<lb/>
somewhere on the label. This also<lb/>
means that vou will pay less for a<lb/>
product that's just as good as well-<lb/>
known ones hut isn't advertised on<lb/>
IV.<lb/>
Some stores also carry lower<lb/>
quality brands. You needn't be<lb/>
at raid oi anything being wrong with<lb/>
such canned products. Their main<lb/>
fault is that they don't look quite as<lb/>
pretty as higher quality brands. The<lb/>
pi ice tags, however, are much pret-<lb/>
tiei.<lb/>
Don't confuse low quality brands<lb/>
with the generic brands some stores<lb/>
carry. Generic products are usually<lb/>
of good quality but are merely miss-<lb/>
ing fancy packaging. The label on a<lb/>
generic can oi beans, for instance,<lb/>
will most likely be white and sport<lb/>
the word "BEANS" in big black let-<lb/>
ters. Generic brands are often very<lb/>
good buys.<lb/>
But perhaps you are hesitant<lb/>
about canned food because of its<lb/>
reputation tor tastelessness. If<lb/>
you're willing to go to a little extra<lb/>
trouble, canned food doesn't have<lb/>
to be predictable and tasteless. With<lb/>
a little help from a few extra ingre-<lb/>
dients even the most ordinary cann-<lb/>
ed food ? yes, even canned<lb/>
spaghetti! ? can become tasty.<lb/>
Bv TIM HARPER<lb/>
I lie Iowa legislature was<lb/>
debating a bill imposing penalties o<lb/>
up to a year in jail and a $1,000 tine<lb/>
tor motorists who don't stop after<lb/>
running over a dog or cat.<lb/>
Sen. lames Gallagher, a Jessup.<lb/>
Iowa, farmer, rose in opposition.<lb/>
"I can see stopping a car for a<lb/>
Jog he argued. "But a cat? You<lb/>
squish a cat and go on<lb/>
Gallaghei said later he only meant<lb/>
that some drivers might not be<lb/>
aware o hitting a cat on a dark<lb/>
highway, but his explanation mat-<lb/>
tered little to the hundreds of feline<lb/>
lovers who sent him angry letters<lb/>
aftei the bill was defeated.<lb/>
Gallagher, himself the owner of<lb/>
four dogs and two cats, said the<lb/>
iuror taught him something about<lb/>
the difference between people who<lb/>
have iust dogs and just cats: "I<lb/>
don't think dog owners are quite as<lb/>
possessive<lb/>
The senator's musing was one of<lb/>
the latest observations on "cat peo-<lb/>
ple a breed that has been growing<lb/>
ever since Felis catus crept out of the<lb/>
desert to become the exalted mouser<lb/>
in better Egyptian homes and<lb/>
granaries 5,000 years ago.<lb/>
While the nation's 23 million cats<lb/>
and their owners ? cats live in one<lb/>
of everv five U.S. households ? are<lb/>
outnumbered nearly 2-1 by dogs and<lb/>
dog owners, most cat people prefer<lb/>
to think of themselves differently<lb/>
than those who prefer dogs, or, God<lb/>
forbid, no pet at all.<lb/>
"Usually, cat people are nicer<lb/>
From "Cat" by B Kliban (Workman Publishing)<lb/>
says Calla Fricke, who makes a liv-<lb/>
ing cat-sitting for wealthy New<lb/>
Yorkers on vacation. "And their<lb/>
houses are cleaner<lb/>
Actually, even cat haters general-<lb/>
ly admit felines are better suited to<lb/>
city apartments because they are<lb/>
usually smaller, cheaper, quieter,<lb/>
cleaner and less troublesome than<lb/>
dogs.<lb/>
"But dogs are much more respon-<lb/>
sive than cats says Cynthis Kohl,<lb/>
who grooms both. "You can't pet<lb/>
them the way you can a dog<lb/>
"I hate cats Manhattan fashion<lb/>
designer Susan Obercion says with<lb/>
no apparent remorse. "They're too<lb/>
sly. They jump up on the kitchen<lb/>
table and lick the butter. They sneak<lb/>
up in the middle of the night and<lb/>
jump on your bed. They give me the<lb/>
creeps<lb/>
Those are fighting words to<lb/>
the one about cats sucking away<lb/>
babies' breath. But cat people have<lb/>
a few counter-offensive jabs, too.<lb/>
"People get dogs for protection<lb/>
Vera Meehan, a 76-year-old widow<lb/>
who lives in a Manhattan apartment<lb/>
with two cats, says. "But I get just<lb/>
as much protection from my<lb/>
Siamese without all that barking<lb/>
and uproar<lb/>
While dogs are traditionally seen<lb/>
as more "masculine" in terms of pet<lb/>
preference, there are apparently few<lb/>
bona fide "cat ladies" ? the<lb/>
stereotypical spinster whose home is<lb/>
overrun with kitty fur and litter.<lb/>
"But I've heard there's some lady<lb/>
in New Jersey who's supposed to<lb/>
have 1,700 cats White Plains,<lb/>
N.Y animal behavioralist Daniel<lb/>
Tortora says.<lb/>
This mystique has been around<lb/>
ever since the early Egyptians began<lb/>
felinophiles who spend their lives mummifying favored cats whose<lb/>
shooting down old wives' tales like mousing days were over. The Egyp-<lb/>
tians eventually deified the beast as<lb/>
Bast, goddess o moonlight, fertili-<lb/>
ty, wisdom a"d hunting.<lb/>
In some ways, this mystique is<lb/>
still going strong for cat fanciers like<lb/>
Li Sumski, who has four felines.<lb/>
"Cats can teach you a lot she<lb/>
savs. "It's something that's hard to<lb/>
put into words. I look into one of<lb/>
mv cats' eves and it's like seeing the<lb/>
past, all of history. It's as if she's a<lb/>
throwback to 100 million years<lb/>
ago<lb/>
"God made the cat 19th cen-<lb/>
tury French satirist Joseph Mery<lb/>
wrote, "to give man the pleasure of<lb/>
caressing the tiger<lb/>
Mysticism aside, there is scant<lb/>
scientific evidence to show just how<lb/>
and why, or even if cat people are<lb/>
really fundamentally different from<lb/>
the rest of the human race.<lb/>
Dr. Peter Borchelt of New York<lb/>
City's Animal Behavior Therapy<lb/>
Clinic says the few studies done on<lb/>
the subject recently are largely in-<lb/>
conclusive.<lb/>
One study, he says, shows dog<lb/>
owners get more emotional satisfac-<lb/>
tion from their pets, and have better<lb/>
relationships with other people.<lb/>
"Cat owners are generally a little<lb/>
more aloof or asocial he says,<lb/>
"while dog owners are more in-<lb/>
terested in controlling the things<lb/>
around them<lb/>
Carol Wilbourn, a "cat shrink"<lb/>
who treats tabbies for aberrant<lb/>
behavior, agrees: "You can't own a<lb/>
cat. Dogs like to take orders, but a<lb/>
cat lives to please himself.<lb/>
SPAGHETTI A LA STOCKTON<lb/>
Empty the contents of one can of<lb/>
spaghetti into a pan. Add one stalk<lb/>
ot chopped celery (remove the leafy<lb/>
?nds) and about one-half of a chop-<lb/>
ped, medium-sized onion. Stir in<lb/>
well. Add one teaspoon of chili<lb/>
powder (more if you like very spicy<lb/>
foods), a pinch of salt and pepper,<lb/>
tir again, and heat until hot<lb/>
throughout.<lb/>
TUNA CRUNCH<lb/>
In a Corningware or metal (not<lb/>
glass!) one-quart casseiole dish:<lb/>
melt two one-fourth inch pats of<lb/>
butter over low heat. Add two large<lb/>
(or three small) chopped stalks o<lb/>
celery, one medium-sized chopped<lb/>
onion and cook over low heat in the<lb/>
butter, stirring occasionally. When<lb/>
tender, remove from heat and add<lb/>
one can of tuna (drained), one can<lb/>
of cream of mushroom soup, and<lb/>
one-half can of chow mein noodles.<lb/>
Mix well. Bake in toaster oven or<lb/>
regular oven at 325 for about<lb/>
twenty-five to thirty minutes. Then<lb/>
stir, top with remaining noodles,<lb/>
and bake five more minutes before<lb/>
serving.<lb/>
QUICK STEW<lb/>
Cook rice according to package<lb/>
direction (you'll want to use only<lb/>
half all the ingredients if you're<lb/>
cooking for only one or two peo-<lb/>
ple). After the rice is cooked, set<lb/>
aside. Heat one can of chunky soup,<lb/>
whichever kind you prefer, until<lb/>
piping hot. If you wish to thicken it<lb/>
add about two tablespoons of flour<lb/>
while cooking and stir in well. Serve<lb/>
over rice.<lb/>
Interesting Events<lb/>
At Other Colleges<lb/>
To curb cheating, the U. of<lb/>
Maryland hired a second-year law<lb/>
student to act as a prosecutor and<lb/>
investigator in cheating cases.<lb/>
Previously, a student who witnessed<lb/>
a cheating incident had to confront<lb/>
the offender directly, but under the<lb/>
new program a complainant can call<lb/>
a special hotline to report the infrac-<lb/>
tion. In addition to following up<lb/>
such complaints, the law student is<lb/>
compiling catalogs from term paper<lb/>
firms in an attempt to give pro-<lb/>
fessors information about purchas-<lb/>
ed term papers so that they can be<lb/>
more easily spotted.<lb/>
Minimum wage laws now cover<lb/>
work-study students. Although<lb/>
passed in September, regulations ex-<lb/>
tending minimum-wage coverage to<lb/>
work-study students didn't make<lb/>
clear when the new provision took<lb/>
effect. In a recent letter, the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Education surprised some<lb/>
colleges by making the provision ef-<lb/>
fective Oct. 1 ? and requiring back<lb/>
pav for students who received less<lb/>
than the $3.10 minimum wage since<lb/>
that date. College administrators<lb/>
complain that the new requirement<lb/>
will play havoc with budgets and<lb/>
create dissension, since some other<lb/>
unclassified employees continue to<lb/>
receive less than minimum pay<lb/>
under a different federal exemption.<lb/>
Fast food restaurants are visited<lb/>
by the average student 13.7 times in<lb/>
a month, says Expo America, a firm<lb/>
promoting consumer goods to the<lb/>
college market. The firm's survey<lb/>
revealed that Pepsi is more popular<lb/>
than Coke among students, that<lb/>
62 own a 10-speed bike and that<lb/>
popcorn poppers are the most com-<lb/>
mon household item owned by<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Potential presidents abound at<lb/>
Princeton and Harvard, if the<lb/>
students' self-estimates are to be<lb/>
believed. More than 55 of the<lb/>
undergraduates at the schools said<lb/>
they were smarter than both Carter<lb/>
and Reagan, according to the 1980<lb/>
Ivy League Presidential Opinion<lb/>
Poll. Cornell and Brown undergrads<lb/>
were slightly more modest, with<lb/>
42 rating themselves smarter than<lb/>
the presidential candidates.<lb/>
"Assassination Games" continue<lb/>
to spread to campuses throughout<lb/>
See INTERESTING, page 6, col. 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057316_0006"/><lb/>
1 HI M-XKOl 1N1AN<lb/>
FEBRUARY3, 1981<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
L?)fcoA)G$eoor CoiLZGt Tht Hwo (AMv(<lb/>
$H Pauid AJoeei3<lb/>
HouoiDTHiteH? A<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
NAVY BLUE 1? Volvo 144 tot<lb/>
tale Needs owner that is willing<lb/>
to do repair Call 7SI ?74J<lb/>
FOR SALE Mivata Americana 10<lb/>
speed, perfect condition, one year<lb/>
old JUS Call 7?? ?'<lb/>
FOR SALE Hide a bed sola<lb/>
table, lamp, lounge chair Good<lb/>
condition 1375 00 Call 7 5 6231<lb/>
alter 5 00<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
COUNSELORS For western<lb/>
North Carolina co ed summer<lb/>
camp Room, meals, laundry<lb/>
salary and travel allowance E?<lb/>
penence not necessary, but must<lb/>
enioy living and wormng with<lb/>
children Only clean cut non<lb/>
smoking college students need ap<lb/>
ply For application and brochure<lb/>
write Camp Pinewood U01<lb/>
Cleveland Rd . Miami Beach, Fl<lb/>
33141<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS Summer year<lb/>
round Europe.S America.<lb/>
LOST Be'?ee. Brewsttr and<lb/>
White silver tigei i eye I I -<lb/>
It touno please call '57 8572<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
to share two bedroom King ? Bo<lb/>
Apartment Hill rent and<lb/>
utilities Call 752 0865 or l?av<lb/>
message at 758 970'<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE Wanted <lb/>
share a two bedroom Eai'brook<lb/>
apt Halt rent and utilities Anon<lb/>
smoker please Call '52 4443<lb/>
LIBERAL MINDF D MALF to<lb/>
share one bedroom apt 575 00 mo<lb/>
plus halt utilities Mike 752 3501<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Tostiai-<lb/>
new two bedroom house ill Stoke;<lb/>
5100 00 mo and halt utilities Call<lb/>
Tom at 758 .717<lb/>
FEMALE HOUSEMATE NEED<lb/>
ED Own bedroom plus stud<lb/>
studio room t8' 50 plus half<lb/>
utilities Two bi ? Art<lb/>
Building Call '58 ISM<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED Great location to<lb/>
ECU and downtown area<lb/>
58' 00 share utilities Can<lb/>
7? A1?3<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
WANTED Female roommate to<lb/>
lhar? th Drdroum house Big<lb/>
and back ?ard Garage<lb/>
Electric heat and only halt mie<lb/>
torm the m?ll and one mile form<lb/>
Pit; Community College Onl.<lb/>
Mo plus jt-hturS Call Anita or<lb/>
Ann al 75 Mil or leave message<lb/>
at 7SJ ?36<lb/>
APARTMtNT Foi rent r?<lb/>
rooms modem bath and kitr.r<lb/>
Sludr Call 752 iOJOatter ? OOp.m<lb/>
FFMALE ROOMMATE Wanted<lb/>
 two bedroom Ta' f-<lb/>
Apartment Call Lisa 752 0453 or<lb/>
758 542?<lb/>
A. S ROOMMATf Hi ?<lb/>
ED To shate large houst- Watt<lb/>
,ng i campus ?7C rent<lb/>
or u1iiit.es<lb/>
544<lb/>
ROOMS FOR REH1<lb/>
? included l?<lb/>
MM<lb/>
ECU Historians Publish<lb/>
Judge Larkins' Memoirs<lb/>
Australia, Asia<lb/>
All fields<lb/>
A book detailing the<lb/>
personal memoirs of<lb/>
Judge John D. I arkins<lb/>
Jr. of Trenton,<lb/>
"Politics, Bar and<lb/>
Bench: A Memoir of<lb/>
U.S. District Judge<lb/>
John Davis Larkins<lb/>
Jr has been publish-<lb/>
ed by the Historical<lb/>
Society of Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The editors are Dr.<lb/>
Fred Ragan, chairman<lb/>
of the Department of<lb/>
History, Last Carolina<lb/>
University, and Don<lb/>
Lennon, director of the<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Manuscript Collection,<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
John D. Larkins, at<lb/>
age 26, became the<lb/>
youngest<lb/>
to serve<lb/>
Senate<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
member ever<lb/>
in the State<lb/>
of N or t h<lb/>
He served<lb/>
nine terms as a state<lb/>
senator, becoming<lb/>
chairman of every ma-<lb/>
jor committee, chair-<lb/>
man of the Advisory<lb/>
Budget Commission,<lb/>
chairman of the state<lb/>
Democratic Party and<lb/>
Democratic national<lb/>
committeeman. He ran<lb/>
for governor in I960,<lb/>
but lost in the primary.<lb/>
Then President John F.<lb/>
Kennedy appointed<lb/>
him to the federal court<lb/>
bench for the Eastern<lb/>
District oi North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
for 20 years Larkins<lb/>
presided over many<lb/>
major federal cases in-<lb/>
cluding school integra-<lb/>
tion and civil rights<lb/>
suits, environmental<lb/>
disputes and numerous<lb/>
criminal trials.<lb/>
The hardbound<lb/>
volume of Larkins'<lb/>
memoirs is 171 pages<lb/>
plus appendices and in-<lb/>
dex and contains 17 il-<lb/>
lustrations.<lb/>
5500 S1200 monthly Sightseeing<lb/>
Free info Write IJC Box 53 NC4<lb/>
Corona Del Mar, CA 9225<lb/>
LOOK GOOD ON PAPER<lb/>
Resumes, term papers protes<lb/>
sionally typed WRITE RIGHT<lb/>
75 M4?<lb/>
PRES Sorry it took so long to rep<lb/>
ly but I got myself that toy and I<lb/>
like it a lot better Bags<lb/>
Charles heard the Buffett<lb/>
tickets were going fast<lb/>
GeepSure are, faster than<lb/>
medical drops at e?am time<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Convenient<lb/>
cheap rates. Can Amy at 758 ??4<lb/>
DEAR DOUG. You and me. us and<lb/>
we, together forever Always'<lb/>
Love, Your valentine Debbie<lb/>
TO F M " No static at all Lets<lb/>
go skiing C D<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY ROBERT<lb/>
Best wishes from the staff The<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
E J Weekends were made for<lb/>
wining and dining Still thinking<lb/>
about you Chris<lb/>
Art and Camera<lb/>
526 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
IAju Town<lb/>
Hht Ik AH HA i ll-HV<lb/>
Ready to teach<lb/>
home nursing, first aid,<lb/>
parenting, child care,<lb/>
water safety; C PR.<lb/>
Red Cross: Reads for a new century,<lb/>
Into The Teeth Of The Storm<lb/>
The sudden cold and snow of last Kridav was almost enough to make one<lb/>
sta in class rather than leave the warmth and shelter inside.<lb/>
Interesting Events<lb/>
At Other Colleges<lb/>
No Foreign<lb/>
Film<lb/>
!$$s$$$$$$$$$$s$$$$ss$$$$$i<lb/>
? KODACOLOR<lb/>
? Developed and Printed<lb/>
$5.53<lb/>
8<lb/>
A Put- Service o? This Nt ? wig Council V<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
the country. But K.A.O.S. (Killing<lb/>
as an Organized Sport) won't be<lb/>
sanctioned b the Oregon State U.<lb/>
Student Activities Committee. The<lb/>
Experimental College had proposed<lb/>
funding an organized campus-wide<lb/>
game, in which students stalk one<lb/>
another with rubber-dart guns, but<lb/>
the committee decided that possible<lb/>
problems, such as the harassment of<lb/>
unwilling plaers, were too great<lb/>
and nixed the idea. The committee is<lb/>
trying to come up with revised rules<lb/>
emphasizing the "positive<lb/>
elements" of the game, such as the<lb/>
chance tor students to acquire new<lb/>
friends, so that it can be recon-<lb/>
sidered next term.<lb/>
A security newsletter published at<lb/>
the U. of Oklahoma is distributed in<lb/>
campus bathrooms, because that's<lb/>
where people have time to read, ac-<lb/>
cording to a security committee<lb/>
spokesman. The publication, which<lb/>
discusses such subjects as a rumor<lb/>
control service and false fire alarms,<lb/>
is called "Tank Times A Syracuse<lb/>
U. researcher used restroom walls<lb/>
for a poster campaign teaching<lb/>
Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation. A<lb/>
follow-up showed that students who<lb/>
were merely exposed to the posters<lb/>
did much better on a CPR test than<lb/>
those who weren't and actually<lb/>
knew CPR techniques as well as a<lb/>
test group that had had formal in-<lb/>
struction in it.<lb/>
"Casper, the friendly ghost<lb/>
writer, "as the ad listed him, was ar-<lb/>
rested in New York on charges of<lb/>
selling students term papers. Dennis<lb/>
King, who had placed the ad in the<lb/>
Village Voice, thus became the first<lb/>
person to be charged under the<lb/>
state's 1974 law banning the sale of<lb/>
academic research papers.<lb/>
GET WILD<lb/>
OKT<lb/>
DKT<lb/>
HH with<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau &amp;<lb/>
L'il Sisters<lb/>
EVERYONE COME &amp; PARTY<lb/>
S<lb/>
Film<lb/>
24<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
Flamingo Discoteque<lb/>
"Thursday Night Live"<lb/>
li you want something to do on 1 hurs-<lb/>
day Nights. If you want someone to do<lb/>
it with, li you want someplace to go<lb/>
where you can do what you want to<lb/>
do, We've got the time. We've got<lb/>
the place, We've got the people and<lb/>
We've got the entertainment.<lb/>
The Flamingo Disco proudly<lb/>
presents Thursday Night Live<lb/>
hjitertainment guaranteed to please.<lb/>
Students get in tree until 1 1:0U. " I he<lb/>
Thursday Night Gang" We do it on<lb/>
Thursday too. Tor into call 752-7331<lb/>
8$$$$$$$$$$sYide$$$$$$$$$!<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
$1.92<lb/>
36<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
$7.97<lb/>
20 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACMROME<lb/>
ANDEKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
36 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KOOACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING OHlLY<lb/>
$3.15<lb/>
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$!<lb/>
LOW, LOW PRICES ON<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
PROCESSING<lb/>
KODACMROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
$2.11<lb/>
SUPER ? AND iTANL?Af0 VQVlES<lb/>
LIMITED OFFER<lb/>
OPPtR EXPiRIS<lb/>
$S$$$$$$$S$$$$$$$$$I<lb/>
Taco Bell<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Special<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Monday PllJS t3X<lb/>
Enchirito, Bean Burrito - Small Drink<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Burrito Surpreme, Tostada - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Beefy Tostada, Taco -Small Drink<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Beef Burrito, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Friday ,<lb/>
Combo Burrito, Taco - Small Drink<lb/>
Two Taco Surpremes - Small Drink<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Two Tacos, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
ANGEL FLIGHT RUSH<lb/>
6th Annual TKE<lb/>
Boxing Tournament<lb/>
will be held<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
February 24, 25 and 26th, 1981<lb/>
'Ring Girl" Competition February 18 at Papa Katz<lb/>
TWO RUSHES MUST BE ATTENDED'<lb/>
What It Is Angel Flight it an honoary.professional service<lb/>
organization with the objective of becoming involved in the com-<lb/>
munity. We help sponsor the Red Cross Blood Drive and we alto<lb/>
sponsor families during holidays.<lb/>
Fun Activitieswe have keg parties, dances, bake sales, cook<lb/>
outs, and a military ball. Our biggest joy is being together. There is<lb/>
no Military Obligation.<lb/>
Dates To RememberFebruary<lb/>
3 (Tuesday); ice cream party 7:00 Wright Annex<lb/>
4 (Wednesday); Wine &amp; Cheese party 7:00 205 F East Brook Apts.<lb/>
5 (Thursday); popcorn party 6:30 Wright Annex<lb/>
Become an Angel<lb/>
Registration begins<lb/>
January 19th-Feh.6th<lb/>
at the TKE House-951 fc 10th St<lb/>
Ring Girl Info Call 758-7699<lb/>
Sponsored by Miller Beer o7-oli30<lb/>
-<lb/>
A<lb/>
s<lb/>
the<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
" i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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mate!<lb/>
undej<lb/>
and<lb/>
I<lb/>
ioleij<lb/>
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were<lb/>
haviH<lb/>
Od<lb/>
12<lb/>
"Ha<lb/>
"AnJ<lb/>
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tnbuj<lb/>
"T<lb/>
want<lb/>
"Pr<lb/>
avoid<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057316_0007"/><lb/>
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"6<lb/>
I HI EAST K() INI AS<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
I I Bkl H 3, I9M<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Buffett Concert Soon;<lb/>
Tickets Selling Fast<lb/>
1 ickets for the Feb. 2 Jimmy Buf-<lb/>
fet concert went on sale yesterday in<lb/>
the Centra! I lcket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Over<lb/>
6(X tickets were sold in the first da)<lb/>
of sales.<lb/>
1 ickets will be sold only on cam-<lb/>
pus until rhursday, and alter that<lb/>
the) will also be on sale at Apple<lb/>
Records, the Record Bars at Pitt<lb/>
Plaza and the Carolina East Mall,<lb/>
the Wilmington Record Bar and<lb/>
WQR in Jacksonville.<lb/>
The Central Ticket Office will<lb/>
now be open on weekends during<lb/>
the Free Micks, so you can buv a<lb/>
Buffet ticket and get a tree films<lb/>
poster. I he ticket office is also open<lb/>
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on<lb/>
weekdays. The) accept Master<lb/>
charge, Visa, cash or money order.<lb/>
Jimmy Buffett is proclaiming<lb/>
1981 with a new MCA album. It is<lb/>
pure Bullet; nine songs of great<lb/>
music and good tun with perhaps a<lb/>
touch of maturity not found in his<lb/>
previous albums. The months since<lb/>
the release of Volcano (his last 1 P)<lb/>
have been productive and rewarding<lb/>
tor Jimmy. Pour successful road<lb/>
tours (m the midst ol the widelv<lb/>
discussed concert attendance<lb/>
slump), and a doen new songs have<lb/>
given Buffett the confidence which<lb/>
sparks this new album.<lb/>
One new tune. "I'm Growing<lb/>
Older. But Not Pp ma) perfectly<lb/>
describe the off-hours lifestyle, but<lb/>
the title skimps justice on Jimmy's<lb/>
continual improvement as a lyricist,<lb/>
vocalist and onstage performer.<lb/>
1 rue to form, the new material on<lb/>
Coconut Telegraph emphasizes But<lb/>
ten's light cynicism and refreshing<lb/>
insights in our plight on this planet.<lb/>
Drawing on his travels, his affairs<lb/>
with the boats, the islands and the<lb/>
tropical ocean, his marvelous sense<lb/>
of humor, and his all-new respon-<lb/>
sibilities as a father, Jimmv has<lb/>
pieced together the annual puzzle<lb/>
which m the end, becomes a<lb/>
tight" album.<lb/>
His fans may recall that earlier<lb/>
albums seemed always to include a<lb/>
couple songs written by Jimmy's ac<lb/>
quaintances or band members.<lb/>
Similarly, contributions by singer<lb/>
songwriters J.D. Souther, Mas<lb/>
Mc Anally and Dave I oggins round<lb/>
out the album perfectly.<lb/>
In the past five years, Buffett has<lb/>
toured regularly with his h<lb/>
spirited Coral Reefer Band.<lb/>
Members oi the group have become<lb/>
as well known to regular audiences<lb/>
as Jimmv himself. Yet a highlight ol<lb/>
Buffett's concerts was his mid-show<lb/>
unaccompanied acoustic set ol hall<lb/>
Joen songs<lb/>
This past October and November<lb/>
Jimmy carried the idea one step '<lb/>
ther with his extremel) successful<lb/>
"Hot Dog and a Road Map lour"<lb/>
? his first set oi solo concerts since<lb/>
"Marearitaville" shot him into the<lb/>
1 op 1 en. In addition to the satisfac-<lb/>
tion ot sell-out crowds (though in<lb/>
smallei halls more suited to one<lb/>
voice and two guitais), Jimmy had<lb/>
the opportunity to perform more ot<lb/>
the hod back Buffett favorites<lb/>
which tended to get lost in the<lb/>
upbeal variety of the full-blown<lb/>
( oral Reefer shows.<lb/>
On Coconut lclegiaph, the title<lb/>
song oncei ns next-day gossip about<lb/>
indiscretions ot the night before.<lb/>
Other topics move from getting<lb/>
awa) from it all ("The Weathei Is<lb/>
Here, Wish You Were Beautiful"),<lb/>
to home state nostalgia (the classic<lb/>
"Stai s Fell on Alabama"), to a song<lb/>
tor his daughtei entitled "Little<lb/>
Miss P,LU<lb/>
1 he Coral Reefer Band will tout<lb/>
again in 1981; and alter being able<lb/>
i- ick of! Ins shoes, sit on a<lb/>
midstage bar stool and make 'em<lb/>
cheer, Jimmv ahead) plans anothei<lb/>
solo toui tor late in the year. Mean<lb/>
while, keep youi ear to the C OCOnu!<lb/>
relegraph and keep an eve out foi<lb/>
shallow vvatei.<lb/>
Popular recording star Jimmy Buffett will be in concert at Minges Coliseum on Saturday, Feb. 21 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
I ickets are Sh.50 for ECU students and $8.50 for the public. (Her 600 tickets were sold in the first day of sales<lb/>
yesterday.<lb/>
Lily Tomlin Bouncing Back<lb/>
Black History Films<lb/>
Showing Wednesday<lb/>
This Wednesda) night at 8 p.m. in MendenhalPs Hendrix rheatre, the<lb/>
Student Union Minorit) Arts Committee will present a Black Histoiv<lb/>
Double Feature as part oi its Spring Semester Films Series. I wo short<lb/>
films are scheduled.<lb/>
"Black Historv, 1 ost, Stolen, ot Strayed the first film ot the double<lb/>
feature, is an outstanding film which focuses on "lost" black histor) and<lb/>
the effect of its absence in the historv books upon black people, par<lb/>
ticulark children.<lb/>
"Black Shadows on a Silver Screen the last halt oi the twin bill.<lb/>
documents the treatment ol Blacks m Hollywood films and Black ettorts<lb/>
to combat these stereotypes and increase Black sell esteem b) creatii<lb/>
their own companies to produce films tor Black audiences.<lb/>
The first of these emerges after the outragious treatment ot Blacks<lb/>
Griffith's B1R1H 1 A NATION. Footage from some o these earl)<lb/>
works reveals committed artistry. in spite of adverse conditions.<lb/>
Violence On TV<lb/>
Still Increasing,<lb/>
Says Coalition<lb/>
B PATRICIA KOZA<lb/>
WASHINGTON I 'PI?The National Coalition on Televi-<lb/>
sion Violence says 16 persons have killed themselves imitating<lb/>
the Russian roulette scene from the movie "Deer Hunter"<lb/>
shown last year on television.<lb/>
" 1 his is still further proof that television violence kills and<lb/>
that on-the-air warnings are of little value said the coalition<lb/>
formed last year to monitor TV violence<lb/>
The coalition in its January newsletter listed the names o!<lb/>
15 persons it said died imitating the "Deer Hunter" scene<lb/>
dating back to March 20. it said the 16th was reported in Pen-<lb/>
nsylvania this month but gave no name.<lb/>
It also said two other persons were seriousl) wounded in-<lb/>
cluding an "unidentified White House Secret Service agent"<lb/>
on Nov. 21.<lb/>
Pie coalition said stations in Atlanta, Denver, Phoenix,<lb/>
1 ouisville, Oklahoma City, Pittle Rock, Fort Wayne, and St.<lb/>
1 ours plan to show uncut versions oi the film this year.<lb/>
On another subject the coalition said more X-rated films<lb/>
were produced in 1980 than those for general audiences with<lb/>
production oi Grated films falling from 12 percent of all<lb/>
films made in 1968 to only 4 percent last year.<lb/>
The coalition said it began monitoring theatre movies last<lb/>
September because its own surveys show 45 percent of televi-<lb/>
sion violence comes from movies shown on TV.<lb/>
The Motion Picture Association of America uses the<lb/>
following voluntary rating system: G for genera! audiences all<lb/>
ages admitted; PG for parental guidance suggested some<lb/>
material may not be suitable for children; R for restricted<lb/>
under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian;<lb/>
and X for no one under 18 admitted; the age limit may vary in<lb/>
certain areas<lb/>
The monitoring showed PG rated movies averaged 15.6<lb/>
violent acts per hour while R rated movies averaged 15.1.<lb/>
About 61 percent of PG movies and 39 percent of R movies<lb/>
were in the high violence category defined by the coalition as<lb/>
having more than 10 violent acts each hour.<lb/>
One film "Shogun Assassin" produced by Tnstar averaged<lb/>
123 violent acts per hour the coalition said. It was followed by<lb/>
"Flash Gordon a Universal film, with 82 per hour and<lb/>
"Anv Which Wav You Can a Warner film, with 29.<lb/>
Coalition Chairman Dr. Thomas Radecki, associated with<lb/>
the Southern Illonois University School of Medicine, at-<lb/>
tributed the growth of movie violence to the rating system.<lb/>
"The MPAA rating system has made it seem childish to<lb/>
want to go to a movie without sex or violence he said.<lb/>
"Producers are forced to add violence or an adult scene to<lb/>
avoid the G rating<lb/>
B) MRNON scon<lb/>
I PI Hotha i Ri ittir<lb/>
H 1 I YW( )(!) UP1 1 il)<lb/>
romlin pei haps the country's most<lb/>
versatile comedian appeared to have<lb/>
crashed and burned two years ac-<lb/>
he and John liavolta<lb/>
revolted moviegoers in "Moment<lb/>
B) Moment<lb/>
Ii was a poorly conceived movie<lb/>
about a middle aged woman involv-<lb/>
ed mi a tawdr) love affaii with an<lb/>
lescent pui ?<lb/>
ritics juslifiabl) bombed<lb/>
'Moment B) Moment" unmerciful-<lb/>
1) and box offices stagnated.<lb/>
Hollywood wondered it 1 il) had<lb/>
come to ih c nd ot the road.<lb/>
B) Moment"<lb/>
she tiad won an Oscai nomination<lb/>
for lNashville" three Emm)<lb/>
v foi i specials a special<lb/>
loin Award tor her one woman<lb/>
Broadwa) show and: a (iramm) foi<lb/>
hei v omed) album.<lb/>
 ;? 1 il wa ??: a career<lb/>
ecli;<lb/>
1 ? bounced back<lb/>
high '? ever Her "Nine to<lb/>
1 ive" movie with. Dolly Parton and<lb/>
Jane i onda is a i unaw a - her<lb/>
notices superb. Next month "The<lb/>
Incredible Shrinkin Woman" ? a<lb/>
tour de foi ' he<lb/>
released b)<lb/>
Monda) night she stars in her first<lb/>
IV special in five vears "I ily: Sold<lb/>
Out" a (. BS musical corned) with a<lb/>
bunch or guest stars including Par-<lb/>
ion and F inda, Paul Anka,<lb/>
1 iberace and loan River<lb/>
I ii contributed to the script and<lb/>
is exes . iroducer ot the hour<lb/>
long sh<lb/>
Other phenomenal resurgence I i-<lb/>
iv sard, "I take tride. Show<lb/>
business ups and siown. 1<lb/>
teel like I'm part oi the show<lb/>
business tamilv, vou knowO It's a<lb/>
nice fe. i be a member of the<lb/>
up.<lb/>
"You can't not be famous once<lb/>
you've been famous if vou know<lb/>
what 1 mean. It follows you around.<lb/>
( m t ? u g ' in the public eve vou<lb/>
stav there. Did vou ever hear of<lb/>
anybody in show business getting<lb/>
unfamous?"<lb/>
Lil) became a public tigure 15<lb/>
years ago with "Rowan and Mar-<lb/>
tin's laugh In She and Goldie<lb/>
Hawn reaped the great career<lb/>
rd? ft Mil the show err<lb/>
superstars in their own rights.<lb/>
Since then Lily has based much of<lb/>
her one woman concert shows on<lb/>
the characters she formulated on<lb/>
"Laugh In" ? Ernestine and<lb/>
telephone operator Susie Sorority,<lb/>
Mrs. Beasley and others.<lb/>
She has added a new character ?<lb/>
Iommv Velour, male Los Vegas<lb/>
headline! to Monday night's show<lb/>
in addition to being seen as<lb/>
Ernestine organist, Bobbie Jeanine,<lb/>
Mrs. Beasley the housewife, Tess<lb/>
the bag woman and Chrystai The<lb/>
Terrible Tumble weed the<lb/>
quadraplegic.<lb/>
"1 was helping put together one<lb/>
oi the sketches for the show and<lb/>
thought it would be a great idea to<lb/>
include Jane Fonda Lily said.<lb/>
"When I called her she was really<lb/>
enthusiastic about appearing with<lb/>
me.<lb/>
"A few davs later 1 got a call<lb/>
from Dolly who said, 'How come<lb/>
I'm not on the show and Jane is.?'<lb/>
So we wrote in a part tor Doll) too.<lb/>
"It the right opportunity present-<lb/>
it self, i.e. a good script all three ot<lb/>
us would like to make a sequel to<lb/>
"Nine to Live<lb/>
Like "Nine to Five Lily's show<lb/>
is a light satire on the battle of the<lb/>
sexes with oi course, the women<lb/>
winning out in the end while gently<lb/>
getting their feminist message<lb/>
across.<lb/>
In addition<lb/>
eight writers<lb/>
women.<lb/>
Lily during lunch at Hollywood's<lb/>
Brown Derby was dressed in gray<lb/>
beige sweater, pmk beige blouse and<lb/>
tan pants tucked into knee high<lb/>
booths.<lb/>
She said, "It isn't necessarv to<lb/>
come down too hard with feminist<lb/>
messages. In 'Nine to live' we kept<lb/>
it light and funnv with satire<lb/>
to I ilv five ol<lb/>
on the show<lb/>
the<lb/>
are<lb/>
Sally Field stars in her award-winning role as Norma Rae in this weekend's Free<lb/>
Flick on Friday and Saturday. Showings will be at 5, 7 and 9 p.m. in the Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre in Mendenhall. While waiting in line for the film, be sure to pick up your<lb/>
free Spring Semester Student I'nion Films Poster.<lb/>
Union Labor Corner<lb/>
Sally Field Is<lb/>
Norma Rae<lb/>
This Friday and Saturday night at 5. 7, and 9 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Hendrix Theatre, the Student Union Films Commit-<lb/>
tee will feature Sally Field's dynamic performance in the film "Norma<lb/>
Rae<lb/>
Admission is by ECU Student ID and Activitv Card or b)<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Membership Card tor faculty and staff<lb/>
members on campus.<lb/>
The film for next weekend, February 13 and 14, is the shocker<lb/>
"When A Stranger Calls The film will be shown in the Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre at 5, 7, and 9 p.m.<lb/>
Next Wednesday evening at 8 p.m. in the Hendrix Theatre, the tilms<lb/>
committee will screen Kubrick's "Dr. Strangelove<lb/>
Sallv Field performs without Burt Reynolds in 1979's "N rma<lb/>
Rae Field took the Academy Award for Best Actress that year for<lb/>
her amaing portrayal of the title character in the film.<lb/>
Sally Field is an energetic and attractive performer; Martin Ritt<lb/>
("Sounder "Conrack") is a nobly intentioned director; Irving<lb/>
Havetch and Harriet Frank Jr. are old-pro screenwriters with a<lb/>
healthy dose of social commitment, and all their hearts are clearly in<lb/>
the right place.<lb/>
Field is Norma Rae, a lovable, loose-living ball ot fire who is in-<lb/>
spired by an equally lovable New York Jewish labor organizer,<lb/>
Reuben Warshovsky (Ron Leibman), to organize a union among the<lb/>
mistreated textile workers in a small Southern town. The conditions<lb/>
are appalling enough to cause her mother (Barbara Baxlev) to go deat<lb/>
and literallv kill her father (Pat Hingle). It's a town badlv in need ot a<lb/>
knight in white armor, but not one who happens to be a Jewish<lb/>
Yankee. The only one who sees things differently is, of course, Norma<lb/>
Rae ? and her tough tender friendship with Reuben makes for the<lb/>
cutest mismatch since Beauty and the Beast.<lb/>
He's a stranger to the South, she's never met a Jew. He's all in-<lb/>
tellect, she's pure instinct. Being a city slicker, he naturally falls right<lb/>
into cow dung and cuts his finger when he takes up whittling. He gives<lb/>
her his copy of Dylan Thomas, she gives him the spark to carry on the<lb/>
cause. They tell each other how wonderful they are. Norma Rae's new<lb/>
husband (Beau Bridges), a lovable redneck saint, is understandably<lb/>
upset by all the time she's spending with Reuben, but rest assured,<lb/>
everything's platonic. And rest assured that the union gets voted in ?<lb/>
with surprising ease. Reuben packs his bags, though it would seem his<lb/>
work has just begun.<lb/>
A gung-ho salute to organized labor may seem a bit peculiar in<lb/>
1979,hen there's so much evidence of union decline and corruption.<lb/>
Even so, there is room for a stirring attack on the textile industry's in-<lb/>
justices.<lb/>
?<lb/>
mtm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057316_0008"/><lb/>
1H1 I s (. K(1 INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
HKl 'KV J, 14<lb/>
i ? .<lb/>
Lady Bucs Split,<lb/>
Now Ranked 18th<lb/>
1 ad Pirate Sam Jones scores here on an<lb/>
incredible stretch shot from underneath<lb/>
Frosh McNair Sparkles<lb/>
the goal during<lb/>
Sundav. (Photo<lb/>
the team's win over ASl<lb/>
b (iarv Patterson)<lb/>
BHARI LS( HANDl LR<lb/>
SporS Mllnr<lb/>
The drama oi the East Carolina<lb/>
women's basketball team continued<lb/>
in full force last 1 ndav nighl as the<lb/>
then-19th-ranked 1 ad) Pirates took<lb/>
on power! ul eighth-ranked<lb/>
Soul hem Cal in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The game followed back-to-back<lb/>
wins b ECU over two other ranked<lb/>
teams. Virginia (15) and N.C . Slate<lb/>
(13).<lb/>
The State game set an all-time<lb/>
Minges attendance record tor a<lb/>
men's game of 4,000. Attendance at<lb/>
the Southern Cal contest topped<lb/>
that (4,500) despite over lour inches<lb/>
of fresh snow thai tell on the ground<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
The trip into the winter weather<lb/>
was well worth the trouble of the<lb/>
fans, as the Lad) Pirates got 26<lb/>
points from forward Mar) Denklei<lb/>
and almost pulled off a major upset,<lb/>
falling to the Trojans 7 3<lb/>
1 he 1 ads Bucs, whose nine game<lb/>
winning streak was snapped bv<lb/>
I SC, got back into their winning<lb/>
ways on Sunda) bv touting Ap-<lb/>
palachian Stale, 96-54, improving<lb/>
then record to 17-4.<lb/>
Monda) morning's polls were not<lb/>
as kind to ECU as some had ex-<lb/>
pected, the I ad) Pirates moving up<lb/>
to the 18th position following last<lb/>
week's pla).<lb/>
In Frida) 's game, ECl wen; into<lb/>
the dressing room at halftime down<lb/>
by five, 41-36, despite a fantastic<lb/>
first-hali performance bv USC's<lb/>
dynamic duo ol Paula and Pam<lb/>
McGee.<lb/>
I he identical twins, both 6-3,<lb/>
tallied 2 points m the opening halt<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
I he 1 ad) I rojans came oul<lb/>
strong to siait the second peliod and<lb/>
built their lead to 11 points, 55-44,<lb/>
following a Pam McGee layup.<lb/>
E( I tailed tii buckle, though, as<lb/>
the nois) Minges crowd urged their<lb/>
support, i he Bui ? downed I S<lb/>
16-8 during the next eight minutes to<lb/>
narrow the margin to three, 63 I<lb/>
I he margin became one, 67-4<lb/>
aftei back-to-back field goals b<lb/>
Mar) Denkler ai tnd-<lb/>
tree, the lattei coming with 5:54 re<lb/>
maining<lb/>
I lie Lad) Pii<lb/>
tunnies aftei hold al<lb/>
to take the lead. I m both<lb/>
occasions.<lb/>
The I rojans built their lead<lb/>
up to six, 73 6  and appeared<lb/>
have the game well in hand bel<lb/>
ECl 's Kath) Rile) began mal<lb/>
hei presence f<lb/>
Rilev scored the next six 1 ?<lb/>
Pirate points as her team narrowed<lb/>
Southernal's lead to 75-73 i<lb/>
Rile) layup with 1 seconds rem<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
1 ollowing 1 illian<lb/>
Barnes fouled f uled rrojan 1 I<lb/>
Smith, sending<lb/>
one and one opportunit) with 11<lb/>
seconds left.<lb/>
The ECU I<lb/>
situation with wreckless al<lb/>
crowding the .oca behind <lb/>
Smith was to ,i and wa ?<lb/>
their hand- rth.<lb/>
Smith missed oni end ol<lb/>
one-and-one but th present<lb/>
Paula Met lee ? ?<lb/>
bound and dished ofl ammate<lb/>
I cm Huff, a<lb/>
1 aui ie Sikes.<lb/>
Hufl also ? iced<lb/>
hei teamn<lb/>
? ed the front end<lb/>
one<lb/>
Paula McG ain,<lb/>
though, pulling d( -v n the ol<lb/>
crucial rebound and I<lb/>
the final m i<lb/>
The McGee sisters finisl ed wit<lb/>
combined total ol 4<lb/>
canning 20 and Paula 27. !<lb/>
added 2" rebounds, 1<lb/>
and hei sister 12.<lb/>
" rhey're the best<lb/>
this yeai besides (ODI<lb/>
Donovan M I<lb/>
Cath) Andruzzi<lb/>
test<lb/>
Despite the presence<lb/>
kGee's, EC!<lb/>
b) tl ans b) onl) three, 42<lb/>
"1 was very pleased<lb/>
bounding against <lb/>
claimed. "(Mai a) (<lb/>
1 ydia (Roundtree) did a I<lb/>
Us<lb/>
(iirven finished the nigl<lb/>
rebounds in addition  ten<lb/>
pomts while Roundtree added<lb/>
pulls to her eight points.<lb/>
In the Sundav win<lb/>
palachian, the Lad) I<lb/>
points from Mars Denkler ii<lb/>
ing to a 53 30 halftime lead and<lb/>
were never he<lb/>
? 54 romp.<lb/>
Sam lones led the I a<lb/>
with 18 points while R<lb/>
in billed 1 Denkler sav<lb/>
second-hall playing time and finish-<lb/>
ed with 14.<lb/>
i illowinf game V di uzzi<lb/>
praised hei team's el<lb/>
have to avoid a letd<lb/>
sspectin op-<lb/>
lents. Our kid<lb/>
1 he) respect all then O<lb/>
ndruzzis SI<lb/>
, h Jud) Clarke, a<lb/>
Is foi<lb/>
1 ad) Pirati<lb/>
" 1 tst <lb/>
?<lb/>
.an see why the) I I would<lb/>
rank them with Clen<lb/>
shine State a:<lb/>
Carolina"<lb/>
I he 1<lb/>
N XI XW<lb/>
ting arch rival N<lb/>
Minges C oliseum<lb/>
matchup.<lb/>
ECU Downs Samford, 75-50<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sprl Mttor<lb/>
"1 don't think I'm getting too far<lb/>
ofl the limb when 1 sav this is the<lb/>
best game we've played all year<lb/>
ECl head basketball coach Dave<lb/>
Odom was obviousl) pleased with<lb/>
his Piraies following iheir ?-() win<lb/>
ove: Samford in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
iast night.<lb/>
Odom had feared the little-known<lb/>
Birmingham, Alabama school after<lb/>
seeing them in person.<lb/>
"The people in Greenville didn't<lb/>
see as good a Samford team as 1 saw<lb/>
Saturda) night Odom said. "1<lb/>
hope we're partly responsible for<lb/>
that. They just looked super Satur-<lb/>
da) - scared me to death<lb/>
I he Pirates had trouble shaking<lb/>
Samford early. After the game was<lb/>
tied 16-16 on a bucket bv Samford's<lb/>
Steve Barker at the 8:02 mark ol the<lb/>
first half, the Bucs made their move.<lb/>
Iwo long jumpers bv Mark<lb/>
McLaurin highlighted an 11-0 run<lb/>
during a four-minute span by E I<lb/>
thai pushed the Buc lead to 27-16.<lb/>
ECU went into the dressing at the<lb/>
halt with that same 11-poinl<lb/>
margin, 33 22.<lb/>
I he Pirates blew the game open in<lb/>
the second hall as freshman sw-<lb/>
ingman Bill McNaii enjoyed the<lb/>
best halt ol his short career, scoring<lb/>
11 points and pulling down t:ve re-<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
?X slam dunk over two Samford<lb/>
defenders accounted tor two ot<lb/>
McNair's points and brought the<lb/>
sparce Minges Coliseum crowd o<lb/>
1.200 to life.<lb/>
Seven o' the Dunn native's points<lb/>
came in the game's last 2:24 when<lb/>
the Pirates built their lead to its<lb/>
25-poinl final margin.<lb/>
McNair finished the game with a<lb/>
career-high 13 points, six rebounds<lb/>
and four assists in onl) 18 minutes<lb/>
o plav.<lb/>
In playing the best game o Ins<lb/>
career, McNair canned six ol seven<lb/>
field goals.<lb/>
"1 think Bill kind of found<lb/>
himself tonight Odom said. "His<lb/>
job is now to put several games<lb/>
together back-to-back<lb/>
Junior forward David Under-<lb/>
wood paced the Pirates with 14<lb/>
points, his third straight double-<lb/>
figure offensive performance. The<lb/>
guard tandem of Charles Watkins<lb/>
and Barry Wright added 11 and 10<lb/>
points, respeclivel).<lb/>
The Pirates held Barker, who was<lb/>
leading Samford with an 18-point-<lb/>
plus per game average coming into<lb/>
the contest, to but four points. For<lb/>
this Odom was particularilv proud.<lb/>
"1 thought Barrv Wright did on<lb/>
outstanding defensive job on<lb/>
Barker said the second-year ECU<lb/>
mentor. "Barker's a fine basketball<lb/>
player<lb/>
Odom claimed that the Pirates<lb/>
played well in every phase of the<lb/>
game in evening their record at<lb/>
10-10.<lb/>
"I'm glad we were finall) able to<lb/>
look like a real basketball team in<lb/>
Greenville he said. "I think we<lb/>
did all the things tonight that make<lb/>
up a good team. About the onl)<lb/>
thing I could complain about was<lb/>
our shot selection at tunes<lb/>
The Pirates now must travel to<lb/>
Raleigh to take on Campbell Col-<lb/>
lege in a 7:30 p.m. game Wednes-<lb/>
day. Odom hopes to return to<lb/>
Greenville with a winning record.<lb/>
"That would be nice he said.<lb/>
"If we plav well, we've go1 a chance<lb/>
to go over .500 for the first time in<lb/>
memor). I hat's a reliel<lb/>
After the matchup with Campbell<lb/>
the Pirates return home foi an ex<lb/>
hibition game with Athletes in Ac-<lb/>
tion, a group o' foi mer college stars<lb/>
that tour the countrv.<lb/>
Included among those coming to<lb/>
Greenville are ex-Notre Dame star<lb/>
Rich Branning, formei UCLA<lb/>
center Gig Sims and ex-Arkansas<lb/>
stats Marvin Delph and Steve<lb/>
Schali.<lb/>
Gametime for the Athletes in Ac-<lb/>
tion game has been changed from a<lb/>
7:30 p.m. start to a 7 p.m. tipoff.<lb/>
ECU Guards (harks Watkins (left) and Barry Wright (right) displav<lb/>
some of the tough defense that helped the team to a win over Samford<lb/>
last night.<lb/>
Andruzzi: Ranking Not Easy<lb/>
B JIMMY DhPREE<lb/>
Keillor<lb/>
Suddenly Last Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty has a nationally ranked basket-<lb/>
ball team.<lb/>
Not only docs ECU have a na-<lb/>
tionall) ranked team, but that team<lb/>
has begun to move up the poll. In<lb/>
last week's Associated Press Top 20<lb/>
Women's poll, the I adv Pirates<lb/>
broke in with a ranking of 19th. Just<lb/>
a week later, the squad climbed a<lb/>
notch to, the 18th position and<lb/>
solidified its place in the Top 20.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates now own a 17-4<lb/>
overall mark on the season, with a<lb/>
1-0 tally against NCAIAW opposi-<lb/>
tion, but that mark will be on the<lb/>
line Thursday at 7:30 p.m. as they<lb/>
host the Tar Heels of UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill. The Lady Bucs handed the<lb/>
Heels an 87-75 defeat in the<lb/>
Carolian Christmas Classic in<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
But has that climb been as fast as<lb/>
man) observers believe. Hardly, as<lb/>
ECU head coach Cathy Andruzzi is<lb/>
quick to point out.<lb/>
"This program has grown a lot<lb/>
she says. "This is my third year here<lb/>
and we've really come a long way.<lb/>
"These girls I have here now are<lb/>
much harder workers than in the<lb/>
past two years. That's not to take<lb/>
anything away from those teams. 1<lb/>
credit those teams for starting all<lb/>
this. The progress of this year's<lb/>
team is a product of the past two<lb/>
years<lb/>
When Andruzzi came to East<lb/>
Carolina in the summer of 1978, she<lb/>
CATHY ANDRUZZI: The ECU head women's basket-<lb/>
ball coach shouts direction to her team during a timeout<lb/>
here. She currently has the Lady Pirates ranked 18th in the<lb/>
nation. (Photo bv (iarv Patterson)<lb/>
found but a mere sample o the<lb/>
tools she would need to build a team<lb/>
competitive on the national AIAW<lb/>
Division 1 level. In her first game as<lb/>
the Pirate coach, ECU fell to Divi-<lb/>
sion 11 Campbell 70-69. and later<lb/>
that season dropped another to<lb/>
Division II High Point 77-67. The<lb/>
Lady Bucs went on to post an 18-11<lb/>
mark that season.<lb/>
Her second session afforded the<lb/>
first real chance at recruiting An-<lb/>
druzzi had had at ECU. Prize cat-<lb/>
ches of that venture were All-<lb/>
American candidate Kathy Riley,<lb/>
Wagner standout Heidi Owen and a<lb/>
(?0 shootei named Mar) Denkler.<lb/>
I ha; version ol the I aJ Pirates<lb/>
posted a 21-10 mark and finished<lb/>
third at the NCAIAW "ournament<lb/>
in Raleigh. Man) fell the) deserved<lb/>
a shot at the Regionals, but the lack<lb/>
ol a win over a name team probabl)<lb/>
put an earl) death to thai possibili-<lb/>
tv.<lb/>
lhe 1979-80 I id) Pirates had<lb/>
played one of the toughest schedules<lb/>
in the nation, but most major op<lb/>
position walked awa) handily. Old<lb/>
Dominion's Monarches pounded<lb/>
ECU 112-77 in Norfolk. South<lb/>
Carolina's Gamecocks bruised the<lb/>
Pirates foi a 9-54 win m the<lb/>
Palmetto state. N.C . State escaped<lb/>
the 1 adv Bucs' nap for an 81-76 win<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum, and later trash-<lb/>
ed ECU S4-4" in Reynolds Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
ECU jusl had not posted a win<lb/>
against a name-brand opponent; un-<lb/>
til Januarv 25, 1981. that is.<lb/>
On that date the I adv Pirates<lb/>
finall) made the break-through<lb/>
Cath) Andruzzi had planned for for<lb/>
two years. An 84-78 victor) over the<lb/>
nationally-ranked Virginia Caveliers<lb/>
in Charlottesville on Super Sundav<lb/>
catapulted East Carolina into the<lb/>
lop 20; a position which the team<lb/>
really hasn't had time to sivoi yet.<lb/>
A "8-7 victorv over N.C . State<lb/>
last Wednesda) and a narrow 77 73<lb/>
loss against 8th ranked Southern<lb/>
Cal Frida) was expected to move the<lb/>
Pirates further up the poll than the<lb/>
18th slot, but the politics of the poll<lb/>
just wouldn't allow it.<lb/>
Nonetheless, Andruzzi is satis:<lb/>
with the progress ot the prograi<lb/>
"Everything we've done has<lb/>
taken a lot o hard work she ex-<lb/>
plains. "I've got to be pleased with<lb/>
the kids" mental attitude We're<lb/>
confidant, but we're humble. We<lb/>
don't want anv let-downs. We know<lb/>
where we want to be and we have a<lb/>
long wa) to go to get there<lb/>
Andruzzi looks al the national<lb/>
tanking in a manner which man)<lb/>
people ma) find difficult to unders-<lb/>
tand.<lb/>
"No last Carolina team gets<lb/>
anything eas she states regretful-<lb/>
ly. "You really have to fight the<lb/>
name barrier. Main people don't<lb/>
know if Last Carolina is in North or<lb/>
South c arolina.<lb/>
"1 love the tans; 1 love it when<lb/>
those tans come in to veil tor the<lb/>
team. Its effect is on the whole<lb/>
athletic program; the whole school.<lb/>
Right now the whole school is<lb/>
" adv Pirate basketball, and<lb/>
hat's great. But you can see<lb/>
it in the communitv as well as the<lb/>
school. People in coffee shops are<lb/>
talking about Lady Pirate basket-<lb/>
ball; people in laundries are talking<lb/>
about Lady Pirate basketball;<lb/>
everybody has gotten excited.<lb/>
"The greatest thing is the support<lb/>
we've gotten from all the men's and<lb/>
women's programs around the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
"Thev want quality; they want a<lb/>
winner.<lb/>
"We've just started in this pro-<lb/>
gram Andruzzi states confidently.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057316_0009"/><lb/>
I HI 1 AM C kul INIAN I I HKl rO ?. 1981<lb/>
,1<lb/>
IM<lb/>
Co-Rec Roller Hocke)<lb/>
ftei the tusi week ol competition,<lb/>
Rollei Hockey has gotten ofi to a greal<lb/>
start Some ol the players look as though<lb/>
they've had a loi ol experience on rollei<lb/>
skates Others look as though they've<lb/>
?ei seen a hockey stick 01 a pan ol<lb/>
rollei skates<lb/>
?vei ihe action liom the pasi<lb/>
vp teams are as follows<lb/>
l)GOI <lb/>
2) PI c Kl ks<lb/>
iKATER DATERS 11<lb/>
4)1 KAPPA 1 11 111<lb/>
rUFF-N-1 END1 R<lb/>
i seen an Rollei Hocke<lb/>
e, we urge everyone to come<lb/>
Spoi aoi Id and take in sonic ol<lb/>
I tames are played Monday<lb/>
LOO 6:00, Wednesday<lb/>
n sda fi on i 4 8<lb/>
e contact<lb/>
fivS" Ol<lb/>
IM Sports 'N' Shorts<lb/>
Hy 1 hoayne Grooms<lb/>
? and?<lb/>
(Jreqe Melton<lb/>
Wrestlers Split<lb/>
Weekend Pair,<lb/>
Finale Coming<lb/>
Office, EM<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
644<lb/>
Basket hall<lb/>
.iiannual basket -<lb/>
ng smoothly with<lb/>
season completed,<lb/>
teams look like they<lb/>
need during the<lb/>
e hristmas break, others may need a little<lb/>
help befoi e the season is through. Judging<lb/>
on then past record and recent perfor<lb/>
mance, the lop 1 ive men's and women's<lb/>
teams are as follows:<lb/>
h<lb/>
(ii ooms' Five<lb/>
I. Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
2. Streak ol I ightning<lb/>
 lones Enforcers<lb/>
4 Dougl Boys<lb/>
5. Belk Stylons<lb/>
M ottu n<lb/>
Grooms' 1 ive<lb/>
1 Dribblers<lb/>
2 IB AC<lb/>
3 rylei "We Bad"<lb/>
4 I ylei Roundtree's Girls<lb/>
s Woi mburners<lb/>
o it you want to see some exciting ac-<lb/>
tion on the basketball court, come by<lb/>
U Gvm or Mingesolliseum.<lb/>
U MI I 1AM<lb/>
YFXVERTON<lb/>
suit nli i<lb/>
1 he wrestling Pirates<lb/>
ol Easi c ai olina didn't<lb/>
ii a s e such a ba d<lb/>
weekend aftei all.<lb/>
Mjei losing a heart-<lb/>
breakei to Atlantic<lb/>
Coast onf ere nee<lb/>
membei Mary land.<lb/>
2s 22. 1 riday night, the<lb/>
Bucs bounced back to<lb/>
whip icoigc<lb/>
Washi  H' the<lb/>
follow ing evening<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
ECU Soccer Teams Compete<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
ed because ol the P?a w<lb/>
ince ol such A (<lb/>
jverhouse teams as 1 he ECUtub, :<lb/>
i lano a, UNC  e minimum<lb/>
apel Hill, N.C. six players foi the i i<lb/>
state. Wake Forest, tire tournament, played<lb/>
iprisingh pov? strong defense and l Ii<lb/>
ful L'NC-Gi tl a 0-0<lb/>
. N( H. 2 o.<lb/>
P and<lb/>
,1(1 (. lub happen- one<lb/>
i be in the<lb/>
ion in M rule,<lb/>
lav's round robin Pirates tied the 1I<lb/>
d Club 0-0, tied<lb/>
Villanova 1-1, and<lb/>
t c 1 -0, giving<lb/>
win 12o pounds, Webb at<lb/>
lames Ellison is also 142 and Mendell lson<lb/>
having an excellent in the heavyweight<lb/>
season for the Pirates class.<lb/>
and impoved his record<lb/>
to 18-4 over the Head coach Hachiro<lb/>
weekend with two vie- Oishi claimed that his<lb/>
tories, his also coining team was still hobbled<lb/>
via pins. with the injuries that<lb/>
have bothered the<lb/>
Ellison's wins came Pirates for weeks,<lb/>
in the 190-pound class<lb/>
at Maryland and at 177 The ,nJuunes arc<lb/>
George hurting us, he stress-<lb/>
Washington. ed ?ith? th? we<lb/>
could have beaten<lb/>
rhe Pirates gave the Maryland. We're still<lb/>
rerrapins all thev could gv?n8 a 8ood efforl<lb/>
pick up theii second .iaIUc before siiccum- and a couple ol oui<lb/>
dual meet win ol the blilL, Frida night. g"s will probably go<lb/>
yeai againsi five losses. Maryland earned a 7-2 !o ,hc Nationals<lb/>
record into the match. rhe Buc grappiers<lb/>
Ml s Butch Revils which was decided by retUrn home to Minges<lb/>
continued his assault several crucial pins. Coliseum this Saturday<lb/>
on h,s ,rs' undefeated l42-pound for a meet with Virginia<lb/>
season by pinning two Q Tech AppaiacnKli;<lb/>
opponents ove, the Webb baltled to a drau State and N.C. Central.<lb/>
weekend '? ?" while B-ent Chambers 1 he match is sel to<lb/>
seas?n reCOrtl t0 pui up a stuggle before begin at 12 noon. With<lb/>
rhe 1'n ate AH losing to I"erp Kevin the prior cancellation<lb/>
m0I. ltl won the Colabucci, the nation's of the ECU wrestling<lb/>
177 pound class againsi s e v e n th-ral e d program bx Athletic<lb/>
v Aland and then 167-poundei Director Ken Kan. this<lb/>
moved up to the In the win over GW, marks the last tune that<lb/>
190-pound class against other Pirate victors in- the Pirates will wrestle<lb/>
GW to hat eluded David Jerose ai in Minges.<lb/>
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23? t S EVANS ST EXT GREENVILLE<lb/>
Ph. 756-2011<lb/>
YL JL?Jy nights in a private luxury villa neai the beach toi 165 pei ;<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057316_0010"/><lb/>
Michelob fans pu<lb/>
witch for Schlitz<lb/>
of 200 Soyal<lb/>
Budweiser drinkers<lb/>
also prefer Schlitz<lb/>
"I was confident"<lb/>
states Schlitz Chief<lb/>
Frank Sellinger<lb/>
d: Si<lb/>
preferred<lb/>
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DISTRIBU rEDIN GREENVILLE BY TAYLOR BEVERAGECO INC<lb/>
<pb facs="00057316_0011"/>
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