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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057450_0001"/>
Education:<lb/>
Hazardous To<lb/>
Your Health?<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
Marionettes:<lb/>
Strung Out In Mendenhall<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Lady Pirates:<lb/>
Win Two In<lb/>
Weekend Games<lb/>
I<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
2foe iEafit Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58 No. 33<lb/>
Tuesday, January 19, 1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
!0 Pages<lb/>
Nail May Veto Student Government Bill<lb/>
Medical Emergency Loan Reinstated<lb/>
i? t<lb/>
B DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
The Student Gocrnment<lb/>
Association Monday approved the<lb/>
reinstatement of the medical<lb/>
emergency loan, which had been<lb/>
made inactive by the summer<lb/>
legislature, after lengths debate<lb/>
regarding the use of the funds for<lb/>
abortion.<lb/>
The bill is likely to be vetoed,<lb/>
however, bv SGA President Lester<lb/>
Nail.<lb/>
When asked bv one of the<lb/>
legislators why he was against the<lb/>
bill. Nail commented. "1 felt like<lb/>
the students were losing money. 1<lb/>
felt this summer thai there wasn't<lb/>
adequate means to get the money<lb/>
back there was too much being<lb/>
lost. I wanted the medical fund<lb/>
(suspended) strictly because I am<lb/>
against abortion. It is not a student<lb/>
service; I think it is a student waste<lb/>
of money<lb/>
Mike Rogers, a junior majoring<lb/>
in music therapy and minoring in<lb/>
psychology, passed out leaflets by a<lb/>
Pro-life organization before the<lb/>
meeting which graphically described<lb/>
and illustrated gory details about<lb/>
abortion. In his comments to the<lb/>
legislature, he expressed his feelings<lb/>
towards the medical emergency loan<lb/>
fund being used for such opera-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"1 don't want my money suppor-<lb/>
ting this thing he said. "It really<lb/>
hurts me to see my money that 1<lb/>
paid as a student go for something<lb/>
like this<lb/>
He further explained why he came<lb/>
to speak on the issue. "One of the<lb/>
legislators came to me and told me<lb/>
that the bill would come up today. I<lb/>
think abortion is wrong he said.<lb/>
"Again, like I stated, I am not try-<lb/>
ing to force anyone to believe how I<lb/>
believe<lb/>
"It is not the university's or the<lb/>
student's responsibility to fund<lb/>
something like tins. I really do feel a<lb/>
lot more students are against abor-<lb/>
tion than people think. 1 wish the<lb/>
legislature would try to form a<lb/>
survey to see how many students are<lb/>
for and against abortion he<lb/>
stated.<lb/>
The student welfare com nut tee<lb/>
discussed the possibility of a survey<lb/>
in the fall semester to determine the<lb/>
consensus on campus about the loan<lb/>
fund, but failed to carry through on<lb/>
the plans.<lb/>
Mitch Daub, chairman of the<lb/>
committee, moved to formally<lb/>
amend the bill allowing the monies<lb/>
to be used for medical emergencies<lb/>
excluding abortion, quoting scrip-<lb/>
tures to show the immorality of such<lb/>
operations. "I will get 200 people in<lb/>
this room he said, that would be<lb/>
opposed to abortion.<lb/>
I he amendment was defeated for<lb/>
several reasons, including the<lb/>
possibility of legal problems. "Until<lb/>
it is ruled unconstitutional by the<lb/>
I S. Congress we shouldn't make<lb/>
that decision argued one<lb/>
legislator.<lb/>
Confidentiality about the way the<lb/>
monies are used posed another pro-<lb/>
blem regarding the amendment. "It<lb/>
doesn't have to be used for abor-<lb/>
tion; it may never be used for abor-<lb/>
tion. We have no way of knowing<lb/>
what exactly it is being used for<lb/>
said Legislator Andy Lewis.<lb/>
The fund is provided by the SGA<lb/>
for students in the case of a medical<lb/>
emergency. The exact manner in<lb/>
which the money is used is confiden-<lb/>
tial between doctor and patient.<lb/>
Loans are made on the recommen-<lb/>
dation of a certified physician who<lb/>
must use his discretion as to what<lb/>
constitutes a medical emergency.<lb/>
The bill passed in its original<lb/>
form, without amendment or<lb/>
change.<lb/>
SGA President Lester Nail<lb/>
ECU Students Share King's 'Dream'<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
stuff Wrilrr<lb/>
The 53rd anniversary of the birth of Dr. Martin<lb/>
Luther King was commemorated Friday by over 200<lb/>
East Carolina students, staff and faculty. Various<lb/>
events wer- sponsored by the ECU student chapter of<lb/>
the NAACP with the added input of many individuals<lb/>
throughout the university.<lb/>
 srginia Carlton. president of the university NAACP<lb/>
chapter, and Student Union president Ron Maxwell<lb/>
worked together in laying the groundwork for organiz-<lb/>
ing the program, which began at noon in subfreezing<lb/>
temperatures.<lb/>
'Today we're tributing Dr. Martin Luther King Jr<lb/>
who led a non-violent civil rights movement throughout<lb/>
America during the '60s Carlton said to the crowd of<lb/>
people gathered outside the Student Supply Store.<lb/>
During a short invocation, Maxwell slated his hope<lb/>
"that the world might see what we believe in and the<lb/>
world might see the dream he ne dreamed ? that truly<lb/>
we all will be free<lb/>
A recording of King's famous "l Have A Dream"<lb/>
speech was played during a moment of silence. Then the<lb/>
participants held hands and began a march to<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. A chorus o "Wt Shall<lb/>
Overcome" was sung, reminiscent of the civil rights<lb/>
marched led by Dr. King.<lb/>
Variations of the song were also sung with the words,<lb/>
"We shall not be moved; we shall all be free, and we<lb/>
shall live in peace as well as the rock version of happy<lb/>
birthday composed by Stevie Wonder in honor of King.<lb/>
Student reaction seemed favorable as well as curious,<lb/>
as the marchers crossed campus. "The spirit was great -<lb/>
it gave me a feeling of great pride . . . being a part of the<lb/>
r-w s<lb/>
Marchers carry a drawing of King to Mendenhall Student Center. Pho,? BrCMp ou"L1Y<lb/>
service said Community Health student Patricia Alex-<lb/>
andei " I here was a great impact on the people involv-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
When the march ended at Mendenhall, four members<lb/>
o the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity performed a block<lb/>
show in tribute to King, who was an Alpha Thi Alpha<lb/>
pledge. The fraternity also presented a memorial por-<lb/>
trait of Dr. King as a gift to the university.<lb/>
A formal program of events and speakers began at 1<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall along with the singing of the ECU<lb/>
Gospel Choir.<lb/>
Rev. Ken Hammond, program director of<lb/>
Mendenhall, told the audience "it's time to just stop<lb/>
dreaming. When people dream they're asleep, and I<lb/>
believe that if Dr. King were alive today he would tell us<lb/>
that we should stop dreaming now and wake up<lb/>
Hammond refered to the problems and injustices<lb/>
directed at minorities today. He stressed that people<lb/>
need to "be involved at all levels" in crucial events.<lb/>
"We need to wake up if we're going to make the dream<lb/>
a reality Hammond said. "Our eyes must be open ?<lb/>
we must be watching daily the things that are going on<lb/>
around us<lb/>
Maxwell also called for action to bring about change,<lb/>
saying "all of us should be challenged to want to<lb/>
emulate the things that he (Dr. King) stood for He<lb/>
then told the audience that "we will never see that<lb/>
dream accomplished until we as a people learn to see<lb/>
that apathy is a spirit of do-nothingness in ourselves<lb/>
Citing King for his non-violent approach to injustice.<lb/>
Maxwell said "a war still rages today because we live in<lb/>
the midst of a society which stands as a sea of affluency<lb/>
and in the middle of this sea . . . stands an island of the<lb/>
poor<lb/>
Maxwell went on to note some of the injustices on this<lb/>
"island of the poor He mentioned a system of justice<lb/>
based not on guilt or innocence but "on the quality of<lb/>
legal counsel one can afford.<lb/>
"A man is never-free until he is economically free<lb/>
he continued.<lb/>
The student union president said he was angered by<lb/>
the recent santions imposed by President Reagan<lb/>
because of the Poland crisis while the United States is<lb/>
stilt "the biggest source of trade with South Africa,<lb/>
where racism and injustice take place everyday He<lb/>
also mentioned that the United States "leaves thousands<lb/>
of Haitian refugees in detention camps, with conditions<lb/>
not fit for animals, iust because they fled a country<lb/>
where men (and women) are no longer free<lb/>
Maxwell felt that freedom could not come about until<lb/>
many of the barriers he mentioned were removed.<lb/>
"When we as a nation can open our arms, then we will<lb/>
See STUDENTS, Page 3<lb/>
Greenville Salutes<lb/>
t<lb/>
Black Leader<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
M?ff Wri4rr<lb/>
Activities commemorating the birthday of Martin<lb/>
Luther King Jr. were widespread on Jan. 15, in-<lb/>
cluding several events in Greenville.<lb/>
Among the city's activities was a protest-memorial<lb/>
march down Fifth Street to the office of Rebublican<lb/>
Senator John East.<lb/>
The march was sponsored by the Pitt County chapter<lb/>
of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference<lb/>
(SCLC) to honor the Nobel Peace Prize-winning ac-<lb/>
tivist.<lb/>
The march was also used as a means of lobbying<lb/>
support to have King's birthday recognized as a na-<lb/>
tional holiday.<lb/>
"We want it on the calendar; it's not on the calen-<lb/>
dar. We want it to be a national holiday for all<lb/>
stated Jim Rouse, SCLC media director, to the group<lb/>
of 65 gathered on the steps of East'sdowntown of-<lb/>
fice.<lb/>
George Streeter, a speaker at the rally.<lb/>
See GREENVILLE, Page 3<lb/>
Trustees Meet<lb/>
Hear Selection Committee's Report<lb/>
The East Carolina board of<lb/>
trustees learned Sunday that there<lb/>
are approximately 148 candidates<lb/>
for the position of chancellor.<lb/>
The trustees, in an executive ses-<lb/>
sion following its regular meeting,<lb/>
were briefed on the progress of the<lb/>
Chancellor Selection Committee<lb/>
which is currently choosing a suc-<lb/>
cessor for Thomas Brewer.<lb/>
In its first meeting since John<lb/>
Howell was named acting<lb/>
chancellor, the trustees voted to ap-<lb/>
prove his proposal to separate the<lb/>
long-range work of the university<lb/>
Planning Commission from the<lb/>
faculty self-study being conducted<lb/>
for the Southern Association of<lb/>
Colleges and Schools accreditation<lb/>
visit.<lb/>
Howell said he felt the new<lb/>
chancellor should have some input<lb/>
into the long-range plan. "If we<lb/>
move forward this way we can finish<lb/>
the self-study, then think later about<lb/>
the plan<lb/>
The board also voted to establish<lb/>
an ad hoc committee which will<lb/>
study and review the Planning Com-<lb/>
mission documents and report its<lb/>
findings to the trustees as a whole.<lb/>
The report will be received only as<lb/>
for informatinal purposes and will<lb/>
not be an endorsement of any<lb/>
recommendations, the board decid-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
In other business the board:<lb/>
?granted Tom Willis, former direc-<lb/>
tor of the Regional Development In-<lb/>
stitute, a leave of absence without<lb/>
pay for an indefinite period beginn-<lb/>
ing in July.<lb/>
?named Clifton Moore and Roy<lb/>
Flood as members of the university<lb/>
Endowment Board,<lb/>
?voted to name the Campus Police<lb/>
station on East Fifth Street the<lb/>
Howard House in honor of the<lb/>
family that made the acquisition of<lb/>
the house possible,<lb/>
?heard a report from trustee James<lb/>
Dixon that the buildings and<lb/>
grounds committee had selected Lit-<lb/>
tle and Associates of Charlotte to do<lb/>
advanced planning for the new<lb/>
classroom building.<lb/>
Fire and Ice<lb/>
'?? MMp<lb/>
mthlv CHAI?OULiY<lb/>
Residents of Fletcher Dorm huddle in 19-degree temperatures during a<lb/>
fire drill.<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Now Accepting<lb/>
Applications<lb/>
The East Carolina Student Union<lb/>
is now taking applications for its<lb/>
president as well as for committee<lb/>
chairmen and members.<lb/>
According to current president<lb/>
Ron Maxwell, the student union will<lb/>
be staffed for next vear by Feb. 15.<lb/>
Applications for the organiza-<lb/>
tion's president will be accepted<lb/>
from Jan. 18 to Jan. 29, with the<lb/>
new president selected on Feb. 4.<lb/>
Students can apply to be<lb/>
chairmen for the Student Union<lb/>
committees from Jan. 25 to Feb. 5.<lb/>
These positions will be filled by Feb.<lb/>
8. Anyone wanting to serve on the<lb/>
committees must applv from Feb. 1<lb/>
10 Feb. 12.<lb/>
Applications will be taken in the<lb/>
Student Union office in 234<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
M<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057450_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 19, 1982<lb/>
?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
It VOW or your organization<lb/>
would Ilka to have an item printed<lb/>
in me announcements column<lb/>
please send me announcement (as<lb/>
oriel as possible) typed and<lb/>
double spaced to The East Caroii<lb/>
nun in care ot the news editor<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements. but space is otten<lb/>
limited.<lb/>
The deadline tor announcement<lb/>
are 5 p.m Friday lor the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 5 p m Tuesday tor the<lb/>
Thursday paper<lb/>
The space is available to all<lb/>
campus oroaniiations and depart<lb/>
men ts.<lb/>
SPORTS CLUB<lb/>
The first meeting of 19? for me<lb/>
Sports Club Council will be held<lb/>
Wed Jan 70 at p m in Memorial<lb/>
Gym. Room 105 Each sports club<lb/>
recognized by the Department for<lb/>
intramural Recreational Services<lb/>
is required to have a represen<lb/>
tative in attendance This meeting<lb/>
is o? utmos' importance to each<lb/>
club Agenda items include<lb/>
lacilifylields usage allocation,<lb/>
spring schedules approval disap<lb/>
provai. budget problems for cer<lb/>
tam clubs and club updates<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma Fraternity<lb/>
would like to extend an invitation<lb/>
to you Tonight is the second night<lb/>
of Spring Rush, with the Famous<lb/>
Bunny Night Wednesday night is<lb/>
the Going Greek Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Style Night For more information<lb/>
call 7SJ SS43<lb/>
GYMNASTICS ROOM<lb/>
UTILIZATION<lb/>
The gymnastics room located m<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium is open to<lb/>
students, faculty and staff each<lb/>
MM ? Thur from 6 30 P m to (<lb/>
p m Members of the university<lb/>
community are invited to utilize<lb/>
the gymnastics equipment and ex<lb/>
ercise area under the guidance of<lb/>
qualified instructors during these<lb/>
time periods<lb/>
HANDBALLRACQUET<lb/>
BALL<lb/>
A challenge court system will be in<lb/>
effect on court no 2 from 8 15 pm<lb/>
to midnignt on Tues Thurs and<lb/>
Sat mghts A blackboard has been<lb/>
provided on the observation deck<lb/>
level to establish challenge posi<lb/>
t i o n s<lb/>
BELLY DANCING<lb/>
The Department of intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services is offer ma a<lb/>
brand new course this semester.<lb/>
Belly Dancing! This ancient, ex-<lb/>
otic art form will be offered Tues<lb/>
day evenings from 6 30 7 30 p m<lb/>
The class will be held m the Dance<lb/>
Room in Memorial Gym starting<lb/>
Feb 2, and will continue for 8<lb/>
weeks The cost is $5 for the entire<lb/>
session This is a beginners class<lb/>
No experience is necessary Don't<lb/>
be shy! Sign up in room 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym for a fun rlas that<lb/>
will help you get ready lor bikini<lb/>
season For additional informa<lb/>
tion. call Sue Stanley at 757 A064<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
Students who CHANGED<lb/>
THEIR ADDRESSES during<lb/>
registration and drop add should<lb/>
go to Whichard Building. Room<lb/>
100. and complete another form<lb/>
The original forms were in<lb/>
advertently destroyed during the<lb/>
cleaning of the gym<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
The Freshman Honor Society<lb/>
will hold a general meeting on<lb/>
Tuesday. Jan 19 in room 212<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center at 5<lb/>
p m AM members are urged to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
ASSERTIVENESSASA<lb/>
WAY OF LIFE<lb/>
Learning to tell others what you<lb/>
want, feel, and believe as well! as<lb/>
increasing self confidence are<lb/>
goals ot this class The classes will<lb/>
begin February 22 March 22,<lb/>
7 30 9 30PM in Brpwster B 704<lb/>
BANJO<lb/>
A basic introductory course m<lb/>
banjo will be tauafit on Monday<lb/>
evenings from 6 30 7 45PM The<lb/>
classes begin February 72 and end<lb/>
on April 19<lb/>
BEGINNING<lb/>
BALLROOM DANCING<lb/>
The basics and their variations<lb/>
and practice m leading and follow<lb/>
mg Tnese classes beom February<lb/>
19 thru April 6 at 6 00PM<lb/>
CONVERSATIONAL<lb/>
FRENCH<lb/>
This course is designed to develop<lb/>
oral sjkills for persons who wish to<lb/>
travel in French speaking coun<lb/>
fries and to communicate with<lb/>
native speakers here and aoroao<lb/>
The classes are taught on Tuesday<lb/>
nights beginning February<lb/>
16 Apni 77 from 7 00 ? 30 PU<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
There will be a N A AC P<lb/>
meeting Wednesday, Jan 20 at 6<lb/>
p m in Room 721 Mendenhall All<lb/>
members please attend<lb/>
POETRY WINNERS<lb/>
The winners of the Rebel poetry<lb/>
contest are First Place. Lisa<lb/>
Ryan with "The Only Love<lb/>
Poem Second Place. Rebecca<lb/>
Hemby with "Drawing By Ronnie<lb/>
C.i Grade Cne The two<lb/>
Honorable Mentions went to<lb/>
Debra Wiggins with "Sandra" and<lb/>
Kathrme Kimberly with<lb/>
"Dogwood<lb/>
ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
The Theta Alpha Chapter of<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority inc<lb/>
is once again inviting all in<lb/>
terested young ladies to their Spr<lb/>
mg Rush ot '82 The Rush will be<lb/>
held in a three day time segment,<lb/>
in order that we may get a better<lb/>
idea of what you are all about The<lb/>
events will be as the following<lb/>
Jan 19. Tuesday at 7 p m ? Ice<lb/>
Cream Party at Mendenhall Cof<lb/>
fee House, Casual but neat attire<lb/>
Jan 20, Wednesday at 7 p m<lb/>
Rush at Mendenhall Multi<lb/>
Purpose Room, Semi formal at<lb/>
tire Jan 21, Thursday at 7 p.m<lb/>
Dinner m Multi Purpose Room<lb/>
Casual but nice attire<lb/>
In order to attend the dinner you<lb/>
must come to the Ice Cream Party<lb/>
andor Rush<lb/>
LIVE LIFE<lb/>
Would you like to improve your<lb/>
present way of life? By getting<lb/>
closer to God and knowing the<lb/>
Word all things are possible You<lb/>
can discover more about this as<lb/>
well as about other truths that are<lb/>
revealed in the simplicity ot God's<lb/>
Word You can do the works that<lb/>
Jesus Christ did and more (John<lb/>
14,12) Come Oin us for a<lb/>
fellowship meeting this Thursday<lb/>
evening at t p.m at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center m Room 242<lb/>
CRIME AID<lb/>
In today's widespread concern<lb/>
about crime and the criminal, the<lb/>
plioht ol the victim is usually<lb/>
neglected You are invited to a<lb/>
presentation on "Aid For The Vk<lb/>
tms Of Violent and Non Violent<lb/>
Crimes tonight. January 19 at 8<lb/>
pm. First Presbyterian Church<lb/>
ol Greenville, corner ot 14th and<lb/>
Elm Streets The speaker will be<lb/>
Alma Nesbitt Victims Assistance<lb/>
Coordinator of the Governor's<lb/>
Crime Commission The meeting<lb/>
is sponsored b, the League of<lb/>
Women Voters Criminal Justice<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
INTER VARSITY<lb/>
Join a new group this semester<lb/>
Come to inter Varsity Wednesday<lb/>
nights at 7 30 in Room 721 in<lb/>
Mendenhall This week Ralph<lb/>
Messick will speak on "Why There<lb/>
Is Suffering In The World "<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
The International Language<lb/>
Organization will have a meeting<lb/>
on Wednesday. Jan. 20. The<lb/>
meeting will be at 7 30 p m in<lb/>
BC 305 All members are en<lb/>
couraged to come and all new<lb/>
members are welcome<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will hold<lb/>
its regular monthly meeting on<lb/>
Thursday evening, Jan 71 at 7 30<lb/>
m room 771, Mendenhall Attorney<lb/>
Robert R Browning will speak on<lb/>
"The Role Ot A Superior Court<lb/>
Judge" For further information,<lb/>
contact Diane Jones at 756 6556<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
The psychology honor society,<lb/>
Psi Chi, will meet Wednesday<lb/>
night, Jan 70, at 7 p m in Speight<lb/>
129 Mr Doug Brannon will speak<lb/>
on humanistic psychology All<lb/>
members are encouraged to at<lb/>
tend, and guests are welcome<lb/>
AO.TT.<lb/>
BIG BROTHERS<lb/>
There will be a meeting for all<lb/>
new and old big brothers Tuesday<lb/>
Jan 19 at 9 Please try to attena<lb/>
since elections will take place<lb/>
DEFENSE<lb/>
Don t be a 98 pound weakling<lb/>
and let that beach bully push you<lb/>
around this spring Sign up for a<lb/>
Personal Defense Course offered<lb/>
by the Dept of IM Rec Services<lb/>
The classes are being ottered on<lb/>
Monday nights from 6 30 7 30 p m<lb/>
m Memorial Gym, and from<lb/>
7 30 8 30 p m in Slay Dorm The<lb/>
super low cost of these classes is $5<lb/>
for the entire eight week session<lb/>
You can sign up m Room 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym<lb/>
You need no previous ex<lb/>
penence to participate in these<lb/>
clas;?s You will learn to detena<lb/>
yourself against an attacker learn<lb/>
to throw and take a punch and<lb/>
protect yourself aaamst rape This<lb/>
course is a fun way to increase<lb/>
flexibility increase strength, and<lb/>
iearn a very practical skill at the<lb/>
same time For additional mfor<lb/>
mation, call Sue Stanley at<lb/>
757 6064<lb/>
ATHLETICS?<lb/>
Come join the Student Athletic<lb/>
Board (SAB) this semester and<lb/>
become involved with meeting the<lb/>
athletes and coaches ol men and<lb/>
women's basketball, men and<lb/>
women's track, men and women's<lb/>
tennis, men and women's swimm<lb/>
ing, golf, baseball, and softball<lb/>
Our first meeting will be on<lb/>
Wednesday. Jan 20 at 5 p.m in<lb/>
Mendenhall 212 (Reading Room)<lb/>
If unable to attend, please call Kit<lb/>
ty Kmane. President, 752 8549 or<lb/>
Pam Holt. Advisor 757 6417 tor<lb/>
more information<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
On Wednesday. Jan 20 at 5.30<lb/>
p m the Screens and Appoint<lb/>
ments Committee of the SGA will<lb/>
met to screen candidates tor va<lb/>
cant positions in the legislature<lb/>
Five day representatives are<lb/>
needed as are dorm represen<lb/>
tatives from Garretf, Jarvis. Cle<lb/>
ment, Fletcher, and Tyler Please<lb/>
register in room 228, SGA office, at<lb/>
Mendenhall before 4pm Jan 19<lb/>
ADVERTISING<lb/>
COMPETITION<lb/>
Students from East Carolina<lb/>
University Greenville. North<lb/>
Carolina, have been invited to take<lb/>
part m a prestigious creative<lb/>
advertising competition, in which<lb/>
they will vie tor top prizes of $1,000<lb/>
cash and an eight week paid sum<lb/>
mer internship at McCaffrey and<lb/>
McCall inc , the New York adver<lb/>
tismg agency which sponsors the<lb/>
program<lb/>
The competition, called<lb/>
Creative Advertising Challenge, is<lb/>
being conducted by McCaffrey<lb/>
and McCall for the second year<lb/>
Students who participate must<lb/>
create an advertising campaign to<lb/>
promote a course or department<lb/>
at their school They can compete<lb/>
m either a creative writing or art<lb/>
direction category They are re<lb/>
quired to submit a concept state<lb/>
ment ot what they intend to comm<lb/>
municate m their campaign, as<lb/>
well as the copy or art (or two<lb/>
elements of the campaign a<lb/>
television commercial and<lb/>
magazine advertisement Each<lb/>
fntr will be ludged against all<lb/>
others m its category<lb/>
Deadline for entry is March I.<lb/>
1982 with announcement of win<lb/>
ners scheduled for April in addi<lb/>
tion to the top prizes, awards Of<lb/>
S7S0 lor Second Place. S5O0 for<lb/>
Third Place, and up to ten 1100<lb/>
Honorable Mentions will be made<lb/>
m eacn category A total of up to 26<lb/>
prizes are available<lb/>
Entry forms and all information<lb/>
needed to enter Creative Advertis<lb/>
mg Challenge are available at<lb/>
East Carolina University, from<lb/>
Dorothy Satterfield Communica<lb/>
"ton Arts Department<lb/>
PHI KAPPATAU<lb/>
Little Sisters There will be a<lb/>
meeting Wednesday, Jan 20 at<lb/>
7 45<lb/>
RUGBY<lb/>
There will be an organizational<lb/>
meeting Wed , January 20 at 7 30<lb/>
p m in Rm 102 of Memorial Gym<lb/>
(basement) Topics to be discuss<lb/>
ed will be the upcoming season<lb/>
and more importantly the Spring<lb/>
Break Tour to Nassau, Bahamas<lb/>
Don't miss it!<lb/>
NEWYORK<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Student union Travel Committee<lb/>
is ottering a fantastic spring break<lb/>
alternative at an unbeatable price<lb/>
six days m New York City The<lb/>
trip will run from March 5 thru<lb/>
March 12 The cost of the trip is as<lb/>
follows Single occupancy -<lb/>
$289 00, Double occupancy ?<lb/>
$185 00. Triple occupancy -<lb/>
$159 00, Quad ocupancy $145 00<lb/>
Included m the price are the<lb/>
following roundtrip transporta<lb/>
tion via forty six passenger buses<lb/>
and hotel accommodations at the<lb/>
Hotel Edison The registration<lb/>
deadline is February 22 and reser<lb/>
vations can be made at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office located in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
CONVERSATIONAL<lb/>
GERMAN II<lb/>
This course is designed to further<lb/>
develop oral skills for persons who<lb/>
wish to travel in German speaking<lb/>
countries The classes will begin<lb/>
on Tuesday February 16 April 27<lb/>
at 7 00 8 30PM<lb/>
INTERMEDIATE<lb/>
BALLROOM DANCING<lb/>
individuals with the vasic shills<lb/>
wantma to improve Foxtrot,<lb/>
Rhumba. Discp Waltz and Bop<lb/>
techniques Every Friday from<lb/>
F ebr uar y 19 April 30 at<lb/>
8 00 9 00PM the classes will be<lb/>
'aught<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
There will be a meeting ol me<lb/>
NC Student Legislature on Tues<lb/>
day, Jan l? in Mandanhall 212 at 1<lb/>
p.m All members ptease attend<lb/>
ECU hosting slat conference will<lb/>
be discussed<lb/>
SGA SCREENINGS<lb/>
There ra several positions open<lb/>
n the SGA Legislature The<lb/>
Screenings committee will be ac<lb/>
cepting applications for positions<lb/>
m the Legislature Please call or<lb/>
come by the SGA Office for infor<lb/>
mation and applications Appllca<lb/>
tions accepted until January 26<lb/>
i<lb/>
BUSINESS MAJORS<lb/>
School of Business e now<lb/>
ivaiiable for more information<lb/>
:ontact Tim Allen at 7M 5473 or<lb/>
left Hales at 757 3484<lb/>
ART SHOW<lb/>
The Seventh Annual Art Show<lb/>
will be from Jan 76 to Feb 5, 1W2<lb/>
m the Greenville Museum of Art<lb/>
All ECU artists are encouraged to<lb/>
prepare their best work to submit<lb/>
Friday, Jan 21, 19?2 to me con<lb/>
ference room in the office of<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center, ECU<lb/>
Cash prizes, provided by the Attic<lb/>
and Jeffries Beer and Wine. Co<lb/>
will fange from $10 for Honorable<lb/>
Mentions to $100 tor Best In Show<lb/>
ARTISTS<lb/>
Artists! The Seventh Annual<lb/>
Rebel Art Show, sponsored by the<lb/>
Attic and Jeffrey's Beer and Wine<lb/>
Co . is coming up to give you an op<lb/>
portunify for recognition as will as<lb/>
prize money All registered ECU<lb/>
tudents may enter a maximum of<lb/>
wo pieces m any of the following<lb/>
ategories Painting, Sculpture.<lb/>
Ceramics, Drawing. Photography<lb/>
Design (metal, fiber, or wook)<lb/>
Graphic Art and Illustration Plan<lb/>
io bring your best work on Friday<lb/>
Jan 22, 19?2 to the conference<lb/>
Room in Jertfcins Fine Art Center.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
SKIING<lb/>
There will be a meeting for all<lb/>
persons Interested in skiing<lb/>
Snowsnoe. W V over Spring<lb/>
Break (PMYE 1000. PHYE 1IS0,<lb/>
PHYE 1151 or SKI non credit) on<lb/>
Tuesday. Jan 19 at 4 in Memorial<lb/>
Gym 10 For further information<lb/>
please contact Mrs Jo Saunders<lb/>
Memorial Gym 205, 757 6000<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
The Law School Admission Test<lb/>
will be offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday, February<lb/>
20, 182 Application blanks are to<lb/>
be completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Service, Box<lb/>
966 R. Princeton, NJ 08540<lb/>
Registration deadline It anuary<lb/>
21, !9i2 Registration postmarked<lb/>
after mis date must be accom<lb/>
panied by a $15 non refundable<lb/>
late registration fee<lb/>
OMEGA PSI PHI<lb/>
Announces all men interested In<lb/>
pledging Spring Line 82. formal<lb/>
Smoker, Jan 24 at 8 Mendenhall<lb/>
PAGEANT<lb/>
North Carolina Southern Beau<lb/>
y The search is on tor contestants<lb/>
ages 4 22 years old. each age divi<lb/>
sion limited, deadline March I.<lb/>
1982 Pageant will be held April 16<lb/>
and 17 For information send a<lb/>
stamped address envelope to N C<lb/>
SOUTHERN BEAUTY<lb/>
PAGEANT, P O Box 5432.<lb/>
Greensboro. N C 27403<lb/>
KYF<lb/>
The King's Youth Fellowship<lb/>
will hold it's first meeting of me<lb/>
prmj semester The date is<lb/>
January 21 at the Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center Room 247 Visitors are<lb/>
welcome and refreshments will be<lb/>
served at me conclusion of me<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
POETRY FORUM<lb/>
The Poetry Forum win meet<lb/>
Thurs . January 21 in AAenoenhan<lb/>
Room 248 Please bring copien o<lb/>
your poems to be cr.tiqu?,j<lb/>
Everyone is invited There are nc<lb/>
restrictions Anyone interested in<lb/>
poetry is welcome<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter of Phi Sigma t- n?<lb/>
tional Honor Fraternity win meet<lb/>
at 6pm Wednesday in 132 Aus'ir<lb/>
REBEL<lb/>
The Rebel is now accepting iyti<lb/>
missions tor the 7th Annual Ret<lb/>
Art 'inow Work may be denverec<lb/>
on Jan 22 between 9 arvo 4 ? rtn<lb/>
Conference Room m Jenkins In<lb/>
eluded with each piece muV c ?<lb/>
$1 entry fee Any ECU Student 1<lb/>
eligible to enter Prizes include $iC<lb/>
lor 1st Place m each category and<lb/>
$100 for Best In Show The contey<lb/>
'S sponsored b? the Ain anc jet<lb/>
treys Beer and Wine Co<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
A student Episcopal se- 1<lb/>
Holy Commun.on will c?<lb/>
celebrated on Tuesday. Jan 19 m<lb/>
the chapel of St Paul s fcr<lb/>
Church, 406 Fourth Stree' "m-<lb/>
block from Ga'rett Dorrr<lb/>
servke will be at 5 30 p rr ??<lb/>
'he Episcopal Chaplain the ??.<lb/>
Bill Hadden re.pbrating<lb/>
SKISNOWSHOE<lb/>
Ail persons interested in sk<lb/>
Snowsnoe, WV durmQ Spr<lb/>
Break contact Ms jo Saunders<lb/>
757 6000 Memorial G t m<lb/>
uetore February 1<lb/>
SOCIANTHCLUB<lb/>
There will be a short mee' ,<lb/>
the Sociology Anthropology c uo<lb/>
on vveonesday. Jan 27 at 4 3C ?<lb/>
will be a short business mee1 ?<lb/>
Please make plans to attend The<lb/>
meeting will be m Brewster D 302<lb/>
am<lb/>
PILOT TRAINING<lb/>
OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
VIA WW<lb/>
The Navy presently has Several p? nmqs lor 'tit<lb/>
most excitmq and challenging Ob m the worm<lb/>
NAVY PILOT. It you qualify, we will guarantee<lb/>
you a seat in the most prestigious flight school<lb/>
anywhere At the completion of trammq you will<lb/>
fly the Navy high performance aircraft<lb/>
Qualification' Ai.<lb/>
?Bachelors degree<lb/>
?Less than 28' 2 years old<lb/>
?2020 uncorrected vision<lb/>
? Excellent health<lb/>
? U S Citizen<lb/>
If you think y u <lb/>
a Starlmr k,v it ,<lb/>
years, send a l <lb/>
in guality. anc: would like toearn<lb/>
Ol S18.000 with S26.0O0 - m four<lb/>
. r if qual'ticat on; to<lb/>
NAVY PILOT PROGRAMS<lb/>
1001 Navaho Dr.<lb/>
Raleigh, NX. 27609<lb/>
or ca!l 1-800-662-7231<lb/>
THE SHOE OUTLET<lb/>
(Located beside Evans Seafood)<lb/>
Featuring name brand shoes at bargain prices.<lb/>
Up To 75 OFF regular prices<lb/>
Bass Steward-Mcf. wire Krouse About<lb/>
201 W. Washington St. Withm walking distance of campus.<lb/>
USED<lb/>
TIRES<lb/>
no.oo<lb/>
inquire at<lb/>
Evans Seafood<lb/>
United Figure Salon's<lb/>
Student Special 25 off<lb/>
Call now - 7S6 2820<lb/>
KEEP YOUR TAN. Get<lb/>
one at United Figure<lb/>
Salon.<lb/>
20 O Ott lb sessions only S24<lb/>
Now available to MEN ALSO.<lb/>
Call for appointment ? 756 2820<lb/>
F0S DICKS<lb/>
1890 Seafood<lb/>
2311 S E.ans St Ext<lb/>
1<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN fcfon Tues Wed<lb/>
iatspec.au i m<lb/>
Mon. Night<lb/>
Trout and Salad<lb/>
s4.95<lb/>
Tues. Night<lb/>
Flounder and Salad<lb/>
$5.95<lb/>
Wed. Night <lb/>
Fried Shrimp and Salad j;<lb/>
$6.95 I<lb/>
Thurs. Nighi<lb/>
Steamed Shrimp<lb/>
and Sala<lb/>
$9.95<lb/>
 FOR TWO<lb/>
7.95<lb/>
$<lb/>
st<lb/>
( onlinuffll<lb/>
iblc k<lb/>
spirit<lb/>
?<lb/>
will i<lb/>
A drai<lb/>
?<lb/>
Brian Ma<lb/>
?<lb/>
Beaut ii<lb/>
It<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
Choice of shrimp,<lb/>
trout, clams 01<lb/>
deviled crab.<lb/>
1.00<lb/>
OFF COUPON<lb/>
Good towards any<lb/>
meal and our all you<lb/>
can eat specials. NOT<lb/>
good towards other<lb/>
specials.<lb/>
K)s) K's IXV0<lb/>
st i-oni<lb/>
J.A. Uniforms Shop<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes, shoes,<lb/>
and hose. Also ? used ECU nurses<lb/>
uniforms. Trade-ins allowed.<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive<lb/>
Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
attic<lb/>
' A -<lb/>
SOUTH'<lb/>
NO. 6<lb/>
ROCK<lb/>
GHTCLUB<lb/>
VERANDA ROOM<lb/>
Happy Hour: MonThurs. - 4:30-7:00<lb/>
Fridays - 4:30-8:00 FreeTacos<lb/>
ARBOR ROOM SPECIAL<lb/>
Sat. Night - 5:30 'til closing<lb/>
All the Prime Rib &amp; All<lb/>
the burgundy wine you can drink.<lb/>
Only $9.95<lb/>
Ramada Inn 264 By-Pass<lb/>
TUESDAY ? GL1SSON<lb/>
1 2 PRICE for ECU students<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
MATT "Guitar"<lb/>
MURPHY<lb/>
from the Blues Bros.<lb/>
THURSDAY FRIDAY<lb/>
STATES<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
DIAMOND<lb/>
!? PRICE for ECU students<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
DOC HOLIDAY<lb/>
 PVlVl wl'h Sup' Bowl on 7 II TV1<lb/>
l4MHHMMMHHMHMMMMMMHMMMyMj<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
TUES . 19th Pino Buffet - $2 49<lb/>
Lod.cs Nite wMork Edwards<lb/>
WED 20th<lb/>
$2 15 -<lb/>
- Salad Bor Special<lb/>
All Yo Can Eat<lb/>
THURS 21st - Spaghetti Special<lb/>
$2.49 - All You Can Eat<lb/>
FRI 22nd &amp;<lb/>
I SAT 23rd - END OF WEEK PARTY<lb/>
I SUN 24rh&amp;<lb/>
MON 25rit - COUNTRY COOKING<lb/>
SPECIAL - $2.99<lb/>
REM<lb/>
Rock &amp; Roll<lb/>
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY<lb/>
 Baby &amp;<lb/>
The Pacifiers<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA'S<lb/>
PARTY CENTER<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
HUMP NITE<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
END OF<lb/>
UK. PARTY<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
BEST IN<lb/>
DANCE MUSIC<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
LADIES' NITE<lb/>
Across<lb/>
Irom<lb/>
U B E<lb/>
It takes 12 inches<lb/>
to make a hero<lb/>
Dl. Sa?di:tes Saiodt -<lb/>
Veajtonan Sondwtchi<lb/>
Hom?mad Soups - Hcroct on tmMy booed rollt<lb/>
,?-New Deli Coupon<lb/>
HSIljaptwXN<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
5050 Nile<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
End of<lb/>
the Week<lb/>
Bucket Party<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
Nickle Nite<lb/>
10- E. 5th St. - 752 1361<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
GOOD TIMES<lb/>
Mon. (3-4p.m.) FREE<lb/>
Pinball<lb/>
(8 p.m.) Dart<lb/>
Tournament<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
TERRAPIN<lb/>
NOWOPrN M)R<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
?'?EAST Sth STREET<lb/>
?S2 1711<lb/>
V<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
Fovoi<lb/>
For rid<lb/>
col<lb/>
<pb facs="00057450_0003"/><lb/>
lilt I ASIC AkOl INIAN<lb/>
JANUARY i. l82<lb/>
PORUM<lb/>
m will m??t<lb/>
? Mcnovnhaii<lb/>
rg copt?t ol<lb/>
There are no<lb/>
n?eres?td in<lb/>
tA PI<lb/>
gma Pi Ua<lb/>
I orttl meet<lb/>
32 Austin.<lb/>
. opting iub<lb/>
annual Rebel<lb/>
oe deliverec<lb/>
- ?rvl 4 to t?e<lb/>
enkm in<lb/>
( us be a<lb/>
-??n is<lb/>
de?M<lb/>
ittgary ana<lb/>
ontest<lb/>
;1 Jef<lb/>
IIP<lb/>
sfvue ot<lb/>
 i be<lb/>
an 19 in<lb/>
? Episcopal<lb/>
one<lb/>
The<lb/>
1 p m with<lb/>
1 "e Rev<lb/>
fai 'q<lb/>
fSHOE<lb/>
tested n skiing<lb/>
1Q Spring<lb/>
705<lb/>
H CLUB<lb/>
' rtg of<lb/>
Club<lb/>
? a' 4 ? It<lb/>
?sj meeting<lb/>
attend The<lb/>
B fwster O 302<lb/>
V<lb/>
ed<lb/>
o<lb/>
ON<lb/>
u<lb/>
n<lb/>
per<lb/>
tOLiHA'S<lb/>
ENTER<lb/>
E<lb/>
Ik<lb/>
K<lb/>
IK<lb/>
Students Commemorate King's Anniversary<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
be able to carry forth<lb/>
the spirit of freedom.<lb/>
That's when America<lb/>
will be America<lb/>
A dramatic perfor-<lb/>
mance about non-<lb/>
violence was performed<lb/>
by Tony Williams and<lb/>
Brian Massey, followed<lb/>
by a soul version of<lb/>
'America the<lb/>
Beautiful" by the ECU<lb/>
Gospel Choir.<lb/>
It took almost five<lb/>
minutes for Virginia<lb/>
Carlton to regain her<lb/>
composure long<lb/>
enough to introduce the<lb/>
next speaker, Conovan<lb/>
Phillips, of the Pitt<lb/>
County chapter of the<lb/>
Southern Christian<lb/>
Leadership Con<lb/>
ference, who said he<lb/>
was equally moved by<lb/>
the choir's perfor-<lb/>
mance. "It's been years<lb/>
since I've been this in-<lb/>
spired said Phillips in<lb/>
his opening remarks.<lb/>
He gave an historical<lb/>
account of the birth of<lb/>
the ACLC (founded by<lb/>
Dr. King in 1955) and<lb/>
mentioned his ex-<lb/>
periences with racism<lb/>
while growing up in the<lb/>
pre-civil-rights era. He<lb/>
spoke of "black and<lb/>
"white" water foun-<lb/>
tains and not being<lb/>
allowed to use rest<lb/>
rooms at service sta-<lb/>
tions. He told black<lb/>
people not to forget the<lb/>
struggles of the past<lb/>
and he critized "those<lb/>
of you who sit here and<lb/>
get so high and mighty<lb/>
and say 'I got to study<lb/>
Let me tell you<lb/>
something ? if Dr.<lb/>
Martin Luther King<lb/>
and a whole lot of other<lb/>
folks hadn't got out<lb/>
here, you wouldn't be<lb/>
able to be here<lb/>
Phillips was especial-<lb/>
ly critical of cuts in<lb/>
social programs.<lb/>
"Something is wrong<lb/>
with this country to the<lb/>
effect that people have<lb/>
to choose between pay-<lb/>
ing rent, utility bills,<lb/>
and eating food he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Phillips drew conclu-<lb/>
sions that people will<lb/>
lose out in the long run<lb/>
if social injustices are<lb/>
not addressed. "I've<lb/>
got some news for you<lb/>
and I don't care who<lb/>
hears it he said. "If<lb/>
my kids are gonna go<lb/>
hungry because I can't<lb/>
find a job and you<lb/>
(Reagan) just cut off<lb/>
my funds ? I will<lb/>
steal He went on to<lb/>
say that "poverty heeds<lb/>
ignorance and it also<lb/>
breeds crime<lb/>
Phillips stressed the<lb/>
right to vote was a per-<lb/>
son's strongest<lb/>
weapon. "We ain't go<lb/>
no economic power; we<lb/>
ain't got no political<lb/>
power he said. "The<lb/>
only power we have is<lb/>
the vote, and if you<lb/>
don't exercise that then<lb/>
you're a fool<lb/>
Student Government<lb/>
Association president<lb/>
Lester Nail told about a<lb/>
"Whites only" sign he<lb/>
saw as a child. The sign<lb/>
was in a laundromat<lb/>
and Nail said he always<lb/>
thught you could only<lb/>
bring your "white<lb/>
wash" there ? until his<lb/>
mother set him<lb/>
straight. Nail also<lb/>
recalled the day Martin<lb/>
Lumer King was<lb/>
murdered and how his<lb/>
mother had cried.<lb/>
D.D. Garrett, presi-<lb/>
dent of the Pitt County<lb/>
NAACP chapter, prais-<lb/>
ed the work of<lb/>
everyone who par-<lb/>
ticipated in the day's<lb/>
events. He said<lb/>
"coalition building"<lb/>
was visible and that<lb/>
"we have to get<lb/>
together not "stand<lb/>
around and watch<lb/>
Garrett told the au-<lb/>
dience that the situa-<lb/>
tion would not change<lb/>
"until you begin to<lb/>
make things happen<lb/>
Carlton noted the ef-<lb/>
forts of the Student<lb/>
Government in its sup-<lb/>
port of a resolution to<lb/>
make Jan. 15 a national<lb/>
holiday. Edna Mar-<lb/>
shall, an SGA<lb/>
legislator, read the<lb/>
resolution to the au-<lb/>
dience amid loud<lb/>
cheers.<lb/>
Greenville Citizens Recognize King<lb/>
Higher Education: A Health Problem?<lb/>
CHAPEI Hill<lb/>
(CPS) ? Higher educa-<lb/>
tion is generally good<lb/>
lor your health, though<lb/>
if you're a woman it<lb/>
may also turn you into<lb/>
a heav) drinker, accor-<lb/>
ding to a national study<lb/>
of health and lifestyles<lb/>
by the University of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The ongoing sludy<lb/>
found that bestter-<lb/>
educated people tend (o<lb/>
be healthier, eat better<lb/>
and ingest lower levels<lb/>
of harmful cholesterol.<lb/>
For women, however,<lb/>
alcohol consumption<lb/>
seems to rise with<lb/>
education level.<lb/>
Nearly 10.(XX) people<lb/>
in the U.S. and the<lb/>
Soviet Union par-<lb/>
ticipated in the study,<lb/>
which the National<lb/>
Heart, Lung, and<lb/>
Blood Institute in the<lb/>
early 1970's.<lb/>
"The higher-<lb/>
educated group tended<lb/>
lo eat healthier diets<lb/>
than the lower-<lb/>
educated group says<lb/>
Dr. Suanne Haynes.<lb/>
an assistant<lb/>
epidemiology professor<lb/>
at UNC and co-author<lb/>
of a research report on<lb/>
the study.<lb/>
"It indicates that<lb/>
persons at higher<lb/>
education levels are<lb/>
perhaps changing their<lb/>
diets more quickly in<lb/>
response to recommen-<lb/>
dations than is the<lb/>
lower education<lb/>
group<lb/>
Haynes suspects the<lb/>
increased drinking<lb/>
among well-educated<lb/>
women may be similar<lb/>
to smoking patterns.<lb/>
"Cigarette smoking<lb/>
began mainly among<lb/>
higher-educated men<lb/>
she says, then "spread<lb/>
to lower-educated men,<lb/>
then to higher-educated<lb/>
women. It looks as if<lb/>
alcohol may be follow-<lb/>
ing the same pattern<lb/>
The study also found<lb/>
that well-educsated<lb/>
u omen had lower levels<lb/>
of cholesterol.<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
praised King as "a<lb/>
great man. He was a<lb/>
man who believed in<lb/>
people; he believed in<lb/>
all people<lb/>
Streeter, an SCLC<lb/>
member, recalled for<lb/>
the group his good for-<lb/>
tune to have once met<lb/>
King. "He believed<lb/>
mostly in black people,<lb/>
because black people<lb/>
were mostly denied the<lb/>
right to be just peo-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
The group also<lb/>
discussed the recent<lb/>
budget cuts by the<lb/>
Reagan administration.<lb/>
Another of the<lb/>
speakers, march coor-<lb/>
dinator Mary Williams,<lb/>
criticized East's sup-<lb/>
port of the cuts and<lb/>
Reagan's "increases in<lb/>
military funding<lb/>
The president of the<lb/>
SCLC, Bennie Round<lb/>
tree, became the spark<lb/>
of the group by leading<lb/>
chants that kept the<lb/>
spirits high.<lb/>
"What do you<lb/>
want?" Roundtree<lb/>
shouted.<lb/>
? Freedom<lb/>
responded the group.<lb/>
"When do you want<lb/>
it?"<lb/>
"Now<lb/>
"Many of you have<lb/>
not voted, and many of<lb/>
you man be affected by<lb/>
the great cuts Round-<lb/>
tree continued.<lb/>
However, he con-<lb/>
tinued, saying, <lb/>
there's a payday com-<lb/>
ing; there's another<lb/>
election day coming,<lb/>
and Senator East, you<lb/>
must go<lb/>
In his conclusion,<lb/>
Roundtree said, "We<lb/>
are tired; yes, our feet<lb/>
are sore. We're losing<lb/>
our voices, hut we shall<lb/>
continue marching and<lb/>
demonstrating until the<lb/>
white and black people<lb/>
across this country<lb/>
wake up<lb/>
No representative<lb/>
from East's office was<lb/>
available to meet with<lb/>
! the SCLC leaders, but<lb/>
j many area television<lb/>
! camera units were on<lb/>
the scene to cover the<lb/>
event. A banquet in<lb/>
honor of Dr. King was<lb/>
held later in the even-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Cnmm vadaraiaauat P?<lb/>
?aaaVaI itwd??n ??? ?ow com-<lb/>
pete (or tevorol huoered ?'<lb/>
Fore, ickelottfcipt. Trine<lb/>
ickotonme an to km oworeee<lb/>
to ituaaHti accepted into<lb/>
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et lb beginoiog ot their<lb/>
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?kip pro??d? ?or tuition, bookt.<lb/>
loo tee and eeoipment, pint a<lb/>
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native to me high co?t a<lb/>
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Contact:<lb/>
I VU.HUI IH<lb/>
PR??KSNlONS<lb/>
UK Rl ITIM.<lb/>
Wt?GL-l 1100 Novoho Or<lb/>
Raleigh. NC 2769<lb/>
mono Collect (919)755-41J4<lb/>
WE SEW<lb/>
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113 Grand Av?<lb/>
7S4in?<lb/>
e<lb/>
traffic<lb/>
overalls<lb/>
Also <lb/>
75 off<lb/>
Select Items<lb/>
the traffic light<lb/>
pitt plaza<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi Spring Rush<lb/>
January 18-January 20<lb/>
Plenty of your<lb/>
Favorite Beverage!<lb/>
For rides &amp; information<lb/>
call: 756-3540<lb/>
TV<lb/>
803<lb/>
Hooker<lb/>
Rd.<lb/>
ottl Carolina<lb/>
indent legislature<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
WANTS<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
i.<lb/>
Tuesday:<lb/>
Winter Warm-Up<lb/>
Wednesday:<lb/>
Western Night<lb/>
Come out and be part<lb/>
of something great!<lb/>
It's time for the students who talk about<lb/>
North Carolina's problems to join the<lb/>
students who are doing something about<lb/>
them<lb/>
NCSL: An Investment For Your Future<lb/>
WE MAKE A DIFFERENCE<lb/>
EVERYTUESDAY NIGHT<lb/>
MENDENHALL212: 7:10p.m.<lb/>
Every Night ?<lb/>
8:30-12:00<lb/>
Preparing Tomorrow's<lb/>
Leaders Today<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057450_0004"/><lb/>
<lb/>
r <lb/>
?fte East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins. ????(<lb/>
Jimmy DuPree. v. ???!<lb/>
Ric Browning. o,? ,? 4mw Charles Chandler. .w? fd,??<lb/>
Chris Lichok. aM(W? Manner Tom Hall, ? ?rf??f<lb/>
Alison Bartei Nti h. Steve Bachner. m??,?? M??,<lb/>
Steve Moore, qmmh hmt William Yei verton, TfJ CMI<lb/>
January 19, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Foul Weather<lb/>
Abandon Classes, Prevent Mishaps<lb/>
Our return to classes last week<lb/>
was greeted with some of the coldest<lb/>
? and most miserable ? weather<lb/>
Greenville has ever known.<lb/>
Temperatures hovered in the teens,<lb/>
and every conceivable form of<lb/>
precipitation was thrown at us: rain,<lb/>
snow, sleet, freezing rain, etc.<lb/>
The weather was so bad thai<lb/>
Greenville City School officials<lb/>
canceled classes on Wednesday and<lb/>
Friday. They felt conditions were<lb/>
too hazardous for students to make<lb/>
the trip to school.<lb/>
Yet officials at ECU saw fit to<lb/>
cancel only 8:00 and 9:00 classes on<lb/>
Friday; students were expected to<lb/>
attend all other classes.<lb/>
We feel the administration should<lb/>
have canceled all classes on Friday<lb/>
and early classes on Wednesday. We<lb/>
can appreciate a reluctance on the<lb/>
part of the administration to cancel<lb/>
classes; it is not something that<lb/>
should be done cavalierly.<lb/>
But on the other hand, let's face<lb/>
reality. While such weather may<lb/>
have little affect up North, this is<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
V.<lb/>
North Carolina and people just are<lb/>
not used to coping with snow. How<lb/>
many fender benders and cars in dit-<lb/>
ches did you see last week? How<lb/>
many people did you see slipping on<lb/>
sidewalks or stairways?<lb/>
For those students who live on<lb/>
campus, reaching class is no real<lb/>
problem, but nearly 6,000 students<lb/>
and 900 faculty members drive to<lb/>
campus each day.<lb/>
To subject them to the hazards of<lb/>
seldom-seen ice and snow is unfair,<lb/>
especially since there was little ef-<lb/>
fort expended in making sidewalks<lb/>
on campus passable.<lb/>
As one student put it, "They can<lb/>
either be mean or stupid, but they<lb/>
can't be mean and stupid In other<lb/>
words, if they make us come to class<lb/>
they have got to clear the sidewalks.<lb/>
This may seem petty to some, but<lb/>
somewhere down the line the com-<lb/>
mon sense involved in decisions to<lb/>
"come in out of the rain" must<lb/>
override the fear of lost time in the<lb/>
classroom.<lb/>
GOSH r4 Z. "?5<lb/>
AmJli tv cm. kfT OLfT Im<lb/>
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&amp; xt KNom.sm tiooc<lb/>
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FAIR TV M FAMIO<lb/>
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that make ,7 so ikresk<lb/>
vbu to get back into<lb/>
A H&amp;i BRACKET'<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
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"x. HOSTWBT<lb/>
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AKYOUT ;<lb/>
- Campus Forum<lb/>
Delays Unnecessary?<lb/>
I read the front page article in the<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 14, 1982 issue of The<lb/>
East Carolinian about WZMB being<lb/>
delayed again. According to the article,<lb/>
this delay is due to a license or an<lb/>
authorization from the FCC to broad-<lb/>
cast using the STL (Studio Transmitter<lb/>
Link). I am somewhat dismayed by the<lb/>
article since this paperwork was com-<lb/>
plete in May 1980 and the authorization<lb/>
was granted in July 1980.<lb/>
To satisfy my disbelief I spent the en-<lb/>
tire day Monday, Jan. 18, 1982 on the<lb/>
phone with the FCC in Washington,<lb/>
D.C. I called the call letter desk within<lb/>
the broadcast bureau<lb/>
and spoke to Mrs. Davis who informed<lb/>
me that call letters WGV-613 belonged<lb/>
to the ECU Media Board and that they<lb/>
were authorized on a construction per-<lb/>
mit to transmit on 948.5 Mega Hertz. I<lb/>
also spoke to Jim Durst of the FCC<lb/>
who explained that all<lb/>
the paper work seemed complete for<lb/>
WZMB.<lb/>
I then spoke to Bob Greenburg of the<lb/>
STL division who<lb/>
stated that the station only needed a<lb/>
PTA (Program Test Authorization). He<lb/>
stated that this authorization could be<lb/>
obtained in 10 days by having WZMB<lb/>
send a telegram stating that the station<lb/>
was ready to begin programming.<lb/>
Since we have verified that we do in<lb/>
fact have the STL transmitter authoriza-<lb/>
tion, my question is when are we going<lb/>
to request a PTA? If we wait for another<lb/>
STL license which we already have and<lb/>
which took four months the first time,<lb/>
then we are essentially just beating a<lb/>
dead horse. This is nearly an $80,000<lb/>
student funded project. Someone needs<lb/>
to examine the WZMB public inspection<lb/>
file thoroughly so that we can heat<lb/>
music rather than excuses.<lb/>
VAN BROWN<lb/>
ECU Alumni<lb/>
WZMB Petitioning Comm.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
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. AH 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/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
CcjecijeT<lb/>
WFVE DONE I Tf IvTVSS CREATE THE ULTIMATE<lb/>
Hl-FASHION ITEM-OESIGNER PEOPLE<lb/>
'Creation Science9 Causes School Stir<lb/>
By JOSEPH OLINICK<lb/>
Recently, in a heated court battle, a<lb/>
federal judge ruled that an Arkansas law<lb/>
requiring Biblically inspired theories of<lb/>
creation be taught along side the theory of<lb/>
evolution in public schools is unconstitu-<lb/>
tional.<lb/>
Although the ruling is a definite and<lb/>
very heavy blow to the creationism move-<lb/>
ment, it, by no means, has stopped the<lb/>
movement. "Creation science" lobbyist<lb/>
are at work with more than 15 legislatures,<lb/>
book publishers and school boards across<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
A bill requiring that creation science be<lb/>
taught along side evolution would have<lb/>
tremendous implications on all levels of<lb/>
education. Attesting to this fact, Judge<lb/>
William Overton, who ruled on the Arkan-<lb/>
sas case, stated in a Los Angeles Times Ser-<lb/>
vice article that "implementation of Act<lb/>
590 (the 'creation science' law) will have<lb/>
serious and untold consequences for<lb/>
students, particularly those planning to at-<lb/>
tend college. Evolution is the cornerstone<lb/>
of modern biologyAny student who is<lb/>
deprived of instruction as to the prevailing<lb/>
scientific thought on these tops will be<lb/>
denied a significant part of scientific<lb/>
education<lb/>
In his ruling, Judge Overton defined<lb/>
creationism as a religion and not a science,<lb/>
as supporters of creationism assert.<lb/>
Truly, creation science does not belong<lb/>
in the classroom next to the theory of<lb/>
evolution, and legislators should not give<lb/>
way to conservative lobbyist and pass laws<lb/>
that force creationism into the classroom.<lb/>
Forcing creation science upon professors<lb/>
and students would be an invasion on their<lb/>
freedom. The forced teaching of creation<lb/>
scieznce would compromise the academic<lb/>
freedom of professors and students. After<lb/>
all, there are people who do not accept the<lb/>
Bible, and creation science draws heavily<lb/>
from the Bible.<lb/>
More importantly, creationism is in<lb/>
direct conflict with modern science. In<lb/>
other words, it is incorrect. It contends<lb/>
that the earth is 10,000 years old. In con-<lb/>
trast, modern science dates the earth as ap-<lb/>
proximately 4.5 billion years old.<lb/>
It seems odd that conservative fun-<lb/>
damentalists would want to put creation<lb/>
science, which is very much like the<lb/>
Biblical account of creation, in the same<lb/>
category as evolution science. The Bible is<lb/>
very symbolic and open to interpretation.<lb/>
On the other hand, science is very precise<lb/>
and set.<lb/>
So, it would seem that putting Biblical<lb/>
ideas into the category of science would<lb/>
belittle and defray the literary and spiritual<lb/>
value of the Bible.<lb/>
One theory seldom heard is that perhaps<lb/>
some superior being or god initiated and<lb/>
controlled evolution ? if it took place at<lb/>
all.<lb/>
Creationism is propagated b Christian<lb/>
fundamentalists who make up a small por-<lb/>
tion of the population. Still, they arc<lb/>
powerful. Fortunately, the American Civil<lb/>
Liberties Union is fighting these groups<lb/>
and, so far, has had success.<lb/>
Creation science lobbyists are putting<lb/>
pressure on legislators throughout the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Hopefully, legislators will study the<lb/>
creation science case in Arkansas and think<lb/>
twice about enacting similar legislation.<lb/>
Perhaps legislators might even be nice<lb/>
enough to listen to their constituents in-<lb/>
stead of the special interest groups and<lb/>
their lobbyists. Then maybe separation of<lb/>
church and state will be maintained.<lb/>
Reaganomics Causes Varied Problems<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Growing old in America is a damned<lb/>
hard process, and auctioning off your life<lb/>
to make a living is even harder. I have<lb/>
understood those truths intellectually for a<lb/>
long time, but it took a recent holiday visit<lb/>
to my hometown of Harrisburg, Pa. to<lb/>
drive them home to me with gut-wrenching<lb/>
force.<lb/>
My source for this American story is my<lb/>
father, Richard E. Armstrong, aged 62.<lb/>
Dad has been a blue-collar worker since he<lb/>
graduated from high school in 1937 and<lb/>
went straight to work in a steel mill.<lb/>
Presently, he is a journeyman machinist<lb/>
for a corporation that does some military<lb/>
contracting. With the threat of war loom-<lb/>
ing large, you would think business would<lb/>
be booming, but it isn't, not for my<lb/>
father's employers. So, the company lays<lb/>
off its employees a week at a shot, every<lb/>
several months, on a rotating basis.<lb/>
When it is his turn to be laid off, my<lb/>
father, who has always prided himself on<lb/>
working for what he gets, collects<lb/>
unemployment. He stands in line with<lb/>
other working people, many of them older<lb/>
white men like himself, who have seldom<lb/>
had trouble finding and keeping a job.<lb/>
This has a way of putting flesh on the<lb/>
dismal economic reports from<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
Unlike many of his co-workers, my<lb/>
father did not vote for Ronald Reagan. He<lb/>
and my mother, who retired as a clerk-<lb/>
typist when my sister and I were grown and<lb/>
mom's health turned bad, have moved<lb/>
gradually, if cautiously, leftward. In recent<lb/>
years, their political sympathies have<lb/>
shifted from Richard Nixon to Gene Mc-<lb/>
Carthy to John Anderson. Although they<lb/>
are tempermental conservatives (their<lb/>
musical taste runs the gamut from<lb/>
Lawrence Welk to Al Hirt), my parents<lb/>
favor the creation of a third party to<lb/>
challenge the Democrats and Republicans<lb/>
? the party of their parents.<lb/>
But while they did not vote for Reagan,<lb/>
my folks had hopes that supply-side<lb/>
economics would turn out to be more than<lb/>
an empty promise. After Reagan delivered<lb/>
his first big economic chalk talk last spr-<lb/>
ing, they asked me, via Ma Bell, what I<lb/>
thought of the game plan. I told them I did<lb/>
not think it would work. No, my mother<lb/>
said, Congress probably would not go<lb/>
along. When I replied that I thought Con-<lb/>
gress would go along, but that<lb/>
Reaganomics is inherently unworkable,<lb/>
there was silence at the other end of the<lb/>
line.<lb/>
Now, they are frequently and fervently<lb/>
critical of Reagan, convinced he is leading<lb/>
us into war, and possibly a depression. My<lb/>
younger sister, Barbara, and her husband<lb/>
Don ? both of whom did vote for Reagan<lb/>
? are non-committal about his perfor-<lb/>
mance so far. Don was downcast, though,<lb/>
when his small insurance business failed<lb/>
last year. "He blamed himself my<lb/>
mother said. " 'Don we told him, 'it's<lb/>
not your fault, it's the economy  Don<lb/>
has since landed a job with one of the cor-<lb/>
porate giants that drove his firm out of<lb/>
business.<lb/>
While my brother-in-law begins his new<lb/>
job, my father dreams of leaving his old<lb/>
one. He had hoped to retire at 62, but he<lb/>
hadn't enough of a nest egg to do that. He<lb/>
will have to work three more years to col-<lb/>
lect full (albeit shrinking) Social Security<lb/>
benefits. By that time, he worries, the safe-<lb/>
ty net may be shredded, and he and my<lb/>
mother will be cut loose in a society that<lb/>
cares very little for old people.<lb/>
So work he must, at the job he has held<lb/>
for nearly 20 years, in the shop where he<lb/>
was once a creative and valued employee.<lb/>
At 62, that is no longer the case. Manage-<lb/>
ment does not respect older workers whose<lb/>
productivity they believe is just about used<lb/>
up. When the firm wants to get a new<lb/>
machine or design a new program, the boss<lb/>
no longer asks for his opinion. "Well, that<lb/>
hurts he told me quietly.<lb/>
To salve the wounds of work and head<lb/>
off worries about life after retirement, mv<lb/>
father rides a shiny new motorcycle hither<lb/>
and yon. He keeps it in the shed he built<lb/>
himself in the backyard, taking out the cy-<lb/>
cle on crisp, clear mornings just before the<lb/>
sun comes up. "It's real prettv that time of<lb/>
day he says.<lb/>
Mostly, my father rides on weekdays,<lb/>
slipping his helmet on and going up to the<lb/>
Happy Farmer restaurant, where he takes<lb/>
breakfast with his pals. Thev talk sports<lb/>
and politics for a while. Then he gives the<lb/>
motorcycle its head for mabve half an hour<lb/>
before steering the vehicle to the plant to<lb/>
begin the latest of 45 years' worth of work<lb/>
days. At 8:15 sharp, Richard E. Arm-<lb/>
strong punches in.<lb/>
St"<lb/>
w,<lb/>
'<lb/>
? Febt<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057450_0005"/><lb/>
NIAN<lb/>
tir<lb/>
I HI I l V ROl IMW<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
VX Vk<lb/>
wmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
Puppeteer Has<lb/>
Pulled Strings<lb/>
Internationally<lb/>
Djwd srotiak National Marionette Theatre will be in the Hendrix Theatre thi Wednesday evening al N p.m.<lb/>
From the fingertips of the inter-<lb/>
national!) known puppeteer. David<lb/>
Syrotiak. life flows down the<lb/>
marionette strings to animate ex<lb/>
qutsitely carved wooden figure. It<lb/>
i all visibleall in the opena new<lb/>
perspective for an ancient art form.<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
The National Marionette Theatre.<lb/>
sponsored by the Student Union<lb/>
Special Events committee, is coming<lb/>
to Hendrix Theatre on the ECL<lb/>
campus this Wednesday. January<lb/>
20. at S p.m. for what promises to<lb/>
be a truly exciting show .<lb/>
Daid Syrotiak beautiful<lb/>
marionettes travel over 45.000 miles<lb/>
and perform more than 200 limes<lb/>
each season. The National<lb/>
Marionette Theatre has toured cx-<lb/>
tensively in the United State. Mex-<lb/>
ico. Canada, and Europe, winning<lb/>
numerous awards including the<lb/>
Citation for Excellence in the Held<lb/>
of adult puppetry from Union Inter-<lb/>
national de la Mai i ?nette. I hey<lb/>
the first mcrican Mat ioncttc <lb/>
pain to win this aw aid.<lb/>
"In Concei i the culmination<lb/>
oi David Syrotiak's mam years<lb/>
study, observation, and experimen-<lb/>
tation with puppetry. 'v - pr diu<lb/>
lion shows .w artisi a; the peak oi<lb/>
his profession. Ii is a brilliant one-<lb/>
man tout -de-to; ce.<lb/>
 01 king in full v iew . ? c au-<lb/>
dience. 5y ronak pet foi ms a ?ei ies ot<lb/>
sharply drawn vignettes I'he scope<lb/>
ranees from the comic "Da<lb/>
Recital" and the poignani "Balloon<lb/>
Woman to the whimsical little<lb/>
man and dog "In the Pat k<lb/>
In addition 10 the S p.m. perfor-<lb/>
mance on January 20. Syrotiak will<lb/>
conduct a workshop at 5 p.m. in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center, foi all interested I v. I<lb/>
students, faculty and stafl.<lb/>
Tickets foi the -how are on  i a<lb/>
' he Central ha. Ol: <lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cenu ai J are<lb/>
priced at 52 tot ECl students. S3<lb/>
tor faculty and staff, and v- I<lb/>
public ll tickets a: the dooi a II bv<lb/>
S4.<lb/>
and think<lb/>
-<lb/>
:<lb/>
?ms<lb/>
.<lb/>
Kllf<lb/>
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tie<lb/>
the<lb/>
Australia's Weir Scores Again With 'GallipoW<lb/>
w<lb/>
By KATHY WF.tLER<lb/>
 . ;ed. a n<lb/>
?  i he past few<lb/>
 . ? a a s i Petet<lb/>
: pa - is such memora<lb/>
?( wv' Ht ai f'icnii at Hanging AA<lb/>
and a successful meeting u is. too.<lb/>
Fan- " Weir may recall I is previous films as being u<lb/>
 moving, visually beautiful but actually very sin<lb/>
p t egard ets. c 'stumes. and even plot. N<lb/>
(niilipiili.<lb/>
dded ' ? Weir's usual perfection of cinematograpl<lb/>
? iens?; u mood ar larae i umbers l elaborate ?<lb/>
b <lb/>
(tailipnli, now playing a i re complex<lb/>
.b rrv uslv use<lb/>
I . ? . ? (tdllipoH rr ghi w.<lb/>
I ei ii eir Meets tfc Budget<lb/>
All this is icing or, an already good cake. One sen?<lb/>
ai even ad Weir attempted (kiUipoii on a smal<lb/>
International Films<lb/>
Six Movies Give Alternatives<lb/>
lie is now accepi ne<lb/>
m series.<lb/>
nclu classics as<lb/>
11 j-<lb/>
? .<lb/>
mg from black . m-<lb/>
a thi llei s to exotic<lb/>
in t<lb/>
Hendrix<lb/>
.<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Sundav s, w itl<lb/>
COIICC<lb/>
? 6 I i Howev er, on Supei<lb/>
2-1 filn If 7m Blood will be<lb/>
itZp.i being served a' 1:30.<lb/>
rhe schedule I ng ts as 1 ivs:<lb/>
? fanuary 24. Hist Mood iA in, !99) Directed<lb/>
H u s<lb/>
lohn Hustoi this Flannery 0' onnoi story<lb/>
i youi  :s i e big city to<lb/>
wall obsessed with his religious<lb/>
.<lb/>
tgh it ' tdgei in Georgia and<lb/>
? ii was hailed by critics<lb/>
? me of the best ol the<lb/>
did ;<lb/>
?<lb/>
ir:<lb/>
 A w e ' <lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Drew allcv:<lb/>
most importani <lb/>
Vincent C anbv<lb/>
?. imph " "A bril<lb/>
? ,a age humor Bet i<lb/>
asterpiece, on? l<lb/>
- ? ilms to be released in vears<lb/>
' me i't Huston's most<lb/>
einal, mosi itunning movies,  exhilarating, lyrical<lb/>
Iv mad u d absolu<lb/>
 ai ? g Brad D i . t. s<lb/>
ton, and Amy W <lb/>
? February 21. tiila i<lb/>
C laudehabi<lb/>
ig.<lb/>
 Beatty, Harrv Dean Stan-<lb/>
ranee, 1975). Directed by<lb/>
(n<lb/>
f th<lb/>
ich Secret P<lb/>
beautifully<lb/>
realize thai<lb/>
al I rench New W ave auteurs. and an<lb/>
ck,habrol makes thrillers that<lb/>
are a  and ambiguous moral fables in<lb/>
which victims d;J predators ate intermingled.<lb/>
In this film, polit idicals kidnap the American<lb/>
ambassador to France during his weekly visit to an<lb/>
eleeanl brothel. Bui the brothel is operated by the<lb/>
ind the entire act is filmed. After a<lb/>
rj hase and seige. the kidnappers<lb/>
? beer manipulated by the police.<lb/>
'An elegani bla al . ipi authority e York<lb/>
fimes announced. "A sliming example of the right way<lb/>
io direct a film wrote 4fer Dark film critic.<lb/>
? Match 21. Jane is Jane forever (Germany, 1977).<lb/>
Directed by Walter Bockmayer and Rolf Buhrmann:<lb/>
Lsing a powerful, austere style characteristic of the<lb/>
New German C inema, Bockmayer and Buhrmann tell a<lb/>
story about old age, incipient madness, and the struggle<lb/>
for dignity that is surprisingly whimsical and warmly<lb/>
humorous.<lb/>
Johanna Koenig, the celebrated German actress,<lb/>
plays Johanna, an old woman recently settled into a<lb/>
home for the elderly w ho is so com inced that she is Tar-<lb/>
an's mate Jane that she plasters her walls with Tarzan<lb/>
movie posters, wears leopard skins, eats bananas con-<lb/>
stantlv and spends most i her time with the animals in<lb/>
the oo (whom she sensibly prefers to the people around<lb/>
her).<lb/>
Her real appeal as a character is not her delusion ?? .<lb/>
her awareness that it is a delusion, a fact which is ot no<lb/>
importance to her in view of the delusions of others and<lb/>
of the satisfactions ol being cray.<lb/>
"One of the most beautiful and important new (?<lb/>
man films Rainer W erner Fassbinder wrote. "A si<lb/>
movie, sometimes funnv. but more often decei<lb/>
understandint<lb/>
-aid Vincen; Canbv<lb/>
It would still have been a wonderful mo-<lb/>
Sutr ' : tp iiaUipofi is d fficuli if not impossible.<lb/>
Yes. Da J v  an as given us a screenplay for a<lb/>
Aai c dealing witl the virtual slaughter of<lb/>
.utra a t Gallipoli Peninsula in Asia<lb/>
Mil 1915<lb/>
v. d V ai I - n the main topic for consideration<lb/>
a ever, foi are noi all wars essentially the<lb/>
aracters and settings changed?<lb/>
iiaffipofi ?large .i bute to those characters ? in this<lb/>
i-e. lh U '  aha.<lb/>
trttllipoft - a s ipt portrait of youth ? us energy.<lb/>
fears, oyalties and disillusionments<lb/>
I ? . eeyes I rchie and Frank (excellently por-<lb/>
trayed by Bi Kerr and Mike Lee), we see war as young<lb/>
mei  1915. and. no doubt, as many see it today.<lb/>
We l ese two young athletes in their pursuit of<lb/>
the g ries ? vai rhey are djd as they find an<lb/>
; ai .cast for their energies and saddened<lb/>
 discovei tl ai war's glory comes only in the form<lb/>
ot bullets ai d b mbs.<lb/>
Lesi yi nV (udlipoli is another one o those<lb/>
tiresome. eavy foreign films. 1 musi<lb/>
as en i add thai this film is not the least bit tiresome<lb/>
i heaw.<lb/>
? April 4. Metropolis (Germain. 1927). Directed by<lb/>
Frit Lang:<lb/>
Director Frit I ang i W. ihelunger. Destiny) was<lb/>
given a budget unprecedented in Germain to create this<lb/>
futuristic film oi a city-factory in which the working<lb/>
masses are slaves of the rich masters<lb/>
In expressionistic settings inspired by the skyscrapers<lb/>
of New York, an allegory o totalitarianism evolves.<lb/>
culminating in the revolt of the slaves.<lb/>
Many of the sequences are among the most famous ii<lb/>
film: the suspended garden as a decadent paradise, the<lb/>
feverish visions of the son of the city ruler. Moloch the<lb/>
infernal machine which controls the entire city, the<lb/>
movement of masses of workers against the abstract<lb/>
monumental decors<lb/>
? April 18. Bahia (Brazil. 1976). Directed by Marcel<lb/>
Camus:<lb/>
Marcel Camus, director o the international award-<lb/>
winner Black Orpheus, has once again made a film ol<lb/>
astounding physical beauty. Set in the Brazilian pro-<lb/>
vince o Bahia. a sensual world of bossa-nova rhythms,<lb/>
handsome dancers and luxurious secside landscapes, the<lb/>
story is one of classic "star-crossed lovers" involving a<lb/>
sweet-talking street hustler and a beautiful young pro-<lb/>
stitute. Their affair is set against a tapestry of color,<lb/>
dancing sensuality and a strange combination ol<lb/>
voodoo and Christianity that controls the names ii<lb/>
Bahia's shanty-town slums. "A hymn to the sensual<lb/>
life, full o music and song reported the Boston<lb/>
Herald American.<lb/>
? May 2. The River (FranceIndia. 1951). Directed by<lb/>
Jean Renoir:<lb/>
The artistic culmination of Renoir's "Indian period<lb/>
The River focuses on three young women who are in<lb/>
love with one of their cousins wounded during the war.<lb/>
who decides to leave rather than having to choose one<lb/>
among the three of them. Told from the point of view of<lb/>
one of the girls, it is a reflection of British colonialism as<lb/>
seen through the eyes of a teenager. The film is noted<lb/>
for its splendid color photography, its exploitation of<lb/>
telescoping for emotional and psychological resonance<lb/>
(as opposed to camera shifts), and its fusion of narrative<lb/>
structure with metaphysical themes. The famous French<lb/>
film critic Anre Bazin wrote, " The River is The Rules of<lb/>
the Game of Renoir's second period. It sits at the avant-<lb/>
garde of the cinema, along with The Bicycle Thief,<lb/>
Diary of A Country Priest, and everything which really<lb/>
counts in the contemporary cinema<lb/>
Attendance at all films is by subscription only. The<lb/>
cost of a membership to attend all six films is $10.<lb/>
Subscription tickets will be given out at the opening<lb/>
feature. For information about subscriptions contact<lb/>
Glen Brewster or Karen Blansfield at 757-6041.<lb/>
If anything. Wen has created a rathei m?<lb/>
throughout most o the film, n iroring the<lb/>
limism of youth. lso. Wen has achieved - iual ex-<lb/>
cellence in directing, so (iallipoh nevet slow<lb/>
fusing.<lb/>
The cinematography. ioo. is extremely well<lb/>
ineing both the base and the sublime io out attention in<lb/>
the proper doses. And. a m his othei film. W en hh<lb/>
various kinds oi music skillfully to enhance mood ai J<lb/>
tone.<lb/>
sve GAl I ll'Oi I. Pa? h<lb/>
GL T Rehearses<lb/>
Producer Director Stephen B 1 innan has ami<lb/>
that his developing theatre organization has been of-<lb/>
ficially named the Greenville I it tic rheaire.<lb/>
Finnan is currently rehearsing Gl Fs scs i.??<lb/>
production. Neil Simon's comedv Burefood In tin<lb/>
Park.<lb/>
Future plans include a thud majoi production in the<lb/>
See GL THEATRK. Pat 6<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
SingerSongwriter Brian Huskey Here Friday<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C. country folk entertainer Brian Huskey will perform al the I'offehouse. located<lb/>
downstairs in Mendenhall Student Center, this Friday nijjlil only at 9 p.m. Admission is S.50 at the<lb/>
door. The performance is beinjt sponsored by the KIT Student Union Coffeehouse Committee.<lb/>
?v.v<lb/>
Si<lb/>
m<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
?t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057450_0006"/><lb/>
(<lb/>
i I V<lb/>
TravelAdventure Film<lb/>
Takes Us To Timbuctoo<lb/>
Two lick ei s To Timbuctoo<lb/>
became a gleam in Ken Richter's eye<lb/>
at a Sunday afternoon tea in New<lb/>
York Cily's Explorer's Club<lb/>
Now, thanks to Richier, ihe<lb/>
public van get a d and brilliantly<lb/>
colorful look at this wondrous land<lb/>
as the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
I i a el -d enture Film Series<lb/>
presents Kenneth Richter's adven-<lb/>
lure classic, Two Tickets To Tim-<lb/>
hllCtOO.<lb/>
The show, sot for 8 p.m January<lb/>
26, is the end result ot Ken and<lb/>
Shirle Richter's leaving Algiers<lb/>
with a station wagon and assign-<lb/>
ment to produce an educational film<lb/>
in Morocco and another one in the<lb/>
Congo River hasm.<lb/>
Ken thought it would be cheapet<lb/>
i dne then ton of photographic<lb/>
equipment aeioss the Sahara than<lb/>
ilv !i. ins proved to be the most<lb/>
spectaculai and interesting mistake<lb/>
eei made. Two Tickets To Tim-<lb/>
buctoo is the storv of that trip.<lb/>
I his was a safari that could be<lb/>
made during only a tew short years,<lb/>
hetore political unrest and wars<lb/>
closed i lie Sahara trails. Some ot the<lb/>
cn the Richters visited are<lb/>
'Gallipoli9<lb/>
( imlinued from Pajje 5<lb/>
One feature of Gallipoli that is<lb/>
. impressive is its treatment ol<lb/>
lu period in which the movie takes<lb/>
plac?. The first two decades of this<lb/>
cv ur have provided a backdrop<lb/>
several movies this winter, such<lb/>
as Runtime and Reds.<lb/>
I these two films, as in mam<lb/>
? aboui "the good old days a<lb/>
n sentimentality seems to<lb/>
prevail at times, despite careful at-<lb/>
to realism in sets and<lb/>
imes.<lb/>
s ich a feeling is completely ab<lb/>
in (uillipoli. n eir's film, the<lb/>
vicwci Jains a sense ol the reality ol<lb/>
the lime of World Wai I.<lb/>
' is av hieed mainly through the<lb/>
i ? v eii doesn't allow<lb/>
I cars or the costumes t<lb/>
I - -v w ?men in the film lo<lb/>
(Htllipttli.<lb/>
ply ar ' 'cus<lb/>
eln - cap-<lb/>
'unhout<lb/>
reachable now only by plane; recent<lb/>
residents o the Zaire mission sta-<lb/>
tion and travelers to Timbuctoo sav,<lb/>
"The haven't changed<lb/>
And who can know what goes on<lb/>
in In-Guezzam, desert settlement<lb/>
with a population of three when the<lb/>
Richters passed through?<lb/>
George Pierrot, Director ot<lb/>
World Adventure Series, said, "this<lb/>
is a most unusual and appealing<lb/>
story. Two young people start out in<lb/>
a station wagon lo make an 11,000<lb/>
mile trip from Algiers across the<lb/>
often roadless Sahara Desert into<lb/>
the Congo and baek.<lb/>
"Naturally, they have plenty ot<lb/>
adventure ? some of it hilarious.<lb/>
It's the kind of trip most of us<lb/>
dtearn about and never get a chance<lb/>
to make<lb/>
ECl students will be admitted by<lb/>
ID and activity cards and ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff by Mendenhall<lb/>
membership. Public tickets are on<lb/>
sale m the Central Ticket Office at a<lb/>
cost of $2.50.<lb/>
GL Theatre<lb/>
Continued from Page 5<lb/>
spring, a children's theatre pnkiiu<lb/>
iion based  lnc works ol<lb/>
Shakespeare and a summci series o<lb/>
plays<lb/>
Participants are im ued to ioin an<lb/>
acting class, io be taughi . an in-<lb/>
iroductory course by Finnan, which<lb/>
will be offered ai the Methodist Siu-<lb/>
deni c en'e; on Saturday mornings<lb/>
through the c ominumg 1 ducaiion<lb/>
Division ot Phi c ommunilN Co!<lb/>
legc. '<lb/>
In addition, ol I will ? n bv<lb/>
vohed in local and statewide fund<lb/>
raising I innan. a foi met lacuhv<lb/>
mcmbei ol HI Drama<lb/>
Spet h Department, is ei<lb/>
"I am very excited by oui prospeets<lb/>
" c e recetv ed w onderl ul<lb/>
' 'iixe and supp t: in all <lb/>
? ors ol ' he t u eenv ille eomnumitv<lb/>
Barefoot ; The I'ark will preview<lb/>
ai ihe Mcihidist S t eniet<lb/>
I ebruary 22, 2 and open foi <lb/>
Perl ?? mances m h hi tiai v 24<lb/>
rickets will tt -Uai<lb/>
! '?? ? -?? i.i ficket Mficv ai<lb/>
Mendenhall and . Mel dis S <lb/>
den I Ceiuci. St h and I lulls si reels.<lb/>
Pizza xxui<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
PIZZA, SALAD, SPAGHETTI, SOUP<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
MonSun. 11:30-2:00 2.69<lb/>
Mon. &amp; TueS. 4:00-8:30 2.89<lb/>
C WEDNESDAY<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DAY<lb/>
LARGE PORTION<lb/>
OF SPAGHETTI,<lb/>
GARLIC BREAD 1.88<lb/>
BONUS TRIP TO SALAD BAR<lb/>
Hwy 2M Bypass Greenville<lb/>
Nji<lb/>
TarLanding Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
499<lb/>
All you can eat<lb/>
N. -<lb/>
Special Good<lb/>
Tuesday,<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
and<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
This Week<lb/>
Bob Hearing ? Manager<lb/>
Cro?? OrN StTMt ??????<lb/>
Ti?W?t i,t LlffM<lb/>
Loc?t? on? block ?om ?? in<lb/>
Phone 758-0327<lb/>
A<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
STAFFING SCHEDULE<lb/>
1982-1983<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
LZAfLi<lb/>
I<lb/>
 Jan. 18-29<lb/>
I Feb. 4<lb/>
jj Jan. 25-Feb. 5<lb/>
I<lb/>
Feb. 8<lb/>
Feb. 1-12<lb/>
Feb. 15<lb/>
March 26<lb/>
Application for Student Union President<lb/>
Student Union President Selected<lb/>
Application for Student Union<lb/>
Chairpersons<lb/>
Student Union Chairpersons Selected<lb/>
Application for Committee Members<lb/>
Student Union Staffed<lb/>
Student Union Banquet<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
m<lb/>
STU0?NT UNION<lb/>
IUU1KUU UBMim<lb/>
,v 3<lb/>
I<lb/>
ec4<lb/>
?sK"<lb/>
Copyright 1982<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold to Dealers<lb/>
OPEN Mon. thru Sat. 8 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
Sun. 9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each o? these advertised items is required to be readily<lb/>
available for sale m each Kroger Sav on. except as specif,<lb/>
cally noted In this ad If we do run out of an item we will offer<lb/>
you your choice of a comparable item when available refiec<lb/>
ting the same savings or a ramcheck which will entitle you to<lb/>
purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within 30<lb/>
days<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
FLORIDA FRESH<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
to-Gal.<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
MADE FRESH DAILY<lb/>
CHEESE OR PEPPERONI<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
SERVE 'N SAVE<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETY<lb/>
Fox Pizzas<lb/>
3 $<lb/>
PKgs.<lb/>
Vaseline<lb/>
Intensive<lb/>
Care<lb/>
INTENSIVE CARE<lb/>
Lotion<lb/>
Luncheon<lb/>
Meats<lb/>
?119<lb/>
COLGATE INSTANT<lb/>
Shave<lb/>
Cream<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
Chips &amp; Snacks<lb/>
rmsc?iffi100l<lb/>
COSMITICS A<lb/>
FHAOBAMCIS<lb/>
Off<lb/>
SUOQ<lb/>
foisc'<lb/>
WJWttji!<lb/>
16?,<lb/>
B<lb/>
mak ? i<lb/>
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 rt<lb/>
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hrir ?<lb/>
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relic'<lb/>
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!IE<lb/>
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WE<lb/>
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iki???,1<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
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has<lb/>
new<lb/>
vinq<lb/>
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Break)<lb/>
T<lb/>
Loc(<lb/>
PI<lb/>
Op<lb/>
Oper<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
t<lb/>
s<lb/>
<pb facs="00057450_0007"/><lb/>
XWK.<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
i<lb/>
$<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
zas<lb/>
LCARMIOC A&amp;QQT GxcC&amp;c TmcT Haho a)m<lb/>
6i Vavw A)oms<lb/>
i III I l? K<lb/>
WHAT A?? VOU TAKING<lb/>
sJoT MOCH,MAaJm. I'fA<lb/>
TAKING A CICHT LOAP<lb/>
7t) 6fcl,O0 vP AVCAGC i<lb/>
I<lb/>
Bad Sci Fi<lb/>
Frankenstein Series Haunts Hollywood<lb/>
B JOHWUU KR<lb/>
suit W ritf<lb/>
HOI SEOFFRA Wit STEIiS<lb/>
(1944)<lb/>
 rom Thomas Edison to And) Warhol, film<lb/>
uv have been fascinated with Frankenstein,<lb/>
Man Shelley's ISIS novel. Considered a classic<lb/>
science fiction as well as a masterpiece ol<lb/>
got hie honor. Shelley's story dealt with the<lb/>
?nes of man dating to create life and imitate<lb/>
a. and with man's inhumanity to man.<lb/>
While such weight) matters have rarely found<lb/>
es into the innumerable Frankenstein<lb/>
nude since Edison's 1910 epic, the storv<lb/>
s been a treasure-trove of eerie ideas tor<lb/>
- ol fright films.<lb/>
most famous of these is the series made<lb/>
the hevdav of Hollywood by Universal<lb/>
s thai included episodes ranging from the<lb/>
Frankenstein !93!). to the ridiculous,<lb/>
ot and ostello Meet Frankenstein (1948).<lb/>
 the worst of the series was House oj<lb/>
inkenstein i 1944).<lb/>
Bv 1942 the Frankenstein formula had worn<lb/>
so for the fifth inning studio execs sent in a<lb/>
mster, resulting in Frankenstein Meets<lb/>
the Holt Man. Bv 1944. even that idea was not<lb/>
enough to ensure box office success. So for the<lb/>
sixth in the series they came up with Frankenstein<lb/>
Meets the Wolf Man Meets Dracula Meets the<lb/>
Mad Doctor Meets the Hunchback. That title<lb/>
was too long however, so the producers named it<lb/>
House of Frankenstein.<lb/>
(Before he set up "house the Monster had<lb/>
always been played by stars: Boris Karloff in the<lb/>
first three movies, then I on Chaney, then Bela<lb/>
I ugosi. By 1944 though, the role was so rotten<lb/>
no one of any import wanted it ? the part finally<lb/>
went to Glenn Strange, an unknown actor in B<lb/>
m estei us.)<lb/>
The storyline centered on the sinister schemes<lb/>
of Dr. Ciustar Niemann (Karloff), professional<lb/>
mad scientist. As the film opens, he and his hun-<lb/>
chback assistant are in jail, incarcerated for their<lb/>
unholy experiments. Freed when a thunderstorm<lb/>
damages the jail, they take their show on the<lb/>
road, soon meeting up with the Monster<lb/>
(Strange) and the Wolf Man (Chaney). who are<lb/>
found freee-dned in the ruins of the castle where<lb/>
the) were last seen during the climax of the<lb/>
previous tilm, and Count Dracula (John C'ar-<lb/>
radine). who is uncovered while on exhibit in<lb/>
(hamher of Horrors<lb/>
1 he Count does the evil doctor's bidding for a<lb/>
while, until he stays out in the sun too long which<lb/>
turns him into bare bones. This blessed event<lb/>
leaves the plot free to focus on the other creepy<lb/>
characters: Dr. Niemann, busy kidnapping his<lb/>
old enemies and preparing to mix up their brains;<lb/>
the hunchback and the Wolf Man, involved in a<lb/>
biarre love triangle with a pretty young gypsy<lb/>
gut(Elena Verdugo); and the title character, who<lb/>
has little to do since he's been lying dormant<lb/>
through most of the movie.<lb/>
Eventually, the werewolf and the woman kill<lb/>
each other. The nasty hunchback gets his Hist<lb/>
deserts, and Franky final)) gets into the action.<lb/>
energized bv 100,(XK) megavolts and carries<lb/>
Karloff into a bog. The (finally) End.<lb/>
About the only thing that can be said in<lb/>
defense of House of Frankenstein is that it is bet<lb/>
ter than Has I Teenage Frankenstein (1957),<lb/>
Frankenstein Meets the Space Monster (1965).<lb/>
Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter<lb/>
(196M oi Frankenstein on Campus (1969).<lb/>
A new series was begun in 1957 by England's<lb/>
Hammer studios with Peter Cushing starring as<lb/>
Dr. Frankenstein, which proves that Marv<lb/>
Shelley's creation is indestructible. Or, as Alan<lb/>
C. Frank put it in his book Hormr Movies:<lb/>
"Frankenstein now lives on in the more than<lb/>
capable hands of Peter Cushing and in the<lb/>
monster that Karloff made. He will undoubted!)<lb/>
survive long at ter his campus capers, teenage<lb/>
duels and monster fights have been forgotten<lb/>
100?o Nylon Pile<lb/>
AlI colors<lb/>
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Large and small<lb/>
sizes available<lb/>
TRUCKLOAD<lb/>
Carpet Sale<lb/>
WARM FLOORS<lb/>
0X6 FT. AREA SIZE ONLY<lb/>
$<lb/>
12<lb/>
00<lb/>
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KIMERY'S USED FURNITURE<lb/>
2808 East 10th St.<lb/>
ECOND CHANCE<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
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TWOOOOBS FROM<lb/>
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SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
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VERY BEST<lb/>
75S-0204<lb/>
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Large inventory of new and<lb/>
used merchandise<lb/>
We Hove Layaway<lb/>
iny items ot value for collateral<lb/>
 . ? ens contioential<lb/>
WE BUY GOLD AND SILVER<lb/>
AC BOSS THf R l  E W Corner ol N Gr (-en &amp; M 33<lb/>
? til 'S9 Mon Fr. 9 'o S - Sat S to 4<lb/>
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European Trained Hair Stylists<lb/>
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FOR:<lb/>
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of EV SALES co "?e.<lb/>
??? ?! PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
l?6oipifOH?$iO?l?l PIRMAMINI ?????"<lb/>
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Male or female. Close to cam<lb/>
pus ? modern conveniences.<lb/>
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month, pius utilities. Call<lb/>
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1<lb/>
AND HIS ALL-STAR BAND<lb/>
ROCK 93ATTIC HEART FUND<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
HARBIN HIGHLANDER CENTER, INC<lb/>
Coin-Operated<lb/>
Laundr<lb/>
and Dry Cleaners<lb/>
( leant si laundry in town!<lb/>
Color TV. and Video Games<lb/>
Across from Highway Patrol<lb/>
Station on 10th St.<lb/>
Hours fi a.m10 p.m.<lb/>
7 days a week<lb/>
i<lb/>
7th<lb/>
ANNUAL<lb/>
? la<lb/>
ART<lb/>
SHOW<lb/>
Co'l ariead : ?'? ?? '? ? ' ?<lb/>
your new hairstyle<lb/>
free Consultation<lb/>
756 6200<lb/>
S3<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
o Grill<lb/>
All ECU students are eligible.<lb/>
Work must be delivered on Jan. 22, 1982, bet<lb/>
ween 9:00 and 4:00 to the Conference Room in<lb/>
Jenkins, accompanied by $1.00 entry fee per<lb/>
piece.<lb/>
Categories: Painting, Sculpture, Ceramics,<lb/>
Drawing, Photography,<lb/>
Design, and Graphic Art and Illustration.<lb/>
Prizes: $50.00 1 st Place in each category and<lb/>
$100.00 Best-ln-Show.<lb/>
Sponsored by the Attic and Jeffreys Beer and Wine, Co<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI<lb/>
ALPHA<lb/>
500 Elizabeth St.<lb/>
Call for Rides or Info at 752-5325<lb/>
has now reopened under<lb/>
new management ? ser-<lb/>
ving breakfast and din-<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
Breakfast served any time.<lb/>
Take out or dine in.<lb/>
Located on corner of 9th &amp;<lb/>
Dickenson<lb/>
Phone 752-1188<lb/>
Open 6 A.M. 'til 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
n<lb/>
Ope<lb/>
Mon. Sun<lb/>
We ain't kidding this time<lb/>
Carolina Recording Artists<lb/>
Nicky Harris<lb/>
Band<lb/>
Performing Wed. at the<lb/>
Casablanca Happy Hour.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
TUES JAN. 19AXA REVOLVING<lb/>
BOOTH<lb/>
WED JAN. 20REFRESHMENTS<lb/>
will be served<lb/>
FROM 9:00-UNTIL ALL THREE NIGHTS<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057450_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1982<lb/>
Defeated Both JMU, Campbell<lb/>
Lady Bucs Were Happy Hosts<lb/>
Zooming In On Odom<lb/>
Photographer Gary Patterson moved in close for these<lb/>
pictures of ECU basketball coach Dave Odom during<lb/>
the team's 58-49 loss to UNC-W last Thursday. Follow-<lb/>
ing the game Odom referred to his team's showing as<lb/>
"the worst physical performance in my three years<lb/>
here Patterson's photography makes evident the<lb/>
frustration, yet hope, that the third-year coach felt.<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Maaagtaa ratitor<lb/>
The first annual East Carolina-<lb/>
Duke Doubleheader proved suc-<lb/>
cessful for one host ? not so suc-<lb/>
cessful for the other.<lb/>
ECU's Lady Pirates claimed a<lb/>
pair of victories in the event, down-<lb/>
ing Campbell University 65-46 Fri-<lb/>
day and James Madison 90-60<lb/>
Saturday. Meanwhile, Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum was not so kind to the Blue<lb/>
Devils as they dropped their Friday<lb/>
contest with Madison 76-75 then re-<lb/>
bounded for an 83-64 romp over<lb/>
Campbell.<lb/>
With top scorers Mary Denkler<lb/>
and Sam Jones leading the way,<lb/>
ECU had little difficulty handling<lb/>
Division II power Campbell. The<lb/>
Lady Pirates built to an 11 point<lb/>
lead on a Jones drive inside with<lb/>
4:18 remaining in the first half.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates continued their<lb/>
attack in the second frame, quickly<lb/>
building a 50-30 advantage on a<lb/>
Loletha Harrison bucket inside on a<lb/>
pass from Fran Hooks with less<lb/>
than seven minutes elapsed. A<lb/>
Lillion Barnes 18-foot jumper with<lb/>
7:17 remaining gave ECU a 24 point<lb/>
edge ? their biggest of the game.<lb/>
Two field goals each by Sharon<lb/>
Williams and Cindy Biggerstaff<lb/>
helped the visitors cut the margin to<lb/>
19 at the buzzer.<lb/>
Jones, who missed her first start<lb/>
of the season for arriving late for<lb/>
pre-game meal, came on to fire in 10<lb/>
of 20 from the field and two out of<lb/>
three from the line for 22 points,<lb/>
dished off five assists and lead all re-<lb/>
bounders with 15. Denkler poured<lb/>
in 18 points, with Hooks con-<lb/>
tributing five assists.<lb/>
The Camels' Rhonda Mueller<lb/>
contributed 12 points, with Sharon<lb/>
Williams adding 10.<lb/>
Things were a little different<lb/>
against Madison, as the Duchess'<lb/>
Deana Meadows gave them the lead<lb/>
2-0 with a drive two minutes into the<lb/>
game. From that point on, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates fought slowly to a 17 point<lb/>
lead with :39 till halftime.<lb/>
The two teams fought evenly<lb/>
through the first six minutes of the<lb/>
final stanza with ECU maintaining a<lb/>
15 point advantage, but Jones led a<lb/>
Lady Pirate flurry as they forged a<lb/>
i point lead with 9:33 on the clock.<lb/>
Jones continued her offensive<lb/>
barrage, tallying 23 points on eight<lb/>
of 15 field goal attempts and seven<lb/>
of eight from the line. She also<lb/>
handed off nine assists and grabbed<lb/>
seven rebounds.<lb/>
Hooks bested her career-high<lb/>
point total with 15 on the night and<lb/>
gave out six assists. Denkler and<lb/>
freshman Darlene Chaney con-<lb/>
tributed 14 points each, with<lb/>
Loraine Foster adding 12. Denkler<lb/>
led the Lady Pirates with nine re-<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
Sue Manelski paced Madison with<lb/>
16 points, while Meadows added 15<lb/>
and freshman Beth Hamilton<lb/>
pumped in 11 while pulling down<lb/>
nine rebounds.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates begin a three-<lb/>
game road trip against Georgia<lb/>
Tech, Wake Forest and Ap-<lb/>
palachian State before returning to<lb/>
Minges Feb. 3 to face East Ten-<lb/>
nessee State.<lb/>
In Duke's opening loss to<lb/>
Madison, the Devils' Kim Matthews<lb/>
led the way with 18 points and 10 re-<lb/>
bounds, while Jennifer Chesnut<lb/>
posted 13 points, Claire Rose 12 and<lb/>
Candy Mikels 10.<lb/>
Meadows led JMU with 20,<lb/>
followed by Hamilton with 17, Bet-<lb/>
sy Blose with 16 and Manelski's 13.<lb/>
Against Campbell, Duke's Stacy<lb/>
Hurd came alive with 24 points, as<lb/>
Maura Hertzog swished 12, Margo<lb/>
Walsh 11 and Matthews 10.<lb/>
The Camels were led by Sharon<lb/>
Williams with 18 points, Cindy Big<lb/>
gerstaff's 14 and Jean Lamson's 11<lb/>
The Lady Pirates' schedule,<lb/>
tough all season long, does not get<lb/>
any easier in February. ECU takes<lb/>
on a pair of nationally ranked teams<lb/>
early next month.<lb/>
One of the ranked clubs, arch-<lb/>
rival N.C. State, will come to<lb/>
Greenville on February 7. On Feb.<lb/>
11 the Lady Pirates travel nor-<lb/>
thward to face powerful Old Domi-<lb/>
nion.<lb/>
Later in the month, during the<lb/>
weekend of Feb. 20-21, the first an-<lb/>
nual Lady Pirate Classic will be<lb/>
played in Greenville.<lb/>
Photo By CHAP GUHLEY<lb/>
Ptwto By MP jlOAN<lb/>
Sam Jones (left) and Fran Hooks (right) both starred over<lb/>
the weekend for the Ladv Pirates.<lb/>
Fast Spider Start Makes Tarrant A Fixture<lb/>
TWO DEVELOPMENTS took<lb/>
place within the FCAC-South<lb/>
yesterda) (Monday). The foremost<lb/>
of the two involves league-leader<lb/>
Richmond.<lb/>
I he Spiders are 1-0 in the con-<lb/>
ference and 11-4 overall under<lb/>
Coach Dick Tarrant. who took over<lb/>
on an interim basis when Lou Goetz<lb/>
stepped down from the position.<lb/>
Yesterda Richmond announced<lb/>
that Far ran; has been signed on as<lb/>
the Spiders' head man on a perma-<lb/>
nent basis. Terms at the contract<lb/>
were not announced, though The<lb/>
Richmond Times-Dispatch reported<lb/>
it to be a four-year pact for about<lb/>
$30,000 annually.<lb/>
Included among Richmond's 11<lb/>
victories have been upsets of Wake<lb/>
Forest, South Carolina and James<lb/>
Madison.<lb/>
"We arc extremely proud o the<lb/>
job which Dick has done said<lb/>
Richmond Athletic Director Chuck<lb/>
Boone. "He and Ins staff and his<lb/>
squad represent the University of<lb/>
Richmond very well<lb/>
I HI OTHER development<lb/>
yesterdaj was George Mason's<lb/>
escaping the league cellar via an<lb/>
89-79 win over Navy.<lb/>
Carlos Yates paced the Patriot at-<lb/>
tack with 19 points. John Niehoff<lb/>
added 15 and center Andre Gaddy<lb/>
13.<lb/>
Mason jumped to a big 43-25<lb/>
halftime lead and never gave up that<lb/>
advantage. A key late in the game,<lb/>
when the Midshipmen were making<lb/>
a run, was the fact that three Navy<lb/>
starters fouled out.<lb/>
THL ONLY OTHER league<lb/>
game over the past seven days<lb/>
resulted in James Madison moving<lb/>
into sole possession of second place<lb/>
with a 54-44 win over William and<lb/>
Mary.<lb/>
The Dukes did so on Saturday<lb/>
behind Linton Townes' 21 points<lb/>
and six rebounds. JMU is now 3-1 in<lb/>
the conference, one-half game<lb/>
ahead of East Carolina, and 11-3<lb/>
overall.<lb/>
The Dukes outdid the Indians by<lb/>
a large margin in field goal ac-<lb/>
curacy, James Madison connecting<lb/>
on 52.5 percent and William and<lb/>
Mary just 40.4 percent. JMU also<lb/>
finished with a wide 31-22 advan-<lb/>
tage in rebounds.<lb/>
?"?0?0 '?<lb/>
ECAC-South Report<lb/>
Richmond Gives Tarrant Vote Of Confidence<lb/>
RECAP? DePaul Downs Old Dominion<lb/>
? AHEAD? ECU vs. AC. State; JMU vs. ODL<lb/>
THE BIGGIE last week among<lb/>
non-conferece games featured Old<lb/>
Dominion hosting fifth-ranked<lb/>
DePaul. The Blue Demons came in-<lb/>
to the sold-out Norfolk Scope look-<lb/>
ing to avenge last year's defeat at<lb/>
the handsof the Monarchs.<lb/>
Revenge was just what Ray<lb/>
Meyer's club got, rolling to a 70-60<lb/>
win that was not as close as the score<lb/>
indicated.<lb/>
The Blue Demons jumped to a<lb/>
44-24 lead early in the second half<lb/>
and survived a late ODU rally. The<lb/>
Monarchs closed the gap to six, at<lb/>
66-60, with 43 seconds remaining<lb/>
before losing.<lb/>
All-America candidate Terry<lb/>
Cummings led DePaul with 18<lb/>
points and 15 rebounds. Charlie<lb/>
Smith tallied 16 points for ODU.<lb/>
A big key in the game was<lb/>
shooting. DePaul put in 49 percent<lb/>
of its shots. ODU, meanwhile, con-<lb/>
nected on but 38 percent.<lb/>
THE BIG SHOWDOWN that<lb/>
many league observers have been<lb/>
waited for looms ahead this week.<lb/>
James Madison and Old Dominion,<lb/>
the two pre-season favorites, go at it<lb/>
in Harrisonburg, Va home of the<lb/>
Dukes.<lb/>
That game takes place on<lb/>
Wednesday. It marks the beginning<lb/>
of the conference campaign for the<lb/>
Monarchs, who are 7-5 overall.<lb/>
On the same night league-leader<lb/>
Richmond travels to William and<lb/>
Mary, where the Indians are always<lb/>
tough. The Indians are currently in<lb/>
last place in the league and need a<lb/>
win badly if they hope to keep their<lb/>
regular season title hopes alive.<lb/>
The only other conference game<lb/>
falls on Saturday, when Old Domi-<lb/>
nion travels to William and Mary.<lb/>
ECU'S PIRATES may not have<lb/>
'Comedy Of Errors' Lead Bucs<lb/>
To Doom In Loss To UNC-W<lb/>
Bv CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sports Idiiur<lb/>
It may have been cold and snowy<lb/>
on the outside last Fhhrsday, but it<lb/>
a as even colder inside of Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
Fast Carolina suffered through its<lb/>
worst game of the season, shooting<lb/>
ofifv 32 percent from the field and<lb/>
committing 22 turnovers, in falling<lb/>
to rival UNC -Wilmington, 58-49.<lb/>
Both teams started slow, the two<lb/>
scoring onlv 19 points between them<lb/>
during the game's first 13 minutes.<lb/>
ECl had the lead early but gave it<lb/>
up when Seahawk guard Edward<lb/>
I millions connected on a jumper<lb/>
with 6:38 left in the opening half to<lb/>
i Mil <lb/>
Pnoto Bv GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
UNC-W's Frankie Dickens<lb/>
Scored 10 Points Thursday<lb/>
put his team ahead, 11-10. The<lb/>
Pirates were never able to recapture<lb/>
the lead.<lb/>
The Seahawks led 20-15 at the<lb/>
half. The first period was not kind<lb/>
at all to the Bucs, who managed to<lb/>
connect on only six of 28 field goal<lb/>
tries, which translates to a mere 21.4<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
A big 12-0 run by the Seahawks<lb/>
during, a four-minute span early in<lb/>
the second half sealed the Pirates'<lb/>
doom. That run gave UNC-W a<lb/>
40-22 lead.<lb/>
The Bucs narrowed the lead io<lb/>
nine on several occasions, but their<lb/>
own mistakes kept them from cut-<lb/>
ting any deeper into that lead. Dur-<lb/>
ing a two-minute span late in the<lb/>
game the Pirates came up with three<lb/>
steals that turned into fast break op-<lb/>
portunities. Still, the Pirates were<lb/>
not able to turn any of the breaks in-<lb/>
to any points.<lb/>
The Pirates' poor shooting on the<lb/>
night was countered by Wilm-<lb/>
ington's 62.5 percent accuracy.<lb/>
Center Leon Nickelson led the<lb/>
way for Wilmington with 14 points,<lb/>
eight rebounds and five blocked<lb/>
shots. Forward Carlos Kelly added<lb/>
12 points and guard Frankie<lb/>
Dickens ten points.<lb/>
Forward Morris Hargrove was<lb/>
the only Pirate finishing in double<lb/>
figures, scoring 13 points. The Bucs'<lb/>
other starting forward, Charles<lb/>
Green, contributed nine points,<lb/>
seven rebounds, three blocked shots<lb/>
and five steals.<lb/>
ECU coach Dave Odom termed<lb/>
his team's sub-par showing "the<lb/>
worst physical performance of a<lb/>
team since I've been here<lb/>
"It was nothing short of a com-<lb/>
edy of errors he added. "Nothing<lb/>
went right. I can't think of anyone<lb/>
that played anything close to their<lb/>
ability level<lb/>
Wilmington coach Mel Gibson<lb/>
was overjoyed with his club's per-<lb/>
formance, despite the Seahawks' 25<lb/>
turnovers.<lb/>
"We made a lot of mistakes<lb/>
Gibson said. "They made a lot of<lb/>
mistakes too. But I'd like to think<lb/>
that our defense had something to<lb/>
do with their offensive problems.<lb/>
This was a very big win for us, put-<lb/>
ting us two games above .500<lb/>
The win was Wilmington's fifth<lb/>
in six games and increased the club's<lb/>
record to 8-6. The Pirates fell to 6-7.<lb/>
ECU is back in action this<lb/>
Wednesday, traveling to Raleigh to<lb/>
face Campbell University. The club<lb/>
is back in the capital city on Satur-<lb/>
day for a matchup with I2th-ranked<lb/>
N.C. State.<lb/>
I M -? II .MIMaTON Itt)<lb/>
Killy 6 0-2 12. William I J 7, NKkdv.Hi 4 -7 I.<lb/>
DVkcm 4 2-4 10. Tobin I 1-2 J. Ttmm,m? 2 12 5. ?<lb/>
Ptudlme 00-0 0. Sal?iiu0-6. PomrO0-O. McMillan <lb/>
12 I.S. Prudhoc 0 0-0 0<lb/>
Ml i?lt<lb/>
Hiiryrovc 3 J- 13. Cmm J 1-4 9. Gibum 2 CM) 4.<lb/>
Sk I aurin I W 1. Byka OM Oftcfcrfct 0 CM) 0. ti? I M 5.<lb/>
MI !  McN?irl4Mjtm?-4 7. Peartrcr 2 1-25.<lb/>
Mallnmc-UNC-W X.W 15. Fouled ?I ???<lb/>
IcclmKal?None. A? !$?.<lb/>
Battling Under The Boards<lb/>
The scene above will no doubt be replayed this Thursday<lb/>
when ECU travels to Raleigh to face Campbell. In the<lb/>
Pirates' early-season win over the Camels, ECU forwards AI<lb/>
Mack (left) and Morris Hargrove (33) battle Camel center<lb/>
Tony Britto. (Photo By Gary Patterson)<lb/>
any conference games this week, but<lb/>
the club does have the most deman-<lb/>
ding non-conference contest to play.<lb/>
Coach Dave Odom's squad will<lb/>
travel to Raleigh to face nationallv<lb/>
ranked N.C. State on Saturday. The<lb/>
Wolfpack is coming off a tough<lb/>
week in which the club lost badly to<lb/>
top-ranked North Carolina, then<lb/>
fought to a comeback win over a<lb/>
strong Wake Forest team.<lb/>
Women '$<lb/>
Team Breaks<lb/>
Four Records<lb/>
BTHOMVBRAMK<lb/>
Nlnfl Wnlrr<lb/>
In their 86-62 victory over Navy,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates broke four varsitv<lb/>
and one freshman record while the<lb/>
ECU men dropped a disappointing<lb/>
meet to the Midsluppmen.<lb/>
The women trimmed the 400<lb/>
medley relay by lour seconds with a<lb/>
4:08.11 time. Nan George broke the<lb/>
500 and 100 free-style varsitv<lb/>
records. She was a member of the<lb/>
400 medley relay and the 400<lb/>
freestyle relay. Varsity records were<lb/>
set in those events as well.<lb/>
"Nancy James had a real good<lb/>
meet, especially her new freshman<lb/>
record in the 100 freest vie and her<lb/>
contribution on the 400 freestyle<lb/>
team said ECU Coach Ray Scarf.<lb/>
First-year ECU assistant Molly<lb/>
Deloier thought, "We looked the<lb/>
best we have all yeai as a whole<lb/>
In addition to the varsity records<lb/>
broken, four national qualifying<lb/>
times were established bv the<lb/>
women.<lb/>
The absence of the divers again<lb/>
destroyed the ECU men's chances<lb/>
for victory. Rick Kobe, second-year<lb/>
assistant of ECU, believed the<lb/>
16-poini loss in divine events was a<lb/>
big blow.<lb/>
Kobe also believed if the men,<lb/>
who fell 79-34, had" not lost their<lb/>
first relay, by only two tenths of one<lb/>
second, the Pirates would have been<lb/>
See MEN, Page 10<lb/>
 I L, i' " 1t m 1 J<lb/>
It rlm Vuve<lb/>
M ?.( Mil ill si MIIM.st Ml H iltmi . . la ?"? Mad ECl at N Siaic<lb/>
(raw  Kr ?Til(l.rrill did iVmiii.Mi  Ik i i Mar)<lb/>
Richmond 1 0I t 4Sun . Jin 24<lb/>
Jamr Madivn 1II )<lb/>
la?i an Jin. MB-7I (. itffl :<lb/>
(ki Domw- 4<lb/>
GfHTfC Mason t Nav 0-1J -MiitJii 25<lb/>
Uitlurn and M 0  4luqucrii.c a' Old DomiAMM 1 jrcomutf a1 Sav v<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S s IHIII 1 1V Inutileunlfrrmr liimi 1 s WlUk sHIl 1 Is<lb/>
??l .Jin 20i m Doottmos H. v Ml 51<lb/>
1 1 n i amphcll m RalnithIM ?. . ? I ! 4V<lb/>
Radlord ji (jcorpe Mawmlamo Maetaofi 76, lwii Siau 48<lb/>
X - Old IV'iimii.m a! lam MiJiM'nlame Martimi - inn- and Mar 44<lb/>
X RututiMid ai William and Mar)DePaul J?, OUI DuMMMOfl (0<lb/>
1 afayene ai SjKn.hm.md 75. Kadi ' M George Mason  ilanin C rtsiian<lb/>
S?l .Jin UGeorge Mason W. a. 79<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
sports quest<lb/>
mainder t<lb/>
piled by fh<lb/>
the semesit<lb/>
The fod<lb/>
quizzes is tj<lb/>
and see it<lb/>
believe.<lb/>
Answer<lb/>
below<lb/>
1. In wi<lb/>
LeagU'<lb/>
I eaeu-<lb/>
2. o I<lb/>
bav <lb/>
0<lb/>
3. True a<lb/>
((range H<lb/>
4 In 19"<lb/>
cf Stai i<lb/>
which M<lb/>
5. Which<lb/>
for the !n<lb/>
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single ime<lb/>
7. Tri<lb/>
all-time<lb/>
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number<lb/>
stars ?<lb/>
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i s i. AROI IMAN IANUARY IV. I9K2<lb/>
Ho w Many A CC Nets ?<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: This begins a series oj<lb/>
sports questionares that wilt appeal toi ' '<lb/>
mainder oj the semester. The questions are com<lb/>
piled by The East Carolinian sports stall I ater in<lb/>
the semester there mux by a sports quiz eontesi<lb/>
The locus in this, ihe firsi ol otu spoils<lb/>
quizzes is football a basketball. 1cm youi wits<lb/>
and see it you are as hie a spoils expen as you<lb/>
believe<lb/>
Answers to the questions appeal upside down<lb/>
below<lb/>
1 In what year did the American Kootball<lb/>
league merge with ihe National Football<lb/>
1 eague.? Was it in 1968, 1969, 01 1970?<lb/>
2 O.J Simpson stands as one ol tht greatest<lb/>
backs io evei pla in the Ml Do sou know<lb/>
O I 's full name'<lb/>
3 line or false. Colorado played in the 197"<lb/>
Oiange Bowl came.<lb/>
4 In W Heisman F"roph winner Inn Pluul<lb/>
of Stanford was the number one draft pick ol<lb/>
w hich Ml team<lb/>
5 Which college football leam hoids the record<lb/>
tor the longest winning streak? Is ii leas, None<lb/>
Hame. Alabama, Southern Cal oi Oklahoma?<lb/>
t Has dn leam ever scored over 2(X) points m a<lb/>
single intercollegiate football game?<lb/>
Iiueor False. Wilt Chamberlain, iIn MBA's<lb/>
all-nme leading scorer, once played : i<lb/>
Harlem Globetrotters.<lb/>
8 The New lersej Nets rostei mchul<lb/>
number of tor met Atlantic . oasi .<lb/>
stars. How many ex-ACC players are Nt. -? N;i i<lb/>
i hem.<lb/>
5 DAYS<lb/>
OF SALE<lb/>
Januar 19-Januarv 23<lb/>
g ip ol<lb/>
Suits25o 50??o<lb/>
A group ol<lb/>
Sport Coats2 50?7o<lb/>
A gnnip of<lb/>
Pants 251<lb/>
Sport Shirts50?o<lb/>
A group of<lb/>
Dress Shirts33 oti<lb/>
A group ol<lb/>
Velours50<lb/>
A i;roup of<lb/>
LS Knits33?7o f,<lb/>
A troup Of<lb/>
Shoes50<lb/>
 group of<lb/>
Sweaters50<lb/>
A group of<lb/>
Jackets50 , n<lb/>
A iiroup ol<lb/>
Jackets33<lb/>
 group ?<lb/>
Leather<lb/>
Jackets50 ?<lb/>
A group ol<lb/>
Ski Vests33<lb/>
A group ol<lb/>
Luggage50<lb/>
A group ol<lb/>
Wool Hats50 ?<lb/>
A group of<lb/>
Sport Vests50 on<lb/>
A group ol<lb/>
All Weather<lb/>
Coats25 50<lb/>
At all of our fine stores<lb/>
?Pftnani<lb/>
MEISIS WEAR<lb/>
Downtown Greenville- Monday Saturdav ? 3?'? ? 10<lb/>
Carotma East Mall - Monday Fnday 10 00 to ? 00<lb/>
Saturday ,0 00 to ? 00<lb/>
Tarrytown Mall - Rocky Mounl - Mon Fri 10 00 to t 00<lb/>
Saturday 10 00 to 00<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Quiz<lb/>
their theme song "Sweet Georgia Brown ' I rue<lb/>
of false. The Globetrotters also once recorded a<lb/>
song that is a real favorite ol beach musiv lovers<lb/>
todav.<lb/>
11. How many limes was Hill Kusscll named ihe<lb/>
 N1osl Valuable Playei in the NBA'<lb/>
12. Everyone is familial with 7-4 supei stai Ralph<lb/>
9 Basketball announcer Billv Packer is a formei Sampson of Virginia. Sampson took a long nine<lb/>
college player. What team did Packer used to play in deciding to become a Cavalier, though an<lb/>
on? you name the othei three schools thai Sampson<lb/>
10 Ihe Hailem Globetrotters are famous foi considered attending?<lb/>
Aaswevs<lb/>
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Bring in this ad and add an extra<lb/>
week to your membership.<lb/>
1530 E. 14th St Call or come by<lb/>
758-7564 for a free visit.<lb/>
The<lb/>
Ebony Herald<lb/>
needs an<lb/>
advertising<lb/>
salesperson.<lb/>
Base salary and commission.<lb/>
Experience helpful, but not necessary<lb/>
Apply with Media Board Secretary.<lb/>
MONDAY? $199<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK ?<lb/>
TUESDAY ? 1 99<lb/>
BEEF TIPS ?<lb/>
WEDNESDAY? $189<lb/>
CUBED STEAK ?<lb/>
THURSDAY? $169<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICH ?<lb/>
FRIDAY ? $Q79<lb/>
U.S.D.A. RIB EYE ?<lb/>
SATURDAY ? $099<lb/>
BARBEQUE RIBS A<lb/>
SUNDAY ? $199<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK ?<lb/>
,3, Famous Salad Bar<lb/>
B Free Tea with ECU ID.<lb/>
M AH meals are complete including baked potato or French fries &amp; Texas<lb/>
m toast.<lb/>
 T?k? Out Service<lb/>
7903 E. 10th St. Hour; i ?.m1?p.m.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057450_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 19, 1982<lb/>
Men Swimmers Fall,<lb/>
Women Are Victors<lb/>
Continued From P. 8<lb/>
a lot closer.<lb/>
There were some<lb/>
bright spots in the loss<lb/>
to Navy. One, the<lb/>
freshman medley relay<lb/>
record was broken.<lb/>
Two, Gregor Wray<lb/>
barely missed the<lb/>
freshman 200 butterfly<lb/>
record. Lastly, Joakin<lb/>
Svensson swam very<lb/>
well, Kobe said.<lb/>
As a team, the ECU<lb/>
men improved on their<lb/>
times. "We keep im-<lb/>
proving and that is<lb/>
pleasing explained<lb/>
Coach Scharf. "We're<lb/>
a young team and it will<lb/>
take time, but we will<lb/>
be back<lb/>
Assistant Kobe pro-<lb/>
claimed, "We're tired<lb/>
now but once we get<lb/>
rested we are going to<lb/>
be tough<lb/>
The ECU men have<lb/>
to get tough quick<lb/>
because ECU entertains<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
Thursday in a double<lb/>
dual meet.<lb/>
After that, UNC,<lb/>
N.C. State and Va.<lb/>
Tech invade the ECU<lb/>
Natatorium on Mon-<lb/>
day. These opponents!<lb/>
will prove to be a very<lb/>
formidable for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
The ECU men will<lb/>
enter the home series<lb/>
with a record of 3-3,<lb/>
while the Lady Pirates<lb/>
will have a respectable<lb/>
3-1 record to their<lb/>
backing.<lb/>
Lady Tracksters Bring<lb/>
Home Trio Of Thirds<lb/>
The last Carolina<lb/>
women's track team<lb/>
came back to Green-<lb/>
 111 c from last<lb/>
weekend's Virginia<lb/>
lech Invitational with<lb/>
three third-places and<lb/>
one fifth place finish.<lb/>
The 600 meter rela<lb/>
team of Arnetta Kelly,<lb/>
Anne Hartman, Liz<lb/>
(iraham and Carolyn<lb/>
Moore posted a 1:20.9<lb/>
time for a third-place<lb/>
finish.<lb/>
Eve Brennan, in the<lb/>
1500 meters, and<lb/>
Moore, in the 300<lb/>
meters, also capped<lb/>
third place in their<lb/>
respective events. Bren-<lb/>
nan came in at 5:02.1.<lb/>
while Moore finished at<lb/>
43.2.<lb/>
Anne Nartman took<lb/>
fifth place in the 400<lb/>
meters with a time of<lb/>
64.5.<lb/>
The Last Carolinian<lb/>
Win<lb/>
i'i, twHtpm <lb/>
i'i, r I92i<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during trie academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
mg the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the o<lb/>
ticial newspaper ot Eas'<lb/>
Carolina Universi'y. owed.<lb/>
operated and published tor and<lb/>
hy the students ot East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Hat i!0 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian ottices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send addreu<lb/>
chanqes ?o The East Carolinian<lb/>
Old South Building, ECU Green<lb/>
ville NC ?7?34<lb/>
Telephone 7?7 tM. 4M7. MO<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
DENS<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S NEWEST BANQUET<lb/>
AND PARTY FACILITY<lb/>
Ir'ORMERLY BALLENTINE S BUFFET<lb/>
PITT PLAZA. GREENVILLE)<lb/>
Winter &amp; Spring<lb/>
? FORMALS<lb/>
?? MEETINGS<lb/>
?? BANQUETS<lb/>
COMPLETE FOOD SERVICE AVAILABLE<lb/>
WECIAUZJNGIH OUTSIDE CATERING<lb/>
Call BOB SAUTER<lb/>
355-2361 OR 756-0842<lb/>
 OStr.Mr ST I K ATKIN. MPI r HUkIM,<lb/>
-come join us-<lb/>
every Sunday<lb/>
SSrRBat<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
11:30-230<lb/>
Mile Relay Team<lb/>
Sets New ECU Mark<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
track team ventured to<lb/>
a warmer climate over<lb/>
the weekend and came<lb/>
back home from the<lb/>
Florida Invitational<lb/>
with a new school<lb/>
record in the mile relay<lb/>
and renewed con-<lb/>
fidence.<lb/>
"We did quite well<lb/>
said Pirate coach Bill<lb/>
Carson. "We're<lb/>
especially pleased with<lb/>
the school record. We<lb/>
should be even better<lb/>
by February 12 (the<lb/>
Millrose Wanamaker<lb/>
Invitational). We have<lb/>
enough talent overall<lb/>
right now to have a<lb/>
moderately successful<lb/>
year<lb/>
The mile relay team<lb/>
of Carlton Frazier,<lb/>
Terry Ford, Keith<lb/>
Clarke and Tim Cephus<lb/>
posted a record time of<lb/>
3:15.5 to finish second<lb/>
in the Florida event.<lb/>
The previous record in<lb/>
the relay was a 3:15.7,<lb/>
recorded at Ohio State<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
Clarke did well on<lb/>
his own in addition to<lb/>
contributing to the<lb/>
relay record. He finish-<lb/>
ed second in the 400<lb/>
meter dash, turning in a<lb/>
time of 49.17. ECU's<lb/>
Terry Ford finished<lb/>
fourth in the same<lb/>
event, at 49.36.<lb/>
Clint Harris, who<lb/>
doubles as a defensive<lb/>
back during football<lb/>
season, finished fifth in<lb/>
the 55 meter event with<lb/>
a 6.44 clocking.<lb/>
The Pirates travel<lb/>
northward this week,<lb/>
taking on VMI Friday.<lb/>
The VMI mile relay<lb/>
team has built up quite<lb/>
a reputation, recording<lb/>
a time of 3:12.8 at East<lb/>
Tennessee State.<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
Nursing &amp;<lb/>
Allied Health Students<lb/>
The SGA transit has ex-<lb/>
panded its routes to include<lb/>
the ECU medical school &amp;<lb/>
health affairs library.<lb/>
MonFri.<lb/>
Departures<lb/>
Mendenhall 1:10<lb/>
3:10<lb/>
5:10<lb/>
7:10<lb/>
9:10<lb/>
Arrivals<lb/>
ECU Medical<lb/>
Complex 1:20<lb/>
3:20<lb/>
5:20<lb/>
7:20<lb/>
9:20<lb/>
oooooocx<lb/>
for men and women<lb/>
Come by or call TODAY and set<lb/>
up an appointment for a free workout.<lb/>
1002 EVANS STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
OLYMPIC lAMMlS<lb/>
?COED HOURS ?FEMALE HOURS<lb/>
AND DUMKLLS ?SAUNA,<lb/>
SHOWERS. AND LOCKfRS<lb/>
WHMUJOOl ?DKT PLANS<lb/>
Stretching Exercise Classes<lb/>
M-W-F 10:00 &amp; 11:00 T-Th. 5:00 &amp; 6:00<lb/>
Aerobics and Dancercize Classes<lb/>
M-W-Th. 3:00-4:00<lb/>
Features Included: Male &amp; Female<lb/>
Instructors ? Nautilus Machines<lb/>
(12 of the most sophisticated exercise machines made).<lb/>
Special Student Rates<lb/>
Group rates for 5 or more students.<lb/>
OU per student.<lb/>
AT NAUTILUS FITNESS IS OUR SPECIALTY<lb/>
January Clearance<lb/>
All Timberlond Boots<lb/>
&amp; Casual Shoes<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
All Insulated Jackets<lb/>
&amp; Vests by Browning &amp; Duxbak<lb/>
13 OFF<lb/>
La. selection of Men's<lb/>
&amp; Ladies' Warm-Ups<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
All Ski Clothing by<lb/>
Aspen &amp; Pacific Trail<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
Out of Season? Yes<lb/>
75?c<lb/>
and Reduced<lb/>
Ooff<lb/>
Ladies' tennis shorts &amp; tops<lb/>
by Court Cosuolf Adidos and More<lb/>
ALL SALES FINAL!<lb/>
H. L HODGES<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
$<lb/>
ADVERTISEO<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale<lb/>
I below the advertised price in each A4P Store except as specifically noted<lb/>
in this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT JAN. 23, AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
ITEllS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS<lb/>
OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville N. C.<lb/>
NOW SAVE MORE THAN BEFORE<lb/>
WITH SUPER SAVER COUPONS!<lb/>
at or<lb/>
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A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Whole Boneless<lb/>
Rib Eyes<lb/>
9-12 lb.<lb/>
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A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Bone<lb/>
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U.S.D.A. INSPECTED<lb/>
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A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
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KRAFT?SAVE 54?<lb/>
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Savings y<lb/>
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SEALTEST<lb/>
Parkay Margarine <lb/>
2 1<lb/>
mYk pkgs.<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
89<lb/>
(Save 80)<lb/>
2 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
1<lb/>
LIQUID?SAVE 10<lb/>
Purex Bleach<lb/>
gal.<lb/>
jug-<lb/>
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Coca-Cola<lb/>
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Tab<lb/>
Sprite<lb/>
Orange Crush<lb/>
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LIMIT ONE WITH ADDfTtONAL 7.50 ORDER Da9<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT JAN. 23 AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
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GOOD THRU SAT, JAN. 23 AT A&amp;P IN GREEN VILLE. N.C.<lb/>
AV<lb/>
ELECTRA PERK ? REGULAR ? AUTO DRIP<lb/>
Maxwell House<lb/>
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UMTT ONE WITH ADDITIONAL 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, JAN. 23 AT A&amp;P M GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
SAVE <lb/>
40 <lb/>
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WASHINGTON STATE<lb/>
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FLORIDA RED OR WHITE<lb/>
Grapefruit<lb/>
W bag<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW RIPE<lb/>
Dole Bananas<lb/>
31<lb/>
t<lb/>
Offt<lb/>
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???? , jjjv-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057450_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>