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<pb facs="00057323_0001"/>
o<lb/>
She lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving (he East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. 44<lb/>
12 Panes<lb/>
Tuesday, February 24, 1981<lb/>
(.reenville. North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Man Injured Slightly<lb/>
In Fall From Minges<lb/>
B PAl LCOLLINS<lb/>
A Rock) Mount man who fell<lb/>
from the tatters al Minges Coliseum<lb/>
during the Jimmy Buffetl Saturda<lb/>
night was apparently injured onlj<lb/>
slighiK .<lb/>
According to Paul Breitman,<lb/>
associate adirectoi oi Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, Joseph I Bass, 18,<lb/>
fell from a ledge about 12 feel above<lb/>
the highest bleachers in the col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Bass was treated for a broken<lb/>
wrisl and linger at Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital and released<lb/>
Sund<lb/>
Bass fell two stones (about 35<lb/>
I to the ground outside Minges.<lb/>
i he ledge he and a group of people<lb/>
were sitting on was an overhang.<lb/>
Breitman estimated the damage to<lb/>
be at least $5,000. "When similar<lb/>
damage occurred two and one hall<lb/>
yeai ? I cost $3,500 to repair the<lb/>
 Breitman said. With m-<lb/>
on I'm sure it will probablv cost<lb/>
tween $5,000 and $7,000<lb/>
I here is no insurance to pa for<lb/>
the damage and money for repairs<lb/>
will come from concert profits.<lb/>
Similar damage occurred two<lb/>
years ago at the Outlaws-Molly Hat-<lb/>
chet concert, but no one was in-<lb/>
jured.<lb/>
The ledge was not designed to<lb/>
support an weight, Breitman said.<lb/>
The Student Union Major Attrac-<lb/>
tions Committee, which sponsored<lb/>
the concert, is liable for the<lb/>
damages, Breitman said.<lb/>
A rescue squad team was at the<lb/>
concert and reached Bass within a<lb/>
minute oi the fall.<lb/>
"It was a lucky thing we had a<lb/>
rescue squad there said Breitman.<lb/>
1 t. Jay Pennell of campus securi-<lb/>
tv was stationed in the lobby of the<lb/>
coliseum during the concert.<lb/>
"I heard a loud noise, and 1<lb/>
thought somebody had run through<lb/>
the glass doors he said. "1 saw the<lb/>
ceiling and a bunch of insulation ly-<lb/>
ing on the ground and ran out<lb/>
there<lb/>
Pennell said that rescue squad<lb/>
members were already there by the<lb/>
time he got outside.<lb/>
Pennell said (hat security officers<lb/>
were not even aware that people<lb/>
were up in the rafters.<lb/>
"With that big crowd and the lights<lb/>
out we couldsn't tell anybody was<lb/>
up there<lb/>
Major Attractions Chairman<lb/>
Charles Sune said that more than 50<lb/>
ushers and security officers were at<lb/>
the concert.<lb/>
"We try to protect people from<lb/>
each other Sune said. "How are<lb/>
supposed to protect them from<lb/>
themselves too? It's just really an<lb/>
unfortunate incident<lb/>
Sune said that Bass' fall was the<lb/>
only incident at the sold-out con-<lb/>
cert. "It's too bad he said.<lb/>
"Otherwise the concert was a total<lb/>
success<lb/>
Bass said he remembered little of<lb/>
what happened. "1 was in a dae<lb/>
he said. "One minute 1 was listening<lb/>
to the concert, the next thing 1<lb/>
remember is some people putting me<lb/>
in a rescue truck<lb/>
Bass said he was on the ledge<lb/>
because there was no place else to<lb/>
sit.<lb/>
KO?N<lb/>
Joseph Bass, 18, of Rocky Mount fell through this hole in the roof of Minges Coliseum. The accident occurred dur-<lb/>
ing the second half of the .limmv Buffetl concert Saturdav night.<lb/>
Housing Costs, Student Fees To Rise Next Year<lb/>
Bv Oils ROBINSON<lb/>
Mall Wrilrr<lb/>
A I el proposal tor the<lb/>
1981-1982 academic yeai is schedul-<lb/>
ed to be submitted to the ECU<lb/>
hoard ol trustees on March 16. and<lb/>
students can expect increases in<lb/>
several areas<lb/>
According to Dr. Elmer Meyer,<lb/>
vice chancellor for student life, the<lb/>
proposal is tentative and would<lb/>
result in an increase in student fees.<lb/>
"We ate intending to keep fees<lb/>
low said Meyer, "but we have to<lb/>
pick up in utilities. Inflation is the<lb/>
major problem<lb/>
He added that the fee increase<lb/>
would allow "services to be main-<lb/>
tained, not increased<lb/>
The proposed increase for fees<lb/>
and room rental is SI92. Of this<lb/>
total, SI66 would be used for on<lb/>
campus housing. The remaining S26<lb/>
would be used for other university<lb/>
tees, such as athletics, intramurals,<lb/>
and student activities and university<lb/>
unions.<lb/>
The $166 for room rent is a 28<lb/>
percent increase from the $590 fee<lb/>
of 1980-81. Dan K. Woolen, direc-<lb/>
tor of housing operations, said this<lb/>
amount includes a $60 fee for<lb/>
telephone service.<lb/>
"When the student moves in the<lb/>
room explained Wooten, "there<lb/>
will be a 'live' phone there. There<lb/>
will be no installation charge or any<lb/>
monthlv phone bill unless the stu-<lb/>
dent makes a long distance call. This<lb/>
is to offset the telephone cost. The<lb/>
difference is the student doesn't<lb/>
have to pay out o his pocket<lb/>
Wooten stated that in the lobby<lb/>
of each dormitory there will also be<lb/>
a telephone. This telephone would<lb/>
be used to call to a specific room.<lb/>
This, Wooten explained, would<lb/>
eliminate the noise on the floors of<lb/>
the women's dormitories. Also, it<lb/>
would prevent the women from hav-<lb/>
ing to walk upstairs in the men's<lb/>
dormitories.<lb/>
Wooten said that the proposed<lb/>
S756 total for room rent is con-<lb/>
siderably less than most universities<lb/>
in North Carolina.<lb/>
He noted several estimated costs:<lb/>
UNC-C Tiarlotie $822, UNC-<lb/>
Greensboro $781, UNc<lb/>
Wilmington S960, Western Carolina<lb/>
SHOO. Each has a telephone system.<lb/>
"The telephone is new and<lb/>
something the students want he<lb/>
concluded. "The system is not ef-<lb/>
fective without 100 percent pat<lb/>
ticipation<lb/>
The remaining $106 would in-<lb/>
clude: $52 for utilities; $26 for stu-<lb/>
dent salaries; SI2 for dormitory sup-<lb/>
plies, such as office material and<lb/>
toiletries; $6 for capital out-lay,<lb/>
such as chairs, mattresses, and other<lb/>
furniture; and $10 for the an-<lb/>
ticipated deficit.<lb/>
Dr. Ken Karr, Director of<lb/>
Athletics said a Si5 fee increase is<lb/>
Situation Compared To Vietnam<lb/>
California Pot Industry Sets Off 'War'<lb/>
WILLITS, Caht (UPI) Califor-<lb/>
nia's divisive, expensive and<lb/>
escalating offensive against its mari-<lb/>
juana growers often is compared<lb/>
aptly to the Vietnam War.<lb/>
The rhetoric and tactics of both<lb/>
sides recalls the bitterness oi the<lb/>
mid-1960s when the Indochina con-<lb/>
flict polaraied the nation into<lb/>
hawks and doves.<lb/>
Professing to see light at the end<lb/>
oi the tunnel, law enforcement of-<lb/>
ficers and narcotics agents call tor<lb/>
more money and manpower to wipe<lb/>
out one of California's biggest cash<lb/>
crops, estimated by some to be<lb/>
worth SI billion.<lb/>
The self-styled "guerrilla<lb/>
farmers" contend the war against<lb/>
them cannot be won.<lb/>
As in Vietnam, front lines are dif-<lb/>
ficult to pinpoint, but in the<lb/>
forested hills of Mendocino County<lb/>
the commercial growing of mari-<lb/>
juana is rampant.<lb/>
It also is risky. Local, state and<lb/>
Profs To Be Selected<lb/>
During the week of preregistra-<lb/>
tion for the summer and fall<lb/>
semesters (March 2-6), ECU<lb/>
students will have the opportuni-<lb/>
?. to vote for the outstanding<lb/>
teachers they have had for at least<lb/>
one undergraduate course for<lb/>
credit during the fall or spring<lb/>
semester o the 1980-81 academic<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
A computer processed voting<lb/>
card with the student's name and<lb/>
ID number will be available,<lb/>
along with other preregistration<lb/>
materials, from the student's<lb/>
faculty advisor.<lb/>
The voting card should be<lb/>
deposi-cd in a ballot box located<lb/>
in the Registrar's Office in<lb/>
Whichard Building, in the same<lb/>
area where the preregistration<lb/>
course sheet is to be returned.<lb/>
A student not preregistering<lb/>
can also obtain the voting card<lb/>
from the faculty advisor. A stu-<lb/>
dent practice teaching away from<lb/>
the campus will be given the<lb/>
voting card and instructions by<lb/>
the faculty supervisor.<lb/>
The student may vote lor up to<lb/>
three undergraduate course<lb/>
teachers and is to assign each<lb/>
nominated teacher a weight of 10<lb/>
(highest rating), 8, or 6, depen-<lb/>
ding on the intensity of each<lb/>
nomination. Each student will<lb/>
use the four digit code number<lb/>
assigned to a teacher instead of<lb/>
the faculty member's name. The<lb/>
list of names and code numbers<lb/>
will appear in the issue of The<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
Students should bear in mind<lb/>
that the vote is for teachers whom<lb/>
they feel are outstanding. It is not<lb/>
a vole to find the most popular<lb/>
teacher nor a vote to indicate<lb/>
course preference.<lb/>
The student vote will be<lb/>
analysed by the Committee for<lb/>
Teaching Effectiveness in order<lb/>
to minimize any possible bias in<lb/>
the vole due to differences in<lb/>
such factors as class, size,<lb/>
number of students who have had<lb/>
the same instructor more than<lb/>
once (yet, who have only one<lb/>
vote), number of courses taught<lb/>
and the grade distribution of the<lb/>
instructor, etc. Announcement of<lb/>
the results of the vote will be<lb/>
made early in the fall of 1981.<lb/>
Lab instructors who do not<lb/>
assign final grades or instructors<lb/>
of zero-credit courses are not<lb/>
eligible for votes. Graduate<lb/>
students are not to vote for any<lb/>
faculty member on the basis of<lb/>
graduate level courses taken in<lb/>
which a graduate level grade was<lb/>
assigned.<lb/>
federal officers employ planes,<lb/>
helicopters and raiding squads in an<lb/>
effort to halt the cultivation of<lb/>
marijuana plants that grow 12 feet<lb/>
high and produce some of the<lb/>
world's most potent pot.<lb/>
Bert, 36, blond and bearded, is a<lb/>
grower whose name is no really<lb/>
Bert.<lb/>
He owns 40 acres of remote land<lb/>
in the foothills of the Coast Range<lb/>
not far from Willits, a bustling town<lb/>
140 miles north of San Francisco on<lb/>
U.S. 101, otherwise known as the<lb/>
Redwood Highway.<lb/>
"This is a cottage industry said<lb/>
Bert, who majored in journalism in<lb/>
college before turning to pottery<lb/>
making and then to growing mari-<lb/>
juana.<lb/>
"I grew 30 plants last year he<lb/>
said. "They vielded an average of<lb/>
three quarters of a pound each<lb/>
He figures that at an average of<lb/>
See POT, Page 3<lb/>
being recommended for the sports<lb/>
program. "The tee is needed tor the<lb/>
basic cost of doing business and<lb/>
conducting our 1" sports said<lb/>
Karr. " This concerns housing,<lb/>
travel, and food n the road Karr<lb/>
stated that inflation has had an ef-<lb/>
fecl on the teams' awav schedules.<lb/>
He added thai athletes receiving<lb/>
financial aid has also caused a need<lb/>
for the increase.<lb/>
According to Rudolph Alex-<lb/>
ander, director of Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, the center emplovs<lb/>
more than 50 students whose<lb/>
salaries are paid out oi the S43 each<lb/>
full-time student pavs tor the center.<lb/>
"We had to let a secretary and a<lb/>
housekeeper iio said Alexander.<lb/>
"If it wera not for inflation, we<lb/>
could operate with little or no in-<lb/>
crease. It just cost more money for<lb/>
books, recreation, films and enter-<lb/>
tainers The center is requesting a<lb/>
S4? fee increase.<lb/>
Dr. Wayne I dwards, director of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Services,<lb/>
said the department ol intramurals<lb/>
is requesting a Si increa e. The cur-<lb/>
rent fee is S20. "Primarily, there are<lb/>
three reasons tor the proposed tee<lb/>
increase explained Idwards.<lb/>
"First, inflation is the major<lb/>
reason. We are requesting a five pe;<lb/>
cent increase. This is well below the<lb/>
inflation level. Second, there has<lb/>
been an increase in sports clubs<lb/>
from six in September to 1? at the<lb/>
present time. Third, we are respon-<lb/>
sible for safeguarding the students<lb/>
while they are participating in the<lb/>
intramurals. Therefore, some o! it<lb/>
would go toward sports medicine<lb/>
The Media Board is requesting a<lb/>
S4 increase. This increase would<lb/>
result in a S16.75 fee.<lb/>
David Creech, chairman of the<lb/>
Media Board said the fee would be<lb/>
used to cover the cost oi printing,<lb/>
photography and electronic equip-<lb/>
ment for the campus radio station.<lb/>
He added that this is (he first in-<lb/>
crease since the Media Board was<lb/>
formed in 1978.<lb/>
The SGA, the SGA Transit Ser-<lb/>
vices, the Student Fund Accounting<lb/>
Office, and Student Health Service<lb/>
did not submit requests for an in-<lb/>
crease for next vear.<lb/>
ECGC Bill Passes<lb/>
Despite Opposition<lb/>
Photo By AENOY RUSSELL<lb/>
The Jimmy Buffett concert Saturday night at Minges was a sellout.<lb/>
By PALI COLLINS<lb/>
Nrs I dititr<lb/>
After 40 minutes of debate, the<lb/>
SGA Legislature voted Monday to<lb/>
give the East Carolina Gay Com-<lb/>
munity $75 to pay for the cost oi<lb/>
pamphlets the group makes<lb/>
available to students.<lb/>
In its busiest and longest meeting<lb/>
oi the semester, the legislature voted<lb/>
$750 to extend the present contract<lb/>
of the SGA Legal Service for five<lb/>
weeks, defeated a measure recom-<lb/>
mending that executive officers in<lb/>
the legislature resign if they are run-<lb/>
ning in the upcoming election and<lb/>
changed the date for any run-off<lb/>
election that might be held this year.<lb/>
Debate on the ECGC bill centered<lb/>
on whether or not the SGA should<lb/>
give support to the group.<lb/>
Speaking against the bill, Jess<lb/>
Yates said that he could not con-<lb/>
done giving money to the group.<lb/>
"We shouldn't give money to a<lb/>
group that supports such a<lb/>
lifestyle he said.<lb/>
Taking the opposite view, Mary<lb/>
Goold said, "We've already<lb/>
recognized the group. I'm sure that<lb/>
for the money ($75) the group does<lb/>
a lot more good than harm<lb/>
After debate ended the bill passed<lb/>
on a voice vote.<lb/>
The SGA had ratified the ECGC<lb/>
Constitution the week before by a<lb/>
13-12 vote.<lb/>
In another controversial matter<lb/>
the legislature voted $750 to<lb/>
replenish the fund for its legal refer-<lb/>
ral service.<lb/>
A number of legislators question-<lb/>
ed the route the bill took since it did<lb/>
not go through committee. Others<lb/>
felt that a cheaper referral service<lb/>
should be sought.<lb/>
Garv Williams introduced the<lb/>
resolution that would recommend<lb/>
that executive officers running in<lb/>
the March elections resign.<lb/>
Williams felt that a conflict ot in-<lb/>
terest could arise in the legislature it<lb/>
some oi its members were running<lb/>
for office.<lb/>
If the motion had passed it would<lb/>
have affected SGA Speaker Peggy<lb/>
Davison and Appropriations Chair-<lb/>
man Ben Singleton.<lb/>
Davison is a candidate for vice<lb/>
president and Singleton is running<lb/>
for president.<lb/>
In a related move. Rules and<lb/>
Judictary Chairman Russell Over-<lb/>
man resigned. Overman is also a<lb/>
candidate for president.<lb/>
Eleven candidates have filed for<lb/>
the March 4 election.<lb/>
In addition to Overman and<lb/>
Singleton, Lester Nail and Guy Dix-<lb/>
on are running for president.<lb/>
Davison will be up against Andre<lb/>
Nickens and Marvin Braxton for<lb/>
vice president.<lb/>
Incumbent Kirk Little will face<lb/>
Angela Pepe in the race for<lb/>
treasurer. Lou Anne Forbes and<lb/>
Denise Phthisic are the candidates<lb/>
for treasurer.<lb/>
Elections Chairman Al Patrick<lb/>
told the legislature that a can-<lb/>
didates' debate may be held next<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
 <lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057323_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 24, 1981<lb/>
-<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
The deadline for submitting an<lb/>
nooncements is Pnday at 5 p m<lb/>
c.tor the Tuesday issue and Tuesday<lb/>
at noon tor the Thursday issue An<lb/>
nooncements submitted atter<lb/>
these deadlines will not be printed<lb/>
All announcements should be dou<lb/>
ble spaced and typewritten or<lb/>
neatly printed on 8 by 11 inch<lb/>
paper Messages should be Kept as<lb/>
short as possible and contain only<lb/>
essential information The person<lb/>
submitting the announcement<lb/>
should include his name and<lb/>
telephone number at the bottom ot<lb/>
the page<lb/>
BIBLE STUDY<lb/>
Bible Study at the Methodist Stu<lb/>
dent Center has been changed<lb/>
trom Sunday nights It will now be<lb/>
held on Tuesday night at 8 00 p m<lb/>
in the Chapel Visitors are<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
There wl be a SOUL S<lb/>
meeting on Thursday, Feb 26 Im<lb/>
portant business will be discussed<lb/>
Please plan to attend The meeting<lb/>
will be at 7 p m in the Cultural<lb/>
Center<lb/>
CITY COUNCIL<lb/>
Notice is hereby given that the<lb/>
Greenville City Council will con<lb/>
duct a workshop meeting on Mae<lb/>
day. Feb 23. 1981 at 8 00 a m at<lb/>
the Public Works Facility. 1500<lb/>
Beaty Street tor the purpose of<lb/>
discussing goals and obiectives<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be an Ambassadors<lb/>
meeting Sunday March 1 at 7 00<lb/>
in Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
room 244 Elections and amend<lb/>
ment changes will be discussed<lb/>
AFRICAN MUSIC<lb/>
"African Music' (MUSC 54761<lb/>
will be offered Fall 1981 The<lb/>
course is open, with permission of<lb/>
instructor, to non music students<lb/>
as well as music students, non<lb/>
music seniors receive General<lb/>
Education Fine Arts credit and<lb/>
non music graduate students<lb/>
receive credit toward free elec<lb/>
lives The course stresses the<lb/>
history ano geography, society<lb/>
and culture of Africa, and surveys<lb/>
African music within this context<lb/>
Classroom opportunities tor per<lb/>
forming some of the music are m<lb/>
eluded m the course<lb/>
STD<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta, English honor<lb/>
society, will have a meeting<lb/>
Thursday. Feb 26, at 700 p m in<lb/>
Austin 132 Susan Donaldson and<lb/>
Beruta Erdmann of the English<lb/>
and Art History Departments<lb/>
respectively will present a pro<lb/>
gram on "Seascapes in Melville<lb/>
and Whitman " A short business<lb/>
meeting will precede the program<lb/>
Any interested person is invited to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Interviewers are needed for a<lb/>
study of recreational tishing in the<lb/>
Sounds ot North Carolina The pro<lb/>
ject will be m progress trom<lb/>
March l to Nov 30. 1981, and will<lb/>
involve interviewing recreational<lb/>
fishermen at designated launching<lb/>
sites m eastern North Carolina<lb/>
Training will be given Applicants<lb/>
must be of sophomore, lunior,<lb/>
senior, or graduate standing and<lb/>
own or have access to a car For<lb/>
further information and applica<lb/>
tion forms, contact Peter Fricke<lb/>
or Marcus Hepburn, Institute tor<lb/>
Coastal and Marine Resources,<lb/>
East Carolina University,<lb/>
telephone 757 6220<lb/>
BUSINESS MAJORS<lb/>
The Max R Joyner Alomn.<lb/>
Scholarship will be awarded dur<lb/>
ing the spring semester to a full<lb/>
time student who is pursuing a<lb/>
degree in the School of Business<lb/>
The scholarship will be tor the<lb/>
amount of tuition and fees tor a<lb/>
resident student<lb/>
Students interested m making<lb/>
application may secure forms<lb/>
from the Financial Aid Office or<lb/>
trom the following department of<lb/>
fices m the School of Business<lb/>
Accounting Department, R325<lb/>
Economics Department R238<lb/>
Finance Department R343?<lb/>
Marketing and Management<lb/>
Department R137<lb/>
Ail applications must be submit<lb/>
ted to Ruth Jones (Raw! 334;<lb/>
Chairman of the School of<lb/>
Business Scholarship Committee,<lb/>
by March l<lb/>
Recipients will be selected on<lb/>
Hie bass of scholarship and<lb/>
? :enshp Final selection will be<lb/>
made b? April 1 by the ECU Stu<lb/>
dent Scholarships, Fellowships<lb/>
ano Financial Aid Committee<lb/>
from candidates submitted to the<lb/>
Commiee b. the Dean of 'he<lb/>
School of Business<lb/>
PERCUSSION RECITAL<lb/>
wo percussion students in the<lb/>
School ot Music Eric Okamoto<lb/>
ano James Ray Roberts jr . will<lb/>
present a iomt senior reictal at<lb/>
7 OOP m Monday, March 2. in the<lb/>
A j Fletcher Recital Han<lb/>
The program is open to the<lb/>
public free of admission charge<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
Students preregistering may<lb/>
enroll for Fine Arts General<lb/>
Education credit in Music Ap<lb/>
preciation (2208), Music of the<lb/>
Theatre (2228), History of Jan<lb/>
Music (22581, Orchestral Music<lb/>
(2218). African Music (54760) Per<lb/>
formance groups accepting many<lb/>
non music maiors are Marching<lb/>
Band, University Chorale, Men's<lb/>
Glee Club. Women's Chorus,<lb/>
Women's Glee Club Limited<lb/>
spaces may exist for private and<lb/>
group lessons on some in<lb/>
struments<lb/>
TWIG FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
People learning the Bible, so we<lb/>
will know the principles of living<lb/>
the Word ot God sets forth Then<lb/>
as we apply these principles to our<lb/>
lives, we learn how to help people<lb/>
help themselves and enjoy life<lb/>
John 10 10, I Tim 6 17 jom us in<lb/>
our quest to learn the Word of Goo.<lb/>
which is the Will of God Monday<lb/>
and Thursday (23 Feb and 26<lb/>
FebMendenhali Student Center.<lb/>
Rm 212 at 7 30 p m (Also Tues<lb/>
24 Feb and Thurs . 26 Feb 8112<lb/>
noon, Rm 212 )<lb/>
MANAGER WANTED<lb/>
Anyone desiring to be a<lb/>
manager for the baseball team<lb/>
should contact the baseball office<lb/>
m Scales Field House at 757 6471<lb/>
Experience in some type of<lb/>
athletics is helpful, but not re<lb/>
quired This employment will<lb/>
start immediately<lb/>
AED<lb/>
On Tuesday Feb 24, Alpha Ep<lb/>
s lor Delta preprofessionai society<lb/>
wilt conduct a business meeting at<lb/>
7 30 p m m Flanagan 307 Dr<lb/>
James L Smith of the philosophy<lb/>
department wn discuss bioeth.es<lb/>
Also a bake sale will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb 25 in front of the<lb/>
Students Supply Store All<lb/>
members and interested persons<lb/>
are urged to attend the meeting<lb/>
and brmg baked goods tor the<lb/>
bake sale<lb/>
TWIG FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
People learning the Bible, so we<lb/>
will know the principles of living<lb/>
the word of God sets forth Then as<lb/>
we apply these principles to our<lb/>
lives we learn how to help people<lb/>
help themselves and enjoy life<lb/>
John '0 10. I Tim 6 17 Join us in<lb/>
our quest to learn the Word ot God.<lb/>
which is the Will of God<lb/>
(Thursday, 26 Feb . at 12 noon and<lb/>
7 30 p m , Rm 212 (next to the<lb/>
music listening room) Mendenhali<lb/>
Student Center <lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
The Latney W Pittard, Jr<lb/>
Memorial Scholarship and the E<lb/>
A Thomas, Jr Accounting<lb/>
Scholarship will be awarded dur<lb/>
ing spring semester The scholar<lb/>
ships will be tor approximately the<lb/>
amount of tuition for resident<lb/>
students<lb/>
Students interested m making<lb/>
application should secure forms<lb/>
from the Accounting Departmen<lb/>
tal Off'ce iRawi 325 or the Fman<lb/>
clal Aid Office All applications<lb/>
must be submitted to Ruth Jones<lb/>
Rawl 3341, chairman of scholar<lb/>
ship committee in the Accounting<lb/>
Department, by March 1<lb/>
Recipients will be selected on<lb/>
the basis of scholarship citizen<lb/>
ship and need, n that order in<lb/>
addition, the permanent residence<lb/>
of a candidate for the Latney W<lb/>
Pittard, jr Memorial Scholar<lb/>
ship should be m Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina (East ot Highway I 95) or<lb/>
any county west of Highway I 95 m<lb/>
which Pittard and Perry inc .<lb/>
maintains an office<lb/>
Final selection will be made by<lb/>
April 1 by the ECU Student<lb/>
Scholarships Fellowships and<lb/>
Financial Aid Committee from<lb/>
candidates submitted to the Com<lb/>
mittee by the Dean of the School of<lb/>
Business<lb/>
TUBARECITAL<lb/>
Bruce Mosier. graduate<lb/>
teaching assistant m the School of<lb/>
Music, will present a tuba reictal<lb/>
at 9 00 p m , Monday March 2, in<lb/>
the A J Fletcher Recital Hall<lb/>
Assisting m the program will be<lb/>
music students vai Parks, piano<lb/>
Angela Boone, flute. John Jones.<lb/>
Joe Alexander, and Bill<lb/>
Chamberlain, tuba, Billy Stocks.<lb/>
Mike Rogers, trombone ano<lb/>
faculty member George<lb/>
Broussard, trombone<lb/>
The program is open to the<lb/>
public No admission will be<lb/>
charged<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS<lb/>
The Co op Off'ce has intorma<lb/>
tion concerning summei tern<lb/>
ships for both graduate and<lb/>
undergraduate students who have<lb/>
backgrounds m computer science<lb/>
Students should review internship<lb/>
descriptions posted outside 313<lb/>
Rawl 'f interested and should con<lb/>
tact the Co op Office tor additional<lb/>
information<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
Attention all social work and<lb/>
corrections maiors and intended<lb/>
maiors There will be a Corso<lb/>
meeting on Tuesday Feb 24 at 5<lb/>
p m m Mendenhali room 248 All<lb/>
members are urged to attend'<lb/>
New members are welcome!<lb/>
UNITED WAY<lb/>
Dr Rosalie Ann Maritun. cam<lb/>
pus Chairman for the 1980 United<lb/>
Way Campaign, is pleased to an<lb/>
nounce that East Carolina Univer<lb/>
sity contributed a total of 113 per<lb/>
cent of its established goal The<lb/>
actual dollar representation was<lb/>
over J22.700 This amount surpass<lb/>
ea the 1979 contribution by 30 per<lb/>
cent! Dr Haritun would like to<lb/>
take this opportunity to thank all<lb/>
those who contributed to this sue<lb/>
cessful effort The university com<lb/>
munitv can be proud ot con<lb/>
tnbuting its fair share to the<lb/>
United Way Campaign<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
The General College has chang<lb/>
ed some preregistration advising<lb/>
procedures Students should see<lb/>
Official Announcements No 6 and<lb/>
No 7 for information on advising<lb/>
appointments and on procedures<lb/>
for completion of preregistration<lb/>
advising<lb/>
AP<lb/>
East Carolina university will<lb/>
host and co sponsor a regional<lb/>
seminar March 19 on Advanced<lb/>
Placement, a program by which<lb/>
high school students earn college<lb/>
credits tor successful completion<lb/>
of advanced courses<lb/>
The seminar is for secondary<lb/>
and collegiate faculty and school<lb/>
administrators at the secondary<lb/>
and postsecondary level ?<lb/>
superintendents, principals,<lb/>
guidance and curriculum person<lb/>
nel, deans, admissions and<lb/>
registration officers<lb/>
Individual sessions by discipline<lb/>
will be led by experienced Advanc<lb/>
ed Placement teachers and ad<lb/>
ministrators and will include Ad<lb/>
ministration. American History,<lb/>
Art. Biology, Calculus, Chemistry.<lb/>
Classics, English, Eurpopean<lb/>
History. French, German, Music,<lb/>
Physics and Spanish The seminar<lb/>
is one of nine being sponsored<lb/>
lomtly by institutions and the<lb/>
southern regional office of the Col<lb/>
lege Board, according to Walter<lb/>
Bortz ECU director of Admis<lb/>
sions<lb/>
INVENTORY<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
"Inventory Management a<lb/>
one day seminar to help<lb/>
managaers develop inventory<lb/>
planning and control systems, will<lb/>
be sponsored by the East Carolina<lb/>
University Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education March 6<lb/>
All sessions will be held in the<lb/>
Greenville Ramada Inn<lb/>
Seminar director is D? Carl W<lb/>
Goodmg of the ECU School of<lb/>
Business Department of<lb/>
Marketing and Management and<lb/>
former Clemson University facul<lb/>
ty member<lb/>
THe program's topics are "The<lb/>
Inventory Management Func<lb/>
tion "Nine Key Results Areas<lb/>
for improve Inventory Manage<lb/>
ment "inventory System Con<lb/>
cepts" and "inventory Control<lb/>
Concepts "<lb/>
The seminar is particularly<lb/>
recommended for purchasing<lb/>
managers, stock supervisors, pro<lb/>
duction control managers, small<lb/>
business proprietors, parts<lb/>
distributors and management<lb/>
trainees<lb/>
Since only 40 persons will be ac<lb/>
cepted for the seminar, early<lb/>
registration is advised<lb/>
Further information and<lb/>
registration materials are<lb/>
available from "Inventory<lb/>
Management Division of Conti<lb/>
numg Education ECU Green<lb/>
ville. N C 27834<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
Careers for North Carolina<lb/>
women interested m science,<lb/>
mathematics engineering and<lb/>
social science are Jhe topic for a<lb/>
one day workshop at Meredith<lb/>
College m Raleigh on Saturday.<lb/>
April 4<lb/>
Resarch Triangle institute is<lb/>
conducting the workshop under a<lb/>
grant from the National Science<lb/>
Foundation<lb/>
Applications should be made as<lb/>
soon as possible by calling collect<lb/>
to Research Triangle institute<lb/>
staff members Mary Ellen Taylor<lb/>
at 919 541 6324. or Carol Place at<lb/>
919 541 6318<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
The Sign Language Club will<lb/>
have its regular bi monthly<lb/>
meeting on Sunday, March l<lb/>
beginning at 6 p.m in the multil<lb/>
purpose room of Mendenhali Stu<lb/>
dent Center There will be a<lb/>
covered dish dinner before the<lb/>
meeting and a captioned film<lb/>
afterward This week's film is<lb/>
"The Sound of Music " An<lb/>
members are urged to attend and<lb/>
any interested persons are<lb/>
welcomed You need not be a<lb/>
member Hey, check us out!<lb/>
HARASSMENT<lb/>
HOTLINE<lb/>
Sexual harassment is a<lb/>
widespread student faculty pro<lb/>
blem at ECU. affecting 33 percent<lb/>
of the female students A<lb/>
telephone line is now open to<lb/>
receive calls from students who<lb/>
have been offended by unwanted<lb/>
sexual looks comments sugges<lb/>
tions, or touches from faculty<lb/>
members It you have been offend<lb/>
ed. please call Your confidential!<lb/>
ty is guaranteed Statements will<lb/>
not be used to file complaints<lb/>
against faculty members, our pur<lb/>
pose is to gather information only<lb/>
The hotline is in operation Mon<lb/>
Thurs 2 10, Fn Sat 12 4. Sun 4 10<lb/>
We need to talk with you Please<lb/>
call Lmda an ECU student, at<lb/>
752 3484<lb/>
ADVISOR<lb/>
Any faculty member interested<lb/>
m advising a newly forming cam<lb/>
pus organization whose purpose is<lb/>
to promote the consciousness of<lb/>
world citizenship please phone<lb/>
752 4483 or 758 9530 as soon as<lb/>
possible<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
The General College has Chang<lb/>
ed some preregistration advising<lb/>
procedures Students should see<lb/>
Official Announcements no 6 ano<lb/>
no 7 for information on advising<lb/>
appointments and on procedures<lb/>
for completion of preregistration<lb/>
advising<lb/>
ELECTION<lb/>
Anyone interested in running in<lb/>
SOULS election, contact<lb/>
Gracie Wells at 752 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/>
PHOTOGRAPHY<lb/>
Two photography courses will<lb/>
be ottered on Tuesday evenings at<lb/>
East Carolina University this<lb/>
semester<lb/>
Camera I the basic course,<lb/>
will meet Feb 10 March 17. and<lb/>
"Camera II meets March 31<lb/>
April 28 Class sessions in each<lb/>
course are set for 7 9 p m on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Participants m each course<lb/>
should have their own cameras,<lb/>
preferably 35 millimeter or larger<lb/>
information and registration<lb/>
materials tor these and other<lb/>
evening course offerings are<lb/>
available from the Office of Non<lb/>
Credit Programs. Division of Con<lb/>
tmumg Education, ECU, Green<lb/>
ville, N C . telephone 757 6143<lb/>
AMA<lb/>
The Albert R Conley Chapter of<lb/>
the American Marketing Assooa<lb/>
tion will hold its next meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday Feb 25, a' 5 00 in<lb/>
Rawl 130 The?guest speaker will<lb/>
be Mr Davd Joyner. a sales<lb/>
representative from Harrington<lb/>
Manufacturing All interested per<lb/>
sons are urged to attend<lb/>
SLAP<lb/>
The Eleventh Annual Speech<lb/>
and Hearing Symposium located<lb/>
at the Belk Building Auditorium at<lb/>
ECU will be held Feb 26 and 27<lb/>
The Symposium will augment the<lb/>
professional growth and<lb/>
knowledge of those who provide<lb/>
services to the language<lb/>
disordered child The Sym<lb/>
posium's mam session concerning<lb/>
"The Language Disordered Child<lb/>
Clinical Applications ot<lb/>
Pragmatics" will be given by Lyn<lb/>
da Miller, Ph D Mini sessions will<lb/>
include "The Language Station<lb/>
Approach to Language Therapy"<lb/>
given by LaRose Daniels. M S .<lb/>
CCC SP. and Larry Livengood<lb/>
M A Ed as well as Tom Hawley.<lb/>
R M T , who will be speaking on<lb/>
"Music as a Facility, ig Modality<lb/>
m Speech and Language Develop<lb/>
ment " All interested persons are<lb/>
invited For further information<lb/>
contact the ECU Speech and Hear<lb/>
mg Clinic<lb/>
TUTORS<lb/>
The Accounting Society will<lb/>
tutor accounting 2401 ano accoun<lb/>
ting 2521 every Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday in Rawl 341 from 4 00<lb/>
5 00<lb/>
BSU<lb/>
The Baptist Student union will<lb/>
have its fellowship supper this<lb/>
evening at 5 30 Cost for the meal<lb/>
is $1.75. Following supper, Kent<lb/>
McCuUough, guest speaker, will<lb/>
talk on "Vocations" Join us at 511<lb/>
East 10th street, (next to Wen<lb/>
dy'si<lb/>
Financial Aid Faces 20 Percent Cut<lb/>
(CPS)?Fully half the<lb/>
nation's college<lb/>
students might have to<lb/>
change their plans for<lb/>
next year if Congress<lb/>
passes President<lb/>
Ronald Reagan's plan<lb/>
to cut federal financial<lb/>
aid by 20 percent,<lb/>
financial aid ad-<lb/>
ministrators warn.<lb/>
The cuts recom-<lb/>
mended by the Office<lb/>
of Management and<lb/>
Budget have private<lb/>
colleges in particular<lb/>
scurrying to devise<lb/>
methods to compensate<lb/>
for the loss in grants<lb/>
and loans. But all col-<lb/>
lege administrators<lb/>
contacted by College<lb/>
Press Service feared the<lb/>
proposed cuts would<lb/>
destroy their<lb/>
enrollments.<lb/>
Don Mullen, head of<lb/>
financial aid at the<lb/>
University of Montana<lb/>
and the president of the<lb/>
Rocky Mountain<lb/>
Association of Student<lb/>
Financial Aid Ad-<lb/>
ministrators, predicts<lb/>
that if the cuts are ap-<lb/>
proved, "Aid to part-<lb/>
time students will be<lb/>
the first eliminated.<lb/>
Then we'd probably<lb/>
have to make aid<lb/>
dependent on grades<lb/>
Even then, Mullen<lb/>
estimates that Montana<lb/>
still would have "about<lb/>
500 hurt students<lb/>
which would<lb/>
"unquestionably have<lb/>
a significant impact on<lb/>
enrollment<lb/>
Of major conse-<lb/>
quence to Mullen and<lb/>
other financial aid ad-<lb/>
ministrators are the<lb/>
recommendations<lb/>
made concerning Pell<lb/>
Grants, National Direct<lb/>
Student Loans, and<lb/>
Guaianteed Student<lb/>
loans.<lb/>
Specifically, Office<lb/>
of Management and<lb/>
Budget (OMB) Director<lb/>
David Stockman wants<lb/>
to cut 286,000 students<lb/>
froam the Pell<lb/>
(formerly BEOG) pro-<lb/>
gram bv restricting the<lb/>
grants to students from<lb/>
families making less<lb/>
than $25,000 a year.<lb/>
Mullen frets such a<lb/>
move would "cut off a<lb/>
couple hundred<lb/>
students" at Montana<lb/>
alone, while Donald<lb/>
Chenelle of Case-<lb/>
Western in Ohio asserts<lb/>
"it would be an incredi-<lb/>
ble hardship" for those<lb/>
families with more than<lb/>
one child in college.<lb/>
"If you've got two or<lb/>
three kids in graduate<lb/>
and undergraduate<lb/>
school, even if you earn<lb/>
a higher-than-average<lb/>
income, you're going to<lb/>
have trouble putting<lb/>
those kids through<lb/>
school unless you can<lb/>
pay in installments over<lb/>
a long period of time.<lb/>
Pell Grants gave people<lb/>
that opportunity<lb/>
Chenelle says.<lb/>
Stockman also wants<lb/>
to eliminate the Na-<lb/>
tional Direct Student<lb/>
Loan program over the<lb/>
next four years. The<lb/>
loss would pose addi-<lb/>
tional problems for<lb/>
students hoping to<lb/>
"make up for the loss<lb/>
of a rant with a loan<lb/>
says Paul Chrisman of<lb/>
Wichita State.<lb/>
Chrisman's financial<lb/>
aid office manages $1<lb/>
million yearly in<lb/>
NDSLs, some of which<lb/>
is used to fund other<lb/>
programs, like<lb/>
workstudy.<lb/>
The Guaranteed Stu-<lb/>
dent Loan plan,<lb/>
however, is the largest<lb/>
federal aid program,<lb/>
and administrators<lb/>
predict thai<lb/>
Stockcman's recom-<lb/>
mended changes in the<lb/>
GSL program could<lb/>
cause the worst pro-<lb/>
blems and most<lb/>
drastically affect<lb/>
enrollment.<lb/>
Stockman proposes<lb/>
the elimination of the<lb/>
"in-school interest sub-<lb/>
sidy" program of<lb/>
Guaranteed Student<lb/>
Loans. Under the cur-<lb/>
rent system, students<lb/>
repay bank loans for<lb/>
tuition at nine percent<lb/>
interest rates, while the<lb/>
government pays the<lb/>
difference between nine<lb/>
percent and the regular<lb/>
interest rate. Under the<lb/>
new plan, students will<lb/>
have to pay the regular<lb/>
market rate, which now<lb/>
hovers between 17 and<lb/>
20 percent.<lb/>
Benjamin CuUey of<lb/>
Occidental College<lb/>
mourns that the loss of<lb/>
any part of the GSL<lb/>
program "would be a<lb/>
very heavy blow" to<lb/>
schools. Nationally, it<lb/>
provides $4.8 billion to<lb/>
students yearly.<lb/>
Over 600 students get<lb/>
$1.25 million in GSLs<lb/>
every year at Occiden-<lb/>
tal, and CuUey warns<lb/>
that many of those peo-<lb/>
ple would have to<lb/>
transfer to a public<lb/>
school if that money<lb/>
dried up.<lb/>
"We simply don't<lb/>
have the resources to<lb/>
make up for that<lb/>
money Culley says.<lb/>
"One-third of our<lb/>
students would be af-<lb/>
fected by such a thing,<lb/>
and they'd have to get<lb/>
the money somewhere<lb/>
else in order to stay at<lb/>
Occidental<lb/>
Almost half the<lb/>
students enrolled at<lb/>
Maine's Babson Col-<lb/>
lege are dependent on<lb/>
GSLs, according to Ed-<lb/>
wina Middleton of the<lb/>
financial aid office.<lb/>
Any change in the pro-<lb/>
gram would "pose a<lb/>
threat" to private<lb/>
schools, she says,<lb/>
because students simply<lb/>
couldn't afford the<lb/>
high tuition costs of<lb/>
such colleges.<lb/>
But if GSLs provide<lb/>
for 30-50 percent of<lb/>
undergraduates, Emory<lb/>
University's Herman<lb/>
Reese estimates that at<lb/>
least 60-75 percent of<lb/>
the nation's graduate<lb/>
students rely on the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
m<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each ot these advertised items is required to be readily available for<lb/>
I below the advertised price in each A&amp;P Store, except as specifically<lb/>
in this ad<lb/>
sale at or<lb/>
noted J<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT FEB. 28, AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL<lb/>
DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
GRADE"A"<lb/>
2 LowfatMilk<lb/>
ANN PAGE m m Qa <lb/>
1 Lowfat Milk Gal $1.89 ? OJ<lb/>
Gal. Jug J<lb/>
Great Steak Giveaway<lb/>
Register to Win s10000 Worth of<lb/>
Steaks or Meat Of Your Choice!<lb/>
Drawing Will Be Held Saturday Night At 6:00 P.M. To Determine<lb/>
100?? WINNER In Each A&amp;P Store In North And South Carolina<lb/>
(Except Aiken &amp; Beaufort). Winning Ticket From Each Store Will<lb/>
Be Forwarded To A&amp;P Charlotte Office. Winner Will Receive By<lb/>
Mail A 10000 Gift Certificate For Steaks or Meat Of Your Choice.<lb/>
No Purchase Necessary. You Must Be f.<lb/>
16 Years Of Age To Enter A&amp;P<lb/>
Employees And Dependents Not<lb/>
Eligible To Win<lb/>
ENTRY BLANK-GREAT STEAK GIVEAWAY<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
STREET ADDRESS<lb/>
CITY<lb/>
STATE<lb/>
TELEPHONE<lb/>
ZIPCODE<lb/>
ENTER OFTEN ? NO PURCHASE NECESSARY<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS GRADE "A"<lb/>
Mixed <lb/>
Fryer Parts<lb/>
JUMBO PKG (6 LBS OR MORE)<lb/>
Whole Fryer Legs it<lb/>
89?)<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
(3 lbs. or more)<lb/>
Ib.<lb/>
LUNDY FRESH<lb/>
Pork Roast<lb/>
99?<lb/>
Boston Butt<lb/>
SOUTHERN STAR<lb/>
Turkey Hot Dogs<lb/>
59c<lb/>
WHITE HOUSE?SAVE 45'<lb/>
Apple Sauce<lb/>
- 100<lb/>
WHITE HOUSE <lb/>
Apple Juice ?iC<lb/>
bti y7v 0 cans<lb/>
12oz.<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
99c<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
8oz.<lb/>
twin<lb/>
pack<lb/>
V2 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
30 COUPON<lb/>
ANN PAGE?REALLY FINE<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT , FEB 2$, AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE N C<lb/>
1qt.<lb/>
jar<lb/>
? SI-<lb/>
663<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
LIQUID iftf <lb/>
Clorox Bleach ?M- OiT j<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT FEB ?B AT A&amp;P I N GRE E NVILLE . N C<lb/>
I<lb/>
'665!<lb/>
45? COUPON<lb/>
CONTAINS RICH  fet d ? ?<lb/>
BRAZILIAN COFFEES ? . . Mm 1 wA 1<lb/>
Eight0dockffi3?j<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT FEB 28 AT ASP IN GREENVILLE. N C<lb/>
zzETARr<lb/>
FLORIDA SWEET &amp; JUICY<lb/>
Oranges<lb/>
SAVE 65?<lb/>
125<lb/>
size<lb/>
WINESAP<lb/>
IMPORTED DIRECT FROM SOUTH AMERICA<lb/>
Green Grapes<lb/>
99?<lb/>
eco less<lb/>
Co<lb/>
Th<lb/>
t fyl<lb/>
ecu rive<lb/>
I<lb/>
PC<lb/>
b<lb/>
i tinl<lb/>
<lb/>
i:<lb/>
?<lb/>
pa<lb/>
on his!<lb/>
ot life,<lb/>
alkms<lb/>
woods<lb/>
tie<lb/>
im i<lb/>
IV<lb/>
lumhtl<lb/>
green!<lb/>
the g<lb/>
I've pi<lb/>
Bartlefl<lb/>
trees.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057323_0003"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I! I M K'il IM <lb/>
I I ItKI k 24. IWI<lb/>
Petro Explains His<lb/>
Powers To Audience<lb/>
Robert Petro<lb/>
?ON JORDAN<lb/>
Congress Different World<lb/>
Than That Of Presidency<lb/>
W S H 1 N (<lb/>
wit<lb/>
a<lb/>
only<lb/>
lenu.<lb/>
a<lb/>
w hile<lb/>
1 v<lb/>
iouse,<lb/>
the<lb/>
ninion<lb/>
;m am<lb/>
H<lb/>
IUS,<lb/>
ecutive what the news is<lb/>
I to determine how<lb/>
andle il.<lb/>
i<lb/>
iU5<lb/>
iblt<lb/>
ar<lb/>
information,<lb/>
always is<lb/>
to the presi-<lb/>
consistent<lb/>
? v iev.<lb/>
ei W hue<lb/>
illustrated this<lb/>
Jody Powell was<lb/>
.11 m C arter's<lb/>
- ? ? . for a<lb/>
1 in oneti<lb/>
iw n strengths,<lb/>
 p a tight rein<lb/>
I e information<lb/>
. from the White<lb/>
House and he shaped il<lb/>
well. He was an<lb/>
and dedicated<lb/>
ot c arter's<lb/>
a ell was<lb/>
thai<lb/>
a heller<lb/>
tides<lb/>
he was closer<lb/>
and the<lb/>
s knew il. In his<lb/>
briefings or the<lb/>
frequent tete-a-tetes in<lb/>
his office, he often<lb/>
ff a news<lb/>
bj refusing to<lb/>
ti mining aside<lb/>
questions. Or, it he<lb/>
through expan-<lb/>
sive answers or his<lb/>
oice o t poi n I?. d<lb/>
words he was able to<lb/>
generate news.<lb/>
c apitol Hill is the<lb/>
opposite ol all 'his.<lb/>
S o m e w h ere,<lb/>
somebody has the in-<lb/>
formation on almost<lb/>
am subject imaginable<lb/>
thai he is more than<lb/>
willing to share with a<lb/>
reporter.<lb/>
There are 100<lb/>
sen a!ors and 435<lb/>
representatives many<lb/>
ol w horn are gari ulous<lb/>
and not at all modest<lb/>
about expressing their<lb/>
opinion. I hese also are<lb/>
times when they do noi<lb/>
feel especially bound to<lb/>
adhere to their party's<lb/>
official stand.<lb/>
It they are reticent,<lb/>
many oi then 20,000<lb/>
stafl members are not.<lb/>
1 he same traits thai ai<lb/>
tract thest aides many<lb/>
of them young and<lb/>
eager to the political<lb/>
intrigues and environ-<lb/>
ment of Capitol Hill<lb/>
also make them<lb/>
vulnerable to spilling<lb/>
the beans about almost<lb/>
any thing.<lb/>
Many of these aides.<lb/>
particulai ly committee<lb/>
staff members, also are<lb/>
bona tide experts in<lb/>
their fields. Congres-<lb/>
sional aides almost<lb/>
always have an edge<lb/>
over their hue House<lb/>
counterparts in mastei y<lb/>
on an issue.<lb/>
I 11 eie also are<lb/>
log i si ieal handicaps<lb/>
that make the White<lb/>
House a more difficuli<lb/>
reporting assignment.<lb/>
Reporters have access<lb/>
only to the White-<lb/>
House press area. So<lb/>
they must rely on the<lb/>
telephone. There are<lb/>
only a handful ol aides<lb/>
to call on am one<lb/>
topic, and the reporter<lb/>
is at the mercy oi their<lb/>
willingess to return<lb/>
calls.<lb/>
r h e r e are t ew<lb/>
physical restraints at<lb/>
the Capitol. 11 a couple<lb/>
members of Congress<lb/>
men auk's<lb/>
unavailable, there<lb/>
umpteen others to<lb/>
a r e<lb/>
are<lb/>
call.<lb/>
 reporter can drop in<lb/>
on offices or linger in<lb/>
the corridors to nab a<lb/>
congressman for a mo-<lb/>
ment's com ei sation.<lb/>
Somevi there<lb/>
aie those aides oi con-<lb/>
ssmen w ho w ill talk<lb/>
and it's not<lb/>
find thei<lb/>
Maid to<lb/>
AftMY MAW STORE J<lb/>
ti(N(tl ? IS Bom-er <lb/>
0 lil 6. Fl.t?t Snorkel ?<lb/>
Jackr't Pf?cots P'ks <lb/>
 SHoes. Combat Boot Plus <lb/>
(11 S E vni S'rp?' ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
By CHAD BUFFK1N<lb/>
Wistani News 1 ditor<lb/>
Psychic Robert Petro<lb/>
"set minds to wonder-<lb/>
ing during a press<lb/>
conference last Mon-<lb/>
day afternoon at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Petro, a nationally<lb/>
k now n New York<lb/>
psychic, held a lecture-<lb/>
demonstration earliei<lb/>
that afternoon at Rose<lb/>
High School before<lb/>
returning to Durham<lb/>
where he is currently<lb/>
assisting police in an in-<lb/>
vestigation.<lb/>
Petro said he first<lb/>
realized his ability<lb/>
when he was 5 years<lb/>
old. "Teachers noticed<lb/>
something different<lb/>
about me and sent me<lb/>
to the school<lb/>
psychiatrist he said.<lb/>
"In later years I<lb/>
withdrew completely<lb/>
and went into my ow n<lb/>
world<lb/>
At the age of 33<lb/>
Petro gave away his<lb/>
flower shop in Manhat-<lb/>
tan to become a<lb/>
psychic. "My pur-<lb/>
pose he explained,<lb/>
"was to help people<lb/>
Petro's ability as a<lb/>
psychic has brought<lb/>
him into the public eye<lb/>
on many occasions.<lb/>
Considered by many to<lb/>
be one of the top<lb/>
psychics in the country,<lb/>
he has worked with<lb/>
federal agencies and<lb/>
 4<lb/>
with police in several<lb/>
slates.<lb/>
He has been called<lb/>
on to assist in murdei<lb/>
cases, bank robberies<lb/>
and to help locate miss<lb/>
ing persons. Although<lb/>
Petro's lees foi<lb/>
assisting private in-<lb/>
dividuals is rathei high,<lb/>
all Ins work foi law en-<lb/>
forcement agencies is<lb/>
voluntary.<lb/>
In addition to woi k-<lb/>
mg with the police,<lb/>
Petro frequently lights<lb/>
up the switch boards ol<lb/>
broadcast si at ions<lb/>
across the nation while<lb/>
COn dllCting 1 ad 1 o<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
lie recently did a<lb/>
show toi radio station<lb/>
WITN m Greenville.<lb/>
"1 have never seen<lb/>
the audience gel so ex-<lb/>
cited over any of my<lb/>
guests the way they did<lb/>
w lien Robert Petro was<lb/>
on the an  said Allen<lb/>
Handel man. a disc<lb/>
jockey at WITN. "In<lb/>
the si years I have<lb/>
done the show, no one<lb/>
lias ever proved the ?ay<lb/>
Robert Petro did<lb/>
Petro stated a the<lb/>
press t ? ;<lb/>
day a!lei noon that he is<lb/>
tired of having to prove<lb/>
luniselt everywhere he<lb/>
goes. "I regrel that<lb/>
people often see me as a<lb/>
performei and as an<lb/>
oddity he said. 'Tin<lb/>
no! a cuckoo. I have a<lb/>
vast a in ouni oi<lb/>
knowledge<lb/>
On several occasions<lb/>
Petro has attempted to<lb/>
wain prominent figures<lb/>
of forthcoming danger.<lb/>
"I think I could have<lb/>
com meed John 1 en-<lb/>
non of his personal<lb/>
danger fie told Globe<lb/>
reporters recently.<lb/>
Petio gave Globe a<lb/>
copy o! a. letter he sent<lb/>
lo I ennon 10 day s<lb/>
before he was killed.<lb/>
pproximately 40<lb/>
students and visitors<lb/>
were present at the<lb/>
press conference. Petro<lb/>
answered quest ions<lb/>
posed by the audience<lb/>
bu I iet used t o<lb/>
demonstrate his<lb/>
abilities in other than a<lb/>
general nature.<lb/>
What does Petro say<lb/>
about the future?<lb/>
He feels thai people<lb/>
will see more money<lb/>
now that Reagan has<lb/>
been elected. "Many of<lb/>
Reagan's tactics will be<lb/>
opposed Petro said.<lb/>
"but in tune, people<lb/>
will realize the changes<lb/>
were necessary.<lb/>
SUMMER JOB OPENINGS FOR CAMP COUNSELORS<lb/>
at Camp Sea (jU (boys) and Camp Seafarer (girls) Serving as a<lb/>
camp counselor is a challenging and rewarding opportunity to<lb/>
wort- with young people, ages 7 16 Sea Gull and Seafarer are<lb/>
health and character development camps located on the coast<lb/>
of North Carolina and feature sailing, motor boating, and<lb/>
seamanship plus many usual camping activities including a<lb/>
wide variety of maior sports Qualifications include a genuine<lb/>
interest in young people, ability to instruct in one phase of the<lb/>
camps' programs, and excellent references For further infor<lb/>
mahon and application, please write a brief resume of training<lb/>
and experience m area(s) skilled to Don Cheek, Director.<lb/>
Camps Sea Gull i I rer, PO Box 10976, Raleigh, Not<lb/>
Carolina 2760b<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
RLPAIR<lb/>
! 1 ijr.tnrlo w<lb/>
7SS 1228<lb/>
Qualitv Repair<lb/>
Rip<lb/>
&amp; Sew<lb/>
Alterations<lb/>
20 years of<lb/>
Experience<lb/>
Reasonable<lb/>
Rates<lb/>
714 Dickinson Ave<lb/>
757-1136<lb/>
Tfc Ham @ s?<lb/>
OMM 1 HOUtl<lb/>
$??m Copf ?? ' ' :<lb/>
Oi L?i ?lt? S<lb/>
 I<lb/>
I M<lb/>
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II' K<lb/>
'JOi I t<lb/>
'Of 4 ?"? :<lb/>
Green,<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
Across From<lb/>
Bount Harvey<lb/>
Parking In<lb/>
Front &amp; Back<lb/>
O Shoo<lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
758 0204<lb/>
i I W ?th S'<lb/>
Taco Bell<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Special<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Monday P'uS tax<lb/>
Enchirito, Bean Burrito - Small Drink<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Burrito Surpreme, Tostada - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Beefy Tostada, Taco -Small Drink<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Beef Burrito, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Combo Burrito, Taco<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Two Taco Surpremes<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Two Tacos, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Small Drink<lb/>
Small Drink<lb/>
OYSTER BAR<lb/>
NO W OPEN!<lb/>
"A Great<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
CALL FOR OUR<lb/>
NIGHTLY SPECIALS<lb/>
'REDUCED PATES IN OYSTER BAR (TUES. THURS.<lb/>
TUES , WED, THURS. ? (OYSTER BAR ONLY) 1 DOZ<lb/>
HALFSHELL OYSTERS (STEAMED OR RAW)<lb/>
ANDAMUGOFYOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE<lb/>
S099<lb/>
FOSDKKS<lb/>
1890 Seafood<lb/>
PAOTY ROOMS AVAILABLE<lb/>
CALL FOR INFORMATION<lb/>
ALSO WE LL DO ANY CATER<lb/>
ING FOR YOUR SCHOOL<lb/>
FRATERNITY OR FUNCTION<lb/>
2311 S. EVANS ST. EXT GREENVILLE<lb/>
CALL<lb/>
756-2011<lb/>
ust tell us ,<lb/>
at you want.<lb/>
Your ArtCarved representative will be on campus soon to show you the<lb/>
latest in class ring design: JCitl z I vies to choose from, you'll be proud to select<lb/>
your one-of-a-kind l tell us what you want And be on the<lb/>
lookout for f pus to get you where you want<lb/>
OFFICIAL ECU CLASS RING<lb/>
Feb. 25 26, 27<lb/>
ECU Student Supply Store Lobbv<lb/>
Pot Industry<lb/>
Faces Battle<lb/>
( ontinucd Frow Pane 1<lb/>
$2,000 a pound, his<lb/>
crop grossed about<lb/>
5,000.<lb/>
I here were heavy ex-<lb/>
pense He paid<lb/>
$10 .in hour<lb/>
inicure1 t he<lb/>
plants while the) were<lb/>
maturing to a height of<lb/>
12 feet. He spent about<lb/>
$600 on fertilizer and<lb/>
special soil which he<lb/>
packed into the woods<lb/>
on his back.<lb/>
"It's a very nice way<lb/>
of life Bert said. "It<lb/>
allows you to live in the<lb/>
woods. Bv having a lit-<lb/>
tle ca h crop you can<lb/>
improve our propert).<lb/>
I've just bought some<lb/>
lumber to build a<lb/>
greenhouse. It shortens<lb/>
t lie growing season.<lb/>
I've put in an orchard<lb/>
Bartlett pear and apple<lb/>
trees. I hope to raise<lb/>
some wine grapes. I've<lb/>
spent some money to<lb/>
ti up mv pickup<lb/>
truck<lb/>
Bert said he did not<lb/>
worry much about<lb/>
"narcs<lb/>
The Kast Carolinian<lb/>
Published ever Tuesda, ana<lb/>
Thursday aufng the academic<lb/>
year and eve'i Wednesdrt.<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Car . "e o<lb/>
fioal newspaper ot East<lb/>
Carolina University owned<lb/>
operated and published tor and<lb/>
by the students ot Eas' Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business S3S earl<lb/>
All others 135 ean.<lb/>
Second class postage paid t<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
The East Carolm.an ott tes<lb/>
are located m the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus ot ECU<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
TelehcjnjSMJO<lb/>
THE HUM? IS COMING<lb/>
Wednesday Night February 25th<lb/>
A New Nite Comes To The<lb/>
huMp nite:<lb/>
So to help you get over the HUMP on Wednesdays<lb/>
There is NO COVER CHARGE<lb/>
A quarter buys alot until 11:00<lb/>
Fifty cents buys alot from 1 l:Oo<lb/>
THURSDAY ? THE ORIGINAL COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
IS BETTER THAN EVER!<lb/>
No cover charge all nite for students with LD.<lb/>
and fifty cents buys alot until 11:00!<lb/>
A BRAND NEW NITE ?<lb/>
AND A TRADITION MADE BETTER<lb/>
DON'T MISS kEM!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057323_0004"/><lb/>
?tre iEaat (Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Chris Lichok. ??,?? tfemw<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE, nanag,m <lb/>
P.AUl LlNCKE, Dirtctorof A4vrust?t<lb/>
D.Wl SEVERiN, Btamtss t<lb/>
Anita Lanc:aster, ?, m<lb/>
Pal i Coi i ins. v?w ?<lb/>
CHARI IS CHANDI ER sporisBdu<lb/>
David Norris. ?,?&amp;???<lb/>
Februar) 24, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Civic Center<lb/>
Benefits Campus And Community<lb/>
It would be fabulous if top-name<lb/>
acts like Bruce Springsteen and Pat<lb/>
Benatar would perform here in<lb/>
Greenville. If the annual com-<lb/>
mencement exercises could be held<lb/>
indoors, they could not be ruined by<lb/>
the heat or rain. The metis' and<lb/>
womens' basketball teams could<lb/>
really shine playing in a more pro-<lb/>
fessional atmosphere. All of these<lb/>
possibilities may become reality if a<lb/>
new coliseum is built here in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
The proposed major arena would<lb/>
be an eastern regional center. The<lb/>
facility could draw top-name per-<lb/>
formers, acts that people would<lb/>
travel from all around the state to<lb/>
see. Information from the Student<lb/>
Union indicates that there was a<lb/>
good profit made on the sold-out<lb/>
Jimmy Buffet concert this past<lb/>
weekend at Minges. If there was a<lb/>
facility here that would house<lb/>
enough people for a major concert,<lb/>
the profits could be tremendous.<lb/>
Commencement, which at present<lb/>
can be a disaster if the weather is<lb/>
bad, could be held inside the new<lb/>
facility. There would be adequate<lb/>
seating for observers, and perfect<lb/>
weather conditions every year.<lb/>
What about our up and coming<lb/>
basketball program? What a<lb/>
fabulous incentive for the players it<lb/>
would be if the games were held in a<lb/>
major arena. It would also en-<lb/>
courage more attendance and en-<lb/>
thusiasm on the part of the student<lb/>
body and area residents.<lb/>
Greenville, with East Carolina<lb/>
University right here, is the perfect<lb/>
location for this coliseum. It would<lb/>
not only benefit the university and<lb/>
the city, but the entire region.<lb/>
Plans for this coliseum are<lb/>
another step in the growth and ex-<lb/>
pansion at the University and in the<lb/>
community as well. With all o' the<lb/>
positive benefits it would bring, this<lb/>
dream will surely become a reality in<lb/>
the very near future.<lb/>
Concert Is A 'Major' Success<lb/>
Concerts are back at ECU.<lb/>
With last Saturday's Jimmy Buf-<lb/>
fett concert sell out, it appears thai<lb/>
the Student Union Major Attrac-<lb/>
tions Committee has things again<lb/>
under control. All tickets to the con-<lb/>
cert were gone by 5 p.m. Saturday,<lb/>
leaving hundreds from as far away<lb/>
as Greensboro out in the cold.<lb/>
Credit should be given to the Ma-<lb/>
jor and Special Concerts Commit-<lb/>
tees who as volunteers, worked to<lb/>
provide the campus with<lb/>
first-rate entertainment.<lb/>
After the Pat Benatar<lb/>
fiasco in December, the<lb/>
committees regrouped and<lb/>
worked to pull in acts for<lb/>
early spring semester.<lb/>
Again their work was in<lb/>
vain, though it was no<lb/>
fault of anyone on campus<lb/>
along came Jimmy Buffett.<lb/>
Within days of learning of the<lb/>
Jimmy Buffett concert possibility,<lb/>
the committees booked the act and<lb/>
began working to promote the<lb/>
show. Their hard work paid off to<lb/>
the tune of 6,138 tickets.<lb/>
There was an unfortunate inci-<lb/>
dent that involved a patron who<lb/>
decided he would climb onto the<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Then<lb/>
(<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
MHMMYOU PON'T DRINK, YoTRE<lb/>
NOT 0V?rWP6HTi Your CHol?.cJeRol<lb/>
LtvEL b VEftY LOW. IN gWGRT<lb/>
N VIEW OF R?C?NT MEDICAL<lb/>
FINPING&amp;?YOU'RE A wreck!<lb/>
STLiN'fli<lb/>
j hPF thev'do wZdJTneu coliseum soje can jj<lb/>
GET SOVE GOOD CONCERTS AROUND HERE! ?<lb/>
Citizens Cooperate On Spending<lb/>
rafters of Minges Coliseum for a<lb/>
better look at the show. After mak-<lb/>
ing his climb, he laved down on an<lb/>
area not intended to support<lb/>
anyone's weight and it collasped<lb/>
sending him approximately 35 feet<lb/>
to the ground. He was released from<lb/>
Pitt Memorial Hospital the next day<lb/>
with a broken wrist and finger.<lb/>
Though it was unfortunate that<lb/>
the accident occured, this should<lb/>
not prevent future Major Concerts<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Precautions can be taken<lb/>
to proteel such patrons<lb/>
from themselves.<lb/>
Many skeptics have rais-<lb/>
ed questions concerning<lb/>
the safety of the design of<lb/>
Minges, but the ledge the<lb/>
ardent concert fan climbed<lb/>
to is nearly 10 feet above the max-<lb/>
imum level approved for seating.<lb/>
This accident certainly cannot be<lb/>
blaimed on the design of this struc-<lb/>
ture. It is impossible to foresee such<lb/>
antics when a structure is conceived.<lb/>
Rumour now has it that the Com-<lb/>
mittees are already working on<lb/>
another concert for early spring.<lb/>
With this newly-acquired track<lb/>
record, we look forward with excite-<lb/>
ment to the next Major Attraction.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? It has been both in-<lb/>
teresting and gratifying that the vast ma-<lb/>
jority of North Carolinians from whom 1<lb/>
have heard have expressed a willingness to<lb/>
cooperate, and sacrifice, in order to reduce<lb/>
federal spending.<lb/>
I have talked with doens ol citizens all<lb/>
across North Carolina, Many of them are<lb/>
involved in what they call "pet projects"<lb/>
which have been receiving federal funds.<lb/>
In every instance, the word has been, in ef-<lb/>
fect: "f the spending cuts are made fairly,<lb/>
and across the board, you won! hear any<lb/>
complaint out of me<lb/>
REALITY ? Most thinking citizens<lb/>
realize thai it is absolutely imperative thai<lb/>
all of us face the reality of our nation's<lb/>
economic woes. They realize that excessive<lb/>
federal spending is the major cause of the<lb/>
inflation that now plagues all Americans.<lb/>
They understand the implications of a<lb/>
federal debt th at now approaches one<lb/>
trillion dollars.<lb/>
1 have heard very tew criticisms of Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan's proposals to reduce federal<lb/>
spending. Ironically, some citizens have<lb/>
concluded that the President may not be<lb/>
proposing enough recution. They may be<lb/>
right. In fact, I am inclined to believe they<lb/>
are.<lb/>
The problem, of course, is how to<lb/>
eliminate the enormous waste, fraud and<lb/>
extravagance in almost all of the federal<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
FOOD STAMPS ? At the risk of ap-<lb/>
Jesse<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
pearing to single out one program, 1 think<lb/>
you may be interested in comments I<lb/>
received in a letter the other dav from a<lb/>
local stamp administrator in one of Ninth<lb/>
Carolina's counties.<lb/>
She listed four things which she sees<lb/>
happening every day ? and which she is<lb/>
powerless to stop because she is locked into<lb/>
rules and regulations sent down from<lb/>
Washington by the food stamp<lb/>
bureaucracy.<lb/>
She mentioned one rule which required<lb/>
her to give $317 worth of food stamps to a<lb/>
man for the month of December ? even<lb/>
though he did not even apply until the<lb/>
afternoon of December 31.<lb/>
Then she asked: "Do you realize how<lb/>
many food stamp cards can go into one<lb/>
household?" Her point was clear: Some<lb/>
"households" have so many food stamp<lb/>
recipients that they can't possibly use all ol<lb/>
the stamps. Therefore, many of the stamps<lb/>
are traded in for money, which is then<lb/>
spent on non-essentials.<lb/>
She also told of a food stamp recipient<lb/>
who had clearly defrauded the govern-<lb/>
ment. She made the point that there should<lb/>
be no more food stamps tor that recipient<lb/>
until restitution is made. But, she said, "I<lb/>
have no choice but to go ahead and issue<lb/>
the new food stamps<lb/>
Finally, she commented: "A person who<lb/>
voluntarily quits a job, without good<lb/>
cause, should not be allowed to receive<lb/>
food stamps. I have an appeal pending on<lb/>
a case; 12 household members, six above<lb/>
the age ol 1, none 60 years of age ? and<lb/>
nobody is working<lb/>
One ol the adults had a job, she said,<lb/>
but he quit it because "he got mad at his<lb/>
foreman The foreman offered the man a<lb/>
week's vacation to give him time to "cool<lb/>
off" ? but the man refused.<lb/>
FEEI INCiS ? She concluded: "All the<lb/>
workers in our office have somewhat the<lb/>
same feelings<lb/>
As 1 have said many times, the strongest<lb/>
criticism of the food stamp program has<lb/>
come from the people who are trying to ad-<lb/>
minister it one the local level. They see,<lb/>
every Jay. how the taxpayers' money is be-<lb/>
ing wasted ? and they don't like it.<lb/>
If 1 have my way, we're going to tighten<lb/>
up this program, and all other welfare pro-<lb/>
grams, so that only the truly needy will<lb/>
receive help. The freeloaders will be<lb/>
eliminated, and 1 suspect this will save the<lb/>
taxpayers billions of dollars.<lb/>
"Know Nothings' Revisited Today<lb/>
B DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Manv people were appalled recently<lb/>
when William Clark, President Reagan's<lb/>
choice for deputy secretary of state,<lb/>
demonstrated almost total ignorance of<lb/>
foreign affairs in Senate confirmation<lb/>
hearings. In quick succession, Clark, a<lb/>
California Supreme Court judge,<lb/>
established that he: (1) didn't know who<lb/>
the prime minister of South Africa is; (2)<lb/>
didn't know the prime minister of Zim-<lb/>
babwe; (3) didn't know there was a bitter<lb/>
split in Britain's Labor Party; (4) didn't<lb/>
know that many Western Europeans op-<lb/>
posed having American nuclear weapons<lb/>
in their backyards. An Amsterdam paper<lb/>
headlined its report of the hearings<lb/>
"American Minister Knows Nothing<lb/>
Knowing nothing, unfortunately, is<lb/>
nothing new in American politics. There<lb/>
was actually a popular political party<lb/>
known as the Know Nothings in the 1850s,<lb/>
whose claim to fame was that its members<lb/>
knew nothing about foreigners save that<lb/>
they didn't like them. The Know Nothings<lb/>
tried to restrict America to people like<lb/>
themselves: white, Protestant, native-<lb/>
born. The rest of the world, they were con-<lb/>
vinced, was up to no good ? especially<lb/>
Roman Catholics, who, obediently carry-<lb/>
ing out the Pope's orders were scheming to<lb/>
seize America's riches for the Vatican.<lb/>
Like today's Moral Majority, the Know<lb/>
Nothings seemed to come out of nowhere<lb/>
to wield political clout. Founded in 1849 as<lb/>
the Order of the Star Spangled Banner, the<lb/>
Know Nothings had all the trappings of a<lb/>
fraternal order ? secret handshake,<lb/>
passwords, rituals. Their original purpose,<lb/>
like that of the Moral Majority, was not to<lb/>
run candidates of their own for public of-<lb/>
fice, but to endorse politicians who shared<lb/>
their aggressive "nativism<lb/>
The Know Nothings organized quietly<lb/>
and effectively. They shocked veteran<lb/>
political observers in 1854 by putting<lb/>
several nativist candidates over the top in<lb/>
the New York City elections. Journalists<lb/>
speculated on the identity and size of the<lb/>
semi-secret organization. When suspected<lb/>
members were asked to talk about the<lb/>
Order, they denied belonging, saying only<lb/>
"1 know nothing" ? hence the Know<lb/>
Nothing nickname.<lb/>
Soon after their New York triumph, the<lb/>
Know Nothings publicly formed a political<lb/>
party called the American Party. Then, as<lb/>
now, the two major parties were in flux;<lb/>
the once-powerful Whig organization was<lb/>
simptv falling apart. The new party filled a<lb/>
political vacuum, attracting prominent<lb/>
Americans such as Sam Houston and,<lb/>
briefly. Ulysses S. Grant. The Know<lb/>
Nothings elected several U.S. Senators<lb/>
(including Houston) and won control of<lb/>
state legislatures in Massachusetts.<lb/>
Californfa and Connecticut, among<lb/>
others. For a while, it seemed possible that<lb/>
the American Partv would sweep the<lb/>
presidential election of 1856.<lb/>
The American Party platform was one<lb/>
of punitive ignorance. The Know Nothing<lb/>
governor of Massachusetts proposed that<lb/>
political office be placed off-limits to the<lb/>
foreign-born, and that the naturalization<lb/>
period be extended to 21 years. (Those pro-<lb/>
posals passed, but were reversed by a later<lb/>
legislature.) When changing laws didn't<lb/>
adequately punish immigrants. Know<lb/>
Nothing thugs took over, sometimes for-<lb/>
cibly preventing foreign-born voters from<lb/>
casting their ballots.<lb/>
The heyday of the American Partv was<lb/>
shortlived. An investigative reporter for a<lb/>
Virginia newspaper revealed the partv<lb/>
secret rituals, dispelling its aura of<lb/>
mystery. Satirists made ceaseless sport of<lb/>
the Know Nothing nickname. And, more<lb/>
seriously, the party's failure to take a<lb/>
strong stand on the overriding issue of<lb/>
slavery endeared them to neither<lb/>
slaveholders nor abolitionists. In addition,<lb/>
the party made the mistake of nominating<lb/>
the unpopular former president Millard<lb/>
Fillmore to have another go at the White<lb/>
House in 1856. Fillmore finished a distant<lb/>
third, and the momentum of the Know<lb/>
Nothings was broken.<lb/>
The virulent nationalism that fueled the<lb/>
Know Nothings is, however, still with us.<lb/>
It is rekindled in times of crisis, such as the<lb/>
present, when simplistic solutions to socie-<lb/>
ty's problems are sought and scapegoats<lb/>
are needed. As always, it is rooted in fear<lb/>
of The Other ? those strange, threatening<lb/>
persons, often with dark skin and dark<lb/>
hair, who call themselves Vietnamese or<lb/>
Cuban or Iranian.<lb/>
Know Nothingism, then, is more than<lb/>
not knowing important facts, as William<lb/>
Clark did. It is an attitude, fed by fear and<lb/>
ignorance, and given form bv political<lb/>
organizations, such as the Moral Majority,<lb/>
Like the original Know Nothings, the<lb/>
Moral Majority have attempted to wrap<lb/>
themselves in the flag to gain the<lb/>
legitimacy they need. And. like their<lb/>
predecessors of a century ago, today's<lb/>
Know Nothings will ? it given their way<lb/>
? destioy the nation's tradition of civil<lb/>
liberties in order to save it.<lb/>
David Armstrong, author of "American<lb/>
Journal. " is a syndicted columnist jnr col<lb/>
let newspapers.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office m 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 author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. Alt let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
days.<lb/>
?)<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057323_0005"/><lb/>
Ht 1 AS I v xROl INI W<lb/>
Features<lb/>
1 1 likl K 24, 198<lb/>
Page<lb/>
we.<lb/>
ECU Faculty Member<lb/>
Defines Dance Art<lb/>
Petrus van Muy<lb/>
dancer who has<lb/>
the audience<lb/>
den, professor o<lb/>
it is very sensith<lb/>
I he Dutch-horn<lb/>
It's a long, long way from<lb/>
Amsterdam to eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, but Petrus van Muyden<lb/>
has traveled in the world o dance.<lb/>
moving easily across social and<lb/>
geographical barriers.<lb/>
Now 61, van Muyden continues a<lb/>
career that has spanned every phase<lb/>
o dance student, performer,<lb/>
choreographer and teacher- in<lb/>
dozens of cities on both sides of the<lb/>
Atlantic.<lb/>
Since las) fall, his latest role is<lb/>
assistant professor o dance at East<lb/>
Carolina University, where his skill,<lb/>
sophistication and friendliness have<lb/>
earned the respect of students and<lb/>
colleagues alike.<lb/>
Van Muyden confesses that his<lb/>
decision to come to ECU from Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh. Pa where he gave up a<lb/>
tenured leaching position at Point<lb/>
e. He fills the stage with his personality it comes over the footlights and touches Rark College, was mote climatic<lb/>
dance instructor finds his students at ECU "a teacher's dream (hal artjstjc.<lb/>
t dance at EC I . says charisma is necessary before a dancer can be first-rate. "A<lb/>
Survey Shows Religious Affiliations<lb/>
lE I NewsB ?ureau . lina lents does<lb/>
rek. ac m the<lb/>
S'<lb/>
: or from a ich fall<lb/>
.i <lb/>
1 (i preferei ild not be taken literally iuch a large proportion<lb/>
ol students have no formal religious<lb/>
"Some students simply choose<lb/>
not so reveal this information he<lb/>
explained. "We are run sure just<lb/>
how main students actually replied<lb/>
'no preference1 and how main<lb/>
deliberately omitted an answer to<lb/>
questions regarding their religious<lb/>
11<lb/>
I he 20 per cent who did not claim<lb/>
church membership is up one per-<lb/>
? from last year, and sharply up<lb/>
from campus religious tallies in<lb/>
previous years.<lb/>
In IM2. the "no preference"<lb/>
percentage was 10 per cent, and in<lb/>
;S 3, only 3.8 percent.<lb/>
Of those students who do declare<lb/>
denominational preference, the<lb/>
largest number claim affiliation<lb/>
with the nation's largest Protestant<lb/>
denominations ? Baptist and<lb/>
Methodist. Baptist students at ECU<lb/>
total 4,021 this year, and<lb/>
Methodists, 2,110.<lb/>
The third most numerous<lb/>
religious group among ECU<lb/>
students are Roman Catholics, who<lb/>
total 1,2 34. Fourth are<lb/>
Presbyterians, at 867.<lb/>
Mainline Protestant denomina-<lb/>
tions follow: Christian (639),<lb/>
Episcopal (519) and Lutheran (307).<lb/>
Jewish students at ECU total 73.<lb/>
Earnhardt said ECU plans to use<lb/>
a more detailed data gathering<lb/>
device in future, listing a larger<lb/>
number o religious faiths, which<lb/>
though small in the southeast, have<lb/>
included East Carolina students in<lb/>
previous years<lb/>
Among these are Christian<lb/>
Science, Free Will Baptist, l.atter-<lb/>
Day Saints (Mormon), Friends<lb/>
(Quaker). Unitarian, Pentecostal<lb/>
Holiness and Moravian.<lb/>
Data received on religious choice<lb/>
is furnished to campus chaplains at<lb/>
E I for use in planning religious<lb/>
programs for university students.<lb/>
At present seven campus<lb/>
ministries are maintained at ECU.<lb/>
"I love the South, the warm davs<lb/>
even in winter, the blue skies. 1 he<lb/>
weather in Pittsburgh- the<lb/>
snowstorms, the cold-<lb/>
depressing foi me<lb/>
After settling here, van Muyden<lb/>
was pleased to find ECU "very pro<lb/>
gressive" and his students to he i<lb/>
"teacher's dream.<lb/>
'T am amazed in such a little<lb/>
town to find so many good bodies<lb/>
hesavs. "They are intelligent. I he<lb/>
don't tight back; they follow what I<lb/>
tell them. When the situation in<lb/>
class is tense, 1 trv to joke a lot so<lb/>
thev relax and laugh. F"his way, Ihey<lb/>
don't get siitt <lb/>
The human body, van Muyden<lb/>
says, is the "instrument" with<lb/>
winch the dancer practices his<lb/>
an ait as old as the human race<lb/>
itself.<lb/>
"The proper placement, the pro-<lb/>
per ahgment, is essential. A lot ol<lb/>
kids don't know how the body<lb/>
works? they don't understand<lb/>
'instrument<lb/>
"The limbs have to move<lb/>
separately; the arm moves from the<lb/>
shoulder, not with it. Movemen<lb/>
the tec! is ocn the most difficult<lb/>
part ot ballet. They should be as<lb/>
graceful, a- flexible as the hands.<lb/>
"1 often sav a good dancei i like<lb/>
a monkey. He has fout hands<lb/>
Petrus van Muyden is very<lb/>
qualified to recognize good bodies<lb/>
and good dancers, for 30 years he<lb/>
performed in Europe with majoi<lb/>
Dutch ballet companies, receiving<lb/>
praise from critics, tans and roy ally.<lb/>
He was "premier danseur etoile"<lb/>
(star dancer) with the Nederlandse<lb/>
Opera Ballet and received the<lb/>
Netherlands "Silver Medal" award<lb/>
ui 1943<lb/>
During the five-yeai Nazi occupa-<lb/>
tion ol Holland, van Muyden and<lb/>
other artists suffered harassment<lb/>
and deprivation along with the rest<lb/>
ot the populace, but thev continued<lb/>
lo pet tot m. 1 lie opp-<lb/>
during the wai yeais was trai<lb/>
into dance by van Muyuden in<lb/>
original choreography, "I he Cap-<lb/>
tive first pei' ?rmed in Am?<lb/>
dam m 1943.<lb/>
I wenty yeai Muyd<lb/>
emigrated to the U.S be ome<lb/>
d i r ec t o i ol the New M e<lb/>
 ademy ol Ballet, and later, ballet<lb/>
master ol the San Fi Ba<lb/>
C ompany.<lb/>
Since i ht nhi ncentrated on<lb/>
teaclun. erm and guest<lb/>
ppoinlments at the N.<lb/>
Scho V' , Intel lochei V<lb/>
 ademy. iversity ot Oreg<lb/>
the I niversity ol the South and<lb/>
puses, with frequent ap-<lb/>
pearance at arts festivals, symp<lb/>
: civic ballet product i<lb/>
ghoul the nation.<lb/>
Van Muyden has advice for<lb/>
parents w ho chet i thai<lb/>
theii little ones in tight-<lb/>
ui be baby Mai got 1 ni<lb/>
Erik Bruns.<lb/>
" I he best students, the<lb/>
go on to performing career-<lb/>
began very early, Nol<lb/>
lessons- but creative mo<lb/>
classes oi tap dance, which<lb/>
bones are too sot; foi formal ballet<lb/>
study until a child is eight years old.<lb/>
"Ik careful also which teacher<lb/>
you choose I ui child. Had<lb/>
training results in bad technique.<lb/>
- can often be unlearned later,<lb/>
but it is verv difficult<lb/>
Animation Art Show<lb/>
Display Opens At Mendenhall<lb/>
When Bugs Bunnv asks, "What's<lb/>
up. Doc? Hollywood artists must<lb/>
create 30 to 50 individual pain-<lb/>
tings?12 for each second o runn-<lb/>
ing time.<lb/>
Those paintings, called eel pain-<lb/>
tings or "eels" are the subject o a<lb/>
special exhibit and sale to be held at<lb/>
East Carolina University Greenville<lb/>
for THREE DAYS!?Mon. Wed<lb/>
March 2-4, 1981, from 10 a.m. until<lb/>
7 p.m. in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Animation eels are the paintings<lb/>
actually filmed m making the<lb/>
animated cartoon. They are the<lb/>
culmination of the artistic process.<lb/>
The characters are painted by hand<lb/>
on clear sheets of acetate, usually<lb/>
11" x 14" or larger. Each figure is<lb/>
outlined on the front and painted by<lb/>
hand on the back o the eel.<lb/>
Cels are all one-of-a-kind, not<lb/>
reproductions or prints. This collec-<lb/>
Road Runner (left) and Wile E. Coyote<lb/>
lion was<lb/>
Lainberg<lb/>
the nation<lb/>
authenticated by Gallery<lb/>
of Cedar Rapids, Iowa,<lb/>
 best-known specialist in<lb/>
this unique art form. A represen-<lb/>
tative o' Gallery Lainzberg will be<lb/>
on hand to answer questions.<lb/>
On display will be animation eels<lb/>
from over 25 different Hollywood<lb/>
cartoon productions, including<lb/>
several Walt Disney feature films:<lb/>
"Winnie the Pooh "The Jungle<lb/>
Book "The Aristocals "The<lb/>
Rescuers and "Pete's Dragon<lb/>
Fans ol the Warner Brothers car-<lb/>
toons will see their favorite<lb/>
characters: Bugs Bunnv, Daffy<lb/>
Duck. Pepe Le Pew. Wile E<lb/>
Coyote, and 1 lie Roadrunner.<lb/>
Highlighting the Warner Brothers<lb/>
collection is a suite ol Four Limited<lb/>
Edition Cels, created and signed b<lb/>
Chuck Jones. There will also be<lb/>
signed cels from Mr. Jones' classic<lb/>
TV Specials: "Rikki-Tikki-Tav i"<lb/>
and "The White Seal<lb/>
Chuck Jones, winner of three<lb/>
Academy wards, is widely regard-<lb/>
ed as one ol America's foremost<lb/>
See ANIMATION, page 7. col. 1<lb/>
Photo bv CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
( aplured above in a pensive mood, brilliant director-actor Stephen<lb/>
Finnan ponders .indel's "And Miss Reardon Drinks a Little" which<lb/>
he is currently directing for an ECU Dinner Theatre Production. The<lb/>
plav is scheduled to open on March 30 and run for six shows in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student (enter Auditorium (room 244). Tickets are now<lb/>
on sale tor three dessert and three dinner performances. In addition to<lb/>
directing the dinner theatre. Finnan is also teaching at both Pitt Com-<lb/>
munity and I enoir College. A former member of ECU'S Drama and<lb/>
speech Department, where he directed major productions "Rimers of<lb/>
Eldritch" and "Hedda Gabler he has also produced and directed<lb/>
off-Broadway such plays a Orwell's "Animal Farm" and O'Neill's<lb/>
"Hughie" in New York City. In addition to his leaching credits which<lb/>
include Brooklyn College and Michigan State I niversity. Finnan has<lb/>
compiled acting credits in films, commercials and theatre.<lb/>
Tryon Palace Symposium<lb/>
Focuses On Small Antiques<lb/>
By FRANCE1NE PERRY<lb/>
1(1 r?v Bureau<lb/>
NEW BERN ? Beginning and<lb/>
advanced collectors of small anti-<lb/>
ques will be particularly interested<lb/>
in the 13th annual Tryon Palace<lb/>
Study Says Loneliest People<lb/>
Are 18-TO-20 Year-Olds<lb/>
( ps Eighteen-to-20 year-olds<lb/>
are probably the loneliest people in<lb/>
America, at least according to<lb/>
studies done by Dr. Robert Weis ol<lb/>
the University of Massachusetts-<lb/>
Boston, along with Dr. Richard<lb/>
Maisel.<lb/>
"Vve surveyed all different age<lb/>
groups, from 18 on up. and our<lb/>
results suggested that there was<lb/>
more loneliness among the youngest<lb/>
people Weiss says.<lb/>
He explains that older teens begin<lb/>
to feel very much alone when they<lb/>
cannot find substitutes for the emo-<lb/>
tional security previously offered by<lb/>
home and family.<lb/>
Weiss says the loneliness is com-<lb/>
pounded by the fear that "I'm the<lb/>
only one w ho feels this way An in-<lb/>
coming student will look around<lb/>
and see others happy and surround-<lb/>
ed by friends, and will feel like a<lb/>
failure in comparison.<lb/>
Weiss told Seventeen magazine<lb/>
that young people idealistically ex-<lb/>
pect to have many deep, lasting rela-<lb/>
tionships. Failure to realize these<lb/>
hopes can lead to depres-<lb/>
sion?another part of loneliness.<lb/>
Older people, with a lifetime of<lb/>
experience, tend to be more<lb/>
realistic, however, and are not af-<lb/>
fected as deeply as teen-agers.<lb/>
Symposium March 15-17. Four ex-<lb/>
perts on folk art, silver, needlework<lb/>
and tablewares will be among the<lb/>
speakers.<lb/>
The annual symposium is co-<lb/>
sponsored by the Tryon Palace<lb/>
Commission and Restoration and<lb/>
the East Carolina University Divi-<lb/>
sion of Continuing Education, in<lb/>
cooperation with the N.C. Division<lb/>
of Archives and History.<lb/>
Carolyn Weekly, curator of the<lb/>
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art<lb/>
Center, will present an illustrated<lb/>
lecture on examples in the Center's<lb/>
collection.<lb/>
Before she became AARFAC<lb/>
curator, Ms. Week ley held various<lb/>
administrative and curator positions<lb/>
at the Museum of Early Southern<lb/>
Decorative Arts, Winsion-Salem,<lb/>
and the Virginia Museum of Fine<lb/>
Arts, Richmond, Va.<lb/>
She has also taught at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Delaware's Winterthur Sum-<lb/>
mer Institute and served as consul-<lb/>
tant and steering committee member<lb/>
to restoration projects in Richmond<lb/>
and Petersburg, Va.<lb/>
Her articles have appeared in An-<lb/>
tiques magazine, the Journal oj Far<lb/>
ly Southern Decorative Arts and<lb/>
Arts in Virginia. She is a past<lb/>
managing editor o Colonial<lb/>
Wilhamsburg News.<lb/>
"Silversmiths of North Carolina"<lb/>
is the topic to be discussed by Mary<lb/>
Reynolds Peacock, historical<lb/>
publications editor for the N.C.<lb/>
Division of Archives and History<lb/>
for the past ten years.<lb/>
Her work has included editing<lb/>
numerous publications and<lb/>
documents, among them "The Pet<lb/>
tigrew Papers "The Wilmington<lb/>
Town Book "The Papers o<lb/>
William A. Graham "Tar Heel<lb/>
Legends" and "The Cor-<lb/>
respondence of William Tryon<lb/>
During two revisions of Dr.<lb/>
George Barton Cutten's book,<lb/>
"Silversmiths of North Carolina<lb/>
she collected much information<lb/>
about the state's silver and its<lb/>
makers.<lb/>
"Setting the 18th Century Party<lb/>
Table" will be presented by Louise<lb/>
Belden, research associate at the<lb/>
Winterthur<lb/>
Henry F. duPont<lb/>
Museum. Delaware.<lb/>
Ms. Belden is an authoi and lec-<lb/>
turer and was formerly assistant<lb/>
curator at Winterthur. Her special<lb/>
interests are silver and early enter<lb/>
tainment traditions m America.<lb/>
She is co-author of "Collecting<lb/>
for Tomorrow: "Spoons" and<lb/>
author of "Marks of American<lb/>
Silversmiths in the Ineson-BisseJI<lb/>
Collection At present she is com-<lb/>
pleting for publication a work on<lb/>
American party tables up to 1890, a<lb/>
book covering the uses of energnes,<lb/>
plateaux, pyramids, gum sugar<lb/>
figures and other paraphernalia.<lb/>
Betty Ring, a Houston, Texas,<lb/>
collector and independent resear-<lb/>
cher, will speak on "The Needle<lb/>
Arts in Women's Education,<lb/>
1640-1840<lb/>
A specialist in American<lb/>
schoolgirl needlework for 15 years,<lb/>
she is the author of several articles<lb/>
in Antiques and edited an anthology<lb/>
of needlework articles from 54 years<lb/>
See TRYON, page 6, col. 2<lb/>
<lb/>
 <lb/>
' ? m ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057323_0006"/><lb/>
1 111 1 S1 t KOl IN1AN<lb/>
11 BRl AR 24. W?l<lb/>
Some Recipes For Making Quiche<lb/>
Lift<lb/>
TC<lb/>
B KM UN WK LER<lb/>
Inexplicably, foods, like fashions,<lb/>
go through periods oi chicness. A<lb/>
few years ago, if you wanted to<lb/>
demonstrate that you were a superb<lb/>
hosl oi hostess, you seised quiche.<lb/>
Although quiche has dropped from<lb/>
the ranks oi "in" foods, main of us<lb/>
"common folks" still enjoy it and<lb/>
despaii that good quiche is hard to<lb/>
come b) .<lb/>
Foi those oi you unacquainted<lb/>
with quiche, il is a rich custard pie<lb/>
which mav be filled with cheese,<lb/>
meat, seafood oi vegetables. Round<lb/>
tinted pans are specially made foi<lb/>
baking quiche, but foi the following<lb/>
you should use a ready-to-<lb/>
bake deep dish frozen pie shell. Un-<lb/>
fortunately, this means you'll also<lb/>
have to use a regular oven, for<lb/>
unless your toaster oven is quite ex-<lb/>
ceptional, a pie pan just won't tit<lb/>
For some reason, most people<lb/>
think quiche is difficult and expen-<lb/>
sive to make. However, less than<lb/>
two dollars will teed tout to si peo-<lb/>
ple with the following vegetable<lb/>
quiche recipe.<lb/>
VEGETABLE QUICHE -<lb/>
You'll need: one unbaked deep dish<lb/>
pie shell (thawed), one cup milk,<lb/>
three eggs (beaten), one-halt teas-<lb/>
poon salt, one-fourth teaspoon pep-<lb/>
per, tour ounces shredded Swiss<lb/>
cheese (cheddar is just as good and<lb/>
cheaper,) one cup cooked and dram<lb/>
ed zucchini slices and tour ounces<lb/>
sliced, satited mushrooms )K about<lb/>
three-fourths of a package oi frozen<lb/>
spinach (cooked and drained) OK<lb/>
the same amount of frozen, chop-<lb/>
ped broccoli (cooked and drained)<lb/>
You might want to add. with am<lb/>
vegetable filling, one small chopped<lb/>
onion, sauteed. Bake the pie shell<lb/>
for five minutes at 4(M) and cool.<lb/>
Combine vegetables, milk, beaten<lb/>
eggs, three-fourths oi the cheese,<lb/>
sail and peppei in a large bowl. Stii<lb/>
well. Poui into pie shell, lop with<lb/>
remaining cheese. Hake at 375' foi<lb/>
thirty minutes.<lb/>
It you're read tor something a<lb/>
little more challenging, tiv the<lb/>
following, the most famous quiche<lb/>
oi all.<lb/>
OIK HE I ORRAINE You'll<lb/>
need: pie shell (baked as in previous<lb/>
recipe), one pound bacon, si<lb/>
ounces shredded Swiss cheese, foul<lb/>
eggs (beaten), one cup whipped<lb/>
cream, one cup half-and-half, one<lb/>
tablespoon all-purpose flour, three<lb/>
fourths teaspoon salt, dash ot pep-<lb/>
per, dash ot nutmeg. I rv bacon un-<lb/>
til cusp; drain, (rumble bacon into<lb/>
the pie shell and top with cheese.<lb/>
t ombine remaining ingredients; stir<lb/>
well. Poui into pie shell. Bake at<lb/>
s to; sixty-five minutes. You<lb/>
ma add cooled, sauteed onions to<lb/>
this recipe, turning it into Quiche<lb/>
Alsacienne!<lb/>
CHEES HAM Ot Kill<lb/>
You'll need: pie shell (baked as in<lb/>
preceding recipes), one cup diced<lb/>
cooked ham, tour ounces shredded<lb/>
Cheddar Cheese, one-fourth teas<lb/>
poon ground nutmeg, tour eggs<lb/>
(beaten), one cup halt and-hall (I've<lb/>
used milk and it works as well), one-<lb/>
halt teaspoon each sail, peppei.<lb/>
paptika and one teaspoon parsley<lb/>
flakes. Place ham in bottom ot pie<lb/>
shell, top with cheese and sprinkle<lb/>
with nutmeg. Combine remaining<lb/>
ingredients; stir well. Poui into pic<lb/>
shell. Bake at 350 tor forty-five<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
 snie an ot th preceedmg<lb/>
quiche recipes (the vegetable quiche<lb/>
recipe is particularly adaptable)<lb/>
can m inventing vour own quu<lb/>
lr different cheeses, meats.<lb/>
tables, lor instance, sauteed<lb/>
mushrooms alone make a delicious<lb/>
quiche filling. rabmeal or shrimp<lb/>
could serve as an exotic substitute<lb/>
tor ham 01 b<lb/>
I hough no longei a truly "chic"<lb/>
tood. quiche is a I tnd im-<lb/>
pressive company dish. Served with<lb/>
11nit slices or raw vegetables<lb/>
white wine, quiche can be the<lb/>
celebrated .enter oi a very sp<lb/>
dinner a deux.<lb/>
I hree senioi student<lb/>
instrumentalists in the<lb/>
1-as: v aiolina I nivet<lb/>
St ool ot Music will<lb/>
pei ? ? m in recital this<lb/>
week, in the .1 1 let-<lb/>
chei Music Center<lb/>
Recital Hall here.<lb/>
David 1 ee Merriam<lb/>
oi Richmond, Va a<lb/>
saxophonist and can-<lb/>
didate foi the Bacheloi<lb/>
oi Musii degiee in<lb/>
music therapy, will p<lb/>
form rhursday, Feb.<lb/>
14. at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
His program will in-<lb/>
clude the J.S. Bad<lb/>
Sonata No. 4. ai I ecles<lb/>
s o n a t a ,<lb/>
"Improvisation" by<lb/>
Bonneau and Ruett's<lb/>
Music<lb/>
"Chanson et<lb/>
Passepied Piano ac-<lb/>
companist is James<lb/>
Gilliam.<lb/>
Merriam is a student<lb/>
oi Brad Foley o' the<lb/>
ECU music faculty and<lb/>
the son oi Harold and<lb/>
1 dith Merriam oi Rich-<lb/>
mond. Va.<lb/>
Performing in a<lb/>
p.m I riday, Feb. 20.<lb/>
joint program are per-<lb/>
cussionist Stefan<lb/>
S uber of Southern<lb/>
Pines and tubisl Joe<lb/>
Mexandei of Wood-<lb/>
budge, Va.<lb/>
Both are candidates<lb/>
foi the Bachelor of<lb/>
Music Education<lb/>
degree: Alexander is<lb/>
pursuing a second<lb/>
degiee program in<lb/>
music theory and com-<lb/>
position.<lb/>
St ubet will be<lb/>
featured in perfor-<lb/>
mances of "Tanka"<lb/>
(for multiple percus-<lb/>
sion) by John<lb/>
Bergamo. " Toccata"<lb/>
(for marimba) bv Henk<lb/>
Badmgs. "Two<lb/>
Movements for Ivm-<lb/>
pani" by Rich Holly<lb/>
and "O Come. Sweet<lb/>
Death" bv J.S. Bach,<lb/>
arranged by St uber foi<lb/>
a marimba ensemble.<lb/>
He will be assisted in<lb/>
the Bach piece by five<lb/>
student percussionists.<lb/>
Stubei is a student ot<lb/>
Harold Jones of the<lb/>
I c I School of Music<lb/>
percussion faculty and<lb/>
the son of Dr. and Mis.<lb/>
R.l . Stubei oi 120 N.<lb/>
Valley Road. Southern<lb/>
Pines.<lb/>
Alexander's portion<lb/>
of the pi ogram w ill in-<lb/>
clude the Camille Saint-<lb/>
Saens "Romance Ar-<lb/>
ea n gel o Croelli's<lb/>
"Sonata da Chiesa<lb/>
Thomas Beversdorf's<lb/>
Sonata foi Bass Tuba<lb/>
and Piano, and Paul<lb/>
Holmes's Quartet for<lb/>
1 ubas.<lb/>
Piano accompanist is<lb/>
I lizabel h Braxton.<lb/>
Assisting .tie Norman<lb/>
Simmons and I im<lb/>
Burgess, euphonium,<lb/>
and Bi uce Mosiei.<lb/>
tuba. M osier, a<lb/>
graduate assistant at<lb/>
ECU, has been Alev<lb/>
andei 's tuba insti udoi.<lb/>
Alexander' parents<lb/>
are George and Nellie<lb/>
iTk? HaflM(g)Sfauu!<lb/>
OHH 14 HOUfl<lb/>
Wholesale &amp; Retail<lb/>
I Ice Sales<lb/>
 SPECIAL HEG jqc<lb/>
39'<lb/>
 8-LB BAG 89<lb/>
 with this coupon<lb/>
Expires April 1. 1981<lb/>
egi ico Dolivei,<lb/>
Alexandei<lb/>
Hylton ve<lb/>
bridge, V a<lb/>
1832 I<lb/>
 ood<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here for you since 1974.<lb/>
providing private, understanding health care<lb/>
to women of all ages at a reasonable cost<lb/>
Saturday abortion hours<lb/>
Free pregnancy teats<lb/>
Very early pregnancy testa<lb/>
Evening birth control hours<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when you need us.<lb/>
Can 781-5880 in PsJeigh anytime.<lb/>
THE<lb/>
Sp<lb/>
( onlii<lb/>
L, B3S233?J<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Souths No 6<lb/>
Rubens' Paintings Show<lb/>
Arthritic Deformities<lb/>
Rock Nightclub<lb/>
MonFri.<lb/>
MonTues<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
TUES. (IN THE PHOENIX<lb/>
ROOM) - BRECKENRIDGE<lb/>
 SHlNGTON<lb/>
il PI) An analysis ol<lb/>
the swollen rtands and<lb/>
wrists in the paintings<lb/>
oi Flemish artisl Peter<lb/>
Paul Rubens suggests<lb/>
rheumatoid ai tin itis ex-<lb/>
isted 200 years before<lb/>
s om e - d ical<lb/>
authorities have been<lb/>
vs illing to believe.<lb/>
I hat's the conclusion<lb/>
a team oi doctors<lb/>
from the I Diversity oi<lb/>
Brussels in Belgium and<lb/>
the lberl Einstein<lb/>
Medical Center in<lb/>
Philadelphia.<lb/>
Unlike osteoarthritis,<lb/>
which van be found in<lb/>
the r e in a i n s o t<lb/>
Rubens<lb/>
1577 to<lb/>
iritis is<lb/>
dinosaurs and early<lb/>
man. the report said<lb/>
there has been no per-<lb/>
suasive evidience that<lb/>
rheumatoid arthritis ex-<lb/>
isted earlier than the<lb/>
last century<lb/>
lived from<lb/>
1640.<lb/>
Osteoari<lb/>
primarily a wear and<lb/>
tear disease oi the<lb/>
joints that comes with<lb/>
age. Rheumatoid ar-<lb/>
thritis, however, is<lb/>
mine serious and more<lb/>
common. It is inflam-<lb/>
matory and although it<lb/>
primarily attacks the<lb/>
joints, it can also cause<lb/>
disease in the lungs,<lb/>
skm. blood vessels,<lb/>
muscles, spleen and<lb/>
heart.<lb/>
Prolonged swelling<lb/>
in one oi mote joints is<lb/>
one ot the key symp-<lb/>
toms ol rheumatoid ai -<lb/>
thritis.<lb/>
A British researcher<lb/>
reported in 1977 that<lb/>
five paintings ot the<lb/>
Flemish school, dating<lb/>
from 1400 to 1700,<lb/>
depicted deformities<lb/>
that mighl have been<lb/>
caused b rheumatoid<lb/>
arthritis.<lb/>
Drs. Ihierrv Ap-<lb/>
pelboom, Corinne de<lb/>
Boelpaepe and Jean-<lb/>
Pierre Famaey of<lb/>
Brussels and George 1 .<lb/>
Ehrlich of Philadelphia<lb/>
decided it the work ot<lb/>
Rubens showed convin-<lb/>
cing evidence of the<lb/>
disease, it would go tar<lb/>
to tell scientists that<lb/>
rheumatoid arthritis<lb/>
has been plaguing man<lb/>
tor a long time.<lb/>
So they examined the<lb/>
paintings of Rubens at<lb/>
an international exhibi-<lb/>
tion m Antwerp, look-<lb/>
ing in particular at<lb/>
hands. Selected pain-<lb/>
tings then were submit-<lb/>
ted to independent<lb/>
review of other doctors<lb/>
and artists before any<lb/>
firm conclusions were<lb/>
reached.<lb/>
r he Brussels and<lb/>
Philadelphia doctors,<lb/>
reporting in the Feb. 6<lb/>
issue ot the Journal of<lb/>
the American Medical<lb/>
Association, said pain-<lb/>
tings attributed to<lb/>
Rubens during the last<lb/>
30 ears of his Hie<lb/>
seemed to show<lb/>
worsening arthritis.<lb/>
Some examples:<lb/>
? A 1609 painting.<lb/>
Saint Matthew, shows a<lb/>
swelling of the left in-<lb/>
dex and middle lingers.<lb/>
? Two paintings,<lb/>
1 he Drunken Sleeping<lb/>
Satyr(1610)and Suan-<lb/>
na and the I lders<lb/>
(1614), continue to<lb/>
show this fingei swell-<lb/>
ing and also show a<lb/>
swollen wrist as well.<lb/>
?The swollen wrist<lb/>
persists in paintings<lb/>
from 1620 to the end of<lb/>
Rubens' life in 1640<lb/>
and is most evident in<lb/>
the portrait of Marie de<lb/>
Medici (1622).<lb/>
? Late paintings por-<lb/>
tray two major defor-<lb/>
mities: a characteristic<lb/>
rheumatoid wrist and<lb/>
the dislocation ot<lb/>
finger joints.<lb/>
The doctors said<lb/>
Rubens attempted a<lb/>
degree of realism in his<lb/>
art, but to please his<lb/>
patrons. he<lb/>
"undoubtedly left out<lb/>
their less attractive<lb/>
features.<lb/>
"When rheumatoid<lb/>
deformities appeal in<lb/>
his paintings.<lb/>
therefore, without the<lb/>
thematic material<lb/>
demanding them, one<lb/>
has to wondei what<lb/>
they imply. As a good<lb/>
deal ot the artisl goes<lb/>
into the painting itself,<lb/>
such deformities might<lb/>
well represent a form ot<lb/>
signature, perhaps pot<lb/>
traits ot the artisl who<lb/>
did them<lb/>
1 he doctors said the<lb/>
deterioration ot the<lb/>
condition, as seen in<lb/>
the chronological ordei<lb/>
of paintings, is consis-<lb/>
tent with the natural<lb/>
progression ot<lb/>
rheumatoid arthritis.<lb/>
"As the progression<lb/>
is documented in the<lb/>
last 30 years ot the life<lb/>
ot Rubens, and not pre-<lb/>
sent in the works of his<lb/>
youth, it is possible that<lb/>
Rubens ot a major col-<lb/>
laboratoi in his studio,<lb/>
for all of this latter<lb/>
period, suffered from<lb/>
the disease portrayed<lb/>
WED. - NO VACANCY<lb/>
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Tryon Palace Symposium<lb/>
Focuses On Small Antiques<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
of Antiques which was published in<lb/>
1975.<lb/>
She has lectured on needlework in<lb/>
women's education at seminars and<lb/>
special programs from Maine to<lb/>
California.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ralph Wor-<lb/>
thington of the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, each of the<lb/>
tour speakers will present color<lb/>
slides to illustrate their lectures.<lb/>
Other symposium speakers are<lb/>
Peter Sandbeck, director of the<lb/>
Craven County Architectural Inven-<lb/>
tory project, who will speak on<lb/>
"18th and 19th Century New Bern<lb/>
Architecture: Sources, Influences<lb/>
and Craftsmen" and Wright Home,<lb/>
master cabinet maker and manager<lb/>
of the Anthony Hay Cabinet Shop<lb/>
in Colonial Williamsburg, whose<lb/>
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niture Maker Looks at Antiques<lb/>
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Several students in<lb/>
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I niversit School oi<lb/>
Music have been<lb/>
recognized foi outstan<lb/>
ding performance in<lb/>
campus and statewide<lb/>
auditions.<lb/>
Kenneth Hubbard, a<lb/>
graduate saxophone<lb/>
student from Raleigh,<lb/>
was named top winnei<lb/>
m the annual K I<lb/>
Spacek As Loretta Lynn<lb/>
H<lb/>
( ontinued from payr X<lb/>
line, Nashville countr<lb/>
sound, w ho w as i he se<lb/>
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radio show and on the<lb/>
charts of c ash Box.<lb/>
1 he picture, which<lb/>
follows hei life in a<lb/>
neat. tins-happened<lb/>
and-then-this-<lb/>
happened style, is wai -<lb/>
ming and just because<lb/>
oi the up-from -<lb/>
Appalachian success<lb/>
sior, oi because ol the<lb/>
sti ong, accomplished<lb/>
performances ol Sissj<lb/>
Spacek as 1 oretta and<lb/>
1 ommy I ee Jones as<lb/>
her husband, Mooney<lb/>
(foi "Moonshine")<lb/>
Lynn, but because it<lb/>
works on our emotions<lb/>
in such an open,<lb/>
unabashedly regional<lb/>
fashion.<lb/>
1 he picture is always<lb/>
passing up drama in<lb/>
favor ol keepm' on,<lb/>
and thus disarms the<lb/>
built-in boredom and<lb/>
mild cynicism we all br-<lb/>
ine to mo ie bios.<lb/>
I his is a light, eiitei<lb/>
taming mo ie a trifle<lb/>
? and its modest) and<lb/>
common sense allow it<lb/>
to survive even its own<lb/>
failures and more<lb/>
tedious stretches.<lb/>
(I hese turn up in the<lb/>
latter third of the story,<lb/>
when I oretta has made<lb/>
hei fortune ? she had<lb/>
sixteen records that hit<lb/>
the top oi t he chai is ?<lb/>
and is working loo hard<lb/>
and popping too main<lb/>
pills.)<lb/>
Faculty Recital Scheduled<lb/>
Sch 'i i l Music Young<lb/>
Aiti ?'ompetition foi<lb/>
his pei foi mance oi the<lb/>
Marcellooncerto in C<lb/>
Minoi and Km? N(da's<lb/>
" Improv isation 1<lb/>
Hubbard was also<lb/>
winnnei in his categoi<lb/>
at the annual N <lb/>
 111 -1 t r e a c h e r s<lb/>
Associat ton compel i<lb/>
tion held on the EC I<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Honors winners in<lb/>
the campus ounj i<lb/>
list ompetition were<lb/>
two sen i oi students<lb/>
from Richmond, Va<lb/>
Michael Rean, an<lb/>
organist. and Mark<lb/>
Ford, a percussionist.<lb/>
Othei I I studeni<lb/>
winners in the NX<lb/>
Music reach <lb/>
Association comp<lb/>
lion were junior iron;<lb/>
nisi Glenn John<lb/>
oi Wilmington, juni<lb/>
sopran v i e Gunn<lb/>
Durham, gi ad ua<lb/>
pianist c arol Wolfe<lb/>
 intei Pai I . 1<lb/>
special studeni Steve 1:<lb/>
win, a trombonist v<lb/>
is a resid<lb/>
Mile<lb/>
( )rtonxtri<lb/>
&amp;? (5' ??-<lb/>
M<lb/>
He<lb/>
( a' '<lb/>
-<lb/>
b Mo;<lb/>
24. ai<lb/>
in a<lb/>
? das.<lb/>
8:15<lb/>
311, was completed<lb/>
during his stay in Man<lb/>
nheim and was actually<lb/>
used by him for an<lb/>
"audition foi an ap-<lb/>
pointment, which, in-<lb/>
have been two Carnegie<lb/>
Hall performances and<lb/>
a performance in<lb/>
Chicago's Symphony<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
In a review m the<lb/>
n will be<lb/>
Hendrix<lb/>
I (. I "s<lb/>
den i<lb/>
tree and<lb/>
g work,<lb/>
cidentally, Mozart did Chicago Tribune. John<lb/>
not secure. Von Rhein wrote of<lb/>
I he second woik Doskey's performance<lb/>
programmed is oi the 1 iszt Sonata m B<lb/>
Gaspard de la Nuit by Minor:<lb/>
Maui ice Ravel.<lb/>
( hopis's lour<lb/>
I I udes and S mat a<lb/>
B-flai Minor,<lb/>
conclude<lb/>
No<lb/>
( )p 35 . wn<lb/>
the evening.<lb/>
? m ong Dos key 's<lb/>
: et i I a I appeal ances<lb/>
"He possesses a big,<lb/>
serviceable technique<lb/>
that gets him around<lb/>
the keyboard accurate-<lb/>
ly, and a tone that is<lb/>
pai ticularly attractive<lb/>
m the softei dynamic<lb/>
reaches. I here is<lb/>
serious musiciansnip<lb/>
here to respect<lb/>
A native of New<lb/>
Orleans. Henry Doskey<lb/>
began his musical<lb/>
studies at an eaily age.<lb/>
He has earned the<lb/>
bachelor's and master's<lb/>
degrees in piano al<lb/>
Southern Methodist<lb/>
I 'niversity and the doc-<lb/>
torate in piano perfor-<lb/>
mance at Indiana<lb/>
University where he<lb/>
studied piano and<lb/>
chambei music with<lb/>
Menahem Pressler.<lb/>
Pepe Ie Pew<lb/>
Animation Art Show<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
animators.<lb/>
In addition to art work from ma-<lb/>
jor studios, the Exhibit Sale will<lb/>
aUo feature meticulously hand-<lb/>
inked eels oi those ever-popular<lb/>
I930's characters, Betty Boop and<lb/>
Krazy Kat. "Stai I rek" tans will<lb/>
lake a special interest in eels from<lb/>
Filmation Studios' animated "Stai<lb/>
I rek and. tans oi Raggedy Ann<lb/>
and Andy will relish the elaborate<lb/>
art work from the Richard Williams<lb/>
tealure-length production.<lb/>
Main people collect animation<lb/>
eels. In fact, in a recent l-amilir-<lb/>
ck15 M) article on budget col-<lb/>
lectibles, animation art was called<lb/>
the holiest collecting area within<lb/>
the field oi comic art I he rime-<lb/>
Life Encyclopedia ol Collectibles<lb/>
(Vol. 1, W"H notes that some fine<lb/>
art collectors look upon the eels<lb/>
as an art form and buy them as an<lb/>
investment, just as they would buy<lb/>
traditional forms oi art<lb/>
Eye Care Center. R A.<lb/>
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Budget tyewear 39.95 complete<lb/>
frames, lenses and tin! in plastic<lb/>
bifocals onh 59.95<lb/>
Contact Lenses 1 49 complete<lb/>
Includes exam, lifting, heat disinfection and<lb/>
for 1 month.<lb/>
Comprehensive exams (students)<lb/>
25.00<lb/>
U ECU student &amp; Haft discount<lb/>
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spec tab and contacts.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057323_0008"/><lb/>
Mi<lb/>
s I i K( ! INI N<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
 UK I IO<lb/>
Playhouse Presents<lb/>
Drama 'Getting Out'<lb/>
Bv JOHN WhllK<lb/>
rounded bv Vrlie's prison, complete Arlene.<lb/>
o a steel catwalk looming above the Ruby and Mlenc canned<lb/>
 ol the set from which guards togethei in the play s climax, n this<lb/>
shocking scene Arlene recounts ho<lb/>
l s V<lb/>
Noi<lb/>
s the<lb/>
iI<lb/>
up 10<lb/>
ess<lb/>
 eon<lb/>
av<lb/>
ui like gargoyles. Only Arlie<lb/>
owevei has the tree run of the set,<lb/>
as she moves in and out ol the two<lb/>
environments, either as Arlene's<lb/>
tiei sell 01 as the demon still<lb/>
L'lling inside tier<lb/>
Arlie is played by Paige Weaver,<lb/>
v; by llison rhompsoi<lb/>
11 musi be an exceptiona"<lb/>
lieult ob<lb/>
ire excellenl<lb/>
1c<lb/>
a 1<lb/>
n<lb/>
y dif-<lb/>
1 acting (and casting)<lb/>
So too ate the<lb/>
ot the majoi wM members, in-<lb/>
Dwighl Eastwood as Ben-<lb/>
rison guard who alternately<lb/>
and bedevils the<lb/>
Robert John illie<lb/>
irbed punk and pimp;<lb/>
i ravis I ockheai t as the<lb/>
1 specially notable are<lb/>
Rhonda Spivev Webb as<lb/>
rlie Xtlene's mother, a woman<lb/>
ke hei child has been beaten<lb/>
ird life; and Karen Cunthei as<lb/>
a wisecracking, older-but-<lb/>
? con, a neighboi who tries<lb/>
? the emotionally ailing<lb/>
(<lb/>
Ruby<lb/>
A se<lb/>
she began on the rocky road to<lb/>
rehabilitation in a fit of religious<lb/>
and emotional hysteria, trying to ex-<lb/>
orcise the demon ihc out ot hei bv<lb/>
repeatedly stabbing hersell with a<lb/>
fork.<lb/>
I he acting, the direction by<lb/>
Cedric Winchell and the settings b<lb/>
Gregory Buch, are all flawless and<lb/>
first-rate. In fact, the only area ot<lb/>
the production needing improve-<lb/>
ment is the environment ot the au-<lb/>
dience. I he hard metal seats, tightly<lb/>
jammed togethei. and the tropical<lb/>
temperature, were somewhat<lb/>
disconcerting. Perhaps not much<lb/>
can be done about this situation, but<lb/>
it something could, tunite audiences<lb/>
would be mo,t appreciative. It ap-<lb/>
peared that at the end of the perfor-<lb/>
mance, the audience wanted to<lb/>
make a standing ovation but was<lb/>
physically unable. Otherwise, the<lb/>
ECU Playhouse's presentation is<lb/>
richh deserving ot an ovation.<lb/>
(.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m,Ml votint actresses P?i? Weaver and Mlison 1 hompson are seen here in a moment from Marsha Nor-<lb/>
lIS"S3JJo "In whai must be an exceptionally diffiei.ll job of acting (and cast?nR), both are ex-<lb/>
cellentall are flawless and first ralerichly deserving of an ovation.<lb/>
Yolanda King Giving<lb/>
Lecture In Hendrix<lb/>
Yolanda King, daughtei o( the late M 11<lb/>
King, Jr will appear in Hendrix rheatre in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center on rhursday, February 26 ? Ms.<lb/>
King is scheduled to give a dram<lb/>
"Black rheatre: Moving I - Higher<lb/>
part ot the Annual Black rts Festival<lb/>
1 ebruan 22 an<lb/>
J is slated to run thi<lb/>
It's lime tor aspiring student filmmakers to go Hollywood-bul fast. Entry forms and comprehensive<lb/>
?eIZ nowTaila'ble for the Eighth Annual student film ards compeUUen, ? program oMhe<lb/>
Xcademv ol Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and the Academy foundation. Kntr t rn "?<lb/>
list of regional coordinators may be obtained tree bv calling Karen Arandielov.cn at .213) 278-89W, or<lb/>
bv calling sieve Baehner at 757-6366.<lb/>
festival is sponsored by the Student ;<lb/>
rts Committee.<lb/>
Yolanda King has been in the mid- ol the<lb/>
human rights all ot he; life<lb/>
1 he oldest child of Dr. Martin 1 utl<lb/>
Scott kme. Yolanda has participated in numerou<lb/>
demonstrations and spoken before countless hun<lb/>
rights, religious, and civic organizations.<lb/>
' ; the age ol seven, Ms. King wrote a play wh<lb/>
immediately directed with reluctant siblings and subse<lb/>
quently performed for parents and friend<lb/>
rhis w.b the beginning ot a career -ahis! 1 ?<lb/>
Smith College, where she received a B.A. in I heatre and<lb/>
frican-American Studies,<lb/>
While a: Smith, she directed and performed in<lb/>
numerous productions throughout the area S then<lb/>
moved on to New York University where sh<lb/>
an M.F.A. in acting and performed in se awcase<lb/>
and Off-Off-Broadway prod<lb/>
However, it was at the X '? xx '<lb/>
Workshop in Atlanta whert Ms. Kit ? " -<lb/>
id found hei calling when she p ' <lb/>
Manhoff's The Owl and the Pussveai. Grow ng up<lb/>
home environment deeply involved in service<lb/>
humanitv, Yolanda naturally assimilated this va<lb/>
Though not traditionally regarded as a service<lb/>
oriented profession, working in the performing arts re<lb/>
quires an abihtv to fullv share the person that you<lb/>
In addition, the theatre (i.e. film, music, dance, song<lb/>
drama) has dramatic impact upon people s lives and<lb/>
.<lb/>
-<lb/>
tile I<lb/>
ies.<lb/>
Vrmed N!<lb/>
I<lb/>
 lei , " WI<lb/>
force<lb/>
too lo<lb/>
"C <lb/>
Ms! presei<lb/>
e found<lb/>
pany ot pei forming artist s<lb/>
preseni<lb/>
rowth with ity<lb/>
NUCl LL'S<lb/>
countrv wi Stepping In-<lb/>
to romorrow, ?<lb/>
st<lb/>
Ms. K ? serve<lb/>
Institute of the Mai in Lu . K x<lb/>
Violent Social ? '<lb/>
that th K<lb/>
well as images<lb/>
.<lb/>
M -<lb/>
1<lb/>
Me; p .<lb/>
monologue? to complimeni<lb/>
"What Happens lo D<lb/>
?-Non Violence: I he a<lb/>
 ?' lhe 1: x ?<lb/>
Ms. King, currently authors i Black<lb/>
Family Mauaine. which high!<lb/>
d as<lb/>
teaching tools.<lb/>
Film Competition,<lb/>
Awards Offered<lb/>
Through Academy<lb/>
??<lb/>
mprehensive rules are now available tor the<lb/>
Awards competition, a program ol the<lb/>
i. and S and the Academy<lb/>
udeni Film Awards ceremony, scheduled for June<lb/>
the Academy's Samuel Goldwyn rheatre in Beverly<lb/>
xv ill honoi films in foui categories: animation,<lb/>
Iramatic and experiment<lb/>
 ievement Award winners receive SLUM), an<lb/>
and ate flown to Los Angeles tor the awards<lb/>
n, up to tso Mem wards ot S5(X) mav be<lb/>
uegory, as well as one Honorary Award ot $750<lb/>
 1 lemy' - discretion.<lb/>
ol these awards also receive a trophy and trip to<lb/>
tor the competition, a film must have been com-<lb/>
piil 1. 19S0, in a student-teacher relationship within<lb/>
structure ot any accredited institution of higher lear-<lb/>
njne ii ' nited States.<lb/>
mi entries is piil 1. 1981 foi each ot the seven regions<lb/>
,nducl preliminary and final regional judging in order<lb/>
which will be submitted to the Academy for the<lb/>
Mav<lb/>
s ol any length in 16, 35 01 70mm mav be submitted (8mm<lb/>
films mav bettered f( 1 consideration in the regional competi-<lb/>
bui must be converted to a largei formal<lb/>
Fntry forms titles, and a list ot regional coordinators and then<lb/>
districts mav be obtained tree bv writing Karen I). Arandjelovich,<lb/>
administrate, for educational and cultural programs a the<lb/>
Academy ol Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, 8949 Wi shire<lb/>
Boulevard, Beverly Hills, Calif 90211, or bv calling (2130<lb/>
2-K-8990.<lb/>
ine<lb/>
whit<lb/>
national jud<lb/>
Talented box-office star Sissv Spacek brings a possessive, homebred pleasure to the film<lb/>
WytI Lynn, "Coal Miners Daughter lhe film w,l. he<lb/>
shmn this Friday and Saturday night in the Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
C&amp;W Corner<lb/>
Sissy Plays<lb/>
Loretta<lb/>
Bv I Romas ( Brickman<lb/>
I his riday and v ' :<lb/>
and 28, in Mendenhall Student Center's H<lb/>
the Student Union Fill<lb/>
presenting Sissv Spacek and rommy 1 ec I<lb/>
ihe blockbustei bi( 1 ol -<lb/>
I oretta I vnn, "Coal Miner's Daughter<lb/>
fhe movie will be shown al 5, 7:15, and 9<lb/>
p m n both evenings dri by 1I<lb/>
dent ID and acm ty said 01 bv MS M<lb/>
c ard foi faculty and staff.<lb/>
 ou don have to know anything abo<lb/>
1 ynn in ordet to have a good lime at "<lb/>
Miner's Daughter You don even have to ,<lb/>
about country music in ord to like the movie,<lb/>
but you might iusi end up about<lb/>
hearing the likes ol Red Foley' "Satisfied Mind"<lb/>
01 Ernest rubb's "Walkin'the Floor Ovei V<lb/>
01 Loretta I ynn's own "You're I ookin' at Coun-<lb/>
try" (all three are heard in the picture aloi<lb/>
a meat main othei classics)<lb/>
"Coal Miner's Daughter" is an unassuming ex<lb/>
iremely pleasant filn ' 1 oretta 1 vnn,<lb/>
one of the great contemporary tars ol the mam-<lb/>
See SPACEK, page 7, col. 1<lb/>
c<lb/>
<lb/>
Tea<lb/>
Thre<lb/>
St<lb/>
Here<lb/>
?<lb/>
'<lb/>
I<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057323_0009"/><lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Contract Squabble Creates Big Stir<lb/>
Us t It VHI S(H VMM I U<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
 L'lan<lb/>
 ke a wriit<lb/>
. on and lhai hosi<lb/>
a action. w; <lb/>
1 ill feel we ha e a ma<lb/>
said San lose M - P<lb/>
i , Dave dani<lb/>
 , still have hopes ol<lb/>
SJSU-VVVt ligned 1<lb/>
vet! plan sel<lb/>
, basis. W esi 12 ' -<lb/>
avel toalifoi nia w<lb/>
and sM ? :<lb/>
 i ? 1982<lb/>
oped,<lb/>
000 ht added " 1 he wa thi<lb/>
sel up out pi <lb/>
11 ? Stati<lb/>
; he del u ii spendi<lb/>
!<lb/>
?<lb/>
violated the niattei oui, w<lb/>
receive S.I SI<lb/>
(Ik<lb/>
dan lo - i<lb/>
?<lb/>
"I<lb/>
i iiae Di. k Mai lin (W'l D<lb/>
and told '<lb/>
i for WVI H<lb/>
Us<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
? ? v<lb/>
I<lb/>
W e<lb/>
all ec<lb/>
' I<lb/>
" v.<lb/>
v teasib<lb/>
men; ?. ed<lb/>
?<lb/>
aw I Ik olf. We're i<lb/>
!<lb/>
Gymnastics<lb/>
Team Gains<lb/>
Three Wins<lb/>
 oumament<lb/>
Here I his If eekend<lb/>
 I H ! W <lb/>
Regain Ranking<lb/>
Lady Bucs<lb/>
Down Wake<lb/>
H Jlh llul'KI I<lb/>
l<lb/>
 i <lb/>
! (<lb/>
MAW<lb/>
i<lb/>
nv i) .1 22 5 i ei all mai k<lb/>
 11<lb/>
1 C 1<lb/>
; M.<lb/>
t 1<lb/>
m0<lb/>
The 'Wright' Way<lb/>
Pirate freshman guard Barry Wright scored 25 on an opponent as felloe guard Charles<lb/>
points Saturda night to lead ECU to a big win Watkins (11 in background), moves upcourt.<lb/>
over Richmond. In above photo Wright moves (Photo In Jon Jordon)<lb/>
Wright Sparks Pirates<lb/>
Past Richmond, 67-65<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
the Ciirv<lb/>
ss 44<lb/>
Junioi speedstei I II<lb/>
clock to put  1 ad Bi<lb/>
UM KI s(H Will I R<lb/>
lard Barrv Wi<lb/>
? I . ?' 25 points<lb/>
Easi Can lina<lb/>
I 67 65 n the<lb/>
irt, Robins<lb/>
I ai r 80-63<lb/>
! '? I in Greei<lb/>
ied i he highest<lb/>
? ? b an<lb/>
ania-<lb/>
the ke reborn ?<lb/>
cond  I. "We were as<lb/>
mi pimp balls and loose<lb/>
enounc<lb/>
the 1 inal sev onds<lb/>
I mi. Symanski<lb/>
th Pirates' 12th<lb/>
I ; def<lb/>
attemp! lo finish<lb/>
1 he ?? 1 l !<lb/>
e also, as tl ti<lb/>
S 2 6 in a<lb/>
followed '<lb/>
Richmond battled ba k, tl ugl .<lb/>
u i owed the Biu ad ' n ; ; 1<lb/>
I .tit<lb/>
rhe Pirates in the win<lb/>
than the hae in sevei imes,<lb/>
ning 57 1 peri<lb/>
rhe Spiders were almosi equalh av<lb/>
curate, hitting oi rcent.<lb/>
 right, ol coui se, paced i he<lb/>
Pirate attack I Ik Poi ismouth, a<lb/>
five ol seven field goal ai<lb/>
CU'dlk'O<lb/>
ol missed as c have been in six weeks<lb/>
j.  tempts and added 1N Iree throws<lb/>
, harles Watkins and Mtcha<lb/>
.is beina a son added !2 points apiece to the<lb/>
fI cause. N atkins also con-<lb/>
J se en assisi <lb/>
c iuai d John Sch a eil paced the<lb/>
ie u n i<lb/>
? P kepi il<lb/>
said. "Kichi<lb/>
( kh<lb/>
quu k<lb/>
t<lb/>
si hi when 11 tuts<lb/>
id for a eason finale this passine team that thev a ird to wa foi the Spiders, scoring 23<lb/>
Illinois State, a team defend. When we showed a 2 3 we points. Ml menca candi<lb/>
led despite a narrow drew some matchups<lb/>
( 54-501 nationally third-ranked Before swii early ii<lb/>
DP ? weeks ago. the first period ihe Pirates trailer<lb/>
Spiders trailed b as manv as 12 4<lb/>
eii. one oi the nation's top ten<lb/>
rs, added 20<lb/>
rhe loss dropped ihe Spiders to<lb/>
3 1 !<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
TKE Boxing Tourney Begins Tonight<lb/>
See Stor Page 11<lb/>
Kathy Riley<lb/>
Ihe I ad Pirate senior All-America candidate scored 27<lb/>
points to lead EC! to a 102-63 "in over Wake Forest<lb/>
Monda night. Rile and tour other I ad Bucs played<lb/>
their last game ever in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
f<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057323_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
I HI EAS1 (. AROl INI W<lb/>
I EBRl AH1 24, 1981<lb/>
Roller Hockey<lb/>
Season Ending<lb/>
Grapplers Win<lb/>
Season Finale<lb/>
Roller Hockey<lb/>
This week marks the last week of ECU<lb/>
Roller Hockey competition and teams are<lb/>
hustling to make the play-offs. 1 here remain<lb/>
on! 3 undefeated teams. 1 hese are "Gola<lb/>
"the Puckers and "The Skater-Daters<lb/>
11 They won then respective divisions and<lb/>
automatical!) qualify tor the upcoming tour-<lb/>
nament .<lb/>
Other teams who are assured berths in the<lb/>
upcoming play-offs are " The Ham<lb/>
merheads "I instead Villians II<lb/>
"Checkmates "High Rollers and "Un<lb/>
kappa Fifth<lb/>
The competition has been tierce and the<lb/>
1M Department would like to congratulate<lb/>
all the above teams tor their respective suc-<lb/>
cesses. 1 he tournament should be an exciting<lb/>
one.<lb/>
We would also like to thank Mike<lb/>
Melshiorre foi all the work he has put into<lb/>
making tins activity a successful one. Mike is<lb/>
the IM Grad Assistant primarily resonsible<lb/>
tor the coordination of the activity. Other<lb/>
scores from the past week include:<lb/>
High Rollers 10. Sixty-Niners 2<lb/>
Gola 9. Jammers 0<lb/>
Puckers 20. Wild Bunch 0<lb/>
C hubmks 10. Body Bruisers 0<lb/>
ROTC Goalies 8, Wild Bunch 0<lb/>
Umstead Villians 111 6. 1 uff-n-Tender 4<lb/>
Un Kappa Fifth 10, Heartbreakers 6<lb/>
Puckers S, Higher Rollers 4<lb/>
Hammei Heads s. Umstead Villians III 4<lb/>
Training Wheels 4, Bombers 2<lb/>
Information about upcoming game tunes<lb/>
can be obtained b calling your intra-action<lb/>
line 757-6562.<lb/>
Faculty Staff Basketball<lb/>
Through the third round of the Faculty<lb/>
Staff Basketball League only one team re-<lb/>
mam- undefeated. They are "The (Clunkers"<lb/>
from Intramurals and PE. Presently they are<lb/>
sporting a perfect 3-0 record.<lb/>
Psychology handed Computing Center it<lb/>
First loss b a score of 40 1. John I ut toss-<lb/>
1M Sports 'N' Shorts<lb/>
By Ditoyne Cnxims<lb/>
?and?<lb/>
(iregg Melton<lb/>
:d m<lb/>
16 points to lead Psychology. Ken<lb/>
W heeler scored N points m a losing effort for<lb/>
the Computing Center.<lb/>
Other games included The Steelers 59-28<lb/>
win over Soft Touch. Sam Perkins led the<lb/>
way vith 14 points. Any similarity between<lb/>
Sam and the center tor Carolina is purely<lb/>
coincidental. Rich Robbins paced Soft<lb/>
Touch with 12 points. The Blue Knights<lb/>
finally scored then first victory with a 38-25<lb/>
win over Pitt. Clinton Anderson and Kevin<lb/>
McKenzie both had 13 pis. for the winners.<lb/>
Finally, the Klunkers broke open a close<lb/>
game late by defeating the Weary Warriors<lb/>
42-35. Dr. Wayne "Truck" Edwards again<lb/>
led the way by tossing in 18 points. He<lb/>
received support from Bob "Night-Train"<lb/>
Fox who threw in 10. Word has it that Fox<lb/>
scheduled himself tor a physical immediately<lb/>
after the game. Here are Terrie Houck's top<lb/>
picks:<lb/>
I-Klunkers<lb/>
2-Computing Center<lb/>
3-The Steelers<lb/>
4-Weary Warriors<lb/>
5 Psychology<lb/>
Again, information about game times can<lb/>
be obtained by calling your intra-action line<lb/>
Ext. 6562.<lb/>
Note: March 2 opens the entry dates for<lb/>
the following IM activities. They are; ECU<lb/>
Track Meet. Pro-Season Softball Tourna-<lb/>
ment, Slow-Pitch Sottball, Volleyball, Golf<lb/>
Classic (learn and Individual), and Co-Rec.<lb/>
Innertube Watei Polo. Please get your en-<lb/>
tries in and check youi student handbook or<lb/>
drop by the IM Office for further informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Seniors Highlight Weekend<lb/>
Eleventh-ranked<lb/>
Notre Dame, known<lb/>
for its upsets in college<lb/>
basketball, proved to<lb/>
be second-ranked<lb/>
Virginia's Achilles'<lb/>
neel, snapping the<lb/>
Cavaliers' 28-game<lb/>
wmnmg streak.<lb/>
Notre Dame halted<lb/>
Virginia's domination<lb/>
of its opponents with a<lb/>
57-56 vietorv Sundav in<lb/>
the game's final<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
In other weekend<lb/>
games involving Atlan-<lb/>
tic Coast Conference<lb/>
teams, it was Senior<lb/>
Day at some of the<lb/>
schools and the seniors<lb/>
made their perfor-<lb/>
mances count.<lb/>
Maryland's 94-80<lb/>
victors over No. 5<lb/>
Wake forest was the<lb/>
final home game tor<lb/>
Albert King, who<lb/>
scored 28 points, and<lb/>
three other seniors.<lb/>
Fn route to the win.<lb/>
King became<lb/>
Maryland's all-time<lb/>
scoring leader with<lb/>
2,024 ? nine more<lb/>
than John Lucas. scored 23 points to lead<lb/>
It also was Senior the 13th-ranked Tar<lb/>
Day m Chapel Hill and Heels to a 75-61 win<lb/>
Durham, where again over Clcmson. And in<lb/>
the seniors were the Cameron Indoor<lb/>
kes. At North Stadium, Gene Banks<lb/>
Carolina, Al Wood scored<lb/>
)<lb/>
points<lb/>
Bv WILLIAM<lb/>
YELVERTON<lb/>
KsH Sports I (til.it<lb/>
Last Friday night in<lb/>
Buies Creek, the<lb/>
Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina saved the best<lb/>
for last.<lb/>
In what was pro-<lb/>
bably the last regular-<lb/>
season wrestling meet<lb/>
for the Pirates, ECU<lb/>
torpedoed Campbell<lb/>
and Davidson en route<lb/>
to two badly-needed<lb/>
wins as the team heads<lb/>
into this week's Eastern<lb/>
Regionals at Norfolk,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
The ECU wrestling<lb/>
program is being ter-<lb/>
minated at the end of<lb/>
the present season<lb/>
because of economical<lb/>
strains on the athletic<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
En route to the wins,<lb/>
the Pirates won every<lb/>
weight class except for<lb/>
the heavyweight divi-<lb/>
sion, w h i c h v. a s<lb/>
forfeited because of an<lb/>
injury to Mi n d e11<lb/>
Tyson.<lb/>
"I am just very im-<lb/>
pressed said Coach<lb/>
Hachiro Oishi, whose<lb/>
team raised its seasonal<lb/>
record to 5-9. "It was a<lb/>
great comeback after<lb/>
the State meet and just<lb/>
has to be a big<lb/>
confidence-booster for<lb/>
our youngsters. Right<lb/>
now everybody is look-<lb/>
ing fine and in good<lb/>
condition.<lb/>
"I just have a good<lb/>
feeling inside right<lb/>
now<lb/>
Once again the<lb/>
Pirates were led bv<lb/>
senior Butch Revils and<lb/>
sophomore James<lb/>
Ellison. Revils pinned<lb/>
two opponents and ran<lb/>
his record to a sparkl-<lb/>
ing 23-0-1. Ellison, who<lb/>
Oishi said has nearly<lb/>
recovered from a<lb/>
shoulder problem, also<lb/>
scored two pins as he<lb/>
improved his record to<lb/>
23-5.<lb/>
The Pirate coach said<lb/>
that Revils is recovering<lb/>
from an injury that has<lb/>
plagued his star<lb/>
17-pounder tor the<lb/>
last two weeks.<lb/>
Other impressive<lb/>
Pirate winners included<lb/>
freshmen Jeff 1 eat,<lb/>
Gary Webb, and Andy<lb/>
Hefner, who all scored<lb/>
one pin and one deci-<lb/>
sion apiece.<lb/>
Junior David Jerose<lb/>
was also impressive as<lb/>
he came away with two<lb/>
super ioi decisions,<lb/>
11-2, and 24-1. "Jerose<lb/>
is getting so much bet-<lb/>
ter Oishi noted.<lb/>
Oishi and his team<lb/>
now look forward to<lb/>
traveling to Norfolk<lb/>
Thursday, to compete<lb/>
with 36 other teams for<lb/>
the tourney crown. I he<lb/>
Pirate coach says the<lb/>
competition will be<lb/>
very tough with such<lb/>
schools as Auburn and<lb/>
Slippery Rock entered.<lb/>
I<lb/>
OPTICIANS 'L j f<lb/>
ut r?a i L<lb/>
10 Discount to Students &amp; Focualty<lb/>
OVER 1,000 FRAMES TO CHOOSE FROM<lb/>
$19 50<lb/>
Single Vision White Glass Lenses<lb/>
$30 50<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses ? White Glass<lb/>
Single Vision PhotoGray Lenses<lb/>
$32 50<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Extra<lb/>
$38 50<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses Photo Gray<lb/>
Soft Contact Lenses $79.95<lb/>
CLEAR-VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
?-?? M - Gn.Ml.S.OOn ?. <lb/>
 (?r$iC'?NS0u?0c? ?;???(. - ? s ? "<lb/>
vrSA ?im.D.NO?  ImLiiT.<lb/>
 STM ST ?? -<lb/>
Sorry!<lb/>
We Missed Our Target!<lb/>
The BUCCANEER Staff would like to apologise for any in-<lb/>
convenience caused b the sudden location change. Please<lb/>
remember thai this is your lasl chance to have your yearbook<lb/>
portrait made!<lb/>
Traditional poses will be taken tree off sitting fee charge. A<lb/>
contemporary pose package( Va length, profiles close-ups, etc.)<lb/>
will be taken foi a sitting fee charge of $3.00. All seniors having<lb/>
their portraits made will have their 1981 yearbook delivered<lb/>
tree of charge.<lb/>
Buccaneer Office<lb/>
Publications Center<lb/>
Feb. 16-20<lb/>
10am-5pm<lb/>
TODD'Sci;<lb/>
ALPINE CAR STEREO SALE<lb/>
Model 7121<lb/>
Sale:<lb/>
5190<lb/>
Complete with Dolby<lb/>
Model 721<lb/>
00<lb/>
Sale:<lb/>
M59<lb/>
95<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
IAST C??OUN? UNIVtftttTY<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
BLACK ARTS FESTIVAL 1981<lb/>
Presented by the Student Union Minority Arts Committee<lb/>
1st<lb/>
Annual<lb/>
SIG-EP<lb/>
Shag<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
Over<lb/>
$300.00<lb/>
in CASH &amp; PRIZES<lb/>
Begins Thursday 26th<lb/>
PAPA<lb/>
KATZ<lb/>
Information at<lb/>
the door<lb/>
Thursday,<lb/>
Feb. 26,1981<lb/>
8:00 P.M.<lb/>
HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
YOLANDA KING presents<lb/>
"Black Theatre:<lb/>
Moving Us Higher"<lb/>
ADMISSION:<lb/>
ECU Students. ID &amp; Activity Cards<lb/>
ECU Faculty &amp; Staff . Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Membership<lb/>
Public. $150<lb/>
Tickets on sale in the ECU Central Ticket Office<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
M<lb/>
Foi i<lb/>
year, I<lb/>
ha<lb/>
Seahavs ,<lb/>
SVMll!<lb/>
pon<lb/>
I N<lb/>
31<lb/>
<lb/>
wen<lb/>
how<lb/>
ed ?<lb/>
<lb/>
T,<lb/>
Tkl<lb/>
ci I<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
Br ?<lb/>
( <lb/>
pa F ;<lb/>
i<lb/>
Cla<lb/>
FOR S<lb/>
FOB SALE P<lb/>
Premie' 11<lb/>
(Jltiofl Cd<lb/>
FOR SAL!<lb/>
road 250 l<lb/>
tion Caii 75? S2I<lb/>
Leave message<lb/>
Da via tu<lb/>
FOR SALE ItTJ<lb/>
runs and iooxs ?<lb/>
III H . ?<lb/>
7S 551<lb/>
FOR SALE O<lb/>
ticke' th row<lb/>
78 Best Bfl<lb/>
Call CI ?<lb/>
FOR i-<lb/>
ton area'<lb/>
noons for '<lb/>
FOR SALE C?<lb/>
75 IT2t after ?pr<lb/>
FOR SALE N<lb/>
convertible Goo<lb/>
top Call 7s: MJ<lb/>
BENI<lb/>
cm<lb/>
WRE<lb/>
SER<lb/>
Front<lb/>
Altgnr<lb/>
AIITyi<lb/>
Auto H<lb/>
Pot-fetjn A<lb/>
Reasonabl<lb/>
200 E I0t<lb/>
Phone 7j<lb/>
America's rot<lb/>
?<lb/>
? Ham<lb/>
and<lb/>
? I hee<lb/>
I<lb/>
? at all pa<lb/>
? Arbvl<lb/>
I Sam<lb/>
I Salai<lb/>
I Otter<lb/>
m at al! parj<lb/>
customer<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057323_0011"/><lb/>
I HI I AS IAROl IMN<lb/>
II BRl AR 24. 1981<lb/>
11<lb/>
V<lb/>
i<lb/>
ocuolty<lb/>
$79.95<lb/>
16-20<lb/>
-5 pm<lb/>
81<lb/>
nittee<lb/>
iENTER<lb/>
,JJ<lb/>
iffice<lb/>
Men Swimmers Win Seahawk<lb/>
Foi the thud straight<lb/>
year, the Pirate men<lb/>
have captured the<lb/>
Seahawk Invitational<lb/>
swim meet, scoring<lb/>
points compared to<lb/>
I NC-Wilmington's<lb/>
M6 and 1 ampa Univer-<lb/>
sity's 302.<lb/>
1 he I ad Pirates<lb/>
were not as fortunate,<lb/>
howevei, as they finish-<lb/>
ed fifth in the women's<lb/>
competition. The<lb/>
finish didn't put a<lb/>
dampei on Coach Ra<lb/>
Scharf's enthusiasm<lb/>
though, since he said<lb/>
the team "worked fair-<lb/>
ly hard during the<lb/>
week.<lb/>
"Most ol the girls<lb/>
had already made na-<lb/>
tional cut-off limes<lb/>
before this meet he<lb/>
added. "We are poin-<lb/>
ting them more toward<lb/>
the upcoming A1AW<lb/>
Nationals in Marqueite<lb/>
(Michigan)<lb/>
Pacing the Lady<lb/>
Pirates was Tammy<lb/>
Putnam, who gained<lb/>
fourth-place honors in<lb/>
the 50-yard individual<lb/>
medley. She also cap-<lb/>
tured sixth place in the<lb/>
200 individual medley.<lb/>
Jennifer Jayes also<lb/>
performed well,<lb/>
finishing fourth in the<lb/>
50-yard backstroke and<lb/>
fifth in the 200-yard<lb/>
backstroke. Dordi<lb/>
Henricsen was another<lb/>
bright spot by finishing<lb/>
fourth in the butterfly<lb/>
as was Sally Collins<lb/>
who captured fifth in<lb/>
the 500-yard freestyle.<lb/>
Doug Nieman led the<lb/>
ECU men by capturing<lb/>
first place in the 200<lb/>
and 400 individual<lb/>
medleys. Bjorn<lb/>
Johansen won the 100<lb/>
TKE Tourney Set<lb/>
backstroke, while Jan<lb/>
Wiklund managed a<lb/>
victory in the 500<lb/>
freestyle in helping the<lb/>
Pirate cause.<lb/>
According to Scharf,<lb/>
Wiklund's time in theo<lb/>
500 freestyle was four<lb/>
seconds better than his<lb/>
previous best.<lb/>
All the Pirate vic-<lb/>
tories occurred in the<lb/>
first two days of com-<lb/>
petition. The Bucs<lb/>
were in second place<lb/>
after Thursday's first<lb/>
round, but took the<lb/>
lead from UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington on Fridav<lb/>
and steadily increased<lb/>
their margin.<lb/>
Other bright spots<lb/>
lor the Pirates were<lb/>
Jack Clower, who con-<lb/>
tributed second-place<lb/>
finishes in the 50 and<lb/>
100-yard freestyles, and<lb/>
Kevin Richards, who<lb/>
finished fifth in the 200<lb/>
butterfly.<lb/>
Mike A m a n was<lb/>
another impressive per-<lb/>
former as he finished<lb/>
fifth in the three-meter<lb/>
diving with a score of<lb/>
305.45.<lb/>
Scharf said no one<lb/>
has qualified for the<lb/>
NCAA Championships<lb/>
as of yet, but added he<lb/>
hoped someone would<lb/>
during the Eastern In-<lb/>
tercollegiate Cham-<lb/>
pionships to be held at<lb/>
Cleveland State Univer-<lb/>
sity March 4-7.<lb/>
MARCH OF DIMES<lb/>
March of Dimes<lb/>
Birth Defects Foundation<lb/>
I he sixth annual<lb/>
rKE-Millei boxing<lb/>
tournament gets under-<lb/>
way tonight (1 uesda) I<lb/>
7:30 p.m. and will<lb/>
 v- n 11 n uc t h i on eli<lb/>
1 hui sda in ECU's<lb/>
 right Auditorium.<lb/>
1 he toui ne , co-<lb/>
sponsored b the Miller<lb/>
Brewing Company and<lb/>
C.O. 1 ankard in con-<lb/>
junction with Tau Kap-<lb/>
1 psilon fraternity is<lb/>
;o anyone who<lb/>
not won prize<lb/>
money for am kind of<lb/>
ung even<lb/>
1<lb/>
bach match will con-<lb/>
sist ol three two-minute<lb/>
rounds and is sanction<lb/>
ed b the AAU. Iwo<lb/>
 l officials will<lb/>
referee the tights.<lb/>
General admission<lb/>
foi Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday is SI.50<lb/>
with the price going up<lb/>
to S2 for rhursday's<lb/>
championship mat-<lb/>
chups.<lb/>
Proceeds from the<lb/>
tourney go to the St.<lb/>
.hide's Children's<lb/>
Hospital, the National<lb/>
Philanthropy project o<lb/>
1K1<lb/>
participants is as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
A total ol 33 entrants<lb/>
were sot to participate<lb/>
in the tourney's nine<lb/>
weight classes as ol<lb/>
Monday night.<lb/>
Included among<lb/>
those entrants is Dale<lb/>
f rye. the tourney's<lb/>
Most Outstanding Box-<lb/>
er lasi yeai and the<lb/>
defending champ in the<lb/>
133-142 pound class.<lb/>
Former unlimited<lb/>
(heavyweight) champ<lb/>
and ex-Pirate football<lb/>
greal Harold Randolph i? in p? m.s<lb/>
? H i McGa lcf? H<lb/>
is set to compete in me . H?, H.?,i<lb/>
193-202 pound class.<lb/>
The complete list of<lb/>
123 i: p?i ms<lb/>
H Pa ki 1 ? I)<lb/>
. I David I <lb/>
133 143 POl Mis<lb/>
R ?<lb/>
I I i<lb/>
143-15 l(ll Nl?s<lb/>
l t,2 I'Ol M?s<lb/>
?? . Ra S KluiI<lb/>
v ! -<lb/>
IM 73 HOI Sits<lb/>
B . H H<lb/>
H<lb/>
113 WI POl Nl?s<lb/>
H . H  ? M it Cil<lb/>
H.i I<lb/>
I M IVIM I I)<lb/>
? ai d I<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
fOft SALE Parade drum<lb/>
Premier, chrome in enceilent con<lb/>
dilion Call 757 3210<lb/>
FOR SALE 78 Yamaha on off<lb/>
road 250 Few m.les Great condi<lb/>
lion Call 758 5282 after 3 p m<lb/>
Leave messaqe<lb/>
FOR sale iWaterbeds direct<lb/>
com pie t with<lb/>
? . ot sheets<lb/>
13 ,tar artanty S'7? Call<lb/>
David 758 1675<lb/>
FOR SALE 1?75 Bwx Skylark<lb/>
runs and loons new AC straight<lb/>
shift power steennq ii'9S Can<lb/>
75 557? ro '57 6824 after 5 pm<lb/>
FOR SALE One Springsteen<lb/>
ticket '6th row Greensboro Feb<lb/>
28 Best offer by Thursday 26th<lb/>
Call Charlie 752 C'48<lb/>
FOR SALE Hitachi D 230<lb/>
cassette deck Dolby noise reduc<lb/>
i.on great shape S85 Call after<lb/>
noons for David 752 4379<lb/>
FOR SALE Cannon AE I with<lb/>
flash and extra lens SIS0 Call<lb/>
756 8726 after 6pm<lb/>
FOR SALE 1969 Buick Skylark<lb/>
convertible Good condition new<lb/>
top Call 752 9453 ask for Roy<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Convenient,<lb/>
cheap rates Call Amy, 754 6994<lb/>
WANTED TO PURCHASE 67 69<lb/>
Camaro Phone 756 7712<lb/>
LAST CHANCE for Springsteen in<lb/>
Greensboro 2 tickets left best of<lb/>
fer Call 752 1670 after 3 00 pm.<lb/>
BUMPER STICKERS We II print<lb/>
anvthmq that you ll tell your<lb/>
mother S2 for one, S5 for 3 Quan<lb/>
tity discounts available for orders<lb/>
up to 100 Call 752 1757 between 6 9<lb/>
pm or send check and i 50 handl<lb/>
ing to Bumper Sticker, Rt 7 Box<lb/>
27 Greenville, N C 27834<lb/>
LOST KEYS Set of six Call<lb/>
7 58 5499<lb/>
SMITTY Thanks for the help! But<lb/>
the situation is beyond repair DB<lb/>
LOOK GOOD ON PAPER<lb/>
Resumes term<lb/>
sionally typed<lb/>
7 56 ?946<lb/>
TYPING DONE<lb/>
papers protes<lb/>
WRITE RIGHT<lb/>
At home during<lb/>
evening hours and on weekends<lb/>
for students, businesses, or items<lb/>
ol personal nature 527 745 I<lb/>
Kinston area 1 Call after 6pm<lb/>
NEED RIDERS For carpool<lb/>
from Jacksonville to ECU M F<lb/>
Call 455 7657 or 353 3606<lb/>
SUNSHINE STUDIOS Offering<lb/>
ballet, iazi, yoga, and exercise<lb/>
classes to students at a discount.<lb/>
Also offering a very special belly<lb/>
dance in preparation tor the<lb/>
Greenville Arts Festival All in<lb/>
terested in learning the art or<lb/>
helping in anyway please contact<lb/>
Sunshine at 758 0736 Classes<lb/>
begin soon. I Sping break taken in<lb/>
to account )<lb/>
REWARD 425 to anyone with in<lb/>
formation leading to the recovery<lb/>
of my refrigerator call 752 8107<lb/>
JIMMY BUFFETT SOLD<lb/>
OUT<lb/>
Jennifer Jimmy Buffett brings<lb/>
the walls down at Mmges but you<lb/>
bring the walls down at the<lb/>
Ramada inn Clayton must know<lb/>
how to party C L<lb/>
Elizabeth Thanks for dinner; It<lb/>
brought me to my senses Signed<lb/>
Not Too Busy<lb/>
PRICE $1 00 for 15 words, 05 for<lb/>
each additional word<lb/>
Make checks payable to The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Abbreviations count as one word<lb/>
as do phone numbers and<lb/>
hyphenations<lb/>
MAIL TO<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Classified Ads<lb/>
Old Sc jth Buoing<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<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, M-F from 8-1 or 2-5.<lb/>
Deadline is Feb. 27.<lb/>
Art and Camera<lb/>
526 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
Dow Town<lb/>
g$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$tt$$$ttf<lb/>
KODACOLOR<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
4<lb/>
12<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
OIL ONLY<lb/>
$3.23<lb/>
NoFr.re.gn EXPOSURE<lb/>
Fim ROLL ONLY<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FOR RENT Large house. 12<lb/>
rooms. 2 baths. Ideal for student<lb/>
group 4500 plus utilities 752 5294<lb/>
Classified Ad Form<lb/>
BENNIES<lb/>
CITCO<lb/>
WRECKER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Front End<lb/>
Alignment<lb/>
All Types of<lb/>
Auto Repair<lb/>
Foreign 4 Domestic<lb/>
Reasonable Rates<lb/>
2?00 E. 10th Street<lb/>
Phone 758-4224<lb/>
ABORTIONS  ?? TO<lb/>
m wiik o<lb/>
PRBONANCY<lb/>
t T6 0C"aiilfKh?tirr<lb/>
pregnancy ????. Wrtf con<lb/>
trot, and problem pregnan<lb/>
cy counseling For hxttssH<lb/>
intortnatlon call tlv 0S5<lb/>
(toll ' free numtar<lb/>
IOC HI lit oatwoan t<lb/>
A MS PM weekday<lb/>
Ratatfk Watte'<lb/>
MM Or?a?laa?toii<lb/>
9U We?t Mar fan St.<lb/>
Available<lb/>
AH Day<lb/>
Everv Day<lb/>
Ope"<lb/>
Horn 9 p rn<lb/>
Son thru Thurs<lb/>
11 a m 10pm<lb/>
Fri &amp;Sat<lb/>
Western Steer0<lb/>
Family<lb/>
STIAKH0VSE<lb/>
3005 E<lb/>
10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
(Befi,nj Has'ingi Ford)<lb/>
Take Out Service<lb/>
Available<lb/>
758-8550<lb/>
$4.81<lb/>
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$<lb/>
? KoDACOLoH<lb/>
Eft Developed and Printed<lb/>
Vfe EXPOSURE (C CO<lb/>
flr ROLL ONlYV J ? J J<lb/>
 3$ itimm s mm<lb/>
No Foreign EXPOSURE C 7 Q <lb/>
Fi.m ROLL ONLYV ? ? ?<lb/>
FAST &amp; EASY DELICIOUS LUNCHES<lb/>
Soup &amp; Salad<lb/>
Chicken Filet<lb/>
Sandwich<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
II<lb/>
99<lb/>
Diet Plate<lb/>
4 oi Chop Sirloin<lb/>
CotTige Cheese 4 Fruit<lb/>
SI ??<lb/>
1<lb/>
Steerburger &amp;<lb/>
Bowl of Chili<lb/>
$199<lb/>
America's roast beef<lb/>
Two more reasons<lb/>
why you &amp; I<lb/>
Yes sir!<lb/>
Child's Plate<lb/>
4oi Chopped Sirloin<lb/>
Baked Potato or French Fries<lb/>
Toast<lb/>
Banquet &amp; Party<lb/>
Facilities<lb/>
Available<lb/>
No Potato<lb/>
1<lb/>
Potato &amp; Salad<lb/>
$19<lb/>
Steak Sandwich<lb/>
Pi PitM'i 4 CHiioni Sl<lb/>
?c Mvthroom Gravy jd<lb/>
????4 Poijio ?)? FrmcH Fries<lb/>
Steerburger<lb/>
With Baked Potato<lb/>
or French Friat<lb/>
Without Potato<lb/>
$$$$$$$$$$???$$$<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING<lb/>
$1.92<lb/>
Soup<lb/>
89<lb/>
20 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KOOACHROME<lb/>
ANDEKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
38 EXPOSURE ?Q C<lb/>
KOOACHROME VW.IU<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
SS$SSSS$S5$S$SS<lb/>
LOW, LOW PRICES ON<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
PROCESSING<lb/>
SPECIALS DAILY<lb/>
?T-T Beef Tips<lb/>
s22V<lb/>
Deny tpecuu i?r?te wit Mto p?'<lb/>
8 ox. Chop Sirloin<lb/>
m m g y Tueiaoy A<lb/>
i or trench tries a '???<lb/>
DELICIOUS 30 ITEM SaLAD BAR<lb/>
KOOACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
SUPER ? AND 4TANOAA0 , MOVIES<lb/>
 -LIMITED OFFER<lb/>
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$<lb/>
$2.11<lb/>
beef at<lb/>
Arbifs<lb/>
love Art s<lb/>
Lean Trim &amp; Delicious No gristle No surprises<lb/>
No Sir' It's America's Roast Beef, Yes Sir'<lb/>
. ? ? m ? WITH THIS COUPON J ?<lb/>
i Ham Jri ?<lb/>
I and<lb/>
M Cheese<lb/>
M<lb/>
I otter alid thru<lb/>
I a. all participating Arts Limit one coupon per<lb/>
J customer per ms Notvalk orithany othef offer MmmmmmT-M<lb/>
????,iBll,? WITH THIS COUPON J<lb/>
? Arbys? Roast Beef<lb/>
I Sandwich With<lb/>
M Salad Bar<lb/>
$1-<lb/>
$019!<lb/>
? Otter valid thru<lb/>
? at all parf.c.pat.ng Arhss I ,m.t one C??pc?P? ??<lb/>
ls,omerpermmi SMmmmmmmStmmmmmmJl<lb/>
mm GTeenviMe Square Shopping Center<lb/>
ACROSS FROM KMART<lb/>
JUST A REMINDER<lb/>
Student Supply Store offers photo finishing ser-<lb/>
vices at everyday low prices. In addition, we offer<lb/>
various specials throughout the year that mean<lb/>
more savings to you. Compare other prices and<lb/>
then save with us.<lb/>
We also carry a good selection of Kodak film and<lb/>
photographic supplies for your shopping conve-<lb/>
nience. For knowledgeable and helpful service,<lb/>
and for that all important "Thank You' shop <lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Owned and operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
Regular Prices<lb/>
12 exp. 1102.99<lb/>
12 exp. 1262.99<lb/>
12 exp.135.<lb/>
20 exp.1104.55<lb/>
20 exp. 1264.55<lb/>
20 exp. 1354.55<lb/>
24 exp. 1105.46<lb/>
24 exp. 1355.46<lb/>
36 exp. 135.7.84<lb/>
<lb/>
,<lb/>
???"<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057323_0012"/><lb/>
<pb facs="00057323_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>