<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057259_0001"/>
Sherrod Elected SGA President,80-81<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
new SGA president<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod won the SGA president's<lb/>
contest yesterday, defeating opponent<lb/>
Drake Mann by drawing approximately 60<lb/>
percent of the 2,592 votes cast in that con-<lb/>
test.<lb/>
In the treasurer's race, Kirk Little outpoll-<lb/>
ed Danny O'Connor by a slim 15-vote<lb/>
margin. Although election rules stipulate<lb/>
that a candidate may request a runoff when<lb/>
the victory margin is less than two percent,<lb/>
O'Connor had not done so at the time of<lb/>
this printing.<lb/>
Lynn Calder won handily in the vice<lb/>
presidential race, defeating Al Patrick by<lb/>
more than a 3-1 margin.<lb/>
Although running unopposed for the<lb/>
secretary's position, Marianne Edwards<lb/>
polled over 2200 votes ? more than any<lb/>
other single candidate.<lb/>
Warm weather and an active campaign<lb/>
contributed to a voter turnout that was<lb/>
relatively high by ECU student government<lb/>
elections standards. About one-fourth of all<lb/>
full time students, who are the oniy eligible<lb/>
voters in such elections, cast ballots. Last<lb/>
year, the turnout was about 20 percent.<lb/>
Sherrod's win came as little surprise to<lb/>
most people, following an extensive cam-<lb/>
paign effort that included a telephone<lb/>
survey of 4,000 student listings and several<lb/>
speaking engagements in dormitories,<lb/>
sororities and fraternities.<lb/>
The SGA president-elect noted after<lb/>
results were announced that the campaign<lb/>
had been a "good" one for ECU.<lb/>
"Drake Mann is a fine person and gave a<lb/>
good fight Sherrod said Wednesday night.<lb/>
Commenting on the win, Sherrod said,<lb/>
"We got a lot of people exited, and the peo-<lb/>
ple that really know me and how I feel about<lb/>
the students turned out and voted for me ?<lb/>
I couldn't have won without their support<lb/>
Sherrod was fairly accurate in his predic-<lb/>
tion earlier this week that he would win by<lb/>
about 500 votes. His actual margin of vic-<lb/>
tory was 456 votes.<lb/>
The election campaign was a "clean" one<lb/>
compared to the elections in recent years,<lb/>
although Election Chairman Nicky Francis<lb/>
said after announcing the results that there<lb/>
had been allegations of minor violations.<lb/>
?he lEafit Carolinian<lb/>
Thursday, April 3, 1980<lb/>
(ireermlle. N.C<lb/>
C initiation lO.(MM)<lb/>
Judges Pick New<lb/>
Cheering Squad;<lb/>
Five Vets Return<lb/>
The new ECU cheerleading squad was chosen Tues-<lb/>
day night, with five members from last year's squad<lb/>
returning to cheer for the 1980-81 season.<lb/>
The selection came after a two-week period during<lb/>
which competitors practiced the routines that were used<lb/>
as a basis for judging.<lb/>
ccording to Frank Saunders, who co-ordinates the<lb/>
cheerleading proeram, the competitors are scored by a<lb/>
panel of ten judges. Five of them are professional cheer-<lb/>
ing judges and the other five are drawn from the ECU<lb/>
athletic program.<lb/>
Judges this year included basketball coach Dave<lb/>
Odorrf and football coach Ed Emory.<lb/>
Prospective cheerleaders may score zero to five points<lb/>
for attractiveness, and up to three points in the<lb/>
categories of agility, charisma, and voice projection.<lb/>
The ten-member squad, consisting of five men and<lb/>
five women, are Donna Pritchard, Rhonda Swairn,<lb/>
Joanne Paul, Page Stout, Rosyln Sing eton Mike<lb/>
Aman, Ervin Hennecy, Randy Mabe, William Elmore<lb/>
and Eddie Sessoms. . .<lb/>
There are four sophmores, four juniors and two<lb/>
seniors on the new squad.<lb/>
According to Donna Pritchard, the number of com-<lb/>
petitors this year was smaller than in years past.<lb/>
"1 think a lot of people don't try out because they<lb/>
think they don't have a chance against the varsity and<lb/>
JV cheerleaders from the year before Pritchard said<lb/>
Wednesday. "But that's not true<lb/>
"People also might not realize how much work goes<lb/>
into cheerleading, so if they're not prepared to put in a<lb/>
lot of time, they shouldn't try out she added.<lb/>
Tryouts for the junior varsity cheerleading squad are<lb/>
held "in the fall, so that incoming freshman have a<lb/>
chance to compete.<lb/>
Make-Up Days Not Set;<lb/>
Paper Erred Tuesday<lb/>
Photo bv LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Cheerleaders Tried Out<lb/>
in Minges Tuesday<lb/>
By LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The story headlined "Days Lost<lb/>
To Snow Have To Be Made Up" in<lb/>
the Tuesday, April 1, 1980, issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian gave the im-<lb/>
pression that the ECU administra-<lb/>
tion has made a definite decision to<lb/>
make up the days lost in early<lb/>
March due to snow. Actually, ad-<lb/>
ministration officials have yet to<lb/>
make a decision concerning the<lb/>
make-up days.<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Meyer, vice chancellor<lb/>
for student life, appeared before the<lb/>
SGA Legislature only to get student<lb/>
reaction to a proposal to make up<lb/>
the days.<lb/>
Meyer conducted an informal<lb/>
head count to gauge reaction to<lb/>
three proposals. No SGA vote was<lb/>
taken, and the action had no official<lb/>
effect.<lb/>
The three proposals were: to hold<lb/>
make-up days on the second Satur-<lb/>
day before exams (April 19) and<lb/>
Reading Day (April 29); or on the<lb/>
two Saturdays before exams (April<lb/>
19 and 26); or to postpone exams<lb/>
two days, thus displacing some ex-<lb/>
ams until after commencement. The<lb/>
legislature felt the least objec-<lb/>
tionable of the three would be the<lb/>
first proposal.<lb/>
According to Dr. Robert H.<lb/>
Maier, vice chancellor for academic<lb/>
affairs, the decision will be made<lb/>
this morning.<lb/>
Speaking about the administra-<lb/>
tion's expectation of attendance on<lb/>
the make-up days, Maier said, "If<lb/>
they are a responsible faculty and<lb/>
student body, they will do what is<lb/>
expected of them<lb/>
Maier explained that he had the<lb/>
best interests of students, faculty<lb/>
and staff in mind when he recom-<lb/>
mended closing the university dur-<lb/>
ing the snowfall.<lb/>
University officials are reportedly<lb/>
concerned over the effect that the<lb/>
loss of school days could have on<lb/>
accreditation.<lb/>
Apparently, the organizations<lb/>
which accredit the university have<lb/>
minimum term length requirements,<lb/>
and ECU's semesters are at the<lb/>
minimum allowed. Officials are<lb/>
concerned that failure to make up<lb/>
the days would bring a risk of loss<lb/>
of accreditation.<lb/>
Student Reaction<lb/>
A random telephone survey con-<lb/>
ducted by The East Carolinian<lb/>
showed that the overwhelming stu-<lb/>
dent reaction to the proposal was<lb/>
negative.<lb/>
"If college students cannot be<lb/>
trusted to learn even though missing<lb/>
onlv two days, then they might as<lb/>
well shut the place down said one<lb/>
irate student. "If however, it proves<lb/>
to be necessary to maintain<lb/>
creditation, then there is not<lb/>
much we can do about it. is there?'<lb/>
Student reaction to the propos<lb/>
ranged from "outrageous" tc the<lb/>
unprintable.<lb/>
Generally, most students -aid<lb/>
they did not plan on attending<lb/>
classes if the administration<lb/>
scheduled them, no matter what the<lb/>
justification. A freshman businc<lb/>
major explained. "1 don't plan <lb/>
going, and neither do most o! m<lb/>
teachers<lb/>
"There is absolutely no reason<lb/>
for it. Most professors have taken<lb/>
the loss of time into account<lb/>
have made ep the<lb/>
definiteU would not go, if only as a<lb/>
matter of principle<lb/>
sophomore political science m<lb/>
"It is the stupidest thing I've eve-<lb/>
seen in my three years here at<lb/>
ECU said a junior polit<lb/>
science major. "It even lops<lb/>
parking lots behind the librarv<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
A major concern of the studei<lb/>
polled was that students ma<lb/>
jobs requiring them to work S<lb/>
days, or, in the case o reading da<lb/>
See MAKE-l P Page 2, Col. 7<lb/>
Coffeehouse Hosts Rebel Presentations<lb/>
An awards ceremony for outstan-<lb/>
ding contributors to the 1980 edition<lb/>
of The Rebel will be held tonight in<lb/>
the ECU Coffeehouse, featuring<lb/>
readings by winners of the literary<lb/>
awards and free refreshments.<lb/>
Prizes of $100 will be given to<lb/>
first-place winners in five<lb/>
categories, and a $150 prize will go<lb/>
to the winner of the Best in Show<lb/>
award.<lb/>
The prize money has been<lb/>
donated by Tom Haines, owner of<lb/>
the Attic, and by the Anheuser-<lb/>
Busch company.<lb/>
The winners of literary awards<lb/>
will be announced during the<lb/>
awards presentation, but winners in<lb/>
five other categories have already<lb/>
been announced. They are Brenda<lb/>
Williams, for photography; Robert<lb/>
Daniels, for painting; Ella Mallen-<lb/>
baum, for mixed media; Michael<lb/>
Loderstedt, for printmaking and<lb/>
drawing; and Stephen Edgerton, for<lb/>
the Best of Show award.<lb/>
Rebel editor Colleen Flynn also<lb/>
announced Wednesday that the<lb/>
1980 edition will be available by the<lb/>
last week of April. The publication<lb/>
is free to ECU students, and will in-<lb/>
clude three short stories, other<lb/>
works of nonfiction, poetry,<lb/>
photographs and artwork.<lb/>
The magazine will be placed pro-<lb/>
minently around the campus for<lb/>
students to take, said Flynn.<lb/>
In the past few years, The Rebel<lb/>
has placed highly in national com-<lb/>
petitions of university art and<lb/>
literary publications, tying last year<lb/>
with William and Mary's magazine<lb/>
for second place in a contest spon-<lb/>
sored by the Society of Collegiate<lb/>
Journalists.<lb/>
Flynn also noted that there are<lb/>
still some copies of The Rebel's last<lb/>
four editions available in her office<lb/>
in the Publications Building.<lb/>
Training Outside Greenville<lb/>
Election Results<lb/>
President<lb/>
Charlie SherrodUS24<lb/>
Drake Mann1068<lb/>
Vice President<lb/>
Lynn Caldert,910<lb/>
Al Patrick646<lb/>
1,266<lb/>
Med Sti<lb/>
By GEORGETTE HEDRICK<lb/>
ECU Medical Writer<lb/>
Dr. John Chapman spent the first<lb/>
12 months of his residency at ECU<lb/>
in obstetrics and gynecology at Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital. He<lb/>
learned his way around the facth y<lb/>
got to know the ECU clinical faculty<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
Bust Victims Talk<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
and nursing staff, and treated a<lb/>
variety of patients with a variety of<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
But a widely accepted premise of<lb/>
medical education today maintains<lb/>
that residents and medical students<lb/>
should receive a portion of their<lb/>
training outside the walls of the<lb/>
medical center and away from the<lb/>
academic atmosphere of the<lb/>
teaching hospital. Excellence in<lb/>
medical education requires a variety<lb/>
of medical experiences.<lb/>
So after a year on the first floor<lb/>
of Pitt Memorial, Chapman Tound<lb/>
himself on the road to health<lb/>
departments and clinics in Beaufort<lb/>
and Wayne counties, including the<lb/>
tw niors Seymour Johnson Air Force Base<lb/>
Hope For 5niur? page 5 . Godsboro Accompanying<lb/>
 him on his rotations ? which often<lb/>
 required traveling up to three days a<lb/>
Pirates Lose To UNC weck - were third-year medical<lb/>
Page8 students whom he taugM routine<lb/>
gynecological problems and<lb/>
n?  ckLp1 ? prenatal care. Chapman's learning<lb/>
Boxing Shocked page 8 and teaching experience was<lb/>
 strengthened by the guidance of<lb/>
local preceptors.<lb/>
"We are developing a significant<lb/>
program in medical education out-<lb/>
side the city limits of Greenvile<lb/>
Dr. Edwin W. Monroe, associate<lb/>
dean for external affairs at the<lb/>
medical school, said during a recent<lb/>
interview. Although Moore explain-<lb/>
ed that the ECU program is still in<lb/>
the growth-and-development stage,<lb/>
he said the medical school has been<lb/>
successful in laying a solid founda-<lb/>
tion for future expansion.<lb/>
He cited the establishment of<lb/>
residency rotations as a good exam-<lb/>
ple. Postgraduate training in the<lb/>
clinical specialties (OBGYN,<lb/>
medicine, surgery, family practice,<lb/>
psychiatry and pediatrics) has been<lb/>
accredited for less than two years,<lb/>
yet some rotations are already<lb/>
operating successfully. And it takes<lb/>
a lot of coordination and coopera-<lb/>
tion to set up rotations out in the<lb/>
communities, he said.<lb/>
Currently, residents in OBGYN<lb/>
and family practice are visiting<lb/>
hospitals in the region for up to two<lb/>
months to supplement their educa-<lb/>
tional experiences at the medical<lb/>
school and its teaching affiliate, Pitt<lb/>
Memorial. These programs were<lb/>
developed by clinical chairmen in<lb/>
conjunction with hospital ad-<lb/>
ministrators and community physi-<lb/>
cians in Beaufort, Lenoir, Carteret,<lb/>
Wayne and Onslow counties. (In<lb/>
Greenville, the Pitt County Health<lb/>
Department also sponsors a rota-<lb/>
tion.)<lb/>
Next year, for example, OBGYN<lb/>
residents will spend a one month<lb/>
rotation on internal medicine at<lb/>
Beaufort County Hospital in<lb/>
Washington. Monroe said the sup-<lb/>
port has been excellent from the<lb/>
hospital director and the four inter-<lb/>
nists who will supervise the<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
"This is the sort of thing that will<lb/>
be happening more he said.<lb/>
?'People understand that our<lb/>
residents are new and so are our<lb/>
programs, and as we get more<lb/>
students and residents, the number<lb/>
of community-based rotations will<lb/>
grow. It's also highly probable that<lb/>
more and more clinical exposure<lb/>
outside of Greenville will be<lb/>
necessary because of the increasing<lb/>
load on the faculty and facilities<lb/>
here<lb/>
Treasurer<lb/>
Kirk Little<lb/>
Danny O'Connor2yI<lb/>
Secretary<lb/>
Marianne Edwards2,253 <lb/>
Cost Of Education<lb/>
Up With Inflation<lb/>
By LOUISE COOK<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
Editor's Note: A college education<lb/>
today costs thousands of dollars ?<lb/>
dollars that many people just don't<lb/>
have. Students and their families are<lb/>
searching for new sources of money.<lb/>
Here, in the second of two articles<lb/>
on the cost of learning, is a look at<lb/>
how some people are managing.<lb/>
Darrell Williams, a junior at the<lb/>
University of Notre Dame in In-<lb/>
diana, has a $500 scholarship, one<lb/>
part-time job at the campus radio<lb/>
station and a second part-time job<lb/>
at a fast food stand.<lb/>
Andrea DeStefano, a senior at<lb/>
Slippery Rock State College in Pen-<lb/>
nsylvania, has a loan and a grant<lb/>
from the state's Higher Education<lb/>
Assistance Authority.<lb/>
Howard Brownlee, a junior at<lb/>
Michigan State University, has a<lb/>
Veterans Administration loan, a<lb/>
part-time job and a working wife.<lb/>
As the cost of going to college has<lb/>
risen, students and their families<lb/>
have had to struggle harder to nay<lb/>
the bills.<lb/>
Joe Paul Case of the College<lb/>
Scholarship Service of the College<lb/>
Board estimated that seven out of 10<lb/>
of the nation's 12 million college<lb/>
and university students are getting<lb/>
some kind of financial aid. Case<lb/>
said about $14 billion in public and<lb/>
private money was available to help<lb/>
students during the current<lb/>
academic year. He predicted that<lb/>
See COSTS Page 3, Cot. I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
. aato-a???-??&amp; J? W 4 U?H<lb/>
Kxr? -? - -l4 <lb/>
 iii? i'tWWWWpWWlHptl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057259_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 3,1980<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Scholarship<lb/>
Boxing<lb/>
Study Hall<lb/>
Road Race<lb/>
The Society for Collegiate Journalists<lb/>
will award a ISO scholarship to a<lb/>
sophomore, junior or senior (not<lb/>
graduating) journalism minor. In-<lb/>
terested persons should submit the<lb/>
following materials to Ira Baker,<lb/>
Austin 334, by April 15: a statement of<lb/>
professional goals including why he has<lb/>
dMMM journalism, a personal reference<lb/>
and a grade summary. Candidates will<lb/>
be screened according to professional<lb/>
intent, background and initiative and<lb/>
recommendation. SCJ members who<lb/>
arc tn good standing arc eligible to par-<lb/>
ticipate also. The winner will be an-<lb/>
nounced at the annual reception of the<lb/>
I nglish Department May 9 in Mingcs<lb/>
Coll i scum.<lb/>
Book<lb/>
1 he book used lor comments on Nancy<lb/>
Wogsland's Senior Show is missing It<lb/>
tt asked lhal ihc book be returned to<lb/>
Mcndenhall Siudcni tenter The con-<lb/>
tent ol ihc b?K)k is ot sentimental value<lb/>
to ihc artist but ol absolutely no value<lb/>
to anyone else.<lb/>
S.O.U.L.S.<lb/>
SOU I S will hold elections for of-<lb/>
ficers tor the 1980-81 school year on<lb/>
Iruirsdav, -pril 3. from II lo 5 al the<lb/>
I cdonia Wright Cultural Center.<lb/>
Nominations lor officers will be held<lb/>
open until 12 noon Wednesday, April<lb/>
Openings for TKE boxing are still<lb/>
available. The tournament will be held<lb/>
April 8, 9 and 10. Openings are<lb/>
available in 183-192, 193-202, and<lb/>
Unlimited weight classes. Interested<lb/>
boxers call 758-7894 or drop by TKE<lb/>
House, 951 E. Tenth St. This tourna-<lb/>
ment benefits St. Judes Childrens<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
Kite Making<lb/>
Learn to design and make your own<lb/>
kite by attending a free workshop spon-<lb/>
sored by Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The workshop, conducted by George<lb/>
Brett, Pitt Community College Artist-<lb/>
In Residence, is scheduled for Wednes-<lb/>
day, April 26, from 6-8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mcndenhall Crafts Center There is no<lb/>
registration or supplies fee for this uni-<lb/>
que workshop, lust come by the Crafts<lb/>
Center and join in the fun!<lb/>
French Night<lb/>
The International I anguage Organiza-<lb/>
tion is sponsoring I a Soiree Francaise<lb/>
on Thursday, April 3 at 8 p m. at the<lb/>
International House on Ninth Street.<lb/>
Taste imported wines and cheeses with<lb/>
fresh French bread and friends. Ad-<lb/>
vance tickets arc S2.50. $3.00 at the<lb/>
door, covering lour glasses of wine and<lb/>
ihc food. Extra glasses will be $.50<lb/>
ach loor prizes will be given awav.<lb/>
Everyone is invited to attend.<lb/>
Marshals<lb/>
BKA<lb/>
Those interested in being marshals for<lb/>
he 1980 commencement exercises may<lb/>
ippK ihis week in the SCiA office.<lb/>
room 2?H Mcndenhall. Applicants<lb/>
hotiiil he rising seniors with a good<lb/>
icidemic record.<lb/>
Ihe Banking and Finance Fraternity<lb/>
will hold its April meeting Wednesday,<lb/>
April 9, at 4:00 p.m. in room 221<lb/>
Mcndenhall Guest speaker will be Mr.<lb/>
l.awton Ncitbet, manager of the In-<lb/>
terstate Securities office here in Green-<lb/>
ville. All interested persons arc invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Noisy rooms, neighbors? Come to the<lb/>
Scott Study Hall which is located in the<lb/>
Scott Hall basement. Open 8-11 p.m.<lb/>
on Mon Tuev, Wed and Thurs.<lb/>
Come on by and study. It also has an<lb/>
informative library with literature on<lb/>
certain topics. Open for all.<lb/>
Family Fun<lb/>
Each Thursday during April is "Family<lb/>
Fun Night" at Mcndenhall. From 6-10<lb/>
p.m all children under age 18 accom-<lb/>
panied by a parent or responsible adult<lb/>
may bowl, play billiards or play table<lb/>
tennis for Vi off regular price Each<lb/>
game or line of bowling will be half-<lb/>
price for children, and billiards and<lb/>
table tennis will be half-price for the en-<lb/>
ure tamily Only one adult per group<lb/>
must have a Mcndenhall Student<lb/>
Center Membership card or ECU ID<lb/>
card to participate.<lb/>
Graduation<lb/>
Attention, all Second Semester<lb/>
Graduates. The delivery dales for caps<lb/>
and gowns al ihc Student Supply Store<lb/>
arc April I. 2 and 3. Announcements<lb/>
arc on sale at this time. There are five in<lb/>
a package for $2.25.<lb/>
Billiards<lb/>
Sign up today for the MSC 8 Ball<lb/>
Billiards Tournament. Open to all full-<lb/>
time ECU students, the double elimina-<lb/>
tion tournament will be held Monday,<lb/>
April 14 at 6:00 p.m. in the Billiards<lb/>
Center. Trophies will be awarded to the<lb/>
1st, 2nd and 3rd place winners.<lb/>
Regislralion forms are available al the<lb/>
Billiards Center Deadline to registei is<lb/>
Friday, April 11.<lb/>
Register now for the Second Annual<lb/>
Greenville Road Race This 10,000<lb/>
meter (6.2 miles) foot race through<lb/>
Greenville is scheduled for Saturday.<lb/>
April 5. The race is sponsored by<lb/>
Bond's Sporting Goods, Inc. The pro-<lb/>
ceeds will go to ihe Easter Seal Society.<lb/>
Merchandise awards will be given to the<lb/>
top finishers overall and to the top<lb/>
finishers in each age division. The first<lb/>
500 persons to enter will receive a com-<lb/>
memorative race t-shirt. For further in-<lb/>
formation, call the Easter Seals Society<lb/>
at 758-3230 or Ken P Murray at<lb/>
756-5475.<lb/>
Best Male Legs<lb/>
The Ciamma Sigma Sigma 1980 Spring<lb/>
Pledge Class ix sponsoring "The Best<lb/>
Male 1 cgs Contest It will be held on<lb/>
April 9 and 10 from 9:00 until 2:00 in<lb/>
the Student Store I obby. Interested<lb/>
parties can call 758-8727 or 752 8602<lb/>
for more information. Entries can be<lb/>
mailed or delivered to 120 Garrctt or<lb/>
321 White. All proceeds will go to Ihc<lb/>
March of Dimes. I ct's see some legs,<lb/>
boys, for the March of Dimes.<lb/>
Poetry Forum<lb/>
The East Carolina Poetry Forum will<lb/>
have a regular workshop and meeting<lb/>
Thursday, April 3, at 8 p.m in<lb/>
Mcndenhall, room 248. The public is<lb/>
cordially invited.<lb/>
Wheelchair<lb/>
The Office of Handicapped Studcni<lb/>
Services is establishing a wheelchair<lb/>
repair service on campus. If you have<lb/>
experience in repairing mechanical<lb/>
equipment and desire part-lime<lb/>
employment, contact the Office of<lb/>
Handicapped Student Services in<lb/>
Whichard 211 or call 757-6799<lb/>
Little Sisters<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Little Sisters are planning<lb/>
a night of fun Wednesday, April 9 from<lb/>
9-1 at Chapter X. Beer will be 50 cents,<lb/>
and there will be a beer chugging con-<lb/>
test. Tickets are 50 cents in advance and<lb/>
75 cents at the door.<lb/>
UFCDC<lb/>
The University Folk and Country<lb/>
Dance Club meets on Thursday nights<lb/>
from 7-9 in Brcwstcr D-109. II vou arc<lb/>
interested in folk and vountrv dancing<lb/>
or have always wanted to learn but have<lb/>
never tried, come on over. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome For additional inlormaiion.<lb/>
call 752 0826<lb/>
AFROTC<lb/>
Air Force ROTC currently has one<lb/>
scholarship available under the Com-<lb/>
mitted Scholarship Trial Program<lb/>
which will he awarded to a May 1982<lb/>
graduate. This scholarship is open to<lb/>
Sophomores with the following<lb/>
qualifications: GPA. 28 or higher:<lb/>
SAT score. 1000 or higher; major,<lb/>
math, physics, chemistry, computer<lb/>
science or business quantitative<lb/>
methods; and qualification for military<lb/>
service The scholarship pays in slate or<lb/>
out-of-state tuition, books, lab fees<lb/>
plus $100 a month tax-lrce. To sec it<lb/>
you qualify, call 757-6597 or come by<lb/>
room 206, Wright Annex.<lb/>
Table Tennis<lb/>
A table tennis tournament, with singles<lb/>
and doubles events, will be held in the<lb/>
Mendenhall multi-purpose room on<lb/>
Wednesday April 16 at 6 p m The com<lb/>
petition is open to all EC U students and<lb/>
faculty and staff MSC members.<lb/>
Trophies will be awarded to 1st and 2nd<lb/>
place singles winners and 1st and 2nd<lb/>
place doubles teams. Entrants must<lb/>
register at the MSC Billiards Center by<lb/>
Monday, April 14<lb/>
Tutoring<lb/>
Need help in preparing lor linal exams!<lb/>
The C enter for Student Opportunities<lb/>
provides free tutorial scrviccx to<lb/>
students who major in Allied Health.<lb/>
Nursing, Medicine or related health<lb/>
professions Contact Or Bridwell.<lb/>
757 6122 or 77.?W. m check your<lb/>
eligibility<lb/>
Summer Dorms<lb/>
Residence hall room dcposiis lor Sum<lb/>
mcr School 1980 will be accepted in the<lb/>
Cashier's Office, Room 105, Spilman<lb/>
Building, beginning April 9. Room<lb/>
assignments will be made in the respec<lb/>
live residence hall offices on April 10<lb/>
and 11 Thereafter, thev will be made in<lb/>
the Office of Housing Operations.<lb/>
Room 201. Whichard Building<lb/>
Make-up Dates Still<lb/>
In Decision Stage<lb/>
Foreign Lit<lb/>
Recreational, popular litcraiurc in<lb/>
foreign languages is now available in<lb/>
Joyncr Library. Foreign students or<lb/>
those with an interest in foreign<lb/>
language may select from records and<lb/>
comics from French to Japanese. This<lb/>
is the first time such a selection has<lb/>
been available.<lb/>
Social Work<lb/>
All Social Work and Corrections ma<lb/>
jors intereslcd in attending lh<lb/>
workshop and pig picking should<lb/>
prcregisitr and pav before April 3<lb/>
1980 Sec Donna Mav or Julie Horvath<lb/>
Your favorite beverages will be served<lb/>
at the pig picking.<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
they may have more than one exam<lb/>
scheduled for the next day. Many<lb/>
feel it is unfair to require a makeup<lb/>
on those days.<lb/>
Overall, all of the students<lb/>
surveyed felt that it would not be<lb/>
right to have to make up the days.<lb/>
Only five percent of them said they<lb/>
would definitely go to classes if held<lb/>
on Saturday or Reading Day, and<lb/>
ten percent would go only if they<lb/>
had a test or some other major con-<lb/>
cern. In total, less than one-fifth of<lb/>
the students polled planned on at-<lb/>
tending make-up classes under any<lb/>
circumstances.<lb/>
Faculty Response<lb/>
Faculty response to the proposal<lb/>
was much more varied than the stu-<lb/>
dent reaction. Professors seemed<lb/>
more receptive to the need to make<lb/>
up the days.<lb/>
James H. Bearden, dean of the<lb/>
School of Business, said he assumed<lb/>
most students will attend classes<lb/>
held on reading day, since they will<lb/>
probably be on campus anwa.<lb/>
But, he added, attendance on either<lb/>
day will most likely vary by depart-<lb/>
ment, since it would depend on what<lb/>
the students felt they had missed.<lb/>
"As an instructor, I would<lb/>
welcome the time to get caught up<lb/>
said Donald E. Bailey, dean of the<lb/>
General College. He said he could<lb/>
understand if students did not want<lb/>
to go to classes those days, however.<lb/>
Other instructors said the would<lb/>
probably not have classes, and some<lb/>
of those who would added the<lb/>
would most likely not do an thing<lb/>
of major importance. One profes<lb/>
said that he planned to show home<lb/>
movies if he was required to hold<lb/>
class.<lb/>
Not all, though, had such plans<lb/>
Several instructors contacted classes<lb/>
as usual would be the order of the<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Greek News<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
(.reck Correspondent<lb/>
As the school year<lb/>
nears a close, it is only<lb/>
appropriate to con-<lb/>
gratulate a group of<lb/>
students who have<lb/>
fought hard in the past<lb/>
two years to transform<lb/>
a small group of men<lb/>
into a successful frater-<lb/>
nity.<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi has<lb/>
been at East Carolina<lb/>
for only two years, but<lb/>
their achievements<lb/>
speak for all their hard<lb/>
work. In this short<lb/>
period of time they<lb/>
have purchased a house<lb/>
at 410 Elizabeth St<lb/>
which is now being<lb/>
completely remodeled.<lb/>
The Alpha Sigs<lb/>
would like to thank all<lb/>
fraternities and<lb/>
sororities at ECU for<lb/>
being helpful and sup-<lb/>
portive. They will be<lb/>
moving into their new<lb/>
house this summer and<lb/>
invite everyone over<lb/>
when they return to<lb/>
school next fall.<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi's<lb/>
motto is "to better a<lb/>
man and they proved<lb/>
it by receiving the<lb/>
Scholarship Trophy at<lb/>
the 1FC banquet last<lb/>
week. Brother Greg Lee<lb/>
also received the IFC's<lb/>
Highest Collegiate<lb/>
Average Award for<lb/>
1979-80. Congratula-<lb/>
tions to the Alpha Sigs<lb/>
and good luck with<lb/>
your new house.<lb/>
The Pi Kapps en-<lb/>
joyed a fun-filled and<lb/>
victorious Greek Week,<lb/>
coming away with<lb/>
honors in the Greek<lb/>
Games and the Track<lb/>
Meet. Pi Kapps would<lb/>
like to congratulate<lb/>
Brother Randy Langley<lb/>
for becoming executive<lb/>
vice-president of IFC.<lb/>
Sigma Nu will be<lb/>
holding its first annual<lb/>
Softball Tournament<lb/>
on April 12 and 13. The<lb/>
tournament is co-<lb/>
sponsored by Jeffreys<lb/>
Beer and Wine and by<lb/>
H.L. Hodges Sporting<lb/>
Goods.<lb/>
The Chi Omegas en-<lb/>
joyed participating in<lb/>
Greek Week and came<lb/>
away with top honors<lb/>
in the Greek Games.<lb/>
They placed third in the<lb/>
Track Meet and in Pi<lb/>
Kapp Field Day.<lb/>
The Chi O's will be<lb/>
busy this week with an<lb/>
Easter egg hunt for<lb/>
needy children,<lb/>
Founder's Day, and a<lb/>
dunking booth at<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall.<lb/>
The Delta Zetas are<lb/>
busy planning their spr-<lb/>
ing formal which will<lb/>
be held April 12. Other<lb/>
events scheduled for<lb/>
this month will be a<lb/>
booth at Barefoot on<lb/>
the Mall, a cookout<lb/>
with big brothers, and a<lb/>
tea for their alumni and<lb/>
house mother.<lb/>
The Sigma Nus held<lb/>
their Annual White<lb/>
Rose Formal last<lb/>
weekend at the Holiday<lb/>
Inn in Williamston.<lb/>
Receiving the Best<lb/>
Brother Award was<lb/>
Jeff Majette. Stanley<lb/>
Joyner was Most<lb/>
Athletic; Kee Holder,<lb/>
Most Athletic; and<lb/>
Steve Medlin, Best<lb/>
Pledge.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now hiring students for the following positions on the Summer 1980 and<lb/>
1980-81 staffs:<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR: Responsible for the overall operation of the editorial division of<lb/>
the newspaper lie, News, Features, Sports, Production, Copy Editing). Management<lb/>
and newspaper experience and completion of JOUR 2000, 2100, 3100, 3200<lb/>
necessary. Salary: $150 month.<lb/>
COPY EDITOR: Edit for style all copy for editorial section of newspaper. Completion of<lb/>
JOUR 2000, 2100, 3100, 3200 necessary. Salary. $125 month.<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR. Direct Features section of paper. Newspaper experience and<lb/>
completion of JOUR 2000, 2100, and enrolled in or completed JOUR 3100, 3200<lb/>
necessary. Salary: $125 month.<lb/>
STAFF WRITERS: To cover events for News, Sports and Features sections of paper.<lb/>
Completion of JOUR 2000, 2100 preferred but not necesary. Trial period with no pay<lb/>
for first five stories. Up to 48 cents per column inch thereafter, according to<lb/>
proficiency.<lb/>
LAYOUT WORKERS: Layout copy and headlines in editorial section of paper.<lb/>
Experience necessary. Salary: $100 month.<lb/>
CONTACT RICHARD GREEN, 1980 81 editor of The East Carolinian, Old South Bldg<lb/>
757-6366, 6367, 6309. Make appointments with secretary for interviews Time of<lb/>
interviews: TTh - 8-11:00 a.m 3:30-6:00 p.m.<lb/>
All new employees will receive on the job training on Compugraphic typesetting<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
Viet&amp;ngJ<lb/>
w'?h pu'ease<lb/>
of ea" '? as<lb/>
24k gold<lb/>
plated surgical<lb/>
steel studs<lb/>
D'vdefl payments<lb/>
3C day charge<lb/>
?<lb/>
Waior Credit<lb/>
Cards Honored<lb/>
S39S<lb/>
S7 95 VALUE<lb/>
We make it easy I<lb/>
you loen ay "e fasf<lb/>
iook you've aiv.a, ar'ed<lb/>
pa?nlessl i expei stvety Oui<lb/>
is o ? safe and stenle<lb/>
NO EAR PIERCING<lb/>
UNDER 6YRS OF AGE<lb/>
mrcWrc<lb/>
Spring Dance<lb/>
Friday April II 8:30-1:00 at the<lb/>
AMERICAN LEGION HUT<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
FIVE DEGREES SOUTH<lb/>
i<lb/>
' -pafri. m mngtr "?" ???<lb/>
<pb facs="00057259_0003"/><lb/>
Costs of Education On The Rise<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
the total would rise<lb/>
next year, but he had<lb/>
no specific figures.<lb/>
The money takes the<lb/>
torm of scholarships,<lb/>
grants and low-cost<lb/>
loans. About half of it<lb/>
is given out according<lb/>
to financial need, Case<lb/>
?viid.<lb/>
Interviews with<lb/>
students, parents and<lb/>
financial aid officials<lb/>
indicate that just about<lb/>
everybody needs help<lb/>
these days. "We've had<lb/>
to raise our scholarship<lb/>
aid program said<lb/>
Steve Kezerian of Yale<lb/>
University. He<lb/>
climated that about 40<lb/>
percent of Yale's<lb/>
students get help from<lb/>
the school itself.<lb/>
Pam Shinglcr, a<lb/>
spokesman for Slippery<lb/>
Rock, said about 70<lb/>
percent of the students<lb/>
pay for their education<lb/>
with the aid of grants,<lb/>
loans or scholarships or<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
0TS<lb/>
?ubhshea every Tuesday and<lb/>
Mlay dur.nq the academic<lb/>
- "id every Wednesday during<lb/>
"er<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
3 newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
tersity owned operated, and<lb/>
it 1 tor and by the students<lb/>
ist Carolina University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
"Wi S15 yearly<lb/>
"ers S20 yearly<lb/>
Secona class postage paid at<lb/>
vilie N C<lb/>
rie East Carolinian offices are<lb/>
Old South Building<lb/>
-pus of ECU Greenville<lb/>
Telephone 757 6364,6367,6309<lb/>
through work-study<lb/>
programs. "That<lb/>
number seems to rise<lb/>
every year she said.<lb/>
"I am by no stretch<lb/>
of the imagination<lb/>
rich said Williams,<lb/>
the Notre Dame stu-<lb/>
dent. "It's a sacrifice<lb/>
on my parents' part <lb/>
I don't see how they do<lb/>
it<lb/>
Ms. DeStefano<lb/>
worked to supplement<lb/>
her loan and grant. She<lb/>
got help from her<lb/>
parents. "I also startej<lb/>
buying used books<lb/>
rather than paying the<lb/>
bookstore top prices<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Bob DiSpirito, the<lb/>
head football coach at<lb/>
Slippery Rock, has a<lb/>
son who is a junior at<lb/>
the school. Two more<lb/>
sons will enter college<lb/>
in the fall. "The crunch<lb/>
is on he said. "We're<lb/>
asking the kids to help<lb/>
themselves by getting<lb/>
jobs and we're sear-<lb/>
ching into student<lb/>
guaranteed loans<lb/>
Legislation passed by<lb/>
Congress in 1978 ex-<lb/>
tended the interest<lb/>
benefits available under<lb/>
the Guaranteed Student<lb/>
Loan program to all<lb/>
students, regardless of<lb/>
family income. Loans<lb/>
issued under the pro-<lb/>
gram have a low in-<lb/>
terest rate ? 7 percent<lb/>
a year ? and students<lb/>
are not required to pay<lb/>
any interest at all while<lb/>
they are in school. The<lb/>
government guarantees<lb/>
the loan and pays the<lb/>
lender a bonus to help<lb/>
make up the difference<lb/>
between the 7 percent<lb/>
rate and current market<lb/>
interest rates.<lb/>
The program does<lb/>
not require lenders to<lb/>
provide money to<lb/>
students, however. And<lb/>
rising interest rates<lb/>
have made money<lb/>
scarce for all types of<lb/>
loans. Ronald Wilson,<lb/>
the director of . con-<lb/>
sumer loans for the<lb/>
Michigan National<lb/>
Bank, said, for exam-<lb/>
ple, that the bank<lb/>
discontinued its par-<lb/>
ticipation in the student<lb/>
loan program last<lb/>
November. "It's the<lb/>
supply of funds he<lb/>
said. Fran Pforr, public<lb/>
relations manager of<lb/>
First Bank of New<lb/>
Haven, Conn said the<lb/>
bank was still issuing<lb/>
student loans, but had<lb/>
curtailed the program<lb/>
because of a decrease in<lb/>
available funds.<lb/>
Like many parents,<lb/>
coach DiSpirito figures<lb/>
he will manage<lb/>
somehow. But he adds:<lb/>
"As difficult as things<lb/>
are now, I wonder<lb/>
where it's going to end.<lb/>
I wonder what it's go-<lb/>
ing to be like for the<lb/>
next generation<lb/>
News Comment<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 3, 1980<lb/>
Dodging The A rtful Pollsters<lb/>
By RICH ALLINSON<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
Last night I became<lb/>
an invisible American.<lb/>
A nonstatistic. How ex-<lb/>
hilarating.<lb/>
It happened in-<lb/>
nocently enough. The<lb/>
caller identified herself<lb/>
as a representative of a<lb/>
public survey on behalf<lb/>
of the New York<lb/>
Times. Without think-<lb/>
ing, I simply said 1<lb/>
simply did not care to<lb/>
participate.<lb/>
Showing off some of<lb/>
the tricks they nvst<lb/>
teach in interviewers'<lb/>
school, she persisted.<lb/>
But not even my<lb/>
natural sympathy for<lb/>
another human being<lb/>
trying legally to make a<lb/>
buck could stay me<lb/>
from my<lb/>
course.<lb/>
I hung up.<lb/>
Those of<lb/>
decline to be<lb/>
the pollsters<lb/>
"no-shows<lb/>
"refusenik<lb/>
something<lb/>
derogatory?)<lb/>
do so for<lb/>
appointed<lb/>
us who<lb/>
polled (do<lb/>
label us<lb/>
"nixies<lb/>
s or<lb/>
more<lb/>
probably<lb/>
the most<lb/>
mundane reasons ?<lb/>
preparing dinner (I<lb/>
was), sleeping, feeling<lb/>
generally grouchy, that<lb/>
sort of thing.<lb/>
But behind our un-<lb/>
willingness to be inter-<lb/>
viewed I would like to<lb/>
believe there lurks a<lb/>
more lofty motive.<lb/>
Perhaps we recoil<lb/>
from spewing out our<lb/>
opinions like coins<lb/>
from a one-armed ban-<lb/>
dit. Or maybe we don't<lb/>
care to see our views,<lb/>
arrived at after some<lb/>
quantum of mental<lb/>
labor, compressed and<lb/>
trimmed around the<lb/>
edges to fit the survey's<lb/>
prearranged categories.<lb/>
We could even be<lb/>
regarded as abstainers<lb/>
from the ultra-hype,<lb/>
fast-fad, instant-replay<lb/>
tiredness that<lb/>
dominates most of our<lb/>
public discourse today,<lb/>
thanks, in part, to the<lb/>
polls.<lb/>
More than the poor<lb/>
and unemployed ?<lb/>
who, after all, are at<lb/>
least counted, if under-<lb/>
counted ? we un-<lb/>
pollables are truly in-<lb/>
visible. We don't even<lb/>
qualify as "don't<lb/>
knows And therein<lb/>
lies our<lb/>
significance.<lb/>
true<lb/>
We are the one and<lb/>
only group which, by<lb/>
definition, is not in-<lb/>
cluded in the ever-<lb/>
Droliferating torrent of<lb/>
surveys revealing<lb/>
WHAT THE<lb/>
AMERICAN PEOPLE<lb/>
THINK about every<lb/>
conceivable topic.<lb/>
Assuming that we<lb/>
naysayers comprise a<lb/>
significant minority,<lb/>
say 10 or ?0 percent of<lb/>
those contacted, our<lb/>
nonparticipation could<lb/>
well upset virtually<lb/>
every pronouncement<lb/>
the pollsters ever make.<lb/>
Given our obvious<lb/>
contrariness, we pro-<lb/>
bably do not rank the<lb/>
Rev. Billy Graham and<lb/>
Farrah Fawcett at the<lb/>
top of our "most ad-<lb/>
mired Americans" list;<lb/>
we may not be convinc-<lb/>
ed that all poor people<lb/>
are lazy; and our<lb/>
highest personal goal<lb/>
may even be something<lb/>
besides owning a swim-<lb/>
ming pool and a Trans<lb/>
Am.<lb/>
The polls take care to<lb/>
include representative<lb/>
samples of every age,<lb/>
ethnic and ideological<lb/>
group, but they don't<lb/>
know a thing about<lb/>
what goes on in the<lb/>
minds of millions ofj<lb/>
poll-boycotters like<lb/>
myself. Therefore, poll<lb/>
results are invariably<lb/>
skewed, unrepresen-<lb/>
tative and invalid.<lb/>
Which means we<lb/>
don't have to bother<lb/>
paying attention to<lb/>
them ever again.<lb/>
THERE 1$ A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE!<lb/>
PREPARE FOR: t<lb/>
VQE ECFMG FLEX<lb/>
NATL MED BOS.<lb/>
NAT! DENTAL BDS.<lb/>
NURSING BOARDS<lb/>
MCAT ? DAT?LSAT ? GRE<lb/>
6MAT ? OCAT ? PCAT<lb/>
VAT ? SAT<lb/>
TEST PREPARATION<lb/>
SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938<lb/>
Visit Any Center<lb/>
And See For Yourself<lb/>
Why We Make The Difference<lb/>
Flexible Programs L Hours<lb/>
Call Days, Eves &amp; Weekends<lb/>
919-4OT-B720<lb/>
Suite 02<lb/>
Crost BMg.<lb/>
2634 Chapel Hill Blvd.<lb/>
Durham MX. 27707<lb/>
For Information About<lb/>
Other Centers Outside NY State<lb/>
Call Toll Tree<lb/>
800-223,1782<lb/>
Centers in Major US Cities<lb/>
Puerto Rico. Toronto, Canada<lb/>
&amp; Lugano, Switzerland<lb/>
SHAPE UP AMERICA!<lb/>
LOSE 17 TO 25 POUNDS<lb/>
IN JUST 6 WEEKS<lb/>
AND LIVE A<lb/>
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LIFE!<lb/>
'?<lb/>
YOL CAN DO IT<lb/>
No Shots No Drugs<lb/>
No Contracts<lb/>
756-8545<lb/>
103OAKMONTDr.<lb/>
CALL TODAY!<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
C Heber Forbes is pleased to announce<lb/>
the celebration of 77 years in operation<lb/>
Since 1903. the aim of our business has<lb/>
been to provide quality clothing along<lb/>
with fine service. Today, more than<lb/>
ever, we realize the importance of our<lb/>
aims and we strive to maintain them<lb/>
To show you our appreciation to you.<lb/>
our friend and customer, we will be of<lb/>
fering various specials during April 1 -12<lb/>
' Please come by and join us in our<lb/>
celebration<lb/>
We are featuring the largest selection of<lb/>
this quality sportswer m Eastern N C<lb/>
by. .<lb/>
J.G.Hook<lb/>
also Point of View.<lb/>
Cargo. Asher.<lb/>
Justin. Thomson<lb/>
rta<lb/>
C. liEBERTORBES<lb/>
Featuring $ue<lb/>
4 To 14<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Evans Matt<lb/>
?CU Studont Union mqor attractions<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Position on Media Board<lb/>
for Day Student<lb/>
Representative.<lb/>
Pick up applications from<lb/>
Media Board Secretary in<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
office.<lb/>
Deadline for application is<lb/>
April 10th<lb/>
Thurs.flpcll7 0pm HingesGobcufft<lb/>
Tickets: eajatudenft$SuOO PubSc$SOQ ftt Door$2QO<lb/>
1 ICIUbe 1 a NUW UN SAiLfe!<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057259_0004"/><lb/>
flje Cast ?arflliniaq<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, w?cktt)<lb/>
Diane Henderson, mmmm m??-<lb/>
ROBERT M. SWAIM. o,rec a RICHARD GREEN, O, i<lb/>
CHRIS LlCHOK, ? ?r CHARLES CHANDLER. ?? ?<lb/>
TERRY GRAY, . ? DEBBIE HOTALING, ft? <lb/>
THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
No Special Interests<lb/>
A letter from one reader that ap-<lb/>
pears on this page today comments<lb/>
on the Greek Week tabloid insert in<lb/>
the March 27 issue of The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
The reader's complaint is that his<lb/>
fraternity was forgotten in that<lb/>
issue, which is true, unfortunately.<lb/>
Space limitations and other factors<lb/>
would not allow all fraternities and<lb/>
sororities to be represented in the<lb/>
special edition. We accept the blame<lb/>
for those that did not appear, and<lb/>
we apologize for it.<lb/>
What we do not apologize for is<lb/>
the recent furor which has sur-<lb/>
rounded a request from one of the<lb/>
members of the editorial board of<lb/>
this newspaper to receive proper<lb/>
recognition for the newspaper's ef-<lb/>
forts'to promote Greek activities at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
This request for a "thank you<lb/>
which we felt was justified, was just<lb/>
that ? a request. There was no de-<lb/>
mand made. Our director of adver-<lb/>
tising thought that since we had<lb/>
donated free labor, time, chemicals<lb/>
and $10,000 worth of free advertis-<lb/>
ing space to the Greek cause, we<lb/>
deserved to be thanked at the 1FC<lb/>
Banquet. We weren't thanked, but<lb/>
we are not losing sleep about it.<lb/>
There seems to be an assumption<lb/>
that The East Carolinian is against<lb/>
Greeks when we run satirical article<lb/>
about Greek Week and one in-<lb/>
vestigative piece about hazing on<lb/>
other campuses. If you balance this<lb/>
with two double-page photo layout<lb/>
spreads, free advertising, a standing<lb/>
weekly column about Greek life,<lb/>
and an editorial stand which con-<lb/>
gratulates Greeks on their initiative<lb/>
and drive, you might find that a<lb/>
case could be build that we are<lb/>
anything but anti-Greek.<lb/>
It is all too often that student<lb/>
groups seem to want us to print only<lb/>
good things about them. This can-<lb/>
not and should not be done because<lb/>
we are dedicated to printing the<lb/>
truth, good or bad. In covering<lb/>
several incidents of hazing on other<lb/>
campuses, ECU Greeks felt that we<lb/>
were somehow cutting them down.<lb/>
We never said that hazing is<lb/>
prevalent on this campus. We don't<lb/>
know that it is, but if we discovered<lb/>
that it is we would not back out of<lb/>
the story. We would print it, on the<lb/>
top left-hand side of page one.<lb/>
We are newsmen, not a public<lb/>
relations firm. We are not set up to<lb/>
make sure that some individual or<lb/>
gruop has a good public image. We<lb/>
are set up to tell the truth and to let<lb/>
students of this university know<lb/>
what is going on.<lb/>
Any and all efforts to stop us<lb/>
from telling the truth and any<lb/>
pressure of reprisals for appropriate<lb/>
commentary from anyone will result<lb/>
in immediate legal action.<lb/>
<lb/>
Easter For Fun And Profit<lb/>
Christ died on the cross, and after<lb/>
three days, he arose again. For<lb/>
many believers in the Christian<lb/>
faith, this is what Easter means. For<lb/>
many in the marketing and mer-<lb/>
chandising industries, it is yet<lb/>
another way to make a fast buck.<lb/>
The spectre of using religious<lb/>
holidays to sell candy, Easter<lb/>
baskets and small rabbits and ducks<lb/>
is nothing new. It seems, however,<lb/>
to have become especially prevalent<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
We see spring outfits advertised<lb/>
on television and in newspapers,<lb/>
and we are encouraged to go out<lb/>
and purchase something nice to<lb/>
wear on Easter. We smile at the<lb/>
dresses and boys suits, and we go<lb/>
out and buy them without thinking<lb/>
of the true meaning of the occasion.<lb/>
Likewise, we buy tons of sugar-<lb/>
coated candy, which isn't good for<lb/>
anyone except for the management<lb/>
of the companies which make it,<lb/>
and the media outlets that advertise<lb/>
it.<lb/>
It is true to our nature that we<lb/>
would really rather not think about<lb/>
Jesus in all of this. After all, his<lb/>
death was unpleasant, and too<lb/>
many of us would just as soon<lb/>
forget about unpleasant things. We<lb/>
have the notion that somehow, if<lb/>
everything under the sun is<lb/>
sweetness and light, it will all<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
Will Not Miss<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
somehow work out.<lb/>
The truth of the matter is that we<lb/>
should look at the holiday from an<lb/>
emotional and religious standpoint,<lb/>
whether or not we agree with the<lb/>
Christian faith. There are millions<lb/>
among us who do, and under the<lb/>
same Constitution which guarantees<lb/>
that this newspaper will be free of<lb/>
government control, a guarantee is<lb/>
also made that any citizen of this<lb/>
nation is free to worship as he<lb/>
chooses.<lb/>
It is incumbent on the rest of us,<lb/>
we feel, to respect our fellow<lb/>
citizens beliefs, as we would have<lb/>
them respect our beliefs. This<lb/>
variant of the "Golden Rule"<lb/>
should apply especially to needless<lb/>
commercialization of a religious<lb/>
holiday, such as Easter.<lb/>
People of all faiths should have<lb/>
respect for all religious holidays,<lb/>
regardless of source of religion or<lb/>
nature of holiday. Whether or not<lb/>
you believe in Jesus, we should all<lb/>
have enough respect for those who<lb/>
do to protest all of the merchandis-<lb/>
ing and commercial aspects of<lb/>
Easter. -<lb/>
Recently, the decision was made to<lb/>
make up days lost to snow. We, three con-<lb/>
cerned seniors, support that decision, pro-<lb/>
viding that the following options be used<lb/>
to penalize those students not attending<lb/>
make-up classes.<lb/>
1. letter sent home to parent or guar-<lb/>
dian<lb/>
2. students be restricted from riding the<lb/>
school bus for a week<lb/>
3. write 100 times, "1 will not miss<lb/>
class<lb/>
4. stay after school<lb/>
5. suspension for three days<lb/>
6. pick up trash around school grounds<lb/>
7. no chocolate milk or ice cream sand-<lb/>
wich in lunch room<lb/>
8. empty pencil sharpeners<lb/>
9. red "U" on report card<lb/>
10. dust erasers and wash chalkboards<lb/>
H. go to office for a spanking (Dr.<lb/>
Brewer's office)<lb/>
We feel that these elementary penalties<lb/>
therefore correspond to the elementary<lb/>
nature of the decision.<lb/>
"Wood, Buk and Mr. Perfect"<lb/>
(Three Concerned Seniors)<lb/>
of Greekweek and several articles critical<lb/>
of the Greek system.<lb/>
Many of the latter articles concerned<lb/>
hazing incidents on other campuses, and<lb/>
are in no way concerned with our Greek<lb/>
system. We hope that these errors are the<lb/>
result of negligence on the part of the<lb/>
newspaper staff and not a concerted anti-<lb/>
Greek action.<lb/>
I am. Sir, respectfully yours,<lb/>
David Swanson<lb/>
Pres Delta Eta Chapter<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
Sixties Were Active<lb/>
Greek System<lb/>
Poorly Covered<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
The effect of these suggestions<lb/>
would result in the better understan-<lb/>
ding of other religions. More impor-<lb/>
tantly, it would result in the removal<lb/>
of religion from Madison Avenue,<lb/>
and put it back where it belongs.<lb/>
We, the brothers of Alpha Sigma Phi,<lb/>
wish to express our concern over the poor<lb/>
coverage of the greek system in the Thurs-<lb/>
day, March 27, issue of The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian. In said issue, articles concerning<lb/>
seven of ECU's 12 fraternities and 1 of<lb/>
our 8 sororities were presented. This is a<lb/>
gross injustice to those organizations not<lb/>
represented, as publicity is necessary to<lb/>
the continued success of any fraternal<lb/>
organization. Were any concerted effort<lb/>
made by The East Carolinian concerning<lb/>
submission of such articles, we would<lb/>
have gladly complied with their wishes.<lb/>
Our phone number, and those of the<lb/>
other nonrepresented organizations, are<lb/>
available from the Interfraternity Coun-<lb/>
cil. c ,<lb/>
The blatent laxness on the part of The<lb/>
East Carolinian extends to their criticism<lb/>
of the Interfraternity Council for not<lb/>
thanking the paper for printing Greek<lb/>
advertisements free of cost. The paper<lb/>
provides this service for all organizations;<lb/>
we Greeks simply tend to take advantage<lb/>
of this service more frequently than<lb/>
others. That the staff of the paper<lb/>
demends thanks for the execution of their<lb/>
proper positions is more indicative of<lb/>
their personalities than of the Greek<lb/>
system. It is also indicative of the paper's<lb/>
position that they have printed 1 article<lb/>
defending the Greek system veres 1 satire<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Often when 1 read articles in this<lb/>
newspaper, I am struck by bits and pieces<lb/>
of false or misleading journalism<lb/>
(inherent in all publications). Mostly, 1 let<lb/>
these go by with only a thought of regret<lb/>
and sympathy for whoever believes them.<lb/>
But as 1 read Jay Stone's article on<lb/>
absentee voting in the Ftb. 28 edition, 1<lb/>
was compelled to speak out.<lb/>
I speak of Mr. Stone's reference to the<lb/>
Movement of the late Sixties that he<lb/>
described as "the nightmare of failure<lb/>
that went down between 1965 and 1970<lb/>
and "the notion of beating the system<lb/>
that was born in Berkeley that he<lb/>
portends "gave way to a sort of numb<lb/>
conviction that it made more sense to run<lb/>
and hide than to fight the swine, at the<lb/>
polls, or on anything even vaguely<lb/>
resembling their own terms No state-<lb/>
ment could be more false or misleading.<lb/>
One need only open hisher eyes to see<lb/>
the lasting effects of "Woodstock Na-<lb/>
tion The war was ended, Nixon was<lb/>
kicked out, minorities received more<lb/>
power and influence; these are obvious<lb/>
enough. More obvious carryovers from<lb/>
that generation are today's protest<lb/>
demonstrations. Farmers, truck drivers,<lb/>
school teachers and firemen use<lb/>
demonstrations to make their points. The<lb/>
events of the late Sixties not only "revived<lb/>
the Boston Tea Party tradition but also<lb/>
stimulated a new sense of individual<lb/>
power" (Rex Weiner and Deanne<lb/>
Stillman, Woodstock Census, 1979, p.<lb/>
157). This valuable right will never be in-<lb/>
fringed again.<lb/>
Many people believe that the Sixties<lb/>
were important, that their actions were<lb/>
important, that they affected history.<lb/>
These people are still around, working,<lb/>
changing, bringing their ideals and<lb/>
methods into every aspect of American<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Some of the things so widely contested<lb/>
and begun by the Movement of the late<lb/>
Sixties such as reduction of penalties for<lb/>
marijuana use, equal opportunities for<lb/>
women and racial desegregation are slow-<lb/>
ly but surely being realized. Many of the<lb/>
99<lb/>
Movement's protest tactics (civil disol<lb/>
dience, leafletting, petitioning) are now<lb/>
being used to strike at nuclear power<lb/>
industrial polluters. The great spirit ol<lb/>
Sixties still lives in those who are Irving<lb/>
change society now. Instead of throwing<lb/>
bricks, they're attacking the system fi<lb/>
the inside with court action and tegi<lb/>
tion. The good of the Sixties is being<lb/>
ternalized and the bad has been efi<lb/>
behind.<lb/>
How could anyone call this a tail.<lb/>
1 see it as a return to the orig<lb/>
American Way (something we seen<lb/>
be drifting so far away from at <lb/>
A lot of things are getting better :<lb/>
"not because (the Movement) failed<lb/>
the young people cam home, but because<lb/>
(the Movement) won and mc me<lb/>
home" Woodstock Census, p. 203).<lb/>
If you thought the Sixties failed or died.<lb/>
vou're badlv mistaken. Take a closei look<lb/>
an dlisten  and it's not too laic to gel in-<lb/>
volved .<lb/>
Jerrj <lb/>
Student Rip Off<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I've been a student living <lb/>
ville since the fall quarter of 1975.<lb/>
this time I've noticed a lot of changes take<lb/>
place. Back in 1975, students were<lb/>
different; there weren't as roan)<lb/>
and expensive cars driving around: (<lb/>
ville and East Carolina were named<lb/>
3rd largest party city in America:<lb/>
almost evervone wanted to attend th<lb/>
lege other than those stuffed shin c<lb/>
we always hear about. So my questu<lb/>
most important to all those students<lb/>
were BS'ed by all the advertisements<lb/>
city and campus put out about how much<lb/>
East Carolina had students who enjo<lb/>
drinking beer and having a good time, as<lb/>
well as being a Fine university.<lb/>
Why on earth did Greenville and East<lb/>
Carolina lie, belittle, defraud and rip<lb/>
all the students manipulated by propag<lb/>
da. This college knew only innocent col-<lb/>
lege bound high school graduates would<lb/>
consider such a college to attend?<lb/>
If you need any facts to verify mv ac-<lb/>
cusations just see how many students are<lb/>
given higher fines, usually 100 dollars<lb/>
more, than any Greenville resident chare<lb/>
ed with the same offense; just see ho<lb/>
many students have been arrested oi<lb/>
charged by campus police not accom-<lb/>
panied by a college official while in their<lb/>
dorm rooms without a search warrant. I<lb/>
one of which is required by university or<lb/>
siate law, and last just check the prices o;<lb/>
retain beer prices at all the local grocery<lb/>
stores compared with those of any other<lb/>
non-college city; for example Fayetteville.<lb/>
Ted Cohen<lb/>
Carter Violates Campaign Promises For Human Rights, Supports Big Business Instead<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Let's talk human rights. One of<lb/>
the primary tenets of Jimmy<lb/>
Carter's 1976 campaign was to pro-<lb/>
mote the struggle for human rights<lb/>
throughout the world. Though he<lb/>
speaks an awful lot about the issue,<lb/>
but not so much lately, the issue<lb/>
seems to be more of a political or<lb/>
rhetorical one than a viable commit-<lb/>
tment in his tenure. The man just<lb/>
does not live up to his rhetoric, and<lb/>
no one expects him to, but when 1<lb/>
voted for Jimmy in '761 felt like this<lb/>
issue alone made him a more<lb/>
preferable candidate than Ford.<lb/>
How wrong Iwas.<lb/>
First of all, how can anyone<lb/>
preach human rights in one breath<lb/>
and actively promote war in<lb/>
another. Regardless of whether it is<lb/>
a cold war or the proposed Third<lb/>
World War, it is inconsistent with<lb/>
policy. As Jesse Jackson stated, "If<lb/>
there is another war, poor people<lb/>
and black people will be the cannon<lb/>
fodder, and if there is a cold war,<lb/>
the same people will pay the price<lb/>
The foundation of our country<lb/>
states that we are entitled to "Life,<lb/>
liberty, and the pursuit of hap-<lb/>
piness But the new threat of the<lb/>
draft and "war hysteria" seem to be<lb/>
limiting factors in our pursuit of<lb/>
such. Which is it, human rights or<lb/>
corporate rights?<lb/>
Secondly, when the time came for<lb/>
Jimmy to make a decision that<lb/>
could be a profound influence on<lb/>
the human rights struggle, he chose<lb/>
to support the deposed shah of Iran.<lb/>
instead of taking affirmative action<lb/>
on human rights, he chose to sup-<lb/>
port the msot flagrant violator of<lb/>
human rights in recent history and<lb/>
sealed the fate of the embassy<lb/>
workers in Iran. To further agitate<lb/>
matters, he chose to give the official<lb/>
U.S. seal of approval by providing<lb/>
refuge for the criminal shah in<lb/>
America. Carter could have wielded<lb/>
a blow for the freedom of the<lb/>
hostages by admitting mistakes had<lb/>
been made in relations with Iran,<lb/>
but he thought pride and political<lb/>
future were the most important<lb/>
issues. Hooray for human rights.<lb/>
As if support for the shah was not<lb/>
enough, Jimmy has been consistent-<lb/>
ly ambiguous when he could have<lb/>
stood up for human rights in rela-<lb/>
tions with countries that have poor<lb/>
human rights histories. He chose<lb/>
not to voice ample protest and has<lb/>
even supported dictatorial regimes<lb/>
in Nicauragua, Argentina and South<lb/>
Korea. To nitpkk, at the same time<lb/>
that Communist China was suppor-<lb/>
ting the horrible regime of Pol Pot<lb/>
in Campuchia and waging war with<lb/>
the sovereign state of Vietnam, Jim-<lb/>
my was signing treaties that would<lb/>
normalize trade relations with'<lb/>
China. Once again, profit rights ran<lb/>
rampant over human rights.<lb/>
Perhaps the biggest blow i,<lb/>
human rights by Carter was made<lb/>
only recently when he proposed to<lb/>
cut federal spending in the areas of<lb/>
Indian education and education of<lb/>
the handicapped. Native Americans<lb/>
(Indians is a misnomer) have the<lb/>
highest rates of-poverty suicide and<lb/>
alcoholism of any minority in the<lb/>
United States. Leave it to Carter to<lb/>
continue a tragic history. Handicap-<lb/>
ped individuals, who never commit-<lb/>
ted a crime except perhaps being<lb/>
born a little different, waste away<lb/>
within confines of institutions while<lb/>
Mrs. Carter appears in television<lb/>
ads for the handicapped. The<lb/>
paradox of federal regulations and<lb/>
federal funding continue to baffle<lb/>
individuals associated with the<lb/>
educational institutions in the<lb/>
United States. It is travesty and a<lb/>
violation of human rights to ignore<lb/>
these individuals.<lb/>
Perhaps Carter's Waterlocvwill be<lb/>
his silly continuation of an ill-<lb/>
founded idea by refusing to allow<lb/>
American athletes to participate in<lb/>
the' Moscow Olympics Americans<lb/>
have fought throughout thek ives<lb/>
f<lb/>
to get a chance to participate in trie<lb/>
Olympics and fulfill a dream of in-<lb/>
ternational brotherhood through<lb/>
athletics, only to have their hopes<lb/>
smashed for political conquest.<lb/>
What it comes dbvn to is that<lb/>
Jimmy has had the opportunity on<lb/>
numerous occasions to live up to his<lb/>
commitment to human rights, and<lb/>
he has consistently failed to live up<lb/>
to one of the major promises that<lb/>
got him elected. He has time and<lb/>
again sided with vested interest<lb/>
groups whose major principle is the<lb/>
right to earn a dollar, and not to<lb/>
promote the welfare and rights of<lb/>
individuals. It is this choice that<lb/>
may prove to be the major stumbl-<lb/>
ing block to the rectectkm of the<lb/>
highly moral und devout Baptist<lb/>
from Qeorgla.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057259_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
APRIL 3, 1980 Page 5<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Author Wins<lb/>
Nat 9IA ward<lb/>
By RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
An ECU senior writing major<lb/>
received third place and $100 in<lb/>
piie money in the 1980 Hackney<lb/>
1 iterature Awards competition at<lb/>
the University of Alabama in Birm-<lb/>
ingham.<lb/>
June Sylvester, a second-semester<lb/>
senior in the English writing pro-<lb/>
gram, won the award for her short<lb/>
story "breaking which she wrote<lb/>
for her fiction writing class taught<lb/>
by Terry Davis.<lb/>
June said it's the first story she<lb/>
has written since high school, but<lb/>
she has been writing poetry since she<lb/>
came to ECU. She is from Elizabeth<lb/>
City, N.C.<lb/>
The story is about a young girl<lb/>
and her first encounters with<lb/>
established social roles for each sex,<lb/>
at that trying age when the girls and<lb/>
boys don't do the same things<lb/>
anymore.<lb/>
"It's not really a feminist view-<lb/>
point, it's just the dichotomy that is<lb/>
established between what's expected<lb/>
of a woman and what's expected of<lb/>
a man she explained. "The sad-<lb/>
dest thing is that it is really com-<lb/>
mon, especially in the South, 1<lb/>
think<lb/>
1 he package containing the story<lb/>
almost didn't make it to the com-<lb/>
petition because of some confusion<lb/>
in the postal system. It was returned<lb/>
marked "no such addres so she<lb/>
had a friend call Birmingham to be<lb/>
vtire.<lb/>
"Em glad that your friend made<lb/>
the call about the returned<lb/>
package wrote Myra Crawford,<lb/>
chairman of the Hackney Awards.<lb/>
"1 had already bundled up the final<lb/>
entries for the judging and slipped<lb/>
the packet in at the last minute<lb/>
The annual competition is spon-<lb/>
sored by Cecil Hackney, a Birm-<lb/>
ingham businessman and patron of<lb/>
the literary arts, as an event of the<lb/>
annual Birmingham Arts Festival.<lb/>
Students Interviewed<lb/>
Claim Arrests Unfair<lb/>
?sB<lb/>
Photo by LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Warm Spring Weather<lb/>
brings out girls in shorts<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"One of the riskiest experiments<lb/>
of the Ectopian government was to<lb/>
deliberately make marijuana a com-<lb/>
mon weed. Not only were legal pro-<lb/>
hibitions ended, but free top-quality<lb/>
seeds were distributed, in a cam-<lb/>
paign aimed at providing<lb/>
"do-it-yourself-highs The result is<lb/>
that every house and apartment can<lb/>
have its own garden or window box<lb/>
where the hemp is grown. It is as if,<lb/>
among us, we had a third tap in the<lb/>
kitchen which provided free beer.<lb/>
But mostfEctopians seem to smoke<lb/>
marijuana with considerable discre-<lb/>
tion, and it is likely that the worst<lb/>
feature of the policy is that it<lb/>
deprives the government of a large<lb/>
source of tax revenue<lb/>
Ernest Callenbach, Ectopia<lb/>
Of course, Ectopia is set in the<lb/>
year 1999 and its central theme is a<lb/>
neo-Woodstock nation roughly<lb/>
bound by Washington, Oregon and<lb/>
Northern California which has<lb/>
seceeded from the United States.<lb/>
The new government is founded<lb/>
upon a "stable-state" ecology,<lb/>
meaning that everything is recycled<lb/>
and Ectopians are free to smoke<lb/>
marijuana and experiment with<lb/>
drugs without fear of authoritarian<lb/>
reprisal.<lb/>
East Carolina University is a long<lb/>
way from Ectopia. For 14 ECU<lb/>
students the harsh reality of state<lb/>
drug laws manifested itself Monday,<lb/>
March 26.<lb/>
Students from Jones, Aycock and<lb/>
Belk dorms were awakened at 5:30<lb/>
a.m served with warrants, and<lb/>
taken to Pitt County jail. Since the<lb/>
"College Hill" bust, student<lb/>
response has been surprisingly vehe-<lb/>
ment, bordering on activistic.<lb/>
SGA President Brett Melvin<lb/>
stated: "I feel that this type of in-<lb/>
vestigation is wrong. Because of<lb/>
that, if there is anything the ex-<lb/>
ecutive branch can do to help, we<lb/>
will do it<lb/>
Melvin said that the bust was not<lb/>
initiated by the university and that<lb/>
campus police did not participate in<lb/>
it, although they were notified that<lb/>
the bust would take place ahead of<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Melvin and the SGA were vital in<lb/>
convincing Tri-County Bonding<lb/>
Company to front bail money to<lb/>
students. In many cases bail<lb/>
amounted to as much as $1,500,<lb/>
non-refundable.<lb/>
Many students have expressed<lb/>
dismay and outrage at what they<lb/>
deem a "senseless publicity stunt"<lb/>
by the Greenville Police Department<lb/>
and the North Carolina State<lb/>
Bureau of Investigation. This<lb/>
definition seems accurate in light of<lb/>
the fact that, according to Melvin,<lb/>
newspapers and television stations<lb/>
were notified in advance of the bust<lb/>
so that they could be on-hand with<lb/>
cameras ready.<lb/>
The East Carolinian conducted an<lb/>
interview with several students who<lb/>
were either involved in the "College<lb/>
Hill" bust or had extensive<lb/>
knowledge of it. Many of the<lb/>
students arrested in the Monday<lb/>
raid refused even to talk about it on<lb/>
the advice of their lawyers.<lb/>
However, some students were will-<lb/>
ing to talk about the bust and to ex-<lb/>
press their opinions in return for a<lb/>
promise of anonymity. Much of<lb/>
what follows is a transcript of<lb/>
several conversations that were<lb/>
taped in Jones, Aycock, and Scott<lb/>
dorms on Tuesday night, April 1.<lb/>
The following is a conversation<lb/>
with an ECU student and dorm resi-<lb/>
dent:<lb/>
East Carolinian: The campus drug<lb/>
bust that occured on March 26<lb/>
seems to have aroused a strong reac-<lb/>
tion against the tactics employed by<lb/>
the Greenville Police Department<lb/>
See STUDENTS Page 7, Col. 1<lb/>
It May Be Little<lb/>
For The Senior, There Is Hope<lb/>
By ROBERT ALBANESE<lb/>
Assistant Features F.ditor<lb/>
Soon the academic year will draw<lb/>
to a close, and most Pirates will<lb/>
have a very frolicksome summer in-<lb/>
deed.<lb/>
They will go home and probably<lb/>
start going to church again, leading<lb/>
a basically dull life with some kind<lb/>
of part-time job that will supply<lb/>
them with the funds to poot away<lb/>
the summer in style. At the bottom<lb/>
of their callow and easily-excitable<lb/>
hearts, they will await the recom-<lb/>
mencement of football season and<lb/>
the rosy-cheeks of cheerleader<lb/>
types.<lb/>
There is a group of Pirates out<lb/>
there, however (and their name is<lb/>
legion), who will never again know<lb/>
the security of constant cramming<lb/>
and being stood-up by the curvy co-<lb/>
ed (or macho masculoid). They will<lb/>
never again know the joy of year-<lb/>
long malnutrition nor will they ex-<lb/>
haust their bladders in the sinks of<lb/>
bathrooms in Greenville nightspots.<lb/>
These, friends, are the seniors.<lb/>
These seniors are not difficult to<lb/>
pick out from the campus throng.<lb/>
The senior is the one who is getting<lb/>
the haircut and the manicure, and<lb/>
for the first time in four years, he<lb/>
has trimmed his moustache. The<lb/>
senior is the one who has twelve<lb/>
shelves full of books he will never<lb/>
open again, and his current reading<lb/>
includes "The Power of Positive<lb/>
Thinking" and "How to Write a<lb/>
Resume The senior is the one who<lb/>
spends his afternoons reading<lb/>
through the microfilms at Employ-<lb/>
ment Security<lb/>
There is an unmistakable look on<lb/>
the senior's face: consternation.<lb/>
Four years of careful planning have<lb/>
prepared him for this moment,<lb/>
when he must now ask himself the<lb/>
question, "What does a body do<lb/>
with an American folklore major<lb/>
with a minor in driver's ed?"<lb/>
But the senior need not worry.<lb/>
There are jobs out there. Just<lb/>
because we are watching the<lb/>
economy flush itself down into the<lb/>
nether regions, we need not become<lb/>
hypertensive. The Marines are look-<lb/>
ing for a few good men (and by all<lb/>
indications, that's what they're get-<lb/>
ting). In the peace corps, you can<lb/>
pick up novel experiences, tribal<lb/>
dialects and tropical parasites from<lb/>
far-flung areas of economic blight.<lb/>
And there are hosts of monastic<lb/>
orders that are looking for someone<lb/>
just like you.<lb/>
The senior looks out into the<lb/>
world, and sees the same possibility<lb/>
of owning a home as that of opening<lb/>
a hot-dog stand on one of Jupiter's<lb/>
moons. He has the same chance of a<lb/>
successful marriage as he has of ren-<lb/>
ting a room in the Kremlin. Yonder<lb/>
hails a plethora of hemorrhoids,<lb/>
vericose veins and acid indigestion.<lb/>
And his pal, the government, will<lb/>
maintain this Madison Avende Eden<lb/>
for him at the low, low price of two<lb/>
or three times God's cut of his in-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
The infernal-snowball prospect of<lb/>
the world at large is too much for<lb/>
some. Many is the Pirate who<lb/>
placidly watches the credit-hours<lb/>
tick away, for eight years having<lb/>
plotted a chart taking him straight<lb/>
between majors in art and correc-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
There is good news for the senior,<lb/>
however. His fate need not be that<lb/>
of countless others who have<lb/>
follows the ivy-covered path to<lb/>
manual laboi. Already eyes are<lb/>
turned upward to the glimmering<lb/>
star of hope, the beacon of faith.<lb/>
They can follow the footsteps of the<lb/>
wretched refuse of the teeming<lb/>
unemployment office, to be counted<lb/>
among those who bear the mark of<lb/>
the knowing grin. For no matter<lb/>
how bad it gets, there is always<lb/>
GRAD SCHOOL!<lb/>
Handicapped Parking Spaces 'Borrowed9<lb/>
By Desperate Students In Space Race<lb/>
Young Pup Frolicking<lb/>
Photo by LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Jazz Ensemble To<lb/>
Play 'On The Mall'<lb/>
Bv STEPHANIE TINGLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Spring Break wasn't long enough,<lb/>
Easter weekend never has been and<lb/>
final exams are practically breathing<lb/>
down our necks. Then, there are;<lb/>
those of us who have already gotten<lb/>
what's going around.<lb/>
Mark Twain once said, "It s spr-<lb/>
ing fever ? you don't quite know<lb/>
what it is you want, but it just fairly<lb/>
makes your heart ache, and you<lb/>
want it so Barefoot on the Mall<lb/>
festivities could not have arrived at<lb/>
a more opportune moment.<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall will definite-<lb/>
ly be a pleasant shot in the arm. One<lb/>
special tidbit of the afternoon will<lb/>
be the ECU Jazz Ensemble perfor-<lb/>
mance at 4:00 p.m. Under the super-<lb/>
vision of George Broussard, ECU<lb/>
School of Music faculty member<lb/>
the ensemble is a respected<lb/>
"ambassador" of East Carolina<lb/>
and is representative of the fine jazz<lb/>
tradition in Greenville.<lb/>
The Jazz Ensemble has a good-<lb/>
natured self-assurance which is<lb/>
often lacking in a relatively young<lb/>
group (an average age of 20). Jazz<lb/>
for the sheer enjoyment of its per-<lb/>
formance only comes from skill and<lb/>
a well developed sense of propriety<lb/>
and good taste which makes you ?<lb/>
comfortable.<lb/>
Jazz, the music of the "common"<lb/>
man, is down-to-earth stuff. No<lb/>
music box melodies, mundane and<lb/>
.trite, but something that can really<lb/>
entice the ear. If you get into percus-<lb/>
sion, the ensemble has a terrific<lb/>
drummer. Keyboards and bass?<lb/>
They've got 'em, along with some of<lb/>
the mellowest 'bones, brassiest<lb/>
trumpets and smoothest sax work<lb/>
you've ever heard. Their perfor-<lb/>
mance is crisp and vibrant, without<lb/>
the "cadenzas" that can really put<lb/>
you out like a light.<lb/>
AH right, so maybe you don't like<lb/>
jazz. The performance is free and<lb/>
right in the middle of the great out-<lb/>
doors. What more could you want?<lb/>
If you haven't tried jazz, take a tip<lb/>
from John Phillip Sousa: people<lb/>
hear it through their feet instead of<lb/>
their brains<lb/>
?<lb/>
By MARK KEMP<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Parking on the ECU campus is a<lb/>
subject that never fails to appear as<lb/>
a principal issue from time to time,<lb/>
but it is an even bigger problem for<lb/>
the handicapped student.<lb/>
The handicapped students are<lb/>
assigned spaces out of necessity;<lb/>
they are not assigned for conve-<lb/>
nience.<lb/>
But these spaces are specially<lb/>
designed for their use.<lb/>
Most handicapped students drive<lb/>
vans which are also specially design-<lb/>
ed for them. The person usually gets<lb/>
in and out of the van through a side<lb/>
door. To facilitate this, the han-<lb/>
dicapped parking spaces are 12 feet,<lb/>
6 inches wide, giving them enough<lb/>
room to get their wheelchairs in and<lb/>
out with little trouble.<lb/>
This is why it is imperative that<lb/>
these spaces are used only by han-<lb/>
dicapped students. Anyone else us-<lb/>
ing these spaces will be towed if<lb/>
their vehicle does not have either a<lb/>
handicapped sticker or a special<lb/>
handicapped plate on the<lb/>
dashboard.<lb/>
The two most abused places on<lb/>
campus, according to C.C. Rowe,<lb/>
director of Handicapped Student<lb/>
Services, are Slay Dorm, where the<lb/>
handicapped men live, and<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Rowe<lb/>
said that "a person who is han-<lb/>
dicapped has to use the handicapped<lb/>
spaces. There's just no way that<lb/>
they can fit out of a regular space<lb/>
He also expressed a concern for<lb/>
the parking situation on campus and<lb/>
an understanding for those who<lb/>
abuse the regulations; however, he<lb/>
feels that it is essential that the han-<lb/>
dicapped spaces not be abused.<lb/>
Rowe went on to say that most<lb/>
handicapped students are hesitant to<lb/>
turn in students who park in their<lb/>
spaces because they too understand<lb/>
the problem.<lb/>
One handicapped student com-<lb/>
mented that the traffic department<lb/>
is discourteous about the situation<lb/>
sometimes. "Sometimes the Cam-<lb/>
pus Security has been as slack as to<lb/>
not come give the car a ticket he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Handicapped students are a large<lb/>
part of the student body. They also<lb/>
make up a very important program<lb/>
here, the rehabilitation of a part of<lb/>
our society who make worthwhile<lb/>
contributions.<lb/>
East Carolina University has the<lb/>
best handicapped program in the<lb/>
university system. Abuse of han-<lb/>
dicapped parking is an important<lb/>
issue that everyone should know<lb/>
about and have the courtesy to<lb/>
respect.<lb/>
Charles Boulevard<lb/>
Undergoes Clean-up<lb/>
By SNEHA<lb/>
The Student National En-<lb/>
vironmental Health Association at<lb/>
ECU has accepted clean-up respon-<lb/>
sibilities for Charles Boulevard bet-<lb/>
ween Tenth Street and 264 Bypass.<lb/>
In addition to conducting<lb/>
periodic litter pick-ups, the student<lb/>
group encourages other community<lb/>
organizations to join the new<lb/>
Adopt-A-Street program and par-<lb/>
ticipate in efforts to keep Greenville<lb/>
streets litter-free. When clean-up<lb/>
takes place, Public Works Depart-<lb/>
ment staff provide collection bags<lb/>
and truck transportation of refuse<lb/>
to the city landfill.<lb/>
Each month the Public Works<lb/>
Department reports streets with<lb/>
chronic litter problems to the Green-<lb/>
ville Beautification, Clean-up and<lb/>
Litter Control Committee.<lb/>
Mike Lainhart, president of ihe<lb/>
thirty member student group en-<lb/>
courages other student organiza-<lb/>
tions and fraternities to assist in<lb/>
keeping Greenville litter free b<lb/>
adopting a street.<lb/>
<lb/>
imf1- ?<lb/>
?? ? ? ? ? -? -tr? ?-??- ir-C ??<lb/>
:?- 4f ?C ir M " ?'?? Sm-m ??? -m -f -m<lb/>
W?'? lim?MWti<lb/>
mm<lb/>
i 9 "?'?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057259_0006"/><lb/>
THE FAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 3, 1980<lb/>
Spyro Gyra, Madness,<lb/>
Tom Paxton Reviewed<lb/>
Jazz Musician<lb/>
By Sanf ord<lb/>
Josephson<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
NEW YORK ?<lb/>
i?<lb/>
By<lb/>
GRAHAM CARLTON<lb/>
Madness ? One Step<lb/>
BeyondSire: Every<lb/>
musical genre has its<lb/>
own variation on the<lb/>
oldies act. Rock has<lb/>
Sha Na Na doing the<lb/>
50's, rockabilly has<lb/>
Robert Gordon spiking<lb/>
for Ike, jazz has Lou<lb/>
Stein with his tributes<lb/>
to Art Tatum, country<lb/>
has Jim Owen reviving<lb/>
Hank Williams, and on<lb/>
and on and on. The<lb/>
reason these acts fail in<lb/>
the long run, or in<lb/>
many cases in the short<lb/>
run, is that they are<lb/>
boring. After the initial<lb/>
novelty of seeing, say,<lb/>
an Elvis impersonator,<lb/>
wears off, you find<lb/>
yourself going back to<lb/>
the source. Of course,<lb/>
the source isn't always<lb/>
available, which ex-<lb/>
plains the popularity of<lb/>
Hal Holbrook's Mark<lb/>
Twain, James Whit-<lb/>
more's Harry Truman<lb/>
and other one-man<lb/>
shows which were the<lb/>
vogue a few seasons<lb/>
back. Music is another<lb/>
story: whether it means<lb/>
scouring a bargain bin,<lb/>
paying an inflated<lb/>
"collectors" price or<lb/>
taping off the radio,<lb/>
there is a chance to get<lb/>
to the source. We don't<lb/>
live in a vacuum and<lb/>
entertainment that<lb/>
smacks of "being good<lb/>
for you" just isn't all<lb/>
that entertaining. The<lb/>
performers mentioned<lb/>
at the start of this<lb/>
review would be better<lb/>
off playing at special<lb/>
interest festivals or<lb/>
libraries. While they do<lb/>
a good job of doing<lb/>
what they do, they<lb/>
don't make any effort<lb/>
to bring their acts into<lb/>
the present.<lb/>
All of this has been a<lb/>
roundabout way of giv-<lb/>
ing me the chance to<lb/>
climb up on my soap-<lb/>
box and start stumping<lb/>
for a group called<lb/>
Madness, whose recent-<lb/>
ly released debut LP,<lb/>
One Step Beyond,<lb/>
might just be rock's<lb/>
musical messiah this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
One of the most<lb/>
welcome moments in<lb/>
seventies' rock was pub<lb/>
rock, a spunky sub-<lb/>
genre that briefly<lb/>
flourished in 1974.<lb/>
vou've probably read<lb/>
enough about pub rock<lb/>
in the last year ? a year<lb/>
when all the prime<lb/>
movers of pub rock<lb/>
became the leaders of<lb/>
the more commercial<lb/>
side of new wave ? to<lb/>
save me the effort of<lb/>
ripping through the<lb/>
history of pub.<lb/>
here is stong enough to<lb/>
send people out looking<lb/>
for old Brinsley<lb/>
Schwarz and Ducks<lb/>
Deluxe albums.<lb/>
The album's<lb/>
strongest point is that<lb/>
it's chock full of the<lb/>
young, rebellious spirit<lb/>
that ruled rock before<lb/>
corporate rock moved<lb/>
in and strangeled<lb/>
rebellion to death. If<lb/>
you're ready to rock,<lb/>
you've been waiting for<lb/>
Madness.<lb/>
unchallenging and not<lb/>
too dimensional. Spyro<lb/>
Gyra touches both of<lb/>
these bases.<lb/>
To their credit,<lb/>
they've taken a great<lb/>
deal of the pretension<lb/>
out of fusion, making it<lb/>
a more desirable listen-<lb/>
ing experience. At the<lb/>
same time they've<lb/>
defanged this fusion<lb/>
animal, and come<lb/>
close, at times, to chur-<lb/>
ning out nothing more<lb/>
than dinner music.<lb/>
One Step Beyond<lb/>
captures enough of the<lb/>
history of pub to be<lb/>
summarily dismissed as<lb/>
pub rock, but as the ti-<lb/>
tle implies, the record<lb/>
certainly goes one step<lb/>
beyond. Mixed in with<lb/>
the pub spirit is a solid<lb/>
dose of 1980 vitality.<lb/>
The boys in this band<lb/>
have kept their ears<lb/>
open during the last six<lb/>
years and have manag-<lb/>
ed to incorporate the<lb/>
better elements of<lb/>
punk, power pop and<lb/>
new wave into their<lb/>
sound. Despite the new<lb/>
wave sty lings and<lb/>
graphics, the pub feel<lb/>
Tom Paxton ? Up &amp;<lb/>
UpMountain<lb/>
Railroad: It used to be<lb/>
fun looking forward to<lb/>
the next Tom Paxton<lb/>
album. Now it's kind<lb/>
of depressing when a<lb/>
Tom Paxton album<lb/>
shows up.<lb/>
Even since he willful-<lb/>
ly resigned himself to<lb/>
being a washed-up<lb/>
folkie (it must have<lb/>
been peer pressure; this<lb/>
record is produced by<lb/>
Bob Gibson who fills<lb/>
the bill of washed-up<lb/>
folkie nicely), the style<lb/>
and humor that made<lb/>
his work such a treat<lb/>
seem to have vanished.<lb/>
All plusses and<lb/>
minuses tallied, this is a<lb/>
good contemporary<lb/>
folk album but a poor<lb/>
Tom Paxton album.<lb/>
Liabilities aside, Cat-<lb/>
ching the Sun works<lb/>
well as an album. A<lb/>
slight but noticeable<lb/>
shift in the sound<lb/>
comes from the fact<lb/>
that Jay Beckinstein<lb/>
assumes more of the<lb/>
responsibility for the<lb/>
direction of the group.<lb/>
Listeners familiar with<lb/>
the band's first two<lb/>
albums will note that<lb/>
Beckinstein's music has<lb/>
a more aggressive edge<lb/>
than that of former co-<lb/>
leader Jeremy Wall,<lb/>
who has bowed out of<lb/>
the band's full-time ac-<lb/>
tivities to spend more<lb/>
time at home writing<lb/>
and producing.<lb/>
Many jazz musicians<lb/>
feel classical music is<lb/>
just a bunch of scales<lb/>
that are easily<lb/>
understood. And<lb/>
classical musicians and<lb/>
audiences think jazz is<lb/>
nothing but noise. All<lb/>
of these misconceptions<lb/>
are born of ig-<lb/>
norance<lb/>
George Shearing, the<lb/>
celebrated 60-year-old<lb/>
jazz pianist, would like<lb/>
to educate people about<lb/>
the virtues of both<lb/>
types of music. The<lb/>
best way to do that, he<lb/>
feels, "is to mix up<lb/>
classical and jazz, to<lb/>
draw from both sides<lb/>
and reach a maximum<lb/>
audience<lb/>
But not everyone<lb/>
agrees with him.<lb/>
Last November, for<lb/>
instance, the University<lb/>
of Wisconsin Sym-<lb/>
phony Orchestra's<lb/>
student-staffed direc-<lb/>
ting board decided<lb/>
against performing a<lb/>
jazz-flavored arrange-<lb/>
ment of Stravinsky's<lb/>
"Rite of Spring<lb/>
reconstructed by jazz<lb/>
musician and<lb/>
composer-arranger<lb/>
Don Sebesky.<lb/>
That incident is<lb/>
symptomatic of a larger<lb/>
controversy existing<lb/>
throughout the musical<lb/>
community ? not only<lb/>
the question of whether<lb/>
it is proper to tamper<lb/>
with the music of the<lb/>
masters, but also the<lb/>
entire question of com-<lb/>
bining elements of<lb/>
classical music and<lb/>
jazz.<lb/>
Shearing, who<lb/>
regularly appears with<lb/>
symphony orchestras,<lb/>
sees nothing wrong<lb/>
with revising the work<lb/>
of the classical masters<lb/>
as long as it's done in<lb/>
the right spirit.<lb/>
"1 took a theme<lb/>
from 'Scheherazade'<lb/>
(Rimsky-Korsakov)<lb/>
he points out, "and put<lb/>
it in 54 time instead of<lb/>
the 6 or 3 it's normally<lb/>
in. And I even used a<lb/>
kind of Floyd Cramer<lb/>
approach to it<lb/>
(Cramer, a country and<lb/>
western piano player, is<lb/>
credited with develop-<lb/>
ing the "Nashville<lb/>
Sound)<lb/>
Shearing's view of<lb/>
the Wisconsin students'<lb/>
decision is that "while<lb/>
it's dyed-in-the-wool<lb/>
sincere, I find it<lb/>
possibly lacking in<lb/>
humor. I see nothing<lb/>
wrong, for instance, in<lb/>
taking 'Peter and the<lb/>
Wolf (Prokofiev),<lb/>
making a jazz arrange-<lb/>
ment of it and calling it<lb/>
'Peter Was a Wolf<lb/>
Music is music is<lb/>
music<lb/>
The classical<lb/>
masters. Shearing feels,<lb/>
would have approved<lb/>
of such dabbling.<lb/>
"There's a jazz feeling<lb/>
in Stravinsky he<lb/>
points out. "In<lb/>
Hindemith, certainly<lb/>
there's jazz.<lb/>
"If we go back far<lb/>
enough he continues.<lb/>
"we find that<lb/>
Beethoven and Mozart<lb/>
were once considered<lb/>
too far out ? they were<lb/>
looking ahead to what<lb/>
would be. but they were<lb/>
being booed<lb/>
And Bach: "Bach<lb/>
wrote at least three<lb/>
separate versions of the<lb/>
first complete book of<lb/>
the 48 preludes and<lb/>
fugues. While the rules<lb/>
governing the style<lb/>
were maintained, there<lb/>
were three different<lb/>
versions.<lb/>
"His mind was not<lb/>
totally settled on a par-<lb/>
ticular order of nota-<lb/>
tion, but because of his<lb/>
creativity and because<lb/>
the composers of those<lb/>
days left great ads of<lb/>
score to the imagina-<lb/>
tion of the performer,<lb/>
there was more room<lb/>
for personal creativiis.<lb/>
"1 think many of<lb/>
these people (Bach.<lb/>
Beethoven, Mozart)<lb/>
would be wonderful<lb/>
jazz musicians if the<lb/>
were alive ioda So:<lb/>
the least of whom is<lb/>
Bach. He got thrown<lb/>
out of a few churches<lb/>
for being harmonicallv<lb/>
too radical. He had tw<lb/>
wives and 20 children<lb/>
How much more of a<lb/>
swinger can you be?'<lb/>
Shearing, who has<lb/>
been blind since birth.<lb/>
has alwavs displayed a<lb/>
remarkable versatility<lb/>
in his music. 1 ot a<lb/>
great portion of his<lb/>
career he led a quintet,<lb/>
achieving distinction<lb/>
and widespread appeal<lb/>
in the I950s with<lb/>
tunes as "September in<lb/>
the Rain<lb/>
Picardy and his own<lb/>
er famous comp<lb/>
lion, "I ullab<lb/>
Birdland<lb/>
Spyro Gyra ? Cat-<lb/>
ching (he SunMCA:<lb/>
The best and worst<lb/>
thing you can say about<lb/>
Spyro Gyra is that they<lb/>
are pleasant. On the<lb/>
positive side, pleasant<lb/>
implies that the music is<lb/>
easy to take and nice to<lb/>
listen to. On the<lb/>
negative side, it sug-<lb/>
gests that the music is<lb/>
The Day Student representative<lb/>
position on the Media Board is<lb/>
now open and the Media Board is<lb/>
accepting applications for this<lb/>
position. Interested persons<lb/>
should apply in The East<lb/>
Carolinian office from 8 am til<lb/>
5 pm Monday - Friday. Deadline<lb/>
for applying is April 10,1980<lb/>
Art and Camera<lb/>
526 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
Down Town<lb/>
hie io.<lb/>
A Fs.H 6croice Lauy,<lb/>
 NEKx)<lb/>
X$<lb/>
?arpctet Uac ojt&amp; Color I t<lb/>
- f(of? Qna Fo? 5ecoU<lb/>
tf$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$!<lb/>
KODACOLOR<lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
yL ft EXPOSURE J0 0<lb/>
? jf ROLL ONLYj)O.LO<lb/>
" $41<lb/>
one uJ8tE S2 o.  ?,<lb/>
DfiAfc Ui ?m6 (Looped - i<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
No Foreign<lb/>
Film<lb/>
20<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL. ONLY<lb/>
? KODACOLOR<lb/>
 Developed and Printed<lb/>
EXPOSURE fcCi H<lb/>
ROLL. ONLYP?-J?-<lb/>
No Foreign EXPOSURE<lb/>
F,im ROLL. ONLY<lb/>
$7.97<lb/>
itt$$$$$$$$gj??$$$$$$$$$j<lb/>
FILM DEVaOPING<lb/>
EXPOSURE jfc 1 Q2<lb/>
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20<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
36 EXPOSURE JfcQ CJ<lb/>
KODACHROME ?PJ?J<lb/>
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PROCESSING. ONLY<lb/>
X A. A J. i A illXAlXXXAAi<lb/>
'I i:t:v .tHHHHHHn;<lb/>
rvrvrvvvv<lb/>
LOW, LOW PRICES ON<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
PROCESSING<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING. ONLY<lb/>
SUPER ? AND 8TANUAI r. ?? wtflES<lb/>
$2.11<lb/>
LIU TED OFFER<lb/>
Classic Coordinates For<lb/>
THE GOLDEN GULL<lb/>
Greenville - 610 Arlington B'vd.<lb/>
Morehead City - Morehead Plaza<lb/>
at<lb/>
Don't <lb/>
get pregnant.<lb/>
Use Contra-Foam.<lb/>
I wont risk damaging my body<lb/>
with the Pill or the IUO. I ve<lb/>
discovered Contra-Foam.<lb/>
WITH CONTRA-FOAM S<lb/>
PATENTED SINGLE STEP<lb/>
ATTACHED APPLICATOR THERE S:<lb/>
? NO WA!TING<lb/>
? NO FUMBLING<lb/>
? NO MESS<lb/>
IT S THAT SIMPLE TO<lb/>
PREVENT PREGNANCY.<lb/>
CONTRA-FOAM CONTAINS<lb/>
APPROXIMATELY 30<lb/>
APPLICATIONS BUT ITS<lb/>
SMALL ENOUGH TO FIT INTO<lb/>
YOUR POCKET OR PURSE.<lb/>
CONTRA-FOAM IS AVAILABLE<lb/>
WITHOUT PRESCRIPTION AT<lb/>
LOCAL STORES<lb/>
$<lb/>
.1 euM man Ae ?<lb/>
He face ?a ? iw? coup?-<lb/>
? . ? ?<lb/>
Ml - -??? -<lb/>
??? se?3<lb/>
? "<lb/>
-  -<lb/>
I - - -<lb/>
-<lb/>
Coupon Expires June 30 1980 As your doaicr for a rmin chock, if ho cannot supply you now. ?<lb/>
Mardecr,<lb/>
"fckj<lb/>
-W<lb/>
av<lb/>
a<lb/>
V?'?-<lb/>
Take two portions of tender, sliced ham and two helpings of tasty,<lb/>
mellow cheese, melt them together on a toasted sesame seed bun,<lb/>
and you Ve got Hardees newest example of the test Eatin' All<lb/>
Around?. Its like two sandwiches in one!<lb/>
ITS HAM AND<lb/>
AND HAM AND<lb/>
3 Ik<lb/>
F<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057259_0007"/><lb/>
THF EASTCAROl IMS<lb/>
Students Interviewed Claim Arrests Unfair<lb/>
AF'KII J, 1980<lb/>
( oittinued from Page 5<lb/>
and the S Do you think that tins<lb/>
is representative of student opinion?<lb/>
Well, I don't know if I can<lb/>
- foi a majorit of the students,<lb/>
but the students living in the dorms<lb/>
that was 1 mysell was ap-<lb/>
iched bv this undercovei shi<lb/>
foi the purpose of buying<lb/>
but 1 re! used him because I<lb/>
ai he might be a narcotics<lb/>
 a while, though, he<lb/>
nod to gain acceptance from<lb/>
'udents on campus.<lb/>
i he was from Uantic<lb/>
i thai he could sell drugs<lb/>
price in tlantic Beach<lb/>
hu a hundred 'hides tot<lb/>
235 h saying he could sell them<lb/>
v i 50 apiece in Atlantic Beach.<lb/>
around and smoke a joint<lb/>
. aA I've heard from people<lb/>
' ?i hi cocaine from that<lb/>
n And tool a line or two<lb/>
em I saw him smoke a<lb/>
clt.<lb/>
1 he weird thing, though, was that<lb/>
he weighed a quarter ounce of co-<lb/>
caine out with hand scales, whereas<lb/>
most coke dealers would use triple<lb/>
beam scales. He had this front of<lb/>
being extra quiet, but he was persis-<lb/>
tent. c come by and he'd slap<lb/>
mone in your face. I ike: "Hey, 1<lb/>
got bucks, can you get me some<lb/>
drugs?"<lb/>
The unfortunate part is that<lb/>
students who were just small-time,<lb/>
lust people doing favors, were<lb/>
busted I ike the guy would come by<lb/>
and ask people for pot and someone<lb/>
would say, "Yeah, I've got a friend<lb/>
down the hall. I'll go get some<lb/>
I'm not gonna name anybody,<lb/>
but 1 know two or three people who<lb/>
were involved in this bust and they<lb/>
were like that just doing favors<lb/>
foi this guy. 1 hey didn't even deal<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
EC: Do you feel that this bust was<lb/>
senseless?<lb/>
Student: On the whole it was pretty<lb/>
Fantasy To Perform<lb/>
fantasy, last<lb/>
( arolina's Signing<lb/>
oup. will be pet form-<lb/>
H . el ot on the<lb/>
1<lb/>
to 2:45<lb/>
la "1 he pro<lb/>
will be the inter<lb/>
ai ion<lb/>
program for hearing language club member,<lb/>
impaired students, ex- at the door on perfor-<lb/>
plaincd. ma nee night, or<lb/>
The group will also through the Central<lb/>
perform in Hendrix Ticket Office.<lb/>
I heater next I uesda<lb/>
:30 p.m. rickets Other members of<lb/>
popular will be $2 for adults Fantas) are: Jim<lb/>
sign and Si for students. Haslup, Bob Coltrane,<lb/>
angua; Mike rickets max be obtain- Shannon Ciilley and<lb/>
rnest, director ot the ed from an sign Kath Beet ham<lb/>
RESUME SPECIAL<lb/>
Package of 25 - $11.95<lb/>
Package of 50 - $15.50<lb/>
Package consists of:<lb/>
Typing (1 8x11 page)Printing<lb/>
(? (Ynnr choice of color on our<lb/>
r!vY' finest PaPer) Matching Second<lb/>
L<lb/>
COPY<lb/>
CENTER qfgrefnviuf SheetsEnvelopes<lb/>
offer valid from<lb/>
412 EVANS STREET<lb/>
March 27- May 8<lb/>
uitiitiei i x B<lb/>
where the opportunity is<lb/>
n ijl tiib; a imkttimi;<lb/>
(iOns i urrently nvaliable as<lb/>
 OOEiS<lb/>
VA1TKIISWA1THKSHS<lb/>
GREA T PA Y! GREA T BENEFITS<lb/>
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For Applications<lb/>
See Ken Wheeler<lb/>
in Financial Aid<lb/>
in If til H ll?kslaurHiil<lb/>
weauumi<lb/>
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Shop Monday thru Saturday<lb/>
10AM.To9PM.<lb/>
FAMOUS LABELS FOR LESS<lb/>
senseless. I'm completely against the<lb/>
methods used in this travesty, this<lb/>
terrible thing that has happened.<lb/>
EC: How do you think justice<lb/>
would best be served in this in-<lb/>
stance; should people protest<lb/>
against the present drug laws or do<lb/>
you think that what has happened is<lb/>
beyond the influence of" students?<lb/>
Student: I've got a rather unusual<lb/>
view of what should be legalized and<lb/>
what shouldn't be. I've used a lot of<lb/>
drugs myself at one time or another<lb/>
although I've tapered down recent-<lb/>
ly. I advocate the legalization of<lb/>
marijuana to the extent that beer<lb/>
and liquor are legal. It should be<lb/>
controlled so that minors wouldn't<lb/>
have the easy access to it that they<lb/>
have today. I can see cocaine in<lb/>
moderate doses as a good potential<lb/>
recreation drug, since cocaine isn't<lb/>
highly physically addictive. Most<lb/>
drugs, Qaaludes and amphetamines<lb/>
included, are okay within limits.<lb/>
Thcv should be controlled because<lb/>
of their high potential for abuse.<lb/>
But, look at caffeine and<lb/>
nicotine. They're legal and look<lb/>
how many people are addicted to<lb/>
them. I know people that have to<lb/>
have a cup of coffee when they uet<lb/>
up in the morning or else they go<lb/>
nuts. And people who can't make it<lb/>
through the day without a cigarette.<lb/>
In the cases of busts for mari-<lb/>
juana and cocaine I don't believe<lb/>
that jail terms are warranted, since<lb/>
they compare favorably with even<lb/>
cigarettes and coffee for addiction<lb/>
potential. You can't get addicted to<lb/>
pot and, for cocaine, dependency is<lb/>
pretty much psychological.<lb/>
EC: Do you agree with the senti-<lb/>
ment expressed in a recent letter to<lb/>
The Last C arolinian that called for a<lb/>
spring smoke-in to be held on the<lb/>
student mall to protest the busts'?<lb/>
Student: I'd be delighted to see a<lb/>
spring smoke-in, but I foresee that<lb/>
the Greenville Police would move in<lb/>
and bust a lot of people. It wouldn't<lb/>
serve the purpose intended because<lb/>
the atmosphere in Greenville is<lb/>
wrong for it, as it is right now. I can<lb/>
envision the possibility that if a peti-<lb/>
tion were circulated among the<lb/>
students in protest of these actions<lb/>
then possibly it would have some<lb/>
impact on the city officials. 1 do not<lb/>
foresee that any mass demonstra-<lb/>
tion could take place because college<lb/>
students are lazy.<lb/>
There are students who use mari-<lb/>
juana who are not strongly opposed<lb/>
to what happened. They think it<lb/>
couldn't happen to them.<lb/>
EC: Do you think a mass marijuana<lb/>
demonstration would not meet with<lb/>
the same lenient attitudes as the<lb/>
Anti-Iran demonstration held<lb/>
earlier this year?<lb/>
Student: That's true. 1 was in that<lb/>
rally and I was utterly amazed at it.<lb/>
But a smoke-in on the I C I campus<lb/>
would be a sitting duck for the<lb/>
police. Ihev would just hassle peo-<lb/>
ple there, foi some small thing. But<lb/>
all the people who are occasional<lb/>
users and not necessarily strong ad-<lb/>
vocates lor legalization would not<lb/>
come. I don't believe thai it would<lb/>
draw a large crowd. Because, like 1<lb/>
said before, college students are<lb/>
notoriously lazv as everyone knows<lb/>
e.t week: an interview with<lb/>
the students lutuullv busied.<lb/>
HEAPING tiny<lb/>
PORTIONS. price<lb/>
EASTER FEATURE<lb/>
Sunday, April 6<lb/>
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Roast Turkey with cornbread dressing or Baked<lb/>
Ham, salad with dressing, bread with butter, two<lb/>
vegetables, dessert, tea or coffee.<lb/>
Come home to eat at S&amp;S ? we're located in the<lb/>
Carolina East Mall in Greenville, at the intersection of<lb/>
West Haven Road (U.S. 264 Bypass) and Hwy. 11. Plenty<lb/>
of free parking too.<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Serving continuously daily<lb/>
from 11 a.m. till 8 p.m.<lb/>
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Records and<lb/>
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COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
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Balls<lb/>
1<lb/>
Off<lb/>
MfR<lb/>
SUG<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
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SOLD<lb/>
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Little Debbie Snack Cakes &amp; Archway Cookies<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
Chips, Snacks &amp; Bagged Nuts<lb/>
POUCH PACK -p<lb/>
Sauces &amp; Gravy Mixes m I H fl <lb/>
"CPPERIOGE FARMS V I Jfg0<lb/>
Bagged Cookies &amp; Snacks <lb/>
5-Oz<lb/>
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REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
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8-Oz. Twin Pack<lb/>
Off MANUFACTURERS<lb/>
SUGGESTED RETAIL<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised Hems Is required to be readily available for<lb/>
sale In each Kroger Sav-on Stora except as specifically noted in this<lb/>
ad. H we do run out of an advertised Item, we will offer you your choice<lb/>
of a comparable Ham. when available, reflecting the same savings or a<lb/>
ralnchack which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the<lb/>
advertised price within 30 days.<lb/>
59<lb/>
Copyright 1980<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Raearved<lb/>
Nona soM to Dealers or Wholesalers<lb/>
on<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GEN<lb/>
MDSE. STORES<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
OPfN SUNOA<lb/>
9AM  9 P M<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057259_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
APRIL 3. 1980 Page 8<lb/>
Pirates Lose 10-9,<lb/>
Now Host UNC<lb/>
ECU Baseball Action<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina baseball team<lb/>
saw an eight game winning streak<lb/>
brought to an end yesterday in a<lb/>
10-9 loss to Fairfield.<lb/>
The Pirates basically did it to<lb/>
themselves as costly fielding errors<lb/>
in the seventh inning assured the<lb/>
defeat.<lb/>
Down 6-5 going into the seventh,<lb/>
the Pirates quickly saw Fairfield<lb/>
load the bases. Consecutive errors<lb/>
by ECU third baseman Todd<lb/>
Hendley and shortstop Kelly<lb/>
Robinette were the makings for a<lb/>
four-run inning for the visitors.<lb/>
The Pirates battled back with<lb/>
four runs in the bottom of the<lb/>
seventh to cut the lead to run but<lb/>
stranded leftfielder Butch Davis,<lb/>
one of 11 stranded Pirate runners on<lb/>
the day, on second base in the ninth<lb/>
and fell 10-9.<lb/>
"We did not seem to have the en-<lb/>
thusiasm today that we've had late-<lb/>
ly said ECU assistant coach Gary<lb/>
Overton after his team fell to 13-3<lb/>
on the season. "We were beaten by<lb/>
a real fine ballclub, though<lb/>
A probable problem for the<lb/>
Pirates was thoughts of tonight's<lb/>
encounter with arch-rival North<lb/>
Carolina at Harrington Field. "I<lb/>
don't think we took Fairfield for<lb/>
granted or anything said Overton.<lb/>
"We simply had a breakdown on<lb/>
defense. This was a disappoint-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
The Pirates were impressive at the<lb/>
plate, though, as the nine runs and<lb/>
14 hits that were banged out are no<lb/>
shabby figures.<lb/>
"We're always pleased when we<lb/>
hit the ball this well claimed Over-<lb/>
ton. "We just couldn't back it up<lb/>
on defense<lb/>
The Pirates upcoming home mat-<lb/>
chup with the Tar Heels is one that<lb/>
always excites ECU players and fans<lb/>
alike.<lb/>
"Our goal, of course, is to get an<lb/>
NCAA bid said the ECU assis-<lb/>
tant. "As far as a bid is concerned<lb/>
this game is no more important than<lb/>
any other.<lb/>
"But he continued, "in the eyes<lb/>
of the people concerned?our fans,<lb/>
the public and outsiders?this is a<lb/>
very big game because North<lb/>
Carolina is such a rival. It seems to<lb/>
do a lot for everyone involved with<lb/>
the school when an East Carolina<lb/>
team can beat North Carolina<lb/>
The Heels are surely rivals to the<lb/>
ECU players and, says Overton,<lb/>
yesterday's loss to Fairfield should<lb/>
work in the Pirates favor.<lb/>
"1 sensed a lot of dejection after<lb/>
the game he said. "The plaers<lb/>
seem to want to win the game even<lb/>
more now that we've lost this one<lb/>
The Pirates will start Bill Wilder<lb/>
as pitcher against the Heels. His<lb/>
hands will be full as the Heels are<lb/>
blessed with an explosive offense.<lb/>
"Offensively, they're a lot like<lb/>
us explained Overton. "They na<lb/>
ing their bats well. Thev bat lor<lb/>
both average and power. Thev have<lb/>
a well-balanced attack?with hitting<lb/>
strength from both the left and right<lb/>
sides of the plate<lb/>
The Heels, 22-10 going into<lb/>
Wednesday night's game with N.C.<lb/>
State, are blessed with better than<lb/>
average speed. Combine that with<lb/>
their excellence with the bat and<lb/>
Overton says you have "what you<lb/>
might call an awesome offense<lb/>
On the mound the Heels are no<lb/>
slouches either as a super recruiting<lb/>
year more than made up tor the<lb/>
many losses the mound corps suf-<lb/>
fered last season.<lb/>
Gametime at Harrington field is<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Boxing's Heavyweight Division In Turmoil<lb/>
The boxing world received a real<lb/>
shock Monday evening when Mike<lb/>
Weaver struck from seemingly<lb/>
nowhere in the 15th round to<lb/>
knockout John Tate and claim the<lb/>
WBA heavy weight championship.<lb/>
The result of the bout was<lb/>
another in a series of events that<lb/>
proves show the condition of the<lb/>
once-powerful heavyweight divi-<lb/>
sion. Once the division housed pro-<lb/>
ud champions such as Joe Louis,<lb/>
Joe Frazier, Muhammed Ali and<lb/>
George Foreman.<lb/>
Today's champions, Weaver and<lb/>
WBC title holder Larry Holmes, do<lb/>
not compare with their<lb/>
predecessors, at least not at this<lb/>
juncture.<lb/>
Tate, considered by some to be<lb/>
the best of today's crop, was put flat<lb/>
on his face by a fighter who has lost<lb/>
an incredible nine pro bouts.<lb/>
Weaver, though, must receive due<lb/>
credit. His effort in the final round<lb/>
of Monday night's bout was superb.<lb/>
Having only one chance?a<lb/>
knockout?to win, the stockily-built<lb/>
boxer came through with a crusing<lb/>
blow that kept his opponent on the<lb/>
canvas for several minutes.<lb/>
Holmes, on the other hand, easily<lb/>
did away with Leroy Jones on the<lb/>
same night to continue his hold on<lb/>
half of the world championship.<lb/>
The talkative Holmes is no doubt<lb/>
the best in the division today. The<lb/>
question is, does he realistically<lb/>
compare with the former cham-<lb/>
pions?<lb/>
The answer is no?at least for<lb/>
now. He does have enormous<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
potential?but so did a guy named<lb/>
Leon Spinks just a few moons ago.<lb/>
Clear evidence of the lack of<lb/>
power, and interest, in the<lb/>
heavyweight division is the luring of<lb/>
the incomparable Ali back into the<lb/>
ring. Promoters have offered him<lb/>
in excess of $7 million to come out<lb/>
of retirement to challenge one of the<lb/>
present champions.<lb/>
Ali has agreed to do so. This<lb/>
move may be foolish in the sight of<lb/>
some but the idea of making that<lb/>
sort of cash would be appealing to<lb/>
any human.<lb/>
The former champion had work-<lb/>
ed out a contract to fight Tate for<lb/>
the title sometime in June. That<lb/>
idea is now long gone, thanks to<lb/>
Weaver. The word now is that Ali<lb/>
could arrange a bout with Weaver at<lb/>
about the same time he had planned<lb/>
to challenge Tate.<lb/>
There are those, though, that<lb/>
make a mockery of Weaver's<lb/>
holding of the title. They claim Ali<lb/>
must fight Holmes if he is to come<lb/>
out of the whole deal looking half<lb/>
decent.<lb/>
The whole idea of Ali returning is<lb/>
insane. The man does not have the<lb/>
tools that once made him the most<lb/>
powerful boxing machine of all<lb/>
time. They, for the most part, have<lb/>
been gone since his fight in Manila<lb/>
with Joe Frazier.<lb/>
In fact, Ali weighed nearly 300<lb/>
pounds when talk of his return<lb/>
began. This meant that he would<lb/>
face a near-impossible feat to ready<lb/>
himself for a championship bout at<lb/>
the ripe age of 38.<lb/>
So why the return? The name<lb/>
"Ali" will draw multitudes to the<lb/>
fight. His comeback attempt would<lb/>
no doubt gross more money, and in-<lb/>
terest, than probably any fight in<lb/>
history.<lb/>
The possibility of "The Greatest"<lb/>
trying for an unprecedented fourth<lb/>
taking of the title was just what the<lb/>
promoters needed to drum up sup-<lb/>
port for what has been discussed<lb/>
earlier?the lack of interest, due to a<lb/>
lack of quality, in the heavyweight<lb/>
division.<lb/>
Have the heavyweights ruined<lb/>
their reign as the most followed and<lb/>
exciting division in boxing. The<lb/>
answer is no, mainly because of<lb/>
several youngsters that should move<lb/>
into the limelight in the next several<lb/>
years.<lb/>
First and foremost among these is<lb/>
21-year old Greg Page of Louisville.<lb/>
Ky. Page is compared, in size, style<lb/>
and personality with Ali.<lb/>
Page, indeed, has all the potential<lb/>
in the world. Quick afoot and with<lb/>
his hands, this man could dominate<lb/>
the ranks once he gets a little ex-<lb/>
perience. Be on the lookout.<lb/>
Page and others like him<lb/>
shouldn't wait too long, though.<lb/>
The heavyweight division is stoop-<lb/>
ing to new lows. A saviour must<lb/>
surface, or else.<lb/>
At ACC Saturday<lb/>
Tennis Team Wins<lb/>
i ? ?<lb/>
-? ?vr<lb/>
Photo by JILL ADAAAS<lb/>
Kenny Love<lb/>
By ALEX<lb/>
CUNNINGHAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU men's ten-<lb/>
nis team set back a<lb/>
tough Edinboro State<lb/>
team, 7-2, Tuesday<lb/>
night at the Minges<lb/>
courts. Pirate Coach<lb/>
Jon Rose arranged the<lb/>
match just recently in<lb/>
his efforts to give the<lb/>
Pirates as much com-<lb/>
petition as possible.<lb/>
The competition almost<lb/>
proved to be too tough,<lb/>
with the Pirates leading<lb/>
only 4-2 after the<lb/>
singles.<lb/>
In many tennis mat-<lb/>
ches it comes down to<lb/>
the doubles to deter-<lb/>
mine the winner. ECU<lb/>
had to do just that in<lb/>
relying on its ex-<lb/>
perience and talent in<lb/>
order to sweep through<lb/>
the doubles and close<lb/>
out the match.<lb/>
"We had our hands<lb/>
full with this team<lb/>
Coach Rose com-<lb/>
mented. "It was a good<lb/>
win. The guys are<lb/>
beginning" to play<lb/>
tough, now<lb/>
At the number one<lb/>
singles position Henry<lb/>
Hostetler was knocked<lb/>
off by Jeff Mullhollein<lb/>
6-4, 6-1, while number<lb/>
two Kenny Love came<lb/>
back strong to defeat<lb/>
Jim Abraham 2-6, 7-5,<lb/>
6-3. Keith Zengle was<lb/>
edged by Rub Murphy<lb/>
7-5, 6-4; Ted Lepper<lb/>
got past Alan Staub<lb/>
7-5, 6-3; Mark Byrd<lb/>
crushed Ric Abegg 6-1,<lb/>
6-3; and Barry Parker<lb/>
turned back Steve<lb/>
Belknap 6-3, 6-4.<lb/>
The Pirates stand 3-3<lb/>
on the season and will<lb/>
be trying to increase the<lb/>
win column today with<lb/>
a rematch against the<lb/>
defending NAIA Na-<lb/>
tional Champions,<lb/>
Atlantic Christian Col-<lb/>
lege. The Pirates lost<lb/>
5-1 to ACC in the first<lb/>
match. The players feel<lb/>
confident they are go-<lb/>
ing to win at Atlantic<lb/>
Christian.<lb/>
Photo Oy JILL ADAMS<lb/>
Henry Hostetler<lb/>
Carlyle A Proud Pirate<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
"When I go on the I'm playing<lb/>
for East Carolina University. When<lb/>
I'm in the purple and gold I can<lb/>
hold my head up because I'm pro-<lb/>
ud<lb/>
This statement could well be<lb/>
rephrased to be a military recruiting<lb/>
advertisement, but the enthusiasm<lb/>
displayed belongs to senior pitcher<lb/>
Mary Bryan Carlyle of the Lady<lb/>
Pirate softball squad.<lb/>
"From the time I came here, I've<lb/>
worked hard to help any sport here<lb/>
in any way I can states Carlyle.<lb/>
"I've been here in Greenville for the<lb/>
past six years and I've seen a lot of<lb/>
changes in the programs.<lb/>
"Finally women are looking at it<lb/>
as 'I am an athlete and I can com-<lb/>
pete as well as anyone If the<lb/>
women here want more money, then<lb/>
they are going to have to get off<lb/>
their butts and participate. It's that<lb/>
simple she sternly proposes. "It's<lb/>
the student athlete that has to do it<lb/>
all<lb/>
The 5-5 Kinston native bubbles<lb/>
with enthusiasm at the mention of<lb/>
the 1980 softball season, expressing<lb/>
confidance in herself and especially<lb/>
her teammates.<lb/>
"I feel like this team feels really<lb/>
good about themselves she says.<lb/>
"1 think we've finally put things<lb/>
together and we're ready to win.<lb/>
We're motivated; all our practices<lb/>
have been intense. We're young, but<lb/>
we've-got a lot of enthusiasm<lb/>
With five starters among the<lb/>
seven freshmen on the squad and<lb/>
only three seniors out of a roster of<lb/>
19, Carlyle's experience and leader-<lb/>
ship on and off the field has been a<lb/>
valuable asset to third-year coach<lb/>
Alita Dillon.<lb/>
"She knows how .to talk to the<lb/>
players to get them motivated ex-<lb/>
plains Dillon. "Sometimes when we<lb/>
huddle I just let her talk because she<lb/>
knows the game as well as any<lb/>
member of the team<lb/>
The addition of1 the incoming<lb/>
freshmen and transfers forced<lb/>
several starters from the 1979 unit<lb/>
into the unfamiliar role of reserves.<lb/>
"I think at this point this team<lb/>
should realize that the best 10<lb/>
should play explains Carlyle.<lb/>
"We all know that any second team<lb/>
player could come on and do the job<lb/>
as well as the person on the field.<lb/>
We are strong two deep at every<lb/>
position.<lb/>
"Fthink right now we're winning<lb/>
because we're better than other<lb/>
teams, but we're going to be even<lb/>
better. I know by state tournament<lb/>
time Mrs. Dillon will have the best<lb/>
10 playing<lb/>
Along with five of her East<lb/>
Caorlina teammates Carlyle com-<lb/>
petes in the summer with Great Gas<lb/>
Gulf, a women's industrial league<lb/>
team which placed fourth last sum-<lb/>
mer in the United States Slo-Pitch<lb/>
Softball Association World Tourna-<lb/>
ment in Michigan.<lb/>
"The unity of the Great Gas<lb/>
players has reflected on the other<lb/>
players offers Carlyle. "A team<lb/>
with this much talent can't afford<lb/>
inner conflict. By working together<lb/>
so much, we know basically what to<lb/>
expect from each other; what we are<lb/>
capable of doing.<lb/>
"That means a lot when it comes<lb/>
down to a game situation when you<lb/>
really need to anticipate what each<lb/>
player is going to do under certain<lb/>
situations.<lb/>
Carlyle readily conceeds the dif-<lb/>
ficulty of competing on a financial<lb/>
basis with in-state rival UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill and N.C. State, but<lb/>
refuses to surrender without a fight.<lb/>
"If we can't compete with State<lb/>
and Carolina on scholarships, then<lb/>
we can take as much as we can from<lb/>
.them on the field through deter-<lb/>
mination and practice she says.<lb/>
"I'm confidant, but not over-<lb/>
confidant that we're going to have a<lb/>
winning season<lb/>
A winner is the only way to<lb/>
classify Carlyle, as she boasts an 8-2<lb/>
record with nearly half of the slate<lb/>
remaining in her final year in the<lb/>
purple an4 gold.<lb/>
Mary Bryan Carlyle<lb/>
ByJI<lb/>
As<lb/>
Th<lb/>
ball<lb/>
rival<lb/>
Nortl<lb/>
Chapj<lb/>
and<lb/>
an<lb/>
retalij<lb/>
gamej<lb/>
drubl<lb/>
Heel<lb/>
Thl<lb/>
ed th<lb/>
innii<lb/>
with<lb/>
Moo<lb/>
RBI<lb/>
Shm<lb/>
T<lb/>
often<lb/>
the<lb/>
Heel<lb/>
strer<lb/>
run-<lb/>
thre<lb/>
C<lb/>
the<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Sapj<lb/>
fieli<lb/>
Foj<lb/>
plaj<lb/>
Foj<lb/>
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Mo<lb/>
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sini<lb/>
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, ??? ?? ?m? - ??-?<lb/>
Sir inimwi -y ????<lb/>
.mmtmmmi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057259_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 3, 1980<lb/>
Lady Bucs Lose<lb/>
8-0 To Tar Heels<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports F.ditor<lb/>
The Lady Pirate soft-<lb/>
ball team traveled to<lb/>
rival University of<lb/>
North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill Tuesday<lb/>
and were greated with<lb/>
an 8-0 loss, but<lb/>
retaliated in the second<lb/>
game with an 11-3<lb/>
drubbing of the Tar<lb/>
Heels.<lb/>
The Tar Heels open-<lb/>
ed their half of the first<lb/>
inring of the opener<lb/>
with a double by M.<lb/>
Moore followed by an<lb/>
RBI ,ingle by Mary<lb/>
Shriver.<lb/>
The Pirates stuttered<lb/>
offensively throughout<lb/>
the contest, but the<lb/>
Heels exhibited bat<lb/>
strength with four more<lb/>
runs in the second and<lb/>
three in the fifth.<lb/>
C. Ford singled in<lb/>
the second and advanc-<lb/>
ed to third when K.<lb/>
Sapp reached base on a<lb/>
fielders choice. K.<lb/>
Fogleman's single<lb/>
plated Ford and<lb/>
Fogleman and Sapp<lb/>
each scored on a base<lb/>
knock by L. Perry.<lb/>
Moore drove in Perry-<lb/>
minutes later on yet<lb/>
another Tar Heel<lb/>
single.<lb/>
Virtually the same<lb/>
UNC combination<lb/>
stung the Pirates again<lb/>
in the fifth as Perry-<lb/>
reached on an error,<lb/>
followed by a single by-<lb/>
Moore. Shriver capped<lb/>
the Heels' scoring bar-<lb/>
rage with a three-run<lb/>
blast over the ab-<lb/>
breviated left-center<lb/>
field wall.<lb/>
Freshman outfielder<lb/>
Mitzi Davis pounded<lb/>
out a pair of hits in<lb/>
three trips to the plate<lb/>
to lead East Carolina<lb/>
batters.<lb/>
"They jumped on us<lb/>
early and we never got<lb/>
together offensively in<lb/>
the first game noted<lb/>
ECU coach Alita<lb/>
Dillon. "They were get-<lb/>
ting base hits and scor-<lb/>
ing runs<lb/>
The Pirates turned<lb/>
the table in the second<lb/>
contest and claimed<lb/>
their ninth victory in<lb/>
eleven outings.<lb/>
ECU quickly sustain-<lb/>
ed two outs in the<lb/>
visitors' half of the<lb/>
first, but Davis came<lb/>
through with a clutch<lb/>
single and freshman<lb/>
Cynthia Shepard legged<lb/>
out a long drive to<lb/>
right-center for a two-<lb/>
run homer.<lb/>
The Pirates struck<lb/>
again in the second as<lb/>
junior shortstop Mary<lb/>
Powell sliced a single<lb/>
and winning pitcher<lb/>
Mary Bryan Carlyle<lb/>
drove her home with a<lb/>
base rap. ,<lb/>
Freshman catcher<lb/>
Fran Hooks led off the<lb/>
third with a double to<lb/>
set the stage for Davis<lb/>
to drill the ball deep to<lb/>
right for the second<lb/>
Pirate homer of the<lb/>
day. With two out,<lb/>
third sacker Cindy<lb/>
Meekins singled, ad-<lb/>
vanced on an error on a<lb/>
Ginger Rothermel shot<lb/>
and scored on a single<lb/>
by Powell.<lb/>
In the<lb/>
Yvonne<lb/>
fourth,<lb/>
"Flea"<lb/>
Williams singled and<lb/>
again Davis came<lb/>
through with an heroic<lb/>
single to plate the Lady<lb/>
Pirate's seventh run of<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
The Heels finally got<lb/>
untracked offensively<lb/>
in the fifth as pinch hit-<lb/>
ter Grace doubled to<lb/>
left and scored later on<lb/>
an error to the Pirate's<lb/>
left fielder. Moore add-<lb/>
ed a run in the sixth and<lb/>
Massey another in the<lb/>
seventh, but the Pirates<lb/>
were destined for<lb/>
revenge.<lb/>
Junior Kathy Riley,<lb/>
in her first competition<lb/>
since returning from<lb/>
the Olympic basketbal<lb/>
tryouts in Colorado,<lb/>
drilled the ball over the<lb/>
left field power alley<lb/>
and tagged the bases<lb/>
for a record tying third<lb/>
homer of the game.<lb/>
Rothermel and<lb/>
Powell followed with<lb/>
singles, and Rothermel<lb/>
scored on Carlyle's<lb/>
third of the contest.<lb/>
Powell and Carlyle<lb/>
crossed home for the<lb/>
final Pirate runs on a<lb/>
double by Williams.<lb/>
Powell finished the<lb/>
game with four hits in<lb/>
as many trips to the<lb/>
plate, while Davis add-<lb/>
ed three.<lb/>
"We jumped on<lb/>
them in the second<lb/>
game said Dillon,<lb/>
"so I'm glad we were<lb/>
able to come back.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
host the Wolfpack of<lb/>
N.C. State today at 3<lb/>
p.m. in a doubleheader<lb/>
at the softball field on<lb/>
Charles Street adjacent<lb/>
to Harrington field.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
$ 176 00 "all inclusive"<lb/>
pregnancy test, birth con<lb/>
trol, and problem pregnan<lb/>
cy counseling. For further<lb/>
information call 832 0535<lb/>
(toll free number<lb/>
BOO 221 2568) between 9<lb/>
A.M. 5 P.M weekdays.<lb/>
Raleigh Women's<lb/>
Health Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 2703<lb/>
YlCkXlZ, by Nature's Way<lb/>
specializing in natural hair cuts for men &amp; women<lb/>
Present ECU Student I.D. Fot<lb/>
20? o Ott Your Next Haircut<lb/>
Offer good thru 4-12-80<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
Thb decision may well be difficult . . .<lb/>
but the abortion itself doesn't-have to be.<lb/>
We do our best to make it easy for you.<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Teat<lb/>
Very Early Pregnancy Test<lb/>
Call 781-S580 anytime<lb/>
The Fleming Center<lb/>
Friendly . . . Personal . . . Professional Care<lb/>
at a reasonable cost<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
appointments only<lb/>
758-7841<lb/>
UPTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
752-7649<lb/>
Special Late Show<lb/>
Fri.&amp; Sat. Nite 11:15 p.m<lb/>
aC Jee COUPS'<lb/>
AND Au<lb/>
CHAOS!<lb/>
w58dy<lb/>
aliens<lb/>
bananas<lb/>
with LOUISE LASSER<lb/>
IgpIss color <lb/>
ADMISION WITH THIS AD $1.50<lb/>
WITHOUT AD $2.50<lb/>
ONEPERSONPERAD<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN<lb/>
.J?r<lb/>
Night Blooming Jasmine Cologne<lb/>
1ft oz $5.00<lb/>
Mfc<lb/>
iJfiifG SfORFS ini<lb/>
V.CSw<lb/>
H<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STEAKHOUSE<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Family Night<lb/>
SIRLOIN BEEF TIPS<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Complete with Waho King Baked<lb/>
Potato, Texas Toast and Margarine<lb/>
a e. loth. ?? 7aa-a7ta<lb/>
EMPANATA<lb/>
With Every Meal<lb/>
ECU Basketball<lb/>
Awards Banquet<lb/>
'? M<lb/>
Join the 197980 ECU<lb/>
Pirate Basketball team<lb/>
April 10 at the Greenville<lb/>
Country Club when the<lb/>
players are recognized for<lb/>
their accomplishments dur-<lb/>
ing the most successful cam-<lb/>
paign (16-11) since 1975.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Guest Speaker:<lb/>
Clemson's Bill Foster<lb/>
??'???- ???"<lb/>
Tickets available through the<lb/>
coaches office: Minges Coliseum<lb/>
(757-6472) OR The East<lb/>
Carolinian office (757-6309)<lb/>
eJlebtautant<lb/>
756-3844<lb/>
CHINESE FOOD<lb/>
TRULY UNIQUE KACS TO DINE<lb/>
FEATURING A COMPUTE<lb/>
CHINESE ft AMERICAN MENU<lb/>
THAT INCLUDES CHILDREN'S<lb/>
&amp; SENIOR CITIZENS' PLATES<lb/>
TAKEOUT SERVICE<lb/>
IANQUET &amp; PARTY ROOM FACILITIES<lb/>
Gould you<lb/>
be comfortable<lb/>
in a church<lb/>
like this?<lb/>
2217 MEMORIAL DR.<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
THURS FRISAT<lb/>
at<lb/>
Hctft? .i I RJMMHWJhUil<lb/>
I iMMlhffcWitj . ??H? t ??K<lb/>
tin.il mJ Jimtln mrtlt<lb/>
4jpH hfrocad -n- ' - '?? r - ?<lb/>
?MMbft?tf .nj ftiK -<lb/>
in ?hH.fc h? nv? cci .?nef<lb/>
in ?h.h vsmj au? -ri mr? t$Ktwm<lb/>
- - . <lb/>
Vki njaiiTtu irfr Aj ?? I<lb/>
? nlllitlHWl ? agMmi h?ht twixiaw<lb/>
jadaocSxti 4 .<lb/>
human Pvint We ul6n?ltul<lb/>
(Mft!u.?. JulfcCWg ? ?? fci<lb/>
JcK'fnunc V??tnv -?"?'<lb/>
Ucfce vh.<lb/>
The Unitarian Churches of<lb/>
GREENV1XE UNfTAmAH-L-NrvEKSAUST FEU.OSWT MEETS  V?D ?? M.NIMV<lb/>
PIANTXRS SA TONAL BANK. ASHUGTON Jm STUEETS<lb/>
It's ALLAN<lb/>
Come join us at 4:00 Friday<lb/>
and have a HAPPY!<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now hiring students for the following positions on the<lb/>
Summer 1980 and 1980-8! staffs:<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR: Responsible for the overall operation of<lb/>
the editorial division of the newspaper lie, News, Features,<lb/>
Sports, Production, Copy Editing). Management and<lb/>
newspaper experience and completion of JOUR 2000, 2100,<lb/>
3100, 3200 necessary. Salary: $150 month.<lb/>
COPY EDITOR: Edit for style all copy for editorial section of<lb/>
newspaper. Completion of JOUR 2000, 2100, 3100, 3200<lb/>
necessary. Salary: $125 month.<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR: Direct Features section of paper.<lb/>
Newspaper experience and completion of JOUR 2000, 2100,<lb/>
and enrolled in or completed JOUR 3100, 3200 necessary.<lb/>
Salary: $125 month.<lb/>
STAFF WRITERS: To cover events for News, Sports and<lb/>
Features sections of paper. Completion of JOUR 2000, 2100<lb/>
preferred but not necesary. Trial period with no pay for first<lb/>
five stories. Up to 48 cents per column inch thereafter,<lb/>
according to proficiency.<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Thurs. Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
OYSTERS ?4.95<lb/>
FLOUNDER 93.50<lb/>
TROUT S8.95<lb/>
PERCH<lb/>
?2.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No tofcoonte please,<lb/>
Maal l?ol?d?tJ<lb/>
WfM9h FrlM, Cl? ??,<lb/>
H??la??????.<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
ana a the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
lor<lb/>
dining oleaanre.<lb/>
OPEN Om LUNCH<lb/>
LAYOUT WORKERS: Layout copy and headlines in editorial<lb/>
section of paper. Experience necessary. Salary: $100 month<lb/>
CONTACT RICHARD GREEN, 1980-81 editor of The East<lb/>
Carolinian, Old South Bldg 757-6366, 6367, 6309. Make<lb/>
appointments with secretary for interviews. Time of<lb/>
interviews: TTh - 8-11:00 a.m 3:30-6:00 p.m.<lb/>
At new employees will receive onthejob treining on<lb/>
Compugraphic typesetting equipment.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is an equal opportunity employer.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057259_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 3, 1980<lb/>
Ladies Get Win<lb/>
By EDDIE<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Even though their<lb/>
match was held on<lb/>
April Fools' Day, the<lb/>
ECU women's tennis<lb/>
team was in no joking<lb/>
mood as they disposed<lb/>
of UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
8-1.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
won five of six in the<lb/>
singles play, then<lb/>
blanked their op-<lb/>
ponents in the doubles<lb/>
action, winning all<lb/>
three matches.<lb/>
"We anticipated<lb/>
winning said ECU<lb/>
Head Coach Barbara<lb/>
Olschner, "even<lb/>
though they had some<lb/>
good players<lb/>
In the singles mat-<lb/>
ches, Lynn Grosvenor<lb/>
ousted Jan Sweet 6-2,<lb/>
6-2; Laura Redford<lb/>
came back from an<lb/>
opening set loss to post<lb/>
a 5-7, 6-2, 6-3 win over<lb/>
Cathy Kreuzberg; Deb-<lb/>
bie Christine continued<lb/>
her winning ways with<lb/>
a 6-1, 6-3 victory over<lb/>
Susan Percina; Conchie<lb/>
Gemborys posted<lb/>
UNC-W's only win as<lb/>
she edged by Karen Jef-<lb/>
freys 7-6 (5-1), 6-2;<lb/>
Claire Baker shut down<lb/>
Brenda Kalcuas 6-0,<lb/>
6-1; and Karen Legette<lb/>
beat Renee Kabbaby<lb/>
6-4, 6-2. In an exhibi-<lb/>
tion single match,<lb/>
ECU's Hannah Adams<lb/>
won over Deloris<lb/>
Strong 6-2, 6-3.<lb/>
Olschner said she<lb/>
was "pleased with<lb/>
Laura Redford's win at<lb/>
number two. Anytime<lb/>
you go three sets and<lb/>
win, it's like an extra<lb/>
bonus. It shows a per-<lb/>
son's character<lb/>
The two teams then<lb/>
squared-off in a pro-set<lb/>
type match in the<lb/>
doubles round.<lb/>
Grosvenor and Red-<lb/>
ford started the match<lb/>
off with an 8-5 win over<lb/>
Sweet and Gemborys;<lb/>
Christine and Baker<lb/>
continued their habit of<lb/>
close doubles victories<lb/>
with a 10-8 squeaker<lb/>
over Kalcuas and<lb/>
Kreuzberg; then Adams<lb/>
and Jeffreys finished<lb/>
up in style with an 8-1<lb/>
win over Percina and<lb/>
Kabbaby.<lb/>
Even though they<lb/>
had actually won the<lb/>
match after the singles<lb/>
round, Olschner was<lb/>
satisfied with the Lady<lb/>
Pirates' persistent per-<lb/>
formance in the<lb/>
doubles play.<lb/>
"We couldn't give<lb/>
them anything<lb/>
Olschner said. "It's<lb/>
like a baseball double-<lb/>
header. It'd be stupid<lb/>
to lose the second game<lb/>
after winning the<lb/>
first<lb/>
ECU's next match is<lb/>
away against High<lb/>
Point on Thursday.<lb/>
"That's going to be a<lb/>
real important match<lb/>
for us Olschner said.<lb/>
"I think it'll be in-<lb/>
dicative of how we can<lb/>
do in the State<lb/>
(Tournament)<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are<lb/>
now 2-4 after posting<lb/>
their second straight<lb/>
victory. UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington fell to 1-3.<lb/>
Fitness A<lb/>
Popularity<lb/>
Share the joy of Easter<lb/>
with a beautiful thought,<lb/>
Easter Greeting Cards<lb/>
Creative excellence is an American tradition<lb/>
Central News &amp; Card Shop<lb/>
321 Evans St. Mall<lb/>
Open 7 Days a Week<lb/>
The sudden rise in<lb/>
amateur athletics has<lb/>
created problems for<lb/>
both consumers and the<lb/>
medical profession.<lb/>
With as many as 100<lb/>
million participating in<lb/>
part-time fitness<lb/>
regimes, there is a<lb/>
strong need for<lb/>
legitimate health prac-<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING Day or<lb/>
Night individual or groups Tn<lb/>
County Stables Gnmesland Call<lb/>
7 52 6893.<lb/>
REWARD S50: for the return ot<lb/>
Charter to Kappa Alpha order at<lb/>
N C. State missing since January<lb/>
No questions asked<lb/>
REWARD $50 for the return of<lb/>
1979 composite and 1976 Ammen<lb/>
Award to Kappa Alpha order NX<lb/>
State missing since January No<lb/>
questions asked<lb/>
LOST one library book at<lb/>
Dempsty Dumpster book raid. If<lb/>
you have Speaking Clearly please<lb/>
drop in Library box Thank you.<lb/>
MARY KAY COSMETICS: to<lb/>
reach yot consultant tor a facial<lb/>
or reoi ders phone 756 3659.<lb/>
RIDER NEEDED to share ex<lb/>
penses and good times. Leaving<lb/>
for N.E New Mexico in mid May.<lb/>
Return in August Call 752 8288<lb/>
after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE<lb/>
AVAILABLE Reasonable rates.<lb/>
Call 756 8545 Or 758 3748<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE 1976 Cordoba fully<lb/>
loaded Yellow with Landau top<lb/>
Mint condition Will sacrifice for<lb/>
S3500 Call 1 (919) 734-3178 or<lb/>
1 (919) 736 7669 (Goldsboro).<lb/>
FOR SALE 1974 Cutless.<lb/>
sunroof .power brakes, power<lb/>
tnng power windows and<lb/>
locks, cruise controll. Call Brian<lb/>
752 0373.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 10 cubic foot<lb/>
refrigerator with freezer and<lb/>
vegetable compartment. Call<lb/>
758 4999<lb/>
FOR SALE : 1970 Ford Galaxie 500<lb/>
with air conditioning, $500. A good<lb/>
car. 7564817<lb/>
FOR SALE 1 pair AR 11<lb/>
speakers, $350 firm. 758 0206<lb/>
FOR SALE: one CSS 3-way, air-<lb/>
suspension speaker. Solid wood<lb/>
cabinet. One year old. Excellent<lb/>
condition. $75. Call 758-5343.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENTS FOR RENT:<lb/>
Duplexes and Townhouses $175 to<lb/>
$270 per month Call 752 6415 9:00<lb/>
til 5:00.<lb/>
NEED A PLACE: to Stay this<lb/>
summer Furnished apartment<lb/>
two blocks from campus. $200<lb/>
month May 10 Aug 20. Call<lb/>
758 1223.<lb/>
WANTED: Two female room<lb/>
mates Rent $55 each plus<lb/>
utilities Call Sarah 752 8931<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
from May to August. $85 per<lb/>
month (pool) Call Vicki 752 1471.<lb/>
ROOM AVAILABLE: in four<lb/>
bedroom house on 5th street, nt?r<lb/>
campus. Rent $87.50. Call<lb/>
758 601.<lb/>
ONE BEDROOM: furnished<lb/>
apartment on 1st street near Over<lb/>
ton's. Available for the summer<lb/>
and maybe fall Call 758 60S.<lb/>
HOUSING FOR SUMMER<lb/>
SCHOOL: available. $100 per ses<lb/>
sion plus percentage of utilities.<lb/>
Apply 803 Hooker Road. Phone<lb/>
754 3540<lb/>
tices to oversee<lb/>
"weekend athletes<lb/>
yet the medical profes-<lb/>
sion has come under at-<lb/>
tack in this field.<lb/>
Twenty million in-<lb/>
juries are tallied each<lb/>
year, and doctors<lb/>
themselves have been<lb/>
blamed in part for their<lb/>
refusal to apply the<lb/>
doctrine of preventive<lb/>
medicine as an antidote<lb/>
to bodily wear and tear.<lb/>
"Then Doctors must<lb/>
tell you the cause of in-<lb/>
jury says Dr. Gabe<lb/>
Mirkin, sportsmed<lb/>
authority, "and what's<lb/>
injured as well as how<lb/>
to avoid it Most<lb/>
practitioners ? in-<lb/>
cluding many profes-<lb/>
sional team doctors ?<lb/>
have relied on cortisone<lb/>
shots and short-term<lb/>
rest as treatment.<lb/>
DR. PETER W.HOLLIS<lb/>
announces the opening of<lb/>
his office for the practice of<lb/>
OPTOMETRY<lb/>
Family Eye Care<lb/>
Contact Lens Fitting<lb/>
Carolina East Mall, Greenville<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
MonTues. 10-6. WedFri. 10-7 Sat. 10-2<lb/>
The Elite Repeat<lb/>
The Little Sisters<lb/>
of Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
are having a<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
BRINGS BACK<lb/>
THE GOOD<lb/>
OLD DAYS<lb/>
JiuX<lb/>
ANY 12 oz.<lb/>
SOFT DRINK<lb/>
54<lb/>
WITH OUR. . .<lb/>
SANDWICH OF THE WEEK<lb/>
HAM?thru April 5<lb/>
REUBEN-Apnl 6-12<lb/>
BREAST of TURKEY-Apnl 13-19<lb/>
CORNED BEEF-Apn! 20-26<lb/>
185C.rol.m.E??M?ll<lb/>
TWMF. Ifr.<lb/>
StudaM DkiM<lb/>
Linda Trtpp hopes the name ol her<lb/>
resale shop on Highway 33 east of<lb/>
Greenville convoys the quality and the<lb/>
nature of the merchandise she stocks.<lb/>
She calls the shop, located in a neat<lb/>
beige gray-trinwsd farmhouse about<lb/>
two and one-half miles east of<lb/>
RHrergate Shopping Center, "The Elite<lb/>
Repeat<lb/>
"Most things here are previously own-<lb/>
ed and soid on consignment she<lb/>
said, "but we turn down everything<lb/>
that doesn't meet our standards. And.<lb/>
as we grow, we're going to be more and<lb/>
more selective<lb/>
The resale shop is owned by Linda<lb/>
and her husband, Randolph Tripp, and<lb/>
is managed by Randy's mother, Mrs<lb/>
Ethel Smith Tripp. Hours are from 11<lb/>
a.m. to i p.m. Monday through Friday<lb/>
and from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays.<lb/>
Linda said she conceived the name<lb/>
for the shop several years ago while<lb/>
browsing in resale shops in other<lb/>
cities. "I'd like to have a place like<lb/>
this she mused, 'but mine would be<lb/>
neater and it wouldn't smell musty.<lb/>
And I'd try to think of a name that<lb/>
would connote quality at tow prices<lb/>
Soon the name appeared in her mind?<lb/>
"The Elite Repeat She kept it there<lb/>
for several veers till her dream became<lb/>
reeHty.<lb/>
"We expect everything brought to<lb/>
our shop tc be clean and fresh smelt-<lb/>
ing she said. "We went it to be un-<lb/>
damaged. Meases brands are nee<lb/>
"We went Mi to be e eeeee where<lb/>
people who neve bought quality Hems<lb/>
can get some profit out of them when<lb/>
they get tired of them or when their cir-<lb/>
cumstances change. When you change<lb/>
your decor or your dress sUe. we hope<lb/>
it'll be nice to know we're here<lb/>
"Everything Is sold on consignment<lb/>
We encourage our consignors to keep<lb/>
their prices tow and we take only 25 per-<lb/>
cent commission. We pay consignors<lb/>
at the end of each month<lb/>
"Things that don't sell in a<lb/>
reasonable time are returned to the<lb/>
owners<lb/>
"Our customers can come here ex-<lb/>
pecting to pay less then brand-new<lb/>
prices, yet more than they'd pay at a<lb/>
yard sale. Here they have the benefit of<lb/>
a fitting room and are encouraged to<lb/>
return to us anything that doesn t make<lb/>
them happy, regardless of the reason<lb/>
This, we believe, is something that not<lb/>
even some of the best retail stores of-<lb/>
fer<lb/>
"The Elite Repeat" is located in a<lb/>
house that the Thpps repaired and re-<lb/>
painted and renovated themselves, it's<lb/>
divided into areas designated by clever<lb/>
names of Linda's own coining?The<lb/>
Wee Boutique, the Gift Gallery. Yester-<lb/>
day's World. The Clothes Closet and<lb/>
The Kitchen Cupboard.<lb/>
Merchandise varies from new items<lb/>
of brass, pewter, rattan and glassware<lb/>
at reduced rates to used small ap-<lb/>
pliances, toys, furniture, household ac-<lb/>
cessories, and clothing ot alt types and<lb/>
sizes?men's, women's and children's.<lb/>
We expect to be constantly improv-<lb/>
ing our shop and upgrading our mer-<lb/>
chandise. And we hope to add new<lb/>
customers and consignors all the time.<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
7:00-9:00<lb/>
Join us for our Pre-Easter<lb/>
Celebration!<lb/>
ECU vs. UNC<lb/>
The Red-Hot Pirate Baseball<lb/>
Team Takes On The Powerful<lb/>
Tar Heels<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
across St. from<lb/>
Blount Harvey<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
IIIW. 4th St.<lb/>
Parking in front and Rear<lb/>
STEEPLECHASE<lb/>
CAFETERIA<lb/>
Mon-Sat<lb/>
Pitt Piazza<lb/>
Closed Sunday<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758-1?28<lb/>
duality Shoe Repair<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C. No. 3 I Nightclub<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Super Grit<lb/>
Fri.A Sat.<lb/>
10th Ave.<lb/>
Tues. Apr. 8th<lb/>
SUGAR<lb/>
Wed. Apr. eth<lb/>
DAKOTA<lb/>
Thurs. Apr idfo<lb/>
Jesse Bolt<lb/>
Fri Sat. 11th, 12th<lb/>
Arrogance<lb/>
11-2:004:30-8:00<lb/>
TUE. 1st<lb/>
1.29 Franks and Beans<lb/>
1.69 Beef Stew<lb/>
WED. 2nd<lb/>
1.29 Tuna Casserole<lb/>
1.69 i Q Meat Loaf<lb/>
Thur. 3rd N<lb/>
1.29 La igne<lb/>
1.69 Shi np Chow Mein<lb/>
Fri. 4th<lb/>
1.29 Chi. Mac<lb/>
1.69 Chic ten and Pastry<lb/>
2.50 Trot ' Special<lb/>
Sat. 5th<lb/>
1.29 Frai cs and Saurkraut<lb/>
1.69 Sout ern Steak<lb/>
Mon: 6th<lb/>
1.29 Creole Spaghetti<lb/>
1.69 Liver and Onion<lb/>
SPECIAL INCLUDES: 1 VEG. and Choice of<lb/>
BREAD<lb/>
Specials Of The Day Are Subject To Change<lb/>
IT<lb/>
<lb/>
See the I 3-2 Pirates,<lb/>
featuring leftfielder<lb/>
Butch Davis (8 HRs,<lb/>
16RBIs, .368), take<lb/>
on the 19-10 Tar<lb/>
Heels of the Universi-<lb/>
ty of North Carolina.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Hf<lb/>
'?<lb/>
Don't Miss A Single Pitch<lb/>
Thursday, 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Harrington Field<lb/>
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