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<pb facs="00057317_0001"/>
?he lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 N<lb/>
oo<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Thursday, February 5, 1981<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Kappa Delta Undergo<lb/>
Real Estate Difficulties<lb/>
By PAl'I COU INS<lb/>
The Greenville City Council has<lb/>
decided to grant a public hearing on<lb/>
Feb. 12 to decide the future of Kap-<lb/>
pa Delia Sorority's attempt to buy a<lb/>
house on Fifth Street.<lb/>
What started as the simple act o'<lb/>
buying a house has become a legal<lb/>
battle between Kappa Delta and the<lb/>
residents of the neighborhood where<lb/>
the house is located.<lb/>
Ihe hearing will decide whether<lb/>
or not the neighborhood should be<lb/>
reoned to exclude all but single-<lb/>
family dwellings. Residences and<lb/>
businesses already in the area would<lb/>
not be affected.<lb/>
1 he house Kappa Delta has been<lb/>
trying to buv since last September is<lb/>
located at 1801 E. Fifth St. The<lb/>
sorority is currently housed at 2101<lb/>
E Fifth St.<lb/>
Rezoning the neighborhood from<lb/>
R-6 to R-9 would effectively<lb/>
end<lb/>
Kappa Delta's chances o buying the<lb/>
house, but even a denial of rezoning<lb/>
would not guarantee that the sorori-<lb/>
ty could purchase the house.<lb/>
At this point the situation<lb/>
becomes complicated.<lb/>
ro buy the house the sorority<lb/>
must obtain a special use permit<lb/>
from the Board oi Adjustments,<lb/>
which has already denied one per-<lb/>
mit.<lb/>
The board, however, was ordered<lb/>
by a Superior Court judge to rehear<lb/>
the matter at its January meeting.<lb/>
Lacking a quorum, the board was<lb/>
forced to put the matter off until its<lb/>
February meeting.<lb/>
Kappa Delta has been looking for<lb/>
a house closer to campus for a<lb/>
number ol years, according to the<lb/>
sorority's house corporation presi-<lb/>
dent. Flo Gammon.<lb/>
"We want to nune because all<lb/>
members do not have cars, and we<lb/>
are concerned for their safety walk-<lb/>
ing to and from campus she said.<lb/>
?'Also, our house is entirely too<lb/>
small; we do not have adequate<lb/>
storage or living space. And finally<lb/>
we cannot be competitive in rush<lb/>
due to the distance from campus<lb/>
The sorority had planned to bu<lb/>
what is now ECU's alumni centei at<lb/>
901 E. Fifth St. but found that ade-<lb/>
quate parking could not be obtain-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
So last September the group<lb/>
entered into an agreement with the<lb/>
owners to purchase the house at<lb/>
1801 1 . Fifth St Kappa Delta paid<lb/>
the city, to advertise its request foi a<lb/>
special use permit and anticipated<lb/>
no trouble in obtaining it at the<lb/>
board's Oct. 23 meeting, uammon<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"1 had planned to go and talk to<lb/>
the people in the neighborhood, but<lb/>
I had to be out of town early in Oc-<lb/>
tober. By the time I got back my<lb/>
phone was ringing off the hook, and<lb/>
everybody was in an uproar Gam-<lb/>
mon said.<lb/>
The residents o the<lb/>
neighborhood started a petition and<lb/>
turned out in full force at the<lb/>
board's meeting. The board turned<lb/>
down the special use permit when it<lb/>
decided that Kappa Delta could not<lb/>
meet one of the six requirements<lb/>
necessary.<lb/>
On the sixth requirement the vote<lb/>
was spin 2-2, with a majority needed<lb/>
for approval. Two members, Mat-<lb/>
thew lewis and J.B. Surles 111,<lb/>
voted that Kappa Delta would<lb/>
create a "vehicular haard" if it<lb/>
moved into the neighborhood.<lb/>
Only four board members voted<lb/>
since two had been disqualified<lb/>
because o' a possible conflict of in-<lb/>
terest. Billie lean Trevathan is the<lb/>
realtor for the house in question.<lb/>
and Patricia Marshall is an<lb/>
employee ot the I afts, who live next<lb/>
door to the house. Surles is also an<lb/>
See KAPPA. Page 3<lb/>
Photo By JON iOt: ??<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas have been trying to buy this house at 1801 E. Fifth St. since September.<lb/>
Students Denied Liquor Vote<lb/>
Iranian Student Harassment<lb/>
Continues On U.S. Campuses<lb/>
(CPS)-ln the wake ot ihe release<lb/>
of ihe Iranian hostages two weeks<lb/>
ago, Iranian students in the United<lb/>
States have reported renewed har-<lb/>
ras-ment on campus. The govern-<lb/>
ment, meanwhile, has resolved to<lb/>
continue us deportation proceedings<lb/>
tins; the foreigners while school<lb/>
administrators wonder if this will be<lb/>
the i.i generation ot Iranian<lb/>
students to study in America.<lb/>
Reports from around the country<lb/>
indicate that the harrassment usual-<lb/>
Is has consisted of threatening<lb/>
phone calls and public ostracism,<lb/>
the first such instances noted since<lb/>
the hostages were first taken over a<lb/>
year ago.<lb/>
Iranian students at the univer-<lb/>
sities of Honda and Central Florida<lb/>
have lodged complaints with cam-<lb/>
pus police in hopes o getting some<lb/>
kind ot protection from the jeering<lb/>
phone calls.<lb/>
For example, a student named<lb/>
Saeed at UF says he has received<lb/>
repeated calls from someone who<lb/>
identifies himself only as "an<lb/>
American marine" who wants to<lb/>
"cut the Iranians' throats<lb/>
"Thev (the callers) think they are<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
Shuttle<lb/>
Announced<lb/>
"We had a very good turnout,<lb/>
especiallv for a first effort at such<lb/>
short notice ECU Transit<lb/>
Manager Danny O'Connor said<lb/>
of the bus service from the<lb/>
women's dorms to Friday's ECU-<lb/>
Southern Cal basketball contest.<lb/>
"We had over 200 riders, so it<lb/>
took a little while to get them all<lb/>
over to the coliseum with only<lb/>
one bus running. With such good<lb/>
results, we've decided to continue<lb/>
only with two buses running from<lb/>
White Dorm to Minges<lb/>
The buses will run on the<lb/>
following schedule:<lb/>
Thursday Feb. 5: ECU women<lb/>
vs UNC<lb/>
Thursday Feb. 12: Men vs<lb/>
Deleware State<lb/>
Monday Feb. 16: Men vs<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
Monday Feb. 23: Women vs<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
The buses will begin carrying<lb/>
students from White Dorm to<lb/>
Minges Coliseum at 6:30 p.m. on<lb/>
these nights and continue until<lb/>
the 7:30 tip-off according to<lb/>
O'Connor.<lb/>
doing then country a favoi by<lb/>
fighting with me sas Saeed.<lb/>
"They are blaming me and the<lb/>
situation only gets worse<lb/>
UF administrators are advising<lb/>
the Iranian students to "keep a low<lb/>
profile<lb/>
In California, an Iranian student<lb/>
who identifies himself only as<lb/>
Hooshvar reports similar incidents<lb/>
at his Berkelev campus.<lb/>
"There is not much trouble here<lb/>
compared to the trouble my friends<lb/>
have had in Texa- and the<lb/>
Midwest he explains. "Here, it is<lb/>
mostlv angry phone calls, but my<lb/>
friends in Texas have been beaten<lb/>
up in the last week. A friend in<lb/>
Chicago was made to drop a course<lb/>
b a professor, who said he didn't<lb/>
want any Iranians in his class "<lb/>
A spokesman for the administra-<lb/>
tion at MIT also indicated that there<lb/>
have been numerous problems there<lb/>
recently, but university officials<lb/>
were told not to discuss the in-<lb/>
cidents.<lb/>
Hooshvar attributes the renewed<lb/>
antagonisms to press reports of<lb/>
abuse of hostages while in Iran. He<lb/>
says that whenever the hostage<lb/>
situation receives extra coverage by<lb/>
the news, the pressure invariably<lb/>
I ecomes worse for the students.<lb/>
! 'hough; that after the release,<lb/>
this jingoism would diminish he<lb/>
says, "but what 1 have seen of the<lb/>
mediastirring up the people again<lb/>
and making all Iranians out to be<lb/>
horrible, makes me know the<lb/>
pressure will get worse<lb/>
 American citizens get tougher<lb/>
with the visiting Iranians, the U.S.<lb/>
shows no signs of letting up on the<lb/>
stric, enforcement of the immigra-<lb/>
tion policies instituted during the<lb/>
last vear by President Carter.<lb/>
The new policy procedures began <lb/>
immediately after the capture of the<lb/>
hostages in November of 1979,<lb/>
when the U.S. Immigration and<lb/>
Naturalization Service (INS) was in-<lb/>
structed to review the visa status of<lb/>
each of the 60,000 Iranian students<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Deportation proceedings began<lb/>
last May against those students<lb/>
whose visas were allegedly outdated,<lb/>
forged, or invalid because of a<lb/>
change in a student's status. Addi-<lb/>
tionallv, the INS declared that no<lb/>
new entry visas would be granted to<lb/>
Iranians to study or visit.<lb/>
Bv October, 478 Iranians had<lb/>
been "escorted" out of the country<lb/>
bv the INS, according to INS<lb/>
spokesman Vern Jervis.<lb/>
Bv PVl LCOLLINS<lb/>
,?,i in<lb/>
last Carolina students ate<lb/>
generally not eligible to vote in Pitt<lb/>
County but mav be liable to list<lb/>
taxes here<lb/>
ihe issue ot student voting<lb/>
eligibility was raised when students<lb/>
attempted to registei lot the Feb. P<lb/>
liquor bv the dunk vote but found<lb/>
thev could not.<lb/>
According to Board ol Elections<lb/>
Superv isor Mai ? aret Register,<lb/>
"Only those people who are perma-<lb/>
nent residents ol Greenville ate<lb/>
ble to vote on ihe hyuoi bv the drink<lb/>
question<lb/>
North Carolina law requires<lb/>
citizens to register in their place ot<lb/>
permanent domicile. Registei said.<lb/>
She added that students ate. tor the<lb/>
most part, considered to be tem-<lb/>
porary residents.<lb/>
"Most students ate registered in<lb/>
their home counties oi states<lb/>
KcL'ister remarked. "A very tew are<lb/>
eligible to vole here. We handle it on<lb/>
a case bv case basis<lb/>
Registei defined permanent<lb/>
domicile as the place "you can<lb/>
return to no mattei what.<lb/>
"Youi permanent domicile would<lb/>
be the address vou gave it you went<lb/>
ott in the service she explained.<lb/>
"Many students don't understand<lb/>
that they're not eligible to registei<lb/>
here Registei continued. "1 tried<lb/>
to get word out before the genet a!<lb/>
election in November, but a lot ot<lb/>
students still don't seem to know.<lb/>
"You can't registei just becauase<lb/>
vou want to vote on one issue. I hese<lb/>
votes affect Greenville long after the<lb/>
temporary residents are gone<lb/>
One ECU student who had a pro-<lb/>
blem registering to vote was Joni<lb/>
Ciuthne. "My roommate and 1 wen!<lb/>
in and said we wanted to register. It<lb/>
seemed like they had a bad attitude<lb/>
from the start, like they could tell<lb/>
we were students.<lb/>
"My roomate was having trouble<lb/>
because she told them her parents<lb/>
were residents oi Maryland.<lb/>
Then I lold them I worked at the<lb/>
Casablanca (Restaurant) and that 1<lb/>
was a student. That's when thev<lb/>
started to give me a hard lime<lb/>
Both women were eventually<lb/>
allowed to register. "We pi" up a<lb/>
lough fight and they finally let us<lb/>
Guthrie said.<lb/>
Outline telt that students should<lb/>
be allowed to register. "Aftei all,<lb/>
what goes on here does at tec' us.<lb/>
Who are thev to say thai I won<lb/>
siav here aftei 1 graduate and gt<lb/>
job?"<lb/>
Registei indicated thai voters<lb/>
could be challenged at the polls a to<lb/>
the legitimacy ot then registrant<lb/>
"It someone suspects thai a pei<lb/>
son is not a permanent resident th<lb/>
can challenge that person's right to<lb/>
vole she said.<lb/>
On ihe oihei hand. ECU students<lb/>
hvmg oft campus ate required to hsi<lb/>
taxes on belongings ihev mav hoe<lb/>
in Greenville, according to Glenn<lb/>
Culrell, assistant tax supervisor foi<lb/>
Pill County.<lb/>
Culrell said that student ; living in<lb/>
apartments or houses ate required<lb/>
to list personal and household items<lb/>
in Pitt County.<lb/>
He added that students are re-<lb/>
quired to list cars if thev are kept in<lb/>
Pitt County at least 51 percent ot<lb/>
the time.<lb/>
Selective Service Conducts Dry Run<lb/>
WASHINGTON, DC.<lb/>
(CPS)?Last November, while you<lb/>
were studying, sleeping and worry-<lb/>
ing that military legistration might<lb/>
be a prelude to a real draft, the<lb/>
Selective Service System was indeed<lb/>
preparing draft notices for 35,000<lb/>
unsuspecting young men chosen by-<lb/>
lottery.<lb/>
The lottery was only practice,<lb/>
Selective Service spokesmen say.<lb/>
The draft notices were never sent,<lb/>
and the list of men was subsequently<lb/>
discarded.<lb/>
The practice was part of the<lb/>
Department of Defense's "Proud<lb/>
Spirit" mobilization exercise, car-<lb/>
ried out by 80 government and<lb/>
military organizations, one of which<lb/>
was the Selective Service.<lb/>
Within 24 hours of the starting<lb/>
time on Nov. 6, the service had<lb/>
reviewed its computerized list of<lb/>
registrants, held a lottery, and fed<lb/>
the names of 35,000 "inductees" in-<lb/>
to a Western Union computer.<lb/>
The computer, in turn, would<lb/>
have sent Mailgrams to the 35,000,<lb/>
if the exercise hadn't been stopped<lb/>
at that point.<lb/>
The next two weeks of the exer-<lb/>
cise period were spent setting up<lb/>
mock state headquarters and area<lb/>
offices to carry out the draft, and<lb/>
serve as induction centers in the<lb/>
event of a real emergency.<lb/>
"We were rather proud of our<lb/>
results recalls Dr. Herb Puscheck,<lb/>
the agency's associate director for<lb/>
Plans and Operations. The<lb/>
revitalized, and has the capability to<lb/>
do it Lamb notes.<lb/>
Asked if the mock draft was held<lb/>
with any special precautions or sen-<lb/>
sitivity to public worry that military<lb/>
registration ?begun last summer<lb/>
and resumed in January?might<lb/>
lead to a real draft, Lamb said, "Oh<lb/>
no. This was just a regular Depart-<lb/>
ment of Defense exercise<lb/>
System Director Bernard Rostker<lb/>
brought in judges from the I S<lb/>
Bureau of Standards to "insure the<lb/>
fairness of selection and to criti-<lb/>
que the procedure in general.<lb/>
The observers liked what they<lb/>
saw, Puscheck says.<lb/>
"The Defense people were in-<lb/>
terested to see that our system is<lb/>
fair, open, and statistically sound<lb/>
he commented. "They recognized<lb/>
our pains to protect the rights of the<lb/>
young men involved<lb/>
Rostker was quick to point out<lb/>
that the computer tape holding the<lb/>
names and addresses of the 35,000<lb/>
mock inductees was removed from<lb/>
the Western Union system before<lb/>
the draft notices were actually<lb/>
Defense Department was assured printed.<lb/>
Photo By JON JORDAN<lb/>
The student shown here are giving blood at the AFROTC bloodmobile. It continues in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
through Thursday.<lb/>
that our system works, and that we<lb/>
can induct efficiently in case of<lb/>
emergency<lb/>
The Defense Department holds a<lb/>
mobilization exercise every two<lb/>
years "to check procedures and<lb/>
make sure they are workable in a na-<lb/>
tional military emergency<lb/>
Puscheck explains.<lb/>
The November mobilization,<lb/>
however, was the first one in which<lb/>
the Selective Service has fully par-<lb/>
ticipated. "We've been required to<lb/>
be a part of it in the past adds<lb/>
Selective Service spokesman Joan<lb/>
Lamb, "but this is the first time<lb/>
we've physically held a lottery and<lb/>
drawn names<lb/>
The reason is that "this is the first<lb/>
year the Selective Service has been<lb/>
A tape with names of 715 military<lb/>
reservists was substituted in the<lb/>
computer. The reservists, previously<lb/>
alerted of the forthcoming notices,<lb/>
received the Mailgrams on the third<lb/>
dav of the exercise.<lb/>
The<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4,<lb/>
Classifieds9<lb/>
Featuress<lb/>
Letters4<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
?<lb/>
s?.<lb/>
wuMmwi'MW1 iihi <lb/>
<pb facs="00057317_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL 1NIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 5, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
The deadline tor submitting an<lb/>
nouncements is Friday al 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 11 inch<lb/>
paper Messages should be 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 of<lb/>
the page<lb/>
AED<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta, preprotes<lb/>
sional society will hold a special<lb/>
meeting on Thursday, Jan 30 at<lb/>
7 30 p m in Flanagan 307 Tillet<lb/>
Mills, a representative of the<lb/>
UNC CH Schools of Medicine and<lb/>
Dentistry Medical Education<lb/>
Development Program (MED)<lb/>
will speak The MED is a program<lb/>
specifically designed to prepare<lb/>
undergraduate students for a<lb/>
medical education All interested<lb/>
persons are invited to attend<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
ADVISOR<lb/>
Any faculty member interested<lb/>
in advising a newly forming cam<lb/>
pus organization wnose purpose is<lb/>
to promote the consciousness of<lb/>
world citizenship please phone<lb/>
752 4483 or 758 9530 as soon as<lb/>
possible<lb/>
DELTAZETA<lb/>
There is a mandatory meet ng ot<lb/>
all Delta Zeta big brothers on Sun<lb/>
day. Feb 8, 7 p m . at the house<lb/>
Please try to bring your spring ac<lb/>
tivify fee<lb/>
CONDITIONING<lb/>
Class to meet from 3 00 4 00<lb/>
p m The basic movements ot<lb/>
athletics and physical condition<lb/>
ing will be the basis of the class<lb/>
mstiuctors for the class will be<lb/>
ECU football coaches This is a<lb/>
non credit course If interested,<lb/>
meet at Scales F ield House at 3 00<lb/>
p.m. in Tuesday Feb 3, 198)<lb/>
cso<lb/>
if you are pursuing a major in<lb/>
allied health, nursing, pre<lb/>
medicine, pre dentistry or<lb/>
medicine you may qualify for<lb/>
COST FREE services made<lb/>
available through the Center for<lb/>
Student Opportunities (CSO),<lb/>
School of Medicine<lb/>
Current openings exist for<lb/>
students interested in utilizing<lb/>
tutorial services Eligible students<lb/>
can also participate in in<lb/>
dividualized or group learning<lb/>
Skills sessions (organizing lecture<lb/>
notes, effective reading, mernoriz<lb/>
mg and test taking techniques!<lb/>
Professional counseling services<lb/>
include career planning<lb/>
assistance, personal, academic,<lb/>
stress management, test anxiety<lb/>
and or group counseling<lb/>
If you would like to be con<lb/>
sidered for participation in any of<lb/>
the COST FREE services contact<lb/>
Dr Frye, Center for Student Op<lb/>
portunities. 217 Whichard Annex<lb/>
or call tor an appointment at<lb/>
757 6122, 6075 or 6081<lb/>
The Latney W Pittard, Jr<lb/>
Memorial Scholarship and the E.<lb/>
A Thomas, Jr. Accounting<lb/>
Scholarship will be awarded dur<lb/>
ing spring semester The scholar<lb/>
ships will be for approximately the<lb/>
amount of tuition for resident<lb/>
students<lb/>
Students interested in making<lb/>
application should secure forms<lb/>
from the Accounting Departmen<lb/>
tal Office (Rawl 325) or the Fman<lb/>
cial Aid Office All applications<lb/>
must be submitted to Ruth Jones<lb/>
(Rawl 334), chairman of scholar<lb/>
ship committee in the Accounting<lb/>
Department, by March 1<lb/>
Recipients will be selected on<lb/>
the basis ot scholarship, citizen<lb/>
ship, and need, in that order In<lb/>
addition, the permanent residence<lb/>
of a candidate tor the Latney W<lb/>
Pittard. Jr Memorial Scholar<lb/>
ship should be in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina (East of Highway I 95) or<lb/>
any county west of Highway I 95 m<lb/>
which Pittard and Perry, Inc ,<lb/>
maintains an office<lb/>
Final selection will be made by<lb/>
April 1 by the ECU Student<lb/>
Scholarships, Fellowships, and<lb/>
Financial Aid Committee from<lb/>
candidates submitted to the Com<lb/>
mittee by the Dean of the School of<lb/>
Business<lb/>
TUTORS<lb/>
The Accounting Society will<lb/>
tutor accounting 2401 and accoun<lb/>
'mg 2521 every Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday in Rawl 339 from 4 00<lb/>
5 00<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
A O TT Sorority Rush Won<lb/>
Feb 9 Tues Feb 10 and Wed<lb/>
Feb 11 805 Johnston Street star<lb/>
, at 700 p m Please call to let<lb/>
.row .( you are coming, it you<lb/>
need a ride or if you need d<lb/>
T:0ns Call 758 4290<lb/>
SPEEDREADING<lb/>
"Speed Reading ' a class for<lb/>
students and other persons in<lb/>
terested in reading more rapidly<lb/>
with increased comprehension,<lb/>
will be offered on Thursday even<lb/>
ings at East KCarodna university<lb/>
Feb 12 April 16<lb/>
The class wiil meet from 7 to 9<lb/>
p m Continuing Education units<lb/>
tor participating professionals are<lb/>
available<lb/>
Further information and<lb/>
registration forms are available<lb/>
from the Office of Non Credit Pro<lb/>
grams. Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education. ECU Grei ? e, N.C<lb/>
telephone 757 6143<lb/>
BUSINESSMAJORS<lb/>
The Max R Joyner Alumni<lb/>
Scholarship will be awarded dur<lb/>
mg the spring semester to a full<lb/>
time student who is pursuing a<lb/>
degree in the School of Business<lb/>
The scholarship will be for the<lb/>
amount of tuition and tees for a<lb/>
resident student<lb/>
Students interested in making<lb/>
application may secure forms<lb/>
from the Financial Aid Office or<lb/>
from the following department of<lb/>
fices in the School of Business<lb/>
Accounting Department, R325<lb/>
Economics Department, R238<lb/>
Finance Department, R343<lb/>
Marketing and Management<lb/>
Department, R 137<lb/>
All applications must be submit<lb/>
ted to Ruth Jones (Rawl 334),<lb/>
Chairman of the School of<lb/>
Business Scholarship Committee,<lb/>
by March 1<lb/>
Recipients will be selected on<lb/>
the basis of scholarship and<lb/>
citizenship Final selection will be<lb/>
made by April 1 by the ECU Stu<lb/>
dent Scholarships. Fellowships,<lb/>
and Financial Aid Committee<lb/>
from candidates submitted to the<lb/>
Committee by the Dean of the<lb/>
School of Business<lb/>
ACADEMIC SKILLS<lb/>
Is surviving academically and<lb/>
enjoying college life a reasonable<lb/>
goal for college students? The<lb/>
University Counseling Center<lb/>
Staff believes so and are ottering a<lb/>
two part mini series on Time<lb/>
Management and How to Avoid<lb/>
Test Anxiety<lb/>
Students n ay participate in any<lb/>
or all sessions The first sessions<lb/>
on Time Management will be con<lb/>
ducted Monday and Tuesday.<lb/>
February 9 and March 24 from<lb/>
3:00 p m 4 00 p m in Room 305<lb/>
Wright Annex The sessions on<lb/>
How to Avoid Test Anxiety will oe<lb/>
conducted Tuesday and Wednes<lb/>
day, February 10 and March 25<lb/>
from 3 00 pm 400 pm in Room<lb/>
305 Wright Annex.<lb/>
Sessions are available to all<lb/>
students free of charge interested<lb/>
students may call the University<lb/>
Counseling Center, 757 6661, for<lb/>
further information Registration<lb/>
is not required<lb/>
FIELDHOCKEY<lb/>
All women interested in playing<lb/>
Club Field Hockey please attend<lb/>
an organizational meeting on Feb<lb/>
11, at 7 00 pm in room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall if you are unable to<lb/>
attend please contact Debbie Har<lb/>
rison at 756 5181<lb/>
ARTHRITIS<lb/>
Send a carnation gram for ar<lb/>
thritis On Feb 9-12, 8 a.m. ? 3p m.<lb/>
in front ot the student store Send a<lb/>
message and flower to your<lb/>
sweetheartfriend on Valentine's<lb/>
Day for 12 00 We deliver!<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 your choice<lb/>
The American Chemical Society<lb/>
Student Affiliates is sponsoring a<lb/>
Chemistry Faculty Pie in the<lb/>
Face, Thursday, Feb 5. 730 9 30<lb/>
p m at the Elbo Room Admis<lb/>
sion is 50c along with reduced<lb/>
prices on party beverages. So<lb/>
come and seek your revenge! I<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serunn thecampm community<lb/>
since v:<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ficial newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated and published for and<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business ?35 yearly<lb/>
All others 25 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
Telephone. 757 6366, 6367, 6309<lb/>
AFTERNOON DELIGHT<lb/>
Featuring $$ &amp; <lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
FEB. 6th<lb/>
easy to swallow<lb/>
prices<lb/>
330-7:00p.m.<lb/>
Admission 25$<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Presented by Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity<lb/>
MIXED<lb/>
DRINKS<lb/>
(AHPAT)<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat , March 7, 1981 Ap<lb/>
plicatcn blanks art to be com<lb/>
pleted and mailed to the<lb/>
Psychological Corp , 304 E 45th<lb/>
St New York, NY 10017 to arrive<lb/>
by Feb 7, 1981 Application blanks<lb/>
are also available at the Testing<lb/>
Center, Speight Bidg . Room 105,<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
An organizational meeting ot the<lb/>
ECU volleyball club will be held in<lb/>
room 104 ot Memorial Gym on<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb 10 at 7 p m Anyone<lb/>
interested in playing volleyball is<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
NURSING<lb/>
Will you have an extra room in<lb/>
your home May 15 July 30, 1981?<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
is looking for rooms and apart<lb/>
ments for nursing students study<lb/>
ing in Greenville this summer<lb/>
The students are senior level<lb/>
nursing students from throughout<lb/>
the United States who will receive<lb/>
some of their clinical experience<lb/>
at Pitt Memorial If you would like<lb/>
to share your home with one or<lb/>
several exferns this summer, call<lb/>
the nurse recruiting office from<lb/>
8 00 5 00 Monday through Friday<lb/>
at 757 4470<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
A set ot keys was found Satur<lb/>
day near Memorial Gym Contact<lb/>
Ann Law at 757 6434<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 course,<lb/>
will meet Feb 10 March 17, and<lb/>
"Camero II meets March 31<lb/>
April 28 Class sessions in each<lb/>
course are set for 7 9 p m on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Participants m eacn course<lb/>
should nave their own cameras,<lb/>
preferably 35 millimeter or larger<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 of Con<lb/>
tmuing Education, ECU, Green<lb/>
ville, N C . telephone 757 6143<lb/>
CO-OP JOBS<lb/>
The Co op Office has current In<lb/>
formation concerning career<lb/>
related work experiences tor bo"<lb/>
undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
students during summer fall, and<lb/>
spnng semesters with both public<lb/>
and private agencies including the<lb/>
Pentagon, Dept of the rnte' M<lb/>
Fish and Wildlife Service Dept of<lb/>
Energy, Federal Pron System<lb/>
and Social Security Admin.stra<lb/>
fion Private organizations include<lb/>
IBM Duke Power Co Burroughs<lb/>
Wellcome and others<lb/>
Students are urged to com,<lb/>
the Coop Office to rev.ew iob<lb/>
descriptions and to talk to a Co op<lb/>
coordinator concerning ,ob<lb/>
possibilities Many positions have<lb/>
approaching deadlines therefore<lb/>
interested students shouic<lb/>
delay!<lb/>
Kg<lb/>
( onttnuiH<lb/>
BISCUIT TOWNE<lb/>
INFLATION FIGHTER SPECIALS<lb/>
1011 Charles Street Phone 752-1373<lb/>
s<lb/>
<lb/>
RIB SPECIAL<lb/>
Two Jumbo BBQ Beef Ribi,<lb/>
Homemade BiKuit, French Friet end Coleelew<lb/>
From 5 p.m. 'til 9 p.m.<lb/>
JvVl<lb/>
,SK<lb/>
N?-<lb/>
<lb/>
99<lb/>
N<lb/>
?<lb/>
$179<lb/>
CHICKEN SPECIAL $129<lb/>
Two Piece of Southern Fried J ,<lb/>
Chicken, Homemade Biscuit, French Frie, Coleslaw DARfc yj-<lb/>
From 5 p.m. 'til 9 p.m.<lb/>
M<lb/>
.?<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
SAVfc<lb/>
up<lb/>
to<lb/>
tf<lb/>
BISCUIT SPECIAL<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE OF THREE<lb/>
Steak BiscuitCountry Style Gravy and French Fries or<lb/>
Chicken Biscuit with French Fries or<lb/>
tiscuit Burger and French Fries<lb/>
From 5 p.m. 'til 9 p.m.<lb/>
MEET AT<lb/>
BISCUIT TOWNE<lb/>
And Enjoy iXlicious Home Looked Meals<lb/>
At Inflation Fighting FricesH!<lb/>
90<lb/>
29<lb/>
ve<lb/>
Dri<lb/>
Thru<lb/>
Wind,<lb/>
ow<lb/>
VOTE FEB. 17<lb/>
JIMMY<lb/>
BUFFETT<lb/>
Sat Feb. 21,1981<lb/>
8 P.M.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
GREENVILLE RESTAURANT<lb/>
ASSOC.<lb/>
TICKETS NOW AVAILABLE:<lb/>
Students $6.50 (in advance)<lb/>
Public $8.50<lb/>
GET YOURS WHILE YOU CAN!<lb/>
??efcfc<lb/>
Note: The Central Ticket Office will be open this weekend<lb/>
during the FREE FLICKS to give students a choncc to get tickets.<lb/>
l<lb/>
<pb facs="00057317_0003"/><lb/>
I HI si (. k I INIAN<lb/>
1 1 Hkl k<lb/>
ns<lb/>
Kappa Delta Faces Battle<lb/>
( ontinued I rom Page l<lb/>
?<lb/>
ded<lb/>
nsure<lb/>
?-<lb/>
t'al<lb/>
?<lb/>
sorority would ada to<lb/>
the problem. She also<lb/>
said. "1 understand<lb/>
and note that sororities<lb/>
and fraternities have to<lb/>
have dumpsters to pul<lb/>
? to park their trash and garbage<lb/>
et<lb/>
"We<lb/>
- and e en<lb/>
ds come to out<lb/>
e and the have<lb/>
lift'iculh p ti king she<lb/>
board<lb/>
ts o<lb/>
blocks<lb/>
m<lb/>
an<lb/>
es, bui<lb/>
???<lb/>
?<lb/>
in rhey<lb/>
g aibage<lb/>
residential<lb/>
cannot<lb/>
c a n s<lb/>
places<lb/>
use<lb/>
ike<lb/>
do.<lb/>
I hey have to be the big<lb/>
dumpsters and they<lb/>
would have to have one<lb/>
ese dumpstei -<lb/>
uild be neiil at I<lb/>
im backdopi almost,<lb/>
and you know how un-<lb/>
sightly a dumpster is<lb/>
and how smell) they<lb/>
can get<lb/>
I he I atts nave since<lb/>
i efused to comment on<lb/>
the tnattei. William<lb/>
1 afl Sr. said. "1 think<lb/>
it would be inap-<lb/>
propriate to say<lb/>
anything at this time<lb/>
since the mattei is in<lb/>
itieation<lb/>
Student Benefits Face Cut<lb/>
UII<lb/>
?XI) HI<lb/>
?<lb/>
I I KIN<lb/>
on<lb/>
payments to<lb/>
d<lb/>
who are<lb/>
ol dead.<lb/>
d i s a b 1 e d<lb/>
Pay ments<lb/>
p when the<lb/>
it is. but if<lb/>
- still in col<lb/>
payment can<lb/>
the<lb/>
monthly<lb/>
S229. in<lb/>
198<lb/>
Aer<lb/>
the fiscal year ol<lb/>
1982, the estimated cosl<lb/>
to Social Security will<lb/>
$2 1 billion.<lb/>
No test is ad-<lb/>
ministered to determine<lb/>
it the recipient has a<lb/>
financial need. General<lb/>
ccounting Office fin-<lb/>
dings two years ago<lb/>
revealed thai about 70<lb/>
percent of the reci-<lb/>
pients had family in<lb/>
comes ol undei $15,000<lb/>
a yeai. 1 oss of the<lb/>
benefil would force<lb/>
many families into a<lb/>
low income range.<lb/>
1 he C'attei<lb/>
ministration made the<lb/>
argument two years ago<lb/>
that with other forms<lb/>
of federal financial aid<lb/>
available to students ol<lb/>
low and model ate in-<lb/>
comes, the need to con-<lb/>
tinue with the Social<lb/>
Security student benefit<lb/>
might stand to be<lb/>
ieduced.<lb/>
According to the<lb/>
GAO the benefits are<lb/>
overlapping, some in-<lb/>
dividual- continue to<lb/>
collect the benefil aftei<lb/>
dropping OUl ol school.<lb/>
Med School Places Interns<lb/>
Bv Mike Davis<lb/>
Hospitals in such Second yeai students<lb/>
ville, have started the<lb/>
. Goldsboro, physical diagnosis por<lb/>
Mounl Olive, tion of then training.<lb/>
n and Beginning this summer<lb/>
M<lb/>
Banks have<lb/>
by<lb/>
net<lb/>
practice, pdiatfies,<lb/>
surgery, obstetrics and<lb/>
these students will be<lb/>
spending two months<lb/>
oi clinical<lb/>
disciplines. cse<lb/>
disciplines include<lb/>
ne, pediatrics,<lb/>
r y, obstetrics,<lb/>
. v and family<lb/>
practice.<lb/>
i ourth s ear<lb/>
have uist finished then<lb/>
January term<lb/>
I he resid i<lb/>
ching program has now<lb/>
begun and is designed<lb/>
to pair students with<lb/>
hospitals where they<lb/>
can complete then<lb/>
residencies.<lb/>
Aboul 50 pei cent ol<lb/>
the class will be taking<lb/>
residencies in family<lb/>
practice, Monroe said.<lb/>
"I feel the majority<lb/>
ol the students will<lb/>
return to North<lb/>
( aroiina aftei finishing<lb/>
up then residencies<lb/>
he sa<lb/>
Mom ?<lb/>
the<lb/>
school's Brody<lb/>
Building is righl on<lb/>
schedule, as is the new<lb/>
bed towei. rhe tov<lb/>
will hold 160 beds once<lb/>
completed.<lb/>
A Cup<lb/>
Cake<lb/>
Order At<lb/>
Cotten<lb/>
Hall<lb/>
4:00-<lb/>
6:00pm.<lb/>
(Feb. 9-10)<lb/>
C.25 C.25<lb/>
BENNIES<lb/>
CITCO<lb/>
WRECKER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Front End<lb/>
Alignment<lb/>
Types of<lb/>
AutQ -<lb/>
Fci'iqn &amp; Dorr'<lb/>
Reasonable w.<lb/>
K) F. 10th st<lb/>
Phom 7Sb "?<lb/>
Taco Bell<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Special<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Monday PluS &amp;X<lb/>
Enchirito, Bean Burrito - Small Drink<lb/>
uesday<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/>
Saturday<lb/>
Two Taco Surpremes - Small Drink<lb/>
.Sunday<lb/>
Two Tacos, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
WE WANT TO SHOOT YOU!<lb/>
The 1981 BUCCANEER portraits<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 made will have their 1981 BUC-<lb/>
CANEER delivered free of charge in<lb/>
the fall.<lb/>
I hi Kappa Deltas present house, shown here, is too small the sorority says.<lb/>
DAYTONA BEACH<lb/>
Oaytooa Ocean<lb/>
Eleven Resort;<lb/>
offers a perfect<lb/>
Spring BeHr<lb/>
Vacation at seven of the finest<lb/>
oceanfront hotels in tHe<lb/>
Daytona Beach Area.<lb/>
Chocse from 1163 sparkling<lb/>
rooms, suites, and effi-<lb/>
ciencies. All Oceans Eleven<lb/>
hotels feature restaurants,<lb/>
lounges, swimming pools<lb/>
and spacious sundecks.<lb/>
DAYTONA OCEANS ELEVEN<lb/>
for SPRING BREAK 81 <lb/>
GO FOR IT!<lb/>
2025 S ATLANTIC AVE DAYTONA BEACH SHORES. FL 32018<lb/>
(904) 257-1950<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
800-874-7420<lb/>
ASK ABOUT COLLEGE<lb/>
DISCOUNT DAZE<lb/>
? ? "Treasure Island Inn<lb/>
MskAcaputco Inn<lb/>
w?.Beachcomer ffin<lb/>
BBjrMayan Inn<lb/>
A J?Sheraton Inn-Daytona Beach Shores<lb/>
Best Western-Islander Beach Lodge<lb/>
 Whitehall Inn<lb/>
oceans eleven resorts'<lb/>
MON. TUES AVAILABLE FOR<lb/>
PRIVATE PARTIES - PAPA KATZ WILL<lb/>
CATER ANY PARTY OR FUNCTION.<lb/>
WED ORIGINAL LADIES' LOCKOUT"<lb/>
- 8:30-10:00. LADIES ONLY - GENTS IN<lb/>
AFTER 10:00<lb/>
THURS. SUPER COLLEGE NiGHT -<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE SIG EPS AND BETA<lb/>
LIL' SISTERS - DOORS OPEN FROM 3:00<lb/>
UNTIL 1:00<lb/>
FRI - "PIZZA PICKIN " - SPON-<lb/>
SORED BY THE ALPHA PHIS AND GOD<lb/>
FATHERS PIZZA - DOORS OPEN AT<lb/>
300 FREE BEVERAGE - $3 50 AT THE<lb/>
DOOR FOR MEMBERS AND THEIR<lb/>
GUESTS ' ?' -J<lb/>
SAT LADIES LOCKOUT II" -LADIES<lb/>
ONLY FROM 8:00 to 9:30.GENTS<lb/>
ALLOWED IN AT 9:30<lb/>
SUN. - ROCK AND ROLL WITH ECU'S<lb/>
PARKS AND RECREATION DEPT. -<lb/>
LADIES FREE 50c FOR MEMBERS -<lb/>
$1.00 FOR GUESTS.<lb/>
FEB. 2-6 FLETCHER DORM<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
APPLICATION<lb/>
1980-81<lb/>
fou have a unique opportunity to become one of<lb/>
the members of an exciting new nightclub for those<lb/>
of us 19 and over.<lb/>
All members will be entitled to 3 guests per even-<lb/>
ing Neat dress and proper identification will be re<lb/>
quired of all members and guests<lb/>
This special INTRODUCTORY MEMBERSHIP is<lb/>
only $1.00 All applications and dues must be return<lb/>
ed to this address: P.O. Box 1943, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834 NC State Law requires a thirty day member<lb/>
ship waiting period from date of application for<lb/>
clubs with brown bagging permits.<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP CARDS AVAILABLE AT DOOR<lb/>
MtMBLKSHlP ?1<lb/>
Nome<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Telephone No. I<lb/>
Birthdote<lb/>
Occupation ?<lb/>
Hobbies <lb/>
Music preference:<lb/>
DATE<lb/>
SIGNATURE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057317_0004"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Sire lEaat (Karnlmian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
v. HRIS Lit HOK, (ieneral Manager<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE.t<lb/>
Paul Lincke, m Wwn, Paul Collins. ,????<lb/>
Dave Severin, m? mh, Charles Chandler ? em?<lb/>
Anita Lanc aster. n?M mmut David Norris. ,?,???<lb/>
K-hruarv 5, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Zoning Laws<lb/>
A ttempt To Restrict Greeks<lb/>
There are some individuals here<lb/>
in Greenville who are trying to have<lb/>
the city limits rezoned to prevent<lb/>
any sororities or fraternities from<lb/>
purchasing housing within this area,<lb/>
which includes the area directly sur-<lb/>
rounding the campus. This rezoning<lb/>
law would deny any of the existing<lb/>
chapters that are located a long<lb/>
distance from campus the oppor-<lb/>
tunity of moving within a more con-<lb/>
venient range, it would also stifle<lb/>
the growth of the Greek system in<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
This action is being spurred by<lb/>
some well known families in the<lb/>
Greenville area. At this time, it is<lb/>
directly aimed at the Kappa Delta<lb/>
Sorority here at ECU. The KDs,<lb/>
located now about a mile off cam-<lb/>
pus were in the process of relocating<lb/>
to a house that would be safer and<lb/>
more convenient for their members<lb/>
in relation to the campus when this<lb/>
action was started.<lb/>
It appears that some powerful<lb/>
forces are at work to make this<lb/>
rezoning a reality. It is interesting to<lb/>
notice that, the day before the KD's<lb/>
had their first hearing in October, a<lb/>
local paper printed an incriminating<lb/>
picture of one of a fraternity's yard,<lb/>
covered with debris from their<lb/>
Homecoming float, soggy because<lb/>
of all the rain that day. Also, the<lb/>
most recent hearing date, January<lb/>
22, 1981, was cancelled because the<lb/>
city couldn't get enough board<lb/>
members together.<lb/>
The next hearing in this matter is<lb/>
set for February 5, 1981, at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. at the City Hall in downtown<lb/>
Greenville. A show of support on<lb/>
the part of the entire ECU com-<lb/>
munity will be helpful in fighting<lb/>
this damaging and unfair legisla-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
we got Your cute dog &amp;ook&amp; and your<lb/>
bad dog book&amp;, your fat cat, your droll<lb/>
Cat, your vjry Cat and your Surreal cat<lb/>
Books, your gnomes, R?oll, witches,<lb/>
UNICORN&amp;, WARLOCKS AND MYTHICAL<lb/>
BEASTS BOOKS. I PONT KNOW WHERE<lb/>
YOU'D FIND Book&amp; ABOUT PECpLE.<lb/>
SOuPvU FfcWfcRHYTf 0 oOQAL t5E:&amp;5k<lb/>
Military Preparation Essential<lb/>
"The history of Failure in War can be<lb/>
summed up in two words: Too Late. Too<lb/>
late in comprehending the deadly purpose<lb/>
of a potential enemy; too late in realizing<lb/>
the mortal danger; too late in<lb/>
preparedness; too late in uniting all possi-<lb/>
ble forces for resistance; too late in stan-<lb/>
ding with one's friends. "<lb/>
?General Douglas VfacArthur<lb/>
It wii! greatly behoove the United States,<lb/>
not only the government, but the citizenry<lb/>
as well, to heed the words of thai great<lb/>
soldier.<lb/>
Those words, uttered decades ago, are<lb/>
more appropriate than ever with regards to<lb/>
our nation's foreign policy and military<lb/>
preparedness.<lb/>
We cannot be too late in comprehending<lb/>
the deadly purpose of our enemy. Our<lb/>
greatest enemy, make no mistake about it.<lb/>
is the threat of the onslaught of com-<lb/>
munism, not only abroad but at home as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
The Soviets have never made an bones<lb/>
about their intentions, "hey are firmly<lb/>
committed to world domination and the<lb/>
enslavement of tree people throughout the<lb/>
world. Our nation is a primary target and<lb/>
the apple of the Russian eye. Tor they<lb/>
know that to conquer the rest of the free<lb/>
world they must first defeat us. the most<lb/>
powerful bastion of freedom the world has<lb/>
ever seen. We must be aware of the danger<lb/>
that the Russians pose to our society and<lb/>
realize that it is not an idle threat but a very<lb/>
real one. Liberals condemn those who<lb/>
warn of the communist threat as "war<lb/>
mongers" and call the warnings<lb/>
"rhetoric" or "McCarihyism" in an at-<lb/>
tempt to discredit prophets like Alexander<lb/>
Solzhenitsyn.<lb/>
If we are too late in preparedness then<lb/>
there is no hope. The only thing that com-<lb/>
munists fear is brute force and militarv<lb/>
Robert M.<lb/>
Swaim<lb/>
might. In the Cold War. onl the strong<lb/>
survive.<lb/>
Whenever I here the liberals rave and<lb/>
plead for arms limitations, particularly<lb/>
their beloved Salt treaties, I am reminded<lb/>
of a bit of historic folly.<lb/>
In 1939 Europe became fearful of<lb/>
Hitler's military buildup which was done<lb/>
in violation of the Treaty of Versailles.<lb/>
Those European leaders who possessed no<lb/>
foresight instituted "peace treaty negotia-<lb/>
tions" with Hitler rather than forcing him<lb/>
to halt his military buildup. So the leaders<lb/>
of Europe sent the British Prime Minister<lb/>
as their representative to negotiate with a<lb/>
mad German dictator.<lb/>
So they worked out what amounts to a<lb/>
1939 version of SALT. Chamberlin pro-<lb/>
claimed, as he stepped off the plane in<lb/>
England after returning from Germany,<lb/>
that we would have peace in our time<lb/>
as he waved a worthless piece of paper with<lb/>
Hitler's worthless promise that he would<lb/>
not promote military aggression against his<lb/>
neighbors in Europe.<lb/>
The Communists cannot be trusted. As<lb/>
President Reagan recently said, they will<lb/>
lie, cheat and commit all manner of evil in<lb/>
pursuit of their world domination goal.<lb/>
For those who would dismiss the warn-<lb/>
ings of our conservative leadership as cold<lb/>
war rhetoric, I ask them to consider a few<lb/>
sobering facts. Angola, Ethiopia,<lb/>
Afghanistan, South Yemen, Mozambique,<lb/>
Laos, Cambodia, and South Vietnam;<lb/>
over 1(X) million people in all, have taller.<lb/>
under the cruel voke of Communist<lb/>
1974.<lb/>
"Iran has been plunged into bloody<lb/>
chaos and turned overnight from a bastion<lb/>
of Western strength into a cauldron ot<lb/>
virulent anti-Westernism, its oil treasure<lb/>
lying provocatively exposed to kisttu! Rus<lb/>
Man eyes. Cuba acts increasingly as an<lb/>
agent of wide-ranging S bitions.<lb/>
' These are examples of how the pieces will<lb/>
continue to tall if we take a piecemeal ap-<lb/>
proach aid President Nixon in his re-<lb/>
cent book The Real War.<lb/>
America is still suffering from<lb/>
radical liberalism ot the I960's when fan-<lb/>
tasy and idealism, which, is usually the op-<lb/>
posite ot realism, swept the campuses. At-<lb/>
tacks on anything that represe:<lb/>
America and the established order were the<lb/>
fad of the da .<lb/>
I tie notion that beyond a certain<lb/>
minimum level, the less militarv strei<lb/>
you have, the better, is a fallacy The hope<lb/>
arose among liberals that if the United<lb/>
States limited its own arms, others?par<lb/>
ticularlv the Russians?would follow. It's<lb/>
a beautiful theory but that's not the wav it<lb/>
works in the real world. The Russians,<lb/>
masters ol pragmatic action, performed<lb/>
admirablv according to their theory. In<lb/>
fact, during the same period when arms<lb/>
control was becoming fashionable, the<lb/>
Soviet five year plan charted heavy in-<lb/>
creases in their militarv spending.<lb/>
It is time we realized that might does<lb/>
mate right and there is strength in<lb/>
numbers.<lb/>
We must begin rebuilding so that never<lb/>
will our people have to face the threat of<lb/>
Communist takeover with uncertainty as<lb/>
to whether our government and armies can<lb/>
protect us.<lb/>
i-Campus Forum<lb/>
Sudden Attendance Boost At Women's Games Questioned<lb/>
1 wish to comment on the recent suc-<lb/>
cess of the women's basketball team and<lb/>
the attendant hoopla which has suddenly<lb/>
arisen around them.<lb/>
The ladies have been playing before<lb/>
obscenely small crowds over the years,<lb/>
but their recent successes and their rise<lb/>
into the national rankings has<lb/>
precipitated a mad rush by certain cam-<lb/>
pus organizations and area people to get<lb/>
on the bandwagon.<lb/>
On Wednesday past, 1 observed a<lb/>
crowd of over 4,000 which, while con-<lb/>
sisting mainly of students, doubtlessly<lb/>
had a number of people who have not<lb/>
regularly attended the women's games.<lb/>
Also, I noticed that the varsity<lb/>
cheerleaders and the gymnastics team<lb/>
deemed it necessary to honor us with<lb/>
their presence to arouse the crowd and<lb/>
exhibit their skills during half-time,<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
It strikes me as odd that these<lb/>
organizations would not have chosen to<lb/>
show themselves in earlier contests in<lb/>
which the ladies have been involved.<lb/>
Why have the cheerleaders suddenly<lb/>
begun attending women's games to put<lb/>
forth their foolishness and imbecilic<lb/>
behavior before the also suddenly-arisen<lb/>
crowds? For those who may be<lb/>
freshmen, the cheerleaders pulled this<lb/>
same stunt last year when the ladies<lb/>
played State and U.N.C.<lb/>
Those of us who have been regular in<lb/>
attendance in the ladies' games are upset<lb/>
over this sudden increase in organiza-<lb/>
tional and individual attendance at these<lb/>
games. Where were you last year and<lb/>
earlier in the season? The ladies have I wonder how many of you would<lb/>
been winning without you and the continue to come to the ladies' games if<lb/>
faithful do not want you! they were to go into a decline and be left<lb/>
IT Wn 9 9mrm 9 mn<lb/>
. ? ????? ofi1 YjJ?'??'?-V'Vf'fi'<lb/>
out of post-season play? Certainly verv<lb/>
few of you would stick with them.<lb/>
It is really unfortunate that such an<lb/>
excellent basketball team as the Lady<lb/>
Pirates are saddled with such a large<lb/>
contingent of fair-weather fans.<lb/>
D.W. HOWELL<lb/>
English<lb/>
EDITOR'S SOTE: White the author<lb/>
of this tetter feels "the faithful" are<lb/>
upset over the sudden popularity of<lb/>
Lady Pirate Basketball, we fee i that it is<lb/>
in the best interest of the program and<lb/>
the University to urge these organiza-<lb/>
tions and individuals to continue their<lb/>
support and attendence.<lb/>
Valentine<lb/>
Alternatives<lb/>
Valentine's Day is a special day set<lb/>
aside for expressions of affection, letting<lb/>
those significant others know you ap-<lb/>
preciate their friendship. The celebra-<lb/>
tion is important, and how we celebrate<lb/>
is important too. Often, the only way we<lb/>
know how to reach out is through com-<lb/>
mercial cards and candy valentines. Giv-<lb/>
ing other peoples' words, other peoples'<lb/>
feelings, other peoples' creations, can be<lb/>
the same as giving nothing. A small risk<lb/>
is involved in the alternatives, for we<lb/>
share a part of ourselves. Receiving, the<lb/>
other hand of giving, is a response that<lb/>
focuses on the good will of the giver<lb/>
than on the quality of his gift. An alter-<lb/>
native celebration checklist:<lb/>
Stop buying candy and commercial<lb/>
cards<lb/>
Make homemade "alternatives"<lb/>
Give yourself<lb/>
Contribute to person's favorite<lb/>
cause<lb/>
Contribute to prison reform pro-<lb/>
ject<lb/>
Considering alternatives is a step in<lb/>
the direction of living a way of life that<lb/>
is outwardly simple and inwardly rich,<lb/>
the essence of voluntary simplicity. Let's<lb/>
make this aay responsive and life affirm-<lb/>
ing, not mechanical and materialistic.<lb/>
Kent McCullough<lb/>
Alumnus<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points oj view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyntr Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks wilt be permitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
da vs.<lb/>
4<lb/>
A<lb/>
in ? ii'i?i?ii i m??" it "?"i"<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057317_0005"/><lb/>
I Ml 1 S1 AROl INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
g<lb/>
.???<lb/>
rn on<lb/>
tttes<lb/>
wed<lb/>
Women s Basketball Appalachian<lb/>
State Minges<lb/>
The Fabulous Knobs Attic<lb/>
8<lb/>
GROUND HOG DAY A shadow<lb/>
means six more weeks of winter -<lb/>
who knows what cold lurks in the<lb/>
heart ot winter<lb/>
Men s Basketball Santord -<lb/>
Mmqes<lb/>
Black Arts Festival begins at UNC<lb/>
thu<lb/>
rs<lb/>
Feb 35 ? Intramural Arm<lb/>
Wrestling Tournament Memorial<lb/>
Gvm<lb/>
Women s Basi-<lb/>
State Boom nc<lb/>
Appalachian<lb/>
Ooro Coliseum<lb/>
" to 6 p m<lb/>
<lb/>
Faculty Duo Rectal,8 15 p m<lb/>
Paul Tardiff,piano and Selma<lb/>
Goken cellist Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
Men s Basketball Pan<lb/>
American Edmburg TX<lb/>
Phylis Schlafy and Betty Fnedan<lb/>
debate the Equal Rights<lb/>
Amendment,8 p m Memorial<lb/>
Hall Chapel Hill<lb/>
TUNISIAN DUCK DAY<lb/>
NC S.rnphon, Memorial<lb/>
Auditorium,Greensboro 3 30 p m<lb/>
? aie Attic<lb/>
22<lb/>
mm BIRTHDAV<lb/>
GEORGE!<lb/>
GEORGE WASHINGTON S REAL<lb/>
BIRTH DATE<lb/>
ECU Symphonic Band<lb/>
Concert Wight Auditorium 8 15<lb/>
p m<lb/>
Sugar Attic<lb/>
Noe! Pointer,Webb Center,Old<lb/>
Dominion University .Norfolk<lb/>
Jimmy Butlett.Camden Indoor<lb/>
Stadium,Duke University<lb/>
Bruce Springsteen concert,8<lb/>
p m Columbia SC Coliseum<lb/>
Ice Cream Bingo.MSC.7<lb/>
p m Student Center Multi Purpose<lb/>
Room<lb/>
Women s Basketball UNC<lb/>
Wilmington NC<lb/>
Buster Brown,Attic<lb/>
Madame Butterfly,Duke Artists<lb/>
Series.performed by Goldovsky<lb/>
Opera of New York Page<lb/>
Auditorium Duke University<lb/>
Men's basketball Campbell<lb/>
University Raleigh. N C<lb/>
Minority Arts Film Series,Black<lb/>
History Double Feature,8<lb/>
p m Hendnx Theatre,ECU<lb/>
The Young Invaders,Attic<lb/>
OFFICIAL HOLIDAY FOR<lb/>
GEORGE WASHINGTON S<lb/>
BIRTHDAY<lb/>
Intramural College Bowling Feb<lb/>
14 March 5 MSC Bowling Center<lb/>
Men's Basketball UNC Wilmington<lb/>
Minges.7 30 p m<lb/>
17<lb/>
Buford T Attic<lb/>
Edgar Winter Group Rogue s.Va<lb/>
Beach<lb/>
Ringlmg Bros Barnum and Bailey<lb/>
Circus opens at 1 30<lb/>
pm Greensboro Cohsum<lb/>
Greensboro Symphony Chamber<lb/>
Orchestra,8 15 p m Carolina<lb/>
Theatre Greensboro<lb/>
CHANGE OF MAJOR - Feb 23 27<lb/>
6. Mar. 2 t<lb/>
ECU Playhouse Cabaret<lb/>
Production Student Center<lb/>
Auditorium .Rm 244<lb/>
Women s Basketball Wake Forest<lb/>
University Mmges,7 30 p m<lb/>
Bruce<lb/>
Springsteen.Omm, Atlanta. Georgia<lb/>
Frani Lisjt Orchestra of<lb/>
Budapest,8 15 p m .War Memorial<lb/>
Auditorium, Greensboro<lb/>
24<lb/>
NATIONAL INVENTORS DAY<lb/>
MovieDr Strangelove. 8<lb/>
p m Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
Suffers Gold,Attic<lb/>
Madame Butterfly, Goldovsky<lb/>
Opera of New York,Memorial<lb/>
Coliseum.Greensboro.8 15 pm<lb/>
Ry Cooder Bayou.Washington.DC<lb/>
Nantucket Lighthouse.Elizabeth<lb/>
City.NC<lb/>
Women's Basketball UNC Chapel<lb/>
Hill ? Mmges<lb/>
Feb. S-7: Sorority Recognition<lb/>
Feb. 5 8 Intramural Racquetbaii<lb/>
Doubles Tournament,Mmges<lb/>
North Carolina Symphony IS<lb/>
p.mWar Memorial<lb/>
Auditorium,Greensboro Coliseum<lb/>
Complex<lb/>
Kaleidoscope Mime Troupe,8: IS<lb/>
p.mTaylor Building,UNC G<lb/>
The Young Invaders,Attic<lb/>
12<lb/>
18<lb/>
Movie, "Breathl??si pm. Hendnx<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
Children's Orchestra<lb/>
Concert,Wright Auditorium,1 p.m.<lb/>
Women s Basketball: NC State<lb/>
University Raleigh,NC,7 30 p m<lb/>
ECU Playhouse Cabaret<lb/>
Production ECU Student Center<lb/>
Auditorium Rm 244<lb/>
Super Grit Cowboy Band,Attic<lb/>
Ringlmg Bros . Barnum and Bailey<lb/>
Circus.4 and 8 p m Greensboro<lb/>
Coliseum<lb/>
ABE LINCOLN S 172nd<lb/>
BIRTHDAY<lb/>
Men's Basketball: Delaware State<lb/>
? Minges,7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Movie Travel Adventure<lb/>
FilmChina After Mao Hendnx<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
Choice,Attic<lb/>
19<lb/>
ECU Cabaret Production,Student<lb/>
Center Auditorium,Rm. 244<lb/>
Super Grit Cowboy Band,Attic<lb/>
North Carolina Dance Theatre IS<lb/>
o ,m Carolina Theatre,Greensboro<lb/>
Ringlmg Bros Barnum and Bailey<lb/>
Circus.11 a.m. and I<lb/>
p.m .Greensboro Coliseum<lb/>
25<lb/>
ECU Playhouse Cabaret<lb/>
Production,Student Center<lb/>
Auditorium,Rm 244<lb/>
Faculty Recital Henry<lb/>
Doskey piano.Hendnx Theatre,8:15<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
Breckenndge Attic<lb/>
Best Little Whorehouse in<lb/>
Texas, road company of hit<lb/>
Broadway play opens at 8 15<lb/>
p m War Memorial<lb/>
Auditorium,Greensboro Coliseum<lb/>
Complex<lb/>
Beverley Wolff meuo soprano 8<lb/>
p.mat Cummings High<lb/>
School.Burlington,for Alamance<lb/>
Community Concert Association<lb/>
pre-<lb/>
or<lb/>
pal at-<lb/>
M 30<lb/>
flip<lb/>
my<lb/>
wig!<lb/>
ECU Playhouse Cabaret<lb/>
Production,Student Center<lb/>
Auditorium.Rm 244<lb/>
Intramural Swim Meet.Mmges<lb/>
Pool.ECU<lb/>
Intramural Co Rec Racquetball<lb/>
Doubles,Mmges Courts.ECU<lb/>
Suzanne Sexless and the<lb/>
Stimulators,Attic<lb/>
"Best Little Whorehouse in<lb/>
Texas, "8 15 p m ,War Memorial<lb/>
Auditorium,Greensboro Coliseum<lb/>
Complex<lb/>
ECU PLayhouse Cabaret<lb/>
Production,Student Center<lb/>
Auditorium,Rm. 244<lb/>
Opera Theatre Production<lb/>
p m.A.J Fletcher Recital,<lb/>
Hall.ECU<lb/>
Doc Holiday with Driver,AIM<lb/>
Record Release Party.Attic<lb/>
Feld Ballet p m High Point<lb/>
Theatre,High Point,NC<lb/>
FEBRUARY 5, 1981<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
o<lb/>
3<lb/>
fri<lb/>
sat<lb/>
All Day High School Band<lb/>
Clinic,A.J. Fletcher Music Center<lb/>
MovieNorma Rae, "5,7,?<lb/>
p m Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
ECU Wind Ensemble<lb/>
Concert,Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Snow.Attic.JM 7:00 p m<lb/>
Laserdrive sound and light show<lb/>
featuring music of Pink<lb/>
Floyd. Emerson, Lake,and<lb/>
Palmer,opens at Morehead<lb/>
Planetarium,Chapel Hill Shows at<lb/>
?: IS p.m10 30 p.m and midnight<lb/>
Johnny Paycheck,Carolina Opry<lb/>
House<lb/>
Lubovitch Dance Company of New<lb/>
York 15 p.m.Aycock<lb/>
Auditorium,UNC G<lb/>
Kaleidoscope Mime Troupe 15<lb/>
p.m ,Taylor Building,UNC G<lb/>
13<lb/>
NeYeRmore<lb/>
FRIDAY THE 13th avoid ladders<lb/>
? cut class<lb/>
MovieWhen A Stranger<lb/>
Calls. "5.7,? p.m Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
Late ShowThe Song Remains The<lb/>
Samell pm,Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
Women's Basketball Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
College.Lenoir Rhyne.NC<lb/>
BB<lb/>
King, Mosque, Richmond. Virginia<lb/>
Robbin Thompson Band.McGuffy<lb/>
Lane Peobody s.Va Beach<lb/>
Choice,Attic<lb/>
Preservation Hall Jan<lb/>
Band,Stewart Theatre,Raleigh<lb/>
All Day High School Band<lb/>
Clime.A J. Fletcher Music Center<lb/>
MovieNorma Rae 5,7,9<lb/>
pm Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
High School Band Clinic<lb/>
Concert,Wright Auditorium.7 30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Men's Basketball Athletes in<lb/>
Action ? Minges<lb/>
Snow.Attic<lb/>
Chris Cross,Premier<lb/>
Theatre,Norfolk<lb/>
Doc Watson,Spirit Square Charlotte<lb/>
George Jones.Tammy<lb/>
Wynette Jerry Lee Lewis.Charlotte<lb/>
Coliseum<lb/>
14<lb/>
??? <lb/>
20<lb/>
JOHN GLENN DAY<lb/>
LAST DAY TO DROP A COURSE<lb/>
OR WITHDRAW FROM SCHOOL<lb/>
ECU Playhouse Cabaret<lb/>
Production.Student Center<lb/>
Auditorium,Rm 244<lb/>
MovieAmerican<lb/>
OlfjjQloS.7:lS.?: 10 p m Hendnx<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
Bnce Street.Affic<lb/>
Jimmy Bulfett Charlotte Coliseum<lb/>
Richie Biackmore's<lb/>
Rainbow,Peppermint Beach<lb/>
Club,Norfolk<lb/>
Roger Whittaker p m.War<lb/>
Memorial Auditorium,Greensboro<lb/>
Coliseum Complex<lb/>
Ringlmg Bros Barnum and Bailey<lb/>
Circus,4 and I p.m .Greensboro<lb/>
Coliseum<lb/>
VALENTINE S DAY<lb/>
MovieWhen A Stranger<lb/>
Calls 5,7,9 p m ,Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
Late Show, "The Song Remains The<lb/>
Same, "11 pm .Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
Conway Twitty and Helen<lb/>
Cornelius.8 pm .Greensboro<lb/>
Coliseum<lb/>
Robbin Thompson Band McGuffy<lb/>
Peobody s.Va Beach<lb/>
BB King,Premier Theatre Norfolk<lb/>
David Bromberg Dana<lb/>
Auditonum.Guilford<lb/>
College. Greensboro<lb/>
Savoy Brown,Peppermint Beach<lb/>
Club.Norfolk<lb/>
NC Symphony,Memorial<lb/>
Auditorium Greensboro,8 p m<lb/>
The Eaie,Attic<lb/>
21<lb/>
27<lb/>
HAVEA<lb/>
HEART!<lb/>
JIMMY BUFFETT DAY - Jimmy<lb/>
Buffet,Minges Coliseum.?<lb/>
p m .ecu<lb/>
ECU Playhouse Cabaret<lb/>
Production,Student Center<lb/>
Auditorium.Rm. 244<lb/>
Movie, "American<lb/>
Gigolo, "5.7: 15.9:30 p m Hendnx<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
Men's Basketball<lb/>
Richmond.Richmond VA<lb/>
Bnce Street,Attic,also the Coonev<lb/>
vs. Norton fight on 7' TV screen<lb/>
Ringlmg Bros .Barnum and Bailey<lb/>
Circus,11 a m ,3 pm and 8<lb/>
pm .Greensboro Coliseum<lb/>
28<lb/>
FV<lb/>
MovieCoalminer's<lb/>
DaughterS,7, IS,9:30<lb/>
p.m .Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
Deadlne: Intramural<lb/>
Wrestling ? S p.m<lb/>
ECU Playhouse Cabaret<lb/>
Production.Student Center<lb/>
Auditorium,Rm. 244<lb/>
Opera Theatre Production<lb/>
p.m.A.J. Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall<lb/>
Wheels.Attic<lb/>
Melba Moore,Spirit<lb/>
Square.Charlotte<lb/>
Movie. Coalmmer s<lb/>
Daughter. S.7-15,9.30<lb/>
p m .Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
ECU Playhouse Cabaret<lb/>
Production,Student Center<lb/>
Auditorium,Rm 244<lb/>
Opera Theatre Production,8<lb/>
p.m.A.J Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall<lb/>
Men's Basketball: Illinois<lb/>
State,Normal,IL,2 p.m<lb/>
Firekat.Attic<lb/>
Bruce Springsteen concert,8<lb/>
p.mGreensboro Coliseum<lb/>
Southern Living Show opens<lb/>
at Merchandise Mart in<lb/>
Charlotte (through March 8i<lb/>
"The Philadelphia<lb/>
Story, I 15 p m Aycock<lb/>
Auditorium,UNC G<lb/>
The Boss: Jersey Success Story<lb/>
Bruce Springsteen, one of the greatest rock performers of today, will be in<lb/>
concert in the Greensboro Coliseum on Saturday, Feb. 28 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
B FREDSCHRUERS<lb/>
Rf pnnlrd r rum Hulling siunr<lb/>
Bruce Springsteen, in the<lb/>
abstract, is just the kind of guy my<lb/>
linle New Jersey hometown school-<lb/>
ed me to despise. Born seventy-<lb/>
seven days apart, raised maybe fifty<lb/>
miles apart, this beatified greaser<lb/>
and I grew up sharing little more<lb/>
than what came over AM radio. In<lb/>
Mountain Lakes, a community of<lb/>
4000, we had a word for people like<lb/>
Bruce: Newarkyianders. The urban<lb/>
canker of Newark-Elizabeth was<lb/>
their state capital, but they lived and<lb/>
played along the boardwalked<lb/>
Jersey shore. They wore those<lb/>
shoulder-strap undershirts some<lb/>
people called "guinea-T's we call-<lb/>
ed them "Newarkys They drove<lb/>
muscle cars and worked in garages<lb/>
and metal shops. They ate meatball<lb/>
subs made of cat parts for lunch,<lb/>
and after work they shouted at their<lb/>
moms, cruised the drive-ins, punch-<lb/>
ed each other out and balled their<lb/>
girlfriends in backseats.<lb/>
Our contempt for<lb/>
Newarkyianders cut almost as deep<lb/>
as our fear of them. We looked on<lb/>
them as prisoners, a subclass that<lb/>
would not get the college degrees<lb/>
and Country Squires we were mark-<lb/>
ed for. But we realized that<lb/>
prisoners sometimes bust out of<lb/>
their cages with a special<lb/>
vengefulness. The fear was as real as<lb/>
a black Chevy rumbling down your<lb/>
tree-lined block, and inside are six<lb/>
guys with baseball bats and tire<lb/>
irons.<lb/>
Bruce Springsteen has seen all this<lb/>
from the inside, he's seen the gates<lb/>
swing shut, he's watched people tur-<lb/>
ning the locks on their own cages.<lb/>
You can hear it in his music, a music<lb/>
with shack-town roots; paradoxical-<lb/>
ly, it saved him from that life. 1<lb/>
could not have heard his songs,<lb/>
especially the early, wordier ones,<lb/>
and expect our meeting to boil down<lb/>
to the wracking Jersey nightmare of<lb/>
Joe College vs. Joe Greaser.<lb/>
While even among his ardent fans<lb/>
there are people who say Springs-<lb/>
teen has gone to the well too many<lb/>
times for his favorite themes of cars,<lb/>
girls and the night, watching him<lb/>
perform the new songs, I came to<lb/>
believe he really was battering at<lb/>
new riddles: marriage, work and<lb/>
how people in America turn<lb/>
themselves into ghosts.<lb/>
I would come to understand that<lb/>
this jubilant rock &amp; roll cock of the<lb/>
walk never had cut it as Joe Greaser,<lb/>
that what had fathered his<lb/>
obsessiveness was doing time as a<lb/>
runty, bad-complexioned kid whom<lb/>
the nuns, girls and greasers had<lb/>
taken turns having no use for. There<lb/>
is finally something irrevocably<lb/>
lonely and restless about him. He's<lb/>
never claimed any different. Spr-<lb/>
ingsteen wants to inspire by example<lb/>
? the example of a trashed and<lb/>
resurrected American spirit. "You<lb/>
ask me if there's any one thing in<lb/>
particular said E Street Band<lb/>
pianist Roy Bittan when we talked<lb/>
about Springsteen's commitment.<lb/>
"There's too many things in par-<lb/>
ticular. He's older and wiser, but he<lb/>
never strays from his basic values.<lb/>
He cares as much, more, about the<lb/>
losers than the winners. He's so<lb/>
unlike everything you think a real<lb/>
successful rock star would be<lb/>
Springsteen comes down the ramp<lb/>
at the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport<lb/>
and looks down the empty corridor:<lb/>
"No autographs he says in his<lb/>
characteristic parched cackle. "No<lb/>
autographs, please<lb/>
This is exactly what he never says,<lb/>
of course, and when the tour party<lb/>
breaches the corridor's double<lb/>
doors, he greets a pack of young,<lb/>
denim-jacketed guys familiarly.<lb/>
Some are holding copies of The<lb/>
River, released just this day and<lb/>
headed very quickly for Number<lb/>
One. As the entourage loads itseli<lb/>
into a string of station wagons, a kid<lb/>
who has been hanging at the edge of<lb/>
the pack tells Bruce about a friend<lb/>
who's critically ill in a local<lb/>
hospital. Bruce tells the kid to get<lb/>
his friend's name to him through the<lb/>
record company. Doors are slamm-<lb/>
ing and engines gunning. It's bitter<lb/>
cold. Just another stranger, I think.<lb/>
Thirty-eight hours later, after per-<lb/>
forming "Out in the Street" onstage<lb/>
at the St. Paul Civic Center, Spr-<lb/>
ingsteen halts the show. "I met a<lb/>
bunch of guys at the airport yester-<lb/>
day coming in. One told me he had a<lb/>
friend who was sick. If that fella<lb/>
who told me his friend was sick will<lb/>
come to the side of the stage during<lb/>
the break, I got something for your<lb/>
friend backstage<lb/>
After the kid appeared, and was<lb/>
duly loaded up with autographed<lb/>
mementos, I pondered the gesture.<lb/>
Springsteen could have scribbled his<lb/>
good wishes on an album at the air-<lb/>
port and been done with it. But he<lb/>
had left the benediction to be ar-<lb/>
ranged in public. There's a lot of<lb/>
showman in Springsteen, and not a<lb/>
little preacher. Why had he let the<lb/>
anonymous kid slip so close to being<lb/>
See BOSS, page 6, col. 1<lb/>
T<lb/>
i<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
????<lb/>
<pb facs="00057317_0006"/><lb/>
! Hi I M knl IS! N<lb/>
t 1 HKl ARY 5, 1981<lb/>
Le.fojirj( A5QVJ7 CouLc&amp;r th Mkd Iajj<lb/>
OS dfsvQ Ata<lb/>
TOHV)07, VOU SH0ULDs)T<lb/>
flT ILL THTTUaJIc foop<lb/>
You AH?aJHAT yuEAT <lb/>
The Boss: Jersey Success<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
probably why ve conic out and play<lb/>
every night, there's thai fear, 'cause<lb/>
(hen nothin' works, nothin' make-<lb/>
sense. As long as one thing docs, it<lb/>
there can be just one thing thai <lb/>
against what you sec all around<lb/>
then you know that things can be<lb/>
different. Mainly, it's importani<lb/>
have that passion foi living, to<lb/>
somehow get il fi<lb/>
forgotten, then givei<lb/>
I roll ril<lb/>
I<lb/>
? i erythii<lb/>
and peoph<lb/>
disrespec t. N i u ?-?<lb/>
don .?<lb/>
S A AD'S SHObl<lb/>
RtPAIR<lb/>
11 J Grande Ave.<lb/>
7S8-1228<lb/>
Qualitv<lb/>
Repair <lb/>
irnillllUll<lb/>
ARMY NAVY STORE<lb/>
? Backpacks. ? IS. Bomber. <lb/>
0 Field, Otck. Fliqht Snorkel .y<lb/>
Jacket. PeacoaH Parkas<lb/>
 Shoe Combil Boots. Plvs. <lb/>
1501 S Evans StrMl<lb/>
FOOD IS<lb/>
BACK<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Rathskeller<lb/>
GOOD FOOD -<lb/>
GOOD PRICES<lb/>
hKlhNDLY ATMOSPHtRL<lb/>
12 p.m1 a.m.<lb/>
109 t. 5th Street<lb/>
752-1361<lb/>
Tke Ham??<lb/>
OP1M 14 MOUtl<lb/>
Sa?m Coptaa laftvi<lb/>
or legal i 5<lb/>
?? l?pw.<lb/>
?jfl I- lu.<lb/>
??miiiiIim<lb/>
 -?-1 i-r<lb/>
'M<lb/>
l? l ?<lb/>
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law IM<lb/>
??? C<lb/>
r?? f?<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
l ??<lb/>
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any c? ii -m it<lb/>
W-?r? teM Maikr JV Wan I I<lb/>
M'l<lb/>
" tl III<lb/>
Keg i c Dii??i ,<lb/>
,??( ice Denver,<lb/>
C<lb/>
'fltf 4 Ivan Si<lb/>
'SJ ??rj<lb/>
?0?TlO?llt.PTO<lb/>
irmWIIH o<lb/>
'???MANO<lb/>
l"(X "an Mdw ?<lb/>
fxrorverw , ???' tw"f ron<lb/>
rra? and pr ??? rxtfay<lb/>
t? tawne or ttjrWtor<lb/>
'?lolM'lf (?n I) rl)1<lb/>
(la" 'aa n?Mt I<lb/>
in. ?i mi ow ? i<lb/>
AMI ateuiri<lb/>
Hear OrpaMu'ipe<lb/>
??? ?f? Mara It<lb/>
.<lb/>
Subscriptions to the Greenville Ciiiema Society's series of films for the spring semester are still<lb/>
available. All 1 ilms (including next Sunday's selection, Truffaut's Jules and Jim) are shown Sundays<lb/>
at 2:00 p.m. in the Hendrix Theatre. I he cost of seeing the remaining five films is S9; subscriptions<lb/>
may he purchased from Karen Mansfield or Glen Brewster in the English Department, or at the door<lb/>
before the movie showings.<lb/>
Music Faculty Duo<lb/>
To Give Recital<lb/>
rano Ai<lb/>
Da la pas and bass-<lb/>
baritone Edward<lb/>
Glenn, members of the<lb/>
Easi t a a I nivei si-<lb/>
ty School ol Music<lb/>
voice faeul II pei<lb/>
form a recital ol arias<lb/>
and duets from operas<lb/>
and songs from modern<lb/>
musical comedies Sun-<lb/>
day, Feb B<lb/>
1 he pi og i am.<lb/>
scheduled foi 8: Ic p<lb/>
in the -V J. 1 letcher<lb/>
Music (en let Recital<lb/>
Hall here, is tree and<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
The program will in-<lb/>
clude the Figaro and<lb/>
Rosin a duet from<lb/>
Rossini's "Barber ol<lb/>
Seville "non piu an-<lb/>
drai" from Moart's<lb/>
"Marriage ol Figaro<lb/>
"Tu, che di gel" from<lb/>
Puccini's ?' I urandot<lb/>
the duel Iron<lb/>
Mascagni's "C avalleria<lb/>
Rusticana the Nile<lb/>
scene from Verdi's<lb/>
"Aida" and selections<lb/>
from musical comedies<lb/>
b Noel Coward.<lb/>
Rodger- and Hammers-<lb/>
tein, Jerome Kern, Vic-<lb/>
tor Herbert and<lb/>
Rodgers and Hart.<lb/>
Antonia Dalapas,<lb/>
who has degrees from<lb/>
the New Englandon-<lb/>
sei v av i ol Music, has<lb/>
performed in Oregon,<lb/>
N e w Y 0 r k and<lb/>
 ashington, D.C. as<lb/>
well as extensively in<lb/>
the New 1 I area.<lb/>
Edward Glenn has<lb/>
performed throughout<lb/>
W ashington, D.C. and<lb/>
the southeastern U.S.<lb/>
and has been featured<lb/>
baritone soloist with<lb/>
the U.S Navy, Band.<lb/>
I he two singers have<lb/>
performed together<lb/>
within the past year for<lb/>
several local civic<lb/>
groups and presented a<lb/>
program of show tunes<lb/>
tor the annual Cireen-<lb/>
ville Chamber ol Com-<lb/>
merce banquet, which<lb/>
featured as guest<lb/>
speaker James Rosen-<lb/>
tield. president of CBS-<lb/>
IV.<lb/>
Happy<lb/>
Birthday<lb/>
Robert<lb/>
Boyette<lb/>
Fosdick's Seafood Savers<lb/>
Tues. Fish Fry- All I he rah You Can bat With A Mug<lb/>
Of Your Favorite Beverage$3.99<lb/>
Wed. Shrimp Treat- Delicious Calabash Shrimp With French<lb/>
Fries, Cole Slaw and Our Famous Hushpuppies$3.99<lb/>
Thur. Family Night A Seafood Sampler With Calabash<lb/>
Shrimp. Fried Fish. Oysters and Deviled Crab$4.99<lb/>
lues,Wed,Thur(Oyster Bar Only) I Doz. Halfsheil<lb/>
Oysters (Steamed or Raw) And A Mug Of our Favorite fcJeverage<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
?;a wanna<lb/>
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Come Pit<lb/>
The Phi iv ? ll<lb/>
Night Prom 7:00<lb/>
1 ill C. l t<lb/>
1 he Chapter X<lb/>
'rices I<lb/>
p-<lb/>
Ensemble Concerts<lb/>
Presented Friday<lb/>
rraditional and contemporary band and jazz<lb/>
music will be presented by the East Carolina<lb/>
University Symphonic Wind Ensemble and the<lb/>
ECU Ja Ensemble in a joint concert Friday,<lb/>
Feb. 6, a! 8:15 p.m. in Wright Auditorium here.<lb/>
The program, tree and open to the public, is a<lb/>
featured performance for participants in the All-<lb/>
Stale High School Band Clinic hosted by ECU<lb/>
Feb. 6 7<lb/>
The Wind Ensemble, conducted by Herbert<lb/>
Carter and Harold Jones of the ECU School of<lb/>
Music instrumental faculty, will present Gordon<lb/>
Jacob's version of "The Earle of Oxford's<lb/>
March "Blue Lake Overture" by John Barnes<lb/>
Chance, Fisher Tull's "Jargon" (For Percussion<lb/>
Ensemble and Band) and "Variations on<lb/>
"America" by Charles Ives and William<lb/>
Schuman.<lb/>
The Jazz Ensemble, conducted by ECU music<lb/>
faculty member George Broussard, will play con-<lb/>
temporary ja selections.<lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EARLY <lb/>
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Billy Scott and the<lb/>
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The Swinging<lb/>
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Sun. Feb. 8th<lb/>
The Band of Oz<lb/>
Wednesday Night's<lb/>
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Members and<lb/>
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Happy Hour From<lb/>
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PREPARE FOR:<lb/>
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Join our "Early Bird" and<lb/>
Summer Classes In Preparation<lb/>
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Round trip transportation from<lb/>
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Drink. 39 49<lb/>
We deliver on the hour and halt hour between 4 p.m<lb/>
p m Sun Thur and i p m -lip m Fri A Sat<lb/>
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America's Best Nutrition Values are at GNC?Over 800 Stores from Coast to Coast<lb/>
I AMPUS EVENTS<lb/>
Thursday 5<lb/>
? 7 p.m. Gamma Beta Phi, Biolog) 103<lb/>
? 7:30 p.m. Women's Basketball: UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hi Minges Coliseum<lb/>
? 5 p.m. Sororit Recognition<lb/>
? 5-8 p m intramural Racquetball Doubles<lb/>
1 viiuament, Minges Court<lb/>
Friday o<lb/>
? Ml Da High School Band Clinic, AI. Flet-<lb/>
chei Musicentei<lb/>
? 5, 7, and :(K) p.m. Movie: Norma Rae, Hen-<lb/>
drix 1 heati e<lb/>
? 8:15 p.m I . I Wind Ensemble Concert,<lb/>
W i ighl uditoi mm<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
? All Da High School Band Clinic, I Fl et-<lb/>
chei M isic C entei<lb/>
? 5, 7, and 9 00 p m. Movie: Norma Rae, Hen-<lb/>
drix 1 heat re<lb/>
? b p.m. Women's Basketball: Easl rennessee,<lb/>
waj<lb/>
? 30 p m. High School Band Clinic Concert,<lb/>
Wrig uditoi rum<lb/>
Suruiiix V<lb/>
? 3 p.m. Women's Basketball: Appalachian<lb/>
State I ni ersitj. Boone, N.C.<lb/>
Monday V<lb/>
? 8:15 p m. Faculty Duo Recital: Paul Tardif,<lb/>
&amp; Selma Gokcen, cellist. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Monday 9- Tuesday 24<lb/>
? Inti Su  M . Entries Due<lb/>
? Intramura I -Rec Racquetball Doubles, En<lb/>
v - due Mei i !i u<lb/>
Tuesday 10<lb/>
? 5 p.m. Deadline: Intramural Co-Rec Bowling<lb/>
? 7 p.m. Phi Upsilon Omicron Meeting, Home<lb/>
Economics Social Room<lb/>
? 7 p.m. Mendenhall Student Center BingoIce<lb/>
Cream Party, MSC Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
? 7 p.m. Women's Basketball: UNCW, Wilm-<lb/>
ington, N.C.<lb/>
SCHOOl OF ART<lb/>
Jan. 15-Feb. 8<lb/>
? Annual Faculty Show-Works by the E.C.U.<lb/>
School of Art Faculty<lb/>
SCHOOl OFMUSiC<lb/>
? Feb. 5 Ban Webster, clarinet Senior Recital,<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
? Feb. 6 Betsy Floyd, piano Senior Recital, 7:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
? 1 eb. 6-7 All-State High School Band Clinic<lb/>
(Eastern Division), All Day<lb/>
? Feb. 6 Wind Ensemble, Ja Ensemble Con-<lb/>
cert, 8:15 p.m Wright Auditorium<lb/>
? Feb. 7 High School Band Clinic Concert, 7:30<lb/>
p.m Wright Auditorium<lb/>
? Feb. 8 Antonia Dalapas, voice; Edward<lb/>
Glenn, voice; Duo Faculty Recital, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
? Feb. y Paul Tardif, piano; Faculty Recital,<lb/>
8:15 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
? Feb. 11 Phi Mu Alpha Musicale, 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
MliHl'LIFE<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
? rhursday, rHE YOUNG INVADERS<lb/>
? Friday, SNOW' w Sigma Phi Epsilon Happy<lb/>
Horn 3:30-7:10 p.m.<lb/>
? Saturday, SNOW<lb/>
? Sunday, THE X-RAVES<lb/>
? Tuesday, BUSTER BROWN<lb/>
? Wednesday, SUTTERS GOLD<lb/>
( arolma Oprv House<lb/>
? Thursday, NORTH STAR BAND<lb/>
? Friday, JOHNNY PAYCHECK &amp; NORTH<lb/>
STAR BAND<lb/>
? Saturday, NORTH STAR BAND<lb/>
? Wednesday, FOOTLOOSE<lb/>
C hapter X<lb/>
? Thursday, Pi Kappa Phi, "Evening Delight"<lb/>
7-10 p.m.<lb/>
? Friday, A Nu Pi "End of Week Party" 4-8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
? Saturday, Kappa Alpha "Nickel Nite"<lb/>
? Tuesday, Sigma Phi Epsilon "Ladies Night"<lb/>
? Wednesday, Sigma Nu "50,50 Night<lb/>
Elbow Room<lb/>
? Wednesday, Feb. 11 1st Annual Mens All<lb/>
Campus Arm Wrestling<lb/>
JJs Music Hall<lb/>
? Thursday, ALLEY CATS<lb/>
? Friday, BILLY PRICE<lb/>
? Saturday, ALAN HANDLEMAN'S NEW-<lb/>
WAVE PARTY<lb/>
? Sunday, TOYS<lb/>
? Wednesday, ALAN HANDLEMAN'S ROCK<lb/>
N' ROLL SPECIAL<lb/>
II you have anything you would like to see in<lb/>
Happenings, please send it to: Nancy Morris, The<lb/>
East Carolinian, East Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
GNC Quality al less than Cheapest Cut-Rate Mail Ordei Prices'<lb/>
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER ItEM PER CUSTOMER<lb/>
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Eiplres A a<lb/>
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The Best Pizza in Town (Honest)<lb/>
I se Our Convenient Hours All Of Your<lb/>
11:00-11:00<lb/>
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Drive-Up Window For<lb/>
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Favorite Beverages<lb/>
758-6121<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
South s No 6 rock Nightclub<lb/>
THURSDAY - 5th<lb/>
The Young Invaders<lb/>
Fri Sat t t<lb/>
and Fri. Afternoon Delight<lb/>
Sun- No Vacancy<lb/>
Tues 2nd Annual Mgrs<lb/>
Appreciation Night w Atlanta's<lb/>
Version of Jesse Bolt<lb/>
"Buster Brown"<lb/>
Flamingo Disco<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
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Tues. Feb. 10<lb/>
at The Attic<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
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1 mile<lb/>
on right<lb/>
Ladies'Sweaters Reg. $13.99 now $8.39<lb/>
Ladies' Jogging Tops &amp; Pants<lb/>
Reg. $18.98 NOW? I .39 each<lb/>
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Men's H.I.S. Corduroy Pants<lb/>
Reg. $21.95 NOW $13.17<lb/>
Men's Flannel Shirts<lb/>
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Reg. $6.99 NOW $4.19<lb/>
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MILL OUTLET CLOTHING<lb/>
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Open 9:30 5:30 ? 6 Days a Week Call 758-2433 Mastercharge and Visa Accepted<lb/>
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J for 1 st 15 words<lb/>
each additional word ? 5C<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS SOLD<lb/>
M-F 2:00-4:00<lb/>
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Corn Rakes<lb/>
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VALENTINE'S CARDS IN TOWN (NOT TO MENTION<lb/>
THE CUTEST, SWEETEST &amp; NEATEST)<lb/>
WE ALSO HAVE<lb/>
THE BEST ICE CREAM<lb/>
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HEART SHAPED COOKIES,<lb/>
AND BIGGEST HEART COLLECTION<lb/>
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I You are hereby invited to our VALEN<lb/>
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I heart (even a homemade one), and we'll<lb/>
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j TINE S DAY ICE CREAM CONE. Feb 14<lb/>
I<lb/>
2 4 p.m. FREE<lb/>
KING SANDWICH &amp; DELI<lb/>
OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK<lb/>
Now serving nightly specials for ECU students.<lb/>
Home cooked meals guaranteed to satisfy.<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Spaghetti<lb/>
French Bread<lb/>
Salad<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
&amp; drink<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Hamburger Steaks<lb/>
French Fries<lb/>
Slaw<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
&amp; drink<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
BBQ Chicken<lb/>
Potato Salad<lb/>
House Salad<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
&amp; drink<lb/>
Thursday ?<lb/>
Friday ?<lb/>
Vegatable Soup<lb/>
Ham &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Sand.<lb/>
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Shrimp Basket<lb/>
French Fries<lb/>
Cole Slaw<lb/>
$2.25<lb/>
$2.50<lb/>
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Check out these delicious specials<lb/>
Serving from 5:00 p.m9:00 p.m. MonFri.<lb/>
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Bj11 KI Istll M) IK<lb/>
 no<lb/>
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-<lb/>
v toi ? nevei<lb/>
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nng, some ol the top collegiette the perfect opporti I know<lb/>
teams. hav<lb/>
Ovei the past five years, MA has<lb/>
posted an incredible 195 37 record,<lb/>
AI<lb/>
a.ee.<lb/>
.i before losing 66 s<lb/>
ie 'VI ? I SO-81 lean<lb/>
e al .cast roui guys who have young man thai na ited in lasi<lb/>
inalFouroftheN AA year's ?<lb/>
tonne; II <lb/>
? winning rwo members of the current l Anothe. formei Final Koi<lb/>
squad combined with NBA stars former on the Rich Bi<lb/>
Sidney Moncrief (Milwaukee Bucks) ing, out of <lb/>
Mready this yeai the club has and Ron Brewei (Portland tutelage at Notre Da.<lb/>
aeteated Marquette and taken the rrailblazers) in leading Arkansas to<lb/>
top learn in the UP1 lop Iwentv two Southwestern Conferei a<lb/>
"? Oregan State, down to the wire 'h<lb/>
l <lb/>
?<lb/>
upst<lb/>
I he team has won II ol 12 games<lb/>
the lost to Oregan State and I tie twosome forwai<lb/>
ently stands 22-8. Delph and centei Steve Set<lb/>
People around here always say current!) AIA's two leadi<lb/>
? wanl to see some name people averaging 11.5 and II 7<lb/>
in Greenville Odom said. " l his is game, respectively.<lb/>
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V MAW<lb/>
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V<lb/>
I<lb/>
"B<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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7 ;<lb/>
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<lb/>
?<lb/>
:(<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
p<lb/>
druvi<lb/>
d we rea<lb/>
a win to improve ou<lb/>
lie toui nt. C onference<lb/>
ake o<lb/>
"Wei ?<lb/>
I re<lb/>
B<lb/>
 Pt'<lb/>
Jones looks for an outlet<lb/>
opponent defends. Jones and the<lb/>
gfi<lb/>
other members of the 18th-ranked team host<lb/>
arch-rival North Carolina tonight<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Us<lb/>
I<lb/>
la' ii, s<lb/>
.<lb/>
Cai ha;<lb/>
impressn .<lb/>
upsei<lb/>
victories ovei N<lb/>
and fennessee on .<lb/>
; I i Walls will<lb/>
ilis<lb/>
Pirates Go Past .500,<lb/>
Defeat Camels, 81-59<lb/>
e tens e<lb/>
u t ei<lb/>
ilchrisl<lb/>
Bill<lb/>
 hinlis<lb/>
VlER-<lb/>
McNair<lb/>
ine duc recoi u<lb/>
x in<lb/>
d red-hoi 62<lb/>
to aid in the<lb/>
. who shot<lb/>
fell to 7 12<lb/>
A Stingv Pirate defense allowed<lb/>
Campbell but six first hall held<lb/>
goals as ECU led at halftime<lb/>
41-24. I he Camels never led.<lb/>
C ampbell was hampered<lb/>
somewhat hv the absence ol<lb/>
ol center ronv Britto, who<lb/>
suffered a badlv spraigned ankle<lb/>
in a I uesdav. practice.<lb/>
Two ECU forwards, Gibson<lb/>
and Morris Hargrove, put Brit-<lb/>
to's absence to then advantage,<lb/>
pulling down a combined total of<lb/>
! 7 rebounds.<lb/>
1 he big lead ECT held<lb/>
throughout the game made it<lb/>
possible for head coach Dave<lb/>
Odom to clear his bench. Every<lb/>
Pirate in the game scored with the<lb/>
exception ol guard Greg Batson.<lb/>
Onlv, freshman guard Mike<lb/>
Fox tailed to play. The Raleigh<lb/>
native ivas not able to piav in his<lb/>
hometown due to an illness.<lb/>
?vitt; 14<lb/>
Watkins<lb/>
Gibson<lb/>
s<lb/>
Pirate Barn Wright Scores As Rill McNair I ooks On<lb/>
Gymnast Jackson Vet Amongst Youth<lb/>
B M( f MM mi Ws<lb/>
II V nlr<lb/>
Amonj ol new, young<lb/>
talent, veteran gymnasl Elizal<lb/>
1 ! ksoi i own.<lb/>
"Mice ad-<lb/>
h, is<lb/>
ECU'<lb/>
womei ' During<lb/>
has seen<lb/>
hands<lb/>
am men"<lb/>
mm<lb/>
a t<lb/>
the<lb/>
once, a<lb/>
ship change several time<lb/>
Despite all these changes. Jackson<lb/>
is still one ol the top all-around<lb/>
competitors foi the Pirate gym-<lb/>
nasts. "Elizabeth has kept up very<lb/>
well with all of the adjustments<lb/>
said coach Jon Rose. "She is grow-<lb/>
ing along with the program<lb/>
I he gymnastics program is<lb/>
definite!) growing. On this year's<lb/>
team are 7 freshmen, five oi them<lb/>
are from out of state. Most of the<lb/>
all-around competitors lor the team<lb/>
are freshmen, with the exception ol<lb/>
Jackson.<lb/>
" i he freshmen now compared to<lb/>
when I was a freshman are like night<lb/>
and day said Jackson. "They<lb/>
have a lot of potential<lb/>
The gymnastics program has also<lb/>
changed considerably over the last<lb/>
two years. According to Jackson,<lb/>
the program is much more serious<lb/>
and demanding on the gymnasts.<lb/>
When asked about the Pirate<lb/>
gymnastics team. Rose always<lb/>
speaks highly o Jackson. Scoring<lb/>
an average oi 29.(X) points per meet,<lb/>
she is one o the team's most consis-<lb/>
tent performers.<lb/>
"Elizabeth always rises to the oc-<lb/>
casion in meets said Rose. "You<lb/>
can usually count on her to hit foui<lb/>
out of four of her routines<lb/>
During Jackson's years at ECU,<lb/>
she has improved greatly. Her skill<lb/>
level has increased, with more dif-<lb/>
ficult tricks being added to her<lb/>
routines every year, helping her to<lb/>
keep up with the rising difficulty<lb/>
standards.<lb/>
Jackson's performances have also<lb/>
matured while at ECU. rhrough ex-<lb/>
perience, she has learned how to<lb/>
maintain hei composure during<lb/>
competition "High school competi<lb/>
tion is much different than college<lb/>
competition said Jackson.<lb/>
"Experience definitely makes the<lb/>
difference<lb/>
According to Rose, "l lizabeth is<lb/>
an excellent example of a college<lb/>
athlete ? dedicated, hard-working,<lb/>
enthusiastic ? a real leader<lb/>
-<lb/>
1 ven against<lb/>
Appalachian Si Sunday,<lb/>
ve-average<lb/>
1,200.<lb/>
"We're realh exc<lb/>
tar Hippo)<lb/>
a ? <lb/>
-tn.<lb/>
"It's<lb/>
p<lb/>
I<lb/>
"Hvei es<lb/>
it when a<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
again Thursdav <lb/>
Curtain<lb/>
Falls On<lb/>
Wrestling<lb/>
Inlet collegiate<lb/>
Minges Colise i<lb/>
ha<lb/>
xvn . w ei  ??? . Saturday<lb/>
on.<lb/>
vv ith the announcem the<lb/>
term <lb/>
wrestling progra<lb/>
Pirates' final home mai<lb/>
season becomes the Pira<lb/>
itch.<lb/>
1 out teams will be .<lb/>
in a round-robin tournament<lb/>
weekend: I CU, Virginia k<lb/>
Appalachian Sta SC. C<lb/>
tral<lb/>
Action begins m the Colise<lb/>
at noon and will continue until<lb/>
approximately 5 p m . or until all<lb/>
earns have played ea er.<lb/>
I c l coach Hachiro; ? .aid<lb/>
Wednesda) i . planned to<lb/>
wrestle Pirate Ail-American<lb/>
Hutch Revils in all three matches,<lb/>
Revils, 17-0 on the season, will<lb/>
be shooting foi his 20th win<lb/>
without a loss<lb/>
following the home tourney,<lb/>
the Pirates have several aw;<lb/>
meets to compete in before the<lb/>
wrestling program thai is so full<lb/>
in tradition draws to a close<lb/>
Dual meets with N.C. State<lb/>
and Old Dominion are scheduled<lb/>
tor later this month. The team<lb/>
will also compete in two more<lb/>
tournaments.<lb/>
I he Pirates are currentK 2-5 in<lb/>
dual meet competition.<lb/>
Revils and teammate James<lb/>
Ellison are strong candidates to<lb/>
compete in the national cham-<lb/>
pionships, to be held in<lb/>
Princeton, N.J. March 12-14<lb/>
<pb facs="00057317_0009"/><lb/>
IHI I AMAKOI IN! AN<lb/>
H BKI MO c. 19X1<lb/>
Wrestlers Seek<lb/>
Team As ECU<lb/>
Program Ends<lb/>
BMI1IMMI KKION<lb/>
M?t1 w ritei<lb/>
s,walking through the ;ii! doors neat the ol Ku klen Stadium, the ees is a large - awards and l-Cl hletic past.<lb/>
 siids, to sa !he least, bi<lb/>
? memories.<lb/>
troph case is e ac<lb/>
?I ?. I wrest l-<lb/>
awards are<lb/>
1 w inns as the<lb/>
MM I First Col<lb/>
 n in<lb/>
V ilies the N. ampions. ore trophies to<lb/>
il . ? this year,<lb/>
t i i I wi estling<lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
1 c I wrestl-w pi omising i d into vs in-?. .<lb/>
rs on<lb/>
?vill the<lb/>
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k Wei th the<lb/>
Ha. 0 ? . about ? l talent<lb/>
"l thmk since Coach Oishi is<lb/>
populai on the wrestling scene is a<lb/>
er important factor. His populari-<lb/>
ty is gome to help a whole lot of us<lb/>
find a school to attend<lb/>
last Carolina dominated the<lb/>
Southern Conference in wrestling<lb/>
foi five straight years, being con-<lb/>
ference champions from !) 1976.<lb/>
During these years the Pirates<lb/>
manhandled Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference teams while undei Coach<lb/>
John Welborn. I hose teams compil-<lb/>
ed a "4 S 3 record, which translates<lb/>
to a winning percentage ol .870.<lb/>
1 (. I wrestling was also ver suc-<lb/>
cessful under Coach Ed Steers, who<lb/>
followed Welborn and was responsi-<lb/>
? ? ebb and 1 eal bunging<lb/>
ents to Greem ille.<lb/>
"The reason I came to ECU<lb/>
is 1 eat. "was because oi the way<lb/>
Coach Steers recruited me. 1 really<lb/>
thought 1 C I had a good wrestling<lb/>
program, but when 1 got here he ac-<lb/>
cepted a job at the U.S. Military<lb/>
cademy. Coach Oishi is a real<lb/>
good coach, though, but with the<lb/>
situation the way it is. it nisi seems<lb/>
the whole program is being<lb/>
o erlooked<lb/>
Both young men said they had op-<lb/>
portunities to attend other schools<lb/>
in Pennsylvania, Ohio, West<lb/>
Virginia and Virginia, but were sold<lb/>
on 1 c I s wrestling tradition.<lb/>
"My brother was recruited by<lb/>
Welborne says Webb, who<lb/>
trestles at 142 pounds, "so I was<lb/>
familiar with how strong this pro-<lb/>
gram was. 1 aUo knew Coach Steers<lb/>
. because he coached at a college<lb/>
in my area<lb/>
1 ven though both wrestlers were<lb/>
ruited b Steei . they pointed out<lb/>
,vere told he would be leav-<lb/>
ing before thev enrolled at last<lb/>
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A dose defeat is no!<lb/>
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Natatorium. swimmei in Nancy<lb/>
Both teams losi close Hogshead. She is cur-<lb/>
meets to the Blue Devils rently fourth in the na<lb/>
last year and now have tion (Division I) in the<lb/>
revenge on their minds.<lb/>
I o make t he<lb/>
men's and women's challenge even greater,<lb/>
sunn meet with Duke at least foi the Lady<lb/>
University at 1 p.m. in Pirates, EC Li will be<lb/>
the Minges facing a "world-class<lb/>
2K) individual medley,<lb/>
fifth national in the<lb/>
100 bu and<lb/>
eighth in the country in<lb/>
the I0D individual<lb/>
medlev.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
ECU WRESTLING: Last action in Minges is set for<lb/>
Saturda. With the termination the younger Pirate team<lb/>
members are looking at possibility of transfer.<lb/>
"Sice gave me the option ol<lb/>
staving here or talking to some other<lb/>
coaches Webb recalled. " I had<lb/>
some other otters still available, but<lb/>
I decided to stav here and slick il<lb/>
out. 1 figured there was always a<lb/>
chance thai the wrestling program<lb/>
would be continued "<lb/>
1 eat summed up mam ol the<lb/>
team members" feelings. "1 really<lb/>
like 1 Cl and especially the area. I<lb/>
surely wish they would continue the<lb/>
wrestling program here<lb/>
1 hese voung men won't be able to<lb/>
follow m the footsteps ol formei<lb/>
greats Bill Hill and Phil Mueller al<lb/>
ECU, but perhaps they will be suc-<lb/>
cessful al othei sehooK.<lb/>
As for the ECU wrestling pro-<lb/>
gram, there will be no more matches<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum alter Saturday's<lb/>
encounter with VPI, Appalachian<lb/>
Mate and CI . I here will be<lb/>
memories, however; memories ol a<lb/>
wrestling program thai once achiev-<lb/>
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TO THE GYMNASTICS TEAM<lb/>
Best of luck in your etlor ts aqams'<lb/>
Longwood 120 or b<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS PHI KAP<lb/>
PA TAUS Here s to your 20th an<lb/>
nivei sity, Wed Feb 4 1981<lb/>
Special thanks to John Meyerhoft<lb/>
ECUS MOST OUTSTANDING<lb/>
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CONGRATULATIONS HAM<lb/>
MERHEADS Full steam ahead<lb/>
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