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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057322_0001"/>
Mt<lb/>
(Earnlmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. 43<lb/>
10 Panes<lb/>
Thursday, February 19, 1981<lb/>
(.reenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 10,(MM)<lb/>
Liquor By The Drink Vote<lb/>
Succeeds Easily In Greenville<lb/>
Liquor By The Drink<lb/>
Referendum Results<lb/>
Precincts For Against<lb/>
B lU IOl I INS<lb/>
Greenville votei decided b an<lb/>
overwhelming majority Tuesday to<lb/>
bung liquor h the dunk to the city.<lb/>
In the referendum approximate!)<lb/>
61.5 percent oi those voting were in<lb/>
favoi ol the sale oi mixed drinks.<lb/>
In ui il tabulations 4,148<lb/>
pie voted in favor of the<lb/>
measure, and 2.599 against. The<lb/>
Its will be certified today at 11<lb/>
he Pit) County Board oi<lb/>
1 he t it) Council, acting on a re<lb/>
 ireenville Restaurant<lb/>
 , decided las! November<lb/>
to allow the - ot Greenville to<lb/>
voie on ilie mattei<lb/>
A county-wide referendum on li-<lb/>
quor by the drink had failed in 1979.<lb/>
but Greenville met certain condi-<lb/>
tions that allowed it to decide the<lb/>
mattei separately.<lb/>
Turnout for the referendum was<lb/>
about 45 percent, according to the<lb/>
Board oi Elections, and seven of<lb/>
Greenville's nine precincts returned<lb/>
votes in favor.<lb/>
Greenville becomes the 27th<lb/>
municipality in the state since 1978<lb/>
to adopt the sale of mixed<lb/>
beverages.<lb/>
A heated campaign by groups on<lb/>
both sides oi the issue preceeded the<lb/>
referendum.<lb/>
The Greenville Restaurant<lb/>
Association, which favored the<lb/>
measure, and Concerned Citizens,<lb/>
which opposed it, conducted exten-<lb/>
sive advertising campaigns in the<lb/>
weeks before the referendum.<lb/>
Bob Sauter of the restaurant<lb/>
association said, "We thank the<lb/>
people oi Greenville for having the<lb/>
good sense to pass liquor by the<lb/>
drink. It is the best oi the possible<lb/>
alternatives<lb/>
Sauter predicted that the matter<lb/>
would be forgotten within two<lb/>
weeks. "It'll all be blown over by<lb/>
then he said.<lb/>
"I'm very disappointed that it<lb/>
passed said Frank Steinbeck, a<lb/>
member oi Concerned Citizens. "1<lb/>
tried to give the facts to the people<lb/>
in a clear and concise manner<lb/>
Steinbeck said that Concerned<lb/>
Citizens would monitor reactions to<lb/>
liquor by the drink and probably br-<lb/>
ing the matter before the City Coun-<lb/>
cil again in two years.<lb/>
As a result of the vote, only<lb/>
private clubs will have the option to<lb/>
continue brownbagging.<lb/>
Restaurants will be able to serve<lb/>
mixed drinks, but brownbaggmg<lb/>
will be ended in such establishments<lb/>
after April 30.<lb/>
All restaurants and clubs that cur-<lb/>
rently have brownbaggmg will be<lb/>
eligible to serve liquor by the drink.<lb/>
Most oi the downtown bars fre-<lb/>
quented by ECU students will not be<lb/>
affected by the change since they<lb/>
would have to become private clubs<lb/>
in order to serve mixed drinks.<lb/>
� �<lb/>
� � � �<lb/>
Greenville 137<lb/>
Greenville 3143<lb/>
Greenville 4<lb/>
Greenville 5<lb/>
Greenville 6<lb/>
Greenville 7<lb/>
Greenville 8<lb/>
Greenville 9<lb/>
GreenvillelO<lb/>
.189<lb/>
.997<lb/>
.270<lb/>
.735<lb/>
.803<lb/>
.530<lb/>
.444<lb/>
TOTAL4148<lb/>
� � �<lb/>
80<lb/>
118<lb/>
199<lb/>
598<lb/>
206<lb/>
534<lb/>
312<lb/>
341<lb/>
211<lb/>
2599<lb/>
Task Force To Study Possibility Of Coliseum<lb/>
B I 1 IM pooh<lb/>
suit V nli l<lb/>
big as a coliseum<lb/>
come true in (ireenville?<lb/>
( ount) commissioners, Green-<lb/>
ville icials, the Greenville<lb/>
rea (<lb/>
1 asi (<lb/>
he,<lb/>
ol Commerce and<lb/>
arolina administrators have<lb/>
sing and working toward<lb/>
coliseum a realitv for<lb/>
ail man<lb/>
Centei la<lb/>
we've had tor a<lb/>
aid Reid J Hoop<lb/>
the Cireenville Area<lb/>
sk Force and vicepresident<lb/>
Wachovia Bank and Trust Com-<lb/>
a 11 v .<lb/>
. i proposed coliseum would be<lb/>
big enough to host ice shows, con<lb/>
ventions, circuses, concerts and in-<lb/>
tercollegiate sports, especially men's<lb/>
and women's basketball. Hooper<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas Brewer ha,<lb/>
been a member oi the civic centei<lb/>
committee since coming to ECU.<lb/>
"East Carolina University of-<lb/>
ficials swayed the thinking oi the<lb/>
committee from a civic center to a<lb/>
coliseum type building he said.<lb/>
Brewer expressed hopes that the<lb/>
proposed coliseum would provide<lb/>
bigger and better facilities for inter-<lb/>
collegiate sports. "If we want to<lb/>
build our basketball program up, we<lb/>
need a new playing atmosphere<lb/>
said Brewer.<lb/>
"Minges and Memorial cannot<lb/>
provide for all the students' ac-<lb/>
tivities, mtramurals and instruc-<lb/>
tional needs<lb/>
He also mentioned that the new<lb/>
coliseum could be used tor Com-<lb/>
mencement in place oi Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium, which is susceptible to<lb/>
adverse weather conditions.<lb/>
Brewer stressed that the center<lb/>
would be an eastern regional center,<lb/>
not just one catering to Pitt County.<lb/>
He added that there is no such<lb/>
facility in eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
and the (ireenville area would be the<lb/>
most likely site for one because ot<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
The Pitt County Board of Com-<lb/>
missioners has asked the Mid-East<lb/>
Survey Shows 25 Percent Deficient<lb/>
Commission m Washington, N.C.<lb/>
for a Coastal Plains Regional Com-<lb/>
mission grant to help fund a studv<lb/>
to determine the .easibility ot con-<lb/>
structing a coliseum.<lb/>
A $45,000 grant is needed for the-<lb/>
study. The study will cover site<lb/>
analysis, projected atiendance for<lb/>
activities, design and presentation<lb/>
ot the building, financing needed<lb/>
tor construction and maintenance<lb/>
and economic impact.<lb/>
The economic impact on the<lb/>
Cireenville- community is the most<lb/>
important factor that will be ex-<lb/>
amined, according to Hooper.<lb/>
"The coliseum facility will hold<lb/>
conventions and attract new<lb/>
businesses to the Put County area<lb/>
Student Writing Problems Called Massive<lb/>
SHINGTON<lb/>
rwenty-fiv e percent ot<lb/>
students have massive<lb/>
problems according to the<lb/>
National Assessment of<lb/>
: al Progress writing surve)<lb/>
released last month.<lb/>
I he survev reports there has been<lb/>
no major improvements in writing<lb/>
skills in the last decade and writing<lb/>
skilK are stabiizing at this low level.<lb/>
I eii among students showing<lb/>
competence in writing. NAEP<lb/>
Director Rav Forbes said a decline<lb/>
m writing quality and analytical<lb/>
thinking was evident. "I feel very<lb/>
good about what's going on with the<lb/>
more basic skills, but I'm fearful<lb/>
we're educating a generation oi<lb/>
non-thinkers<lb/>
The results combined 900,000<lb/>
writing samples from the 1969-70,<lb/>
1973-74 and 1978-79 surveys oi<lb/>
students aged nine, 13 and 17.<lb/>
"This plateau of achievement is<lb/>
neither a validation oi current<lb/>
methods nor an auspicious omen for<lb/>
the future said Graham Down,<lb/>
Stockman Seeks To Reduce<lb/>
Aid To Education By 1982<lb/>
executive director of the Council for<lb/>
Basic Education. "I don't see many<lb/>
signs of excellence in the national<lb/>
assessment<lb/>
"The achievement of our students<lb/>
appears to be stabliing at a<lb/>
discouragingly low level just at a<lb/>
time when the prerequisites of<lb/>
literacy are increasing, both in<lb/>
number and complexity Down<lb/>
said. "What passes for functional<lb/>
literacy in 1981 will not suffice for<lb/>
the year 2001, when these students<lb/>
will be at the peak of their careers<lb/>
The assessment showed that<lb/>
students who wrote well "appeared<lb/>
to have had amore writing<lb/>
assignments in school Neither<lb/>
13-year-olds nor 17-year-olds<lb/>
receive much writing instruction in<lb/>
school, the report found.<lb/>
"What turns kids off to writing is<lb/>
the short-answer writing, not real<lb/>
writing said Charlotte Brooks,<lb/>
Washington, D.C. representative of<lb/>
the National Council oi Teachers of<lb/>
English. "Students are not given<lb/>
enough opportunity to write longer<lb/>
pieces and they fee penalized by-<lb/>
constant red marking of their com-<lb/>
position papers<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C.<lb/>
(C PS)�Making good on promises<lb/>
to try to re-structure and cut back<lb/>
on federal education programs, the<lb/>
Reagan administration wants to<lb/>
reduce its support for education by<lb/>
20 percent by 1982, and in the pro-<lb/>
cess sharply decrease financial aid to<lb/>
disadvantage, minority and<lb/>
middle-income students.<lb/>
Those are the highlights of budget<lb/>
recommendations made by the Of-<lb/>
fice of Management and Budget<lb/>
chief David Stockman in a con-<lb/>
fidential preview obtained by the<lb/>
Washington -Vast<lb/>
The preview, distributed to<lb/>
members ot congressional budget<lb/>
and appropriations committees, ad-<lb/>
vocates undoing much of the Middle<lb/>
Income Student Assistence Act�a<lb/>
measure that took the Carter ad-<lb/>
ministration two years to navigate<lb/>
through Congress�and replacing<lb/>
most college programs with two<lb/>
huge block grants.<lb/>
One legislator, Rep. Carl Perkins<lb/>
(D-Ky), chairman of the House<lb/>
Education-Labor committee, vowed<lb/>
to "use his last breath to defeat<lb/>
the budget cuts, says one of the con-<lb/>
gressman's aides.<lb/>
Specifically, Stockman wants to<lb/>
consolidate some 57 school aid pro-<lb/>
grams into two "block grants<lb/>
which would be given to state and<lb/>
local authorities with few strings at-<lb/>
tached. The local politicians could<lb/>
Virtually all the special aid pro-<lb/>
grams for low-income and minority<lb/>
students would be included in the<lb/>
block grants. Among the programs<lb/>
are $3 billion in Title 1 aid, $1 billion<lb/>
in handicapped student aid (which<lb/>
helps pay for making campuses ar-<lb/>
chitecturally accessible to disabled<lb/>
students), and money to help<lb/>
desegregation, bi-lingual education<lb/>
and school libraries programs.<lb/>
Millions of other students will be<lb/>
touched by Stockman's recom-<lb/>
mended cuts in Guaranteed Student<lb/>
Loan (GSL), National Direct Stu-<lb/>
dent Loan (NDSL) and Pell Grant<lb/>
(formerly Basic Educational Oppor-<lb/>
tunity Grants) financial aid funding.<lb/>
Under the Stockman plan, in<lb/>
which the government underwrites<lb/>
loans to students and parents at low<lb/>
interest rates, money would be pro-<lb/>
vided only after remaining sources<lb/>
of aid were accounted for in deter-<lb/>
mining a student's need.<lb/>
The government would also drop<lb/>
"in-school interest subsidies<lb/>
Under the current system, students<lb/>
repay back loans for tuition at nine<lb/>
percent interest rates, while the<lb/>
government pays the difference bet-<lb/>
ween nine percent and the regular<lb/>
interest rates banks charge other<lb/>
customers.<lb/>
If the Stockman plan is approved,<lb/>
students and parents will have to<lb/>
pay the regular market interest rates<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Hooper's enthusiasm was not on-<lb/>
I) for the welfare oi the city ot<lb/>
Greenville but tor ECU and it's<lb/>
students<lb/>
He telt that the Student Union<lb/>
would be able to book more popular<lb/>
concerts and speakers since the col-<lb/>
iseum would hold more people than<lb/>
Minges does.<lb/>
He slated that the coliseum<lb/>
should be a shared interest of<lb/>
Greenville citizens and ECU<lb/>
students. The activities at<lb/>
Mendenhall and Minges such as<lb/>
speakers, tree movies, concerts and<lb/>
sports have been as important to the<lb/>
citizens oi Greenville as to the<lb/>
students of ECU, according to<lb/>
Hooper.<lb/>
All the people involved in the<lb/>
civic center project want to expand<lb/>
what the university now titters,<lb/>
combine it with the city's needs and<lb/>
come up with something special, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"It's been a real love affair bet-<lb/>
ween this community and ECU he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Hooper expressed the importance<lb/>
oi ECU and its students to the city<lb/>
of Greenville and Pitt County. A<lb/>
coliseum would be "the icing on the<lb/>
cake Hooper surmised.<lb/>
Some people feel that Greenville<lb/>
can't afford the tax money for this<lb/>
type of project right now. Hooper<lb/>
said.<lb/>
A recent tax re-evaluation of the<lb/>
Greenville community has caused<lb/>
property values to rise, therefore<lb/>
raising taxes on many homes and<lb/>
farms.<lb/>
"It more money is needed tor the<lb/>
study, Pitt County is willing to pro-<lb/>
vide S5,000 'in kind Hooper said.<lb/>
"In kind he explained, "is pro-<lb/>
viding services toward the stud)<lb/>
would normall) cost a<lb/>
monev. Such in kind contributions<lb/>
would be office space. se<lb/>
help, etcetera, tor the res<lb/>
doing the studv while in Green-<lb/>
ville<lb/>
Once the Pitt Count) C ommis-<lb/>
sioners get the CPR( gram appi<lb/>
ed they will tlsk five or six com-<lb/>
panies to bid on it. rhe compan)<lb/>
best suited to carry out the study<lb/>
will he chosen, the studs should<lb/>
hem at the end ot March 01 earl)<lb/>
April, according to Hot<lb/>
I as! year, Hooper, Brc m<lb/>
ty commissioners and Greenville ci-<lb/>
ty officials went to the Mid I asl<lb/>
Commission in Washington, (<lb/>
to ask for a written grant request.<lb/>
They then went to the Econo<lb/>
Development Administration in<lb/>
Raleigh where the grant was approv-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
From there it was sent to Geoi<lb/>
for final approval and fund<lb/>
"Almost simultaneously, President<lb/>
Carter decided that the country was<lb/>
spending too much money, which<lb/>
meant many cutbacks<lb/>
Hooper. The grant request was<lb/>
denied.<lb/>
The community oi Greenville is<lb/>
behind the commissioners and are<lb/>
helping the task force any way thev<lb/>
can, said Hooper.<lb/>
He went on to say that everyone<lb/>
from Gov. Jim Hum. who ap-<lb/>
preciated the need oi a center in the<lb/>
eastern part oi the state, to the-<lb/>
county commissioners, Chamber oi<lb/>
Commerce and private citizens len-<lb/>
ding their support in various ways<lb/>
were conscious of a community<lb/>
need, the importance o ECl 's ac<lb/>
tivities and their combined expan<lb/>
sion and erowth.<lb/>
Gas Prices Rise Sharply<lb/>
Across North Carolina<lb/>
spend the education grants largely on the loans, which at this writing is<lb/>
as they saw fit. at about 20 percent.<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
The Long Goodbye<lb/>
.some students will do anything to avoid going to class<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (UPI) Gasoline<lb/>
prices in the Carolina increased<lb/>
nearly 10 cents a gallon in four<lb/>
weeks to an average oi $1.43 a<lb/>
gallon for unleaded full service, the<lb/>
Carolina Motor Club reported<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
In North Carolina, the average<lb/>
cost for a gallon of gas increased 9.5<lb/>
cents and in South Carolina the<lb/>
price jumped 9.6 cents.<lb/>
In a survey of 175 service stations,<lb/>
the club said unleaded full service<lb/>
gas in North Carolina was selling at<lb/>
an average price of $1.43 per gallon,<lb/>
and regular was selling for $1.38 per<lb/>
gallon. Prices in South Carolina<lb/>
were $1.45 cents for unleaded and<lb/>
$1.40 for regular.<lb/>
At $1.36 per gallon for unleaded<lb/>
and $1.30 for regular, self-service<lb/>
prices trail full-service prices an<lb/>
average of 7.2 cents a gallon in<lb/>
North Carolina. South Carolina<lb/>
self-service prices are an average of<lb/>
8.5 cents less at $1.37 for a gallon of<lb/>
unleaded and $1.31 for regular.<lb/>
Average increases for both<lb/>
unleaded and regular grades ranged<lb/>
from only 5.4 cents a gallon by Shell<lb/>
to over 11 cents a gallon by Texaco<lb/>
dealers. Shell's lower increases<lb/>
resulted in their having the lowest<lb/>
average prices for both regular and<lb/>
unleaded in the two states.<lb/>
Some station operators interview-<lb/>
ed by the club predicted gasoline<lb/>
will cost $1.60 per gallon by June.<lb/>
"Because oi all the publicity, 1<lb/>
think my customers have become<lb/>
accustomed to the increases, and<lb/>
believe it's just the way things ate<lb/>
said a Greenville, S.C Exxon<lb/>
dealer. "They don't seem to be buy-<lb/>
ing any less gas than they did<lb/>
before. By the first of June, prices<lb/>
will be about $1.60, and by<lb/>
December 31, thev'11 be around<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
Diesel fuel prices increased 9.9<lb/>
cents to $1.31 in North Carolina and<lb/>
4.8 cents to an average of $1.293 in<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
The highest price gasoline found<lb/>
in the survey was at a Durham full<lb/>
service station where unleaded was<lb/>
selling for $1.55 per gallon.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Classifieds7<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Letters4<lb/>
Sports g<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057322_0002"/><lb/>
Ill I M � KOl INI <lb/>
I I HKl K 1. 1 S I<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
�� is<lb/>
tot me T uesdav ssu i<lb/>
.if  , ' � , - � � �.<lb/>
rhesi i �<lb/>
ble spaci i I '�  �'�<lb/>
� � �<lb/>
ADVISOR<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
trie Ldtne, W Pittard Jr<lb/>
Mi �� i ial s holarship and the E<lb/>
�� 4. � Atcountiny<lb/>
. � , a be ,fA,rOed dor<lb/>
 � - i h si Molar<lb/>
 � , �. � approximately the<lb/>
�evdent<lb/>
pnl "J Oepar'men<lb/>
R3VS . 5 or the Finan<lb/>
� � . . application<lb/>
� ���,�� Ruttl Jones<lb/>
� n ot Si holar<lb/>
�� . i( counting<lb/>
itnei a<lb/>
SLAP<lb/>
�� �<lb/>
and<lb/>
n<lb/>
� � �<lb/>
BUSINESS MAJORS<lb/>
��Jed du'<lb/>
�o in ��<lb/>
'<lb/>
� � �<lb/>
ELECTION<lb/>
Anyone interested m running m<lb/>
SOULS election, contact<lb/>
Gracce Wells at 72 9802 or Eula<lb/>
Moore at 752 8981 The deadline is<lb/>
March 12 1981 The positions<lb/>
available are president, vice<lb/>
president secretary treasurer<lb/>
parliamentarian and historian<lb/>
SPEEDREADING<lb/>
Speed Reading a class for<lb/>
students and other persons in<lb/>
terested m reading more rapidly<lb/>
with increased comprehension<lb/>
will be ottered on Thursday even<lb/>
ings at East KCaroima Un.vers <lb/>
Feb 12 April 16<lb/>
' � . . lass will meet from ' t( 9<lb/>
p m Continuing Education units<lb/>
for partic ipa'mq professionals are<lb/>
available<lb/>
Further information ancl<lb/>
registration forms are available<lb/>
from the Office of Non Credit Pro<lb/>
grams Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education, ecu Greenville N C<lb/>
telephone 75' 6143<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY<lb/>
 photography ccw- a<lb/>
be offered on Tuesday evi<lb/>
East Carolina University II<lb/>
semester<lb/>
Camera " � I �'<lb/>
wiii meet Mai ' ��<lb/>
� Camera II meets Va-<lb/>
April 28 Class sess.ons<lb/>
. st.  v.i tor 7 9 p m on<lb/>
DUS<lb/>
Participants m each course<lb/>
shnu'd have their own � �<lb/>
preferal � 15 mill metei m � �<lb/>
formation anfl ran Irat i<lb/>
materials �r these ann other<lb/>
eveninq course offerings ar<lb/>
available trom the Office of N i<lb/>
Credit Programs Division of Con<lb/>
I ng Education ECU Gree<lb/>
. � tl � I I ne 757 6U3<lb/>
OFFICIATING<lb/>
S iening, classes m ott .<lb/>
all sottbai' and so. t<lb/>
SURF CLUB<lb/>
SWIMMING<lb/>
There W'll be a surt il<lb/>
meeting on Thursday Fel - -<lb/>
7 00 in rm 247 Mende .i1' ' '� 5<lb/>
meeting is mandato. lot all<lb/>
members Important I<lb/>
as the f lot da It ip wn be di!<lb/>
ed Be there<lb/>
PAUSE<lb/>
I on bW al ' (X B m ' �' ' ii '<lb/>
Union a I v. II�<lb/>
in us i<lb/>
� . . � ' <lb/>
: � � 11 mei<lb/>
El �<lb/>
b will be � ' � '<lb/>
at 6 00 p n<lb/>
��.��, ei s are i<lb/>
raged f<lb/>
UNITARIANS<lb/>
na Whtttey a Kacen � �<lb/>
. . � . . show a<lb/>
Africa a �- empha<lb/>
�<lb/>
arving Meet l beg<lb/>
 (he<lb/>
Room of I<lb/>
����<lb/>
TWIG FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
People leai i the I<lb/>
 ��<lb/>
�� . .<lb/>
help themselvi . �<lb/>
�-� ��<lb/>
A<lb/>
�<lb/>
v<lb/>
k rt<lb/>
2 4 F i � � 26 I<lb/>
AD TT<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
U N I T E D W A Y<lb/>
NAG I- WANTED<lb/>
N T E kNSH<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
MODEL UN<lb/>
ELECTIONS<lb/>
� ��<lb/>
for SGA pc<lb/>
I . .<lb/>
irea<lb/>
 Vi" �� �<lb/>
later n �<lb/>
p m<lb/>
V � 'ator,<lb/>
POETRY<lb/>
fry toi<lb/>
Fel - �� - �<lb/>
248 B<lb/>
FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
�<lb/>
RECITALS<lb/>
CO<lb/>
OYSTER BAR<lb/>
JTTTTTTT T T T Y TTTTTTT<lb/>
NO W OPES!<lb/>
TUTORS<lb/>
i<lb/>
CAREER CHOICE<lb/>
;arolina<lb/>
Qntt<lb/>
16 narch 3<lb/>
. � �. a � <lb/>
' pOSOnS vOicI<lb/>
��'��� pi eta'iOn, ta<lb/>
:ails � fnt<lb/>
r is John (0 � �<lb/>
"A (treat<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
federation ana founder ol It �<lb/>
envillc Soccer Club, will in<lb/>
struct the course<lb/>
Both classes w� He gned to be<lb/>
I only 1<lb/>
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Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Th.jrs Feb 19<lb/>
thru Sat Feb 21.1981<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057322_0003"/><lb/>
I HI I -SIAKOt 1NIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 19, 1981<lb/>
do<lb/>
 �<lb/>
o a<lb/>
I<lb/>
Leaks ' Welcome' Reagan To Washington<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(UP1) Welcome lo<lb/>
Washington. Mr Presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Only a month in of-<lb/>
fice, and Ronald<lb/>
Reagan is already<lb/>
somewhat annoyed at<lb/>
the published "leaks"<lb/>
about his programs<lb/>
"We get surprised at<lb/>
some o' the things we<lb/>
r e a d in t h e<lb/>
new spapers he<lb/>
recently told a coalition<lb/>
o conservative leaders.<lb/>
1 he seem t o<lb/>
always be looking foi<lb/>
splits m the tanks he<lb/>
said, but added thai tic<lb/>
was "happ and en-<lb/>
thused about the team<lb/>
he has brought together<lb/>
to fulfil! the primuses<lb/>
ot his presidenc.<lb/>
His complaints<lb/>
againsl the press conic<lb/>
with the tint, and those<lb/>
before him often left<lb/>
the White House with<lb/>
bitter sears. Soon after<lb/>
he took office, John<lb/>
Kenned) said, "Tin<lb/>
reading more and en-<lb/>
joying it less<lb/>
1 yndo n J o hnso n<lb/>
blamed the press often<lb/>
when reporters pin-<lb/>
pointed his credibility<lb/>
gap. Richard Nixon's<lb/>
problems with the press<lb/>
go back to the first year<lb/>
he ran for congress in<lb/>
the "40s. and they only<lb/>
grew worse through the<lb/>
eais.<lb/>
Gerald lord manag-<lb/>
ed to keep a<lb/>
philosophical Mew of<lb/>
the press, although his<lb/>
aides were mightil)<lb/>
unset over stories that<lb/>
he was accident prone,<lb/>
bumping his head.<lb/>
Jimmy Carter will<lb/>
tell his side ot the stor)<lb/>
in his million-dollar<lb/>
memoirs. But whenever<lb/>
he met with groups ol<lb/>
i si tmg editors, he<lb/>
complained about the<lb/>
W lute House press<lb/>
corps, which he said<lb/>
did not ask relevant<lb/>
questions. He held his<lb/>
last news conference in<lb/>
October 19K0, some<lb/>
three months before he<lb/>
left office.<lb/>
Reagan has held one<lb/>
full-dress news con-<lb/>
ference so far, and<lb/>
another is promised tor<lb/>
next week. But he also<lb/>
has had a couple of ses-<lb/>
sions with smaller<lb/>
groups of reporters.<lb/>
Before departing for<lb/>
California he hosted a<lb/>
break last briefing tor<lb/>
125 out-of-I o w n<lb/>
editors.<lb/>
Since assuming the<lb/>
p r e s i d e n c y, he is<lb/>
achiev ing what I B.I<lb/>
longed for: to be on the<lb/>
from page nearly every<lb/>
dav with a photograph<lb/>
showing hum at work<lb/>
or meeting with impor-<lb/>
tant leaders<lb/>
Reagan read- the<lb/>
Washington Post and<lb/>
the New York Times in<lb/>
the morning. Also on<lb/>
his desk every morning<lb/>
is a news summary<lb/>
prepared from<lb/>
newspapers and broad-<lb/>
casts the night before.<lb/>
Photographic oppor-<lb/>
tunities with Reagan,<lb/>
those two-or three-<lb/>
minute smiling ses-<lb/>
sions, abound. The<lb/>
cameramen have found<lb/>
a president who<lb/>
understands what<lb/>
they're about, who<lb/>
knows lighting and who<lb/>
has patience with them.<lb/>
But there is little or<lb/>
no give and take with<lb/>
the press, except on<lb/>
rare occasions.<lb/>
Reporters also are be-<lb/>
ing kept farther away<lb/>
from him, but still<lb/>
within shouting<lb/>
distance. The president<lb/>
is insulated, so much so<lb/>
that he asked his<lb/>
friend, Nevada Sen.<lb/>
Paul Laxalt, what was<lb/>
going on in the world<lb/>
outside the White<lb/>
House.<lb/>
Despite occasional<lb/>
leaks, the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration is keeping<lb/>
control of the direction<lb/>
of the news out of the<lb/>
While House. The<lb/>
press has focused on<lb/>
nothing but the presi-<lb/>
dent's economic<lb/>
package in the last four<lb/>
weeks, and in many<lb/>
more weeks if Reagan<lb/>
has his way.<lb/>
They have managed<lb/>
to do so by shunting<lb/>
other foreign policv<lb/>
subjects such as the<lb/>
Polish crisis, the civil<lb/>
strife in HI Salvador,<lb/>
the Iranian hostage<lb/>
agreement review, out<lb/>
of White House news<lb/>
briefings<lb/>
White House press<lb/>
secretarv Jim Bradv is<lb/>
Library Considers Extending Hours<lb/>
holding his own so far.<lb/>
A couple of times he<lb/>
has muddled through<lb/>
or come to a dead<lb/>
standstill when<lb/>
reporters knocked<lb/>
holes through his infor-<lb/>
mation, particularly on<lb/>
Reagan's tax pro-<lb/>
posals.<lb/>
But he gets by with a<lb/>
lot because of his<lb/>
geniality. "I've shot<lb/>
myself in the foot; 1<lb/>
don't want to blow my<lb/>
leg off he laughingly<lb/>
told reporters when<lb/>
they nailed him.<lb/>
Brady has access to<lb/>
Reagan and there is no<lb/>
question that the other<lb/>
top aides in the White<lb/>
House have programm-<lb/>
ed him on what he can<lb/>
and cannot say. But in<lb/>
terms ot the climate in<lb/>
the press room, there is<lb/>
none of the hostility ot<lb/>
some past administra-<lb/>
tions, and so far<lb/>
everyone seems to be<lb/>
feeling his way.<lb/>
The president, mean-<lb/>
time, is getting what is<lb/>
called m the trade "a<lb/>
good press<lb/>
�?'TW3-<lb/>
President Reagan<lb/>
Bv l)()l GQUEEN<lb/>
Staff W nlrr<lb/>
'The key word, the<lb/>
operative word, for an<lb/>
academic library is ac-<lb/>
cess -aid V) c e<lb/>
Brock rnann, head of<lb/>
the circulation depart-<lb/>
m e n t a I J o v n e r<lb/>
I ib<lb/>
Access was the topic<lb/>
ol a meeting Friday,<lb/>
among Dr. Eugene<lb/>
Brunelle, director of<lb/>
Joyner, Dr. Ruth Katz,<lb/>
associate director. Dee<lb/>
Brockmann, and Lester<lb/>
Nail. SGA Attorney<lb/>
Cieneral.<lb/>
Nail, familiarizing<lb/>
himseli with various<lb/>
campus institutions,<lb/>
vailed Brockmann re-<lb/>
questing information<lb/>
concerning a possible<lb/>
extension of library<lb/>
hours on the weekends.<lb/>
Brockmann arranged<lb/>
the meeting with the<lb/>
directors of the Hbrarv<lb/>
to discuss with Nail the<lb/>
mission of Joyner<lb/>
I ibrary w ithin the<lb/>
university structure.<lb/>
I he library ad-<lb/>
ministration, according<lb/>
to Rat, i very in-<lb/>
terested in extending<lb/>
hours of operation on<lb/>
the weekends to pro-<lb/>
vide the access<lb/>
necessarv for a growing<lb/>
educational institution.<lb/>
Brunelle has planned<lb/>
extensively for the<lb/>
hbrarv to assume a<lb/>
greater role in aiding<lb/>
scholarship on ECU'S<lb/>
campus, he said.<lb/>
The problem in im-<lb/>
plementing something<lb/>
relatively simple as an<lb/>
extension of hours,<lb/>
Katz explained, stems<lb/>
from a serious lack of<lb/>
funds.<lb/>
The libra r y h a s<lb/>
essentially the same<lb/>
budget year alter year,<lb/>
hut inflation has taken<lb/>
a devastating toll on the<lb/>
money allocated to<lb/>
hbrarv services. This<lb/>
means that there is less<lb/>
actual money for the<lb/>
regular services, hence<lb/>
the near impossibility<lb/>
of new, more efficient<lb/>
services being offered<lb/>
to the faculty and<lb/>
students of ECU in the<lb/>
fulure.<lb/>
Therefore, with less<lb/>
actual money t o<lb/>
operate with, it is dif-<lb/>
ficult to schedule staff<lb/>
members to cover addi-<lb/>
tional hours of opera-<lb/>
tion, Katz said.<lb/>
Brockmann explain-<lb/>
ed that the slate's hir-<lb/>
ing freeze has tem-<lb/>
porarily excluded the<lb/>
option of adding new<lb/>
staff members to super-<lb/>
vise the intended exten-<lb/>
sion of hours.<lb/>
Brunelle and kat<lb/>
agreed that it is in-<lb/>
convenient for the<lb/>
library to close at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. on Saturdays and<lb/>
open at 2:00 p.m. on<lb/>
Sundays. They<lb/>
therefore urge students<lb/>
interested in longer<lb/>
hours to make the<lb/>
chancellor and trustees<lb/>
aware that the desire<lb/>
for improved library<lb/>
services exists.<lb/>
The Fast C arolinian<lb/>
sum v<lb/>
Published every Tuesd�� ag<lb/>
Thursday ay ncj the academy<lb/>
yen and every Wednesday Our<lb/>
ing the s'j'imer<lb/>
Efls� Carolinian  the ot<lb/>
newspaper ot Easl<lb/>
Cao'ina Univer; �,<lb/>
: � � -td. and published for and<lb/>
by the students ot East Carolina<lb/>
Un . � �<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business 135 ��� m .<lb/>
All o" i?S -<lb/>
! class pos'age pa<lb/>
� N C<lb/>
T 'if E ast Caroiin.an oft � ��.<lb/>
i' ll " � Old Sou'h<lb/>
Building<lb/>
Telephone 757 6366. 637 630<lb/>
Chapel Hill Studies<lb/>
Curiculum Change<lb/>
JIMMY BUFFETT<lb/>
T-Shirt Winners<lb/>
STUDENT Ticket Numbers:<lb/>
Chapel Hill-il.P.)<lb/>
An addition to the<lb/>
�'Thornton Report" on<lb/>
the undergraduate<lb/>
curiculum allowing for<lb/>
e x e m p 11 o n f r o m<lb/>
uniform General Col-<lb/>
e requirements is the<lb/>
result ot a series of<lb/>
:ommendations b<lb/>
the administrative<lb/>
board- of the Cieneral<lb/>
College and the College<lb/>
of Arts and Sciences,<lb/>
I niversity of North<lb/>
Carolina. (The Com-<lb/>
mittee for<lb/>
He the<lb/>
highest paid<lb/>
lover up<lb/>
Beverfy Hills.<lb/>
He leaves<lb/>
women feeling<lb/>
more alive<lb/>
than they've<lb/>
everfeh<lb/>
before.<lb/>
Except one.<lb/>
Undergraduate c<lb/>
ricular Reform is<lb/>
chaired bv English pro-<lb/>
fessor Weldon Thorn-<lb/>
ton).<lb/>
The change would<lb/>
allow degree programs<lb/>
to petition tor a reduc-<lb/>
tion ot perspective re-<lb/>
quirements from nine<lb/>
courses to six. I he pro-<lb/>
posed curriculum<lb/>
would redd me science,<lb/>
humanities and fine<lb/>
arts requirements into<lb/>
perspectives<lb/>
categories.<lb/>
81110174<lb/>
337540650<lb/>
6767701053<lb/>
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FOR BOTH MiiN<lb/>
AND WOMk<lb/>
BY APPOINTMENT<lb/>
ONLY J52 u�55<lb/>
SHIRLEY'S<lb/>
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301 EVANS ST. MALL<lb/>
MINGESBLVD. SUITE 206<lb/>
NEW YORK RAVED IN 1979<lb/>
NOW IT'S COME TO GREENVILLE<lb/>
The East Carolina Playhouse Presents<lb/>
GETTING OUT<lb/>
by Marsha Norman<lb/>
"The Best Play of 1979"<lb/>
Studio Theatre<lb/>
8:15 p.m. - February 18-21, 23-25<lb/>
General Admission � $2.50<lb/>
ECUSfudenfs - $1.50<lb/>
For ficket reservations call 757-6390<lb/>
<lb/>
� T-Shirts must be claimed at �<lb/>
� �<lb/>
� the Central Ticket Office by �<lb/>
� 6:00 P.M. Friday. �<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
t.ST ;lKm�l UWVttVT'<lb/>
ABOUT 10�I VP TO<lb/>
PRIONANCY<lb/>
 176 oo ���� MMMr<lb/>
proanoftcy Wtt, Mrtf con<lb/>
�rol. MX) p�-oti�m prognon<lb/>
:y counowino For turthor<lb/>
iffor�n�tKo call �j 8SJ5<lb/>
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100 Itt-NMI bftwMn t<lb/>
A MS P.M wMtdirt<lb/>
ROlOtO Mr��0�'t<lb/>
HooffcOrtMMunon<lb/>
t� MM Morton if.<lb/>
He's coming to Mendenhall's Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
this Frida and Saturdav night at 5, 7:15, and<lb/>
9:30 P.M. Courtesy of Student I'nion Films<lb/>
jQm&amp;ujccut,<lb/>
1st Annual<lb/>
SIG-EP<lb/>
Shag Contest<lb/>
Over $300.00<lb/>
inCASH&amp; PRIZES<lb/>
Begins Thursday 26th<lb/>
Papa Katz<lb/>
Information at<lb/>
the Dorm<lb/>
CHAPS, INC.<lb/>
HWY. 258 NORTH<lb/>
KINSTON, N.C. 28501<lb/>
Eastern Carolinas<lb/>
Newest And Finest<lb/>
Private Club<lb/>
Fri Feb. 20th<lb/>
CATALINAS<lb/>
Sat Feb. 21st<lb/>
MAURICE WILLIAMS<lb/>
AND THE ZODIACS<lb/>
Sun Feb. 22nd<lb/>
CLIFFORD CURRY<lb/>
Wednesday Night's<lb/>
are Ladies' Night<lb/>
Members and<lb/>
Their Guests<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
Ail ABC Permits<lb/>
From<lb/>
5:00-7:00pm<lb/>
Be sure to see Jimmy Buffett in concert,<lb/>
February 21 at Minges Auditorium.<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057322_0004"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
(Hlje Eaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
CHRIS LICHOK. C.tnrral Manager<lb/>
JlMMY DuPREE, Managing Iditor<lb/>
Paul. Lincke. d�� ��� Paul Collins. r eon�<lb/>
Dave Severin, b � Charles Chandler v e<lb/>
Anita Lancaster. praAM mmi'<lb/>
David Norris, t,mur,stdnur<lb/>
February 18. 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Liquor Passes<lb/>
Despite Efforts Of Local Groups<lb/>
The days of the brown paper bag<lb/>
are finally over. Ther residents of<lb/>
Pitt County finally came out of the<lb/>
dark ages and approved the referen-<lb/>
dum tor liquor-by-the-drink on<lb/>
Tuesday, February 17, 1981, by a<lb/>
vote of 2 to I.<lb/>
The acceptance of this bill was a<lb/>
blow to the efforts of the local<lb/>
groups that, prior to the voting,<lb/>
spread the propaganda insinuating<lb/>
that liquor-by-the-drink would br-<lb/>
ing more chiid-abuse, prostitution,<lb/>
and other sordid evils to the area if<lb/>
it was approved. It was possibly this<lb/>
same group who had young children<lb/>
carrying signs with this message<lb/>
picketing outside the polls on Tues-<lb/>
day These kids, as young as<lb/>
elementary school age, could hardly<lb/>
be old enough to understand the<lb/>
meaning behind the referendum,<lb/>
much less picket against it.<lb/>
It is scandalous that these in-<lb/>
dividuals, some of them religious<lb/>
groups, would resort to using<lb/>
children to advocate their ridiculous<lb/>
and biased assumptions about the<lb/>
effects of this referendum. For-<lb/>
tunately, their scare tactics worked<lb/>
to no avail, and the sale of liquor-<lb/>
by-the-drink will soon take effect<lb/>
throughout the county.<lb/>
From now on it will no longer be<lb/>
necessary to carry an entire pint or<lb/>
fifth into the bars and restaurants in<lb/>
this area to have a couple of drinks.<lb/>
Instead, it will be possible to order a<lb/>
single mixed drink or glass of wine<lb/>
bv itself or with a meal.<lb/>
'Congratulations, Pitt County!<lb/>
Welcome to the Twentieth Century!<lb/>
Women's Basketball<lb/>
Displays Excellance<lb/>
Last evening's victory by the East<lb/>
Carolina women's basketball team<lb/>
over N.C. State marked a high point<lb/>
in the school's athletic year.<lb/>
The 95-87 triple overtime win<lb/>
came in a game that may go down as<lb/>
one of the best and most exciting in<lb/>
the history of women's collegiate<lb/>
basketbalf in North Carolina.<lb/>
The win could, and should, push<lb/>
the Lady Pirates back into the na-<lb/>
tional rankings come next week.<lb/>
ECU fans and students should feel<lb/>
proud.<lb/>
The 1980-81 Lady Pirates have<lb/>
become a symbol of how things can<lb/>
be. With all the apathy that has<lb/>
been present on campus concerning<lb/>
athletics, it is refreshing to know<lb/>
that a women's team has captured<lb/>
the hearts of the student body.<lb/>
The Lady Pirate phenomena is<lb/>
hard to explain. It came about,<lb/>
though, at a time when ECU most<lb/>
needed it.<lb/>
Remember the year's occurances<lb/>
in women's basketball well. They<lb/>
will be talked about for many a<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
rCampus Forum<lb/>
Topless Bars Doubted<lb/>
Recently, an advertisement supported<lb/>
by Mr. Van Dale Hudson and his Con-<lb/>
cerned Citizens Committee appeared in<lb/>
The Daily Reflector. Hudson and his<lb/>
committee printed the ad in protest of<lb/>
the controversial liquor-by-the-drink<lb/>
referendum. Although 1 have my opi-<lb/>
nions on the bill, this letter does not con-<lb/>
cern supporting or protesting the issue.<lb/>
It concerns a statement by the Concern-<lb/>
ed Citizens Committee.<lb/>
It seems that this coalition of Green-<lb/>
ville residents believe that if liquor-by-<lb/>
the-drink is passed, an abundance of<lb/>
topless establishments and social clubs<lb/>
will start taking over Greenville's<lb/>
nightlife. Granted, this might be a<lb/>
possibility. However, the ad went on to<lb/>
say, "With ECU located here, you can<lb/>
imagine how intense the effort will be to<lb/>
open these 'Private Clubs<lb/>
As a decent and hard-working student<lb/>
of the University, 1 resent this<lb/>
generalization. 1 personally have no<lb/>
desire to patronize a topless bar. That is<lb/>
not to say that some of the students will<lb/>
not patronize these clubs � some pro-<lb/>
bably will. But 1 dare say that many<lb/>
Greenville citizens will also go to places<lb/>
such as this. 1 feel that the majority of<lb/>
the ECU students are mature young<lb/>
adults who are here for a purpose � to<lb/>
get an education so that we, too, may<lb/>
have a chance to survive in the real<lb/>
world. Contrary to some people's belief,<lb/>
we are not here to drink, cause<lb/>
distrubances, and go to parties.<lb/>
By the time this letter is printed, the<lb/>
referendum will have already been voted<lb/>
on, yea or nay. But like it or not we the<lb/>
students of ECU are a part of your com-<lb/>
munity for at least nine months out of<lb/>
the year. And I am one student who is<lb/>
proud to stand up and say to Mr. Hud-<lb/>
son "Please treat us (the students) as<lb/>
adults and try not to generalize all<lb/>
students with stereotypes. After all, we<lb/>
are here to get an education so that we<lb/>
may better the world. We are not here to<lb/>
spend the night in bars and wreck your<lb/>
town<lb/>
Donald "Rusty" Rains<lb/>
Music Education<lb/>
CURSES FOILED AGAIN<lb/>
Capitalism Succeeds In USA<lb/>
Appropriations Changes<lb/>
This is an open letter to raise student<lb/>
interest and involvement in formulating<lb/>
the policies of the S.G.A. Several pro-<lb/>
posals to change the appropriations<lb/>
rules and policies will be coming up at<lb/>
next Monday's (Feb. 23) S.G.A.<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
When I was appointed as chairman of<lb/>
the appropriations committee earlier this<lb/>
year, things were in a state of disarray.<lb/>
No written guidelines were being used in<lb/>
determining the qualifications to be met<lb/>
for students and groups to be able to<lb/>
receive funds.<lb/>
Procedures to tentatively approve a<lb/>
group's budget in the spring need to be<lb/>
established. This would expedite final<lb/>
approval when the fall session of the<lb/>
legislature convenes. By setting up<lb/>
things this way groups can plan their ac-<lb/>
tivities further in advance which in turn<lb/>
will directly benefit students and their<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
Since the S.G.A. no longer controls<lb/>
the fees allocated to transit, and because<lb/>
the year was started with such a small<lb/>
amount of money in the S.G.A. general<lb/>
fund, money has been tight. The conser-<lb/>
vative nature of this year's legislature,<lb/>
along with some inexperience and<lb/>
sometimes poor judgement have also<lb/>
contributed to money problems. Not<lb/>
everyone who wanted money received<lb/>
any, and some of those who did were<lb/>
severly cut back. However, all of these<lb/>
factors have created an atmosphere of<lb/>
learning and have restored the S.G.A. to<lb/>
a sound fiscal basis. Therefore, No Fee<lb/>
Increase was requested by the S.G.A.<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Please join me in setting up some<lb/>
good policies and procedures to allocate<lb/>
your money by getting involved and<lb/>
voicing your opinion.<lb/>
BEN SINGLETON<lb/>
Chairman, S.G.A. Appropriations<lb/>
When shallow critics denounce the<lb/>
profit motive inherent in our system<lb/>
of private enterprise, they ignore the<lb/>
fact that this is the economic support<lb/>
of every right we possess, and that<lb/>
without it, all rights would soon<lb/>
disappear. Their conclusions em-<lb/>
phasize the results: more and more<lb/>
bureaus, more and more taxes, fewer<lb/>
and fewer producers, and finally<lb/>
financial collapse and the end oj<lb/>
freedom.<lb/>
�President Dwight D. Eisenhower<lb/>
Did the critics of the profit incentive<lb/>
save millions of American women from<lb/>
back-breaking work by inventing the<lb/>
vacuum cleaner and washing machine�or<lb/>
was it the businessman looking for a pro-<lb/>
fit?<lb/>
Did union bosses create modern life-<lb/>
giving drugs, or was it the shrewd man<lb/>
looking for a profit?<lb/>
Is it government bureaucracy or profit<lb/>
seekers who generate the millions of jobs<lb/>
in America paying the highest wages in the<lb/>
world?<lb/>
Was it the welfare state or men who<lb/>
wanted to become millionaires who<lb/>
developed the automobile and the hun-<lb/>
dreds of thousands of jobs that followed?<lb/>
When those who criticize and attack<lb/>
profit and prosperity can equal this record<lb/>
for their country, it will be time to listen to<lb/>
them. But not until.<lb/>
"Profit" and "incentive" are not dirty<lb/>
I words. This great nation and our un-<lb/>
paralleled standard of living are the result<lb/>
.of one, and only one motive, profit.<lb/>
Perhaps the most important economic<lb/>
theory to understand is: "there's no such<lb/>
thing as a free lunch If you want to<lb/>
dance you have to pay the band.<lb/>
Capitalism is one of the great bulwarks<lb/>
of a free society such as ours. If Russia<lb/>
could buy our free enterprise system and<lb/>
adhere to the profit motive, they wouldn't<lb/>
Robert ML<lb/>
Swaim<lb/>
<lb/>
have to buy our gram.<lb/>
When you are tree, the human desire to<lb/>
improve your lot and that ol your family<lb/>
shows itself. Io improve your own lot, you<lb/>
have to do something better than others do<lb/>
it. If you succeed, you benefit (make a pro-<lb/>
fit) and in the process you benefit the<lb/>
public as well. No wage is too high it the<lb/>
worker earns it.<lb/>
The Wealth oj Nations, written a few<lb/>
hundred years ago b Scottish economist<lb/>
Adam Smith, has proven over the years to<lb/>
be a brilliant economic philosophy. Smith<lb/>
was a strong advocate ol 1 aissez-Faire<lb/>
economics. He argued, quite correctly,<lb/>
that those individuals who seek to shower<lb/>
themselves with riches will inadvertently<lb/>
make prosperity tor their fellow men. I his<lb/>
theory is based on the assumption that all<lb/>
people have an innate desire to accumulate<lb/>
wealth and to prosper.<lb/>
Following this instinct, people will supp-<lb/>
ly whatever there is a demand for if they<lb/>
can further their goal o accumulating<lb/>
wealth; whether the demand be tor their<lb/>
labor or their wares and products. It they<lb/>
s you see. it is an endless cycle of pro-<lb/>
ductivity and prosperity for all who pro-<lb/>
duce.<lb/>
I his miracle known as capitalism is simply<lb/>
the result ol some "greedy" person who is<lb/>
hokme to izel rich<lb/>
 hat if nobody wanted to make a profit<lb/>
or accumulate any wealth More than like-<lb/>
ly we would still be living in caves and<lb/>
chasing animals around with sticks trying<lb/>
to get something to eat.<lb/>
Personally, 1 would rathet climb into my<lb/>
Mercedes, Irive to a posh restaurant, have<lb/>
in a d eai a S50 steak.<lb/>
 uldn't y<lb/>
I iv lei those who denounce profit and<lb/>
making a buck go to Russia where they<lb/>
belong. Only communists and their sym-<lb/>
pathizers oppose tree enterprise and our<lb/>
system thai allows an individual to sell his<lb/>
talents and the fruits ol his labor for his<lb/>
own betterment.<lb/>
1 say let every man have what he earns.<lb/>
It is no sin to prosper, rattier it is a sign o<lb/>
complishmenl and dignity.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The I as! Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authorls. Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages.<lb/>
are selling their labor, then obviously they double-spaced, or neatly printed.4ll let<lb/>
must produce something. What they pro<lb/>
duce will fulfill a demand and hopefully<lb/>
turn a profit for the business. In turn, thai<lb/>
profit will pay the wages o another<lb/>
worker. These wages will be spent on a<lb/>
variety of other goods and services.<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
days.<lb/>
Opinions Add To Newspapers<lb/>
ByFERRELGUiLLORY<lb/>
It would be possible, of course, to<lb/>
publish a standard American daily<lb/>
newspaper without an editorial page. But<lb/>
what kind of newspaper would it be then?<lb/>
Readers of this page sometimes write to<lb/>
tell us in no uncertain terms where we<lb/>
might go and what might be done witht he<lb/>
paper on which these words are written.<lb/>
Nevertheless, readers also regularly raise<lb/>
tough, but worthy, questions about the<lb/>
role and purpose of editorial pages, about<lb/>
how editorials come to be and about bias.<lb/>
Early American newspapers did not<lb/>
have editorial pages. In colonial times,<lb/>
pamphlet, rather than newspapers, were<lb/>
regarded as the proper medium for<lb/>
disseminating views on major issues.<lb/>
There were, to be sure, a few newspaper<lb/>
editorials, such as Benjamin Franklin's<lb/>
famous "JOIN, or DIE" editorial calling<lb/>
on the colonies in 1754 to unite. But much<lb/>
newspaper commentary came in the form<lb/>
of letters and essays sent to the editor.<lb/>
Sometimes, historian Frank Luther Mott<lb/>
has pointed out, editors wrote letters to<lb/>
their own newspapers, signed with fic-<lb/>
ticious names � that's a technique modern<lb/>
editors couldn't get away with.<lb/>
Both before and during the Revolution,<lb/>
American newspapers spiced their news<lb/>
reports with editorial comment. It was not<lb/>
until the late 1790s that editors, with Noah<lb/>
Webster among the leaders, began putting<lb/>
editoials under the name of the newspaper.<lb/>
And it was not until just before the Civil<lb/>
War that Horace Greely launched the prac-<lb/>
tice of an editorial page as a distinct<lb/>
department of the newspaper.<lb/>
Since then, it ahs been a fundamental<lb/>
precept of the traditional American daily<lb/>
to put news on the news pages and<lb/>
editorials on the editorial page. While let-<lb/>
ters to the ediotr have long been a feature<lb/>
of American newspapers, the political col-<lb/>
umn in which someone expresses his<lb/>
own viewpoint, not necessarily that of the<lb/>
newspaper itself � is a relatively recent in-<lb/>
vention, growing out to signed articles bv<lb/>
Washington correspondents in the second<lb/>
decade of this century.<lb/>
If editorial pages were to disappear,<lb/>
readers would undoubtedly search for<lb/>
what were called in the London In-<lb/>
telligencer in 1633 "conveinient Hints and<lb/>
Touches" within the news columns. There<lb/>
would be reading between the lines and<lb/>
suspicions about where an editor was<lb/>
leading his readers.<lb/>
Thus, in a sense, an editorial page is the<lb/>
place where a newspaper bares its soul to<lb/>
its readers. As an institution in a communi-<lb/>
ty, a newspaper has a certain responsibility<lb/>
for community leadership � and the<lb/>
editorial page is the vehicle for the exercise<lb/>
of community leadership.<lb/>
Given the history an that framework, it<lb/>
becomes easier to understand why<lb/>
editorials are not signed in most<lb/>
newspapers. A signed editorial becomes<lb/>
one person's opinion. An unsigned<lb/>
editorial is the institution's voice. On this<lb/>
newspaper, editorials, while usually writ-<lb/>
ten by one person, often reflect the think-<lb/>
ing of several persons, editors and writers,<lb/>
who meet daily to debate issues and who<lb/>
read each other's copy. In any case, the<lb/>
persons ultimately accountable are 'isted in<lb/>
the box in the upper left cornet of this<lb/>
page.<lb/>
Since editorials are expressions ol opi-<lb/>
nion, it necessarily follows that they aie in<lb/>
effect "biased thai choices have to be<lb/>
made, some people and their actions prais-<lb/>
ed. some criticized, some supported, some<lb/>
opposed. There is debate among<lb/>
newspaper people about whether editorial<lb/>
pages should endorse candidates. But most<lb/>
do, as part ol their community leadership<lb/>
function, and thai means they make a case<lb/>
for the candidates of their preference and<lb/>
against their opponents.<lb/>
Of course, newspaper editorials are try-<lb/>
ing to exert influence. But even a<lb/>
newspaper like this one, with a tradition of<lb/>
stating its opinion forcefully, understands<lb/>
thai it is nearly impossible to eommard<lb/>
people how to think.<lb/>
Nevertheless, strong editorials can serve<lb/>
both those who agree and those who<lb/>
disagree. Opinions neither challenged nor<lb/>
nourished grow flabby. Strong editorials,<lb/>
bolstered by sound research, ought to<lb/>
cause a reader to examine his or her own<lb/>
thoughts.<lb/>
Few modern editorials match the one<lb/>
Herb O'Keef, a wise man and the former<lb/>
editor of The Raleigh Times, cites as the<lb/>
work of one of history's first editorial<lb/>
writers. In the Old Testament, Nathan ex-<lb/>
coriates David for killing Uriah the Hittite<lb/>
and taking Uriah's wife. David immediate-<lb/>
iv confesses that "1 have sinned against the<lb/>
Lord Seldom do editorials thunder like<lb/>
Nathan's or get that kind of quick<lb/>
response.<lb/>
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1 HI I s i H) s<lb/>
Features<lb/>
1 HKt H is 1981 Pace <lb/>
Black Arts Festival<lb/>
Starting Next Week<lb/>
Margarita Man Returns<lb/>
A Black Arts Festival, featuring<lb/>
the arts, culture and cookery oi<lb/>
American black people, will be held<lb/>
at East Carolina University Feb.<lb/>
22-28.<lb/>
I he week's events begin with a<lb/>
"soul food" dinner in the campus'<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center Feb. 22 at 2 p.m.<lb/>
An illustrated lecture, "The<lb/>
Plight of the Black Artist will be<lb/>
presented by ECU School ol Art<lb/>
faculty member Clarence Morgan<lb/>
Feb. 2 at 8 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
"A Man Called Adam a film<lb/>
exploring the world o the black jazz<lb/>
musician, will be screened at 8 p.m<lb/>
I eb. 24, in the Student Center. The<lb/>
film stars Sammy Davis Jr Louis<lb/>
Armstrong, Cicely Tyson, Frank<lb/>
Sinatra and Ossie Da, is.<lb/>
A variety ol talent�ranging from<lb/>
comedy to dramatic readings �will<lb/>
be presented in a cabaret perfor-<lb/>
mance in the Student Center Cof-<lb/>
feehouse Feb. 25 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Yolanda King, daughter of the<lb/>
late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr will<lb/>
appeal in ECU's Hendrix Iheatre<lb/>
Feb. 26 in an 8 p.m. dramatic lec-<lb/>
ture. "Black rheatre: Moving Us<lb/>
Higher<lb/>
Scheduled for Feb. 2" is a musical<lb/>
production, "A History o Music in<lb/>
the Black Church 1 he program,<lb/>
to begin at 8 p.m. in the Student<lb/>
Center, is written and narrated by<lb/>
Ronald Maxwell, president elect ol<lb/>
the 1 Cl Student Union and a stu-<lb/>
dent in the be U School o Music.<lb/>
Yolanda King, daughter of the late Dr. Martin I uther King. Jr will ap-<lb/>
pear in Hendrix Theatre on Thursday, February 26 at 8 p.m. M King is<lb/>
scheduled to give a dramatic lecture entitled "Black Theatre: Moving Us<lb/>
Higher The lecture is part of the Annual Black Arts Festival slated to<lb/>
run from February 22-28. The festiviT is sponsored by the Student Union<lb/>
Minority Arts Committee.<lb/>
A capacity crowd is expected for the Jimmy Buffet! concert this Saturdav at 8:00 p.m. in Miages Coliseum Student M axwe11 ls tne son o1 John R<lb/>
tickets are S6.50 and will be available in the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall until 5:00 p.m. Saturdav All Maxwell �' 3159 Dawnshire Ave<lb/>
tickets at the door will be $8.50. c harlotic.<lb/>
Che production will trace the<lb/>
music ol American black cl<lb/>
from the slave spiritual to contem-<lb/>
porary gospel songs. Performing<lb/>
will be the EC! Gospel 1 nsemble.<lb/>
Concluding the festival is a Feb.<lb/>
28 dance in Wright Auditorium with<lb/>
"The Third Generation<lb/>
d<lb/>
rickets to all events ma) be pur-<lb/>
chased at the door or in advance at<lb/>
the I Cl Central Ticket Office.<lb/>
Morgan art lecture, the jazz film<lb/>
and the church music program are<lb/>
open to the public tree of charge.<lb/>
Some Variations On The Hot Dog<lb/>
Some<lb/>
unusually great appea liege<lb/>
students. Such foods usually, have at<lb/>
least two things in common:<lb/>
cheapness and convenience. Peanut<lb/>
butter falls into this category. So<lb/>
does lunch mea loes jusi at<lb/>
every kind ol canned food known to<lb/>
man. Probably one of the mosl<lb/>
popular cheap convenience foods is<lb/>
the great American hoi dog. I know<lb/>
of one fellow who. after having<lb/>
been given a hot dog cooker foi<lb/>
Christmas, lived mi them for no less<lb/>
than three months.<lb/>
At some point, though, it you eal<lb/>
a lot of hot dogs, you're bound to<lb/>
get sick to death ol them. There's<lb/>
only so much you can do with a hot<lb/>
dog, right?<lb/>
Not so. A hot dog is good tor a<lb/>
lot more than being slapped between<lb/>
two slices of bread or a bun and<lb/>
covered with catsup and mustard.<lb/>
Let's consider the creative<lb/>
possibilities of hot dogs.<lb/>
I o begin with, there is more than<lb/>
to cook hot dogs. ou may<lb/>
be lot lunate enough to have a hot<lb/>
�ker, one of those cute little<lb/>
appliances designed with college<lb/>
students in mind. It not, you have<lb/>
several options. You can boil hot<lb/>
ting them out in cold<lb/>
watet is best, and letting them boil<lb/>
foi live minutes or so�or fry, bake<lb/>
or boil them until lightly browned.<lb/>
You can cook them whole, or cut<lb/>
them up. As far as the best kind<lb/>
ii hot dogs to buy goes, your money<lb/>
and taste preferences are about the<lb/>
only factors that must influence<lb/>
youi decision. If you're between<lb/>
eighteen and twenty-two, chances<lb/>
are you've eaten enough hot dogs m<lb/>
your life to know what you like. If<lb/>
you've never tried chicken dogs,<lb/>
though, I feel you should give them<lb/>
a chance. Several well-known com-<lb/>
panies make them, and the price is a<lb/>
lol easier on the wallet than, say. all<lb/>
beef hot does.<lb/>
lJlWlMHIl I' "��'<lb/>
So you've got your hot dogs and<lb/>
you're ready to cook them. But you<lb/>
don't want to just envelope them in<lb/>
bread. What do you do with them?<lb/>
Here are some suggestions.<lb/>
HOT DOG PIZZAS (Serves 4 to<lb/>
8). You'll need: 8 hot dogs, 8 hot<lb/>
dog rolls, butter or margarine, one<lb/>
half pound mozzarella cheese (or<lb/>
any kind you can afford!), 1 cup<lb/>
canned tomato sauce, canned<lb/>
Parmesan cheese. Split the rolls and<lb/>
spread them with butter. Toast<lb/>
lightly before placing a strip of<lb/>
cheese on each roll. Split hot dogs<lb/>
lengthwise and place half a hot dog<lb/>
on each half o roll. Top each with a<lb/>
tablespoon of tomato sauce and a<lb/>
short strip of cheese. Sprinkle with<lb/>
Parmesan cheese and broil until the<lb/>
cheese melts.<lb/>
POLYNESIAN BARBEC I I<lb/>
(Serves 4). You'll need: 8 hot dogs,<lb/>
1 (10 ounce) can of crushed pineap-<lb/>
ple, 8 slices of bacon, toothpicks.<lb/>
Slice the hoi dogs lengthwise to<lb/>
form a pocket. Fill the pocket with<lb/>
drained pineapple. Wrap a slice of<lb/>
bacon around each hot dog and<lb/>
secure the ends with toothpicks.<lb/>
You can barbecue these over<lb/>
medium heat in a hand grill, if you<lb/>
have one, or broil them, hither way,<lb/>
turn frequently and cook until the<lb/>
bacon is crisp.<lb/>
HOT DOC, NUTTY FRITTERS<lb/>
(Serves 4). You'll need: 8 hot dogs,<lb/>
8 tablespoons o peanut butter, 8<lb/>
strips of bacon, 8 toasted hot dog<lb/>
rolls. Slit the hot dogs lengthwise to<lb/>
form a pocket. Fill pockets with a<lb/>
level tablespoon of peanut butter.<lb/>
Richard Gere Starring In<lb/>
Free Flick 'American Gigolo'<lb/>
This Friday and Saturday night in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's W-n<lb/>
drix Theatre, the Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee will present the<lb/>
film "American Gigolo" at 5, 7:15,<lb/>
and 9:30 p.m. Admission is by ID<lb/>
and Activity Card or MSC Member-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
Life grows ever more com-<lb/>
plicated. Now it seems that, the old<lb/>
song notwithstanding, it is impossi-<lb/>
ble to be just a gigolo. This curious<lb/>
little movie actually persuades one<lb/>
to believe that male hustlers have<lb/>
feelings, problems and pain just like<lb/>
everyone else. That is no small feat,<lb/>
considering the attitudes one tends<lb/>
to bring to an examination of a<lb/>
gigolo's life and hard times.<lb/>
Julian (Richard Gere) makes his<lb/>
living in the nicer precincts of bos<lb/>
Angeles by providing sexual services<lb/>
to well-off middle-aged ladies. He is<lb/>
pretty, smartly dressed and inar-<lb/>
ticulate when any serious subject<lb/>
comes up; yet one can understand<lb/>
what a neglected wife might see in<lb/>
him.<lb/>
His power with women derives<lb/>
not from being aggressively male<lb/>
Richard Gere<lb/>
but from being ingratiatingly sweet.<lb/>
He is good at his work and is suffi-<lb/>
ciently self-aware to understand that<lb/>
his exceptional talent is ultimately<lb/>
self-defeating: he can give pleasure<lb/>
but never receive it.<lb/>
Indeed, the film's major<lb/>
psychological twist occurs when<lb/>
Julian discovers his capacity to<lb/>
believe in and accept the love of a<lb/>
decent woman (Lauren Hutton).<lb/>
The passages between Gere and<lb/>
Hutton � thanks largely to the lat-<lb/>
ter's open and vulnerable playing �<lb/>
are the most affecting in the film.<lb/>
She actually convinces one of her<lb/>
passion, despite its unlikely"<lb/>
sociological grounding. There are<lb/>
moments when American Gigolo<lb/>
looks as if it might develop into a<lb/>
sober Shampoo.<lb/>
Paul Schrader is an earnest film-<lb/>
maker (he directed "Blue Collar"<lb/>
and wrote the screenplay for Martin<lb/>
Scorsese's "Taxi Driver"), but<lb/>
"American Gigolo" gives the im-<lb/>
pression that he was distracted by<lb/>
the looks of things in the picture and<lb/>
allowed himself and his audience to<lb/>
become tourists of these expensive<lb/>
places and people.<lb/>
Perhaps sensing the absence of<lb/>
anything serious or moving at the<lb/>
end of the road, he more or less gave<lb/>
up on the search for Julian's soul,<lb/>
and instead involved his hero in a<lb/>
sadomasochistic murder, a silly<lb/>
frameup, and a brutal accidental<lb/>
See RICHARD, page 6, col. 1<lb/>
Illusionist Andre Kole will perform in the Hendrix Theatre on Monday,<lb/>
Feb. 23 at 8:00 p.m. Tickets are $4 per person, with discounts for groups of<lb/>
ten or more.<lb/>
Wrap each hot dog with a strip of<lb/>
bacon, securing ends with<lb/>
toothpicks. Starting with the split<lb/>
side down, you can grill them over<lb/>
hot coals (if you have a grill) or<lb/>
broil. Litticr way, cook until the<lb/>
bacon is crisp. Serve in hot don<lb/>
rolls.<lb/>
If you don't like to go to a lot o<lb/>
rouble, but still want to do<lb/>
something a little different with<lb/>
your hot dogs, try the following:<lb/>
Cut one to eight hot dogs<lb/>
(depending on how many people<lb/>
you're serving) into approximately<lb/>
o'c inch sections. Cook in a skillet<lb/>
or pot over medium heat, using a<lb/>
small amount of butter or cooking<lb/>
oil, until lightly browned. Then add<lb/>
one can of baked beans or one can<lb/>
o spaghetti and heat until hot<lb/>
throughout. Or you can add the hot<lb/>
dog slices, with a little sauteed<lb/>
onion, to macaroni and cheese.<lb/>
Magician<lb/>
Andre Kole<lb/>
To Perform<lb/>
Illusionist Andre Kole, the<lb/>
"magician's magician will display-<lb/>
some of his unique and elaborate ef-<lb/>
fects at East Carolina University<lb/>
Monday, Feb. 23.<lb/>
Kole's performance, set for 8<lb/>
p.m. in Hendrix Theatre, is spon-<lb/>
sored by the ECU Campus Crusade<lb/>
for Christ. Tickets are $4 per person<lb/>
with discounts offered for groups of<lb/>
10 or more and are available each<lb/>
weekday from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m.<lb/>
in a Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
booth.<lb/>
During a tour of the Phillipines,<lb/>
he investigated "psychic" surgeons<lb/>
and later testified in a U .S. Court on<lb/>
behalf of the Federal Trade Com-<lb/>
mission's efforts to halt psychic<lb/>
healers in this nation.<lb/>
The veteran of seven world tours,<lb/>
Kole has performed for more than<lb/>
70 million people in 73 countries. In<lb/>
his program, says Kole, there is "a<lb/>
fine line between fantasy and reali-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
"The world of illusion sometimes<lb/>
appears more real than the world of<lb/>
reality<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
4 S f �<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057322_0006"/><lb/>
I HI I AM C AROl 1NIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 1. 1981<lb/>
Richard Gere Stars In 'Gigolo'<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
killing: television-series<lb/>
stuff.<lb/>
Richard Gere is a con<lb/>
siderable actor, given<lb/>
the propei Kind of<lb/>
material, but in<lb/>
"American Gigolo" he<lb/>
has no place to go.<lb/>
literal!) and in our im<lb/>
agination.<lb/>
He and Lauren Hut-<lb/>
ion are so good-looking<lb/>
thai we stare at them<lb/>
blankly, without the<lb/>
distraction of accompa-<lb/>
nying thought, which is<lb/>
the way we are meant<lb/>
to look ai fashion<lb/>
models.<lb/>
Miss Hutton is a very<lb/>
famous model, ol<lb/>
course, and even as v.e<lb/>
want her to do well up<lb/>
there in her acting<lb/>
career, the slack movie<lb/>
loses us and ue gae in<lb/>
wonder at her<lb/>
beautifully distributed<lb/>
teeth, her splendid.<lb/>
ever so slightly crossed<lb/>
eyes, and her loose-<lb/>
wristed, laid-back,<lb/>
almost-ready-to-fall-<lb/>
down cool.<lb/>
Other actors � Hec-<lb/>
tor Elizondo, as a bald,<lb/>
reptilian, skinny detec-<lb/>
tive, and K. Callan, as<lb/>
a faded, sweet-faced<lb/>
customer of Julian's �<lb/>
are given better oppor-<lb/>
tunities for acting than<lb/>
the two stars, and make<lb/>
the most of them.<lb/>
Band Gives Concert<lb/>
1 he 53-member Sm<lb/>
phonic Band of the<lb/>
East C arolina I Iniversi-<lb/>
i School ol Music will<lb/>
perform in concert<lb/>
Sunday. Feb. 22. at<lb/>
8:1s p.m. in Wright<lb/>
uditorium.<lb/>
Conductor of the<lb/>
hand is Tom Goolsby<lb/>
of the ECU music<lb/>
ult . who also<lb/>
directs I Cl 's mar-<lb/>
i ng band, the<lb/>
"Marching Pirates<lb/>
The band's program<lb/>
includes K a I p h<lb/>
 a ug han W111 iam s'<lb/>
folk Song Suite<lb/>
(arrangements ol tradi-<lb/>
tional English folk<lb/>
tunes), Vincent Per-<lb/>
s i c h e 11 i ' s<lb/>
"Divertimento lor<lb/>
Band "Elegy" b<lb/>
John Barnes Chance,<lb/>
and Ciail Kubick's<lb/>
" S t e w b a 11: Three<lb/>
Variations on an<lb/>
American Folk Tune<lb/>
lo r<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Earpiercing!<lb/>
w purchase ol our<lb/>
pierced earrings available<lb/>
in white or yellow' tor<lb/>
$5.00 plus tax.<lb/>
264 Bypass West<lb/>
Hrs. I0am-6pm MonSat.<lb/>
CATALOG<lb/>
SHOWROOM<lb/>
Farmville<lb/>
Sorry!<lb/>
We Missed Our Target!<lb/>
The BUCCANEER Staff would like to apologise for any in-<lb/>
convenience caused by the sudden location change. Please<lb/>
remember that this is your last chance to have your yearbook<lb/>
portrait made!<lb/>
Traditional poses will be taken free off sitting fee charge. A<lb/>
contemporary pose package( 34 length, profiles close-ups, etc.)<lb/>
will be taken for a sitting fee charge of S3.00. All seniors having<lb/>
their portraits made will have their 1981 yearbook delivered<lb/>
free of charge.<lb/>
Buccaneer Office Feb. 16-20<lb/>
Publications Center 10am-5pm<lb/>
He s the highest paid<lb/>
lover in Beverly Hills.<lb/>
neral Nutrition Centers!<lb/>
GNC<lb/>
America's Best Nutrition Values are at GNC-Over 800 Stores from Coast to Coast<lb/>
I VITAMIN!<lb/>
i BULGUR<lb/>
WHEAT<lb/>
TMOMPSO<lb/>
RAISINS<lb/>
$119<lb/>
i��S Hi' xt<lb/>
HONEY VTTAMIN<lb/>
$199<lb/>
 I 100<lb/>
GNC Quality at less than Cheapest Cut Rate Mail Order Prices!<lb/>
iTf MS �! ; . 'UlN W�l t lM"f I 1 fi ONI I At M I'l R C 11 " Mt H Wll M f OUP'JNi S. <lb/>
AND HE'S COMING<lb/>
THIS WEEKEND<lb/>
IIDOLOMITI<lb/>
i I TABLETS<lb/>
Ginseng '<lb/>
s- 39C4P �i?irs39c.<lb/>
tn eipre 21 �i i5(a etpints i r firav Btt'PiRfs i 21 01 i<lb/>
BENNIES<lb/>
CITCO<lb/>
WRECKER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Front End<lb/>
Alignment<lb/>
All Types of<lb/>
Auto Repair<lb/>
ForeIgn A Domottiv<lb/>
Reasonable Rates<lb/>
2900 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Phone 7M-4224<lb/>
urmat<lb/>
im<lb/>
IIIPiRCS 1 2' ��!<lb/>
Prewer'<lb/>
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� E SPIRES 1 l�H<lb/>
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rviAaHtin'iil'UMt<lb/>
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Diet Plan i<lb/>
snt�wi J<lb/>
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J<lb/>
Vitamin 1<lb/>
69<lb/>
B-1 2 muh<lb/>
sm$139<lb/>
Im<lb/>
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SUKR GARLIC 2O80<lb/>
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� 170 mW 100<lb/>
Save Money on Old Fashioned Budget Stretching Favorites!<lb/>
� MM. �! 1 I (UPON PBlf f UMIlin IO ONI l(M I'l H IISIOMIU WilH (OlIfON.S.<lb/>
WHOLE WHE�T<lb/>
Macaroni a<lb/>
I Cheese Dinner!<lb/>
ZINC 2O50<lb/>
'itnii iom��<lb/>
yrrAMiNB-12 2720<lb/>
Till US M) "�ce. JW-tt't ��<lb/>
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OLD f�H0�tlD<lb/>
GRANOLAf DAtES "oats' Soybeans<lb/>
39c<lb/>
n.(Uwi�si��<lb/>
sw oaataa i� i i"i<lb/>
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MEDIUM<lb/>
PRUNES<lb/>
11<lb/>
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FLOUR<lb/>
49� �!S<lb/>
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UNTU<lb/>
9<lb/>
I 1 . ft II K 1 I I W1 1<lb/>
ciPtRtsi 21 mrtlttn�P'M� m nwjfct e�p�t� ir n ng<lb/>
SAVE MONEY OM NATURAL HEALTH SPECIALS<lb/>
"POTATO CORK U<lb/>
YOGURT juices chips<lb/>
H FR<lb/>
loz. Each<lb/>
II<lb/>
7 cu. Each g'g 1 oz. Each k�'<lb/>
I<lb/>
10110110<lb/>
EXPIRES H1-l1�rEX�IWCS 1-21 �1 vStEXPIRES 3-21 81 �<lb/>
iElR�t 1 21 HI<lb/>
Ft cw<lb/>
I EIMRCt 1-11 (1 �<lb/>
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ALMONDS<lb/>
I 6 oz.<lb/>
IflPlRtS21 �1 I<lb/>
6 oz!<lb/>
f ip�Et j 2i�i an<lb/>
PURE<lb/>
BRAN<lb/>
1 lb<lb/>
K E�WREE 1 21 Hi<lb/>
195 Protcinf<lb/>
Supreme<lb/>
��� It oz<lb/>
�ItlPlREt 121011<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
n� ajeafjpai m<lb/>
Ttz-orn<lb/>
Genend Nutritfon Center<lb/>
60�7o REDUCTIONS<lb/>
ALL MOST ALL FALL &amp; WINTER FASHIONS<lb/>
INCLUDING<lb/>
SWEATERS<lb/>
REG.$10-$23<lb/>
SHETLANDS, VELOURS,<lb/>
ACRYLICS<lb/>
ASSORTED STYLES &amp; COLORS<lb/>
SKIRTS<lb/>
REG.$14-$23<lb/>
WOOL BLEND, CORDUROY,<lb/>
FLANNEL<lb/>
PLAIDS&amp; SOLIDS<lb/>
BLAZERS<lb/>
REG. $23 $55<lb/>
CORDUROY, WOOL, VELVETEEN<lb/>
PLAIDS&amp; SOLIDS<lb/>
LINED 8. UNLINED STYLES<lb/>
DRESSES JUMPERS<lb/>
SHIRT SETS<lb/>
REG. $16 $40<lb/>
WOOL, CORDUROY, KNIT<lb/>
PLAIDS, SOLIDS, PRINTS<lb/>
SPECIAL Pl'RC'HASi KM I fOPS<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
S3.22<lb/>
EVANS ST.<lb/>
PHONE: 752 8965<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
PHONE: 756 8242<lb/>
ernoon<lb/>
"Beat the<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Crowd"<lb/>
Come Party At<lb/>
PAPA KATZ!<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
3:00 - 7:00<lb/>
free admission<lb/>
Music by request<lb/>
7:00 -1:00<lb/>
.50$ girls<lb/>
$1.00 guys<lb/>
Men<lb/>
�<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
� hi<lb/>
T<lb/>
L<lb/>
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Bd<lb/>
Beat<lb/>
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Wr�0<lb/>
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1<lb/>
 orll<lb/>
and<lb/>
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I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057322_0007"/><lb/>
on<lb/>
I Ml I ASI CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 19, 1981<lb/>
Happenings<lb/>
L�4e0M6 taour Collzgc- Thc Ump Ni<lb/>
$y Dfwo AJos<lb/>
CAMPUS EVENTS<lb/>
Thursday 19<lb/>
� 7:00 p.m. Gamma Beta Phi, Biology 103<lb/>
� 7:00 p.m. Intramural Co-Rec 2-on-2 Basket-<lb/>
ball Participants' Meeting, Memorial Gym 104<lb/>
� ECU Playhouse Cabaret Production,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Auditions Room 244<lb/>
to<lb/>
Friday 20<lb/>
Drop a Course or Withdraw<lb/>
� Last Day<lb/>
From School<lb/>
� ECU Playhouse Cabaret Production,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Auditions Room 244<lb/>
� 5, 7:15, &amp; 9:30 p.m. Movie: American Gigolo,<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Saturday 21<lb/>
� ECU Playhouse Cabaret Production,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Auditions Room 244<lb/>
� 5, 7:15, &amp; 9:30 p.m. Movie: American Gigolo,<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
� 7:30 p.m. Men's Basketball: Richmond, Va.<lb/>
Sunday 22<lb/>
p.m. ECU Symphonic Band Concert,<lb/>
� 8:15<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
� Washington's Birthdav<lb/>
Monday 23<lb/>
� ECU Playhouse Cabaret Production,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Auditions Room 244<lb/>
� 7:30 p.m. Women's Basketball: Wake Forest<lb/>
University, Minges Coliseum<lb/>
� Feb. 23 - Mar. 5 Intramural Co-Rec 2-on-2<lb/>
Basketball, Memorial Gym &amp; Minges Coliseum<lb/>
� Feb. 23-27 &amp; Mar. 2-6 Change of Major<lb/>
Tuesday 24<lb/>
� 5:00 p.m. Deadline: Intramural Swim Meet<lb/>
� 5:00 p.m. Deadline: Intramural Co-Rec Rac-<lb/>
quetball Doubles<lb/>
� 5:00 p.m. Familv-Child Association Meeting,<lb/>
Room 143<lb/>
� ECU Playhouse Cabaret Production,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Auditions Room 244<lb/>
� 8:15 p.m. Faculty Recital: Henry Doskey,<lb/>
piano, Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Wednesday 25<lb/>
� 4:00 p.m. Intramural Co-Rec Racquetball<lb/>
Participants' Meeting, Memorial Gym 104<lb/>
� 6:00 p.m. Intramural Swim Meet, Minges<lb/>
Pool<lb/>
� ECU Playhouse Cabaret Production,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Auditions Room 244<lb/>
� Feb. 25 - Mar. 1 Intramural Co-Rec Racquet-<lb/>
ball Doubles, Minges Courts<lb/>
SCHOOL OF MUSIC<lb/>
� Thursday 19 David Merriam, saxophone; Jay<lb/>
Hurst, trumpet; Senior Recital, 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
� Friday 20 Stefan Stuber, percussion; Joe<lb/>
Alexander, tuba; Senior Recital, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
� Monday 22 Symphonic Band Concert, 8:15<lb/>
p.m. Wright Auditorium<lb/>
� Tuesday 23 David Hawkins, oboe; Faculty<lb/>
Recital, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
� Wednesday 24 Henry Doskey, piano; Faculty<lb/>
Recital, 8:15 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
NIGHTLIFE<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
� Thursday SUPER GRIT<lb/>
� Friday BRICE STREET<lb/>
� Saturday BRICE STREET<lb/>
� Sundav SUGAR<lb/>
� Tuesday BRECKENRIDGE<lb/>
� Wednesday SUZANNE SEXLESS AND THE<lb/>
STIMULATORS<lb/>
Carolina Opry House<lb/>
� Thursday AMBUSH<lb/>
� Friday AMBUSH<lb/>
� Saturday AMBUSH<lb/>
� Wednesday BILL LYERLY BAND<lb/>
Chapter 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 Best in Beach Music<lb/>
� Sunday Kappa Alpha "Nickel Nite"<lb/>
� Tuesday Sigma Phi Epsilon "Ladies Night"<lb/>
� Wednesday Sigma Nu "50, 50 Night"<lb/>
If you have anything you would like put in<lb/>
Happenings, please send it to: Nancy Morris, The<lb/>
East Carolinian, East Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
QW7<lb/>
" I� � � "Wm � I<lb/>
THf CWus COPS<lb/>
f-7 Loud music.<lb/>
Senior Show Announced<lb/>
Interior design pro-<lb/>
jects and needlework<lb/>
by Cynthia Brewer of<lb/>
Greensboro, senior stu-<lb/>
dent in the Last<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
School of Art, will be<lb/>
on display Feb.<lb/>
22-March 1 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
C enter here.<lb/>
Her exhibition in-<lb/>
cludes examples o<lb/>
various types of<lb/>
needlework�counted<lb/>
cross-stitch, bargello<lb/>
needlepoi nt, em-<lb/>
broidered pictures and<lb/>
a bell-pull�along with<lb/>
projects from her in-<lb/>
terior design classes.<lb/>
Among these are floor<lb/>
plans, elevations,<lb/>
perspective drawings<lb/>
and furnishing designs<lb/>
for residential and<lb/>
commercial buildii<lb/>
A candidate foi the<lb/>
BA degree in interioi<lb/>
design, Miss Brewei<lb/>
has served a- secretary<lb/>
oi the 1(1 student<lb/>
chaptei ol the<lb/>
American Society ol<lb/>
Interior Designers.<lb/>
Her parent- are I)r<lb/>
and Mrs. James .<lb/>
Brewer ol Route 11.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
WED. o THURS<lb/>
18th<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
19th<lb/>
FRI<lb/>
SAT.<lb/>
West ern<lb/>
Greens!<lb/>
I i a i<lb/>
20th 21st<lb/>
O<lb/>
COMING SUN THE 22nd<lb/>
at<lb/>
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL<lb/>
w SUTTER'S GOLD STREET BAND<lb/>
Artist<lb/>
To Give<lb/>
Lecture<lb/>
The Visual Arts<lb/>
Forum is presenting a<lb/>
slide presentation and<lb/>
lecture by Pat Martin<lb/>
Bates Thursday, Feb.<lb/>
19 at 8:00 p.m. in the<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center Auditorium.<lb/>
Born in Saint John,<lb/>
New Brunswick,<lb/>
Canada, Bales pursued<lb/>
studies in art at the<lb/>
Academie Royale des<lb/>
Beaux-Arts in Belgium,<lb/>
the Academie de<lb/>
grande Chaumier and<lb/>
the Sorbonne, Paris,<lb/>
and the Pratt Graphic<lb/>
Center in New York.<lb/>
She pioneered in<lb/>
print-making techni-<lb/>
ques internationally,<lb/>
and made the first for-<lb/>
mal advances in the<lb/>
1960's in Canada.<lb/>
Bates has won a<lb/>
number of interna-<lb/>
tional awards and has<lb/>
work in the Museum of<lb/>
Modern Art in New<lb/>
York, the Smithsonian<lb/>
and the San Francisco<lb/>
Art Gallery.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE Parade drum<lb/>
Premier, chrome in excellent con<lb/>
dition Call 757 3210<lb/>
FOR SALE Lark bano Almost<lb/>
new, hardshell case. Earl Scrugs<lb/>
book included 8125 Call Keith at<lb/>
758 7878<lb/>
FOR SALE: Quilts: 89 year old<lb/>
Granny makes them to sell JJS 00<lb/>
each also pillows il 00 and S3 00<lb/>
plus crochet pieces Call 752 1785<lb/>
or 752 8850<lb/>
FOR SALE: 78 Yamaha on off<lb/>
road 250 Few miles Great condi<lb/>
tion Call 758 5282 alter p m<lb/>
Leave message<lb/>
FOR SALE Utah, 3 way<lb/>
speakers. 170 00 Large cabinets,<lb/>
rms. 40 wats. call 758 8493<lb/>
FOR SALE Waterbeds direct<lb/>
from mgt complete with<lb/>
everything needed except sheets<lb/>
13 year warranty 5179 Call<lb/>
David 758 UTS.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Convenient,<lb/>
cheap rates Call Amy, 758 8994<lb/>
COUNSELORS for western North<lb/>
Carolina co ed summer camp<lb/>
Room, meals, laundry, salary and<lb/>
travel allowance Experience not<lb/>
necessary, but must enioy living<lb/>
and working with children. Only<lb/>
clean cut non smoking college<lb/>
students need apply For applica<lb/>
t ionbrochure write: Camp<lb/>
Pinewood. 1801 Cleveland Rd<lb/>
Miami Beach, Fl. 33141<lb/>
WANTED TO PURCHASE 47 49<lb/>
Camaro Phone 754 7712<lb/>
LAST CHANCE for Springsteen in<lb/>
Greensboro 2 tickets left best ot<lb/>
fer Call 752 1470 after 3 00 pm<lb/>
STELLA It it returns, I will love<lb/>
it for ever Henry<lb/>
SR J : Listen to an elder, He is very<lb/>
wise Is less by March 2nd, and a<lb/>
dinner on the town I love you.<lb/>
LLS<lb/>
KEITH "Betcha didn't know that<lb/>
you're one in a million I love it<lb/>
when we're "together Punkin.<lb/>
BILL: I love ydu and will want you<lb/>
always You make my day special.<lb/>
Dawn.<lb/>
BUMPER STICKERS: We'll print<lb/>
anything that you'll tell your<lb/>
mother $2 for one, $5 for 3. Quart<lb/>
tity discounts available for orders<lb/>
up to 100. Call 752 1757 between 4 9<lb/>
pm or send check and 5.50 handl<lb/>
ing to Bumper Sticker, Rt 7 Box<lb/>
27. Greenville, N C 27834.<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY WENDI Its<lb/>
a special day to me because its<lb/>
such a special day to you Always.<lb/>
Billy<lb/>
JIMMY BUFFETT IS CRUISING<lb/>
IN SATURDAY NIGHT. MINGES<lb/>
COLISIUM 8 00PM WELL SEE<lb/>
YOU THERE!<lb/>
RENEE If they ain't looking,<lb/>
we're with the wrong one GPJ<lb/>
Poor Fishy, dead and gone.<lb/>
Left us here to sing this song.<lb/>
Died in the house, with no heat on.<lb/>
We'll remember Delta Dawn.<lb/>
It's to Donna, with our deepest<lb/>
sympathy<lb/>
Your sisters in Delta Zeta<lb/>
WE SPEAK TURABIAN Proles<lb/>
sional typing editing, pro<lb/>
otreading WRITE RIGHT<lb/>
754 9944.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENT For rent. Two<lb/>
rooms, modern bath and kitchen,<lb/>
study Call 752 3020 after 400 p m.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE Wanted<lb/>
to share two bedroom Tar River<lb/>
Apartment Call Lisa 752 0453 or<lb/>
758 5429<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT 575 per<lb/>
month, utilities included, for info<lb/>
call 752 3480<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES NEED<lb/>
ED: House l block from campus<lb/>
5100.00 mo everything included<lb/>
Call 758 3318 ask tor Anita<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
WANTED Cypress Gardens, hall<lb/>
mile from campus Call 752 5947<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED To share 3 bedroom<lb/>
house 580 mo plus third utilities<lb/>
Call 758 0838<lb/>
MALE HOUSEMATE WANTED<lb/>
3 blocks from Artie $45 rent, one<lb/>
fourth utilities, private room<lb/>
752 3199.<lb/>
NEEDED Female roommate to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt close to cam<lb/>
pus Half rent, half utilities It in<lb/>
terested please call Donna at<lb/>
758 7728.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED 5100 a<lb/>
month, deposit required<lb/>
Available March 1st Call 758 9964<lb/>
after 500 MWF or 758 5982 after<lb/>
5 00 Tu Th<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED Tar<lb/>
River Estates. 5120 per month plus<lb/>
one half utilities 757 3549 Call<lb/>
between 14 p m. or after 10: 30<lb/>
PRICE: 51 00 for 15 words, 05 for<lb/>
each additional word<lb/>
Abbreviations count as one word<lb/>
as do phone numbers and<lb/>
hyphenations.<lb/>
Make checks payable to The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
MAIL TO:<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Classified Ads<lb/>
Old South Building<lb/>
Greenville, NC. 27834<lb/>
CASTEL<lb/>
CARINI<lb/>
RESTAURANT &amp; PIZZA<lb/>
NEW YORK STYLE PIZZA<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
756-8704<lb/>
TRY OUR SICILIAN<lb/>
STYLE PIZZA<lb/>
Meet Your Friends At The<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
This weekend (Friday only):<lb/>
The Mike August<lb/>
Jazz Quartet<lb/>
February 20th<lb/>
9:00 -11:00pm<lb/>
Rm. IS Mendenhall<lb/>
Admission .50'<lb/>
SAVE A<lb/>
EAKFAST<lb/>
AND LUNCH!<lb/>
�aaas<lb/>
rsv"<lb/>
m&amp;<lb/>
r<lb/>
J<lb/>
r<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
"3R<lb/>
<lb/>
"X<lb/>
.Cafca. '<lb/>
Here's a couple of coupons to start<lb/>
you on your way in the mornins,<lb/>
and to set you throush the day.<lb/>
And for less than $3.00! First, the<lb/>
big taste of Hardee's buttermilk<lb/>
biscuit. Filled with chopped beef-<lb/>
steak and fresh scrambled eggs.<lb/>
Plus a chilled cup of orange<lb/>
&amp;i&amp;&amp;&amp;W juice. Then for your next<lb/>
I ICWl full meal, a tender; tangy<lb/>
w vi5 Hot Ham'N'Cheese, a<lb/>
regular order of our<lb/>
famous fries, and a<lb/>
turnover you'll flip<lb/>
overall at some real<lb/>
sweet savings.<lb/>
3t�&amp;�<lb/>
w w w<lb/>
STEAK AND<lb/>
EGG BISCUIT AND ORANGE JUICE<lb/>
ONLY'1.09<lb/>
Please present this coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer, please.<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax. Not good in com-<lb/>
bination with any other offers. Offer good only<lb/>
at participating Hardee's. Offer good through<lb/>
March 4,1981.<lb/>
ttardegr<lb/>
HOT HAM N CHEESE,<lb/>
REGULAR FRIES AND APPLE TURNOVER<lb/>
ONLY 149<lb/>
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March 4,1981.<lb/>
v.uu(jvi i ).i LUJiwHiti, jjigj.<lb/>
Vbrdetzr<lb/>
- r �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057322_0008"/><lb/>
llll EAST Kt'l IMAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
II BKi AK 19. 1981 Ha.<lb/>
ECU Facing NCAA-AIAW Choice<lb/>
W " C rhis, says Arrants,<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sports EMM<lb/>
The recent NCAA Convention in<lb/>
Miami, Fla. will probably eventual-<lb/>
K be remembered as the convention<lb/>
that changed the world of women's<lb/>
collegiate athletics.<lb/>
At the January convention a pro<lb/>
posal was passed allowing women's<lb/>
teams to come under N A<lb/>
jurisdiction. At present, women's<lb/>
athletics operates under the Associa-<lb/>
tion tor Intercollegiate Athletics tor<lb/>
Women (A1AW).<lb/>
The move, of course, does not<lb/>
eliminate M V from existance,<lb/>
though it could threaten severely the<lb/>
strength of the present women's<lb/>
governing bods.<lb/>
MAW members are being allow-<lb/>
ed a five-yeai period in which to<lb/>
consider a possible move to the<lb/>
c AA. Each institution is expected<lb/>
to investigate thoroughly the advan-<lb/>
tages anddisadvantages ot women's<lb/>
athletics under both the NCAA and<lb/>
the A1AW.<lb/>
Four options are open to each in-<lb/>
stitution: DDual membership with<lb/>
both AIAW and NCAA; 2)A1AW<lb/>
membership only; 3)NCAA<lb/>
membership only; and 4)NCAA<lb/>
membership with AIAW' rules.<lb/>
last Carolina is currently in-<lb/>
vestigating all tour alternatives and<lb/>
officials expect a final decision long<lb/>
before the five-year deadline passes.<lb/>
' don't know which way we'll<lb/>
go said ECU Faculty Athletic<lb/>
Representative Ernie Schwarz.<lb/>
Ihen<lb/>
be a split over<lb/>
which options we should consider<lb/>
Schwarz pointed out that schools<lb/>
could compete in both NCAA and<lb/>
AIAW' championships if they<lb/>
choose option 1 or option 4.<lb/>
Advantages can be cited for both<lb/>
the NCAA and the AIAW<lb/>
ECU Assistant Athletic for Stu-<lb/>
dent Life Laurie Arrants is perhaps<lb/>
the most staunch opponent of the<lb/>
NCAA's proposal on campus and<lb/>
points out many faults with the<lb/>
idea.<lb/>
"This is another case of 'money<lb/>
speaks Arrants said. "It's all<lb/>
political. The power struggle moves<lb/>
on.<lb/>
Arrants said she could not sup-<lb/>
port the NCAA because of its past<lb/>
dealings with women's athletics.<lb/>
"Historically, the NCAA has not<lb/>
favored women's athletics she<lb/>
said. "The AIAW was formed for<lb/>
that reason. The NCAA didn't even<lb/>
support Title IX. It would be one<lb/>
thing if the NCAA had been neutral<lb/>
to women, but all along it has been<lb/>
anti-women's athletics<lb/>
Arrants credited the sudden<lb/>
popularity with women's athletics,<lb/>
especially basketball, for drawing<lb/>
the NCAA's attention.<lb/>
"Suddenly, when the AIAW was<lb/>
offering over 36 championships, the<lb/>
NCAA becomes interested. Now<lb/>
they say they want to give women<lb/>
better opportunities. Suddenly the<lb/>
power and politics of the NCAA is<lb/>
on the move<lb/>
Schwarz, though not opposing<lb/>
Arrants' view, claimed that the<lb/>
NCAA could prove advantagious to<lb/>
women's teams.<lb/>
"The thing that is attractive<lb/>
about the NCAA he said, "is that<lb/>
teams in the championship tour-<lb/>
naments could receive better reim-<lb/>
bursements. The AIAW can reim-<lb/>
burse only on a smaller rale than<lb/>
the NCAA would be able o<lb/>
A problem with the move towards<lb/>
the NCAA that provides the main<lb/>
area ot concern in ECU'S case is the<lb/>
fact that the AlAW's "division bv<lb/>
sport" policy would be eliminated<lb/>
under NCAA governance.<lb/>
Currently, the AIAW allows an<lb/>
institution to field sports in anv ot<lb/>
three divisions. Foi example.<lb/>
women's basketball and Softball are<lb/>
Division I sports while swimming,<lb/>
track and several others are Division<lb/>
II.<lb/>
Upon joining the NCAA, those<lb/>
latter sports would have to join<lb/>
basketball and Softball as Divi<lb/>
sports<lb/>
rhis, says Arrants, is nonsense.<lb/>
"We had eight All-Americans in<lb/>
swimming last year she said "It<lb/>
they were forced to compete on the<lb/>
Division I level, many or all ol them<lb/>
would not receive such recogni-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Arrants claims thai the lack ot<lb/>
division bv spoil is not m the best<lb/>
interests of either the university or<lb/>
the athlete.<lb/>
"No doubt, the AIAW gives the<lb/>
instition and the athlete the best<lb/>
chance. I here's nothing wrong with<lb/>
not being Division 1 in some ol the<lb/>
non-revenue sports. I he important<lb/>
thing is that we give student athletes<lb/>
the opportunity to .anv the East<lb/>
Carolina I niversity name in a pro-<lb/>
ud way<lb/>
The growing battle between the<lb/>
NCAA and the AIAW is<lb/>
necessary, says James Frank, pi<lb/>
dent of Lincoln University and<lb/>
SCC p. Id<lb/>
Lady Bucs Pound NCSU,<lb/>
Earn Tie In State Race<lb/>
Lad Pirate Mary Denkler Fires Against State<lb/>
Meeting With Karr Set<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPRKE<lb/>
Managing Kdiinr<lb/>
It was billed as a rematch of the<lb/>
two top teams in the state and when<lb/>
the smoke had cleared in Reynolds<lb/>
Coliseum Wednesday night, the<lb/>
Lady Pirates had walked away with<lb/>
a 97-89 triple-overtime victory over<lb/>
nationally 15th ranked North<lb/>
Carolina State.<lb/>
The Pirates controlled the tap at<lb/>
the start of the third overtime atter<lb/>
losing the previous two. Beyond<lb/>
that point, it was all a matter of the<lb/>
margin, as ECU capitalized on<lb/>
Wolf pack fouls and turnovers to<lb/>
cruise to victory.<lb/>
Senior point guard Laurie Sikes<lb/>
opened the scoring barrage with a<lb/>
20-footer. Junior Ginger Rouse<lb/>
made the first o the NCSU tur-<lb/>
novers with 4:17 remaining in the<lb/>
decisive frame with a double-dribble<lb/>
violation. The Pirates were unable<lb/>
to score on that trip down the floor,<lb/>
but forward Sam Jones drove the<lb/>
length of the court at the 3:02 mark<lb/>
for a 91-87 ECU lead.<lb/>
Senior center Marcia Girven pop-<lb/>
ped in a field goal and sophomore<lb/>
Mary Denkler converted a Sikes<lb/>
assist for a 95-87 Pirate lead. She<lb/>
later connected on ECU'S final<lb/>
points of the night to insure victory<lb/>
at 97-87 with :56 remaining. Only a<lb/>
field goal by State point guard<lb/>
Angie Armstrong with :17 to play<lb/>
prevented the hosts from being shut<lb/>
out in the final overtime.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates struggled early<lb/>
in both halves of regulation play,<lb/>
falling behind 14-4 less than six<lb/>
minutes into the contest. Jones<lb/>
pumped in a shot from the outside<lb/>
along with a follow-up bucket. A<lb/>
Kathy Riley field goal pulled the<lb/>
Pirates to within four and they held<lb/>
close until the 32-30 deficit at inter-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
The Wolfpack opened the second<lb/>
half with a flurry supplied by crafty<lb/>
senior Trudi Lacey and forward<lb/>
Connie Rogers to build a 47-36 ad-<lb/>
vantage over ECU with less than<lb/>
seven minutes elapsed.<lb/>
Many of the 3,400 in attendence<lb/>
felt the Pack was on its way to<lb/>
another Reynolds Coliseum<lb/>
blowout of the Pirates such as the<lb/>
1980 contest.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates managed to cut<lb/>
to within two points with 7:53 re-<lb/>
maining in the half, but momentum<lb/>
began to shift back in favor of<lb/>
State. When Denkler was called for<lb/>
a foul against Rogers inside, ECU<lb/>
head coach Cathy Andruzzi vehent-<lb/>
Iv protested, drawing a technical<lb/>
foul from official Lloyd Nelson.<lb/>
Rogers sank all three tree throws<lb/>
but the moment un turned once<lb/>
again in favor ol the Pirates at that<lb/>
point.<lb/>
A field goal bv senioi centet Mai<lb/>
cia Girven with 2:09 left in the se-<lb/>
cond halt cut the gap to 65-63 Aftei<lb/>
an NCSl timeout, Rogers fouled<lb/>
Jones in the act ol shooting. 1 he<lb/>
poised Jones stepped to the line and<lb/>
sent both efforts sailing through the<lb/>
bottom of the net to knot the score<lb/>
at 65 with 1:10 to pi<lb/>
With :46 on the clock, the 1 ady<lb/>
Pirates once again put their faith in<lb/>
Jones when she connected on a driv-<lb/>
ing bucket and sank vet another free<lb/>
throw.<lb/>
State had the final opp<lb/>
ice the game during regulation with<lb/>
:05 remaining and the ball out-of-<lb/>
bounds at their baseline. The m-<lb/>
bounds pass went to Armstrong.<lb/>
who lobbed the ball inside to tower-<lb/>
ing 6-7 Ronda Falkena. The tall<lb/>
Wolfpack freshman squared U<lb/>
goal for the final shot, but threw a<lb/>
stone that didn't fit in the hole as<lb/>
the horn sounded.<lb/>
Girven and Rilev helped the<lb/>
Pirates build a three point lead in<lb/>
the first overtime. But less than a<lb/>
minute later, guard Lydia Rountree<lb/>
collected tier fifth personal foul,<lb/>
leaving the game 1:05 on the dock.<lb/>
Eleven seconds later. Riley also col-<lb/>
lected het fifth, and the hopes ol<lb/>
te players and tans began to<lb/>
dwindle.<lb/>
State a iumed ai ri 79 lead with<lb/>
:05 in overtime. E( I 's in-bounds<lb/>
pass went to Jones at midcourt and<lb/>
timeout was called. Jones ap-<lb/>
pearantly was intended to take<lb/>
final shot tor EC I . but hei lane ol<lb/>
traffic was shut off. Sikes tired a<lb/>
lumper over the out-stretched hand<lb/>
� Armstrong from tl I the<lb/>
key winch caromed<lb/>
through the cylinder as the horn<lb/>
sounded.<lb/>
Both teams traded baskets in the<lb/>
second overtime, with R<lb/>
mg a shot with a secoi d<lb/>
A futile tip-in effort by 1 acey fell<lb/>
mlessly to the floor.<lb/>
Riley led the Pirates wi<lb/>
points, with Girven adding 24 and<lb/>
IS rebounds and Jones 21 points<lb/>
and 10 grabs. Sikes dished out 14<lb/>
assists and Jones eight in directing<lb/>
the ECU floor game.<lb/>
Lacey led the way for NCSU with<lb/>
24 points and 17 rebounds, while<lb/>
Armstrong and Rogers contributed<lb/>
15 points each. <lb/>
Oishi Making Last Push<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELYERTON<lb/>
vMt�nt spor1� EdHof<lb/>
William "Billy" Sheridan, Dean<lb/>
of American Wrestling at Lehigh<lb/>
University, says it best: "No matter<lb/>
what his weight or build, there is a<lb/>
place on a wrestling mat for every<lb/>
boy<lb/>
No one realizes the importance of<lb/>
this statement more than Pirate<lb/>
Coach Hachiro Oishi. He is fighting<lb/>
valiantly now to save the ECU<lb/>
wrestling program from extinction<lb/>
so some of these promising young<lb/>
wrestlers can bring their talents to<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
The wrestling program at ECU is<lb/>
being axed at the end of the current<lb/>
season because of economic strains<lb/>
on the athletic program budget.<lb/>
This year's wrestling budget is<lb/>
$25,000.<lb/>
Oishi has received letters of sup-<lb/>
port for his cause from such schools<lb/>
as UNC-CH, N.C. State, the<lb/>
University of Northern Iowa and<lb/>
George Washington University.<lb/>
Several ECU alumni, as well as high<lb/>
school coaches across the state, have<lb/>
expressed their concern over the ter-<lb/>
mination of the program.<lb/>
"I love wrestling very much<lb/>
Oishi savs, "That's why I'm doing<lb/>
the best I can to save the program<lb/>
here v<lb/>
The letters are not the only<lb/>
evidence of public concern. A peti-<lb/>
tion that was circulated on the ECU<lb/>
campus resulted in 9,000 signatures.<lb/>
"The students have much interest<lb/>
in the wrestling program Oishi<lb/>
points out, "and it shows with the<lb/>
number of signatures we got. Some<lb/>
people have said that the petition<lb/>
won't do any good, but they're<lb/>
wrong. It shows the students care<lb/>
According to Oishi, wrestling<lb/>
builds character. "I agree with<lb/>
UNC's Coach Bill Lam in that the<lb/>
real purpose of athletics is to help<lb/>
educate and develop a young person<lb/>
to their fullest potential. Wrestling<lb/>
is one of the few sports in which you<lb/>
can work individually with so-<lb/>
meone<lb/>
The Pirate coach has also begun<lb/>
asking area citizens for donations<lb/>
that possibly will help the program.<lb/>
However, there has not been much<lb/>
luck so far, he says.<lb/>
"Wrestling is growing fast in<lb/>
North Carolina Oishi explains.<lb/>
"There are some very big and ex-<lb/>
citing high school rivalries, even<lb/>
some in junior high school. The pro-<lb/>
gram was once great here and this is<lb/>
not the time to cut it. With the<lb/>
growth of high school wrestling, the<lb/>
program here could be great again<lb/>
Oishi said that schools such as the<lb/>
University of Georgia, Florida and<lb/>
Alabama that have dropped wrestl-<lb/>
ing did not have the tradition that<lb/>
East Carolina has. "These schools<lb/>
just didn't have the abundance of<lb/>
competition that we have in North<lb/>
Carolina he remarked.<lb/>
According to Oishi, a committee<lb/>
has been formed to try to resolve the<lb/>
issue and attempt to save the wrestl-<lb/>
ing program. A meeting with Direc-<lb/>
tor of Athletics Ken Karr has been<lb/>
scheduled for next week.<lb/>
"I've only been here since Oc-<lb/>
tober Oishi said. "I wish I'd been<lb/>
here longer, maybe I could have<lb/>
helped the situation. I'll tell you'one<lb/>
thing, though; I've still got hope<lb/>
that the program can be saved. I'm<lb/>
not going to give up<lb/>
FXU's Mindell Tyson Battles<lb/>
25 000 won l u y �uuu, uUl v . <lb/>
7-Footer Has Odom, Others Drooling<lb/>
When this time of the year rolls<lb/>
around recruiting is always on the<lb/>
minds of the die-hard college sports<lb/>
fans.<lb/>
Just yesterday (Wednesday) was<lb/>
the national signing date for foot-<lb/>
ball. Pirate head coach Ed Emory<lb/>
and his staff were out of town all<lb/>
day attempting to lure some of the<lb/>
treasured gridiron prepsters.<lb/>
Meanwhile, basketball coach<lb/>
Dave Odom and his staff were busy<lb/>
trying to lure that big man that<lb/>
would turn the cage program<lb/>
around.<lb/>
The guy that could do it resides in<lb/>
the small community of Dry Fork,<lb/>
Va a suberb of Danville.<lb/>
The young man is Warren Mar-<lb/>
tin, a 7-foot, 210 pound center that<lb/>
seems to get better each time he<lb/>
takes the court.<lb/>
Martin is a real sleeper and has<lb/>
shown vast improvements in this,<lb/>
his senior season. As the year has<lb/>
worn on he has drawn more and<lb/>
more attention from schools desir-<lb/>
ing his valuable services.<lb/>
To ease himself of some of the<lb/>
strain of the recruiters, Martin<lb/>
released a list of seven schools dur-<lb/>
ing the first of January. The list in-<lb/>
cluded the final institutions he was<lb/>
considering attending and was set<lb/>
up to keep recruiting pressure as low<lb/>
as possible.<lb/>
The seven included Virginia Tech,<lb/>
Jacksonville, Richmond, James<lb/>
Madison, East Carolina, Virginia<lb/>
and North Carolina.<lb/>
The latter two loom as the<lb/>
favorites to sign Martin. Never-<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
theless the Pirate coaching staff is<lb/>
going all out in their attempts of br-<lb/>
inging a real prize home to Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Martin has led his Tunstall High<lb/>
School team to a 15-3 record thus<lb/>
far this season. He leads his district<lb/>
in scoring (23.9 ppg), rebounding<lb/>
(13.0) and blocked shots (six per<lb/>
game).<lb/>
Martin was interviewed late last<lb/>
week and stated that he had yet to<lb/>
eliminate any of the seven schools<lb/>
listed in January. He is expected to<lb/>
make a decision soon after the<lb/>
Viginia state playoffs.<lb/>
One of the attractive points about<lb/>
Martin, aside from the obvious, is<lb/>
the fact that doctors predict he will<lb/>
grow at least another two inches. No<lb/>
doubt each of the seven involved<lb/>
coaches drool at the thought of sign-<lb/>
ing him.<lb/>
Virginia coach Terry Holland is<lb/>
very intent upon signing the big guy.<lb/>
He was quoted as saying last<lb/>
weekend that Martin's decision<lb/>
could affect the decision of Ail-<lb/>
American Ralph Sampson, who<lb/>
though a sophomore is being lured<lb/>
by the NBA.<lb/>
Holland mentioned the possibhty<lb/>
of Martin and Sampson in the same<lb/>
lineup, the ague Sampson moving to<lb/>
forward to open up the middle tor<lb/>
Martin.<lb/>
Martin, of course, is not in the<lb/>
class of a Ralph Sampson. He is.<lb/>
though, an ever-increasing com-<lb/>
modity that no college coach in the<lb/>
country would turn down.<lb/>
Odom saw Martin play this Tues-<lb/>
day night. He or a member of his<lb/>
staff has but one of the three<lb/>
designated talks remaining with the<lb/>
big guy.<lb/>
Observers close to the situation in<lb/>
Danville feel that the Tar Heels and<lb/>
Cavaliers are far and away the<lb/>
leading candidates to sign Martin.<lb/>
Holland and LNC's Smith also are<lb/>
reported to have just one more talk<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
The Pirate basketball team must<lb/>
win both its remaining two games,<lb/>
both away at Richmond and Illinois<lb/>
State, in order to finish the season<lb/>
with a non-losing record.<lb/>
Following consecutive home<lb/>
losses to Delaware State and UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington the team owns an 11-13<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
The odds at finishing 13-13 do not<lb/>
appear promising. Richmond<lb/>
disposed of the Bucs easily in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum earlier this year<lb/>
while 1SU played third-ranked<lb/>
DePaul a tough game two weeks ago<lb/>
before falling, 54-50.<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
Bv UN j<lb/>
VII M Klj<lb/>
w<lb/>
ing in!<lb/>
p e r i I<lb/>
star<lb/>
H :<lb/>
prep<lb/>
:<lb/>
�' W �<lb/>
ourst<lb/>
The ECt<lb/>
Graduate!<lb/>
i<lb/>
v<lb/>
�<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057322_0009"/><lb/>
I HI I AM H(I IM-W<lb/>
I I Hk I MO IV, 19M<lb/>
Pirate Nine Looking For Repeat Year<lb/>
VI<lb/>
With<lb/>
ing infi<lb/>
pei ien<lb/>
ff, tl<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
Ha<lb/>
pre<lb/>
Male m<lb/>
"We'<lb/>
UIIlM<lb/>
IMKION<lb/>
a s<lb/>
eld<lb/>
ong return<lb/>
and an ex<lb/>
e vi p i u in n<lb/>
K<lb/>
�' 1 very where the<lb/>
yers have g one<lb/>
i he ' e heard thai this<lb/>
is i lo eel East<lb/>
c as olina because we've<lb/>
lost all those players.<lb/>
()ui plas ei s ha e taken<lb/>
thai as a personal<lb/>
 d are<lb/>
Cionc from last<lb/>
lad all to<lb/>
majoi clubs<lb/>
Bill) B Butch<lb/>
Davis, Muke Britt<lb/>
d Raymie Styons<lb/>
ind Styons will<lb/>
orel missed<lb/>
� n power,<lb/>
B his<lb/>
rikeoul<lb/>
M i- ' Britt,<lb/>
tarter, will<lb/>
as he<lb/>
held Pirate records foi stafi will be headed b<lb/>
mmngs pitched and junioi Bill Wilder. I lie<lb/>
most consecutive vic-<lb/>
loiles.<lb/>
According to Baud.<lb/>
the strength ot this<lb/>
seal's club will be the<lb/>
infield. " 1 oM Hendlev<lb/>
(Ji.) will start at thud;<lb/>
Kelly Robinette (So.)<lb/>
will siait al short; Mike<lb/>
Sorrell (Jr.) al second,<lb/>
and Mike Sage (Si.) al<lb/>
I arboro native posted<lb/>
a 10-2 record last yeai.<lb/>
tops on the club.<lb/>
Baud said the other<lb/>
top hurlers will be Bob<lb/>
Patterson (6-2), Rick<lb/>
Ramev (5-1), both<lb/>
seniors. The rest of the<lb/>
stafl is rounded out b<lb/>
Robbie Harper and<lb/>
Kuk Parson. "Behind<lb/>
first. Petei Perisco(Si Lhe number.�ve man<lb/>
gives us supei depth in<lb/>
all three of the posi-<lb/>
tions in the middle oi<lb/>
the field Baud said.<lb/>
Band said the<lb/>
preseason plav oi the<lb/>
infield has been ex<lb/>
celleni "We've got ex-<lb/>
perienced players there,<lb/>
and the) continue to<lb/>
get belter<lb/>
1 he veteran pitching<lb/>
ft<lb/>
The ECU Baseball leam Musi Play Without Services Of<lb/>
Graduated Bukh l)uis i4<lb/>
Baud noted, "were a<lb/>
little bit shakev<lb/>
The Pirate skipper<lb/>
says the outfield is the<lb/>
most improved aiea oi<lb/>
the team. " Todd Ivans<lb/>
tl i.) will start in left<lb/>
field. He has hit the<lb/>
ball super. John<lb/>
Hallow (Jr.) broke his<lb/>
hand lasl week, but he<lb/>
is anticipated to be the<lb/>
siai tei in righl<lb/>
I lie race for centei<lb/>
field is up in the air.<lb/>
" e've got a battle go-<lb/>
ing between Robert<lb/>
Wells (So.) and Charlie<lb/>
Wavnick (Fr.) Baud<lb/>
said. "I don i real!)<lb/>
feel badl) aboul eithei<lb/>
one ot them playing<lb/>
there<lb/>
Baud said thai Ja)<lb/>
C arrawa) and John<lb/>
lit g er a I d, both<lb/>
seniors, are in a dead<lb/>
heat for the catching<lb/>
position. 'They're<lb/>
both plaving well, and I<lb/>
think the competition<lb/>
has pushed them a little<lb/>
harder Baud poini<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Band isn't sure<lb/>
whethei this yeai<lb/>
squad can equal<lb/>
vcai's .307 hitting<lb/>
mar k, a club record.<lb/>
"I'm not sure we're<lb/>
as fai alone as we in<lb/>
to be. How tai a ion<lb/>
real!) hard to sa<lb/>
because we' e only -��<lb/>
ourselves. We're<lb/>
capable oi being<lb/>
ot tensive club<lb/>
Injui ie- are hampei �<lb/>
ing the Buc's progress<lb/>
now Hallow's I<lb/>
will be in a ca<lb/>
another two to th<lb/>
weeks "1 believe John<lb/>
is mil best hitter<lb/>
Baud said. " I he tact<lb/>
that he is not in the<lb/>
lineup lakes a dimen-<lb/>
sion ol our offense<lb/>
awa)<lb/>
Baud also pointed<lb/>
out thai pitchei Rick<lb/>
Ramev was hit in the<lb/>
arm hv a line drive and<lb/>
w ill be unable to throw<lb/>
foi al least two weeks.<lb/>
Mike Sage lias suffered<lb/>
a strained shouldei.<lb/>
I he Pirates gol a<lb/>
ance to test out their<lb/>
hardware in a 19-inning<lb/>
immage against Elon<lb/>
lasi Saturday. Baird<lb/>
willed the game a suc-<lb/>
cess because o the<lb/>
team's ictoi v.<lb/>
1 here are some areas<lb/>
thai need work, the<lb/>
Pii i aid. "We<lb/>
In'i perform well<lb/>
:n the number live<lb/>
pitchei down, and we<lb/>
didn't hit the ball with<lb/>
men on base. However,<lb/>
our first five pitchers<lb/>
did a great iob, and our<lb/>
defense looked good and ,h(V ,<lb/>
Baird said the team's , <lb/>
i eu.<lb/>
attitude has been ex- <lb/>
� i  . I the coach s en<lb/>
cellent. We have . ,<lb/>
 , .  . . thusiasrn is anv mdica<lb/>
worked them harder<lb/>
  tion ot i ne teai<lb/>
than any team bet ore,<lb/>
i hen t fie<lb/>
Pirati ive al lea;<lb/>
il to equal last year's<lb/>
28-7 mark and N( A <lb/>
bid.<lb/>
Announcing The Arrival<lb/>
of<lb/>
"Ballons Over Greenville"<lb/>
r- - jr Cj<lb/>
0 i fc. v<lb/>
- �<lb/>
TrTrMJSHkVr M qv-L Trti.K- ft v. hi )Tli jV 9lT<lb/>
Make - nt happ) with a Bou eied b a<lb/>
Mined messenger with a soi . nniversary,<lb/>
Birthday, Gel Well, Retirement, C'oi etc. oi just<lb/>
because vou love them. !  � x<lb/>
,  HI Ml silk' M ' �<lb/>
Master Charge <lb/>
yisa . AiiK't lean express<lb/>
ECU loves<lb/>
roast beef at<lb/>
America's roast beef<lb/>
Yes sir!<lb/>
0<lb/>
drbtf<lb/>
Two more reasons<lb/>
why you &amp; I<lb/>
a love Art-s Lea<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
and<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Otter valid thru<lb/>
at all partu ipal . '�<lb/>
customer pei visii Sot va<lb/>
Will!<lb/>
AM:<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
w I<lb/>
?1<lb/>
ArbvV Roast Beef<lb/>
Sandwich Wifh<lb/>
Salad Bar �<lb/>
Otter valid thru U<lb/>
al all partic ipating rbV Limii<lb/>
i ustomei per isil Soi<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
ACROSS FROM K MART<lb/>
Jl <lb/>
g<lb/>
:<lb/>
ALWAYS FRESH<lb/>
DAIRY FOODS<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Beef or T-Bone<lb/>
Steaks $1"<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Mountain Dew<lb/>
or Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
16 Ol cm of 8<lb/>
$108<lb/>
Plus Deposit<lb/>
Frito Lay<lb/>
Ruffle or Regular<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
68 <lb/>
7 oz. bag<lb/>
Tropicana Pure<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
Gallon<lb/>
Supermarket, Inc.<lb/>
Jimmy Buffet Concert<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
Natural Light Beer<lb/>
$039<lb/>
l2oz. cans �6 pak<lb/>
Budweiser Beer<lb/>
12 oz. cans � 6 pak<lb/>
Miller Beer<lb/>
12 oz. cans � 6 pak<lb/>
Also . . .<lb/>
Carlo Rossi Wine<lb/>
3 liter, Burgundy, Chablis, Rhine, Rose<lb/>
He sure and call Overtoil 'v for<lb/>
the lowest keg beer prices in town.<lb/>
$29<lb/>
Fox Deluxe Pizza<lb/>
BUY ONE - GET<lb/>
ONE FREE<lb/>
Reg. $1.29 All Varieties<lb/>
24 oz. loaf<lb/>
Franklin Old Fashion<lb/>
White Bread<lb/>
BUY ONE -GET ONE<lb/>
FREE 89C<lb/>
ml<lb/>
-L<lb/>
<lb/>
Grade "A" Whole<lb/>
FRYERS<lb/>
52 <lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Dannon Yogurt<lb/>
All Flavors<lb/>
$100<lb/>
8 oz<lb/>
for<lb/>
Campbell's Chicken<lb/>
Noodle Soup<lb/>
10 oz. can<lb/>
28 c<lb/>
Frito Lay<lb/>
Ruffle or Regular<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
$169<lb/>
1 lb. bag<lb/>
K<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
t <lb/>
"V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057322_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
1 HI l S 1 CAROl 1N1AN<lb/>
1 t BRUARY 19. 1981<lb/>
Sampson Still Top<lb/>
GREENSBORO,<lb/>
N. C. (UP!)<lb/>
Virginia's Ralph Samp<lb/>
son continues to hold<lb/>
the scoring and reboun-<lb/>
ding lead in the latest<lb/>
basketball statistics<lb/>
released b the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference but<lb/>
M ar y I a nd' s B u c k<lb/>
Williams is challenging<lb/>
him in rebounding.<lb/>
Sampson is scoring<lb/>
19.3 points and grabb-<lb/>
ing 12.4 rebounds a<lb/>
game for the second-<lb/>
ranked Cavaliers.<lb/>
Williams, sixth in scor-<lb/>
ing with a 16.4 average,<lb/>
is second in reboun-<lb/>
ding, getting 12 pulls a<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Gene Banks is second<lb/>
in the scoring race with<lb/>
an 18.6 average,<lb/>
followed by North<lb/>
Caioima's Al Wood<lb/>
with an 18.2 averaee<lb/>
and Virginia's Jeff<lb/>
Lamp with an 18 point<lb/>
per game average.<lb/>
Williams leads in<lb/>
field goal percentage,<lb/>
making .653 of his<lb/>
shots. Sam Perkins of<lb/>
North Carolina is se-<lb/>
cond at .645.<lb/>
Tom Emma of Duke<lb/>
is the top free throw<lb/>
shooter in the league,<lb/>
hitting .870 of his<lb/>
shots. Lamp is second<lb/>
NCAA-AIAW<lb/>
with an .842 mark.<lb/>
Sidney Lowe of<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
continues to lead in<lb/>
assists, with 8.4 per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
In team statistics,<lb/>
Wake Forest has the<lb/>
highest scoring offense.<lb/>
The Deacons are<lb/>
averaging 78.6 points<lb/>
per game.<lb/>
Maryland is second<lb/>
with a 77.1 point per<lb/>
game averaee.<lb/>
Virginia has the best<lb/>
defense, allowing .59.4<lb/>
points per game. North<lb/>
Carolina State is se-<lb/>
cond in defense with a<lb/>
62.7 point per game<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
o<lb/>
Virginia is the best<lb/>
field goal shooting<lb/>
team with a .535 mark<lb/>
while North Carolina<lb/>
has the best free throw<lb/>
percentaee at .727.<lb/>
North Carolina is tne<lb/>
best rebounding team<lb/>
in the league, getting<lb/>
6.1 more rebounds a.<lb/>
game than opponents.<lb/>
Virginia has the highest<lb/>
scoring margin,<lb/>
outscoring opponents<lb/>
by 16.7 points a game.<lb/>
SALE 40 OFF<lb/>
Ladies' Rain Coats tbiackoniy)<lb/>
Ladies' Wrangler Tops<lb/>
Ladies' Knit Tops<lb/>
Men's Denim Coats<lb/>
 Big Man's Male Corduroy Pants<lb/>
Men's Sport Coats<lb/>
reg 11.99 NOW 7.19<lb/>
reg 12.98 NOW 7.79<lb/>
reg 12.98 NOW 7.79<lb/>
reg 18 99 NOW 15.98<lb/>
reg 24 95 NOW 14.97<lb/>
reg 29.98 to 36 98 NOW 19.98<lb/>
264 By Pass Greenville NC<lb/>
Across From Nichols<lb/>
Hours: 9:30 to6 00 Mori Sat<lb/>
MASTER CHARGE ano VISA accepted Call 756 1474<lb/>
MILL OUTLET CLOTHING<lb/>
( onimiifd from p. 8<lb/>
NCAA Secretary reasurer.<lb/>
�� l he entrance oi the NCAA into<lb/>
women's sports championships does<lb/>
not spell the demise ol the Al AW <lb/>
he said. "It the AIAW continues ;o<lb/>
initiate and refine its program, there<lb/>
is ever) reason to believe thai pro-<lb/>
motion ol women's competition by<lb/>
more than one governing bod) can<lb/>
be beneficial to the student athletes.<lb/>
�"Ihe availability of more than<lb/>
one alternative for women's com-<lb/>
petition should encourage excellence<lb/>
and, at a minimum, will provide<lb/>
freedom of choice<lb/>
"Freedom of choice though, is<lb/>
just what Arranis and others in the<lb/>
ECU administration tear will not be<lb/>
present as far as a decision on the<lb/>
I ad) Pirates are concerned.<lb/>
"We're verv much affected by<lb/>
what other schools do Arrants<lb/>
claimed. "11 the ACC goes NCAA<lb/>
(and it i expected to) our choices<lb/>
become much narrower<lb/>
One of the main problems, as tar<lb/>
as ECl is concerned, with the ACC<lb/>
move lies in the fact that the four<lb/>
ACC North Carolina schools<lb/>
il NC til. N.C. State, Wake<lb/>
Fores! and Duke) make up a big<lb/>
part of the women's athletic<lb/>
schedules and might would refuse to<lb/>
schedule ECU in the future, should<lb/>
the lady Pirates stay under AIAW<lb/>
governance.<lb/>
Recruiting is a main difference<lb/>
between the AIAW and NCAA and<lb/>
presents another roadblock should<lb/>
the ACC make the switch.<lb/>
NCAA rules for women's<lb/>
athletics will be the same as they are<lb/>
for men. Coaches will be allowed to<lb/>
travel and meet with recruits,<lb/>
though on a limited basis. Under<lb/>
AIAW rules, off-campus recruiting<lb/>
is illegal.<lb/>
"If the ACC goes NCAA and we<lb/>
don't our recruiting could be<lb/>
substantially hurt Arrants said.<lb/>
"It would be hard to explain to a<lb/>
recruit why the ACC schools are<lb/>
knocking on her door and ECU is<lb/>
not. It would look like we were not<lb/>
interesting when actually we had no<lb/>
choice<lb/>
At present the ECU athletic<lb/>
department is considering all of the<lb/>
many sides to the vital decision it<lb/>
must make.<lb/>
The department has announced<lb/>
that the Lady Pirates will compete<lb/>
under AIAW rules next season. A<lb/>
decision on future years will be<lb/>
some time in arriving.<lb/>
Beta Little Sisters 1<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
NEW WAVE DANCE<lb/>
AND<lb/>
DRESS COMPETITION<lb/>
DANCE WINNINGS<lb/>
$250.00<lb/>
$150.00<lb/>
$50.00<lb/>
1st place<lb/>
2nd place<lb/>
3rd place<lb/>
DRESS WINNINGS<lb/>
$100.00<lb/>
The ECU Media Board is accepting ap<lb/>
plication for the following positions for<lb/>
the 1981-82 school year:<lb/>
Editor of the Buccaneer<lb/>
Editor of the Rebel<lb/>
Head Photographer of the Photo Lab<lb/>
General Manager of WZMB<lb/>
General Manager of the<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Editor of the Ebony Herald<lb/>
Applications may be obtained from the<lb/>
Media Board secretary in the Publica<lb/>
tions Center, AA-F from 8 1 or 2 5.<lb/>
Deadline is Feb. 27.<lb/>
oV<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
COU PON<lb/>
i Tie Hxpu Q S&amp;t�<lb/>
OrtM 14 NOUII<lb/>
Wholesale &amp; Retail<lb/>
I Ice Sales<lb/>
 SPECIAL rEQ �qc<lb/>
 S-LB. BAG M- �<lb/>
 with this coupon<lb/>
Exptroa April 1. 19�1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
 iM �v�n� St<lb/>
! IMMJ.l'l i<lb/>
!$<lb/>
Kag t lea Oalivarr<lb/>
vtU<lb/>
ex<lb/>
When:<lb/>
Sunday nights beginning Feb.<lb/>
nm - l :00 am<lb/>
Sponsored By:<lb/>
Jeffrey's Beer and Wine<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
Godfather's Pizza<lb/>
22 at PAPA KATZ 8:30<lb/>
Crow's Nest<lb/>
Tree House<lb/>
Bonds Sporting Goods<lb/>
A &amp; B Auto Parts S<lb/>
'<lb/>
ftKSMffifflfflffl<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
PRICES ARE UP!<lb/>
"LAUREN HUTT0N AND<lb/>
j RICHARD GERE TURN IN<lb/>
 MEMORABLE PERFORMANCES.<lb/>
J They make sin beautiful. The<lb/>
j multiple charms of Gere are<lb/>
J brought to" brilliantly appropriate<lb/>
i fruition in American Gigolo' A<lb/>
 superlative job of writing and<lb/>
j directing by Paul Schrader. It's<lb/>
i the sort of image to make a<lb/>
! woman drool, a man envious<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
j He's coming to Mendenhall's Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
j this Friday and Saturday night at 5, 7:15, and<lb/>
j 9:30 P.M. Courtesy of Student Union Films<lb/>
ilS�<lb/>
If you need money for fall clothes or football ticket now It a<lb/>
good time to sell your gold and sliver aluables. And here's a<lb/>
good way to get EXTRA CASH!<lb/>
SELL YOUR<lb/>
CLASS RINGS <lb/>
TO COIN &amp; RING MAN! 4<lb/>
Almost everyone has i high school or college class ring<lb/>
they don't wear anymore. Chock your dresser drawers<lb/>
and bring your class ring Into Coin &amp; Ring Man. Wore<lb/>
your professional buying service and we guarantee you<lb/>
tair prices and good service.<lb/>
�r Bfcoaos a ta�$ m ease.<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
$<lb/>
Wl PAY CASH ONTHIf POT<lb/>
FOt JIWILIY, VAlUAIlf Sabytwrc<lb/>
MAtKID 10K - UK - 1IK.<lb/>
$ GOLD $<lb/>
� MRCS � SiCKUCfS<lb/>
� cuss uses<lb/>
con � auciuTs<lb/>
� (MAIMS � UCSTHS<lb/>
WATCH!S � MAMOROS<lb/>
�ARCS � DWTAl<lb/>
�MOONS � 10CIITS<lb/>
caw UM� � jjajejjg<lb/>
RAYING ON TH1IRBT<lb/>
CAIN f OB ITUM MARttID<lb/>
STERLING SILVER<lb/>
aic AROLit i of mmmm<lb/>
� COFFEE SERVICES GOBLETS<lb/>
� RINGS � SPOONS TRAYS � KNIVES<lb/>
� FORKS�NECKLACES�BRACELETS<lb/>
� FRANKLIN ANB HAMILTON MINT<lb/>
MERCHANDISE<lb/>
$<lb/>
&amp;RIWG<lb/>
OF K6V SAIES CO ��<lb/>
401 EVANS ST. UPtN9 Ms J"MUN bAI<lb/>
iHAHMONY HOUSt SOUlHl PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER.<lb/>
V<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057322_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>