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<pb facs="00057263_0001"/>
?bc lEast (Earnlmtan<lb/>
Vol. 54 No<lb/>
JSff<lb/>
IS.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Thursday, April 17,1980<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Drugs, Immigrants<lb/>
Focus Of Action<lb/>
By LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Assistant News Kditor<lb/>
"The United States is firmly com-<lb/>
mitted to curbing the flow of illicit<lb/>
drugs into this country said Emily<lb/>
Perreault, coordinator of narcotic<lb/>
traffic for the Bureau of Inter-<lb/>
merican Affairs of the U.S. State<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
Ms. Perreault and Dr. Ralph<lb/>
Guzman, deputy assistant secretary<lb/>
of state and director of the Bureau<lb/>
have a lot to do with the problem,<lb/>
Ms. Perreault explained. Because of<lb/>
the tremendous income of drug traf-<lb/>
fickers, they are able to hire laborers<lb/>
and buy land, property and protec-<lb/>
tion. As a result of the large influx<lb/>
of money from drugs, the legitimate<lb/>
economy becomes stifled.<lb/>
According to Ms. Perreault, most<lb/>
Latin American countries can do lit-<lb/>
tle to curb the flow of illicit nar-<lb/>
cotics. This, she said, is because<lb/>
ico began shortly after World War I<lb/>
when strict immigration quotas were<lb/>
imposed. Since then, Mexicans have<lb/>
been crossing the border at ever-<lb/>
increasing rates.<lb/>
The main reason people come to<lb/>
this country is for economic con-<lb/>
siderations, he said.<lb/>
"People come to the United<lb/>
States to search for the better life<lb/>
Guzman said. "Despite our pro-<lb/>
blems, in the eyes of foreigners, the<lb/>
United States is a land of riches,<lb/>
See Immigrants, Page 3, Col. 1<lb/>
public resources are scarce, and<lb/>
of Inter-American Affairs, spoke police are relatively powerless. The where anyone can make a life for<lb/>
Wednesday morning at the 12th An- police are also poor and many are themselves<lb/>
nual Latin American Symposium, corrupt. The governments generally Other reasons for emigration in-<lb/>
sponsored by the Latin American view the drug problem as something elude famine, revolution or the need<lb/>
Area Studies program. the United States should handle, to escape political, religious or<lb/>
"The State Department has three Ms. Perreault added.<lb/>
main tools it uses to win the The State Department's role in<lb/>
cooperation of foreign governments the attempts to slow drug traffic in-<lb/>
to stem drug flow Ms. Perreault to the United States is multifaceted,<lb/>
she said. Their main functon is the<lb/>
negotiation of treaties and<lb/>
agreements, but they also coor-<lb/>
dinate the foreign activities of<lb/>
federal enforcement agencies and<lb/>
operate training, enforcement and<lb/>
public education programs.<lb/>
Dr. Guzman spoke on illegal im-<lb/>
migration to the United States, a<lb/>
problem he well understands. For 15<lb/>
Photo tv JILL ADAMS<lb/>
A Special Jogger<lb/>
competes in a special event (Story, Page 5)<lb/>
said. "First, we try to bargain with<lb/>
the government, telling them we<lb/>
want the drug traffic to stop. They,<lb/>
in turn, tell us what they want<lb/>
She went on to say that the United<lb/>
States can also assist the nation by<lb/>
using State Department funds to<lb/>
purchase enforcement equipment<lb/>
such as communications or, as was<lb/>
done in Mexico, helicopters. Last,<lb/>
Memories Of Repression<lb/>
ECU Iranian Speaks Out<lb/>
she said, they try to persuade the of the first 20 years of his life, he<lb/>
sources of the narcotics to take up was a Mexican "wetback" who slip-<lb/>
legal means of obtaining income, ped into the United States and<lb/>
This is done by providing economic worked in a copper mining town as<lb/>
development aid to the area. a migrant agricultural laborer and a<lb/>
The three most prevalent drugs in merchant seaman before joining the<lb/>
the United States are marijuana, U.S. Navy.<lb/>
heroin and cocaine, Ms. Perreault<lb/>
said. The heroin traffic in this coun-<lb/>
try comes primarily from Mexico,<lb/>
and Columbia supplies most of the<lb/>
cocaine. She noted that in Columbia<lb/>
drug exports rival the country's<lb/>
leading legitimate export, coffee, at<lb/>
approximately $2 billion per year.<lb/>
The economics of drug traffic<lb/>
Guzman, baptized Jose Rafael<lb/>
Jesus Guzman Cortez, is now Depu-<lb/>
ty Assistant Secretary of State for<lb/>
Inter-American Affairs, on leave<lb/>
from his post as professor of<lb/>
political science at the University of<lb/>
California-Santa Cruz.<lb/>
According to Guzman, illegal en-<lb/>
try to the United States from Mex-<lb/>
Penn State Quiet<lb/>
About President's<lb/>
Joining TMI Firm<lb/>
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (CPS) They hoped that experience "will<lb/>
? Just a few days before the first lend significantly to the difficult<lb/>
anniversary of the accident at Three problems we are facing<lb/>
Editors Note: Asghar Memar-<lb/>
zadeh is an Iranian pre-med student<lb/>
at ECU, who says he hopes one day<lb/>
to return to Iran as a physician.<lb/>
Our original intent in the follow-<lb/>
ing interview was to provide a<lb/>
glimpse into the personal life of an<lb/>
Iranian in America, but it soon<lb/>
became evident that the political<lb/>
could not be divorced from the per-<lb/>
sonal.<lb/>
However, we would like to stress<lb/>
that Asghar is only one man, one<lb/>
Iranian among thousands in this<lb/>
country, and can speak only for<lb/>
himself. What follows are exerpts<lb/>
from a taped interview with Asghar<lb/>
conducted in the International<lb/>
House on Tuesday, April 15.<lb/>
cast carotin tan: As an Iranian in a<lb/>
country that is increasingly hostile<lb/>
to Iran, what kind of treatment do<lb/>
you get from fellow students?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: I've got a lot of<lb/>
friends at ECU, but there are a lot<lb/>
of people who are not aware of the<lb/>
situation. I mean, they've only been<lb/>
hearing about Iran for a few mon-<lb/>
ths. I know their feeling  they are<lb/>
frustrated and want to get this over<lb/>
with. They see their country hasn't<lb/>
done anything, and they see their<lb/>
EC: Considering President Carter's<lb/>
decision to break relations with<lb/>
Iran, it seems possible that one day,<lb/>
even the students might have to<lb/>
leave. How do you feel about that<lb/>
possibility?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: I really feel bad  1<lb/>
see the American people different<lb/>
than the American government, and<lb/>
I'm grateful to the American people<lb/>
that I have this opportunity  even<lb/>
though I pay out of state (tuition), I<lb/>
pay taxes, I pay for everything<lb/>
although I don't get the same op-<lb/>
portunity as the Americans have,<lb/>
Americans. All of the Air Force<lb/>
bases were there, with something<lb/>
like 25,000 Americans. The reason I<lb/>
say "attacked" is because they com-<lb/>
peted with the people in my city for<lb/>
everything  compared to the Ira-<lb/>
nians, their wages were very high. I<lb/>
used to go to the butcher shop, and<lb/>
sometimes there would be some<lb/>
Americans behind me. The butcher<lb/>
would serve them first because they<lb/>
could offer him more money. I<lb/>
mean, it was the butcher's fault, too<lb/>
? he was Iranian, but emotionally<lb/>
 it just built up.<lb/>
Iranians have realized they have power. IVs not<lb/>
the power of strength or military  it's the power of<lb/>
belief. They know they are right and believe that right<lb/>
M?ft?Mif a mmttmr the<lb/>
snah. The shah is not just one person. TTfTfantam,<lb/>
he's 100,000persons, because they have lost 100,000<lb/>
lives<lb/>
but still, I am grateful. But there is a<lb/>
point where I feel that I can't take it<lb/>
anymore  when I read "Let's<lb/>
nuke Iran"  I mean, they have<lb/>
Mile Island in Middletown, Pa<lb/>
Pennsylvania State University an-<lb/>
nounced that its president, John W.<lb/>
Oswald, would be joining the board<lb/>
of directors of General Public Utili-<lb/>
ty, the parent company of that ill-<lb/>
fated nuclear plant.<lb/>
Reaction on campus has been sur-<lb/>
In a prepared statement, Oswald<lb/>
said he looked forward to his new<lb/>
position with the utility company.<lb/>
He couldn't "imagine any problem<lb/>
is more important than energy.<lb/>
"The development of the various<lb/>
forms of energy, and the monitoring<lb/>
of them, continue to be a major<lb/>
never been to Iran. They've never<lb/>
side and think that they are right, so seen people living in caves for 27<lb/>
every time we argue, we get into years, or eight or ten people sleeping<lb/>
EC: We hear often about certain<lb/>
horror stories coming out of Iran.<lb/>
Do you have any personal ex-<lb/>
perience with that?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: In my alley, I know artjcie m the paper<lb/>
prisingly negligible, to the point of responsibility of research efforts in<lb/>
something that is impossible <lb/>
there's no ground to argue on. But<lb/>
those people who are aware, who<lb/>
know about the shah, about eastern<lb/>
culture, about what Iran was like<lb/>
two years ago, they can see both<lb/>
sides. I don't think that if I were in<lb/>
the same situation and had been<lb/>
in one room  they can't place<lb/>
themselves there. It really hurts. It<lb/>
affects everything. I can hardly go<lb/>
to classes  when I go, I just sit and<lb/>
I watch  I'm not really there.<lb/>
EC: What part of Iran are you<lb/>
from?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: From Isfahan, the<lb/>
being mysterious.<lb/>
"The public information office<lb/>
didn't even send out a press<lb/>
release reports Kathy Hoke, staff<lb/>
manager of the Daily Collegian.<lb/>
"It's kind of odd. Here they send<lb/>
out all kinds of stuff, and on this,<lb/>
nothing<lb/>
From the students, Hoke says,<lb/>
there has been no reaction at all,<lb/>
"not even a letter to the editor<lb/>
It was a year ago March 28 that<lb/>
Penn State was forced to shut down<lb/>
both industry and the academic<lb/>
community he added.<lb/>
given the same information, I would central part. I am from the part of<lb/>
be able to hold back like the Iran that was mostly attacked,<lb/>
Americans. culturally and economically, by<lb/>
three or four families that lost lives.<lb/>
I knew a couple who, for having<lb/>
some leftist books, got arrested<lb/>
three years ago and nobody has seen<lb/>
them since. For having books.<lb/>
When I sit here and I know that<lb/>
an Iranian general who exploded<lb/>
715 people in a theater  because<lb/>
there were two Iranian activists in<lb/>
there and Five blocks down there<lb/>
was a Fire department that didn't<lb/>
come until eight hours later  that<lb/>
this man is in California and they<lb/>
have given him asylum in the name<lb/>
of humanitarian rights  1 mean,<lb/>
that's why it builds up in the Iranian<lb/>
people  people don't get crazy just<lb/>
for nothing  they see these things<lb/>
and they cannot control themselves.<lb/>
EC: Why did you come to America<lb/>
to study?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: In my country, there<lb/>
are 35 million people, and only<lb/>
seven universities. Usually, half of<lb/>
the people who could get in were<lb/>
higher class people. I came to the<lb/>
United States because I could learn<lb/>
more, better and faster.<lb/>
The only reason my father sent<lb/>
me here was because he knew I<lb/>
could say what I feel. When I was<lb/>
12, I knew what was going on<lb/>
around me, but I didn't know the<lb/>
cause behind it. Every time I talked<lb/>
to my daddy, he would tell me to<lb/>
abut ufv because he was mfmid<lb/>
something was going to happen to<lb/>
me. And this is what builds up <lb/>
this is what makes a million people<lb/>
come to the street and wear white<lb/>
clothes and come against the tanks.<lb/>
EC: The East Carolinian ran an arti-<lb/>
cle today about alleged Iranian ter-<lb/>
rorist plans in the United States. Did<lb/>
you read it?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: Yes. When I read that<lb/>
all it does is<lb/>
make Americans terrified that the<lb/>
Iranians are going to do something.<lb/>
When they read Iranians are trying<lb/>
to build up a terrorist camp in the<lb/>
United States, they won't trust me.<lb/>
When I read that article, I cried in<lb/>
the library, because perhaps my<lb/>
friends are afraid to say they trust<lb/>
me. But I know they can't, because<lb/>
they read the paper and believe it.<lb/>
See Iranian, Page 3, Col. 1<lb/>
Draft Proposal Faces Stiff Opposition In Congress<lb/>
By PATRICK SULLIVAN<lb/>
College Press Service<lb/>
Even those favoring starting<lb/>
registration for the First time since<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) ?<lb/>
its Capitol Campus in Middletown, The fate of President Carter's pro-<lb/>
while Nuclear Regulatory Commis- posal to re-institute military<lb/>
sion officials tried to determine if registration for 19- and 20-year-old<lb/>
the TMI reactor was going to melt males will be determined later this<lb/>
down. month when the House Ways and 1973 carefully note that a registra-<lb/>
Oswald, Penn State's president Means Committee takes its key vote tion system won't necessarily lead to<lb/>
since 1970, was chosen because of on whether to approve $13 million a draft,<lb/>
his administrative and education ex- for the proposal,<lb/>
perience, GPU officials announced. Most committee watchers expect<lb/>
the measure to pass easily. tains Warren Nelson, an aide to<lb/>
A House subcommittee has Rep. Les Aspin (D-WI), generally<lb/>
already defeated an $8.5 million re- considered a congressional expert<lb/>
quest that would have allowed the on military personnel.<lb/>
Selective Service System to register "As it stands now Nelson adds,<lb/>
women for the first time. "the new registration system will be<lb/>
tions. colleagues, Seiberling worried that<lb/>
Substantial congressional opposi- registration would be a "massive in-<lb/>
tion to registration remains, lead by vasion of the privacy of millions of<lb/>
representatives Pat Schroeder young Americans '<lb/>
"The draft will only be<lb/>
instituted if there is a war<lb/>
re-<lb/>
tain-<lb/>
simpler and less time-consuming<lb/>
than the old method<lb/>
The new system envisioned in the<lb/>
bill would require that 19- and<lb/>
20-year-old males report to the<lb/>
nearest post office during the month<lb/>
of June or July.<lb/>
Bill proponents argue that post<lb/>
offices are usually quiet in those<lb/>
months. Draft opponents, however,<lb/>
have charged President Carter pur-<lb/>
posefully deferred the registration<lb/>
date until college students are on<lb/>
summer vacation, and can't<lb/>
organize large anti-draft demonstra-<lb/>
(D-CO) and John S. Seiberling<lb/>
(D-OH).<lb/>
"Compulsory military service ?<lb/>
except in times of constitutionally<lb/>
approved war or compelling na-<lb/>
tional emergency ? raises serious<lb/>
The proposal as it stands now<lb/>
would require registrants to tell the<lb/>
government their name, address,<lb/>
birth date, and social security<lb/>
number.<lb/>
The information would be<lb/>
questions of propriety and indeed entered into computers by Internal<lb/>
legality in light of the constitutional Revenue Service keypunch<lb/>
prohibition against involuntary ser- operators. Bill advocates say IRS<lb/>
vitude Seiberling wrote in a public key-punchers are simply the ones<lb/>
letter to the president. who would be available at that time<lb/>
Rep. James Weaver of Ohio, of year, that the information on the<lb/>
another opponent, feared registra- registration forms would not be<lb/>
easier for the<lb/>
"adventures"<lb/>
tion would make it<lb/>
U.S. to engage in<lb/>
around the world.<lb/>
In his letter, co-signed by 38 of his<lb/>
Alumni To Host Seniors<lb/>
Columbia recording artists, Toto, are scheduled to appear in concert tonight at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
MinKes CoHsenm for their only North Carolina low date. Only public tickets, at $7, will be<lb/>
available at the door.<lb/>
ECU seniors will be treated to<lb/>
free beer, soft drinks, hors<lb/>
d'oeuvres and musk next week as<lb/>
the ECU Alumni Association hosts<lb/>
its annual Senior Social.<lb/>
According to Bill Bedsole, alumni<lb/>
field director, the purpose of the<lb/>
event is to aquaint graduating<lb/>
students with the purposes, services<lb/>
and functions of the ECU Alumni<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
The social is scheduled to be held<lb/>
in the multi-purpose room at<lb/>
Mendenhail Student Center on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 23, from 4 p.m.<lb/>
until 7 p.m.<lb/>
"We picked this time period for<lb/>
the convenience of as many seniors<lb/>
as possible, so that they'll be able to<lb/>
attend after classes and before stu-<lb/>
dying or working in the evening<lb/>
said Bedsole.<lb/>
Bedsole added thai he had con-<lb/>
tacted the School of Musk to see if<lb/>
they couW provide live jazz at the<lb/>
event, although no definite ar-<lb/>
rangements had been made yet. He<lb/>
said that there would be a Juke box<lb/>
if live entertainment was not nossi-<lb/>
atc<lb/>
shown to other government agen-<lb/>
cies.<lb/>
See Obstacles, Page 3, Col. 3<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
la<lb/>
MMf rwnies<lb/>
s<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057263_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 17, 1980<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ramily Fun<lb/>
Nurses<lb/>
Booksale<lb/>
Kach Thursday during April is "Famil) I he representative from NiKhnngale<lb/>
lun Nighi" ai Mendenhall From 6 10 Uniform Company will be in the School<lb/>
p.m all children under age 18 acconv ol Nursing building, room 102. on<lb/>
pained hv a parent oi responsible aduli pnl 17 from H Via m to l:00p m to<lb/>
may bowl, plas billiards or pias table measure each freshman nursing studeni<lb/>
tennis loi oil rcgulai price lash lor uniforms loial tmiform cosl will<lb/>
jiame oi line ol hosslmg vs.iM be hall he S72 70 tor female students and<lb/>
price foi children, and billiards and So III lor male students money<lb/>
lablc tennis will be half-price for the en order lor the exact amount must be<lb/>
.mnl Onls lie adult pel group submitted with the uniform order<lb/>
must hase a Mendenhall Student l'lea-e stop hs the Sshixil ol Nursing<lb/>
Centet Membership card r m id Office. Room 152, to make an appoint<lb/>
I to partH ipate mem<lb/>
SI! Artist<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
 cations lot siudeni I mon -Vim ECCK ssill hsld its monthly buunexs<lb/>
be accepted through pnl 23 p meeting lue-das. pnl 19, 5 00p m .n<lb/>
i ions mas be pKks-d up in the Stu the Newman House. Mm I sih Si<lb/>
Jem Union Office, room 234 Plans for summer wilt be discussed Hi<lb/>
Mendenhall lob descriptions ssill also ing youi lasonte beverage Ml in<lb/>
he available Portfolio required lerestcd persons are welcome!<lb/>
The friends of the I ibrary will hold a<lb/>
hooksale ai Joyner I ibrary pril Ift<lb/>
and 17. Hours will be 10 a.m. to 3 p m<lb/>
and 7 p.m to " p m Wednesday. April<lb/>
lo, and 10 am to 3 p.m Thursdas.<lb/>
'Vpril 17.<lb/>
NASW<lb/>
Members ol NASV . social work and<lb/>
corrections majors are now selling ral<lb/>
Me tickets to raise moncs lor then<lb/>
departmental sollball game and<lb/>
cookoul Sis drawings tor dinners at<lb/>
I osdisks 1890, jhe Beet Barn. Pcppi's<lb/>
l'ia. Shoncss and Parker's BBy will<lb/>
he held at the game on April 2fH rickets<lb/>
are S 50 I or more inlormanon contact<lb/>
Barbara Anderson. Anne O'Neal oi<lb/>
Diane Austin<lb/>
GBA<lb/>
The almost end of the semester celebra-<lb/>
tion will be held Sunday, April 20.<lb/>
beginning at 4:00 p.m at the far Riser<lb/>
Apts Clubhouse Hamburgers, hot<lb/>
dogs, and a keg will be prosided Bring<lb/>
potato chips, slaw, beans, desserts, or<lb/>
any sidedish you wish Cirills are also<lb/>
needed All MBA students are insited<lb/>
Remember to get your nominations in<lb/>
for next year's officers.<lb/>
FamilyChild<lb/>
fhe I .mills C hild Association will have<lb/>
an end of the school scar cook out<lb/>
Tuesday, April 22 at V00 p m at the<lb/>
Hm Street Park<lb/>
Fall Co-Op<lb/>
SU Reps<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
Racquetball<lb/>
 square dance is being held ai the I here will be a meeting ol the li I<lb/>
xtcihodisi Studeni tenter. 0 ? Racquetball Club Thursday. April 17 al<lb/>
Si on Saturday night, pnl 14 at H 5 p m in room 104 MemonaKiym ke<lb/>
lerr Powell will be our callci ?inet foi I4H0 Nl budget ssill he<lb/>
lIh al on pei person, discussed along with the club's rules<lb/>
shi.icnts prosided Put on youi and the men and women's ladder<lb/>
square dance clothes and come on over! Please ioin us'<lb/>
Kappa Delta Pi<lb/>
iChit hapiei ol Kappa Delta Pi<lb/>
v ncel on Saturday, pril 2h. .it<lb/>
t m al the Holidas Inn in (.ieen<lb/>
stile I his meeting will he held in con<lb/>
n with our Spnng Initiation<lb/>
Revival<lb/>
I he 1(1 fountain ol life Christian<lb/>
I ellowship sill he sponsoring its second<lb/>
annual revival this spring, on pnl 24.<lb/>
25 and 2h in Wright auditorium 1 he<lb/>
theme foi the iesis.il is "Behold I<lb/>
? speakei will be Oi Floyd Maltheis Come Quick Is " 1 he speakers foi the<lb/>
science Education Department<lb/>
pians should send m then reserva<lb/>
ions hs April Is<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha<lb/>
i banquet on Saturday, pril 14,<lb/>
at p m Guest speakei ?:ll he lohn<lb/>
Brooks, Commissioner ol I ahor ot<lb/>
North arohna I he banquet wdl he<lb/>
held .it the rhree S'eers Restaurant on<lb/>
Iru i , ens illc Ml<lb/>
iiicmbi nests are united to at<lb/>
i he price ot the meal - U i1 pet<lb/>
n interested persons should<lb/>
.eisiei foi the dinnei al the<lb/>
i "? ce, 124 Brewstei<lb/>
 Win;<lb/>
Car Clinic<lb/>
I ? Natt ? i Environmental<lb/>
 ax ?iii sponsor .i free cat<lb/>
t piil t Tom lo<lb/>
i I ,i-t Mall<lb/>
 exhaust gases m<lb/>
ipet tuning.<lb/>
three das revival are Reverend Ken<lb/>
neth Hammond accompanied by the In<lb/>
ieulenoinin.iltonalhoir and the I (. 1<lb/>
Fountain ot I ife C'hon on rhursdas<lb/>
night; Friday night chaplain Kenneth<lb/>
hdssardv Mill be accompanied hs the<lb/>
Itl tiospei Ensemble (and possible<lb/>
the si Xugustine's I ellowhsiphorn,<lb/>
on Saturday Res Ah Griffin with<lb/>
I N( hapel Hill and the I ountain ot<lb/>
I ite hoii rendet ng music Mrs<lb/>
Rosalee I dwards ss ? 11 conduct mo<lb/>
seminars Saturday pnl 2h starting at<lb/>
10a ni in the l.cdonia Wright ultural<lb/>
1 entei I he lopus lor the seminar are<lb/>
nutrition and siress Devotional set<lb/>
vices si.hi ,n 7:00 each night Please<lb/>
come out and praise the I ord with us<lb/>
Summer Rooms<lb/>
Rooms are available lor Summer<lb/>
School i onlact the Methodist Student<lb/>
( enter. "s 2030<lb/>
Positions are open lor two das siudeni<lb/>
representatives to scrse on the Student<lb/>
I mon Board ol Directors tor 1980-XI<lb/>
Das students who wish to appls lor the<lb/>
positions mas pick up applications<lb/>
Irom the Information Desk in<lb/>
Mendenhall Deadline lor applications<lb/>
is Monday, April 21 at 5 p.m. The Stu<lb/>
dent I nion Boaid ol Directors is com<lb/>
posed ol President ol Men's Residence<lb/>
( ouncil, President ol Women's<lb/>
Residence (ouncil, President ol the<lb/>
Intei Fraternity (ouncil. President ol<lb/>
the Panhcllenkouncil. President ol<lb/>
the siudeni Government Association, a<lb/>
faculty membei appointed bs the<lb/>
I acuity Senate, an administrator ap-<lb/>
pointed hs thehancellor ot the<lb/>
I niversity, two day students appointed<lb/>
hs the Board, the President pi the Stu<lb/>
dent I nion tes officio member without<lb/>
.i votel and the I iterative Director ot<lb/>
Mendenhall (ex officio member without<lb/>
a vote) I he Board selects the President<lb/>
ol the student Union, approves the SI<lb/>
budget and appropriates lunds, ap<lb/>
proves si committee chairpersons, and<lb/>
sets organizational policy<lb/>
Phi Fta Sigma<lb/>
Students lo he initialed into Phi Eta<lb/>
Sigma, freshman honor society, are<lb/>
reminded that the initiation ceremony<lb/>
will take place on Thursday, April Pin<lb/>
the niulii purpose room ol Mendenhall.<lb/>
beginning .it " V p m Students are<lb/>
asked to he present hs 7 15 p m. in<lb/>
ordei that propet arrangements tor the<lb/>
ceremony he made<lb/>
The (enter for Disease Control in<lb/>
Atlanta, Ga is recruiting tor<lb/>
Cooperative Education assignments<lb/>
beginning in September lsK() and or<lb/>
lanuars IvKI The lollowing trainee<lb/>
positions will be available<lb/>
Mictobiologv Trainee at Atlanta.<lb/>
( hemisl trainee at Atlanta; Chemical<lb/>
Engineer Trainee al Cincinnati; Com<lb/>
pulcr Science Trainee al Atlanta;<lb/>
Mechanical Engineer rrainee at Cincin-<lb/>
nati; Biologs Irainee al C incinnati; In<lb/>
structional Systems Specialist Irainee<lb/>
in Atlanta. Necessary forms and ap<lb/>
plications can be obtained in the<lb/>
Cooperative Education Office, ill<lb/>
Raw I Application deadline is April 18<lb/>
Students must be enrolled in an<lb/>
undergraduate or graduate program to<lb/>
be eligible; graduating seniors arc not<lb/>
eligible Sophomores and juniors are<lb/>
10 apply<lb/>
Teachers New To Politics<lb/>
Fall Co-Op<lb/>
Car Wash<lb/>
V olunteers<lb/>
SNFHA<lb/>
lurs<lb/>
i sM H meeting Ih<lb/>
 I I7 in the Health <lb/>
? Ml members<lb/>
lents are encouraged<lb/>
?s<lb/>
s<lb/>
Volunteer work s.in plav a vital role in<lb/>
.celling the iob sou really want II sou<lb/>
are interested in work experience which<lb/>
will help you alter von graduate contact<lb/>
the t astet Seal Soctet at s 1230<lb/>
Advisor Needed<lb/>
I he SPANluh (Student Planning<lb/>
Association) will sponsor a .ar wash at<lb/>
Pill Plaza shell (cornet Ol Arlington<lb/>
Blsd and 2M Bypass) on Saturday.<lb/>
April 14 trom in a m until 4 p.m<lb/>
Prices Wash. 51 50; Wash and<lb/>
v.i mini. 52 im<lb/>
Car Wash<lb/>
 faculty adsisoi is needed to form<lb/>
ome important i(l Baha'i Club Foi more informa<lb/>
lion call 758-5170<lb/>
I'hi I psilon ((micron will sponsor a car<lb/>
was at Pin Plaa Exxon on Greenville<lb/>
Hhd on Saturday. April 9 from 9am<lb/>
to 4 p m 51 SO I sersone come!<lb/>
The Smithsonian Institute, beginning in<lb/>
1980, will conduct a program in<lb/>
cooperatise education under which<lb/>
graduate students in selected Itelds mas<lb/>
pursue individual programs ol studs at<lb/>
the Smithsonian. The program Features<lb/>
alternating semesters ol work at the<lb/>
Smithsonian followed by on-campus<lb/>
studs ot iob related subjects. The<lb/>
lollowing opportunities are among<lb/>
several now asailable lo highly<lb/>
qualified students: Public Affairs<lb/>
Writer Assistant. National Air and<lb/>
Space Museum. Research Trainee.<lb/>
Center tor Earth and Planetary Studies,<lb/>
Museum Programs. Audio Visual Pro-<lb/>
duction Assistant, Script VVriicr,<lb/>
Museum Programs. Audio Visual Pro<lb/>
duction Assistant. Video Studio. Na<lb/>
tional Portrait Gallery. Bibliographic<lb/>
Researcher. History Department.<lb/>
Radiation Biology laboratory.<lb/>
Physical Science Engineering Studeni<lb/>
Trainee. Radiation Biologs<lb/>
1 ahorators. Biological Science Siudeni<lb/>
Tiainee; Office ot Audits, Accounting<lb/>
Student Trainee. Division ol Perform<lb/>
ing Arts. General Arts and Information<lb/>
Assistant. Smithsonian Institute Press.<lb/>
General Arts and Information Assis<lb/>
tant. Necessary forms and applications<lb/>
can be obtained in the Cooperatise<lb/>
Education Office. 313 Rawl<lb/>
By ERIC FREEDM AN<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
A law degree may no<lb/>
longer be important to<lb/>
your future in politics.<lb/>
In fact, you may find<lb/>
more success at the<lb/>
ballot box if you<lb/>
become a teacher.<lb/>
That's the picture<lb/>
developing throughout<lb/>
the United States, ac-<lb/>
cording to a new survey<lb/>
of the occupations of<lb/>
state legislatures con-<lb/>
ducted by the Insurance<lb/>
Information Institute.<lb/>
The survey also<lb/>
shows women holding<lb/>
more legislative seats<lb/>
than in the past.<lb/>
"Representation by<lb/>
lawyers in the state<lb/>
legislatures across the<lb/>
nation is continuing to<lb/>
decline, and the percen-<lb/>
tage of state lawmakers<lb/>
from the field of educa-<lb/>
tion is on the rise ac-<lb/>
cording to the study.<lb/>
The New York City-<lb/>
based institute also<lb/>
observed, "Women are<lb/>
gaining seats coun-<lb/>
trywide<lb/>
Traditionally,<lb/>
lawyers have gone into<lb/>
politics for several<lb/>
reasons, including the<lb/>
belief that politics at-<lb/>
tracts private law<lb/>
clients. In addition,<lb/>
tion which has steadily port, endorsements and<lb/>
eroded since 1966. lobbying.<lb/>
They are best<lb/>
represented in the<lb/>
South, particularly in<lb/>
Virginia, where at-<lb/>
torneys hold more than<lb/>
half the legislative jobs.<lb/>
In contrast, there are<lb/>
no lawyers in<lb/>
Delaware's legislature,<lb/>
and attorneys hold only<lb/>
3 percent of the seats in<lb/>
the New Hampshire<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
Even in lawyer-laden<lb/>
New York, attorneys<lb/>
have slipped from 45<lb/>
percent to 37 percent of<lb/>
the legislature in just<lb/>
two years, the institute<lb/>
tally shows.<lb/>
At the same time,<lb/>
educators are grabbing<lb/>
a larger chunk of<lb/>
political power. The in-<lb/>
stitute said represen-<lb/>
tatives from the<lb/>
"academic communi-<lb/>
ty" now hold 10 per-<lb/>
cent of the legislative<lb/>
seats in the country.<lb/>
The figure was only 3<lb/>
percent in 1966.<lb/>
One factor in the<lb/>
change has been the in-<lb/>
creased politicization<lb/>
of college campuses.<lb/>
Both professors and<lb/>
academic ad-<lb/>
ministrators have mov-<lb/>
ed into politics since the<lb/>
Vietnam war became a<lb/>
many lawyers feel they public issue on and off<lb/>
can always return to campus in the 1960's.<lb/>
Educators out-<lb/>
number representatives<lb/>
of any other single pro-<lb/>
fession in the Wiscon-<lb/>
sin, Michigan and<lb/>
Arizona legislatures,<lb/>
according to the in-<lb/>
stitute study. Michigan<lb/>
leads the nation with 23<lb/>
percent of its legislature<lb/>
made up of teachers<lb/>
and other educators,<lb/>
followed by 20 percent<lb/>
in Wisconsin and 17<lb/>
percent in Arizona.<lb/>
At the other end of<lb/>
the spectrum,<lb/>
educators hold only 2<lb/>
percent of the Kansas<lb/>
and Missouri legislative<lb/>
seats.<lb/>
Women have been<lb/>
most politically suc-<lb/>
cessful in the Nor-<lb/>
theast, particularly in<lb/>
New England where<lb/>
they make up 18 per-<lb/>
cent of the legislatures.<lb/>
New Hampshire has<lb/>
the highest proportion<lb/>
of women legislators.<lb/>
26 percent, trailed by<lb/>
Connecticut and Ver<lb/>
mont with 19 percerv<lb/>
Terry<lb/>
Susan P.<lb/>
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about contraception, abortion, sex and<lb/>
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their legal practices if<lb/>
the fates ? and the<lb/>
voters ? prove unkind.<lb/>
However, the In-<lb/>
surance Information<lb/>
Institute reports that<lb/>
lawyers now make up<lb/>
only 20 percent of state<lb/>
legislatures, a propor-<lb/>
Another factor has<lb/>
been greater political<lb/>
awareness by public<lb/>
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politically active and<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057263_0003"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Iranian Student Recalls Death And Repression<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 17, 1980<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
EC. What do you think<lb/>
about American media<lb/>
coverage in Iran?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: I used to<lb/>
listen to the media <lb/>
sometimes I would get<lb/>
upset because of the<lb/>
neus, and I'd call my<lb/>
parents. And their news<lb/>
would be exactly op-<lb/>
posite. Nowadays,<lb/>
what 1 do is ask a<lb/>
French friend to read<lb/>
1 Monde for me. I re-<lb/>
's more on Le Monde<lb/>
than any other paper.<lb/>
They don't get on<lb/>
anybody's side, or at<lb/>
least they try not to <lb/>
that's why I believe the<lb/>
American media is not<lb/>
doing a good job.<lb/>
To me, the concept<lb/>
of getting the hostages<lb/>
was wrong, but I know<lb/>
if 1 was in their place 1<lb/>
would do the same<lb/>
thing. Because those<lb/>
people, they have lost<lb/>
lives, their parents,<lb/>
their brothers, and<lb/>
Greenville Man<lb/>
Dies In Wreck<lb/>
 52-year-old Green-<lb/>
ville man died as a<lb/>
result of a traffic acci-<lb/>
dent Monday after-<lb/>
noon on N. Greene<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
Robert Harris Daniel<lb/>
ty Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
Police reported that<lb/>
Robert Keith Casper,<lb/>
19, of Oak City and<lb/>
Greenville, was charged<lb/>
with involuntary<lb/>
manslaughter in addi-<lb/>
when something like<lb/>
this happens, nobody<lb/>
can see right and<lb/>
wrong. The students<lb/>
thought by getting the<lb/>
Americans, they could<lb/>
talk to the American<lb/>
people, at home in their<lb/>
living rooms, but they<lb/>
were wrong. They<lb/>
didn't realize that the<lb/>
media, not them, con-<lb/>
trols what the<lb/>
American people have<lb/>
to think. It was a big<lb/>
mistake.<lb/>
They burned the<lb/>
American flag because<lb/>
we thought of it as the<lb/>
symbol of American<lb/>
government, American<lb/>
system  it is not the<lb/>
symbol of American<lb/>
people. The color of<lb/>
red in your flag is not<lb/>
the blood of the<lb/>
American young. They<lb/>
don't want to do it,<lb/>
they don't want to kill<lb/>
anybody.<lb/>
The problem is that<lb/>
the media doesn't let<lb/>
the people know what<lb/>
has really gone on.<lb/>
People are people <lb/>
Americans are like Ira-<lb/>
nians  in their body<lb/>
runs blood.<lb/>
EC: Can you see a solu-<lb/>
tion to this problem?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: From the<lb/>
beginning there was a<lb/>
solution. The United<lb/>
States has never<lb/>
apologized to anyone.<lb/>
But the United States is<lb/>
like every other country<lb/>
people make<lb/>
mistakes and if people<lb/>
would stand and be<lb/>
brave and say "I did it,<lb/>
I made a mistake the<lb/>
whole situation would<lb/>
be cleared up. We<lb/>
wouldn't have the pro-<lb/>
blem now.<lb/>
People who believe<lb/>
in right  every time<lb/>
you stand before your<lb/>
flag you say "and<lb/>
justice for all"  you<lb/>
say that for everybody,<lb/>
every country says it,<lb/>
but Iranians say,<lb/>
"What happened to<lb/>
our justice?"<lb/>
EC: But in many ways,<lb/>
America seems to be<lb/>
helpless in this situa-<lb/>
tion, while the Iranians<lb/>
have the power to solve<lb/>
the crisis. Don't you<lb/>
think they might give<lb/>
up the hostages so that<lb/>
they can begin to<lb/>
rebuild their country?<lb/>
Memarzadeh: If they<lb/>
do that, it means they<lb/>
are nothing  they<lb/>
haven't accomplished<lb/>
anything, not even a<lb/>
revolution  because<lb/>
we've been suffering<lb/>
for five months ? just<lb/>
forget the 27 years ?<lb/>
but in the recent two<lb/>
years, and especially<lb/>
these five months, we<lb/>
know who is our<lb/>
enemy. We try to<lb/>
distinguish and we try<lb/>
to let everybody know,<lb/>
we try to get to<lb/>
American homes and<lb/>
say, "We know you are<lb/>
not our enemy If<lb/>
they stop now, there's a<lb/>
feeling that what<lb/>
they've done hasn't ac-<lb/>
complished anything <lb/>
all those lives  all<lb/>
those people who went<lb/>
against the tanks, and<lb/>
the tanks ran over them<lb/>
 for nothing. I don't<lb/>
think they're going to<lb/>
do it. The Iranians have<lb/>
realized they have<lb/>
power. It's not the<lb/>
power of strength or<lb/>
military  it's the<lb/>
power of belief. They<lb/>
know they are right and<lb/>
believe that right<lb/>
always wins. You see,<lb/>
it's not just a matter of<lb/>
the shah  the shah is<lb/>
not just one person. To<lb/>
Iranians, he's 100,000<lb/>
persons, because they<lb/>
have lost 100,000 lives<lb/>
 they murdered their<lb/>
brothers and kids, they<lb/>
tortured, they raped<lb/>
their sisters  it's just a<lb/>
scar on their heart. I<lb/>
mean, there's nothing<lb/>
that can be erased.<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
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died at 5:26 p.m. Mon- tion to the previous Continued from Page 1<lb/>
day in the Intensive charge of driving under<lb/>
Care Unit at Pitt Coun- the influence.<lb/>
Immigrants<lb/>
Escape Lives<lb/>
Of Destitution<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
economic persecution,<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
Immigration has<lb/>
many effects on both<lb/>
the country people<lb/>
leave and the one they<lb/>
go to, Guman said.<lb/>
Immigration reduces<lb/>
internal, social and<lb/>
demographic pressures<lb/>
in the country people<lb/>
leave. Many of those<lb/>
leaving return a portion<lb/>
of their wages to the<lb/>
family they left behind,<lb/>
thus reducing economic<lb/>
pressures as well. Also,<lb/>
manv illegal im-<lb/>
migrants set up second<lb/>
families in their new<lb/>
country, and if they are<lb/>
caught and deported it<lb/>
would create problems<lb/>
there.<lb/>
For the United<lb/>
States, though, the ef-<lb/>
fects are not that great,<lb/>
Guzman noted. Many<lb/>
people believe that il-<lb/>
legal immigrants take<lb/>
jobs away from the<lb/>
citizens of the country,<lb/>
but he said the effect of<lb/>
the illegals is not very<lb/>
great. Most of them<lb/>
settle in farming<lb/>
regions and are<lb/>
primarily farm<lb/>
workers. Those that do<lb/>
settle in urban areas<lb/>
tend to fill jobs which<lb/>
Americans will not<lb/>
take.<lb/>
Last year, Congress<lb/>
established a select<lb/>
committee to study the<lb/>
immigration situation,<lb/>
he said. One result of<lb/>
this has been the<lb/>
"reclassification" of il-<lb/>
legal aliens as<lb/>
undocumented<lb/>
workers a move<lb/>
designed to remove<lb/>
some of the stigma<lb/>
associated with the<lb/>
previous term.<lb/>
Another thing most<lb/>
people do not realize<lb/>
about illegal im-<lb/>
migrants is that they do<lb/>
not, as a general rule,<lb/>
go on welfare or seek<lb/>
public support. This,<lb/>
according to Guzman,<lb/>
is because they are try-<lb/>
ing to avoid the govern-<lb/>
ment due to deporta-<lb/>
tion policy.<lb/>
In 1978, President<lb/>
Carter rejected a Con-<lb/>
gressional Budget Of-<lb/>
fice (CBO) proposal<lb/>
that would<lb/>
automatically register<lb/>
people by compiling in-<lb/>
formation from ex-<lb/>
isting government files.<lb/>
The CBO report figures<lb/>
the Social Security<lb/>
System and the IRS<lb/>
could provide most of<lb/>
the needed informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The report also noted<lb/>
that the automatic<lb/>
registration system<lb/>
could miss as much as<lb/>
40 percent of the eligi-<lb/>
ble people, and thus<lb/>
create serious political<lb/>
and legal obstacles to a<lb/>
draft based on such an<lb/>
incomplete list.<lb/>
In requesting<lb/>
registration, of course,<lb/>
President Carter said<lb/>
that the point was to<lb/>
provide the Pentagon<lb/>
with a manpower pool<lb/>
from which it could<lb/>
either expand the size<lb/>
of its forces, or replace<lb/>
casualties in a war<lb/>
lasting several months.<lb/>
A full peacetime con-<lb/>
scription system,<lb/>
however, would require<lb/>
separate congressional<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
The current legisla-<lb/>
tion would provide<lb/>
funds to implement<lb/>
registration, a power<lb/>
the president already<lb/>
has.<lb/>
Officials emphasize<lb/>
that registration will<lb/>
not remedy the two ma-<lb/>
jor military problems<lb/>
that some critics argue<lb/>
have undermined the<lb/>
nation's combat<lb/>
readiness.<lb/>
Military experts say<lb/>
too few technically-<lb/>
trained officers and<lb/>
enlisted personnel are<lb/>
staying in the service.<lb/>
As a result, the armed<lb/>
forces currently lack an<lb/>
adequate corps of ex-<lb/>
perienced field leaders.<lb/>
Secondly, they sas<lb/>
the low volunteer rate<lb/>
has sapped the strength<lb/>
of reserve units, on<lb/>
which the Pentagon<lb/>
must rely for im-<lb/>
mediate reinforcements<lb/>
in wartime.<lb/>
GOLD and SILVER<lb/>
Compare and then call<lb/>
758 1892<lb/>
for best prices<lb/>
by Les Jewelers<lb/>
120 E. 5th St.<lb/>
gf&amp; fi? ?&amp;<lb/>
am am j0<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus commOntiv<lb/>
for s-t ear<lb/>
Published every Tuesda and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday during<lb/>
the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the ot<lb/>
fiaal newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University, owned, operated, and<lb/>
published tor and by the student<lb/>
of East Carolina University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Alumni $15 yearly<lb/>
All others $20 yearl .<lb/>
Second class postage paid a<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices art<lb/>
located in the Old South Building<lb/>
on the campus of ECU, Greenville.<lb/>
N C<lb/>
Telephone: 757 6364, 6367, 6309<lb/>
ABORTIONS U" TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
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West Haven Road (U.S. 264 Bypass) and Hwy. 11. Plenty<lb/>
of free parking too.<lb/>
Mall<lb/>
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FRIDAY AND SATURDAY<lb/>
THE BILL BLUE BAND<lb/>
And Don't Forget <lb/>
Have a Happy<lb/>
Starting at 4:00 on Frida<lb/>
. .mm?<lb/>
? A I i i <lb/>
? - -<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057263_0004"/><lb/>
SI? Saat (Carolinian<lb/>
Serving 'the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, a-<lb/>
Richard Green, wm ?,<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, an r a Diane Henderson, cm?<lb/>
Chris Lichok, m? mmow- Charles Chandler, ,?, $,<lb/>
Terry Gray, mm ?,? Debbie Hotaling, ?,?,? m? <lb/>
THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
77115 Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
Make Your Plans Now<lb/>
We told you in these columns a<lb/>
long time ago to get ready for the<lb/>
end of the semester. We told you it<lb/>
would be impossible to do all of<lb/>
your work in the last two or three<lb/>
weeks before school ended.<lb/>
Did you listen to us? No.<lb/>
Will it be impossible for you to do<lb/>
a 70 page term paper, take three<lb/>
finals, and still find time to go<lb/>
downtown every night? Probably<lb/>
not.<lb/>
Still, it is highly likely that you<lb/>
will go home for the summer. Most<lb/>
of you do anyway. There is a likely<lb/>
chance, then, that you live with<lb/>
your parents, and that they will see<lb/>
your grades. Do you want to spend<lb/>
three long months with your mother<lb/>
staring at you? Do you want your<lb/>
father to cut off your beer money?<lb/>
Hmmm, you are probably think-<lb/>
ing. This could be a major problem.<lb/>
Seriously, there is a way that yoi<lb/>
can do it, and survive. Not onl)<lb/>
that, but you can probably salvage<lb/>
at least a semblance of a social life.<lb/>
First of all, get in touch with all<lb/>
of your professors. Find out exactly<lb/>
what is expected of you in each<lb/>
class. List this information on a<lb/>
sheet of paper.<lb/>
If your professors tell you that<lb/>
there is absolutely no way that you<lb/>
can complete the requirements in<lb/>
the time available, we highly recom-<lb/>
mend that you consider an alter-<lb/>
native plan, such as enlisting in the<lb/>
French Foreign Legion, becoming<lb/>
an American ambassador to the<lb/>
Middle East, entering a Tibetan<lb/>
monastery or running for president.<lb/>
Next (and this is the most difficult<lb/>
part), figure out how much time<lb/>
each assignment will take you. The<lb/>
Spanish will take an hour, the Lit<lb/>
class will take two, etc.<lb/>
Figure out how many days you<lb/>
have to get each assignment in. This<lb/>
depends on due dates and other fac-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
With these factors in mind, and<lb/>
taking into account what times dur-<lb/>
ing the day your classes meet, figure<lb/>
out a schedule for getting your work<lb/>
done. Write everything down, and<lb/>
stick to it. It might be a good idea if<lb/>
you got everything wound up a few<lb/>
days before exams, so that you will<lb/>
have plenty of time to get some<lb/>
cramming in before finals.<lb/>
The most important thing to<lb/>
remember is that once you have<lb/>
established the schedule, you must<lb/>
abide by it or it won't do you any<lb/>
more good than the promises you've<lb/>
made to yourself all year long that<lb/>
you wouldn't wait until the last<lb/>
minute to get things done.<lb/>
We could give you another warn-<lb/>
ing about the evils of procrastina-<lb/>
tion, but we would be two-faced<lb/>
about it. At this moment, several<lb/>
East Carolinian staffers are doing<lb/>
their work for the newspaper and<lb/>
their work for their classes at the<lb/>
same time.<lb/>
We wouldn't be surprised if a<lb/>
Spanish assignment ended up on the<lb/>
front page.<lb/>
Finally, hold on to a bit of fan-<lb/>
tasy ? that next year this won't<lb/>
happen again!<lb/>
70s<lb/>
80s<lb/>
??<lb/>
q)IEUN '0 ROCKV MT NfcWg, College Press Se<lb/>
rvice<lb/>
WILL HE EVER HATCH ?<lb/>
Parking Situation Needs Revamping,<lb/>
University Should Consider Options<lb/>
By LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
East Carolina University, like most<lb/>
other colleges, has its share of problems.<lb/>
By no means the biggest or the most<lb/>
serious, on that most of us must face every<lb/>
day is the parking situation.<lb/>
To say that ECU has a major parking<lb/>
plight would be the understatement of the<lb/>
century. There are about 40 percent more<lb/>
vehicles registered on this campus than<lb/>
there are parking spaces, taking into ac-<lb/>
count second vehicles and replacement<lb/>
decals. This includes both student and<lb/>
staff vehicles.<lb/>
One problem, until recently, was non-<lb/>
ticketing of staff vehicles. If a student<lb/>
parked in staff, it was ticketed or towed,<lb/>
but a staff member parking in a student<lb/>
space was ignored. This policy has been<lb/>
changed, and rightfully so. What's good<lb/>
for the goose is good for the gander, so to<lb/>
speak.<lb/>
There are also about 75 spaces reserved<lb/>
for university-owned vehicles. This is fine,<lb/>
but it creates a problem. It's bad enough<lb/>
when students or staff park in other's do-<lb/>
main, but it's even worse when a<lb/>
university-owned vehicle parks there; it<lb/>
stinks. Any vehicle parking in a space<lb/>
reserved for university-owned vehicles is<lb/>
automatically towed, whether they are on<lb/>
the towing list or not. However, the<lb/>
university's vehicles park any place they<lb/>
please, in any parking place, with seeming-<lb/>
ly total impunity.<lb/>
ECU's Traffic Office reports that the<lb/>
drivers of the vehicles are held responsible<lb/>
for any tickets received, but many ignore<lb/>
the violations.<lb/>
I am not advocating towing these<lb/>
vehicles, since in the long run we all would<lb/>
pay for it anyway. However, I am saying<lb/>
that the state-owned vehicle operators<lb/>
should be made accountable for their<lb/>
violations, just as students and staff are.<lb/>
There is absolutely no excuse for some<lb/>
of the situations which arise due to iftis.<lb/>
Last week, only about 6 of the approx-<lb/>
imately 25 spaces in front of Memorial<lb/>
Gym were occupied by university vehicles,<lb/>
but several were parked in the staff park-<lb/>
ing spaces in the area. There were no free<lb/>
spaces, and many professors were unable<lb/>
to park their cars, not wishing to park in<lb/>
the university-owned places for fear of see<lb/>
ing their cars on the business end of a tow<lb/>
truck. Many of us may not have much<lb/>
sympathy for the professors, but<lb/>
remember: we could have the same pro-<lb/>
blem.<lb/>
Another problem encountered while do-<lb/>
ing the "parking-lot shuffle" is the use of<lb/>
spaces reserved for handicapped persons<lb/>
by the non-handicapped. This is an impor<lb/>
tant regulation that the campus con-<lb/>
stabulary should enforce, but it seems to<lb/>
be largely ignored.<lb/>
It may not occur to many people, but<lb/>
aside from violating state law providing<lb/>
for a fine and towing a vehicle (it is one of<lb/>
the only state regulations enforceable on<lb/>
private property), you also hurt yourself.<lb/>
Since a vehicle with handicapped registra-<lb/>
tion can park in any legal space on cam-<lb/>
pus, the handicapped driver will then take<lb/>
a space you could have used. "Most people<lb/>
justify use of handicapped parking by say-<lb/>
ing, "I'll only be a minute but the space<lb/>
could be needed for longer than that, thus<lb/>
depriving you of a legal space.<lb/>
While these may not be ECU's biggest<lb/>
problems, they are very apparent ones to<lb/>
most of us. Maybe the university's parking<lb/>
priorities should be re-evaluated.<lb/>
Moon Treaty May Form New OPEC<lb/>
By EDITH KERMIT ROOSEVELT<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
The space program is a secret source of<lb/>
America's faith in the future. Soon the<lb/>
shuttle will provide reliable transportation<lb/>
to other planets, giving us access to an in-<lb/>
exhaustible supply of energy as well as the<lb/>
opportunity to develop the resources on<lb/>
celestial bodies.<lb/>
But this vision of a vast new American<lb/>
frontier is not to be if the U.S. Senate<lb/>
ratifies the Moon Treaty, also known as<lb/>
the Agreement Governing the Activities of<lb/>
States on the Moon and Other Celestial<lb/>
Bodies. If the Moon Treaty is passed, we<lb/>
can anticipate the establishment of an<lb/>
OPEC-like organization, headed by the<lb/>
Soviet Union, which will deny us alter-<lb/>
native sources of raw materials as well as<lb/>
entrench a totalitarian order in outer<lb/>
space.<lb/>
A major bone of contention concerning<lb/>
the Moon Treaty, which was passed by the<lb/>
United Nations General Assembly on<lb/>
December 5, 1979, is language which<lb/>
describes the moon and its resources as the<lb/>
"common heritage of mankind Accor-<lb/>
ding to Leigh S. Ratiner, W; " "??-??<lb/>
counsel to the L-5 Society, a group pro-<lb/>
moting space development, "if signed and<lb/>
ratified this controversial legal doctrine<lb/>
would mandate a socialist model for a<lb/>
space resource development<lb/>
The attorney for the space group con-<lb/>
tends that because of the near-concensus<lb/>
on the interpretation of the common<lb/>
heritage doctrine by 150 nations, the inter-<lb/>
national organization, which would dictate<lb/>
development on the celestial bodies would<lb/>
necessarily:<lb/>
t ? be powerful, allegedly to protect the<lb/>
knerests of all countries;<lb/>
?adopt its' decisions on the basis of one<lb/>
nation, one vote, pursuant to the principle<lb/>
of equality; and<lb/>
?have its own commercial capability, in<lb/>
order to subsidize the less advanced coun-<lb/>
tries attempts to participate in resource<lb/>
development.<lb/>
Of<lb/>
In a letter to Secretary of State Cyrus<lb/>
Vance, Senator Frank Church (D-Ohio),<lb/>
Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations<lb/>
Committee, and Senator Jacob Javits<lb/>
(R-New York), the committee's ranking<lb/>
minority member, said that the Moon<lb/>
Treaty, by discouraging private invest-<lb/>
ment, gives the Soviets a substantial<lb/>
geoDolitical advantage.<lb/>
Representative John Breaux (D-La). a<lb/>
member of the Law of the Sea Advisor)<lb/>
Committee, points out that the concept of<lb/>
"the common heritage of mankind has<lb/>
already led to a regime which has<lb/>
discouraged American mining companies<lb/>
from making the necessary investment to<lb/>
develop mineral resources on the ocean<lb/>
bed. Under the Moon Treaty, Breaux con-<lb/>
tends, the same situation will hold true.<lb/>
In a letter to President Carter, Breaux<lb/>
wrote: "In recent weeks, I have become<lb/>
alarmed by increasing pressure within the<lb/>
State Department for acceptance of<lb/>
broadly-based international regimes that<lb/>
do not comport with the fundamental<lb/>
political, economic and strategic interests<lb/>
of the United States<lb/>
By CHARLES GRIFFIN<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
At some point in our childhoods,<lb/>
we all came in contact with a circus.<lb/>
Childhood is the perfect time to see<lb/>
a circus, for its memory fuels<lb/>
forever the lust to experience again<lb/>
those first thrills.<lb/>
Recently, I saw the 109th edition<lb/>
of Ringling Brothers Barnum &amp;<lb/>
Bailey Circus. It was the "Red<lb/>
Unit" or Gunther Gcbel-Williams<lb/>
version. At any given time during<lb/>
the circus touring season there are<lb/>
two units of "The Greatest Show on<lb/>
Earth" playing at various places<lb/>
around the country. There is, of<lb/>
course, no big top at either show.<lb/>
AH play in arenas or enclosed stadia<lb/>
since the advent of Irving Feld, who<lb/>
has become, in the words of the cir-<lb/>
cus souvenir program, "the<lb/>
Greatest Showman on Earth<lb/>
It was Feld who put the American<lb/>
circus into buildings and restored<lb/>
the prestige of the most famous<lb/>
names in American circus. He<lb/>
started by promoting the tours of<lb/>
the show in the late 50's, acquired<lb/>
control of the show in '67, split it in-<lb/>
to the Red and Blue units shortly<lb/>
afterward, and built both shows in-<lb/>
to troupes far larger than the<lb/>
original. Feld and his son, Kenneth,<lb/>
have continued to dominate this<lb/>
field of showmanship by acquiring<lb/>
Ice Follies and Holiday on Ice, by<lb/>
producing TV specials with the<lb/>
European touring circus Festival In-<lb/>
ternational du Cirque de Monte<lb/>
Carlo, and through their association<lb/>
with circus museums and amuse-<lb/>
ment centers in Florida and Wiscon-<lb/>
sin.<lb/>
I have given the devil his due. But<lb/>
is this all really circus?<lb/>
reldian circus is flash and sequins<lb/>
and color ? something like Chinese<lb/>
opera ? a pleasant piece of pander-<lb/>
ing pageantry set on a stage so small<lb/>
that each scene would be better seen<lb/>
on a TV screen. Thrills are so staged<lb/>
that you can count on your fingers<lb/>
the time until the magic moment<lb/>
when something will appear to go<lb/>
wrong.<lb/>
It suits small children who are<lb/>
easily fooled, but few, I think, will<lb/>
want to run away to join the circus<lb/>
unless they have a thing for lavendar<lb/>
ruffles and tights. The real circus is<lb/>
there only at the edges ? in the<lb/>
shuffle of some elder clown or when<lb/>
a nonchalant elephant shits in front<lb/>
of his trainer. The feats of the best<lb/>
flyer, the best tumbler, the greatest<lb/>
animal trainer, and the most<lb/>
frenetic of clowns are met with a<lb/>
smattering of applause and the eter-<lb/>
nal din of "Cotton Candy! Sno-<lb/>
Balls! Getcher Circus Toy<lb/>
The proudest boast of the Feld<lb/>
dynasty is their Clown College.<lb/>
Their publicity program mentions<lb/>
that Feld was disappointed in the<lb/>
clowning of the original unit's 14<lb/>
clowns, whose average age was 38<lb/>
(this information almost side-by-<lb/>
side with a paean to their senior<lb/>
clown, Lou Jacobs, who is 77). As if<lb/>
age were a factor, they claim with<lb/>
pride that their down alley is peopl-<lb/>
ed with graduates of their Clown<lb/>
College ? "98 percent<lb/>
By Comparison To Yesteryear<lb/>
Which means that Lou Jacobs is<lb/>
the sole survivor. He must have had<lb/>
an ironclad contract with the<lb/>
original organization.<lb/>
Two years ago I saw Jacobs per-<lb/>
form. He was like unto a jewel, fine-<lb/>
ly cut, thrown into the midst of<lb/>
pavement gravel. His was style and<lb/>
studied humor gained through years<lb/>
of apprenticeship and practice ?<lb/>
the others were swill ground out by<lb/>
Clown Cloning.<lb/>
There once was a circus with tents<lb/>
that smelled of sawdust and lion<lb/>
piss, a circus where small boys<lb/>
dodged past tent flaps to see the<lb/>
show from underneath the rickety<lb/>
bleachers through the patrons'<lb/>
ankles. It was a circus where the per-<lb/>
formers sweated and shouted and<lb/>
strained to accomplish their many<lb/>
feats ? the least of which was just<lb/>
beyond what you or I could do.<lb/>
It was a circus where the clowns<lb/>
talked directly to members of the<lb/>
audience and played pranks on<lb/>
them. Each down had his own<lb/>
carefully nurtured personality and it<lb/>
was not always genial.<lb/>
The clowns and the<lb/>
the performers on or above the<lb/>
sawdust and the attendants of the<lb/>
menagerie and the animals<lb/>
themselves formed an intimate rirele<lb/>
within which all participated. It was<lb/>
a magic that is best contained in the<lb/>
phrase, "The show must go on<lb/>
Come what may ? fire or water,<lb/>
pain or death ? the show went on.<lb/>
And the people of pre-TV time<lb/>
could depend on exdtement and<lb/>
magic beyond thrir everyday lives.<lb/>
There were things they all wanted to<lb/>
see ? and see again if it came thrir<lb/>
way again.<lb/>
The strong man, the magician,<lb/>
the midget, the daring young man<lb/>
on the flying trapeze and his lady in<lb/>
tights and the human cannonball.<lb/>
You could see them over and over<lb/>
again, and dean up camel shit just<lb/>
to ride with them into the next state<lb/>
or to a career under the big top.<lb/>
It was an act of faith. The show<lb/>
would go on and you would go to<lb/>
see it and you would experience as<lb/>
much as they ? the mud, the animal<lb/>
odors, the wind whipping the top. It<lb/>
was never just spectacle.<lb/>
There arc still small drcuses<lb/>
1<lb/>
traveling America. They still pro-<lb/>
vide the intimacy and honesty of<lb/>
real circus.<lb/>
Once I saw a performance bv a<lb/>
bullwhip artist at a Clyde Beam<lb/>
Circus when the assistant holding a<lb/>
cigarette to be cut in two in her<lb/>
mouth actually had her forehaid<lb/>
laid open by the tip of the whip. She<lb/>
pressed the bloody scalp back to her<lb/>
head with one hand and raised the<lb/>
other high, palm outward, and turn-<lb/>
ed once more to face the whip,<lb/>
which was successful the second<lb/>
time.<lb/>
The master, Beatty himself, ap-<lb/>
plauded her off and walked into his<lb/>
cage of roarig lions (smdiing the<lb/>
blood, no doubt) and defiantly<lb/>
made them perform, the lions snarl-<lb/>
"ifjnd growling all the time.<lb/>
mat was no parade of pacified<lb/>
Pussycats who only purr at their<lb/>
trainer's petting. No, these cats<lb/>
roared their anger and the elephants<lb/>
trumpeted without, and the man<lb/>
who tamed them accepted hk due<lb/>
applause while his tan safari shirt<lb/>
clung damply to his scarred back.<lb/>
That was drcus.<lb/>
1<lb/>
? o ? ?? ?. ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057263_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
APRII 17, l?Mtt)<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Olympics<lb/>
Conducted<lb/>
By DKBB1K HOTALINCi<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
The day was filled with children<lb/>
participating in different games on<lb/>
the track and field. Although the<lb/>
wind blew fiercely, the children con-<lb/>
tinued their frisbee-throwing and<lb/>
relay racing.<lb/>
From a distance, the field con-<lb/>
tained children playing games that<lb/>
you would see on any playground.<lb/>
There were the regular relay races,<lb/>
softball throws, and high jump<lb/>
competitions.<lb/>
But at a closer look, there were<lb/>
also "special" divisions, like<lb/>
wheelchair events and beanbag<lb/>
tosses.<lb/>
Bunting Field on the ECU track<lb/>
became a place where special<lb/>
children could compete without be-<lb/>
ing afraid that they "couldn't keep<lb/>
up" with other children.<lb/>
The Special Olympics commenced<lb/>
at 9 a.m. Wednesday and continued<lb/>
until 3 p.m. Several ECU students<lb/>
participated as event leaders,<lb/>
guiding and directing the children in<lb/>
the different events.<lb/>
"This is the second year that<lb/>
physically handicapped children<lb/>
have participated in the Special<lb/>
Olympics. Previously, only mentally<lb/>
Photography by Jill Adams<lb/>
retarded children were involved<lb/>
explained Barbara Zicherman, a<lb/>
staff member of the United Cerebral<lb/>
Palsy Developmental Center in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
The track events included: soft-<lb/>
ball throw, high jumps, soccer, 50,<lb/>
2(X) and 400 meter dashes, standing<lb/>
broad jumps, frisbee events, and<lb/>
wheelchair events and beanbag toss.<lb/>
Awards were given to all par-<lb/>
ticipants with a ribbon boasting of<lb/>
each child's participation in the<lb/>
events.<lb/>
The ages of the participants rang-<lb/>
ed from 18 months to adult and all<lb/>
were from Pitt County.<lb/>
All Greenville City schools and<lb/>
Pitt County schools and the follow-<lb/>
ing non-public schools participated:<lb/>
United Cerebral Palsy Deelopmen-<lb/>
tal Center, Farmville Child<lb/>
Development Center. WAG<lb/>
(Winterville, Ayden. Grifton)<lb/>
Developmental Center and ADAP<lb/>
(Adult Developmental ctivitv Pro-<lb/>
gram).<lb/>
?"Special Olympics means a lot to<lb/>
the children added Barbara<lb/>
Zicherman. "Seeing the excitement<lb/>
on their faces as the competed and<lb/>
won their awards was trul) gratify-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Papers Put Pirates To The Test<lb/>
B I)A II) NORR1S<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
College students have all sorts of<lb/>
fun activities to pass their time. Un-<lb/>
fortunately, they don't have much<lb/>
time for them because of unfun ac-<lb/>
tivities such as term papers.<lb/>
What is a term paper? A term<lb/>
paper is about the most unfun ac-<lb/>
tivit thre is in college. It consists<lb/>
ours and hours of staying up all<lb/>
night, four hundred unnecessary<lb/>
notecards, an outline that you don't<lb/>
need but write because the teacher<lb/>
thinks it is important, a rough draft<lb/>
and sore fingers from typing all fifty<lb/>
pages the night before it is due.<lb/>
I. Choosing a topic. Usually, the<lb/>
teacher saves you the bothersome<lb/>
chore of picking a topic by picking<lb/>
one for you. Teachers rarely choose<lb/>
iuch topics as "An Illustrated<lb/>
History of Playboy Centerfolds<lb/>
"The Films of the Three Stooges"<lb/>
or "The Adventures of Superman<lb/>
from the War of the Roses<lb/>
II. Getting the information. The<lb/>
most common method employed by<lb/>
students to get information is<lb/>
"plagiarism It consists of finding<lb/>
cm<lb/>
CATAUOG<lb/>
Teachers frequently offer such sub-<lb/>
jects as "The Properties of Ionic<lb/>
Fission in Cryogenic Ther-<lb/>
monuclearphysics "An Inter-<lb/>
pretation of the Pseudo-<lb/>
psychoanalytical Idiosyncracies of<lb/>
the Minor Characters in<lb/>
Longiellow's Evaneline" or "The<lb/>
Socio-Economic Factors Arising<lb/>
you may have to go look on the<lb/>
shelves.<lb/>
There are lots of shelves, but it's<lb/>
easy to find the right one when the<lb/>
books are filed under the Dewey<lb/>
Decimal system. Unfortunately, our<lb/>
library is nowing using the Library<lb/>
of Congress system. It consists of<lb/>
taking the books you need, giving<lb/>
them indecipherable classification<lb/>
numbers and putting them on the<lb/>
highest shelf possible.<lb/>
If you had gone to your library<lb/>
science classes, things would be a lot<lb/>
easier. But you didn't, so they<lb/>
won't. What's that saying they have<lb/>
about spilled milk?<lb/>
III. Taking notecards. Don't do<lb/>
them yet. Wait until your paper is<lb/>
finished, then write up the notecards<lb/>
from your paper. Hopefully, the<lb/>
teacher will not notice the dif-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
IV. The rough draft. See section<lb/>
III.<lb/>
V. Writing the paper. This is pret-<lb/>
ty simple. Just copy enough<lb/>
easier? Don't forget to stick in<lb/>
enough footnotes so that it won't<lb/>
look like you were plagiarizing.<lb/>
After this, list all the books you<lb/>
copied from in the bibliography. If<lb/>
you only used one book, it's a good<lb/>
idea to make up five or six more and<lb/>
list them too.<lb/>
VI. Final preparation. Final<lb/>
preparation mainly entails typing<lb/>
your paper or finding someone to<lb/>
ly to make many typing errors (such<lb/>
as the ones I have probably made<lb/>
typing this article.) Things like<lb/>
margins are really a lot of trouble<lb/>
and ought to be done away with.<lb/>
And, have you ever noticed that if<lb/>
you accidentally hit two keys at<lb/>
once, the wrong one is always the<lb/>
one that prints? The most common<lb/>
and serious error is staying up all<lb/>
night typing the paper the night<lb/>
b0Mf CorvlMOAJ TfNG Ecfc0fc5<lb/>
5LoPPv(<lb/>
Md&amp;ios<lb/>
PrlfCls.<lb/>
TOO- tA-MPt<lb/>
AfTEH W'v-f GOTTEN A H<lb/>
5O0K5, 60 OJT0 STCP UL.<lb/>
books and articles on your subject<lb/>
and copying them. (Caution: some<lb/>
teachers disapprove of this method.)<lb/>
To find sources, you could look<lb/>
first in the books in your room.<lb/>
Unless you are doing an illustrated<lb/>
history of Playboy centerfolds,<lb/>
though, you probably should start<lb/>
at the library.<lb/>
The first place to look in the<lb/>
library is the card catalog. Most<lb/>
likely, the books won't be there, so<lb/>
kJ<lb/>
before it's due, while another com-<lb/>
mon mistake is not doing it at all.<lb/>
Well, now that you've typed your<lb/>
paper, just turn it in and you're<lb/>
through, at least for a while. If you<lb/>
are lucky, you can go sack out. If<lb/>
you are one of the unlucky folks,<lb/>
you can go work on your next term<lb/>
paper, like I have to. And, if you<lb/>
really are having a rough day, you<lb/>
can type a newspaper article on how<lb/>
to do a term paper.<lb/>
Artwork by<lb/>
David Norris<lb/>
passages from your library books to<lb/>
fill up your paper. What could be<lb/>
type it for you. Most students are<lb/>
not experienced typists and are like-<lb/>
Beware Of<lb/>
Household<lb/>
'Cool Cats'<lb/>
By ROBKRT ALBANFSF<lb/>
Assistant Features Fditor<lb/>
The dust of Woodstock has<lb/>
scarcely settled. The din of anti-<lb/>
war slogans is almost reduced to<lb/>
quiet. But some things lie on<lb/>
from that turbulent era.<lb/>
Drug abuse continues to be a<lb/>
subject of concern to both<lb/>
Morley Safer (and the rest of the<lb/>
news elite) and the American<lb/>
man-at-large.<lb/>
Drugs are still used and abus-<lb/>
ed, and one of the worst and<lb/>
most despicable forms of drug<lb/>
abuse is getting one's pet stoned.<lb/>
Don't pretend you don't know<lb/>
what I'm talking about. If you're<lb/>
the average college devil-may-<lb/>
care heathen, you have either<lb/>
done it to some unsuspecting pet<lb/>
or stood in spasmodic hilarity<lb/>
and watched one of your barbaric<lb/>
friends put the household kitty<lb/>
cat into a Hefty trash-can liner<lb/>
and blow in billows of noxious<lb/>
smoke.<lb/>
This is abominable. First of all,<lb/>
it's a waste of a perfectly good<lb/>
buzz (if you happen to like buzzes<lb/>
? 1 rflyself don't use drugs, and<lb/>
if anyone asks you what 1 was do-<lb/>
ing last Tuesday night, 1 was at<lb/>
the car wash on Evans Street). Se-<lb/>
cond, those poor animals are be-<lb/>
ing subjected to a phenomenon<lb/>
that their particular level of<lb/>
evolution has not prepared them<lb/>
for. 1 will explain this with one of<lb/>
these truly Visigothie doings that<lb/>
I had the sad misfortune of<lb/>
observing.<lb/>
See Bt W AKt Page 7. Col. I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?? ? w<lb/>
m - ??.?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057263_0006"/><lb/>
6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 17. 1980<lb/>
Parlez-Vouz Gourmet?<lb/>
Please Don't Call Venison "Seared Roebuck<lb/>
By GARY BLAKE<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
Most people feel un-<lb/>
comfortable in French<lb/>
restaurants because<lb/>
they allow themselves<lb/>
to be bullied, in-<lb/>
timidated or ignored ?<lb/>
and that's just by the<lb/>
hatcheck girl. A maitre<lb/>
d' can instill you with a<lb/>
lifetime sense of in-<lb/>
feriority in a matter of<lb/>
seconds. For example,<lb/>
he can stare out over a<lb/>
sea of unfilled tables,<lb/>
turn to you and sneer,<lb/>
"Ahv you got zee reser-<lb/>
vation?"<lb/>
Try to master a few<lb/>
French words before<lb/>
dining at your local<lb/>
bistro so that you don't<lb/>
have to ask the waiter<lb/>
to translate words like<lb/>
"cafe" and "hors<lb/>
d'oeuvres You<lb/>
should be aware that<lb/>
pate is more than just<lb/>
chopped liver (Julia<lb/>
Child refers to it as "a<lb/>
luxurious cold meat<lb/>
loaf") and know what<lb/>
to expect when asking<lb/>
for crepe farci (a<lb/>
French pancake stuffed<lb/>
with seafood) or Co-<lb/>
quilles Saint Jacques<lb/>
(scallops in a sauce, ar-<lb/>
ranged on shells).<lb/>
The height of<lb/>
cleverness is not mak-<lb/>
ing one-to-one<lb/>
equivalencies between<lb/>
French and American<lb/>
cuisine. Only a<lb/>
gastronomic aborigine<lb/>
would describe<lb/>
chocolate mou ,e as<lb/>
"chocolate pudding<lb/>
and, please, don't look<lb/>
for the Log Cabin when<lb/>
your crepes suzettes are<lb/>
served. Resist the urge<lb/>
to refer to the grilled<lb/>
venison<lb/>
roebuck.<lb/>
as "seared<lb/>
Ordering wine is a<lb/>
feat which defeats all<lb/>
but a few gourmets.<lb/>
You should take a<lb/>
straw vote among you<lb/>
dining companions<lb/>
before letting a waiter<lb/>
or sommelier influence<lb/>
your decision about<lb/>
wine. If you do rely on<lb/>
the management, they<lb/>
may guide you to a<lb/>
wine which un-<lb/>
drinkable, expensive or<lb/>
both. If you're not up<lb/>
to drinking a whole<lb/>
bottle, you may order<lb/>
by the carafe, demi-<lb/>
carafe or glass.<lb/>
When wine is<lb/>
poured, remember that<lb/>
the first few drops are<lb/>
customarily offered to<lb/>
the head of the table<lb/>
for tasting and<lb/>
"acceptance A few<lb/>
connoisseurs prefer to<lb/>
signal the waiter that<lb/>
this ritual, generally a<lb/>
rather empty one, may<lb/>
be dispensed with.<lb/>
There have been in-<lb/>
stances, however, when<lb/>
the less continental<lb/>
among us have stared<lb/>
at the wine offering and<lb/>
bellowed: "Is that all I<lb/>
get?"<lb/>
The only more tragic<lb/>
faux pas would be to<lb/>
glance at the label of a<lb/>
1929 Lafite and ask:<lb/>
"Waiter, don't you<lb/>
have a bottle that's<lb/>
fresh?" That type of<lb/>
remark is guaranteed to<lb/>
make the others in your<lb/>
party turn whiter than<lb/>
vin blanc, and pretend<lb/>
to make idle conversa-<lb/>
tion about whether the<lb/>
dandelions will be early<lb/>
next spring. You can't<lb/>
go too far off if you<lb/>
simply request a Pouil-<lb/>
ly Fuisse or a Beau-<lb/>
jolais, depending<lb/>
whether you want white<lb/>
wine or red.<lb/>
As for your plat du<lb/>
jour, knowing a few<lb/>
key words will help<lb/>
demystify the menu:<lb/>
poisson means fish;<lb/>
canard is duck; coq au<lb/>
vin is chicken in wine<lb/>
sauce; veau is veal;<lb/>
escargots refers to<lb/>
snails in a butter and<lb/>
garlic sauce; entrecote<lb/>
is steak; jambon is<lb/>
ham; truit is trout;<lb/>
saumon is salmon, and<lb/>
any fish dish termed<lb/>
"meuniere" means that<lb/>
it is season, floured and<lb/>
sauteed in butter.<lb/>
If your ego is still in-<lb/>
tact by dessert, you're<lb/>
in for some of the<lb/>
finest, creamiest pastry<lb/>
in the world:<lb/>
Napoleons, eclairs,<lb/>
coupe aux marrons<lb/>
(chestnut and ice cream<lb/>
in a sweet sauce), glace<lb/>
(ice cream), or a cheese<lb/>
assortment. Don't<lb/>
think for a minute that<lb/>
they're about to wheel<lb/>
out Velveeta, cheddar<lb/>
or Cheez Whiz. They<lb/>
mean brie, camembert,<lb/>
port salut and other<lb/>
soft, creamy delights (if<lb/>
the brie is ripe and at<lb/>
room temperature,<lb/>
don't be surprised if it<lb/>
runs; if, God forbid,<lb/>
the brie is fresh from<lb/>
the refrigerator, it'll be<lb/>
lucky if it can even<lb/>
jog).<lb/>
You'll want expresso<lb/>
to accompany your<lb/>
dessert. When it ar-<lb/>
rives, lightly caress the<lb/>
lip of your cup with a<lb/>
lemon peel; don't toss<lb/>
the peel in the cup as if<lb/>
you were drinking<lb/>
lemonade.<lb/>
Now go out there<lb/>
and try to act as though<lb/>
you're having a good<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Cerf, Jr. Is Versatile Writer<lb/>
By Paul Clolery<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
Good morning,<lb/>
class. Welcome to U.S.<lb/>
History 202, "The<lb/>
Tumultuous '80s<lb/>
We'll begin our first<lb/>
session with a quick run<lb/>
through the decade.<lb/>
As I'm sure you all<lb/>
remember, Teddy Ken-<lb/>
nedy defeated Jimmy<lb/>
Carter for the<lb/>
Democratic nomina-<lb/>
tion in 1980 but took<lb/>
the former chief ex-<lb/>
ecutive on as his runn-<lb/>
ing mate. Ronald<lb/>
Reagan was the<lb/>
Republican candidate.<lb/>
Teddy defeated Ron-<lb/>
nie narrowly with Loui-<lb/>
siana as the pivotal<lb/>
state. Kennedy promis-<lb/>
ed Russell Long, the<lb/>
state's senator, he<lb/>
could have anything he<lb/>
wanted so long as the<lb/>
state went Democratic.<lb/>
It did, and Long recall-<lb/>
ed the favor a short 10<lb/>
days later.<lb/>
Taken seriously ill<lb/>
with liver trouble, Long<lb/>
requested Kennedy's<lb/>
liver. On the advice of<lb/>
his surgeon general,<lb/>
Allan Bakke, Kennedy<lb/>
made the donation.<lb/>
Unfortunately, due to a<lb/>
court date, Bakke had<lb/>
missed the session on<lb/>
the liver and kidneys.<lb/>
Sobbing to a griving<lb/>
nation on coast-to-<lb/>
coast television, Bakke<lb/>
cried, "Now I<lb/>
remember, it's two<lb/>
kidneys and one liver<lb/>
Kennedy was put on<lb/>
life support systems,<lb/>
and Carter was sworn<lb/>
- as President.<lb/>
What do you mean<lb/>
you don't remember<lb/>
any of this. Do you<lb/>
mean to tell me you<lb/>
don't remember the<lb/>
musical version of<lb/>
George Orwell's 1984,<lb/>
or "Black Friday"<lb/>
when the price of oil<lb/>
fell from $240 a barrel<lb/>
to 10 cents due to a<lb/>
world-wide oil glut?<lb/>
EGAD!<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Christopher Cerf, co-<lb/>
author of The '80s: A<lb/>
Look Back at the<lb/>
Tumultuous Decade,<lb/>
1980-89 (Workman<lb/>
Publishing, $6.95),<lb/>
these events actually<lb/>
place. He's looking at<lb/>
the world through<lb/>
1990-colored glasses.<lb/>
An author,<lb/>
songwriter, toy<lb/>
designer and editor,<lb/>
Cerf graduated cum<lb/>
laude from Harvard<lb/>
and went to work for<lb/>
his father, Bennett<lb/>
Cerf, at Random<lb/>
House. From 1962 to<lb/>
1970 he served as Ran-<lb/>
dom's juvenile and<lb/>
adult senior editor. He<lb/>
was one of the foun-<lb/>
ding fathers of the Na-<lb/>
tional Lampoon and<lb/>
was one of the master-<lb/>
minds behind the "Not<lb/>
The New York Times"<lb/>
the Lampoon put out<lb/>
during New York's<lb/>
1978 newspaper strike.<lb/>
"I think said Cerf,<lb/>
"people actually<lb/>
thought it was the<lb/>
Times"<lb/>
In 1970, Cerf joined<lb/>
the Children's Televi-<lb/>
sion Workshop, where<lb/>
he created books,<lb/>
records and games bas-<lb/>
ed on "Sesame Street"<lb/>
and "The Electric<lb/>
Company In 1976 he<lb/>
formed his own multi-<lb/>
media consulting and<lb/>
production firm and<lb/>
became special consul-<lb/>
tant to the president of<lb/>
CTW.<lb/>
Currently, Cerf is<lb/>
developing a program<lb/>
by which computers<lb/>
would be used as a lear-<lb/>
ning tool.<lb/>
Besides his '80s an-<lb/>
thology, which he<lb/>
wrote with Tony Hen-<lb/>
dra and Peter Elbling,<lb/>
Cerf has written The<lb/>
VoHdsLareshees<lb/>
and The Vintage An-<lb/>
thology of Science Fan-<lb/>
tasy.<lb/>
As Cerf surveys the<lb/>
'80s, he reminisces<lb/>
about how old was<lb/>
vogue and how the<lb/>
world's largest banks<lb/>
and corporations form-<lb/>
ed the United Multina-<lb/>
tionals, complete with<lb/>
armed strike forces. He<lb/>
tells of the great food<lb/>
shortage caused by the<lb/>
earth's shaking during<lb/>
the "Year of the<lb/>
Simultaneous<lb/>
player who<lb/>
renegotiated his con-<lb/>
tract in between third<lb/>
and home during the<lb/>
playoffs and how John-<lb/>
John Kennedy took<lb/>
over the "Tonight<lb/>
Show<lb/>
Christopher Cerf has<lb/>
made a career out of<lb/>
being funny, and his<lb/>
book and slide show<lb/>
are no exception. Some<lb/>
of the jokes do fall<lb/>
short of their mark, but<lb/>
those that do can be<lb/>
counted on one hand.<lb/>
Which is not bad for<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
at<lb/>
Darts, Chess, Checkers,<lb/>
Backgammon<lb/>
Orgasm the baseball 264 pages.<lb/>
T<lb/>
r<lb/>
Visit Pipe Dreams<lb/>
218 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
T-Shirts Cowboy Hats<lb/>
Smoking Accessories<lb/>
KiafR, by Nature's Way<lb/>
specializing in natural hair cuts for men A women<lb/>
Present ECU Student I.D. For<lb/>
20 Off Your Next Haircut<lb/>
Offer good thru 4-19-80<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
appointment only<lb/>
758-7841<lb/>
OUTER BANKS<lb/>
SAILING ADVENTURES<lb/>
ONE OR TWO<lb/>
WEEK TRIPS<lb/>
ViOOOOper<lb/>
Trip throughout the<lb/>
summer<lb/>
Beginning May 18th<lb/>
nstructionol weekends<lb/>
also oval ible<lb/>
For Information:<lb/>
United Methodist<lb/>
Ministry Outdoors<lb/>
Camp Don Lee<lb/>
Arapohoe. NC<lb/>
28510<lb/>
LA-KOSMETIQUE<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
"1980 SPRING &amp; SUMMER open<lb/>
HAIR FASHIONS" ??<lb/>
The Elegant Eighties Are Here, And Career Cuts Are The Hair<lb/>
Fashions For The New Decade. Individuals in the Eighties demand a<lb/>
fashion look that is elegant but yet comfortable. Career Cuts are the<lb/>
perfect hair fashions to meet the need.<lb/>
For both Male and Female<lb/>
Career Cuts ? For short, medium or long hair.<lb/>
You choose the length.<lb/>
L CYSTENE - New breakthrough in Perm Waving. Your looks and<lb/>
FEELS like you were Born with a natural wave.<lb/>
PIPING ? New face framing colors.<lb/>
TW-UGhllNG - Let us lift your own color. Apply two or more<lb/>
shades of color to give you that individual look that's yours alone.<lb/>
You'll love the look.<lb/>
CALL 752-3419 Eight<lb/>
East 10th Street 0i <lb/>
o Stylists<lb/>
Stop by for a consultation.<lb/>
MEN'S RESIDENCE<lb/>
COUNCIL PRESENTS<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
THREE<lb/>
REASONS<lb/>
TO BUY<lb/>
CHOOSE<lb/>
A selection of 17 innovative<lb/>
and contemporary styles on<lb/>
display this week only.<lb/>
ARTCARVED FEATURES MORE<lb/>
DESIGN VARIETY THAN ANY<lb/>
OTHER COLLEGE RING COMFXNY<lb/>
Save $20.00 on Four Ladies<lb/>
Fashion<lb/>
t<lb/>
FREE RING<lb/>
Trode in your man's gold<lb/>
H.S. ring for a SIlAEHUrvl<lb/>
Cotege ring tree.<lb/>
ARTCARVED ALSO AUOW5<lb/>
BEST TRADE-IN VALUES<lb/>
TOWARDS GOLD RING<lb/>
PURCHASES.<lb/>
Gold H. S. rings,<lb/>
trade-in values.<lb/>
Man's: $99.00<lb/>
Women's $50.00<lb/>
.?<lb/>
ON THE HILL 7:00- 11pm<lb/>
ON<lb/>
APRIL 28th, 1980<lb/>
ADMISSION IS FREE<lb/>
3.<lb/>
Rings SAE<lb/>
Produced from a strong jeweler's<lb/>
alloy, SILADIUM College rings<lb/>
we available at special sale prices.<lb/>
ARTCARVED PROVIDES AN<lb/>
ALTERNATIVE TO THE HIGH PRICE OF GOLD.<lb/>
All Men's Siladium rings<lb/>
are on sale for $74.95<lb/>
BONUS: ArtCarved's Colege ring speciafcst is on compusfodoy<lb/>
to assist with this important and meaningful purchase<lb/>
IKIUIRVED<lb/>
COLLEGE RINGS<lb/>
 symbolizing your abftty to achieve.<lb/>
April 22nd and 23rd<lb/>
HATF<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
Lobby<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
Motier Qtorge or Vise accepted.<lb/>
8M WUwityt<lb/>
<pb facs="00057263_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 17, 1980<lb/>
Recitals Given In A.J. Fletcher Hall<lb/>
A recital was recently<lb/>
given by two senior<lb/>
clarinet students in the<lb/>
ECU School of Music.<lb/>
I he performers were<lb/>
Nanc Anne Beckwith<lb/>
and William Robinson,<lb/>
both candidates for the<lb/>
Bachelor of Music<lb/>
Education degree.<lb/>
 student of Dr.<lb/>
loseph Distefano, Ms.<lb/>
Beckwith was featured<lb/>
in the Camille Saint-<lb/>
Saens Sonate, Opus 167<lb/>
("Allegretto"), Alvin<lb/>
Etler's Sonata and Carl<lb/>
Reinecke's Trio in B<lb/>
flat, Opus 274<lb/>
("Scherzo").<lb/>
She was assisted by<lb/>
pianist Val Parks. Also<lb/>
featured in the<lb/>
Reinecke Trio was<lb/>
William Pearce, horn.<lb/>
Ms. Beckwith is the<lb/>
daughter of Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. Donald Beckwith<lb/>
of Charlotte.<lb/>
Robinson, a student<lb/>
of Dr. Geroge Knight,<lb/>
performed the Paul<lb/>
Hindemith Sonata and<lb/>
Johann Stamitz's Con-<lb/>
certo in B flat Major,<lb/>
accompanied by pianist<lb/>
Val Parks.<lb/>
During his studies at<lb/>
ECU, Robinson has<lb/>
been a member of Phi<lb/>
Kappa Phi and Pi Kap-<lb/>
pa Lambda honor<lb/>
societies, a recipient of<lb/>
the Phi Mu Alpha<lb/>
Outstanding Senior<lb/>
Award dnd a past presi-<lb/>
dent of the student divi-<lb/>
sion of the Music<lb/>
Educators of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
He has also perform-<lb/>
ed professionally as a<lb/>
magician in the Green-<lb/>
ville area and appeared<lb/>
as a wizard at ECU's<lb/>
annual Christmas<lb/>
Madrigal Dinner series.<lb/>
Robinson is the son<lb/>
of Mary Jo Vauter of<lb/>
Hampton, Va. and<lb/>
William E. Robinson<lb/>
of Graceville, Fla.<lb/>
Pianist Kathryn Law<lb/>
of Cary and flutist<lb/>
Michael Elliott of<lb/>
Woodbridge, Va ad-<lb/>
vanced students in the<lb/>
ECU School of Music,<lb/>
will perform in recitals<lb/>
Friday, April 18, in the<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher Music<lb/>
Center Recital Hall.<lb/>
Ms. Law, a student<lb/>
of tfr. Paul Tardif of<lb/>
the ECU keyboard<lb/>
faculty and a senior<lb/>
candidate for Bachelor<lb/>
of Music degrees in<lb/>
piano performance and<lb/>
piano pedagogy, will<lb/>
perform at 9 p.m.<lb/>
Her program will in-<lb/>
clude the Beethoven<lb/>
Sonata in A flat Major,<lb/>
Opus 26, two dances<lb/>
from Ginastera's<lb/>
"Danzas Argentinas<lb/>
two Scarlatti sonatas<lb/>
(K.481 and K. 482) and<lb/>
the Chopin Ballade in<lb/>
A flat Major.<lb/>
She is the daughter<lb/>
of Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Charles Law of Cary.<lb/>
Elliott, performing<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m is a stu-<lb/>
dent of Beatrice<lb/>
Chauncey and a junior<lb/>
candidate for Bachelor<lb/>
of Music degrees in<lb/>
flute performance and<lb/>
music education.<lb/>
He will be featured in<lb/>
the Honegger<lb/>
"Concerto da Camera<lb/>
for Flute and English<lb/>
Horn Aaron<lb/>
Copland's Duo for<lb/>
Flute and Piano and<lb/>
Oliver Messiaen's Le<lb/>
Merle Noir<lb/>
Piano accompanist<lb/>
will be Donna Roman.<lb/>
Assisting are Terri<lb/>
Svec, English horn, and<lb/>
Matt Morris, bassoon.<lb/>
Elliott is the son of<lb/>
Mr. and. Mrs. Joseph<lb/>
Elliott of Woodbridge,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
Ibuy<lb/>
YOUR<lb/>
TOTO<lb/>
TICKETS<lb/>
NOW!<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUOCNT UMOM<lb/>
Beware Of Household Cool Cats On Rise<lb/>
( on tinned from Page 5<lb/>
several years ago 1 was at a<lb/>
mend's house enjoying some<lb/>
good ibes and tunes, and this<lb/>
friend decided that he would gas<lb/>
his cat, whom we will call Felix<lb/>
C. Domesticus.<lb/>
Vhe cat was pretty good-<lb/>
natured about the ordeal, as he<lb/>
had a generally good disposition.<lb/>
He finally got out of the card-<lb/>
board gas chamber, red-eyed and<lb/>
out of breath.<lb/>
The first thing Domesticus did<lb/>
was sit down in front of the<lb/>
television. He stared and stared,<lb/>
seemingly enjoying the Errol<lb/>
Flynn movie, but when "Hawaii<lb/>
Five-O" came on, he was clearly<lb/>
undergoing a case of bad vibes.<lb/>
He tried vainly to change the<lb/>
channel, attempting to make it<lb/>
clear that he preferred Mannix.<lb/>
Not able to communicate his<lb/>
desire, he sat down and stared at<lb/>
the ceiling. He seemed particular-<lb/>
ly interested in a blotch of green<lb/>
paint, in which a house fly had<lb/>
met his demise.<lb/>
Next, old Felix seemed to have<lb/>
been hit by a munchies attack.<lb/>
The cat ate all the Little Friskies<lb/>
in his bowl, and then made it<lb/>
known to us through an elaborate<lb/>
system of paw signals that he had<lb/>
an overwhelming desire for a<lb/>
pack of Twinkies and some<lb/>
Seven-Up. Kitty physiology can-<lb/>
not support that kind of food,<lb/>
and it wasn't long thereafter that<lb/>
the junk food had coursed the lit-<lb/>
tle fellow's digestive system.<lb/>
He went to his little cat-box<lb/>
and tried to do the doody, but he<lb/>
kept getting distracted by our<lb/>
conversation. He kept putting his<lb/>
paw over his mouth to tell us to<lb/>
be quiet, but we couldn't read<lb/>
him. He was the first blown-away<lb/>
cat I had ever seen ? I didn't<lb/>
know what was going on then.<lb/>
One thing that really surprised<lb/>
me about this cat in his new mode<lb/>
of being was the way he seemed<lb/>
to "get into" things. For about<lb/>
an hour, he was really "into"<lb/>
watching our cigarettes burn in<lb/>
the ashtrays, and we were really<lb/>
amazed when he started puffing<lb/>
on one and proceeded to go<lb/>
through two packs.<lb/>
The most remarkable thing<lb/>
about the experience was Felix'<lb/>
taste in literature. He just didn't<lb/>
seem to tire of Tom Wolfe and<lb/>
Hunter Thompson. He also<lb/>
seemed to enjoy Heavy Metal<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
This kind of abuse will cost us<lb/>
dearly, according to scientists at<lb/>
the University of California at<lb/>
Detroit. Already, they say. hun-<lb/>
dreds of "cool cats" are becom-<lb/>
ing apathetic and unmanageable.<lb/>
The rate of pregnancy among<lb/>
teen-age kittens has been increas-<lb/>
ing alarmingly, and small com-<lb/>
munities of Bohemian felines are<lb/>
springing up all over the country.<lb/>
You make your choice, fellow<lb/>
students. Will you be able to bear<lb/>
the guilt of knowing that you're<lb/>
responsible for a nation of tuned-<lb/>
out cats? You'e been warned.<lb/>
Music Students<lb/>
Give Recitals<lb/>
17<lb/>
Two senior students<lb/>
in the ECU School of<lb/>
Music, pianists Mar-<lb/>
cille Braxton and Bren-<lb/>
da Leigh Miles, ap-<lb/>
peared recently in<lb/>
recital in the Fletcher<lb/>
Music Center Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Both are students of<lb/>
Dr. Paul Tardif of the<lb/>
ECU keyboard faculty.<lb/>
Ms. Braxton's pro-<lb/>
gram included Bartok's<lb/>
Sonatina, the Haydn<lb/>
Sonata in F Minor<lb/>
(Hob. XVI 34) and<lb/>
Scriabin's Preludes.<lb/>
A candidate for the<lb/>
Bachelor of Music<lb/>
Education degree, she<lb/>
is the daughter of Wade<lb/>
and Florence Braxton<lb/>
of Savannah, Ga<lb/>
formerly of Whiteville.<lb/>
Brenda Miles, a can-<lb/>
didate for Bachelor of<lb/>
Music degrees in piano<lb/>
performance and<lb/>
pedagogy, performed<lb/>
two Debussy preludes:<lb/>
the Scriabin Etude,<lb/>
Opus 2. No. 1;<lb/>
Rachmaninoff's<lb/>
Prelude. Opus 32, No.<lb/>
5; 1 istz'sd Etude in C<lb/>
Flat and the Mozart<lb/>
Sonata, K. 331.<lb/>
Her parents are Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Russell Miles<lb/>
of Salisbury, Md.<lb/>
Two advanced<lb/>
students in the School<lb/>
of Music, pianists Alisa<lb/>
Wetherington of<lb/>
Kinston and violinist<lb/>
thena Neblitt of Port-<lb/>
smouth, Va are<lb/>
scheduled to perform u<lb/>
recital Wednesday,<lb/>
April 23, in Fletcher<lb/>
Music Center Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Ms. Wetherington, a<lb/>
student of Henry<lb/>
Doskey of the ECU<lb/>
keyboard faculty, is a<lb/>
candidate for the<lb/>
Master of Music degree<lb/>
in piano performance.<lb/>
Her program, set for<lb/>
7:30 p.m will include<lb/>
Beethoven's Sonata in<lb/>
F sharp Major, Opus<lb/>
78, two Liszt etudes,<lb/>
Satie's "Sports et<lb/>
Divertissements" and<lb/>
the Barber Sonata in E<lb/>
flat Minor, Opus 26.<lb/>
She is the daughter<lb/>
of M.G. Wetherington<lb/>
of Kinston.<lb/>
A student of Dr.<lb/>
Paul Topper of the<lb/>
ECU strings faculty,<lb/>
Ms. Neblitt is a senior<lb/>
candidate for the<lb/>
Bachelor of Music<lb/>
degree in music<lb/>
therapy.<lb/>
Her 9 p.m. program<lb/>
will include Schubert's<lb/>
Sonatine I in D Major,<lb/>
Beethoven's<lb/>
"Romance Opus 50<lb/>
and Heifetz ar-<lb/>
rangements of Scarlat-<lb/>
ti's Minuetto and<lb/>
Allegro from Suite<lb/>
XIX.<lb/>
She will be accom-<lb/>
panied by pianists<lb/>
Pamela Henry and<lb/>
Ronnie Wooten.<lb/>
Her parents are Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Clem Neblitt<lb/>
ECU members of the Strickland, guitar; Rich<lb/>
National Association Holly, drums). The<lb/>
of Jazz Educators will Late Nites will play<lb/>
sponsor a free jazz con- "St. Thomas by Son-<lb/>
cert Sunday at 8:15 ny Rollins, "Hot<lb/>
p.m. in the Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall.<lb/>
The performing<lb/>
bands will include the<lb/>
Late Nites Quintet<lb/>
(Rick Levinson,<lb/>
trumpet; Mike Kincaid,<lb/>
saxophone; Rick<lb/>
Vizachero, bass; Eb<lb/>
Wax by Rich Levin-<lb/>
son, "Joy by Gerry<lb/>
Niewood, and "Go<lb/>
by Rich Holly.<lb/>
Also performing will<lb/>
be the ECU Jazz<lb/>
'Bones- (George<lb/>
Broussard, Andy<lb/>
Gilbert. Glenn<lb/>
Johnson, Rich Mon-<lb/>
cure and Mike Rogers,<lb/>
trombones; Woody<lb/>
Cowan, bass; Michael<lb/>
Regan, piano; Eb<lb/>
Strickland, guitar;<lb/>
Dave Albert, drums).<lb/>
The Jazz Connection<lb/>
(Robert Keller, sax;<lb/>
Mickey Eury, trom-<lb/>
bone; Woody Cowan,<lb/>
bass; Eddie Thigpen,<lb/>
piano; Dave Albert,<lb/>
drums) will play such<lb/>
tunes as "Yardbird<lb/>
Suite" and "Minor<lb/>
Blues<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse Committee presents<lb/>
SALLY SPRING<lb/>
One Night Only!<lb/>
LAST SHOW OF THE SEMESTER!<lb/>
Multi-purpose Room Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
Fri. April 18<lb/>
9:00-11:00 p.m.<lb/>
50C Admission<lb/>
Free Snacks<lb/>
feu<lb/>
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Lose 10 Pounds<lb/>
in 4 Weeks<lb/>
i Different Plan Weekly<lb/>
i Printed on Decorative<lb/>
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OPEN HOUSE: APRIL 14-26<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
756-6226 or 443-6501<lb/>
Truly noteworthy goodtime flats have<lb/>
all the extras! Like leather uppers,<lb/>
sharp styles, full-time comfort.<lb/>
Thong with adjustable buckle<lb/>
in WHITE or NATURAL LEATHER,<lb/>
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back in NATURAL LEATHER, $21.00<lb/>
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10 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
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and Parkwood Mall in Wilson<lb/>
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-v<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057263_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
APRII '7 1980 Page 8<lb/>
Lady Bucs Sweep<lb/>
Twinbill At State<lb/>
Lady Pirate Fran Hooks Rips A Single<lb/>
Resigns Post<lb/>
Olschner Speaks Out<lb/>
By EDDIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Athletic Department<lb/>
lost another head coach yesterday,<lb/>
as Barbara Olschner, the women's<lb/>
tennis mentor, resigned her posi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
In a letter to Athletic Director Bill<lb/>
Cain, Olschner stated she was relin-<lb/>
quishing her job due to low wages<lb/>
and frustrating working conditions.<lb/>
"I can't see that I'm getting<lb/>
anywhere Olschner lamented.<lb/>
She feels the program has no real<lb/>
goals to strive for.<lb/>
"The program has to have some<lb/>
definition. It has to know where it's<lb/>
going, it has to know what it's do-<lb/>
ing she said. "The administration<lb/>
has not had a concern (for the tennis<lb/>
program).<lb/>
"We're (the ECU tennis pro-<lb/>
gram) really at the bottom of the<lb/>
ladder Olschner continued. "We<lb/>
don't have to be there. If the ad-<lb/>
ministration would put its commit-<lb/>
ment and its support behind tennis,<lb/>
we could have a terrific program<lb/>
So far, she says, that has not hap-<lb/>
pened because of several hindering<lb/>
factors.<lb/>
"It's frustrating in the terms of<lb/>
not being able to recruit as effective-<lb/>
ly as I might want to, because I can't<lb/>
tell the girls (to be recruited) what<lb/>
the future may bring Olschner ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
A point-in-case, according to<lb/>
Olschner, is an incident that occur-<lb/>
red in the recruiting war last year.<lb/>
"I had the number one, 21-and-<lb/>
under, woman player in Canada,<lb/>
and she was very interested in com-<lb/>
ing to East Carolina Olschner<lb/>
stated.<lb/>
Olschner eventually had to<lb/>
dissuade the "girl not to come" to<lb/>
ECU because Olschner couldn't<lb/>
honestly tell the player if the ad-<lb/>
ministration was "going to put<lb/>
enough money in the program in the<lb/>
Barbara Olschner<lb/>
future to build a program around<lb/>
this girl ? which they could've<lb/>
done Olschner couldn't even tell<lb/>
the girl if she would be the coach<lb/>
because there had been no salary<lb/>
commitment made.<lb/>
Another frustrating aspect for<lb/>
Olschner is that she was hired for a<lb/>
position that is "considered part-<lb/>
time according to the Coor-<lb/>
dinator of Women's Athletics<lb/>
Laurie Arrants.<lb/>
"I'm a commuter-coach<lb/>
Olschner said. "I drive 160 miles<lb/>
round trip when I come. I can't be<lb/>
here as much as I need to be here.<lb/>
But I'm not paid enough to make it<lb/>
worthwhile for me to be here<lb/>
Arrants agrees there is a problem.<lb/>
"We're not supporting her pro-<lb/>
gram, such as traveling expenses<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Arrants also stated that some<lb/>
steps were being taken in order to<lb/>
hear the coach's grievances, then<lb/>
provide suggestions to work pro-<lb/>
blems out.<lb/>
An "in-house" evaluation is now<lb/>
taking place within the athletic<lb/>
department. The members consist<lb/>
of the athletic administration and<lb/>
the ECU coaches, according to ar-<lb/>
rants. She hopes that through this<lb/>
procedure "we can consistently<lb/>
evaluate ourselves (the individual<lb/>
athletic programs)<lb/>
Olscnner stated that she came to<lb/>
ECU because she has "a strong in-<lb/>
terest in tennis in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina. There are a lot of girls<lb/>
who really haven't had the chance to<lb/>
compete. I think they really need the<lb/>
opportunity<lb/>
Also, Olschner wanted to be in-<lb/>
volved in coaching.<lb/>
"I like working with competitive<lb/>
players, and I thought it would be a<lb/>
good arrangement.<lb/>
"I don't want to come across as<lb/>
bitter she continued. "I would<lb/>
like to have thought that I have<lb/>
done the best job with what I had to<lb/>
work with<lb/>
To develop a stronger tennis pro-<lb/>
gram at ECU, Olschner suggested<lb/>
"to combine the men and women's<lb/>
tennis coach position and increase<lb/>
the total budgets to $20,000, not in-<lb/>
cluding salary Olschner has work-<lb/>
ed from approximately a $9,000<lb/>
budget, including salary.<lb/>
Olschner compiled a 5-12 record<lb/>
last year along with a 2-8 slate thus<lb/>
far this season. Her resignation<lb/>
comes a day before the Lady Bucs<lb/>
are to complete their season by par-<lb/>
ticipating in the State Tournament<lb/>
at Western Carolina.<lb/>
Olschner, a graduate of both St.<lb/>
Mary's Junior College and UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte, plans to return to Bogue<lb/>
Banks Country Club (in Atlantic<lb/>
Beach) until the end of September,<lb/>
where she is club pro.<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina continues to<lb/>
dominate NCAIAIW Division I<lb/>
softball opponants, sweeping a<lb/>
doubleheader 6-4 and 3-0 Tuesday<lb/>
against N.C. State in Raleigh.<lb/>
Sophomore third sacker Maureen<lb/>
Buck opened the first contest with a<lb/>
single to left and later scored on a<lb/>
sacrifice fly by leftfielder Kathy<lb/>
Riley. Freshman slugger Mitzi Davis<lb/>
reached base on an error to the<lb/>
Wolfpack shortstop and was plated<lb/>
on senior Jan McVeigh's single.<lb/>
Rightfielder Cynthia Shepard<lb/>
pounded out a single and was driven<lb/>
in by Mary Powell's base knock to<lb/>
close out the first-inning barrage by<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
State plated a lone run in the first<lb/>
with a single by Keith and an RBI<lb/>
base hit by Snook.<lb/>
Winning pitcher Mary Bryan<lb/>
Carlyle helped her own cause in the<lb/>
second with a double and scored on<lb/>
a single by Buck.<lb/>
State retaliated in their half of the<lb/>
second for a trio of runs as Willis,<lb/>
Asycue and Brabson (running for<lb/>
Tanner who singled) each crossed<lb/>
home during the Wolfpack's most<lb/>
productive spurt of the day.<lb/>
Riley doubled in the fourth and<lb/>
later scamperred home as McVeigh<lb/>
notched her second hit of the day.<lb/>
The Pirates added an insurance<lb/>
run in the seventh after Shirley<lb/>
Brown singled and was replaced on inning ended<lb/>
the base pathes by speedy Lillion<lb/>
Barnes. Freshman Fran Hooks step-<lb/>
ped to the plate for Carlyle and her<lb/>
grounder was to hot for the State<lb/>
shortstop.<lb/>
McVeigh completed the contest<lb/>
with a pair of hits in three trips to<lb/>
the plate and Buck followed with<lb/>
two out of four.<lb/>
Carlyle harnessed the Wolfpack<lb/>
in the second game, allowing only<lb/>
two base hits and just two runners<lb/>
to get as far as second base in recor-<lb/>
ding her 15th win in 19 decisions.<lb/>
Neither team got on the board un-<lb/>
til the fourth when Davis singled<lb/>
and scored on a homer by Riley to<lb/>
left-center field.<lb/>
Riley accounted for the other East<lb/>
Carolina run in the seventh as she<lb/>
singled and crossed home when<lb/>
Brown's smash was erred by the<lb/>
Pack second sacker.<lb/>
N.C. State had a chance to score<lb/>
in the second when Snook reached<lb/>
first on an error by Buck, but<lb/>
stranded her at third after the initial<lb/>
Wolfpack single by McLaurin.<lb/>
Keith contributed the other single<lb/>
in the sixth, but was cleared from<lb/>
the pathes by Rizzo's fielder <lb/>
choice. Rizzo advanced to second<lb/>
but was left holding the bag as the<lb/>
Davis notched a flawless two out<lb/>
of two at the plate in the second<lb/>
contest, with Riley adding two of<lb/>
three and Powell one of three to ac-<lb/>
count for the East Carolina hitv<lb/>
"The great thing about (Tuesda <lb/>
was the good defensive game we<lb/>
had said ECU coach ALiia<lb/>
Dillon. "We had some super catches<lb/>
in the outfield which saved vome<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
"We had some problems this<lb/>
weekend (fifth place in the N.C.<lb/>
State Invitational), but we had a<lb/>
meeting before the game and work<lb/>
ed those out Dillon stated. "Wc<lb/>
didn't want things to keep going<lb/>
downhill.<lb/>
"In our minds, nothing should<lb/>
stop us from here on out. We need<lb/>
to try to be a little more intense<lb/>
You've eot to deserve the wins vou<lb/>
get<lb/>
East Carolina, now 19-4,travels<lb/>
to Buies Creek today for a twinbill<lb/>
with the Campbell Camals.<lb/>
ECU Baseball Resumes<lb/>
With UNC- W Contest<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina baseball<lb/>
resumes play this Saturday when it<lb/>
hosts UNC-Wilmington, ending a<lb/>
one-week layoff.<lb/>
The layoff was created when a<lb/>
Tuesday game at Wilmington was<lb/>
cancelled due to poor weather con-<lb/>
ditions. The cancellation was<lb/>
another in a long line of rainouts for<lb/>
the 18-5 Pirates.<lb/>
ECU coach Hal Baird tried earlier<lb/>
this week to set up a Thursday game<lb/>
with Virginia Commonwealth, bui<lb/>
saw those plans fall through.<lb/>
The Saturday matchup will begin<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. and will be encored<lb/>
Sunday by a 2 p.m. rematch with<lb/>
the Seahawks. Both games will be<lb/>
played at ECU's Harrington Field.<lb/>
The impressive Pirate start has<lb/>
been spearheaded by a red-hot team<lb/>
batting streak. The school record<lb/>
for team batting average in a single<lb/>
season belongs to the 1964 Pirate<lb/>
squad, who ripped opposing pit-<lb/>
chers for a .288 average.<lb/>
The 1980 Pirates are threatening<lb/>
to make a mockery of that record,<lb/>
though, as they are presently hitting<lb/>
at a .319 team clip.<lb/>
No less than six team members<lb/>
are batting above the coveted .300<lb/>
mark. Leftfielder Butch Davis leads<lb/>
the way with a .382 mark. Davis<lb/>
also has a single-season school<lb/>
record 11 home runs and 21 RBIs.<lb/>
He also has accumulated a single-<lb/>
season record with his five triples.<lb/>
Rightfielder Macon Moye is next<lb/>
at .379 and is tied for the team lead<lb/>
with his six doubles, followed by<lb/>
shortstop Billy Best at .369. Best<lb/>
ranks second on the team with his 17<lb/>
RBIs.<lb/>
Designated hitter John Hallow is<lb/>
at .343 and has been a welcome sur-<lb/>
prise to the fold since coming over<lb/>
from the ECU football squad,<lb/>
where he is the regular nose guard.<lb/>
First baseman Rick Derechailo,<lb/>
who saw his season record of 10<lb/>
PhOfO by JILL ADAMS<lb/>
Players Celebrate Another Pirate Run<lb/>
home runs recently broken by<lb/>
Davis, is batting at a .319 clip. His<lb/>
home run putout is down from last<lb/>
year, though, as he has but three.<lb/>
Derechailo, like Moye, has six<lb/>
doubles.<lb/>
Catcher Raymie Styons rounds<lb/>
out the Pirates at .300 or better with<lb/>
his .313 average. He is second on<lb/>
the team in home runs with six.<lb/>
Lefthander Bill Wilder leads the<lb/>
Pirate mound corps with a 7-1<lb/>
record. The lone loss came to<lb/>
Maryland last Saturday and was the<lb/>
first of his collegiette career. Wilder<lb/>
was 3-0 last season.<lb/>
Bird, 'Magic' To Star In Celtic-Laker Series?<lb/>
For once the "media hype" has<lb/>
been worthwhile.<lb/>
The present National Basketball<lb/>
Association season has been one<lb/>
that has been earmarked by the<lb/>
presence of two super rookies,<lb/>
Larry Bird of Boston and Earvin<lb/>
"Magic" Johnson of Los Angeles.<lb/>
The two have received large<lb/>
amounts of publicity.<lb/>
The pub is warranted, too, as the<lb/>
dynamic duo has turned one terrible<lb/>
team and one so-so one into the two<lb/>
best in the NBA. Because of Bird<lb/>
and "Magic the Celtics and<lb/>
Lakers are the odds-on favorites in<lb/>
the NBA playoffs.<lb/>
Though some may throw in an<lb/>
argument or two for Julius "Dr. J"<lb/>
Irving and the Philadelphia 76ers,<lb/>
or others may back the defending<lb/>
NBA champion Seattle Supersonics,<lb/>
it should be the Celtics and Lakers<lb/>
battling it out in the championship<lb/>
series.<lb/>
The two rookies are the reasons<lb/>
why. Bird's shooting, defensive,<lb/>
and passing wizadry has spread to<lb/>
his Boston teammates. The present<lb/>
Celtics are playing the type of team<lb/>
ball that brought them a dynasty<lb/>
over a decade ago<lb/>
What Johnson has done for the<lb/>
Lakers cannot be said simply. Not<lb/>
only has his play been spectacular,<lb/>
but so has his attitude.<lb/>
"Magic" is a very sensitive, emo-<lb/>
tional and easily excitable 19-year-<lb/>
old. He plays every game as though<lb/>
it were his last. This is something<lb/>
new in Ler Land.<lb/>
Last season the Lakers were a<lb/>
somewhat dull, routine team. Now<lb/>
that Johnson has arrived, though,<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
the entire town of Los Angeles is ex-<lb/>
cited.<lb/>
The Laker players are alsoK in-<lb/>
cluding the incomparable Kareem<lb/>
Abdul-Jabbar. The 7-foot-2 giant<lb/>
says this year he is playing with<lb/>
more enthusiasm than ever thanks<lb/>
to the example set before him by<lb/>
Johnson.<lb/>
This in itself is a big contribution<lb/>
by the ex-Michigan State star.<lb/>
The Lakers are not without other<lb/>
big contributers either. Guard<lb/>
Norm Nixon teams with "Magic"<lb/>
to give L.A. one of the best<lb/>
backcourts around. Forward<lb/>
Jamaal Wilkes has been excellent<lb/>
also.<lb/>
For the Celtics, it has been the ar-<lb/>
rival of the Bird and the comeback<lb/>
of "Tiny" that have led to their im-<lb/>
proving from 29 wins last season to<lb/>
61 this year.<lb/>
Point guard Nate "Tiny" Ar-<lb/>
chibald, once the NBA's leading<lb/>
scorer at Kansas City, is shooting<lb/>
less and scoring more in Boston. He<lb/>
has directed the Celtic style of of-<lb/>
fense to near perfection all season<lb/>
long, i<lb/>
Center Dave Cowens has been ex-<lb/>
cellent this season also after turning<lb/>
over the head coaching ranks to Bill<lb/>
Fitch (Cowens was player-coach last<lb/>
year).<lb/>
Forward Cedric "Cornbread"<lb/>
Maxwell, formerly of UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte, set a new NBA record for<lb/>
field goal percent for a forward in a<lb/>
single season this year' and is vastly<lb/>
underrated.<lb/>
Boston also is loaded with depth.<lb/>
Forward M.L. Carr is a big boost<lb/>
off the bench, as is center Rick<lb/>
Robey and newly-acquired guard<lb/>
Pete Mara'ich.<lb/>
Should the Lakers and Celtics<lb/>
become the final two teams remain-<lb/>
ing in the NBA playoffs, television<lb/>
executives will be overjoyed.<lb/>
Not only would there be interest<lb/>
in the championships as simply that,<lb/>
but a rematch between Bird and<lb/>
"Magic" would be too much for the<lb/>
average viewer to resist.<lb/>
Bird and Johnson faced each<lb/>
other last season in the NCAA<lb/>
Championsip Game, with<lb/>
Johnson's Michigan State squad<lb/>
coming out on top.<lb/>
In addition, the viewing audience<lb/>
would get a cnance to see the big<lb/>
center, Jabbar. go against the<lb/>
smaller but multi-talented Cowens.<lb/>
The action would surely be<lb/>
superb. Ratings could do nothing<lb/>
but soar.<lb/>
Still it all comes down to Bird and<lb/>
Johnson. There's just something<lb/>
appealing about the both of them.<lb/>
Both have quickly established<lb/>
themselves as superstars ? possiblv<lb/>
the saviors of a once-dying league.<lb/>
The winner? Things could be dif-<lb/>
ferent this time. Bird and the Celts<lb/>
get the edge. That team has just<lb/>
been playing incredible ball of late.<lb/>
But it's awfully hard to go against<lb/>
a squad composed of both "Magic"<lb/>
and Kareem. It's equally hard to<lb/>
avoid hoping the championship<lb/>
"S l!clde lcams Pwkcd <lb/>
"Magic" and Bird.<lb/>
<lb/>
?- ?? -i jr-<lb/>
?? ??? .Wt7P'?J'?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057263_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 17, 1980<lb/>
NASL Star Messing Set To Appear<lb/>
By CHARLES<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Kdiior<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
soccer team will host<lb/>
the Eastern Regional<lb/>
playoffs of the North<lb/>
Carolina Soccer League<lb/>
on April 26 and 27.<lb/>
Making a special ap-<lb/>
pearance at the tourney<lb/>
will be professional<lb/>
goalie Shep Messing.<lb/>
The tournament will<lb/>
feature the two best<lb/>
teams from the East,<lb/>
Mideast, North and<lb/>
South divisions of the<lb/>
NCSL.<lb/>
"The teams involved<lb/>
are usually college<lb/>
teams or club teams<lb/>
made up of guys who<lb/>
used to play in col-<lb/>
lege explained ECU<lb/>
coach Brad Smith.<lb/>
"It's a good time for<lb/>
the teams to get food<lb/>
experience during the<lb/>
off-season<lb/>
The ECU squad<lb/>
presently is atop the<lb/>
Mideast race with a<lb/>
6-0-1 record. The<lb/>
Pirates have scored 26<lb/>
goals in the seven con-<lb/>
tests and have allowed<lb/>
only three. There have<lb/>
been no goals scored on<lb/>
ECU in the last 12<lb/>
periods.<lb/>
"I'm really proud of<lb/>
our play thus far said<lb/>
Smith. "A lot of the<lb/>
credit goes to our<lb/>
goalie, Brian Winchell.<lb/>
If he's not the most im-<lb/>
proved player on our<lb/>
team I don't know who<lb/>
is. He's begun to at-<lb/>
tack the ball, rather<lb/>
than letting it play<lb/>
him<lb/>
The special ap-<lb/>
pearance by Messing, a<lb/>
star on the 1977 North<lb/>
American Soccer<lb/>
League champion New<lb/>
York Cosmos, is<lb/>
sponsered by U.S.<lb/>
Tobacco Compnany.<lb/>
Messing has been<lb/>
conducting a number<lb/>
of clinics throughout<lb/>
the country on college<lb/>
campuses in an effort<lb/>
to spread the interest of<lb/>
soccer among college<lb/>
studentsand area<lb/>
residents and to im-<lb/>
prove the skills of the<lb/>
college teams involved.<lb/>
"Soccer is the fastest<lb/>
growing and most<lb/>
heavily attented sport<lb/>
today said Messing,<lb/>
"and I'd like to do all I<lb/>
can to help it develop<lb/>
into as accepted a game<lb/>
as professional football<lb/>
and baseball<lb/>
The 29-vear-oId<lb/>
Messing earned All-<lb/>
American recognition<lb/>
Pirate Club Offers <lb/>
Special Membership CI a S S i f i ed<lb/>
in the sport at both<lb/>
New York University<lb/>
and Harvard. During<lb/>
his senior year at Har-<lb/>
vard, he was named<lb/>
Most Valuable Player<lb/>
in the finals of the 1972<lb/>
NCAA tournament.<lb/>
He also holds the<lb/>
Olympic record of 63<lb/>
saves, set in the '72<lb/>
Games.<lb/>
Messing turned pro<lb/>
in 1973 when he first<lb/>
joined the Cosmos, but<lb/>
after two so-so years<lb/>
was sold to the Boston<lb/>
Minutemen. In a year<lb/>
and a half with Boston,<lb/>
Messing led the NASL<lb/>
in goalkeeping with a<lb/>
.93 average.<lb/>
In mid-1976 Messing<lb/>
returned to the<lb/>
Cosmos, who had<lb/>
recently acquired the<lb/>
services of the<lb/>
legendery Pele. The<lb/>
Cosmos went on to a<lb/>
16-8 record that year<lb/>
and a NASL champion-<lb/>
ship the next.<lb/>
In 1978 Messing<lb/>
became the first<lb/>
American to sign a con-<lb/>
tract in the NASL for<lb/>
more than $100,000<lb/>
when he hooked on<lb/>
with the Oakland<lb/>
Stompers.<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Xssistanl Sports Fditor<lb/>
All spring 1980<lb/>
graduates of East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
beware: the Pirate Club<lb/>
is out to get YOU.<lb/>
For the second con-<lb/>
secutive year, the Pirate<lb/>
Club is offering<lb/>
graduates the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to join free of<lb/>
charge for a period of<lb/>
one year from date of<lb/>
commencement, with<lb/>
no obligation to con-<lb/>
tinue membership after<lb/>
the period ends.<lb/>
"All that is required<lb/>
of the individual is that<lb/>
they come by the office<lb/>
(located under Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium, near Scales<lb/>
Field House) and fill<lb/>
out a card so that we<lb/>
have their mailing ad-<lb/>
dress to show that they<lb/>
are interested in keep-<lb/>
ing in touch says<lb/>
Pirate Club executive<lb/>
director Gus Andrews.<lb/>
"Last year the Pirate<lb/>
Club grew to the point<lb/>
that we were able to<lb/>
hire another person<lb/>
which enabled us to<lb/>
handle the paperwork<lb/>
this creates<lb/>
Andrews states that<lb/>
in the initial year of of-<lb/>
fering the package, on-<lb/>
ly a small number of<lb/>
grads have utilized the<lb/>
opportunity. He said<lb/>
that only three or four<lb/>
signed up from the spr-<lb/>
ing 1919 group, but<lb/>
that 15 of those<lb/>
graduating in the fall<lb/>
1980 group registered.<lb/>
"There is a larger<lb/>
number of students<lb/>
graduating in the spring<lb/>
this year, so I'm hoping<lb/>
participation will be up<lb/>
even more said An-<lb/>
drews. "I feel like it's a<lb/>
good opportunity for<lb/>
the new alumni to keep<lb/>
up with the changes at<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Students who choose<lb/>
to take advantage of<lb/>
the membership offer<lb/>
will enjoy various<lb/>
priviledges over non-<lb/>
participants. The basic<lb/>
plan credits to the in-<lb/>
dividual "quality<lb/>
points" which are the<lb/>
basis for reserved seat<lb/>
tickets as well as other<lb/>
considerations.<lb/>
Aside from priority<lb/>
rating for ECU season<lb/>
tickets, Andrews also<lb/>
stated that Pirate Club<lb/>
members receive first<lb/>
call at away-game<lb/>
tickets, including N.C.<lb/>
State and UNC.<lb/>
"In the past he<lb/>
stated, "Pirate Club<lb/>
members have taken<lb/>
every ticket available to<lb/>
those games, other than<lb/>
those reserved for<lb/>
students<lb/>
Also included in the<lb/>
limited membership<lb/>
package is Pirate<lb/>
Report, a regular<lb/>
publication from the<lb/>
director's office infor-<lb/>
Pirate Club<lb/>
Executive Director<lb/>
Gus Andrews<lb/>
ming members of up- students is<lb/>
coming meetings as<lb/>
well as games and<lb/>
social events prior to<lb/>
the games.<lb/>
"We have a lot of<lb/>
fun at pre-game<lb/>
socials said Andrews.<lb/>
that you<lb/>
don't have to have<lb/>
$1000 to join the Pirate<lb/>
Club Andrews em-<lb/>
phasized. "We'd rather<lb/>
have ten $100 donators<lb/>
than one $1000<lb/>
donator. Those ten can<lb/>
"It's a good time for spread the information<lb/>
businessmen to get much further,<lb/>
together away from the<lb/>
office and I think it is "We want our<lb/>
an excellent opportuni- graduates to stay in<lb/>
ty for our alumni and touch and get involved<lb/>
friends to get in athletics at East<lb/>
together<lb/>
"We are trying to<lb/>
create an awareness of<lb/>
the programs here at<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty ? to get a group of<lb/>
people totally in-<lb/>
terested in ECU<lb/>
athletics.<lb/>
"The thing we're try-<lb/>
ing to get across to the<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Facilities and<lb/>
membership of the<lb/>
Pirate Club are current-<lb/>
ly being expanded, and<lb/>
the chance for a one<lb/>
year free ride should in-<lb/>
spire members of the<lb/>
Class of '80 to venture<lb/>
by the Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
and register.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Cutless,<lb/>
sunroof,power brakes, power<lb/>
steering, power windows and<lb/>
locks, cruise control! Call Brian<lb/>
752-0373.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Queensize Waterbed<lb/>
with frame. Call 756 6858<lb/>
FOR SALE: Red 1971 MGB AM<lb/>
FM Cassette, new convertable top.<lb/>
Many more extra's. Excellent<lb/>
condition. Call 752 1566<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1 pair A.Rll<lb/>
speakers, new woffers and<lb/>
tweeters 7 58 0206 before 10:00 a.m.<lb/>
or after 6:00p.m.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING: Day OK<lb/>
Night, individual or groups. Tn<lb/>
County Stables Grimesland. Call<lb/>
752 6893.<lb/>
MARY KAY COSMETICS: to<lb/>
reach your consultant for a facial<lb/>
or reorders phone 756 3659<lb/>
RIDER NEEDED: to share ex-<lb/>
penses and good times. Leaving<lb/>
for N.E. New Mexico in mid-May.<lb/>
Return in Augi" Call 752 8288<lb/>
after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
DON'T RISK: your future with<lb/>
uncertainty and doubt. See what<lb/>
lies ahead for the month with your<lb/>
personal Biorhythm Chart. Send<lb/>
name, address, birthdate, along<lb/>
with the month and year for your<lb/>
chart. Enclose $2.00 for each<lb/>
month requested to: Ross Enter-<lb/>
prises P.O. Box 4104 Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27834.<lb/>
SVW ATTENTION: Business Ma-<lb/>
jors, summer work, practical<lb/>
business experience. Tremendous<lb/>
tor job resume. Hard work equals<lb/>
good pay. Call 758 3719 for inter<lb/>
view.<lb/>
TYPING" DONE. Term papers.<lb/>
Resumes, Thesis, Etc.<lb/>
Reasonable. Call Jane Pollock<lb/>
752-9719.<lb/>
SUMMER STORAGE: ideal for<lb/>
furniture, books, etc CHEAP!<lb/>
758-7233.<lb/>
TYPING: dissertations, theses,<lb/>
term papers. Excellent skills and<lb/>
reasonable rates. Call 7S6-9169.<lb/>
WANTED: Tank, wet suit(med).<lb/>
regulator, etc Call Sam at<lb/>
758-3918 weekdays 6:00 9.00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENTS FOR RENT:<lb/>
Duplexes and Townhouses St75 to<lb/>
S270 per month Call 752-6415 9:00<lb/>
til 5:00.<lb/>
HOUSING FOR SUMMER<lb/>
SCHOOL: available, S100 per ses-<lb/>
sion plus percentage of utilities.<lb/>
Apply 803 Hooker Road. Phone<lb/>
756-3540.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: with private<lb/>
entrance and bath, located on 14th<lb/>
street behind dorms. $80 month.<lb/>
Open May 15. Call 758-2585.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
(female) to share two bedroom<lb/>
apartment. Must call by April 30.<lb/>
Call 758-0838.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To Share<lb/>
three bedroom duplex near cam-<lb/>
pus for summer only. $87 plus<lb/>
third utilities. Washer dryer, fur-<lb/>
nished bedroom. Call 752-5977.<lb/>
GOOD STUDENT: seeks to share<lb/>
trailer expenses, country location,<lb/>
write Box holder 567, Bell Arthur,<lb/>
N.C. 27811.<lb/>
?TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
NEEDED: beginning May 7. $50<lb/>
and one third utilities. Three<lb/>
blocks from campus on Jarvis<lb/>
street Call Becky 758-6173.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: $80 month<lb/>
plus utilities. Close to campus,<lb/>
available May 15th. Call 758-3545.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room for<lb/>
male. Available for fall and spring<lb/>
semester. Call 752-4004 after 1:00.<lb/>
NEEDED ONE MALE: to Share<lb/>
duplex from May until August.<lb/>
Rent $60 a month. Call Phil or<lb/>
Mike at 758 7724.<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT,<lb/>
for summer. Village Green Apart-<lb/>
ments 10th street. Can 752-042.<lb/>
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES:<lb/>
Needed to share furnished apart-<lb/>
ment at R.verbluff for both sum-<lb/>
mer sessions possibly into fall.<lb/>
Call 758-5823.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Cable<lb/>
T.V dishwasher, two bedroom,<lb/>
half expenses. Call after 7:00<lb/>
M-Th. Ask for Kevin. Available<lb/>
May 1. 758-4317.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private rooms for<lb/>
summer school or yearly. Share<lb/>
kitchen and bath. $7$ plus<lb/>
utilities. Two blocks from cam-<lb/>
pus. 752-529.<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: at<lb/>
Tar River Estates for the sum<lb/>
mer. Call 752 8840<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: apartment located one<lb/>
mile from campus, furnished,<lb/>
assume half rent and half utilities.<lb/>
Available May isth. Call Debbie<lb/>
758-0'29 after 5:00 p.m. for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
beginning in May. Call 758-572.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED HOURS FOR TAK<lb/>
ING ADDS ARE 3:00 - 4:00 MON-<lb/>
DAY THRU FRIDAY.<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
Challenging, High Paid<lb/>
Direct Sales Jobs In<lb/>
Eastern NC<lb/>
for Mature Goal Oriented<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Equal Opportunity Employer<lb/>
CALL 758-3089<lb/>
ThursApril 17 5:00-7:00p.m.<lb/>
FriApril 18 9:00-10:30a.m.<lb/>
Don't be a Lonely Runner Come by and join us every Tuesday at 5:30 for our Fun Run. Tennis Racket Restringing Available Demo Racket Program Try before You Buy! American Athletics Pitt Plaza 756-0309<lb/>
T-shirts $2.99<lb/>
Warm-ups 40 Off<lb/>
 Amoricsn m V Athleticsy<lb/>
1st Annual Spring<lb/>
CAST2tyY5<lb/>
Concert begins at 11 00 a. m.<lb/>
APRIL 2O1980<lb/>
HOLIDAY INN tRAUEL PARK<lb/>
EMERALD ISLE. NX.<lb/>
(on the beach)<lb/>
Make it a complete beach<lb/>
weekend-rain or shine<lb/>
Beach party and shag<lb/>
contest Saturday nite,<lb/>
April 19th ($100 and other<lb/>
valuable prrzes to winners)<lb/>
Bring your blanket or lawn chair<lb/>
Adm.<lb/>
(8.00 adv.<lb/>
$10.00 gate<lb/>
Adv. tickets at:<lb/>
Call now for your<lb/>
camping reserva-<lb/>
tions:<lb/>
326-3010<lb/>
APPLE RECORDS<lb/>
TONIGHT<lb/>
PIZZA spt:a AL<lb/>
Buy one get 2nd<lb/>
Pizza of the same<lb/>
value FREE.<lb/>
ALL NIGHT LONG<lb/>
Fast Free Delivery<lb/>
Dine InCarry Out<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Thurs. Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
OYSTERS $4.95<lb/>
FLOUNDER 93.50<lb/>
TROUT $2.95<lb/>
PERI II<lb/>
98.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No t?Ke-out? pU<lb/>
Meal Include:<lb/>
French ? nee, CM ???<lb/>
Hweh9?9f)lee.<lb/>
W? or ? proud to<lb/>
?nnonnce that wo<lb/>
hovo o44o4<lb/>
ono of tho<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
for jroor<lb/>
jjajgj plo?ro.<lb/>
OPEN FOE LUNCH<lb/>
Doily xttao<lb/>
Sun. - Thvr.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057263_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
i hi t src koi ii w<lb/>
M'KIl<lb/>
980<lb/>
Brewers Favored In AL East<lb/>
HII VHI IS<lb/>
( ii-wm FR<lb/>
Sports Kdilor<lb/>
fhe 180 nerican<lb/>
1 cague baseball season<lb/>
here is to be one.<lb/>
s a h an nn<lb/>
V; ? ! eague<lb/>
k ' sh ukl be one o<lb/>
iosi interesting in<lb/>
? Hi history, as no<lb/>
six oi seen<lb/>
ivc shots ai a<lb/>
I ! consensus<lb/>
the defen-<lb/>
ampion<lb/>
ii ?r e Orioles,<lb/>
Brewers,<lb/>
s Yankees,<lb/>
R Sox. the<lb/>
ia ngels,<lb/>
v t Royals .<lb/>
N<lb/>
1 ' es,<lb/>
?. ankees and<lb/>
s Mime<lb/>
?ugh<lb/>
1 I West<lb/>
I cxas,<lb/>
d Kansas<lb/>
pl not<lb/>
of<lb/>
clubs as theii eastern<lb/>
counterparts.<lb/>
1 he earl) nod in the<lb/>
lasi hei e goes to<lb/>
Milwaukee I he<lb/>
Brewers have more<lb/>
firepowei than am<lb/>
team in the majors, as<lb/>
witnessed In theii<lb/>
leading the league in<lb/>
t hornet s last season<lb/>
Oufieldei Gorman<lb/>
rhomas led the wa<lb/>
with a league-leading<lb/>
45 round trippers<lb/>
"Stormin' Gorman"<lb/>
also 12.1 RBIs to his im<lb/>
pressive figures.<lb/>
I he ot lu-1 t v o<lb/>
members of the Brewer<lb/>
outfield, Sixto 1 eeano<lb/>
and Ben Oglivie, had<lb/>
big years also. 1 eeano<lb/>
contributed 28 homers,<lb/>
101 RBIs and a .321<lb/>
bat t ing a vet age<lb/>
Oglivie's figures were<lb/>
 SI and .282<lb/>
First basemaneeil<lb/>
( iopet also was a tei<lb/>
rot at the plate as<lb/>
essed b his 24<lb/>
homers, (6 RBIs and<lb/>
08 clip. dd to all<lb/>
this the !av t that I arr<lb/>
Hisle (designated hitter<lb/>
who had 34 lIRs, 115<lb/>
RBIs in '78) will return<lb/>
to the Brewei fold<lb/>
following an injury last<lb/>
yeai and ou have an<lb/>
ineredible amount of<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
1 he pitehing isn't all<lb/>
had. either. Mike<lb/>
Caldwell, a two-time<lb/>
20-game winner and<lb/>
16 6 last yeai is the<lb/>
staff aee. Jim Slaton<lb/>
115 9), I an Sorenson<lb/>
115 14). Moose Haas<lb/>
( 1 1 11). and Bill<lb/>
I ravers (14-8) make up<lb/>
the starting rotation.<lb/>
Bill Castro (2.03 ERA)<lb/>
anchors the bullpen.<lb/>
I he Orioles, of<lb/>
coin se, cannot be<lb/>
counted out. Their pit-<lb/>
ching is the best in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
C Young winnei<lb/>
Mike I lanagan (23-9.<lb/>
3.01 1 RA) teams with<lb/>
ex-Young winner Jim<lb/>
Palmer (10 6 in an<lb/>
injury-filled last<lb/>
season). Dennis Mar-<lb/>
tinez, Seott MeGregor,<lb/>
Dennis Martinez and<lb/>
Steve Stone to comprise<lb/>
an unbelievable starting<lb/>
corps.<lb/>
The bullpen took a<lb/>
blow when Don<lb/>
Stanhouse left via the<lb/>
re-entry draft, but Tim<lb/>
Stoddard and Iippv<lb/>
Martme should handle<lb/>
things rather well,<lb/>
I he Baltimore bats<lb/>
come through when it is<lb/>
most needed. Ken<lb/>
Singleton (35 HR.lll<lb/>
RBI295) may have<lb/>
been the most valuable<lb/>
player in the league last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Eddie Murray, I ee<lb/>
Mav and Gary<lb/>
Roenicki also supply<lb/>
firepower.<lb/>
1 he Yanks shoulc<lb/>
again be tough. Reggie<lb/>
Jackson is back and<lb/>
will be joined in the<lb/>
outfield by newly-<lb/>
acquired R u p p e r t<lb/>
Jones, a possible future<lb/>
superstar, and Bobby<lb/>
Murcer.<lb/>
Intramural Wrestling<lb/>
Championships Held<lb/>
Bv KM Kl (,l I KMs<lb/>
rt'sptindenl<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
'for this<lb/>
in m the I<lb/>
sed the<lb/>
this m to i i ,i<lb/>
' the. tun next<lb/>
vea<lb/>
H<lb/>
 - Mewl n<lb/>
' . lackmol ?<lb/>
tie.<lb/>
Runnei <lb/>
Rose Hestei and (<lb/>
1 oe who fought then<lb/>
way through er's<lb/>
to piny<lb/>
 Je w b.<lb/>
ofsk<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
sion leader. J ri Sigma;<lb/>
Men's Dorm leader,<lb/>
 v c o e k Aee<lb/>
Club In depe ndent<lb/>
leaders, Dolemites and<lb/>
I i am c Shots; and<lb/>
leaders. Km<lb/>
K ? i pv ilon and<lb/>
i Sigma Phi ces<lb/>
Dates Deadlines<lb/>
 ? h(H l) .<lb/>
ation ends April<lb/>
17. Play will begin<lb/>
pril 21 lb and<lb/>
? forms in to<lb/>
the IM off<lb/>
l olleyball (ft visit ?<lb/>
playoffs are schedu<lb/>
to begin pril 21 w<lb/>
Ml c ampus n atches<lb/>
slatd tor April 26.<lb/>
Vfen and M omen <lb/>
Softball games are be-<lb/>
ing played every Sun-<lb/>
day through Thursday<lb/>
from 4 p.m. until 10<lb/>
p.m. on the Intramural<lb/>
fields. Playoffs will<lb/>
begin April 21. In the<lb/>
men's play so far, the<lb/>
Roundt rip pe r s a re<lb/>
number one followed<lb/>
by Dough Boys,<lb/>
Renegade Be Ik<lb/>
W iar ds, and Seott<lb/>
NAD's. In w omen's<lb/>
play, All Pro tops off<lb/>
the standings followed<lb/>
W2, Ivler Grand<lb/>
si am mers, Cotte n<lb/>
Bombers, and Alpha i<lb/>
Delta.<lb/>
Nai<lb/>
I<lb/>
?:<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
: 21-11<lb/>
' Mize and<lb/>
 a ??? Polo<lb/>
W a<lb/>
-<lb/>
teams,<lb/>
Hit! and<lb/>
t I " entered<lb/>
p 1 a Ait h<lb/>
?d reeords.<lb/>
I he ' . ictory<lb/>
were soon diminished<lb/>
t houg h when two<lb/>
underdog teams<lb/>
defeated them in the<lb/>
first round ol playoffs.<lb/>
The Sinkers a n d<lb/>
Water Bugs met in the<lb/>
finals tor a tun. ex-<lb/>
citing fight to the finish<lb/>
with the Water Bugs<lb/>
emerging victorious.<lb/>
Frisbee Goll<lb/>
V i n ner ol the<lb/>
18-target I risbee Golf<lb/>
Iournament were Bob<lb/>
Burchard and Susan<lb/>
Evanko.<lb/>
Following closely in<lb/>
the men's division<lb/>
behind Burehard were<lb/>
Woody Oliver and<lb/>
Alfred fownes. The<lb/>
18-hole course was<lb/>
designed around<lb/>
Minges and plans are<lb/>
cs is the<lb/>
new EC! (iolllassie<lb/>
;hamp Derics com-<lb/>
peted with IS) other par<lb/>
pants in this event<lb/>
which was he! I at the<lb/>
 ,den C ioll and Coun-<lb/>
try Club.<lb/>
Bobby White, 1978<lb/>
hampion, came in se-<lb/>
cond followed closely<lb/>
s :ve I nderkoflei<lb/>
: Phil White who<lb/>
ird.<lb/>
I earn 1 ennis<lb/>
I earn I ennis has got-<lb/>
ten underway with the<lb/>
t ol lo w i ng teams<lb/>
holding leads in their<lb/>
div isions: Sororitv div i-<lb/>
Tin nam i:<lb/>
Moderate &amp; 8etter<lb/>
Dresses Sportswear<lb/>
signer Jeans 3Q 5QO,<lb/>
j<lb/>
756-4001<lb/>
I<lb/>
S5.00off on<lb/>
reg. price<lb/>
jeans for ECU<lb/>
students with ID<lb/>
Just Arrived<lb/>
Junior Skirts<lb/>
FAN LABEL!<lb/>
f . :<lb/>
? I<lb/>
AFTER 3:<lb/>
CHICKHLA<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
FOR 99.<lb/>
Jiit k -til -A. ft s America s original boneless breast of chicken sandwich<lb/>
And n wi .with the coupon belowyou can get aD the Chick-fil-A sand-<lb/>
w iches you want t r 99c each .once the ck ?ck strikes three in the aftenvxHi<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
OUR CHICKHLA SANDWICHES ARE 99 EACH AFTER<lb/>
3:OORM. JUST FILL IN THE NUMBER YOU WANT<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
Present this i rupon .it your local<lb/>
Chick fil A restaurant We'll<lb/>
give you all theCh k fil A<lb/>
sandwii hes you want foi<lb/>
99c each, after 3:00 PM<lb/>
 ne coupon (H'i person k-i<lb/>
visit Xffi expires<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
'C lised im Sunday s;<lb/>
THE TASTE WORTH SHOPPING FOR.<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
Kiggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
across .St. from<lb/>
Blount r larvev<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
III W. 4th St.<lb/>
Parking m tront and RruJ<lb/>
ItiN<lb/>
iA?id<lb/>
- ' restaurants<lb/>
I he infield is solid<lb/>
with Jim Spencer,<lb/>
Willie K a n d o I p h,<lb/>
Bucky Dent and Graig<lb/>
Nettles slated for star<lb/>
ting duty. Newly-<lb/>
acquired catcher Rick<lb/>
Cerone won't replace<lb/>
the late great I hurman<lb/>
Munson, but he'll do a<lb/>
more than respectable<lb/>
job. I he acquistion of<lb/>
first baseman DH Hob<lb/>
Watson will help a<lb/>
great deal.<lb/>
The Yankee<lb/>
is. as always,<lb/>
Kon Guidrj is the best<lb/>
in the game and I om-<lb/>
nn lohn is not tar<lb/>
behind. Rich Gossage<lb/>
and Ron Davis give the<lb/>
New Yorkers a solid<lb/>
rehev ing orps.<lb/>
Hairing injury, the<lb/>
 anks could win it all<lb/>
this season. It would<lb/>
'?ike a little luck,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
I he Red Sox are con-<lb/>
tenders thanks to I red<lb/>
Lynn, Jim Rue.<lb/>
pitching Carlton Fisk and com<lb/>
tough. ram The hitting is<lb/>
fine but the pitching is<lb/>
questionable. Boston<lb/>
should not be i serious<lb/>
contender<lb/>
rhoguh the Yanks<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057263_0011"/>
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