<?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="00057260_0001"/>
?rre ?ast (ftarnltman<lb/>
N ol. 54 No. ?0<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
luesday, pril 8, 19X0<lb/>
(reen die. N (<lb/>
( iri iil.iiin HI<lb/>
Iranian Students Unaffected By Visa Freeze<lb/>
H I t i r (.rav<lb/>
( ?v I ililor<lb/>
ImHhm) Iranians in the I nited<lb/>
i.iU's will eventually have to leave,<lb/>
as then isas cxi1o<lb/>
announcement Carter's announcement also in<lb/>
nited States will eluded the expulsion ot all Iranian<lb/>
Iranians will diplomatic personnel from the<lb/>
Iranian students United StaUs, and the instatement<lb/>
the country, ac of official economic sanction<lb/>
it ion given I he text ot his remarks tan as<lb/>
Iranian stu follows:<lb/>
'I ha ' today ordered she follow-<lb/>
ideh said that ing steps: First, the United States ol<lb/>
alul tot the dura merica is breaking diplomatic rela<lb/>
, and need not be lions with the government ol Iran<lb/>
ideh said that in rhe Secretary ol State has informed<lb/>
-as had to be the government ol Iran that its em<lb/>
;e a yeai bass and consulates in the I nited<lb/>
 - on noi to issue States are to be closed immediately.<lb/>
at an estimated All Iranian diplomatic and consular<lb/>
officials have been declared persona<lb/>
non ratu and must leave this coun<lb/>
tr b midnight tomoi row.<lb/>
'The Secretary ol the rreasury<lb/>
will put into effect official sanctions<lb/>
prohibiting exports from the I nited<lb/>
States to Iran, in accordance with<lb/>
the sanctions approved b ten<lb/>
members ot the I nited Nations<lb/>
Security Council on lanuary 13, in<lb/>
the resolution which was vetoed b<lb/>
the soviet I nion. Although ship-<lb/>
ment ot food and medicine were not<lb/>
included in the I V Securityoun<lb/>
cil vote, it u expected that exports ot<lb/>
even these items to ban will be<lb/>
minimal ot nonexistent<lb/>
Cartel also ordered inventories ol<lb/>
the frozen Iranian assets m the<lb/>
stival<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
The Mall<lb/>
mall will again<lb/>
ty rhui m.Li as the<lb/>
k  1 or Progressive<lb/>
si PR) sponsors its first<lb/>
?  the ? i"eat<lb/>
the I estial for a<lb/>
Renaissance, the<lb/>
les veral speeches on<lb/>
sues, and music by<lb/>
and indiidual per-<lb/>
will aKo be natural<lb/>
i a noon<lb/>
i lot appro<lb/>
Marl Kemp,<lb/>
S PR member, will<lb/>
'?? i-tninute solo<lb/>
lestial's keynote<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
festival vill ' 11<lb/>
ho vs.ii .Kiuuss a variety<lb/>
fron racism to<lb/>
I lal<lb/>
: behind the<lb/>
? SCPR wa on-<lb/>
: rhe goals o the<lb/>
ble to<lb/>
mote<lb/>
tlternative<lb/>
ed political<lb/>
sec u rt t i ce<lb/>
to manifest the<lb/>
. . mopolitan commun<lb/>
ible individual and<lb/>
: nd to gi e v oice<lb/>
deemed vital by<lb/>
irgani.ation.<lb/>
owei and alternative<lb/>
? energy will be discussed<lb/>
leannie Mclntyre and Paul<lb/>
Waldrop. Mclntyre is a regional co-<lb/>
: the C oalition tor a<lb/>
n icleat World, and Waldrop is<lb/>
tructor with the ECU depart-<lb/>
? industrial technology.<lb/>
other speakers include Stacy<lb/>
ton, an ECl political<lb/>
:ikc professor who will speak on<lb/>
ERA;larenee Moore, ol the<lb/>
NAA( P, who will talk about police<lb/>
Patrick O'Neal, of the<lb/>
( I campus ministries, who will<lb/>
See Festival, Page 2. Col. 7<lb/>
Scientists Gather<lb/>
l nited States, and an inventory olmade bv the militants in 1 ? i<lb/>
all outstanding claims thatMemaradeh<lb/>
American citizens and businessesagainst the hold ng of tl<lb/>
may have againsl Iran I he presi-calling them "innocent"<lb/>
dent suggested thai the Iranian( artei iccused Aval ih K<lb/>
assets be used to settle the claims,meini,<lb/>
including those made bv the familiesthe Ira<lb/>
ol the merican hostageshand<lb/>
Memarzadeh gave his personal?<lb/>
reaction to the president's an<lb/>
nouncement, saying that het h t i ? ? ? ?<lb/>
suspected Carter's political motiveshad brougl 1 sij<lb/>
and that the U.S. government wasint" '<lb/>
mistaken in looking to Iran foi<lb/>
solution to the problem. MemarV <lb/>
zadeh said that the power to end the(, at 'cr said, " I he tep 11<lb/>
stalemate rested in the United<lb/>
States' willingness or lack ol it to( r<lb/>
meet some of the demands being Interviewbev f tl<lb/>
Student Expresses<lb/>
Opinion Of Raid<lb/>
B i STONE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the pi il 4 edition ol The ?<lb/>
Carolinian, we interviewed a<lb/>
den' who. although not arre<lb/>
the March 26 " i lege Hill Bust<lb/>
expressed sentiments ol disillusi<lb/>
ment  even angei at the tad -<lb/>
employed bv the law enforcen<lb/>
agencies connected with the bust.<lb/>
He revealed that "Sonny Gard<lb/>
(an alias employed hv the undei<lb/>
;ovei agent) I<lb/>
drugs from students, but had used<lb/>
them him sell:<lb/>
"1 le'd sit around and sm ?<lb/>
joint with us. and I've h om<lb/>
people thai he bought cocaim<lb/>
that he'd sit dow n and tool a lint<lb/>
two in front of them. 1 saw<lb/>
smoke a joint my sell<lb/>
In this edition ot The I ast c an<lb/>
man we set out to interview a stu<lb/>
dent who was actually arrested in<lb/>
the drug bust. It was not an easy<lb/>
task to accomplish. Several of the<lb/>
students arrested in the Monday<lb/>
raid refused to talk about it on the<lb/>
advice o their lawyers.<lb/>
I ventuallv. The East Carolinian<lb/>
?.<lb/>
follow.<lb/>
.<lb/>
M ?<lb/>
<lb/>
to km<lb/>
resent?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?  . ? <lb/>
? 11<lb/>
<lb/>
s a v s.<lb/>
' '<lb/>
??<lb/>
??<lb/>
i<lb/>
tei 1: s a<lb/>
. the media<lb/>
oi p  1 hit<lb/>
reaso<lb/>
h<lb/>
? <lb/>
is s.<lb/>
j something tor their n<lb/>
: Do you think this is s kind<lb/>
ol a publicity l ml by the p<lb/>
V A ' Not necessarily public<lb/>
if they would have wai<lb/>
was h<lb/>
but like.<lb/>
to, thai<lb/>
Student, P<lb/>
Photo b RICHARDGRFFN<lb/>
Barefoot On the Mall<lb/>
Even our canine pals seemed to have a good time I hursday as the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union sponsored a day of music, mime, comedy and sunshine on<lb/>
the ECl campus mall. Now only in its second year, the springtime<lb/>
event promises to become a permanent fixture in the April calendar.<lb/>
City Policy Causes<lb/>
Fire, Rescue Conflict<lb/>
ECU To Host Conferences<lb/>
Professional and student scientists<lb/>
North) Carolina locations will convene<lb/>
1 i 12 tor the 7th annual meeting of the N.C<lb/>
ol Science.<lb/>
Also meeting here<lb/>
trom various<lb/>
at PC I pnl<lb/>
cademv<lb/>
Society, the College Academy of Science and the Stu-<lb/>
dent Academy of Science.<lb/>
will be the N.<lb/>
Raleigh Accident<lb/>
Claims Freshman<lb/>
1 he annual meeting provides scientists m various<lb/>
Entomological ticlds an opportunity to meet formally and informally<lb/>
tor the exchange of ideas and reports of research results.<lb/>
Among the scientific fields to be represented are ar-<lb/>
chaeology, biochemistry, botany, cell biology,<lb/>
chemistry, entomology, geology, geography,<lb/>
mathematics, physics, physiology, science education,<lb/>
toxicology and zoology.<lb/>
Carolyn Cuddy, an ECU freshman, was killed Satur<lb/>
day evening when she was thrown from a car after it ran<lb/>
off an unpaved road and overturned 2.5 miles west of<lb/>
Wake forest.<lb/>
According to the Highway Patrol, Cuddy, IX, ol<lb/>
Raleigh, was the only passenger in the vehicle, a 1968<lb/>
Pontiac convertible driven by Marshall Christine Jones,<lb/>
19, of Raleigh Jones was taken to Wake Medical<lb/>
( enter for treatment.<lb/>
Cuddy graduated last year from Raleigh's Sanderson<lb/>
High School. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
David M. Cuddy of Raleigh. She lived in Fletcher<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
Among the highlights ot the meetings are a Friday<lb/>
evening banquet in ECU'S Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
featuring an address by Academy President Daniel B.<lb/>
Pyler of UNC-Wilmington. A film, "The living<lb/>
Coast produced at the Wilmington campus, will be<lb/>
screened.<lb/>
A Saturday general session will include an address by<lb/>
Dr. Charles Eilber, director o the N.C. School of<lb/>
Science and Mathematics.<lb/>
Commercial and special exhibits will be on view in<lb/>
ECU'S Biology Building.<lb/>
Dr. Everett Simpson of the ECU biology faculty is<lb/>
chairing the Academy's local Arrangements Commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
Programs listing events planned for the meetings are<lb/>
available from Dr. Simpson.<lb/>
Bv l.AKRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Changes in Greenville city<lb/>
government and the city manager's<lb/>
pursuance of policies contrary to the<lb/>
:ity council's wishes are spelling<lb/>
problems for the Greenville lire<lb/>
Department and the Greenville<lb/>
Rescue Squad.<lb/>
At present, the city is undertaking<lb/>
a merger of the fire department and<lb/>
the rescue squad, with cross-training<lb/>
and cross-utilization o personnel by<lb/>
the two systems.<lb/>
The program has created con-<lb/>
siderable discontent within the<lb/>
rescue squad. The volunteer rescue<lb/>
squad disbanded in early February<lb/>
over the policy, and four o the 14<lb/>
paid members o' the squad have<lb/>
left, seeking employment elsewhere.<lb/>
The squad's main complaint is<lb/>
that they are being required to per-<lb/>
form a job for which they were not<lb/>
hired and do not wish to do. They<lb/>
maintain they were hired to work in<lb/>
emergency medical services (EMS)<lb/>
and not in fire service. The squad<lb/>
also contends that levels of skill will<lb/>
decrease due to service time on a fire<lb/>
truck instead of an ambulance.<lb/>
Fire fighters, though, do not seem<lb/>
to be too upset by the program. Ac-<lb/>
cording to several of them, they are<lb/>
just as happy working in EMS as in<lb/>
fire fighting.<lb/>
A public meeting was held March<lb/>
27 by several of the former<lb/>
volunteer and paid members of the<lb/>
squad. According to John Conway<lb/>
III, a former paid rescue squad<lb/>
member, the rescue squad attemp-<lb/>
ted to persuade the<lb/>
about two years ago to grant<lb/>
squad autonomous adn ration.<lb/>
Conway said they asked for noth<lb/>
more - no building, no additional<lb/>
manpower or equipment.<lb/>
At a special call meeting of the<lb/>
Greenville C"ity Council June 5,<lb/>
99. reports on the proposal wt<lb/>
presented by the N.C. league of<lb/>
Municipalities, the Greenville rea<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce and City<lb/>
Manager Ed Wyatt. Ml three ad-<lb/>
vocated integration of the two<lb/>
departments.<lb/>
W yatt presented his cost estimates<lb/>
for separation of the two depart-<lb/>
ments o $530,313.68, divided as<lb/>
follows: construction of rescue<lb/>
facility $444,078; additional person<lb/>
nel to man facility "4.634; addi-<lb/>
tional operating expenses 11,601 .68<lb/>
However, this was not what the<lb/>
squad asked for. Conway said the<lb/>
only additional expense in the<lb/>
squad's proposal would be to give<lb/>
the chief officer a pay raise equal to<lb/>
his new position.<lb/>
When the city cc mcil adopted the<lb/>
motion offered by Councilman<lb/>
John L. Howard to cross-train per-<lb/>
sonnel, they had no intention of<lb/>
having rescue personnel riding a fire<lb/>
truck or vice versa, according to<lb/>
Percy Co, mayor at the time the<lb/>
policy was adopted.<lb/>
Another problem cited by the<lb/>
squad is the loss of the possibility of<lb/>
getting advanced life support<lb/>
capability. In October 1979, 12<lb/>
members of the rescue squad went<lb/>
through an Emergency Medical<lb/>
N<lb/>
begir et<lb/>
conti overs -<lb/>
members i<lb/>
feh it would -<lb/>
servu<lb/>
area to initiate sucl<lb/>
to he inner turmc<lb/>
depa its, Conway sa d<lb/>
He added thai Greenville was :<lb/>
be the site ol a pilot prog<lb/>
paramedic system in r . a. b<lb/>
due to the situation within tru I<lb/>
and rescue department<lb/>
moved the program elsewhere.<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
Barefoot Reiew<lb/>
tree Hick Rock.<lb/>
I m?r Realizes Orivm<lb/>
Pirale Miell Heelv<lb/>
fane<lb/>
Pane t<lb/>
I" a t<lb/>
I'ii.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057260_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 8, 1980<lb/>
Student Sounds Off Over College Hill Raid<lb/>
Continued from Page l<lb/>
You've gotta have trust<lb/>
in somebody.<lb/>
EC: Do you think the<lb/>
way many students<lb/>
were coerced into get-<lb/>
ting drugs for this<lb/>
under-cover agent,<lb/>
while he was flashing<lb/>
money around and do-<lb/>
ing illegal drugs<lb/>
himself, might con-<lb/>
stitute entrapment?<lb/>
Student: Hell yeah! 1<lb/>
think so. The law might<lb/>
not say so, but 1 think<lb/>
if he's gonna bust you,<lb/>
he should get you red-<lb/>
handed, for whatever<lb/>
you've got in your<lb/>
room, and if he would<lb/>
have tried to do that to<lb/>
me, 1 wouldn't be in the<lb/>
situation I'm in now,<lb/>
cause there's not really<lb/>
anything in this room,<lb/>
and there never has<lb/>
been. I mean, if they<lb/>
wanted to, they could<lb/>
90 percent of the<lb/>
people who live in this<lb/>
dorm for what I did.<lb/>
1 hey jsut happened to<lb/>
act me.<lb/>
El : Do you think the<lb/>
laws are right?<lb/>
Student: If you're just<lb/>
getting not for people<lb/>
.on know, and it's a<lb/>
victimless crime, you're<lb/>
not hurting anybody. It<lb/>
all stays within a circle<lb/>
of friends, and I think<lb/>
ihat they should not go<lb/>
out of their way like<lb/>
this to interrupt it. It is<lb/>
against the law, but<lb/>
they should look the<lb/>
other way or something<lb/>
like that.<lb/>
EC: Was the bust ?<lb/>
being awakened at 5:30<lb/>
in the morning, etc. ?<lb/>
dehumanizing for vou?<lb/>
Student: It's Nazi-ism,<lb/>
you know? They didn't<lb/>
have to make such a big<lb/>
stink about it. I mean, I<lb/>
came back from jail,<lb/>
and everybody knew<lb/>
me. I couldn't go<lb/>
anywhere without a<lb/>
bunch of people<lb/>
bothering me. And I<lb/>
don't think that I really<lb/>
did anything wrong. I<lb/>
mean, there are lots of<lb/>
people who don't even<lb/>
smoke pot who know<lb/>
where they can get a<lb/>
bag as a favor for<lb/>
somebody.<lb/>
tC: How do you think<lb/>
that the student com-<lb/>
munity will respond to<lb/>
this?<lb/>
Student: Well, I<lb/>
haven't really talked to<lb/>
anybody who isn't, you<lb/>
know, behind us.<lb/>
Everybody seems to<lb/>
think that what hap-<lb/>
pened was wrong. But<lb/>
it's happened, you<lb/>
know, and there's<lb/>
nothing you can do<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
The interviewer<lb/>
played the tape of this<lb/>
interview to one of the<lb/>
other bust victims and<lb/>
asked him for addi-<lb/>
tional comments. His<lb/>
response was that all of<lb/>
the best words had been<lb/>
said by his friend, and<lb/>
he had nothing<lb/>
substantial to add to<lb/>
them. We were in a<lb/>
room full of his friends<lb/>
who expressed their<lb/>
support for him and<lb/>
their opinions of the<lb/>
bust.<lb/>
EC: Why are you guys<lb/>
opposed to the bust<lb/>
that took place last<lb/>
Monday?<lb/>
Student: It's just the<lb/>
way they went about it,<lb/>
I mean it's not  well,<lb/>
I guess it is the<lb/>
American way, man,<lb/>
but you know ? it<lb/>
shouldn't be like that. I<lb/>
mean you shouldn't be<lb/>
able to come into<lb/>
somebody's house,<lb/>
which is what "Sonny"<lb/>
did almost and do that.<lb/>
'Cause, man, we live<lb/>
here, and we don't treat<lb/>
it like that. I mean, that<lb/>
was a pretty fuckin'<lb/>
dirty thing to do.<lb/>
EC: Did you think that<lb/>
the entire operation<lb/>
was warranted?<lb/>
Student: No, 'cause as<lb/>
much time and money<lb/>
as they spent for what<lb/>
they got ? they got a<lb/>
few people who not in-<lb/>
to drugs that heavy<lb/>
anyway, people that<lb/>
were doin' somebody a<lb/>
favor by going and get-<lb/>
ting a bag for them. I<lb/>
mean, everybody knew<lb/>
each other, and people<lb/>
would say: 'Do you<lb/>
know where I can get a<lb/>
bag of pot? and<lb/>
they'd say, 'Yeah, I<lb/>
know somebody right<lb/>
down the hall It was<lb/>
nothing like heavy deal-<lb/>
ing. I'm sure there's<lb/>
thousands of people<lb/>
here who can get you a<lb/>
bag of pot. I don't see<lb/>
why they picked on<lb/>
those people. They<lb/>
didn't get what they<lb/>
were lookin' for in my<lb/>
opinion. What they did<lb/>
doesn't mean anything<lb/>
except that they fucked<lb/>
those people's lives up<lb/>
for nothing really.<lb/>
They could've gotten<lb/>
almost anybody for<lb/>
what they got those<lb/>
people for.<lb/>
EC: What is your<lb/>
baseline reaction to this<lb/>
thing? Does it make<lb/>
you paranoid?<lb/>
Student: Well, when it<lb/>
first happened, I was<lb/>
paranoid as hell. I<lb/>
threw out all my plants<lb/>
and my seeds and shit,<lb/>
and everybody was<lb/>
really blown away. But<lb/>
we were down here do-<lb/>
ing bong hits the next<lb/>
day. We just locked the<lb/>
door instead of leaving<lb/>
it open.<lb/>
EC: What kind of a<lb/>
response do you think a<lb/>
marijuana protest<lb/>
might meet at ECU?<lb/>
Student: ECU is just<lb/>
too dumb, ignorant, an<lb/>
uncool place. There's a<lb/>
few heads who would<lb/>
do it and, you know,<lb/>
wouldn't give a f?,<lb/>
but the majority of the<lb/>
people wouldn't do it.<lb/>
At this point several<lb/>
people in the room<lb/>
voiced either their sup-<lb/>
port or opposition to<lb/>
the idea of a protest.<lb/>
Student: If this were<lb/>
Berkeley or UCLA,<lb/>
you might find enough<lb/>
people to do it.<lb/>
Student: We need<lb/>
about 5000 more<lb/>
radicals on this cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Student: We need more<lb/>
fourth floor hippies.<lb/>
EC: Could you guys get<lb/>
behind the idea of a<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
SPECIAL 10? Off Your<lb/>
Next Pizza. Exoires 4-30-80<lb/>
NOW SERVING YOUR FAVORITE GQLDPj BEVE1<lb/>
HpTssrRTr<lb/>
fff 1 App'e Pie<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
Small ljrue<lb/>
A Cheese<lb/>
?<lb/>
pe. :<lb/>
OO'<lb/>
8. l,epoe'<lb/>
JLSH'S<lb/>
A?? Y?ff i<lb/>
.? f 7S<lb/>
1S 1 .2?<lb/>
Pent -??<lb/>
Sa .s.i<lb/>
?LIT S.5<lb/>
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SJS<lb/>
B i<lb/>
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3-JS<lb/>
2 ay<lb/>
A?<lb/>
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CheeK Cae<lb/>
 Blueberry Pie<lb/>
1?L<lb/>
JUL<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
Small Large<lb/>
6-co<lb/>
. dy<lb/>
iggig<lb/>
3 7ST 1 7.55<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
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" vtM. ails1S<lb/>
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?- ?- . ea1.7ST<lb/>
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Meatualll.oo2&amp;?<lb/>
Sausagexpcx6o<lb/>
i tai ian.?02.faD<lb/>
Ham2.COZ.IC<lb/>
Tunaoc7L6<lb/>
Roast Bee2VTZtt<lb/>
Pastramir??r<lb/>
BLT25Tl.fro<lb/>
Peppc &amp; f gg200i toC<lb/>
Veai2.0cZfeC<lb/>
5uper SubVU)?<lb/>
Pepper StearorlrYi<lb/>
SALADS<lb/>
rlSrigr<lb/>
Greek Sd'ad2.2S<lb/>
And Pastai iS<lb/>
Tossed-ft<lb/>
an<lb/>
Ik bread)<lb/>
BEVERAGES<lb/>
Raw<lb/>
- e i V . jd ? i<lb/>
i Served ? nh j.id and<lb/>
1CC-<lb/>
J-oo<lb/>
AJFl<lb/>
Milk bread)<lb/>
Coffee3<lb/>
Sanka.10<lb/>
Mrlk??<lb/>
Tea Hot or Cold?<lb/>
Proudly Presents<lb/>
just a pinch between the<lb/>
Thursday April 10th<lb/>
Ladies -I<lb/>
66<lb/>
Coming Apnl 23 MIKE CROSS<lb/>
petition then, asking<lb/>
for suspension of all<lb/>
campus marijuana<lb/>
busts or a drastic reduc-<lb/>
tion in the penalties for<lb/>
pot?<lb/>
Student: 1 could get<lb/>
behind a protest if we<lb/>
could get enough peo-<lb/>
ple from the dorms and<lb/>
stuff together. There<lb/>
are more people up<lb/>
here than you think<lb/>
that would go to a pro-<lb/>
test. It might not be so<lb/>
much a smoke-in as a<lb/>
demonstration against<lb/>
the kind of selective<lb/>
bust that happened<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Student: You can help<lb/>
to an extent, but you<lb/>
can't buck the system<lb/>
too much, man,<lb/>
because the system<lb/>
won't move. It's gonna<lb/>
always be there, and<lb/>
it's not gonna change<lb/>
for a bunch of freaks<lb/>
who go out and smoke<lb/>
joints. They're still<lb/>
gonna haul you away if<lb/>
they can. This bust is<lb/>
gonna make people<lb/>
more careful, but it<lb/>
won't really stop<lb/>
anything.<lb/>
Student: I think you<lb/>
can compare that bust<lb/>
to somebody in high<lb/>
school trying to catch<lb/>
somebody for smoking<lb/>
cigarettes. They could<lb/>
have put people at the<lb/>
bkrs downtown and<lb/>
gotten more drugs than<lb/>
that. They could get<lb/>
local people who really<lb/>
deal heavily, and I'm<lb/>
sure they know that.<lb/>
But the thing is it's so<lb/>
for something that, on pus seem to feel that<lb/>
any given day, you the March 26 bust was<lb/>
could get hundreds of unjust for a variety of<lb/>
easy to bust us. They people for on this hill, reasons already covered<lb/>
know it's an easy rap. I that's all. in this report. There<lb/>
mean, they could come seemed to be no con-<lb/>
up here any day of the Most people on cam- census, however, as to<lb/>
week and bust people<lb/>
for pot if they wanted<lb/>
to.<lb/>
what students can do to<lb/>
help their classmates<lb/>
and friends who were<lb/>
bustedortoprevent<lb/>
bustslikethisinthe<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Student: Most of these<lb/>
people went straight<lb/>
out of high school into<lb/>
college, and they aren't<lb/>
really criminals. But<lb/>
their lives could be<lb/>
completely fucked up<lb/>
by this. If they go to<lb/>
jail, they'll .never be<lb/>
right again. It will<lb/>
definitely affect them<lb/>
for the rest of their<lb/>
lives. Prison ruins peo-<lb/>
ple. I would just hope<lb/>
to God that the judge<lb/>
would see that this is<lb/>
just a cheap publicity<lb/>
stunt and that these are<lb/>
basically good people<lb/>
who were singled out<lb/>
Festival To Be Held<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
speak about the April<lb/>
13 Hunger Crusade to<lb/>
be held in Greenville;<lb/>
Mark Zumbach, ECU<lb/>
student and president<lb/>
of the Gay Communi-<lb/>
ty, who will speak on<lb/>
gay rights, and Steve<lb/>
Summerford, who will<lb/>
speak about the draft<lb/>
and nuclear weapons.<lb/>
Peanut butter, teas,<lb/>
apples, fruit mixes and<lb/>
apple juice will be sold<lb/>
at the festival on a non-<lb/>
profit basis.<lb/>
Most of the speeches<lb/>
are scheduled to last<lb/>
about ten minutes, and<lb/>
musical performers will<lb/>
take the stage at least<lb/>
once an hour.<lb/>
Besides Mark Kemp.<lb/>
the J e r r Thomas<lb/>
Band. Tommv G. and<lb/>
Co Buford I. and<lb/>
The Tour.<lb/>
After the closing<lb/>
dress at 7:45 p.m a<lb/>
debate on nuclear<lb/>
the performers will be energy is scheduled.<lb/>
LQt&amp; f,<lb/>
KlClfR, by Nature's Way<lb/>
specializing in natural hair cuts for men &amp; women<lb/>
Present ECU Student I.D. Foi<lb/>
20 Off Your Next Haircut<lb/>
Offer good thru 4 12 80<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
appointments only<lb/>
758-7841<lb/>
? " ?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
LEM HOWARD<lb/>
'The Worlds Greatest<lb/>
Love Story'<lb/>
M ONDA Y<lb/>
APRIL 14th - 830<lb/>
pm<lb/>
MENDENHALL UPSTAIRS<lb/>
AUDITORIUM<lb/>
DOOR<lb/>
PRIZE<lb/>
ADMISSION FREE<lb/>
Sponsored by Campos Crusade for Christ<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
DAILY LUNCHEON <lb/>
SPECIALS <lb/>
HOt DOgOnlyU?J<lb/>
Hamburger,<lb/>
French Fries $i99<lb/>
&amp; 12-0z. Drink  I<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4 00 800 PM<lb/>
SALAD?50 EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR.<lb/>
NO CAMY0UT<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$<lb/>
1<lb/>
99<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
$199<lb/>
SPAGHETTIoll<lb/>
THUR.<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
SsSfiSl<lb/>
Up<lb/>
To<lb/>
EVERYTHING<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
SPRING!<lb/>
DIET PEPSI. MT. DEW OR<lb/>
lj Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
OFF l ' ji Ik r<lb/>
- PRICE m Wk M II<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
6<lb/>
Black Label<lb/>
$<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
RED, WHITE, PINK OR GOLD<lb/>
Taylor LakeJJountry<lb/>
Wines $<lb/>
3-Ltr.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
J v<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
&amp; Cheese<lb/>
JfiT Pizza<lb/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
199<lb/>
Each<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Balls<lb/>
$<lb/>
1<lb/>
7 0<lb/>
W<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DJiCOUNTED<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURER S<lb/>
SUGGESTED RETAIL<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
(L<lb/>
ad n we do run out of ?n advertised Item, we will offer you your choice<lb/>
of a comparable Item, when available, reflecting the wnt savings or ?<lb/>
, raincheck which wtH entitle you to purchase the advertised Ham at the<lb/>
1 advertised price wMMn 30 days<lb/>
Each of these advertised items Is required to be readily available for<lb/>
sale In each Kroger Sav-on Store except as spscMtcaNy noted in this<lb/>
5V2-Oz.<lb/>
Pkgs<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-O2. Twin Pack<lb/>
59<lb/>
Copyright 1M0<lb/>
Kroge Sav-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
Nona aoM to Doalors or Wholaaators<lb/>
on<lb/>
FOOD. DRUG. GEN<lb/>
MDSE. STORES<lb/>
I<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057260_0003"/><lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 8, 1980<lb/>
Kite Making<lb/>
1 earn to des.gn and make your own<lb/>
kitt hv attending a free workshop spn<lb/>
Th Mendenhall Student Ceme"<lb/>
;?0P' ???l by George<lb/>
In R?Jcn,e ,s scheduled for Wednes<lb/>
Jas Apnl 26. from 6-8 p m ,n L<lb/>
Mendenhall C rafts Center "there ,s n<lb/>
registration or vUpp1(.s fet fo um<lb/>
guc workshop Just come by the Crafts<lb/>
?. enter and 10m in the fun'<lb/>
BKA<lb/>
The Bankmg and F.nance Fraternity<lb/>
?ill hold ,ts apr meeIlng Wednesday<lb/>
1 9. a, 4:00 p.m. in room 22y,<lb/>
Mendenhall Guest speaker will be Mr<lb/>
la-ion eiibet. manager of the In<lb/>
terstwe Securities office here in Green-<lb/>
v.lle All .nterested persons are invited<lb/>
i end<lb/>
Family Fun<lb/>
I act) 1 hursdas during April is "Family<lb/>
I tin ,ghf at Mendenhall. From 6 10<lb/>
p m . all children under age 18 accom<lb/>
ramed b a parent or responsible adult<lb/>
U1 K Pla billiards or play table<lb/>
icnn loi . off regular price Each<lb/>
"m( l" 'me of bowling will be hair<lb/>
fw children, and billiards and<lb/>
ennis will be half-price for the en<lb/>
.milv Only one adult per group<lb/>
muvt hae a Mendenhall Student<lb/>
( enur Membership card or ECU ID<lb/>
id to participate<lb/>
Theology Series<lb/>
rhe Greensille Unitarian Umversalist<lb/>
fellowship invites you to attend its<lb/>
H Ming our Own Theology" series<lb/>
pril I "We Arc Meaning<lb/>
Maker- ' The Fellowship meets the<lb/>
 4i h Sundays of each month at<lb/>
 m in the Planters National<lb/>
Kink Community Room (basement),<lb/>
?? Washington and 3rd Street<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/>
Registration forms are available at the<lb/>
Billiards Center Deadline to register is<lb/>
Friday. April II.<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 ECU 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/>
Mondas. April 14<lb/>
Tutoring<lb/>
Dr Bndwell.<lb/>
to check your<lb/>
Olympics<lb/>
No Summer Olympics is the<lb/>
v she nest Sig Tau party at the<lb/>
Man rwmii and prizes are<lb/>
Vdulcd tor the Tuesday. April 15<lb/>
event Fversone is invited! ?<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Eta Sigma honor fraternity will<lb/>
I meeting at 5 p m on Thursday.<lb/>
pnl 10 in room 221 Mendenhall<lb/>
Nr made for the April 17 in<lb/>
Report will be given on last<lb/>
bake sale and Easter parts for<lb/>
n at the hospital Also, the<lb/>
t4 a vear end party will be<lb/>
led Please come<lb/>
SU Artist<lb/>
?lions for Student Union Artist<lb/>
be accepted April 14-18. Apphca<lb/>
ia be picked up in the Student<lb/>
Office, room 224 Mendenhall<lb/>
 descriptions will also be available<lb/>
foho required.<lb/>
Need help in preparing for final exams1<lb/>
The Center for Student Opportunities<lb/>
provides free tutorial services to<lb/>
students who major in Allied Health,<lb/>
Nursing. Medicine or related health<lb/>
professions. Contact<lb/>
757-6122 or 757-6081<lb/>
eligibility<lb/>
Nurses<lb/>
The representative from Nightingale<lb/>
Uniform Company will be in the School<lb/>
of Nursing building, room 102, on<lb/>
April 17 from 8:30 a m. to 1:00 p.m. to<lb/>
measure each freshman nursing student<lb/>
for uniforms. Total uniform cost will<lb/>
be $72.70 for female students and<lb/>
$50 10 for male students. A money<lb/>
order for the exact amount must be<lb/>
submitted with the uniform order.<lb/>
Please stop by the School of Nursing<lb/>
Office, Room 152, to make an appoint-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Wheelchair<lb/>
The Office of Handicapped Student<lb/>
Services is establishing a wheelchair<lb/>
repair service on campus. If you have<lb/>
experience in repairing mechanical<lb/>
equipment and desire part-time<lb/>
employment, contact the Office of<lb/>
Handicapped Student Services in<lb/>
Whichard 211 or call 757-6799<lb/>
History Cookout<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta is sponsoring a history<lb/>
departmental cookout on Thursday,<lb/>
April 10. in the wooded area adjacent<lb/>
to Memorial Gym All history majors,<lb/>
minors and faculty are invited. Admis-<lb/>
sion will be $1 00. The cookout will be<lb/>
held at 5:00 p.m<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
There will be an SGA meeting Tuesday<lb/>
at 5 p.m. in the legislature room in<lb/>
Mendenhall, due to the Easter holidays.<lb/>
PRC<lb/>
The PRC Department is having an<lb/>
awards banquet on April 12, from<lb/>
6-12:00 p.m at the Holiday Inn in<lb/>
Greenville All ECU students, faculty<lb/>
and alumni are invited to attend. For<lb/>
ticket information call Margie at<lb/>
752-0306; Teresa at 756-8241. or Diane<lb/>
at 752-1489. The cost of the banquet is<lb/>
$5.00 per person or $8.00 per couple.<lb/>
Best Male Legs<lb/>
The Gamma Sigma Sigma 1980 Spring<lb/>
Pledge Class is sponsoring "The Best<lb/>
Male Legs Contest It will be held on<lb/>
April 9 and 10 from 9:00 until 2:00 in<lb/>
the Student Store Lobby, tnterested<lb/>
parties can call 758-8727 or 752-8602<lb/>
for more information. Entries can be<lb/>
mailed or delivered to 120 Garrett or<lb/>
321 White All proceeds will go to the<lb/>
March of Dimes. Let's see some legs,<lb/>
boys, for the March of Dimes.<lb/>
College Life<lb/>
College Life, featuring Lem Howard<lb/>
speaking on "The World's Greatest<lb/>
Love Story will meet at 8:30 p.m<lb/>
Monday, April 14 in the upstairs<lb/>
auditorium in Mendenhall. Door prize<lb/>
will be given. Free admission. Spon-<lb/>
sored by Campus Crusade for Christ.<lb/>
Scholarship<lb/>
The Society for Collegiate Journalists<lb/>
will award a $50 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/>
chosen 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/>
are fn good standing are eligible to par-<lb/>
ticipate also. The winner will be an-<lb/>
nounced at the annual reception of the<lb/>
English Department May 9 in Minges<lb/>
Colliseum<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
Sigma Nu fraternity will be holding a<lb/>
softball tournament April 13 and 13.<lb/>
The entry fee will be $3 per player<lb/>
which includes a jersey and beverages at<lb/>
the championship party For more in-<lb/>
formation call 758-7640 or 758-6493.<lb/>
There will be a 20 team maximum.<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/>
Booksale<lb/>
The Friends of the Library will hold a<lb/>
booksale at Joyner Library April 16<lb/>
and 17. Hours will be 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.<lb/>
and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday, April<lb/>
16, and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday,<lb/>
April 17.<lb/>
Gong Show<lb/>
There will be a Gong Show in Clement<lb/>
Dorm April 14 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Journalists<lb/>
The Society for Collegiate Journalists'<lb/>
pledge orientation meeting will be held<lb/>
Thursday, April 10, at 6 p.m. instead of<lb/>
Tuesday. April I, in room 248<lb/>
Mendenhall. All pledges and members<lb/>
are urged to attend, since officers for<lb/>
next year will be nominated at this<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Foreign Lit<lb/>
HAPPY<lb/>
BIRTHDAY<lb/>
LISA!<lb/>
Recreational, popular literature in<lb/>
foreign languages is now available in<lb/>
Joyner 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/>
Summer Dorms<lb/>
Residence hall room deposits for Sum-<lb/>
mer 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/>
tive residence hall offices on April 10<lb/>
and 11. Thereafter, they will be made in<lb/>
the Office of Housing Operations,<lb/>
Room 201, Whichard Building.<lb/>
THERE IS A<lb/>
DIFFERENCE!<lb/>
. our<lb/>
nnarl<lb/>
The Day Student representative<lb/>
position on the Media Board is<lb/>
now open and the Media Poard 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/>
PREPARE FOR<lb/>
VQE ECFMG FLEX<lb/>
NAT L MED BDS.<lb/>
NAT! DENTAL BDS.<lb/>
NURSING BOARDS<lb/>
MCAT ? OAT ? LSAT- GRE<lb/>
GMAT ? OCAT ? PCAT<lb/>
VAT ? SAT<lb/>
MPUN<lb/>
EDUCATIONAL<lb/>
CENTER<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 I Hours<lb/>
Call Days, Eves &amp; Weekends<lb/>
?1 4mm Ml<lb/>
MMflej<lb/>
CmtlMg.<lb/>
2634 Chopcl Hill Blvd<lb/>
Owtiom. MjC 27707<lb/>
For Information About<lb/>
Other Centers Outside NY State<lb/>
Call Toll Free<lb/>
800-223-1782<lb/>
Centers in Major US Cities<lb/>
Puerto Rico, Toronto, Canada<lb/>
&amp; Lugano, Switzerland<lb/>
Pi 77a inn.<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
32.59<lb/>
MonFri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
Mon. fiP Tues. 6:00 8:00<lb/>
758 6266 Evening buffet 92.79<lb/>
Hwy 264 bypass Greenville , N. C.<lb/>
756-3844<lb/>
CHINESE FOOD<lb/>
TIULY UNIQUE PLACE TO DINE<lb/>
FEATURING A COMPLETE<lb/>
CHINESE &amp;? AMERICAN MENU<lb/>
THAT INCLUDES CHILDREN'S<lb/>
b SENIOR CITIZENS' PLATES<lb/>
TAKEOUT SERVICE<lb/>
SANQUET &amp; PARTY ROOM FACILITIES<lb/>
2217 MEMORIAL DR.<lb/>
Tw?Tmw.?II jml ?-? f pjmiM i<lb/>
rrHmr?11 U1 9-mpjBI? ?-?-<lb/>
Set?f ?jm ?<lb/>
Smb.?11 .m 1 jb- 5 ??? 3? p.m<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
HEAPING tiny<lb/>
PORTIONS. price<lb/>
April 9 ONLY $1.59<lb/>
Chicken &amp; Dumplings with 2 vegetables<lb/>
April 10 ONLY $1.49<lb/>
Baked Spaghetti Feast with tossed salad and<lb/>
dressing and garlic bread<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/>
(8:30 Friday ft Saturday)<lb/>
AFTER 3:<lb/>
CHICK-FIL-A<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
FOR 9.<lb/>
.hick-fil-A. It's America's original boneless breast of chicken sandwich<lb/>
' nd now .with the coupon below you can get all the Chick-fil-A sand-<lb/>
iches you want for 99c each once the clock strikes three in the afternoon<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
OUR CHKXFH.A SANDWICHES ARE 9 EACH AFTER<lb/>
3KX) RM. JUST RU. IN THE NUMBER YOU WANT<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
Present this coupon at your local<lb/>
Chick-fil-A restaurant. Well<lb/>
give you all the Chick-fil-A<lb/>
sandwiches you want for<lb/>
99c each after 3:00 P.M.<lb/>
One coupon per person per<lb/>
visit. Oner expires:<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
04<lb/>
' Gosed on Sundav I<lb/>
THE TASTE WORTH SHOPPING FOR.<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Offer good at the following Chick fil A restaurants<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
RCPAIF<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
lualtty Shoe Repair<lb/>
MRCJWRC<lb/>
Spring Dance<lb/>
Friday April 11 8:30-1:00 at the<lb/>
AMERICAN LEGION HUT<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
FIVE DEGREES SOUTH<lb/>
? v<lb/>
?s-3 <lb/>
MOST<lb/>
MUSIC LOVERS<lb/>
HAVE A PROBLEM<lb/>
OVERWEIGHT<lb/>
Not the kind of overweight that requires<lb/>
cutting out chocolate mousse. We mean<lb/>
the kind that causes record wear,<lb/>
performance below potential and, alas,<lb/>
audible distortion.<lb/>
Only an Ortofon dealer can help.<lb/>
Only an Ortofon dealer can reduce<lb/>
effective tonearm mass by up to 40.<lb/>
Only an Ortofon dealer can offer an<lb/>
Ortofon LM cartridge weighing 2.6 grams ?<lb/>
that's about half the weight of a<lb/>
conventional cartridge.<lb/>
So trade in that old, overweight car-<lb/>
tridge and Todd's Stereo will allow you<lb/>
$20 on a LM-10 or $28.50 toward a<lb/>
LM-15 with any old phono cartridge.<lb/>
ORTOFON LM-10 $70<lb/>
ORTOFON LM-15 $95<lb/>
ys<lb/>
'<lb/>
JUBc<lb/>
V,<lb/>
<lb/>
0)<lb/>
W&amp;.<lb/>
.CARpaDGES<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
ortofon<lb/>
accuracy in sound<lb/>
ferir<lb/>
002<lb/>
til<lb/>
Your Ortofon weight reduction center.<lb/>
107 Trade St. in<lb/>
Pair Electronics Building.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057260_0004"/><lb/>
?ije ?aat (Karnltaian<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, Km tkj<lb/>
Richard Green, tmnnmi iuk,i<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, ???? Ammm Diane Henderson, ?,? tw<lb/>
Chris Lichok, ??,???? m?mm Charles Chandl er, ??<lb/>
Terry Gray, v ? Debbie Hotai ing, icuii??r<lb/>
TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
Sanctions Were Overdue<lb/>
President Carter's sanctions<lb/>
against Iran were a long time in<lb/>
coming and were long overdue.<lb/>
At this writing, the hostages have<lb/>
been within the tiny confines of the<lb/>
American Embassy in Iran for over<lb/>
150 days. An Easter visit by<lb/>
clergymen gave the outside world<lb/>
the impression that the hostages<lb/>
were in good physical health, but<lb/>
speculation has surfaced in recent<lb/>
months thaUtheir mental health is<lb/>
not faring well.<lb/>
Psychologists and others who<lb/>
work with mental health are yet<lb/>
uncertain of the effect that the<lb/>
length of time inside the embassy,<lb/>
under constant physical and emo-<lb/>
tional stress, will have on the sanity<lb/>
of the hostages It is entirely possi-<lb/>
ble that the hostages will never be<lb/>
the same peole they were before the<lb/>
embassy takeover.<lb/>
The government in Iran is a farce.<lb/>
The leaders there are inconsistent<lb/>
with their policies, unfair to their<lb/>
people and unreasonable in their<lb/>
demands. They have arbitrarily<lb/>
decided, through the guise of a<lb/>
senile old man named Khomeini<lb/>
that the shah must be returned, and<lb/>
that the U.S. will be held hostage<lb/>
until he is.<lb/>
Every week, the same old song<lb/>
and dance comes out of Iran. There<lb/>
is a hope for a settlement of the<lb/>
crisis, the revolutionary council<lb/>
votes to ask the students to release<lb/>
the hostages, and the Ayatollah<lb/>
refuses to release anyone until the<lb/>
shah is returned.<lb/>
Speculation has existed in recent<lb/>
months that the entire hostage situa-<lb/>
tion may be a mask for deeper<lb/>
economic troubles within Iran's<lb/>
government, with some observers<lb/>
saying that Iran may well go broke<lb/>
and blame it on the U.S. This is un-<lb/>
fair to the Iranian people, who may<lb/>
be forced to desperate actions,<lb/>
should food and adequate medical<lb/>
care cease to exist because of lack of<lb/>
funds. It would be easy for them to<lb/>
blame the U.S because we were<lb/>
pushed into the use of economic<lb/>
sanctions to free our hostages.<lb/>
The demands of the alleged Ira-<lb/>
nian government are unreasonable<lb/>
and illogical. Basically, the line has<lb/>
been that if the shah is not returned<lb/>
to stand trial for his reported<lb/>
atrocities against the Iranian peo-<lb/>
ple, the American hostages will not<lb/>
be released. To begin with, the shah<lb/>
is in the care of an Egyptian<lb/>
hospital, and could not be released<lb/>
to stand trial by the U.S even if we<lb/>
would consent to do it. Secondly,<lb/>
Iran has more to lose by holding the<lb/>
hostages than it does to gain,<lb/>
because the loss of American<lb/>
technology and business in-<lb/>
vestments will severely jeopardize<lb/>
their way of life. The Ayatollah<lb/>
seems to be unable to realize the real<lb/>
harm his country could suffer from<lb/>
these losses.<lb/>
The overriding opinion of the so-<lb/>
called leadership in Iran has been<lb/>
one of frustration. The stubborn-<lb/>
ness, and indeed the stupidity of<lb/>
their arguments, will cost them<lb/>
dearly in the long run. Their goal ?<lb/>
the return of the shah ? is one<lb/>
which could be argued about<lb/>
endlessly, but there would be few<lb/>
arguments that Iran's actions to<lb/>
achieve this goal were wrong, and in<lb/>
the end could mean a breakdown to<lb/>
the peaceful processes in the world.<lb/>
President Carter's actions yester-<lb/>
day, which some will point to as a<lb/>
political move, may restore a sense<lb/>
of patriotism to America, and may<lb/>
send a signal to both our enemies<lb/>
and our friends that the America of<lb/>
1980 is still a country that is not<lb/>
willing to take an aggressive act ly-<lb/>
ing down. Political move or not, it<lb/>
was a message that has needed sen-<lb/>
ding for a long time.<lb/>
Move Over Some<lb/>
Progress is a necessary thing, but<lb/>
somehow we feel that it sacrifices<lb/>
some of the better things in life.<lb/>
Walking through campus the<lb/>
other day, we noticed that the wall<lb/>
outside the old campus union is be-<lb/>
ing torn down betweeen the Wright<lb/>
building and the faculty and staff<lb/>
parking lot in front of Austin.<lb/>
We noticed that the remaining<lb/>
wall, the one that runs almost to the<lb/>
front of Wright Auditorium, was<lb/>
more crowded than usual yesterday<lb/>
afternoon. Perhaps this better than<lb/>
anything demonstrates the populari-<lb/>
ty of the practice of sitting on the<lb/>
wall and watching the world go by.<lb/>
We would certainly hope that the<lb/>
remaining seat space won't be taken<lb/>
by the construction crews, and we<lb/>
hope that everyone will be willing to<lb/>
move over a little so that someone<lb/>
else can have a seat.<lb/>
i- Letters To The Editor<lb/>
' Waiting' Describes Court System<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Recently waiting to testify in the trial of<lb/>
a friend busted for possession of LSD, I<lb/>
had the opportunity to observe the local<lb/>
legal system in action. "Waiting" would<lb/>
be the word to emphasize here.<lb/>
The affair began when the friend, an<lb/>
ECU student living in the dorms, was ask-<lb/>
ed by a neighbor to store 93 tabs of LSD<lb/>
in his refrigerator. The following day<lb/>
Capt. Wiggins of the campus con-<lb/>
stabulatory and a couple of uniformed of-<lb/>
ficers came to call. They found the acid<lb/>
and a small quantity of marijuana. A stu-<lb/>
dent informant was suspected. This oc-<lb/>
cured in October of 1979.<lb/>
The first of our many days in court<lb/>
began in late February. After a postpone-<lb/>
menUand false start or two, a- definite trial<lb/>
date had finally been set. The friend, with<lb/>
his family and friends, gathered in the<lb/>
courtroom. They didn't get heard.<lb/>
The case before theirs was that of Sgt.<lb/>
Douglas H. Ross of the Greenville Police<lb/>
Department. He was on trial for having<lb/>
8000 pounds of pot on his property. His<lb/>
brothers on the force, through<lb/>
surveillance and informers, witnessed the<lb/>
unloading of the herb from a truck to a<lb/>
small building in his yard. Upon raiding<lb/>
they seized four men and four tons.<lb/>
That morning the courtroom was pack-<lb/>
ed, filled with prospective jurors and<lb/>
friends of Sgt. Ross. It seems everyone in<lb/>
town knew him. It took the entire day to<lb/>
choose the jury. The situation was<lb/>
worsened by the slow and laborious man-<lb/>
ner in which the selection was made. My<lb/>
friends and I sat and waited.<lb/>
Per court order we were back next day<lb/>
for more of the same. The morning con-<lb/>
sisted of a tedious haggling over the<lb/>
validity of the search warrant used in the<lb/>
Ross raid. The afternoon was enlivened a<lb/>
bit by the showing of the prize exhibits,<lb/>
huge bales of reefer. Again we went<lb/>
unheard, told to come back a few days<lb/>
later.<lb/>
Then the big blizzard of 1980 hit Green-<lb/>
ville. The friends' case was postponed<lb/>
again and again, until, supposedly March<lb/>
24. His friends showed up in court that<lb/>
Monday morning. Upon phoning the<lb/>
defending attorney's secretary, they<lb/>
found the case was no. 11 out of 13 and<lb/>
might not be heard until the end of the<lb/>
week. The courts' own clerks had no idea<lb/>
at all of what was going on.<lb/>
Later it was determined that the case<lb/>
would commence that Wednesday. Guess<lb/>
again. This time the case we waited<lb/>
through was of an armed robbery suspect.<lb/>
Sgt. Ross' case, we heard, had been<lb/>
declared a mistrial. Half-jokingly, we<lb/>
comforted ourselves with the thought that<lb/>
the defendant in this new trial was poor<lb/>
and black: it couldn't last too long.<lb/>
We sat through the trial the next day,<lb/>
as, that afternoon, he was found guilty.<lb/>
Theft Was Wrong<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
In front of Joyner Librarv stands a<lb/>
flagpole in honor of Dr. Richard C. Todd<lb/>
for his outstanding service to ECU and<lb/>
the brotherhood of Phi Sigma Pi, an<lb/>
honor fraternity on campus of which he<lb/>
was the advisor.<lb/>
A flag was flying since Col. Ed Tadlock<lb/>
in ROTC had requested that special<lb/>
lighting be provided around the clock, but<lb/>
now no flag is flying. Two flags have been<lb/>
stolen.<lb/>
I could go into my lecture that I give the<lb/>
junior high school students that I teach<lb/>
about taking "something that is not theirs,<lb/>
but I won't. I'd just like to say that I am<lb/>
disappointed. It is a shame that the col-<lb/>
lege has to go to the trouble and expense<lb/>
jf getting new flags and possibly locks or<lb/>
steel cables to chain up something that<lb/>
stands for freedom.<lb/>
Then our friend's trial went unc<lb/>
He was put on probation and giver, S<lb/>
fine. After five mont<lb/>
postponements, uncertain over :<lb/>
dates, and days wasted sitting in co<lb/>
the entire thing was over within le<lb/>
half an hour.<lb/>
The court system here in Greenvil<lb/>
characterized by slowness and confusion.<lb/>
There is no reliable. workabL Cn-<lb/>
dar. Those connected with a case m<lb/>
continually come to court evt<lb/>
case is not to be heard for da<lb/>
Dates are often set and then<lb/>
before the day even arrives. The<lb/>
troom proceedings themselves arc<lb/>
ducted in slow motion. Uncertain:<lb/>
what's what is rampant. Justice<lb/>
better than this. Something car<lb/>
should be done about it.<lb/>
 .<lb/>
John Yv<lb/>
I<lb/>
Colleen Flynn<lb/>
Member, Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or <lb/>
them by our office in the Old S<lb/>
Building, across from the library.<lb/>
Letters to the editor must include the<lb/>
name, address, phone number <lb/>
signature of the authorise and must<lb/>
typed, double spaced, or neatly printed.<lb/>
Letters should be limited to three<lb/>
'voewritten, double-spaced pages. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obcenity and libel. Letters by the same<lb/>
author are limited to one each 30 da vs.<lb/>
Personal attacks will not be permitted.<lb/>
Names of authors will be withheld onv<lb/>
when inclusion of the name will cause the<lb/>
author embarrassment or ridicule, such as<lb/>
letters concerning homosexuaiitv, drug<lb/>
abuse, etc. Names will be withheld onlv<lb/>
on the author's request.<lb/>
For Some, Battle Of Sexes Has Never Really Changed At All<lb/>
By CHARLES GRIFFIN<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
It has been called the battle of the<lb/>
sexes and there is no man alive who<lb/>
will admit to having won even a<lb/>
skirmish. The old toast goes, "To<lb/>
the ladies, God bless "em, we can't<lb/>
live with 'em and we can't live<lb/>
without 'em<lb/>
It would be foolish of me to say<lb/>
that I came late to the fray. 1 was in<lb/>
my late 20's when a young woman<lb/>
called me a "male chauvinist pig<lb/>
But I well remember my earliest<lb/>
skirmish.<lb/>
At home, 1 had no siblings. We<lb/>
had an outhouse for a toilet and a<lb/>
large tin tub that we filled with<lb/>
warm water and pulled over by the<lb/>
heater when we took baths. It was<lb/>
an old farmhouse and we were your<lb/>
basic farm family circa 1949 in most<lb/>
rural North Carolina.<lb/>
Going to school for the first time<lb/>
created a problem of adjustment.<lb/>
My grandfather warned me not to<lb/>
sit on the toilet seats the morning<lb/>
before I was to catch the school bus.<lb/>
He told me to climb up on the toilet<lb/>
and squat just as I would if I were to<lb/>
take a crap in the woods. I asked<lb/>
him why. He said, "You'll see<lb/>
I saw. When 1 had to go, I was led<lb/>
to the boys restroom by a second<lb/>
grader. The first thing that hit me<lb/>
(<lb/>
was the odor. The toilets were a row<lb/>
of open booths. There were five<lb/>
toilets. Two of them actually had<lb/>
seats. All of them had spots of shit<lb/>
everywhere on them. One cleve farm<lb/>
lad had missed the toilet entirely,<lb/>
apparently by squatting with his<lb/>
back facing out while hanging on<lb/>
the pipe and playing with the<lb/>
flusher. At least he found out how<lb/>
to flush. Most of the others hadn't<lb/>
bothered.<lb/>
Later on, the teachers and<lb/>
janitors combined to housebreak us.<lb/>
The toilets became much cleaner. I<lb/>
?later understood that six-year-olds<lb/>
who had never seen a flush-type in-<lb/>
door john could be expected to<lb/>
create a shitty situation.<lb/>
Now, you must realize that I was<lb/>
in close contact with girls my own<lb/>
age for the first time in my life. As<lb/>
boys go, I knew enough not to shit<lb/>
on the toilet, but otherwise I was<lb/>
wild as a colt. Notions of chivalry<lb/>
and protection of the fair sex had<lb/>
never occurred to me in my first five<lb/>
years.<lb/>
No one told me they had their<lb/>
own toilet. I never saw a girl in the<lb/>
one I went to. 1 figured they had a<lb/>
special time they went, or maybe<lb/>
they held it better than boys did. I<lb/>
mean, what do you expect when you<lb/>
know from nothing to begin with.<lb/>
So, when a girl named Vicky hit<lb/>
me in the back of my head with a<lb/>
well-aimed rock, 1 took it very per-<lb/>
sonally. She danced from foot to<lb/>
foot singing, "Na-na, n'aaa-na ?<lb/>
yuh can't hit a gurlll She ran<lb/>
when I chased her. She continued to<lb/>
sing until it became clear that I was<lb/>
very serious about catching her. She<lb/>
ran very well, but time was on my<lb/>
side, I thought.<lb/>
Vicky ran into a door that was at<lb/>
the opposite end of the hall from the<lb/>
restroom that I used. My logic did<lb/>
not function well enough to ring any<lb/>
warning bells. I went through the<lb/>
door also.<lb/>
My eyes told me I was in a toilet,<lb/>
but what a toilet. The floors were<lb/>
clean. The walls had nothing scrawl-<lb/>
ed on them. There was no urinal.<lb/>
There was an extra sink. And there<lb/>
were six private booths ? each with<lb/>
a slatted door. They had locks, too,<lb/>
'cause Vicky was behind the fourth<lb/>
door and it was locked tight. She<lb/>
screamed and screamed. A teacher<lb/>
came and got me.<lb/>
In the principal's office I got a<lb/>
lesson on women's rights, unequal<lb/>
protection, chivalry, the sacredness<lb/>
of the toilet, and the functions<lb/>
of the handed one-inch-thick<lb/>
paddle.<lb/>
Years passed, but I still had sort<lb/>
of an outlaw nature. The kids at<lb/>
school had rules that were con-<lb/>
sidered unbreakable. If you broke<lb/>
them you became a social outcast.<lb/>
Of course, the most sacred was the<lb/>
one about not hitting girls.<lb/>
Eventually, I found myself in<lb/>
junior high in Holly Hill, Florida. I<lb/>
was in the seventh grade. An eighth-<lb/>
grade girl named Brenda was a<lb/>
favorite of the leader of the local<lb/>
gang. She considered herself tough<lb/>
and above the rules. One day before<lb/>
school started she slugged me just to<lb/>
show off to her girl friends. I had<lb/>
done nothing to her and I followed<lb/>
my first impulse - which was to sw-<lb/>
ing back. I knocxed her down. Her<lb/>
lip was bloodied. She cried and bet-<lb/>
ween sobs shouted at me that her<lb/>
boyfriend was going to get me. We<lb/>
came to a negotiated settlement.<lb/>
In 1971 at a USSPA convention, I<lb/>
opened the door for a young<lb/>
woman. I admit that the door would<lb/>
had opened for her had she pushed<lb/>
against it, but her arms and hands<lb/>
were full and I thought nothing of<lb/>
extending a little courtesy to a<lb/>
fellow student journalist. As I pull-<lb/>
ed the door open she said, "Get<lb/>
lost, you male chauvinist pig At<lb/>
first, 1 didn't understand the ra-<lb/>
tionale behind the phrase, but it was<lb/>
drummed into me at that meeting.<lb/>
V<lb/>
Not all the girls were for the<lb/>
feminist movement. One sweet<lb/>
young Georgia peach said, "Honey,<lb/>
1 will go along with this bullshit<lb/>
when men can have babies and<lb/>
women can pee standing up That<lb/>
was not terribly profound. It is<lb/>
theoretically possible to implant a<lb/>
fetus on a male, and I have seen<lb/>
women peeing while standing up.<lb/>
They were good shots, too.<lb/>
The myth of the fairer sex exists.<lb/>
It echoes in the halls of Congress. It<lb/>
hides behind closed doors in the<lb/>
Pentagon. Big business brandishes it<lb/>
every time some woman executive<lb/>
gets too close to the board room.<lb/>
Even the proponents of women's<lb/>
lib are not immune to the myth.<lb/>
They do ask for special protection<lb/>
under the law. If they believed in<lb/>
their ability, they wouldn't need<lb/>
ERA.<lb/>
Mention the idea of women in<lb/>
combat and you get a mixed bag of<lb/>
response Too delicate, says the<lb/>
Pentagon. Too precious, says the<lb/>
Southern congressman. Too<lb/>
dangerous, says the girl who may<lb/>
have to go. It's OK, say the<lb/>
statewomen of women's lib who are<lb/>
already too old to go.<lb/>
They seldom point out that<lb/>
women occupy a special status as<lb/>
our only renewable source of<lb/>
children. Without future genera-<lb/>
<lb/>
tions, wars cannot be fought or<lb/>
won. Wars also tend to obliterate<lb/>
the best of a given generation of<lb/>
youth. Reserving women for<lb/>
childbearing insures that 50 percent<lb/>
of the gene pool will contain enough<lb/>
good traits to allow mating with in-<lb/>
ferior stock ? 4Fers and the like ?<lb/>
which will still produce normal<lb/>
children.<lb/>
As far as the rest of it goes, the<lb/>
myth is just that. Women can shoot<lb/>
and fight just as well as men. They<lb/>
have up days and down days, but if<lb/>
a man had to have a period in the<lb/>
middle of his down days, he would<lb/>
be flat on his back until it was over<lb/>
with A woman might hit the bed if<lb/>
she has a chance, but most of the<lb/>
time she keeps right on making a liv-<lb/>
ing and doing whatever has to be<lb/>
done.<lb/>
They are just plain tougher than<lb/>
ntvirJi" WC Justified<lb/>
Wmg themJess for equal work or<lb/>
citizenship, PU never know<lb/>
K.LiSU!?t' ?oweVCT? i! w?s Pro-<lb/>
bably their idea - they juslcM<lb/>
?ijund.to changu SrmiJ<lb/>
wluch ,s a woman's prerogarWe!<lb/>
And, as any man knows, no woman<lb/>
ever blamed hersdf for hvTnH?<lb/>
idea she is currently against<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057260_0005"/><lb/>
Features<lb/>
Al'KIl H. IWO<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
rHE EAS1 t AROl INIAN<lb/>
Barefoot On The MalV Is Great Success<lb/>
Photo bv RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
I Dreamed I (irew Old<lb/>
in my Maiden!arm bra<lb/>
By DEBBIE HOT AUNG<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Along with girls lying in the dorm<lb/>
courtyards, guys cruising campus in<lb/>
their convertibles and happy-hour-<lb/>
regulars cramming the downtown<lb/>
bars. East Carolina has a new spring<lb/>
tradition.<lb/>
Barefoot on the Mall originated<lb/>
last vear and as a result of a lot of<lb/>
hard work, was put on again this<lb/>
year. Wednesday afternoon was<lb/>
packed with all kinds of exhibits and<lb/>
entertainment for students and<lb/>
facultv to enjoy.<lb/>
Warm, sunny weather brought<lb/>
several hundred people out to be<lb/>
entertained periodically by emcee<lb/>
Michael Marlin, an amazing jug-<lb/>
gler, who filled in between acts.<lb/>
Marlin recently performed on Don<lb/>
Kirschner's "Rock Concert the<lb/>
Merv Griffin Show, and was a<lb/>
special guest star on Doug Henn-<lb/>
ing's tour.<lb/>
One of the biggest attractions in<lb/>
this year's festival was "Mainly<lb/>
Mime Using today's themes as<lb/>
subjects of their mime acts, Kate<lb/>
Bentley and Jacqueline Wildau cap-<lb/>
tured and held the audience's atten-<lb/>
tion during two performances.<lb/>
East Carolina's own "Fantasy"<lb/>
performed, presenting the audience<lb/>
sign language in song in such a way<lb/>
that was effectively communicated<lb/>
to all Mike Ernest, director of the<lb/>
program for hearing impaired<lb/>
students; Kathy Beetham; Bob Col-<lb/>
trane; Shannon Gilley; and Jim<lb/>
Haslup comprise the group which<lb/>
performed a variety of popular<lb/>
music.<lb/>
If you believe in the telling of for-<lb/>
tunes and futures and missed the<lb/>
featured astrologist, you missed one<lb/>
of the best. Marcella Ruble Rook<lb/>
amazed students again this year with<lb/>
her extraordinary talents in the art<lb/>
of palm-reading, plotting<lb/>
astrological charts, and providing<lb/>
insights to personalities. Part of her<lb/>
great ability to delve into people's<lb/>
personalities comes from the fact<lb/>
that she possesses great enthusiasm<lb/>
for her work. She has a very open<lb/>
rapport with those who seek her<lb/>
enlightenment and has helped many-<lb/>
people become more aware of the<lb/>
many sides to their personalities.<lb/>
Frisbee-throwing is a popular<lb/>
pasttime on the East Carolina mall<lb/>
every spring. This year, students<lb/>
were given the opportunity to<lb/>
observe professional frisbee<lb/>
throwers at work. The Pro-Disc<lb/>
Jammers, a professional frisbee<lb/>
demonstration team, displayed 'heir<lb/>
talents periodically during the after-<lb/>
noon. One member, Peter Rick<lb/>
Bloeme, was the 1977 World Champ<lb/>
and at 19 was the youngest World<lb/>
Champ ever.<lb/>
The list of activities is endless. A<lb/>
special thanks to the craft booths<lb/>
and displays which allowed students<lb/>
to view local artists' works. If you<lb/>
didn't get a chance to have your<lb/>
charicature done by John Weyler, a<lb/>
fast sketch artist, maybe you can<lb/>
catch him next year. It's well worth<lb/>
your time for a buck.<lb/>
Student Union once again suc-<lb/>
ceeded in providing a great day for<lb/>
everyone on the mall and hopefully,<lb/>
will carry on the tradition. After all,<lb/>
what is spring on ECU's campus<lb/>
without it?<lb/>
hard r R c I N<lb/>
Emcee Michael<lb/>
better<lb/>
Marlin<lb/>
juggling than jokes<lb/>
Despite Conditions,<lb/>
4Mainly Mime' Gives<lb/>
A Good Performance<lb/>
B 1FRR GRV<lb/>
 e don't often see mime acts<lb/>
( I . and for most of us, the<lb/>
pantomime" conjures up<lb/>
f white-faced Marcel<lb/>
trapped in a glass box.<lb/>
I he appearance of Mainly Mime<lb/>
annual Barefoot On The<lb/>
Mall festival last Thursday show-<lb/>
f us that mime can be<lb/>
n that.<lb/>
Mainh Mime is Jaqueline<lb/>
d Kate Bentley, who<lb/>
2 while performing<lb/>
- ? Mime Theatre of<lb/>
Kate performed, taught<lb/>
n years as the<lb/>
emale. Jacqueline.<lb/>
! 'ecole Jacques<lb/>
? Mime. Move-<lb/>
-atre in Pans.<lb/>
;lown and mime<lb/>
rk after touring<lb/>
: merica. In 1978.<lb/>
ces in New York to<lb/>
. ?i the country's few<lb/>
.ale mime duets.<lb/>
Vnd a damned good one. Most<lb/>
fieir routines leave the glass<lb/>
mtasies behind, focusing in-<lb/>
td on the humor, the ex-<lb/>
mities, the absurdities and the<lb/>
itions ot real-life situa-<lb/>
ns.<lb/>
Mainlv Mime is just that:<lb/>
nix mime. The purist believes<lb/>
that mime is completely physical.<lb/>
Mainly Mime, knowing that their<lb/>
art fails when it confuses, include<lb/>
music, dialogue, props and short<lb/>
introductions ? whatever is<lb/>
needed to get the message across.<lb/>
In one of the routines they per-<lb/>
formed here Thursday, Kate and<lb/>
Jaqueline used a spoken intro,<lb/>
eight chairs (for the eight<lb/>
characters in the piece), rock<lb/>
music and a sprinkling of<lb/>
dialogue to show how neurotic<lb/>
and intense things can get in a<lb/>
classroom at exam time. The ef-<lb/>
fect was powerful.<lb/>
Which is not to say that Mainly<lb/>
Mime cannot do pure mime.<lb/>
Watch them walk their dogs in<lb/>
the hilarious "Job Hazards"<lb/>
routine, and you'll see that these<lb/>
women have paid their dues in<lb/>
mastering the basics.<lb/>
By creating scenes and feelings<lb/>
out of thin air and showing our<lb/>
imaginations hoyy to perceive<lb/>
them. Mainly Mime gave the day<lb/>
on the mall a dimension that<lb/>
would otherwise been lacking.<lb/>
The other acts entertained us<lb/>
well, btrt-they did so without ever<lb/>
needing to involve us directly in<lb/>
what was going on. The beauty of<lb/>
mime is that the audience<lb/>
becomes a medium through<lb/>
which the mime constructs small<lb/>
worlds of idea and image.<lb/>
MIME<lb/>
Kate Bentley<lb/>
Jacqueline Wildau<lb/>
Mainly Mime gave us a varied,<lb/>
entertaining, sensitive and funny<lb/>
show, and the amazing thing is<lb/>
that they did it yvhile working<lb/>
under very difficult conditions.<lb/>
There were hundreds of people<lb/>
out there on the mall. Dogs bark-<lb/>
ed frisbees sailed oy, people yell-<lb/>
ed cannons fired. The other acts<lb/>
could simply outshout everybody<lb/>
else, but Mainly Mime had to rely<lb/>
mostlv on the concentration and<lb/>
the energy of their audience. In<lb/>
order to tailor the performance,<lb/>
the mime needs to know what is They pulled it off anyway, in<lb/>
going on out there. Mainly Mime spite of the dogs and the cannon-<lb/>
had to deal with what must haye tire<lb/>
been a lot of ambiguous feed- The show Thursday was Main-<lb/>
back, because the audience was ly Mime's first appearance on a<lb/>
just as disturbed bv the distrac- southern campus, and hopefully<lb/>
tions as thev were. it won't be the last. <lb/>
Gay Folks Can Be Just As<lb/>
Funny As The Rest Of Us<lb/>
Photo by LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Dunk-a-Chi O<lb/>
proceeds for the March of Dimes<lb/>
By ROBERT ALBANESE<lb/>
Assl. Features Kditor<lb/>
A Mr. Alfonso Chiacherone, of<lb/>
Holyoke, Mass. writes:<lb/>
Why don't you ever satirize<lb/>
gays? Most of the gay humor<lb/>
floating around is getting kind<lb/>
of stale, and the guys down<lb/>
here at the club are looking for<lb/>
a few jokes to liven the place<lb/>
up, you know what I mean?<lb/>
Keep the humor flowing.<lb/>
The truth of the matter is, gay<lb/>
people homo homoque) are too<lb/>
easy to make fun of because of all<lb/>
the stereotypes provided by society<lb/>
at large. Any junior high school<lb/>
humorist can make up gay jokes,<lb/>
and authorities report that most ot<lb/>
the street-humor associated with<lb/>
gays actually does originate in such<lb/>
places. ,<lb/>
Yes, gays certainly are funny, but<lb/>
the self-respecting humorist must<lb/>
seek new frontiers of humor. Take,<lb/>
for example, the nongay (hetero<lb/>
normal is).<lb/>
Except for those who have no se<lb/>
ual affiliation (such as certain<lb/>
members of the clergy, those active<lb/>
in politics and the dead), non-gays<lb/>
come in three basic kinds: hetero in-<lb/>
different us, hetero ultranormalis,<lb/>
and hetero superliberalis.<lb/>
Hetero indiffentus can be<lb/>
recognized by his maxim, "If they<lb/>
leave me alone, I'll leave them<lb/>
alone He is interested only in his<lb/>
own sexual behavior, but fears the<lb/>
possibility of being propositioned<lb/>
by a gay as he has not thought of a<lb/>
cool way to decline. This particular<lb/>
subspecies of homo americanus<lb/>
thinks that the gay life style is<lb/>
somewhat revolting but has relatives<lb/>
who are more revolting still. He<lb/>
would hire gays to work in his office<lb/>
but only in groups of two The<lb/>
"Gayness Book of World Records"<lb/>
reports that although most<lb/>
Americans think they belong to this<lb/>
category, only about 5 percent of<lb/>
the population actually does.<lb/>
The second group of nongays,<lb/>
hetero ultranormalis, is known for<lb/>
. the expression, "Let's get drunk<lb/>
and beat up some fags These peo-<lb/>
ple have protruding bellies, arms<lb/>
covered with hair, and in general<lb/>
some kind of learning disability.<lb/>
They imagine gays as weak and<lb/>
pathetic, a mockery of the manhood<lb/>
they themselves represent. They<lb/>
usually have a harder time making a<lb/>
woman than does the average gay.<lb/>
and they enjoy farting and scrat-<lb/>
ching their testicles in public.<lb/>
The most characteristic aspect of<lb/>
hetero ultranormalis is his sug-<lb/>
gestibility. If you tell him that the<lb/>
way he wears his cap is a gay signal,<lb/>
ft will throw the hat away and wear<lb/>
a fez. If you tell him that gays watch<lb/>
"Hee Haw he will watch<lb/>
Lawrence Welk and enjoy it. And it<lb/>
you tell him that many professional<lb/>
football players are gay, he'll either<lb/>
beat you up or commit suicide.<lb/>
By far the funniest group of<lb/>
nongays is hetero superliberalis.<lb/>
They imagine themselves as cham-<lb/>
pions of freedom and are thought<lb/>
by many to be an evolutionary<lb/>
throwback to homo student is lef-<lb/>
tissimus (circa 1969). They are<lb/>
known for the statement, "Like, a<lb/>
lot of my best friends are gay,<lb/>
man<lb/>
Superliberalis does haye many<lb/>
friends who are gay, often at their<lb/>
expense. He offers victory slogans<lb/>
to gays who just want to be left<lb/>
alone and hands out fliers without<lb/>
askine the gays permission. They<lb/>
hungrily await "fag' jokes, to<lb/>
which they respond, "Hey, you<lb/>
bourgeois repressionist element.<lb/>
Dont vou realize that many of the<lb/>
founding fathers were gay? I'll bet<lb/>
you're against the blacks, too<lb/>
Superliberalis also has a lot of black<lb/>
friends.<lb/>
Blacks and gays report that<lb/>
Superliberalis can be a boon, as they<lb/>
are alwavs ready to lend money or<lb/>
drugs. They will let you use their<lb/>
car, and if you wreck it, they won't<lb/>
let you pay for it because you've<lb/>
already paid your debt to society.<lb/>
They are always quick with a balled<lb/>
fist' and a hearty "Right on,<lb/>
brother<lb/>
I; myself, belong to a fourth<lb/>
category of nongay. We believe that<lb/>
the gays are basically all right, but,<lb/>
to tell the truth, 1 wouldn't let my<lb/>
daughter marry one.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057260_0006"/><lb/>
6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 8, 1980<lb/>
Barefoot<lb/>
On The<lb/>
Mall<lb/>
Peter Rick Bloeme (left), 1977<lb/>
World Champion, shows his<lb/>
stuff. A large crowd par-<lb/>
ticipated in ECU's second<lb/>
Barefoot On The Mall.<lb/>
Photo by RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
'Free Flick' Features Rock<lb/>
BvSTEVE?BACHNER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
This Wednesday<lb/>
night, April 9, the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee will present a<lb/>
concert double feature<lb/>
with a regional premier<lb/>
showing of "Rod<lb/>
Stewart ? In Concert"<lb/>
at both 6 and 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
and a single showing of<lb/>
"Ladies and<lb/>
Gentlemen, The Roll-<lb/>
ing Stones" at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. Both films will be<lb/>
heard in "concert"<lb/>
Surround Sound.<lb/>
The films will be<lb/>
shown in Mendenhall's<lb/>
Hendrix Theater. Ad-<lb/>
mission for students is<lb/>
by ID arcd activity card.<lb/>
Faculty and staff may<lb/>
use their Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
Membership Card.<lb/>
First released in a<lb/>
series of ticket-only<lb/>
presentations, "Ladies<lb/>
and Gentlemen, The<lb/>
Rolling Stones" has<lb/>
emerged as the<lb/>
brightest, swiftest and<lb/>
least cluttered of the<lb/>
many rock 'n' roll con-<lb/>
cert films that have<lb/>
come down the pike in<lb/>
recent years.<lb/>
The film captures the<lb/>
magic that is the Roll-<lb/>
ing Stones and has<lb/>
made them the world's<lb/>
most successful and en-<lb/>
during rock<lb/>
phenomena.<lb/>
Long before Rod<lb/>
Stewart decided to<lb/>
spend his time turning<lb/>
out disco singles, the<lb/>
Scottish singer was one<lb/>
of rock 'n' roll's most<lb/>
exciting performers.<lb/>
That excitement is cap-<lb/>
tured in "Rod Stewart<lb/>
? In Concert which<lb/>
was filmed on Stewart's<lb/>
last performance with<lb/>
the now-disbanded<lb/>
Faces.<lb/>
The movie, which<lb/>
has yet to be released to<lb/>
commercial theater<lb/>
chains across the coun-<lb/>
try, serves as a power-<lb/>
ful refresher course on<lb/>
the direction of<lb/>
Stewart's music at the<lb/>
time, especially when<lb/>
considered in contrast<lb/>
to the schmaltzy pop<lb/>
and disco efforts he has<lb/>
produced on his most<lb/>
recent albums.<lb/>
There are the in-<lb/>
evitable gratuitous<lb/>
shots of Rod shaking<lb/>
his behind for the<lb/>
teenyboppers, but<lb/>
Stewart's stage<lb/>
presence rises far<lb/>
beyond such instances.<lb/>
The combination of the<lb/>
Scotsman's singing,<lb/>
posing, coaxing the au-<lb/>
dience and prancing<lb/>
around the stage con-<lb/>
tributes to the magic of<lb/>
a Stewart concert.<lb/>
The mixture vaults<lb/>
Stewart to a level below<lb/>
only Mick Jagger and<lb/>
Roger Daultrey among<lb/>
rock's most charismatic<lb/>
lead singers. This, com-<lb/>
bined with the powerful<lb/>
backup of a band that<lb/>
features lead guitarist<lb/>
Ron Wood (currently<lb/>
with the Stones and ap-<lb/>
pearing in "Ladies and<lb/>
Gentlemen, The Roll-<lb/>
ing Stones") and guest<lb/>
appearances by revered<lb/>
Stones' guitarist and<lb/>
composer Keith<lb/>
Richards, provides a<lb/>
raw product that only<lb/>
the most bungling of<lb/>
filmmakers could dull.<lb/>
Here, the product is<lb/>
instead enhanced by<lb/>
good camerawork and<lb/>
excellent sound<lb/>
reproduction. The film<lb/>
consists of footage<lb/>
from the concert,<lb/>
without interruption by-<lb/>
artsy, phantasmagoric<lb/>
interludes (e.g. ? Led<lb/>
Zeppelin's "The Song<lb/>
Remains the Same").<lb/>
As a result, at no time<lb/>
does the product seem<lb/>
pretentious.<lb/>
Stewart's show is<lb/>
rather an unbridled<lb/>
concert on film.<lb/>
Stewart whips his<lb/>
microphone stand<lb/>
around like a baton and<lb/>
several times coaxes the<lb/>
audience into sing-<lb/>
alongs (most notably<lb/>
on his last song, the<lb/>
classic "Maggie<lb/>
May").<lb/>
But it is the blonde-<lb/>
haired artist's singing<lb/>
that lends the most<lb/>
worth to his perfor-<lb/>
mance. A critic once<lb/>
observed that "Stewart<lb/>
has an awful voice, but<lb/>
he sure knows how to<lb/>
sing a song The<lb/>
seeming paradox<lb/>
perfectly describes<lb/>
Stewart's showing in<lb/>
the film.<lb/>
His voice is as scrat-<lb/>
chy and raw as ever,<lb/>
but nothing is more<lb/>
suitable against the<lb/>
background of scream-<lb/>
ing guitars and raunchy<lb/>
rock. The distinctive<lb/>
voice is just as perfect<lb/>
for Stewart's occa-<lb/>
sional ballads.<lb/>
It is more than<lb/>
anything the sensitivity<lb/>
and skill with which<lb/>
Stewart sings which<lb/>
enhances his vocal con-<lb/>
tributions. At several<lb/>
points we are treated to<lb/>
the singer's sense of<lb/>
humor<lb/>
At one point, the<lb/>
bizarre Ron Wood,<lb/>
under Stewart's direc-<lb/>
tion, stands beside and<lb/>
accompanies the string<lb/>
section that sits to the<lb/>
side of the stage. The<lb/>
violinists, all middle-<lb/>
aged and clad in tux-<lb/>
edos, react with a com-<lb/>
bination of smiles and<lb/>
icy glares. A delighted<lb/>
Stewart then joins<lb/>
Wood and tosses a<lb/>
towel to one of the<lb/>
violinists.<lb/>
At another point,<lb/>
during a remarkable<lb/>
performance of<lb/>
"Twisting the Night<lb/>
Away a flurry of ar-<lb/>
tificial snow falling to<lb/>
the stage gradually<lb/>
becomes a blizzard.<lb/>
Overall, the film, as<lb/>
a chronicle of a superb<lb/>
rock 'n' roll show, is a<lb/>
reminder of what Rod<lb/>
Stewart was once<lb/>
capable of. "Rod<lb/>
Stewart ? In Concert"<lb/>
is thoroughly<lb/>
outrageous and en-<lb/>
joyable.<lb/>
Rod Stewart<lb/>
?'v<lb/>
"Jim Sji 2e H "?<lb/>
on thi co?rr o? o?tm c??<lb/>
SUMMER JOB OPENINGS FOR CAMP COUNSELORS at<lb/>
camp Sea Gull (boys) and Camp Seafarer (girls) on the coast<lb/>
of North Carolina The camps feature sailing, motor-<lb/>
boating, and steamship, plus all usual camping activities in-<lb/>
cluding a wide variety of major sports. Early June through<lb/>
mid August Challenging work with young people, 7-16<lb/>
years of age outdoors enjoyable stimulating. Qualifica-<lb/>
tions include ability to instruct in one phase of the camp's<lb/>
program, a genuine intrest in young people, and excellent<lb/>
references Quick answer upon receipt of letter of applica-<lb/>
tion whicn should include a brief resume' of training and ex-<lb/>
rience in area(s) of the camp program in which you are<lb/>
Dest qualified to instruct. Apply to Wyatt Taylor, Director,<lb/>
Camp Sea GullCamp Seafarer, P.O. Box 10976, Raleigh,<lb/>
NC 27605<lb/>
Terry<lb/>
Susan P.<lb/>
MaiyAnne<lb/>
Molly<lb/>
Becca<lb/>
Carroll<lb/>
Ellen<lb/>
Loretta<lb/>
Susan N.<lb/>
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Lynn<lb/>
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SusanS.<lb/>
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We are the women who make The<lb/>
Fleming Center such a special place,<lb/>
providing prompt and personal,<lb/>
patientoriented care for women of all<lb/>
ages. We know your needs. WeVe been<lb/>
here since 1974.<lb/>
Call 781-8880 anytime<lb/>
Accurate, non-Judgmental<lb/>
information whenever you need it,<lb/>
about contraception, abortion, sex and<lb/>
relationsnipe, from the resource<lb/>
center for sexual health.<lb/>
The Flaming Center, Inc.<lb/>
3613 Haworth Drive<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27609<lb/>
Campus Elections April 15th<lb/>
NEW SUMMER OLYMPICS<lb/>
PRESIDENT CARTER SAV&amp; NO TO THE MOSCOW OLVMPiCS<lb/>
THE ELK) AND THE Q&amp;TWLfc SAV VES<lb/>
TO TWEiR VERSION OF THE SUMMER OLYMPICS<lb/>
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LOSE 17 TO 25 POUNDS,<lb/>
IN JUST 6 WEEKS<lb/>
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WHILE IT LASTS<lb/>
BEGINNING AT Q PM I<lb/>
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r<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
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t2OO-8AUCONBCMN-2A?Mtia0N ps? AT SRRTSV8RLD<lb/>
Elections for sdorm leaders across the campus will be held Tues. April<lb/>
15th. With the re-zoning of the campus this year, elections will be<lb/>
slightly different than they have been in years past. In the past, spring<lb/>
elections have determined the executive staffs of the Men and Women<lb/>
Residence Councils. The rezoning that has taken place divides the cam-<lb/>
pus into three Virtually equal Campuses. This year students Belk.<lb/>
Scott, Tyler, Aycock and Jones will be voting for members of the Col-<lb/>
lege Hill Campus Executive Council. This coucil will be the governing<lb/>
body for all the dorms on the 'hill Qrls in the high rise dorms, Greene,<lb/>
Fletcher, Clement, White and Garrett will elect the executive members<lb/>
of the West Campus Executive Council. The remaining dorms, Cot ten,<lb/>
Jarvis, Fleming, and the two co-ed dorms, Slay and Umstead, will elect<lb/>
representatives for the Central Campus Executive Council.<lb/>
These three area councils, College Hill, West and Central, will all be<lb/>
co-ordinated by a new student organization, the Student Residence<lb/>
Association (SRAJ that will be in effect next fall.<lb/>
Interested candidates should file with their Residence Hall Directors<lb/>
or the Office of Residence Life, 214 Whichard.<lb/>
The elections will be on Tuesday, April 15 with polls being located in<lb/>
each dorm lobby between 10:00 and 4:00.<lb/>
There will be a mandatory meeting of all candidates applying for<lb/>
positions on the area Campus Councils on Thursday, April 10 at 7:30<lb/>
in the basement of Scott Dorm. Positions available (all areas) include<lb/>
President, Vke-President, Secretary and Treasurer. Remember, those<lb/>
elected will represent YOU, so please vote on April 15.<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057260_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROUSE<lb/>
APRIL 8, 1980<lb/>
Billy Joel's Latest<lb/>
Glass House Remains Pop<lb/>
B STEPHANIE<lb/>
K. riNGLEK<lb/>
staff riter<lb/>
i ou know what they<lb/>
iv about people who<lb/>
ve in glass houses.<lb/>
(Veil, Billy Joel has<lb/>
evei been too concern-<lb/>
d with "they" and<lb/>
ves it with his latest<lb/>
ie, Glass Houses,<lb/>
thei olume in his<lb/>
ical odysscy.<lb/>
loel hit the American<lb/>
sic charts with<lb/>
ano Man" in 1973.<lb/>
He followed this suc-<lb/>
ess with two good<lb/>
ims that got cuts m-<lb/>
the top 40 but little<lb/>
fanatically adoring its way into the new<lb/>
group in the Northeast, work. 52nd Street made<lb/>
Joel finally got national FM, but only th less<lb/>
recognition with his significant cuts made it<lb/>
gem, The Stranger, a<lb/>
four-time platinum in<lb/>
1977, which won the<lb/>
pianist a Grammy for<lb/>
Best Song of the Year<lb/>
("Just the Way You<lb/>
Are) Practically<lb/>
every cut on the album<lb/>
got exposure on FM<lb/>
stations all over the<lb/>
world, and Joel and his<lb/>
band took their first<lb/>
North American tour in<lb/>
1978.<lb/>
52nd Street was<lb/>
released shortly after<lb/>
the 1978 tour was corn-<lb/>
including publiei- pleted. This album ex-<lb/>
Streetlife Serenade hibited Joel's ex-<lb/>
4) and Turnstiles perimental streak, and<lb/>
6) Once worship- the unmistakable in-<lb/>
bs a small but fluence of jazz wedged<lb/>
on the charts. Joel, the<lb/>
Band, Stephen Stills,<lb/>
Weather Report and a<lb/>
few other notables were<lb/>
invited to Cuba in<lb/>
1978. Joel was an im-<lb/>
mediate media draw,<lb/>
made another tour of<lb/>
the United States and<lb/>
set to work on his next<lb/>
release<lb/>
New Wave. It's not the<lb/>
blatant, offensive New<lb/>
Wave of Squeeze, etc.<lb/>
but a conservative<lb/>
"thumb in the pie<lb/>
Joel can no longer af-<lb/>
ford to be the artist in<lb/>
the ivory tower of<lb/>
i very nice ballad display here with clean<lb/>
en francais, "C'etait piano work (which is<lb/>
Toi "Don't Ask Me<lb/>
Why" carries on the<lb/>
Latin tradition Joel<lb/>
made popular with last<lb/>
year's "Rosalinda's<lb/>
Eyes but my favorite<lb/>
hard to<lb/>
release)<lb/>
lyrics.<lb/>
find<lb/>
and<lb/>
on this<lb/>
caustic<lb/>
freedom of expression piece is "Sleeping with<lb/>
and admits it in cuts the Television On.<lb/>
that show he is attemp-<lb/>
ting to read potential<lb/>
tastes. "Close to the<lb/>
Borderline" and "it's<lb/>
Still Rock and Roll to<lb/>
Pure Billv Joel is on<lb/>
It's definitely worth<lb/>
the bucks, unless of<lb/>
course you've gotten<lb/>
your Summer School<lb/>
bill.<lb/>
Wh The Stranger Me" are real solid rock<lb/>
offered to pop music and smack of Costello.<lb/>
and 52nd Street to<lb/>
those who feel<lb/>
themselves tugged xinto<lb/>
the realms of im-<lb/>
provisation and extend-<lb/>
ed solos, Glass Houses<lb/>
will be to those who<lb/>
can't quite<lb/>
themselves to<lb/>
Glass Houses retains<lb/>
some of Joel's pop in<lb/>
songs like "You May<lb/>
Be Right" and<lb/>
"Sometimes a Fan-<lb/>
tasy "Through the<lb/>
Long Night" slides like<lb/>
bring late BeatlesMcCartney<lb/>
enjoy material, and there is<lb/>
WJNtetjB 5<lb/>
HjgP<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Art<lb/>
Show<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
Arts major Brenda<lb/>
Williams is displaying<lb/>
her senior show in<lb/>
Mendenhall upper<lb/>
cases from April 8<lb/>
dedicated to her<lb/>
parents, Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Wallace L. Williams of<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
Works displayed in<lb/>
the show include<lb/>
through April 13. The graphics, illustrations,<lb/>
show is titled "Mission typography, black-and-<lb/>
Accomplished" and is white and color<lb/>
photography. Ms<lb/>
Williams will graduate<lb/>
this May with a<lb/>
Bachelor of Fine Arts<lb/>
in Communications<lb/>
Arts and plans to pur-<lb/>
sue a career as a<lb/>
graphic<lb/>
designphotographer.<lb/>
8<lb/>
 Try Our New Sub<lb/>
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If you're a student or<lb/>
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pend<lb/>
p ? work in the<lb/>
Ji Mates, two<lb/>
programs of work,<lb/>
study and travel. C1EE<lb/>
has been active in the<lb/>
field of student travel<lb/>
"Worldwide Summer<lb/>
Placement Directory<lb/>
published by the Ad-<lb/>
vancement and Place-<lb/>
ment Institute, is a<lb/>
listing of jobs open <lb/>
mainlv to college issue international Stu<lb/>
students. Most are in dent l.D. cards. You 1<lb/>
cost, simple, overnight<lb/>
sleeping accomoda-<lb/>
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mattress and blanket.<lb/>
for more than 25 years There are separate dor-<lb/>
and is authorized to mitories for men and<lb/>
the U.S though the<lb/>
book also lists foreign<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
Most students ar-<lb/>
range for foreign<lb/>
need proof that you are<lb/>
a bona fide student ?<lb/>
photographs, etc.<lb/>
Membership is only<lb/>
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employment through eligible for discounts in<lb/>
the Council on Interna- many places<lb/>
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b v state<lb/>
the job, re-<lb/>
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Manx jobs are<lb/>
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I ook for<lb/>
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Moyment Directory<lb/>
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ed bv Barbara<lb/>
men and published<lb/>
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5 in the United<lb/>
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lives advice on how to<lb/>
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I m p I o v m e n t .<lb/>
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can obtain work<lb/>
authorizations in the<lb/>
following countries for<lb/>
full-time college<lb/>
students 18-30: Britain,<lb/>
France, Ireland and<lb/>
New Zealand. You can<lb/>
also arrange for work<lb/>
on a kibbutz in Israel.<lb/>
The fee for obtaining<lb/>
employment authoriza-<lb/>
tion is $40; in Ireland<lb/>
it's $20.<lb/>
CIEE is a private,<lb/>
For further informa-<lb/>
tion, contact CIEE, 777<lb/>
United Nations Plaza,<lb/>
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Students can save a<lb/>
bundle when traveling<lb/>
to job destinations by<lb/>
staving at American<lb/>
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are 200 of these hostels<lb/>
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Before using the<lb/>
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There are grassy sites<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057260_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 8, 1980<lb/>
Anti-Nukes To 'Air' Views<lb/>
As a Peace Corps Volunteer, you can help people<lb/>
in developing nations try to meet their basic<lb/>
needs in areas of Food, Energy, Community<lb/>
Development, Health Care, and Education. Its<lb/>
a full-time, 24-hour a day commitment with<lb/>
built-in frustrations and sacrifices. It qpuld be<lb/>
the toughest job you'll ever love. .<lb/>
By J ACQUI SALMON<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
Connecticut<lb/>
residents turning on<lb/>
their radios these days<lb/>
are apt to hear a cool<lb/>
male voice asking<lb/>
them: "Did Three Mile<lb/>
Island make you<lb/>
wonder just how safe<lb/>
nuclear reactors are?<lb/>
Well, Connecticut<lb/>
residents who live in the<lb/>
general area of the<lb/>
Millstone nuclear reac-<lb/>
tors could be in just as<lb/>
much danger<lb/>
After reeling off a<lb/>
list of the accidents that<lb/>
have struck the two<lb/>
nuclear power plants<lb/>
supplying most of the<lb/>
electricity for Connec-<lb/>
ticut's giant Northeast<lb/>
Utilities, the voice con-<lb/>
cludes: "These<lb/>
thoughts are brought to<lb/>
you by FUSE, the Fund<lb/>
for Secure Energy<lb/>
It's all part of a<lb/>
carefully planned<lb/>
strategy masterminded<lb/>
by John Aristotle<lb/>
Phillips, the former<lb/>
Princeton University<lb/>
student who designed a<lb/>
workable atomic bomb<lb/>
three years ago for his<lb/>
junior thesis. A Con-<lb/>
necticut native, Phillips<lb/>
founded FUSE in Oc-<lb/>
tober 1979, in order to<lb/>
take a new tack to the<lb/>
pro-solar, anti-nuke<lb/>
battle. Instead of<lb/>
organizing mass<lb/>
? demonstrations or civil<lb/>
disobedience actions,<lb/>
FUSE is taking on the<lb/>
nuclear industry and oil<lb/>
interests on its turf.<lb/>
The group is buying<lb/>
$250,000 worth of<lb/>
radio air time over the<lb/>
next year to air a series<lb/>
of commercials urging<lb/>
energy efficiency and<lb/>
alternative energy and<lb/>
attacking Big Business<lb/>
energy control.<lb/>
"Our is not a grass<lb/>
roots organization<lb/>
Phillips explains.<lb/>
"We're not set up to<lb/>
hold demonstrations or<lb/>
rallies or that sort of<lb/>
thing. We think that<lb/>
our area of expertise is<lb/>
in terms of media, and<lb/>
that is where we should<lb/>
be concentrating our<lb/>
efforts<lb/>
An attractive, ar-<lb/>
ticulate 24-year-old,<lb/>
Phillips is an effective<lb/>
blend of young<lb/>
idealism and clear-eyed<lb/>
pragmatism. He<lb/>
graduated from<lb/>
Princeton in May 1978<lb/>
with a degree in<lb/>
aerospace and<lb/>
mechanical studies. He<lb/>
now lives in Norwalk,<lb/>
Connecticut. Phillips'<lb/>
design for the atomic<lb/>
bomb, which he pieced<lb/>
together using only<lb/>
publicly available<lb/>
documents, caused a<lb/>
sensation in the scien-<lb/>
tific world. Until then,<lb/>
the scientific establish-<lb/>
ment had believed that<lb/>
designing an atomic<lb/>
bomb took<lb/>
sophisticated equip-<lb/>
ment and extensive<lb/>
knowledge. But<lb/>
Phillips proved that<lb/>
just about anyone was<lb/>
capable of coming up<lb/>
with the bomb ? in-<lb/>
cluding terrorist<lb/>
groups. It wasn't a<lb/>
pleasant thought, but it<lb/>
is one that Phillips has<lb/>
been using since then to<lb/>
argue against nuclear<lb/>
power and nuclear pro-<lb/>
liferation. Using per-<lb/>
suasion, and his<lb/>
notoriety as the<lb/>
"A-Bomb Kid<lb/>
Phillips has so far rais-<lb/>
ed more than $100,000<lb/>
for FUSE. The group's<lb/>
small staff works out of<lb/>
a cluttered office in<lb/>
Westport, Connecticut.<lb/>
Phillips serves in a non-<lb/>
salaried position as<lb/>
chairman. A former<lb/>
Princeton University<lb/>
classmate, John Cof-<lb/>
fee, is executive direc-<lb/>
tor. There are only<lb/>
three staff members,<lb/>
although a number of<lb/>
high school students do<lb/>
volunteer work.<lb/>
tions throughout the<lb/>
state. Some will be<lb/>
public service an-<lb/>
nouncements, while the<lb/>
more "hard-balled"<lb/>
will be paid adver-<lb/>
tisements, Phillips says.<lb/>
FUSE bases its<lb/>
philosophy on "Energy<lb/>
Future the six-year<lb/>
study conducted by<lb/>
members of the Har-<lb/>
vard Business School.<lb/>
The study rejects the<lb/>
prospect of significant<lb/>
contributions in the<lb/>
future from coal, oil<lb/>
gas or nuclear power as<lb/>
impractical and expen-<lb/>
sive. Instead, the study<lb/>
advocates energy effi-<lb/>
"Did Three Mile Island<lb/>
make you wonder just<lb/>
how safe nuclear reactors<lb/>
are?"<lb/>
The results were en-<lb/>
couraging for FUSE.<lb/>
Forty-two percent of<lb/>
those surveyed said<lb/>
they prefer that the<lb/>
U.S. be dependent on<lb/>
solar energy in the next<lb/>
10 years. Only 10 per-<lb/>
cent wanted nuclear<lb/>
power. Fifty-two per-<lb/>
cent said they opposed<lb/>
building more nukes in<lb/>
Connecticut, while<lb/>
forty-two percent<lb/>
favored building more.<lb/>
Using that informa-<lb/>
tion, media consultant<lb/>
Tony Schwartz is<lb/>
designing 40 to 60 radio<lb/>
spots aimed at various<lb/>
demographic groups,<lb/>
to be aired on radio sta-<lb/>
ciency and solar energy<lb/>
as the wave of the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Explains Phillips:<lb/>
"They will send us the<lb/>
information ? perti-<lb/>
nent information regar-<lb/>
ding where they think<lb/>
public opinion is at,<lb/>
what arguments are be-<lb/>
ing made by the utility,<lb/>
how to refute those<lb/>
arguments and what<lb/>
the concerns of the<lb/>
public are. And then we<lb/>
will, in turn, turn that<lb/>
into professionally pro-<lb/>
duced 30- and<lb/>
60-second radio<lb/>
spots<lb/>
The need for such a<lb/>
professional service is<lb/>
becoming more urgent,<lb/>
Phillips believes. The<lb/>
Three Mile Island<lb/>
debacle may have<lb/>
wounded the nuclear<lb/>
industry, but it is by no<lb/>
means dead. Millions<lb/>
of dollars are being<lb/>
spent on radio commer-<lb/>
cials, newspaper and<lb/>
magazine adver-<lb/>
tisements and<lb/>
billboards to convince<lb/>
the public of the in-<lb/>
evitability and<lb/>
desirability of nuclear<lb/>
power and other syn-<lb/>
thetic fuels.<lb/>
FUSE doesn't have<lb/>
that kind of money, but<lb/>
Phillips isn't concern-<lb/>
ed. He points to the<lb/>
poll results as showing<lb/>
that the public has not<lb/>
yet been convinced of<lb/>
the virtues of nuclear<lb/>
power, despite the<lb/>
millions.<lb/>
"We can't match the<lb/>
utilities dollar for<lb/>
dollar. But we don't<lb/>
have to, because the<lb/>
public is not stupid<lb/>
he says. "The public<lb/>
usually knows when it's<lb/>
being told the truth.<lb/>
We can be outspent ten<lb/>
to one and still get<lb/>
public opinions on our<lb/>
side<lb/>
Phillips may not be<lb/>
around to see that day<lb/>
come to FUSE. Now<lb/>
that he has the group<lb/>
on its feet, he is eyeing<lb/>
his next step. Both<lb/>
political parties have<lb/>
approached him about<lb/>
running for Congress in<lb/>
November. Although<lb/>
he hasn't made up his<lb/>
mind yet, he is leaning<lb/>
in that direction.<lb/>
I'm beginning to<lb/>
feel more and more<lb/>
that we need young<lb/>
people and we need<lb/>
people who are willing<lb/>
to discuss these issues<lb/>
and present a clear<lb/>
choice to the American<lb/>
public he says, ad-<lb/>
ding, "it's fine for the<lb/>
New York Times to say<lb/>
that there's no hurry to<lb/>
solve the nuclear waste<lb/>
problem. There's no<lb/>
hurry for them because<lb/>
by the time this stuff<lb/>
starts to leak, most of<lb/>
the people who wrote<lb/>
that editorial will be<lb/>
dead. Buta s far as you<lb/>
and I are concerned,<lb/>
we'll be picking up the<lb/>
tab, and we're going to<lb/>
be paying a very heavy<lb/>
price<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community<lb/>
for 54 yean.<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday during<lb/>
the summer.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
licial newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University, owned, operated, and<lb/>
published for and by the students<lb/>
of East Carolina University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Alumni515 yearly<lb/>
All others$20 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices are<lb/>
located in the Old South Building<lb/>
on the campus of ECU, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Telephone: 75734. 637, 4309<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
s now hiring students for the following positions on the Summer 1980 and<lb/>
198081 staffs:<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR Responsible for the overall operation of the editorial div.aon 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/>
The East Carolinian is an equal opportunity employer<lb/>
??!?.<lb/>
Distributed<lb/>
By<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
Beverage Co.<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
GOLD and SILVER<lb/>
Compare and then call<lb/>
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by Les Jewelers<lb/>
120 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Pretenders' Album Is 'ForcefuV<lb/>
IWIPOHTISO<lb/>
By MARK KEMP<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Bands like the<lb/>
Pretenders are<lb/>
responsible for the<lb/>
current revolutionary<lb/>
musical explosion. It<lb/>
has taken bands like<lb/>
this to overcome the<lb/>
obstruction of popular<lb/>
music perpetuated by<lb/>
the enormous music<lb/>
industry during the<lb/>
seventies. But now,<lb/>
with the radical<lb/>
progress of bands like<lb/>
the Pretenders, Elvis<lb/>
Costello and the Clash<lb/>
to name only a few,<lb/>
rock and roll will<lb/>
certainly never die.<lb/>
With their supreme<lb/>
first LP, the Pretenders<lb/>
have facilitated a very<lb/>
promising future for<lb/>
themselves. All of the<lb/>
musicians present a<lb/>
forceful drive which<lb/>
illustrates the essence<lb/>
of their sound. Chrissie<lb/>
Hynde, the Grace<lb/>
Slick-like lead singer, is<lb/>
an extremely arrogant<lb/>
woman, who, like<lb/>
Slick, insists on<lb/>
dominating the boys in<lb/>
the band. She is a sassy<lb/>
little bitch who is<lb/>
obviously content with<lb/>
her cynicism of the<lb/>
stereotypical woman's<lb/>
role.<lb/>
Side one of the LP<lb/>
breaks ground with a<lb/>
powerful rock V roll!<lb/>
tune, 'Precious This<lb/>
song immediately<lb/>
reveals Chrissie's<lb/>
discontent with the!<lb/>
typical macho man.<lb/>
She sarcastically tells<lb/>
her fellow friend in one<lb/>
line of the song "But<lb/>
not me baby, I'm too<lb/>
precious  Fuck Off<lb/>
You can tell from this<lb/>
song on that Chrissie<lb/>
ain't going to take no<lb/>
lip from any dude.<lb/>
The rest of the first<lb/>
side reveals the<lb/>
enormous creative<lb/>
ability of this new<lb/>
band. "The Phone<lb/>
Call" is a bizarre song<lb/>
using a lot of<lb/>
electronics to represent<lb/>
the sound of a<lb/>
telephone call. They are<lb/>
sending out a message<lb/>
to society. "This is a<lb/>
mercy mission" is the!<lb/>
line repeated<lb/>
continuously<lb/>
throughout the song.<lb/>
"Up the Neck" is a<lb/>
prettier more rhythmic<lb/>
song.<lb/>
It shows a hint of<lb/>
Patty Smith influence<lb/>
in Chrissie's voice.<lb/>
"Space Invader" is an<lb/>
instrumental, again<lb/>
using electronics to<lb/>
depict space sounds, a<lb/>
very popular practice<lb/>
these days. "The<lb/>
Wait" is a direct<lb/>
influence from Patty<lb/>
Smith. It almost could<lb/>
have been on her<lb/>
"Horses" LP. One of<lb/>
the strongest selections<lb/>
on the LP is "Stop<lb/>
Your Sobbing" an old<lb/>
Ray Davies pop son.<lb/>
It is the only song on<lb/>
the album produced by<lb/>
Nick Lowe (the rest are<lb/>
produced by Christ<lb/>
Thomas) and the sound<lb/>
makes this very<lb/>
evident.<lb/>
Side two starts off<lb/>
much softer than the<lb/>
two previous sides.<lb/>
"Kid" sounds a little<lb/>
like something<lb/>
Debborah Harry, of<lb/>
Blondie, would do,<lb/>
only with much more<lb/>
life. The second song,<lb/>
"Private Life" is a<lb/>
slow space song which<lb/>
sounds very much like<lb/>
something Jefferson<lb/>
Airplane might have<lb/>
done. The lead guitar<lb/>
solo echoes of the old<lb/>
Jorma Koukonan style<lb/>
and Chrissie again<lb/>
punches at the lyrics in<lb/>
the style of Grace Slick.<lb/>
"Brass in Pocket"<lb/>
shows Chrissie's total<lb/>
arrogance.<lb/>
The Pretenders are.<lb/>
as of now, a brand new<lb/>
band and cannot be<lb/>
positively judged yet<lb/>
however considering<lb/>
the quality of this<lb/>
album and theii<lb/>
amazing creative<lb/>
abilities, I cannot see a<lb/>
disappointing second<lb/>
album in the making.<lb/>
Their influences are<lb/>
very evident but their<lb/>
own sound is strong<lb/>
too. They are an<lb/>
exciting group infested<lb/>
with unique talent and<lb/>
are on their way to<lb/>
considerable amounts<lb/>
of success.<lb/>
Heineken<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
APRIL 8, 1980<lb/>
P&amp;?<lb/>
Pirates Shell Tar Heels<lb/>
<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports KdiJor<lb/>
The East Carolina baseball team<lb/>
delighted a capacity Harrington<lb/>
Field crowd Thursday with a 10-3<lb/>
win over arch-rival North Carolina.<lb/>
The victory was the ninth in the<lb/>
last ten games for the Pirates, giving<lb/>
them a 14-3 seasonal mark, and<lb/>
brought to an end an 11 game Tar<lb/>
Heel winning streak, leaving them at<lb/>
24-11.<lb/>
The Pirates jumped on UNC<lb/>
starter Bill Musser in the first inning<lb/>
for three runs and then continued<lb/>
their early rampage in the second,<lb/>
scoring four off reliever James<lb/>
Parks.<lb/>
Bill Wilder went the distance for<lb/>
the Pirates, pushing his record to<lb/>
5-0. Wilder scattered ten hits, work-<lb/>
ing himself out of jams on several<lb/>
occasions with excellent support<lb/>
from the ECU defense.<lb/>
The Pirates hit the Tar Heel pit-<lb/>
ching hard, banging out 14 hits as<lb/>
every starter but Butch Davis col-<lb/>
lected at least one. The 0-for-4<lb/>
showing, ironically, brought to an<lb/>
end Davis' 14 game hitting streak.<lb/>
ECU coach Hal Baird was<lb/>
delighted with the play of his club,<lb/>
boasting mostly of the defensive<lb/>
play in his post-game comments.<lb/>
He did so for good reason as the<lb/>
Pirates committed but one error and<lb/>
came up with plays to aid Wilder's<lb/>
decision throughout.<lb/>
"We played a very good game<lb/>
said Baird. "This was really a good<lb/>
win for us. We beat a strong team,<lb/>
one of the best in the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Baird seemed delighted at his<lb/>
team's play in the early part of the<lb/>
? season and expressed real hope<lb/>
when speaking of his team's chances<lb/>
at receiving an NCAA bid. "I'll tell<lb/>
you he said, "if we can keep this<lb/>
up, we'll have a real shot at<lb/>
something in the post-season<lb/>
Hitting standouts for the Pirates<lb/>
included centerfielder Bill" Best and<lb/>
rightfielder Macon Moye. Best had<lb/>
a double and a homer in a 3-for-5<lb/>
outing. Meanwhile Moye went<lb/>
3-for-4, including one double, giv-<lb/>
ing him 20 in his career, tieing him<lb/>
with Ron Staggs for the all-time<lb/>
school record.<lb/>
With one down in the first Kelly<lb/>
Robinette started things off with a<lb/>
single off the pitcher's glove. Best<lb/>
followed with a double. Robinette<lb/>
scored on a wild pitch.<lb/>
Catcher Raymie Styons then<lb/>
walked and moved to second on<lb/>
another wild pitch, which scored<lb/>
Best. Styons moved to third on a fly<lb/>
out and scored on a centerfield<lb/>
single by Moye.<lb/>
In the second inning second<lb/>
baseman Mike Sorrell and Davis led<lb/>
off with consecutive walks. Both<lb/>
were sacrificed one base by<lb/>
Robinette. Best then grounded out<lb/>
to second, scoring Sorrell.<lb/>
A walk issued to Styons was<lb/>
followed by a Rick Derehailo single,<lb/>
scoring Davis. Derechailo and<lb/>
Styons both scored on Moye's<lb/>
subsequent double.<lb/>
The Pirates added single in-<lb/>
surance runs in the fifth, sixth and<lb/>
eight innings. The sixth was<lb/>
highlighted by Best's lead-off home<lb/>
run to right centerfield.<lb/>
The Tar Heels saw a superb scor-<lb/>
ing opportunity go by the wayside in<lb/>
the second when, with two men<lb/>
aboard, Craig Shumock's towering<lb/>
drive to leftfield was flagged down<lb/>
at the fence by Davis.<lb/>
Carolina scored their initial run<lb/>
in the third when shortstop Chris<lb/>
Pittaro scored on a Lloyd Brewer<lb/>
sacrifice.<lb/>
Returns To Coach Alma Mater<lb/>
Emory Realizes Dream<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
From the moment Ed Emory<lb/>
graduated from East Carolina in<lb/>
1960. he had a dream of returning as<lb/>
the school's football coach.<lb/>
That dream came true in<lb/>
December when he was hired to<lb/>
replace Pat Dye, who had resigned<lb/>
and headed to Wyoming.<lb/>
"For so long, my dream was to<lb/>
come back to East Carolina as the<lb/>
head football coach Emory said<lb/>
during a stop in Durham recently.<lb/>
"Everything I've done since then<lb/>
has been with that in mind. In fact, 1<lb/>
applied for the job six years ago<lb/>
when Pat (Dye) got it. I really<lb/>
thought I had shot at becoming the<lb/>
coach then<lb/>
Following Dye won't be an easy<lb/>
task for the former ECU co-captain.<lb/>
The Pirates were 49-18 during Dye's<lb/>
six-year stint. Only six starters<lb/>
return from last season's 7-3-1<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
"It's tough following a guy like<lb/>
Pat Dye said Emory. "He won 80<lb/>
percent of his games and he did a lot<lb/>
to make the football program what<lb/>
it is today. But I am going to do<lb/>
everything I can do to be the best<lb/>
coach I can<lb/>
Emory has encountered the nor-<lb/>
mal adjustment problems, plus a<lb/>
couple he didn't expect. Starting<lb/>
linebacker Jeffrey Warren was ar-<lb/>
rested on drug charges recently, and<lb/>
the wife of defensive coordinator<lb/>
Norm Parker was paralyzed in an<lb/>
automobile accident two weeks ago<lb/>
in Ohio.<lb/>
"That was tragic for Norm and<lb/>
his entire family said Emory.<lb/>
"For obvious reasons he won't be<lb/>
returning to school until the fall.<lb/>
That's slowed us down tremendous-<lb/>
ly, because I've had to handle both<lb/>
the defense and the offense<lb/>
Regarding Warren's arrest,<lb/>
Emory said the junior linebacker<lb/>
was arrested for "telling the guy<lb/>
(narcotics agent) of somebody who<lb/>
could sell him some (marijuana and<lb/>
cocaine). He's been charged with<lb/>
aiding and abetting. We've suspend-<lb/>
ed him from the team until the case<lb/>
is settled<lb/>
But Emory has remained true to<lb/>
his dream. "You've always got to<lb/>
fight for your dream because so-<lb/>
meone's always testing you he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"When we came in here we set up<lb/>
our priorities and we've stressed<lb/>
those things. 1 don't want to go<lb/>
through the transition stage Bo Rein<lb/>
went through at State, Dick Crum<lb/>
went through at UNC and Red<lb/>
Wilson went through at Duke.<lb/>
We're trying to adjust our way of<lb/>
doing things to the players rather<lb/>
than have them adjust to us. It's<lb/>
easier for everyone that way<lb/>
Before taking the ECU job,<lb/>
Emory served as an assistant coach<lb/>
at Georgia Tech for two years. He<lb/>
has also coached at Duke, Wake<lb/>
Forest and Clemson. According to<lb/>
Emory, some of the problems at<lb/>
ECU are academics, weight-training<lb/>
and recruiting.<lb/>
"We want our guys to be sound<lb/>
academically, and a lot of them<lb/>
weren't when 1 got there. We've<lb/>
worked on that he said. "We also<lb/>
found that the overall strength of<lb/>
this team was very, very poor. There<lb/>
just weren't the facilities or the<lb/>
equipment needed to get the body<lb/>
strength our guys are going to need<lb/>
to compete against the teams on our<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
"We had only an adequate<lb/>
recruiting year, although it's not<lb/>
bad for the first year as coach, but<lb/>
Davis' Hitting Streak Snapped<lb/>
we're going to have to do better in<lb/>
future years. Statewide and on a na-<lb/>
tional scale, we're behind the rest of<lb/>
the schools in recruiting<lb/>
Emory also wants to get ECU's<lb/>
alumni and fans more involved in<lb/>
recruiting.<lb/>
"We're going to have a meeting<lb/>
in Greenville on April 25 and get all<lb/>
the ECU fans together. We're going<lb/>
to talk to them about helping us<lb/>
recruit. We'll let them know how<lb/>
they can help us and what they can<lb/>
and can't do under NCAA rules.<lb/>
"And we've got to Fill the<lb/>
stadium. That's the single most im-<lb/>
portant thing to our program right<lb/>
now. When we try to schedule big-<lb/>
name schools to play in Greenville<lb/>
they ask how many people come to<lb/>
see us, not how main people<lb/>
(35,000) our stadium will hold<lb/>
Emory is full of ideas on how to<lb/>
change and improve the ECL pro-<lb/>
gram but there are some things he<lb/>
won't change.<lb/>
"We'll start the season doing<lb/>
tain things a certain way and we'll<lb/>
end the season doing them the same<lb/>
way Emory said. "We believe<lb/>
what we're doing is the best system<lb/>
we can have at ECL. We won't<lb/>
panic. We might have to make a few<lb/>
changes during the season, but we<lb/>
won't be juggling people all over the<lb/>
place<lb/>
Dye Greeted With Open Arms By Cowboys<lb/>
Remember the old "whatever<lb/>
happened to  articles? Well, if<lb/>
not here's one to remember later.<lb/>
For the past several months, a<lb/>
number of ECU students and fans<lb/>
have contacted The East Carolinian<lb/>
and asked about ex-Pirate head<lb/>
football coach Pat Dye.<lb/>
Well, 'old Pat is doing fine and<lb/>
dandy at the University of Wyom-<lb/>
ing. Dye is in the midst of his first<lb/>
recruiting season with the Cowboys<lb/>
and has full support of a multitude<lb/>
of supporters anxious to rebuild a<lb/>
nearly-dead grid program.<lb/>
The best way to exemplify what's<lb/>
going on in Wyoming follows. A<lb/>
month-old article concerning Dye<lb/>
and the Cowboy athletic program<lb/>
recently was found in my mail box.<lb/>
It was sent by a long-time friend<lb/>
who resides in Cheyenne and comes<lb/>
from The Tribune-Eagle newspaper.<lb/>
It reads as follows:<lb/>
By LARRY JARRETT<lb/>
Sunday Sports Editor<lb/>
It won't be white tie and tails but<lb/>
a sports gala is set for Cheyenne<lb/>
when the First annual Cowboy Joe<lb/>
Sports Night is staged Tuesday,<lb/>
Feb. 26 at Holding's Little America.<lb/>
The night to kickoff the fundrais-<lb/>
ing efforts of the Cowboy Joe Club<lb/>
will feature talks by University of<lb/>
Wyoming President Edward H. Jen-<lb/>
nings, Head Football Coach Pat<lb/>
Dye, Head Basketball Coach Jim<lb/>
Bradenburg and Women's Athletic<lb/>
Director Mary Elhn Cloninger.<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
Tickets are $12.50 per person for<lb/>
a prime rib dinner and tickets must<lb/>
be purchased in advance. A capacity<lb/>
crowd of 600 men and women is ex-<lb/>
pected and sitting capacity is limited<lb/>
to 600 persons.<lb/>
"We are launching a new era in<lb/>
University of Wyoming Cowboy<lb/>
athletics said Cowboy Joe Club<lb/>
Sports Night Chairman Mickey<lb/>
Powers in announcing the upcoming<lb/>
event set for 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Tickets will be sold on a First<lb/>
come, first serve basis and can be<lb/>
purchased in Cheyenne at:<lb/>
Greater Cheyenne Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce, 122 E. 17th, phone<lb/>
638-3388; Powers Building Supply,<lb/>
1003 E. Lincolnway, 632-5521;<lb/>
Dray, Madison and Thompson, 2.04<lb/>
E. 22nd, 634-8892; Royal Travel<lb/>
Agency, 914 E. Lincolnway,<lb/>
778-2034; Del Northcutt Realty,<lb/>
1721 Warrenn Ave 634-4406.<lb/>
A number of Cheyenne Quarter-<lb/>
back Club members have expressed<lb/>
an interest in the night and the club<lb/>
will likely have a good representa-<lb/>
tion at the dinner to help boost the<lb/>
athletic programs at UW. In fact,<lb/>
the dinner is the large sports under-<lb/>
taking in Cheyenne in recent years<lb/>
save for the QBC meetings<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
Local sports fans will undoubted-<lb/>
ly enjoy hearing from each of the<lb/>
coaches and the women's athletic<lb/>
director, and especially from Pat<lb/>
Dye who is launching a new gridiron<lb/>
campaign at UW.<lb/>
Dye, who turned a badly sagging<lb/>
East Carolina football program into<lb/>
a powerhouse, became Wyoming's<lb/>
23rd head football coach in Dec. of<lb/>
1979. He.is busy with recruiting in<lb/>
hopes of fielding the kinds of teams<lb/>
he had at East Carolina that posted<lb/>
a 48-18-1 record over six successful<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
A native of Blythe, Ga Dye at-<lb/>
tended Richmond Academy in<lb/>
Augusta, Ga where he won all-<lb/>
state and All-America honors. He<lb/>
then enrolled at the University of<lb/>
Georgia and earned three letter v.<lb/>
was named All-Southeast Con-<lb/>
ference and AH-America in 1959<lb/>
and '60 and was selected to the<lb/>
Academic All-America Team in<lb/>
1960. He played on the Bulldog<lb/>
team that defeated Missouri, 14-0.<lb/>
in the 1959 Orange Bowl. After<lb/>
playing in three post-season bowls,<lb/>
he played for two years with the Ed-<lb/>
monton Eskimos in the Canadian<lb/>
Football League.<lb/>
Dye and his wife, Sue, have two<lb/>
sons, Pat, Jr 17, and Brett, 13, and<lb/>
two daughters, Missy, 16, and Wan-<lb/>
da, nine.<lb/>
V<lb/>
V<lb/>
I<lb/>
y<lb/>
0<lb/>
ft<lb/>
v<lb/>
Lady Bucs Sweep State;<lb/>
Riley Sparks Comeback<lb/>
East Carolina third baseman Maureen Buck<lb/>
watches intently on the base pathes for an op-<lb/>
portunity to advance. The sophomore from<lb/>
Silver Springs, Maryland, pounded out a<lb/>
seventh inning double to drive in Janis Parlon<lb/>
and build momentum for their eventual 4-3<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
. Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina trailed the<lb/>
Wolfpack of N.C. State 3-0 going<lb/>
into the final inning of Thursday's<lb/>
softball doubleheader, but the Lady<lb/>
Pirates rallied to victory 4-3 with a<lb/>
comeback capped by Kathy Riley's<lb/>
bases-loaded single with one out.<lb/>
ECU outlasted the Wolfpack 1-0<lb/>
in the opener as senior Mary Bryan<lb/>
Carlyle claimed both decisions to<lb/>
raise her record to 10-2.<lb/>
The Pirates pounded out their<lb/>
runs on a flurry of singles and<lb/>
capitalized on errors by N.C. State.<lb/>
First baseman Shirley Brown<lb/>
opened the decisive seventh inning<lb/>
with a single, and was replaced on<lb/>
the base paths by freshman<lb/>
speedster Angie Humphrey.<lb/>
Sophomore Janice Parlon reached<lb/>
first on NCSU's first error of the in-<lb/>
ning to advance Humphrey to third.<lb/>
Junior Cindy Meekins stepped to<lb/>
the plate to bat for Carlyle and pro-<lb/>
duced a sacrifice fly to score Hum-<lb/>
phrey. Steady third sacker Maureen<lb/>
Buck laced a double to drive in<lb/>
Parlon and Yvonne "Flea"<lb/>
Williams reached base on an error<lb/>
by the State shortstop.<lb/>
Freshman outfielder Mitzi Davis<lb/>
rapped a single to plate Buck.<lb/>
Freshman outfielder Cynthia<lb/>
Shepard drew an intentional walk,<lb/>
setting the scene for the dramatic<lb/>
climax.<lb/>
ECU coach Alita Dillon went to<lb/>
the bench, calling on Riley to supply<lb/>
the crushing blow.<lb/>
Riley stepped to the plate and<lb/>
quickly fell behind with a one ball,<lb/>
two strike count. The Lady Pirates'<lb/>
hopes of victory dimmed as Riley<lb/>
sliced a pitch straight up over home<lb/>
plate. <lb/>
In form which would delight<lb/>
Charlie Brown (of Peanuts comic<lb/>
fame), the Wolfpack catcher circled<lb/>
relentlessly under the ball. With<lb/>
grace equal to that of an albatross,<lb/>
the chagrined backstop fumbled the<lb/>
ball to the ground to give Riley new<lb/>
salvation.<lb/>
Riley drove the next pitch to<lb/>
center to score Williams for the run<lb/>
to lift the Pirates' seasonal mark to<lb/>
11-2.<lb/>
"I was really relaxed when I went<lb/>
up there to bat said Riley. "I<lb/>
thought it was over when I popped<lb/>
up, but I got lucky<lb/>
The Wolfpack toofc the lead with<lb/>
a pair of unearned runs in the first<lb/>
inning and another in the third.<lb/>
"I think it was a matter of then<lb/>
giving up mentally said Dillon.<lb/>
"In a situation like that when you<lb/>
have your eight, nine and ten batters<lb/>
coming up, things don't look so<lb/>
well. But we have excellent depth<lb/>
and we showed that. They made a<lb/>
couple of errors and we took advan-<lb/>
tage of it.<lb/>
"If the other team can make er-<lb/>
rors and you can take advantage of<lb/>
them, then you're going to be all<lb/>
right<lb/>
Davis pounded out two hits in<lb/>
four trips to the plate and Brown<lb/>
added a pair in three at-bats in the<lb/>
final contest, but no batter claimed<lb/>
more than one hit in the opener.<lb/>
State had the bases loaded in the<lb/>
first inning but failed to produce<lb/>
any runs as they stranded the first of<lb/>
six runners they would leave on the<lb/>
bases in the contest.<lb/>
ECU tallied the game's only run<lb/>
in the third, as Brown singled and<lb/>
advanced on a pair of hits before<lb/>
Williams slapped an RBI fielder's<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
"We had a pair of errors in the<lb/>
first inning said Dillon, "but<lb/>
somehow we kept them from scor-<lb/>
ing. Our defense kept us in it<lb/>
The Lady Pirates travel to UNC-<lb/>
Greensboro today for a<lb/>
doubleheader before hosting a pair<lb/>
with Methodist Wednesday at the<lb/>
ECU field on Charles Street.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057260_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 8, 1980<lb/>
A mateur A thletics<lb/>
Causes Problems<lb/>
By JULIAN WEISS<lb/>
National News Bureau<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/>
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/>
The use of pills has<lb/>
been replaced by<lb/>
biomechanics in the<lb/>
more reputable<lb/>
therapies. The or-<lb/>
thopedists that were<lb/>
relied upon for relief to<lb/>
sprained muscles or<lb/>
aching tendons have<lb/>
been slow in adapting<lb/>
this preventive concept.<lb/>
In biomechanics, body<lb/>
limbs are studied for<lb/>
each individual to<lb/>
determine exercise pit-<lb/>
falls and limits of<lb/>
stress. Mirkin is one of<lb/>
a growing number of<lb/>
advocates of this ap-<lb/>
proach. "By looking at<lb/>
muscles and what kinds<lb/>
of things a person is<lb/>
able to do in the office,<lb/>
such as bending a knee<lb/>
at a certain angle, I<lb/>
know predisposing fac-<lb/>
tors of injury right<lb/>
away In this treat-<lb/>
ment, rehabilitation<lb/>
begins right after a<lb/>
twist, fall or break <lb/>
and continues<lb/>
throughout the fitness<lb/>
program's duration.<lb/>
If amateur joggers,<lb/>
hikers, runners, and<lb/>
bikers want to avoid<lb/>
calamity, they should<lb/>
investigate sport-<lb/>
smedicine. A car-<lb/>
diopulmonary<lb/>
specialist in Aspen<lb/>
(Colorado) Dr. Bruno<lb/>
Balke cautions exer-<lb/>
cisers. "The greater<lb/>
percentage do it<lb/>
without proper medical<lb/>
examination or testing,<lb/>
without knowing their<lb/>
full capability In-<lb/>
juries are caused by<lb/>
lack of flexibility,<lb/>
structural abnor-<lb/>
malities, muscle im-<lb/>
balance, or bad train-<lb/>
ing. Stretching exer-<lb/>
cises are now regarded<lb/>
as keys to avoiding<lb/>
muscle abuse and a<lb/>
remedy superior to the<lb/>
pill-taking, arm injec-<lb/>
tion technique used<lb/>
after the fact.<lb/>
There is danger to<lb/>
the layperson through<lb/>
misinformation. One<lb/>
authority, Allan J.<lb/>
Ryan (Physician and<lb/>
Sportsmedicine editor)<lb/>
has observed that "few<lb/>
medical schools or<lb/>
residencies offer train-<lb/>
ing. Sportsmedicine is<lb/>
not a recognized<lb/>
specialty such as inter-<lb/>
nal medicine or<lb/>
pediatrics The pro-<lb/>
blem of conflicting ad-<lb/>
vice has been rampant;<lb/>
podiatrists and car-<lb/>
diologists are limited in<lb/>
approaching a com-<lb/>
prehensive view, while<lb/>
orthopedic surgeons<lb/>
are given only brief<lb/>
athletic-related train-<lb/>
ing. Maryann Napoli at<lb/>
the Center for Medical<lb/>
Consumers in New<lb/>
York summarizes the<lb/>
view of many. "With<lb/>
the exception of a few<lb/>
orthopedists who con-<lb/>
fine their practices to<lb/>
professional athletes,<lb/>
the medical care system<lb/>
has not been responsive<lb/>
to the needs of those<lb/>
who make vigorous ex-<lb/>
ercise part of the daily<lb/>
routine<lb/>
Examinations should<lb/>
include the treadmill<lb/>
test, blood pressure<lb/>
readings, and the car-<lb/>
diac function test. The<lb/>
borderline overweight,<lb/>
smokers, and those<lb/>
with physical problems<lb/>
should be cautious<lb/>
when designing their<lb/>
regimes ? and check-<lb/>
jps are necessary. Joint<lb/>
laxity, muscle<lb/>
weakness, and coor-<lb/>
dination are all factors<lb/>
in the possibility of<lb/>
future accidents. Dr.<lb/>
George Sheehan,<lb/>
another pioneer in the<lb/>
field, emphasizes<lb/>
strengthflexibility,<lb/>
whereby undue stress<lb/>
on the foot and<lb/>
shoulder is explored.<lb/>
One test designed by<lb/>
Dr. Robert Kerlan at<lb/>
the National Athletic<lb/>
Health Institute in<lb/>
California uses com-<lb/>
puter analyses of<lb/>
pulmonary functions,<lb/>
and a monitoring of fat<lb/>
content in the body to<lb/>
draft a personalized<lb/>
athletic program.<lb/>
"Many consumers<lb/>
are turning to local col-<lb/>
leges for help in obtain-<lb/>
ing sound sport-<lb/>
smedicine examinations<lb/>
and treatment. They<lb/>
assume, correctly, that<lb/>
the schools have many<lb/>
close encounters of all<lb/>
kinds with exercise in-<lb/>
juries. Sportsmedicine<lb/>
came into being only<lb/>
within the last decade,<lb/>
as did the exercise<lb/>
physiology craft, and<lb/>
will doubtless undergo<lb/>
transformations in the<lb/>
1980's.<lb/>
It is closely allied<lb/>
with the preventive<lb/>
medicine ideal, and its<lb/>
probe of body stress<lb/>
and structure can add<lb/>
sophistication to the<lb/>
knowledge of<lb/>
"weekend warriors"<lb/>
intent on consoling<lb/>
themselves for years of<lb/>
inactivity.<lb/>
If you've just<lb/>
brought a set of track<lb/>
shoes or dusted off<lb/>
your tennis racket! then<lb/>
follow one simple rule:<lb/>
preconditioning is the<lb/>
best medicine. Simple<lb/>
warm-up exercises pre-<lb/>
vent most strains and<lb/>
stresses that bring on<lb/>
charleyhorse, cramps,<lb/>
aches and the like.<lb/>
Here are some warn-<lb/>
ing signals to let you<lb/>
know if the bounds of<lb/>
safe ? and hence truly<lb/>
worthwhile ? fitness<lb/>
activity are crossed.<lb/>
Breathing trouble or<lb/>
spitting blood means i<lb/>
lung may be in trouble,<lb/>
or punctured in severe<lb/>
cases.<lb/>
Pain and swelling in<lb/>
the knee is a sign of<lb/>
ligament tears (with<lb/>
surgery likely).<lb/>
Weakness or numbness<lb/>
in the back is related to<lb/>
spinal cord damage.<lb/>
Aside from not<lb/>
cramming in a week's<lb/>
workout into a single<lb/>
day, apply the<lb/>
hardeasy principle.<lb/>
Exert yourself one day,<lb/>
then give yourself a<lb/>
break avoiding possible<lb/>
trouble, on the next.<lb/>
An initial checkup<lb/>
and following the rules<lb/>
keep risks low for the<lb/>
amateur athlete,<lb/>
especially for the pre-35<lb/>
group.<lb/>
With almost half of<lb/>
the population exercis-<lb/>
ing daily, a great many<lb/>
of them will continue to<lb/>
be plagued by minor<lb/>
and severe injuries. For<lb/>
16 million joggers, you<lb/>
can bet your last white<lb/>
sox-and-sweatshirt<lb/>
combo that shin splints<lb/>
(leg muscle fars) will<lb/>
be a continuing<lb/>
possibility.<lb/>
Some common sense<lb/>
? such as trading in<lb/>
high-heeled shoes for<lb/>
sneakers to avoid ten-<lb/>
donitis ? can keep you<lb/>
out of the doctor's.<lb/>
????<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
Backpacks, B-15. Bomber, <lb/>
Field, Deck, Flight,Snorkel J<lb/>
Jackets, Peacoats, Parkas,<lb/>
Shoes, Combat Boots, Plus J<lb/>
1501 S. Evans Street <lb/>
?Ma<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
across St. from<lb/>
Blount Harvey<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
111 W. 4th St.<lb/>
Parking in front and Re;<lb/>
Si<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/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
FLOUNDER 03.SO<lb/>
TROUT ?2.95<lb/>
PERCH ?2.95<lb/>
all you can oat<lb/>
No taka-outs please<lb/>
?Ual Includes:<lb/>
French Fries, Col slaw,<lb/>
HttthpappUs<lb/>
Peace Corps &amp; VISTA<lb/>
will be on campus<lb/>
APRIL 15<lb/>
Booth-Wright Bldg.<lb/>
APRIL 16<lb/>
Career Planning Off.<lb/>
Sign up today for intwvtews<lb/>
PEACE CORPS offers a volunteer<lb/>
opportunity to help oeopte m<lb/>
developing nations meet the oosc<lb/>
numon needs<lb/>
VtSTA volunteers work with<lb/>
groups across America tryrg to<lb/>
ncreose poor peoples voices<lb/>
in community decision<lb/>
making<lb/>
We are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
lor your<lb/>
dining pleasure.<lb/>
PEACE CORPS especially seeks volunteers<lb/>
ith backgrounds n Nursmg, Math, Science,<lb/>
and Business AdmmBtrafion<lb/>
V1SFA invites ON degree candidates to<lb/>
nqmre ooout a challenging grass<lb/>
roots experience<lb/>
Benefits tfclude paid Hwng. travel<lb/>
heuffh expenses plus after<lb/>
'service reaoiustment<lb/>
ukjwunces<lb/>
Nac?C?nK'VISTA<lb/>
!7!3HS?i?e? MW<lb/>
Washington DC 20525<lb/>
ftmrn<lb/>
DC (202) 254 7346<lb/>
Vo Md MC<lb/>
(To?Fwe)<lb/>
(800)424 8580.38<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Dolly 11S30<lb/>
San. Thar. a,Bi<lb/>
4:30-9:00<lb/>
Frl and Sot.<lb/>
430-10:00<lb/>
ECU Basketball<lb/>
Awards Banquet<lb/>
Join the 1979-80 ECU Pirate Basketball team<lb/>
April 10 at the Greenville Country Club when<lb/>
the players are recognized for their ac-<lb/>
complishments during the most successful<lb/>
campaign (16-11) since 1975.<lb/>
Guest Speaker:<lb/>
Clemson's Bill Foster<lb/>
Tickets available through the coaches'<lb/>
office: AAinges Coliseum (757 6472) OR<lb/>
The East Carolinian office (757 6309)<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
I2th 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 83? 0535<lb/>
(toll free number<lb/>
800 221 2568) between 9<lb/>
AM 5PM weekdays.<lb/>
Raleigh Women's<lb/>
Health Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh. N.C. 27603<lb/>
rc<lb/>
z<lb/>
o<lb/>
income By and Munch?<lb/>
a Lunch<lb/>
with us at<lb/>
CHANELO'S<lb/>
We Open at 11:00<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
For Fast Free<lb/>
Delivery<lb/>
03<lb/>
Ol<lb/>
(<lb/>
QJ<lb/>
N<lb/>
N<lb/>
QJ<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C. No. 3 I Nightclub<lb/>
TUES. U 8th<lb/>
Lady Recording Artist<lb/>
il<lb/>
?m<lb/>
High Calorie<lb/>
4<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
WED<lb/>
Columbia Recording Artist<lb/>
Jakota.<lb/>
Rock-n-Roll with Cheyenne<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
TH<lb/>
10th<lb/>
N.Cs Premier Rock Band<lb/>
with Cheyenne<lb/>
with Former members<lb/>
of the Bouys- Jerry &amp; Kelley<lb/>
with Hit Single"Timothy"<lb/>
United Cerebral Palsy Benefit<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C. No.<lb/>
FRI.&amp;<lb/>
VMS.<lb/>
-?<lb/>
with<lb/>
Skeet Kelly<lb/>
IIIIU<lb/>
31 Nightclub<lb/>
A ?<lb/>
th&amp;<lb/>
SAT. Warner Brothers 12th<lb/>
Recording Artists<lb/>
I<lb/>
T<lb/>
1<lb/>
with<lb/>
Lead In<lb/>
"Suddenly" is Arrogance's 4th<lb/>
Album and their best!<lb/>
I<lb/>
r<lb/>
t<lb/>
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