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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057264_0001"/>
mt lEaHt<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, April 22,1980<lb/>
(Greenville, NX<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Professor: Good Work If You Can Keep It<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
When it comes to paying for the help,<lb/>
education at the university level has all the<lb/>
earmarks of Big Business. And like the<lb/>
employees within big business, the "help"<lb/>
at the university faces a certain amount of<lb/>
job insecurity.<lb/>
During the 1979-80 school year, East<lb/>
Carolina University paid its professors a<lb/>
total of about $10.5 million ? a sum that<lb/>
does not include the salaries of the<lb/>
leaching staff below the level of assistant<lb/>
professor.<lb/>
If the salaries of instructors, lecturers<lb/>
and others without academic standing are<lb/>
included, the figure approaches $11.8<lb/>
million.<lb/>
Of course, the payroll for professors was<lb/>
divided among 485 faculty members,<lb/>
resulting in an average salary of about<lb/>
$20,500. According to Dr. Susan<lb/>
Mcbaniel, assistant to the vice chancellor<lb/>
of academic affairs, the actual range of<lb/>
professors' salaries at ECU is between ap-<lb/>
proximately $13,000 and $37,000.<lb/>
When one considers that most pro-<lb/>
fessors at ECU are employed on a nine-<lb/>
month basis, the average salary looks even<lb/>
more attractive.<lb/>
But being a professor involves more<lb/>
than collecting a paycheck. In addition to<lb/>
the teaching duties, committee work,<lb/>
bureaucratic papershu filing and summer-<lb/>
time unemployment, the faculty member<lb/>
has to deal with the uncertainties of the<lb/>
tenure system.<lb/>
Dr. McDaniel explained some of the in-<lb/>
tricacies of this system in an interview<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
According to McDaniel, there are four<lb/>
classifications of permanent faculty posi-<lb/>
tions at East Carolina University: instruc-<lb/>
tor, assistant professor, associate pro-<lb/>
fessor and professor. To gain tenure, a<lb/>
faculty member does not have to rise<lb/>
through these grades ? he or she may be<lb/>
tenured without such advancement.<lb/>
Though there are instructors who have<lb/>
tenure at ECU, this will eventually become<lb/>
a thing of the past, since recent changes in<lb/>
the university's guidelines prevent the<lb/>
tenuring of this classification in the future.<lb/>
As it now stands, only the latter three<lb/>
classifications may earn tenure.<lb/>
The assistant professor must hang onto<lb/>
Bus Replaced<lb/>
By New Van<lb/>
By LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Assistant News K.ditnr<lb/>
ECU's Student Government<lb/>
Transit recently purchased a van to<lb/>
supplement its existing fleet of<lb/>
buses.<lb/>
The blue Dodge Maxi-Van has a<lb/>
capacity of 15 passengers and cost<lb/>
the SGA $9,300.<lb/>
It is currently being used on the<lb/>
Purple route, which runs between<lb/>
the apartment complexes and cam-<lb/>
pus, from 3:30 to 10 p.m. Ridership<lb/>
on the new night route is very good,<lb/>
according to Chubby Abshire, SGA<lb/>
transit manager.<lb/>
Since the price of gas went up,<lb/>
many students are using the SGA<lb/>
bus instead of driving Abshire<lb/>
said. "We added the night trips on<lb/>
the Purple route so that students liv-<lb/>
ing in the apartments far from cam-<lb/>
pus would be able to take the bus to<lb/>
the library or late classes<lb/>
Abshire said the new van is saving<lb/>
the SGA approximately $21 a day<lb/>
compared to the cost of operating<lb/>
one of the big buses.<lb/>
"We hope that during the re-<lb/>
mainder of this semester, the sum-<lb/>
mer and the fall, the van will pay for<lb/>
itself with the money saved by<lb/>
reduced fuel usage Abshire said.<lb/>
"In addition, the van will be<lb/>
available for charters every weekend<lb/>
this fall, probably for out-of-town<lb/>
football games, for those people<lb/>
who do not wish to charter a large<lb/>
bus<lb/>
For the summer, the SGA will run<lb/>
the big buses on the Purple and<lb/>
Gold routes from 7:30 a.m. to 3<lb/>
p.m. After a few weeks, though, the<lb/>
ridership will be studied, and if con-<lb/>
ditions permit, the routes will be run<lb/>
by vans, Abshire said.<lb/>
Last summer, the SGA used two<lb/>
of the Athletic Department's vans,<lb/>
he said, but this year they will only<lb/>
need to use one van since the SGA<lb/>
has its own.<lb/>
See VAN, Page 3, Col. 1<lb/>
Photo by LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
New Landscaping<lb/>
in full bloom at Mendenhall<lb/>
Art Seniors Show Work<lb/>
An exhibition of art works in<lb/>
various media by ECU School of<lb/>
Art undergraduates will be officially<lb/>
opened tonight at 8 p.m. with a<lb/>
public reception in Gray Gallery.<lb/>
The works to be displayed have<lb/>
been chosen for their quality by<lb/>
faculty members in each medium.<lb/>
Each of the undergraduate classes<lb/>
will be represented in the show,<lb/>
which will run from April 23 until<lb/>
May 5.<lb/>
"It's i good show ? like all<lb/>
undergraduate shows, it has its ups<lb/>
and downs, but on the whole it<lb/>
shows that East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty's School of Art is very com-<lb/>
petitive among art schools in the na-<lb/>
tiaaV said Randy Osman, director<lb/>
of Gray Gallery.<lb/>
Gray Gallery is located in the Leo<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center, in the cen-<lb/>
his job for seven years before joining the<lb/>
ranks of the academically secure. During<lb/>
this probationary period, his job perfor-<lb/>
mance will be reviewed several times. If all<lb/>
goes well, at the end of six years he will be<lb/>
notified that he has tenure.<lb/>
For associate professors and professors,<lb/>
the process is not so lengthy. The proba-<lb/>
tionary period is reduced to five years,<lb/>
with notification given at the end of the<lb/>
fourth.<lb/>
The process whereby one gets final<lb/>
See TENURE, Page 3, Col. 1<lb/>
Humanities<lb/>
Director<lb/>
To Speak<lb/>
New SGA Van<lb/>
 will save $21 per day in fuel costs<lb/>
Photo by LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Inflation Hurts New Graduates<lb/>
By Lowering Buying Power<lb/>
BETHLEHEM, PA (CPS) ?<lb/>
Graduates going into the job market<lb/>
this spring will be offered higher<lb/>
starting salaries than last year's<lb/>
graduates, but the salary increases<lb/>
are probably worth less in real<lb/>
dollars, according to a study by the<lb/>
College Placement Council.<lb/>
Average increases, the CPC an-<lb/>
nounced April 8, are nearly nine<lb/>
percent, although the inflation rate<lb/>
has been 18 percent.<lb/>
The CPC calculated the averages<lb/>
by studying the starting salaries of-<lb/>
fered graduates between Sept. 1,<lb/>
1979 and March 6, 1980.<lb/>
According to the study,<lb/>
petroleum engineering graduates<lb/>
can expect salaries up to $1979 per<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Not surprisingly, engineers of all<lb/>
types can command the highest<lb/>
salaries. Mechanical engineers were<lb/>
offered an average of $1866 per<lb/>
month. Chemical engineers got<lb/>
$1790 per month, civil engineers<lb/>
$1524, and electrical engineers with<lb/>
advanced degrees $1852 per month.<lb/>
The high starting salaries have<lb/>
convinced many engineering<lb/>
undergraduates to take jobs instead<lb/>
of going to graduate school, a<lb/>
development that causes some<lb/>
engineering teachers to worry about<lb/>
where the next generation of pro-<lb/>
fessors will come from.<lb/>
Dr. Donald Marlowe of the<lb/>
American Society for Engineering<lb/>
Education in Washington, D.C<lb/>
says the high starting salaries for<lb/>
new engineers has thrown the<lb/>
discipline "into a very serious<lb/>
crisis Even full professors are be-<lb/>
ing lured from faculty positions into<lb/>
private industry by the high salaries.<lb/>
Business graduates are also doing<lb/>
well. Business administration grads<lb/>
are starting at an average $1197 per<lb/>
month, with accountants comman-<lb/>
ding $1284 per month.<lb/>
Dr. William J. Bennett, Executive<lb/>
Director of the National Humanities<lb/>
Center, will be the speaker for the<lb/>
1980 Commencement at ECU.<lb/>
More than 2,800 students are<lb/>
scheduled to receive degrees during<lb/>
exercises beginning with a tradi-<lb/>
tional academic procession at 9:40<lb/>
a.m. May 9 in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Of that number, approximately<lb/>
2,000 are undergraduates and 800<lb/>
are graduate students.<lb/>
Last year, 2,562 ECU students<lb/>
were awarded degrees.<lb/>
Bennett received his B.A. from<lb/>
Williams College, a Ph.D. in<lb/>
Philosophy from the University of<lb/>
Texas, and a Law degree from Har-<lb/>
vard University.<lb/>
<lb/>
In addition to writing for scholar-<lb/>
ly journals and for magazines such<lb/>
as Newsweek, Commentary and En-<lb/>
counter, Bennett is an adjunct assis-<lb/>
tant professor at N.C. State and<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Some of the issues Bennett has<lb/>
spoken and written about include<lb/>
the Bakke case, morals and values in<lb/>
American life, and TV censorship.<lb/>
Photo by CHAP OURLEY<lb/>
Sherrod Plans To Veto<lb/>
Clement Dorm Beach<lb/>
Spring attraction or traffic hazard.<lb/>
SGA Reorganizes Transit System<lb/>
The SGA Legislature met for its<lb/>
last session of the year Monday and<lb/>
passed a transit system reorganiza-<lb/>
tion bill that is expected to be vetoed<lb/>
by SGA President Charlie Sherrod.<lb/>
The reorganization plan provides<lb/>
for the creation of a Transit Board,<lb/>
to be composed of two transit<lb/>
managers, two day students, two<lb/>
dorm students, one administrative<lb/>
staff member, one advisor who will<lb/>
be drawn from either faculty or<lb/>
staff ranks, and the SGA president<lb/>
or his appointee.<lb/>
The justification for the bill, as<lb/>
stated in the preamble, is that there<lb/>
is a "need to have the system<lb/>
managed in such a way as to allow<lb/>
for more input from the students<lb/>
and staff of East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
The transit system is financed<lb/>
wholly through student funds.<lb/>
Sherrod said he would veto the<lb/>
bill because he was not involved in<lb/>
its preparation, although the bill re-<lb/>
quires the SGA president to be<lb/>
directly involved in the board's<lb/>
operation.<lb/>
Besides sitting on the board<lb/>
himself (or appointing someone to<lb/>
sit in his place), the SGA president<lb/>
would also appoint the two transit<lb/>
managers.<lb/>
The membership of the board<lb/>
would have to be approved by the<lb/>
SGA Legislature.<lb/>
Kirk Little, recently elected as<lb/>
SGA treasurer, reported that,<lb/>
because of committments with<lb/>
ROTC, he would be unable to serve<lb/>
in his office during the second sum-<lb/>
mer session. Sam Bernstein was<lb/>
nominated and approved as acting<lb/>
treasurer for the period of Little's<lb/>
absence.<lb/>
See SGA, Page 2, Col. 1<lb/>
U. Of Florida Sees High Suicide Rate<lb/>
tral section of the main campus. The<lb/>
gallery is open each weekday from<lb/>
10 a.m. until 5 p.m. and on Sunday<lb/>
afternoons, 1-4 p.m.<lb/>
Osman added that the purpose of<lb/>
the undergraduate art show, which<lb/>
will be the only one of its kind this<lb/>
year, is to show the students and<lb/>
general community what is being<lb/>
produced by the art school.<lb/>
The exhibition will include works<lb/>
in ceramics, jewelry, painting and<lb/>
drawing, sculpture, printmaking,<lb/>
fibers and other media. According<lb/>
to Osman, the artworks might also<lb/>
be sold to interested parties, depen-<lb/>
ding on the desires of the artists.<lb/>
The public is invited to the recep-<lb/>
tion to meet students and faculty of<lb/>
the School of Art, and refreshments<lb/>
will be served, said Osman.<lb/>
GAINESVILLE, FL. (CPS) ? A<lb/>
few weeks ago, Mitch Gortler, a<lb/>
University of Florida student, told<lb/>
his girlfriend in Atlanta he wasn't<lb/>
feeling well, and asked if she would<lb/>
call him back in a half-hour. But<lb/>
Gortler didn't answer her return<lb/>
call. Concerned, she took the next<lb/>
flight to Gainesville, hurried to his<lb/>
off-campus apartment, and found<lb/>
that sometime between Gortler's<lb/>
phone call and his girlfriend's ar-<lb/>
rival, the 19-year-old sophomore<lb/>
had placed a rifle to his head and<lb/>
shot himself.<lb/>
Yet Gortler's was only one of five<lb/>
suicides during a recent ten-week<lb/>
period at the University of Florida. '<lb/>
Two students, two faculty members,<lb/>
and one former student have killed<lb/>
themselves. An unsuccessful at-<lb/>
tempt by a student in the UF park-<lb/>
ing lot was also made during the<lb/>
same period.<lb/>
While UF's suicide rate during the<lb/>
ten-week period is extraordinarily<lb/>
high, so is the recent national col-<lb/>
lege rate. In fact, suicide in the 18 to<lb/>
24-year-old age group has risen to<lb/>
epidemic levels, and the only thing<lb/>
the experts can agree on is the fac-<lb/>
tors responsible are baffling.<lb/>
Health statistics for college-age<lb/>
people tell a grim story of depres-<lb/>
sion .and stress quite frequently tied<lb/>
to academic endeavors and college<lb/>
life. Suicide is the second leading<lb/>
cause of death for 18-24-year-olds.<lb/>
Only auto accidents claim more col-<lb/>
lege students. Many law enforce-<lb/>
ment officials, though, suspect<lb/>
some of those may also be inten-<lb/>
tional acts of self-destruction.<lb/>
"There are as many reasons to<lb/>
commit suicide as there are people<lb/>
who do it says Liz Jones, director<lb/>
of the Alachua County Suicide and<lb/>
Crisis Prevention ' Center in<lb/>
Gainesville. Uf students account for<lb/>
20 to 30 percent of the center's case<lb/>
load. "Each time we took at a<lb/>
suicide, it's unique. There's no way<lb/>
you can say a person kills himself<lb/>
because of college<lb/>
L. Thomas Cummings, director<lb/>
of student mental health services at<lb/>
Arizona State, thinks college<lb/>
pressure can help push an unstable<lb/>
person over the edge. Yet he adds<lb/>
that a lot of students who commit<lb/>
suicide bring the potential for killing<lb/>
themselves when they enroll.<lb/>
"There are so many dimensions<lb/>
to suicide that it really isn't fair to<lb/>
implicate the university complete-<lb/>
ly he says. "There are life<lb/>
pressures, pressures with boyfriends<lb/>
and girlfriends, economic pressures.<lb/>
One has to stand a certain amount<lb/>
of pressure. Academic stress is a<lb/>
validating factor, but not a primary<lb/>
one. e .<lb/>
"The university may be the last<lb/>
straw he adds, "but the whole<lb/>
comprehensive mass is responsi-<lb/>
ble<lb/>
But Michael Zangari, a student at<lb/>
the University of Nebraska whose<lb/>
extensive research into suicide was<lb/>
prompted by a friend's death, firm-<lb/>
ly believes college can be a determin-<lb/>
ing factor.<lb/>
"A lot of college students haven't<lb/>
the slightest idea why they're at col-<lb/>
lege, except that they've been told<lb/>
they should be Zangari observes.<lb/>
"Then, there are the social<lb/>
pressures. The pressure to fit into a<lb/>
peer situation, the pressure to be<lb/>
with someone sexually. Finally, the<lb/>
pressures become too much<lb/>
Conversely, some mental health<lb/>
professionals even suggest that col-<lb/>
lege could be a deterrent to suicide.<lb/>
Sec SUICIDE, Page 2, Col. 5<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
i<lb/>
7<lb/>
Pirate Rafty For Wf? .rage ?<lb/>
Tata interviewed<lb/>
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faaji I<lb/>
mW www<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 22, 1980<lb/>
Suicide Rate Causes Concern<lb/>
Photo by LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Lot Paving Completed<lb/>
I he paving of large parking lot behind Mendenhall Student Center was completed last Saturdav bv Bar-<lb/>
ms Constructs Co of Kinston. The lot can be used now, but it has not been laned off vet and the<lb/>
umversity has not officially taken posession of it<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
A study done between 1960 and<lb/>
1970 by Dr. Michael Peck of the<lb/>
University of Southern California<lb/>
Medical Center found that college<lb/>
students in the Los Angeles area had<lb/>
a lower rate of suicide than non-<lb/>
college students in the same age<lb/>
group.<lb/>
"College is a safe, highly-<lb/>
structured environment opines<lb/>
Dr. Peck, who contends his study<lb/>
applies to today's students as well.<lb/>
"In school a student is protected<lb/>
from the ambiguities of life. The<lb/>
worst time is when a student comes<lb/>
to the end of his academic career,<lb/>
and faces the real world<lb/>
"Once upon a time agrees Dr.<lb/>
Marvin Miller, a San Diego-based<lb/>
suicidologist, "there was a pattern<lb/>
to life that could be counted on: get<lb/>
through high school, go to college,<lb/>
get a job, and get married. It may<lb/>
sound dull, but it offered security.<lb/>
"Now, there are no more<lb/>
guarantees. Students cannot be sure<lb/>
of getting a job in their chosen field<lb/>
and there's a general sense of disillu-<lb/>
sionment with the world<lb/>
"Suicide is ambivalent says<lb/>
Gainesville crisis center director<lb/>
Jones. "People end up in the posi-<lb/>
tion of killing themselves or not kill-<lb/>
ing themselves, but when they see<lb/>
stories in the newspaper, thev feel<lb/>
like, 'Yeh, I can do that<lb/>
Yet no one pretends there's a<lb/>
single solution to the problem.<lb/>
"Those people who are willing to<lb/>
pick up on the (campus anti-suicide)<lb/>
programs offered will benefit (from<lb/>
them) says Arizona State's Cum-<lb/>
mings, "and most of the universities<lb/>
provide a broad spectrum of ser-<lb/>
vices for students who have pro-<lb/>
blems. The challenge is to get to the<lb/>
students who need them<lb/>
But of course funding is also a<lb/>
barrier to those trying to help<lb/>
students with emotional problems<lb/>
Counseling centers are chromcalK<lb/>
understaffed, unable to provide<lb/>
enough time and attention when<lb/>
center traffic gets thick. "In the<lb/>
end Cummings sighs, "it all<lb/>
comes down to money<lb/>
Although mental health profes<lb/>
sionals are reluctant to admit the)<lb/>
have few means ot preventing the<lb/>
self-destruction plaguing campuses.<lb/>
all agree that, given the scarcm<lb/>
money, an individual student musi<lb/>
be willing to ask tor help<lb/>
"You can prevent pregnanev ru<lb/>
telling someone to take a pill<lb/>
Cummings says, "but when a pci<lb/>
son says, 'I won't commit suicide j.<lb/>
long as life goes my way vou cant<lb/>
guarantee that<lb/>
SGA Holds Last Meet<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
The Legislature also passed an<lb/>
amendment to the SGA constitution<lb/>
that requires all SGA officers to be<lb/>
sworn into office seven calendar<lb/>
days after the SGA elections. The<lb/>
amendment, which will be inserted<lb/>
as Article 7, section 5 of the con-<lb/>
stitution, goes into effect im-<lb/>
mediately. In the past, the terms of<lb/>
SGA officers have been ending on<lb/>
different days.<lb/>
Dr. Floyd Mattheis, a professor<lb/>
in the Science Education depart-<lb/>
ment, appeared before the<lb/>
legislators to report on a student<lb/>
science trip he led around the world<lb/>
that was partially financed by stu-<lb/>
dent funds. Eleven ECU students<lb/>
travelled to India earlier this<lb/>
semester to observe a total eclipse of<lb/>
the sun, and Dr. Mattheis thanked<lb/>
the legislators for approving a $2200<lb/>
appropriation to the group to help<lb/>
cover expenses.<lb/>
A senior Interior Design student<lb/>
also thanked the Legislature fop its<lb/>
financial support of the Interior<lb/>
Design house project, located on<lb/>
Ninth Street. Patti Wells invited all<lb/>
SGA members to attend the pro-<lb/>
ject's Open House on Sundav, April<lb/>
27.<lb/>
In other business, the Legislature<lb/>
passed resolutions of appreciation<lb/>
for the work of a fellow student, a<lb/>
staff member and a faculty member.<lb/>
Mrs. Joy Clark, of the Student<lb/>
Fund Accounting office, was com-<lb/>
mended for her years of service to<lb/>
the student body. Eddie Walters,<lb/>
SGA Refrigeration Manager, was<lb/>
officially praised for his handling of<lb/>
the refrigeration rentals, and Dr.<lb/>
Jack Thornton was recognized for<lb/>
his service to student organizations.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Family Fun<lb/>
bach I' irsda) during April is "Famih<lb/>
I un s. ght" al Mendenhall I torn 5-JO<lb/>
p m . al! children under age is .1.<lb/>
? sible ajuli<lb/>
may b pla table<lb/>
earns 1 .Kt-<lb/>
bowling Mill hi- run<lb/>
rice ' ' <lb/>
?ihie tennis ?ill K hall he en<lb/>
re ? aduli pei crimr<lb/>
have a Mendenhall Student<lb/>
 erne- 1. n bership card .?? I Cl II)<lb/>
ard 10 par' tcipate<lb/>
SU Artist<lb/>
Vpplicanons 'or Student I nion nisi<lb/>
will be accepted through pnl 23 p-<lb/>
ns ma be pilled up in the Stu-<lb/>
dent I nion Office, room 234<lb/>
Mendenhall lob descriptions will also<lb/>
he available Portfolio required<lb/>
Kappa Delta Pi<lb/>
the I'd C hi (.hapier ol Kappa Delta Pi<lb/>
a ill meet on Saiurda -pril 26. at<lb/>
0:30a.m at the Holiday Inn in Green-<lb/>
?Me. This meeting ssiii he held in con-<lb/>
lunction with our Sprint Initiation<lb/>
' ?ur speaker will he I): I loyd Mattheis<lb/>
! 'he Science Education Department<lb/>
Kadelpians should end in their reserva-<lb/>
lions tn April 18<lb/>
ROSSE<lb/>
?( sst (Returning Older Students<lb/>
Seeking Education) will hae its final<lb/>
meeting ol the semester on Iridas.<lb/>
Vpnl 25 a? 4 iK) pm in room 248<lb/>
Mendenhall Ml interested students are<lb/>
.ordialh insited to attend. This will be<lb/>
1 formal business meeting and plan<lb/>
?sill be di-iuvsed tor this summer and<lb/>
'all as'iities<lb/>
SCJ<lb/>
ll members ol the Socict) lor Col<lb/>
egiate lournalists are urged to attend a<lb/>
meeting luesdas. April 22. at 6 p m .<lb/>
al the home ol Ira I Baker. I4H i<lb/>
cih Street The purpose ot the meeting<lb/>
' is to elei' new officers<lb/>
Rho Epsilon<lb/>
I here will be a Rho tpsilon meeting<lb/>
pril 24at 3:00p.m m Raw! Mo EJec<lb/>
ions will be held and 11 is mandatory<lb/>
hat all members be present to sole for<lb/>
he is-M) x, officers<lb/>
Summer Rooms<lb/>
Rooms JH. available lor Summer<lb/>
vhool C ontact the Methodist Student<lb/>
 enter. 758-2030<lb/>
Sidewinder<lb/>
The band. Side?indei wil<lb/>
the Atiis this I ? si v ; <lb/>
1.11. sponsored 1 ?<lb/>
and last until " p 1  . ;?<lb/>
cents and domes! 1. h<lb/>
?1" 50 cents I -t- <lb/>
Comic Books<lb/>
The K I c OfllK Hk i lub will hold<lb/>
us third spring comic book comet<lb/>
at 'he ' in downtown Greens<lb/>
Sunday, Vnl 27, from IOtOO a.m 10<lb/>
5 1' ;? m Admission is Iree Ml people<lb/>
interested in busing, selling, collecting,<lb/>
etc . comic books, science fiction and<lb/>
related subjects are insited to attend<lb/>
For more information, call X-6?N<lb/>
Anderson<lb/>
John Anderson, Republican presiden-<lb/>
tial candidate, is gaining increasing in-<lb/>
terest and support on American college<lb/>
campuses Those interested in helping<lb/>
Anderson's campaign should call<lb/>
758-7955<lb/>
Marketing<lb/>
Revival<lb/>
I 11 1 I if life On .ii<lb/>
' ? - ? -1 sponsoring its second<lb/>
pnng  24<lb/>
 1 d  ? el  id tonun 1 'u<lb/>
1 - Beh<lb/>
Quiet<lb/>
thicc d.? icwsal ate Reverend Keni<lb/>
m 1" n and accompanied bs the In !<lb/>
icrdenomirutttonal c hoti and the I 1<lb/>
fountain ol I ife (. hoir on ! I<lb/>
night. Iridas nigh' chaplain Kenneth<lb/>
I dwards will be accompanied hs the<lb/>
It I Gospel Ensemble (and possibh<lb/>
the Si Augustine's Kellowhsip c hoir)<lb/>
on Satuidas Rev All Griffin with<lb/>
I M c hapel Hill and the Fountain of<lb/>
I ife t hoir rendering musk Mis<lb/>
Rosalee f dwards will conduct two<lb/>
setninats Saturday April 26 starting a<lb/>
10 a.m in the 1 edoma Wright Cultural<lb/>
Center fhe topics tor the seminar are<lb/>
nutrition and stress Devotional ser<lb/>
vices start at 7:00 cash night Please<lb/>
come oui .rid praise the 1 ord with us<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
There will be a sers important meeting<lb/>
of the C SI on Tuesdtrs at 5 (X) in<lb/>
room 24H Mendenhall I ins ,s a verj<lb/>
important meeting All members are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
fhe American Marketing Association<lb/>
will meet on Wednesday. April 23 at<lb/>
4 00 p m in room 130 Raw! Member-<lb/>
ship applications will be available<lb/>
NASW<lb/>
Members ol NASW, social work and<lb/>
corrections majors are noss selling rat<lb/>
tie tickets to raise money for their<lb/>
departmental softball game and<lb/>
cook oui Six drawings for dinners at<lb/>
Fosdicks 1890, The Beet Barn. Peppi's<lb/>
Pia. Shoness and Parker's BBQ will<lb/>
be held at the game on April 26. Tickets<lb/>
are S 50 I or more inlormation contact<lb/>
Barbara Anderson. Anne O'Neal or<lb/>
Diane Austin.<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
There will be a stall meeting for<lb/>
WMB (campus radio) at 6 p m lues<lb/>
day in Old Joyner library. Second<lb/>
Moor<lb/>
Advisor Needed<lb/>
A lacults adsisor is needed 10 torm<lb/>
I C I Baha'i C lub lor more inlorma-<lb/>
tion call h S7(J<lb/>
Fall Co-Op<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
T-Shirts<lb/>
Delta Zeta will sponsor a Pancake Din-<lb/>
ner April 23 from 5 p m until 8 p m at<lb/>
the Delta eta House All sou can eat<lb/>
lor $2.00<lb/>
The last I ellowship supper of the<lb/>
-emester at the Methedisi Student<lb/>
' enter will be a cookoul on Wednes-<lb/>
day. April 23, a c JO p m Hot dogs,<lb/>
hamburgers and soghurt pie will be<lb/>
sersed SI.50<lb/>
Pancakes<lb/>
Fall Co-Op<lb/>
The Center for Disease Control in<lb/>
Atlanta. Ga is recruiting for<lb/>
C ooperative Education assignments<lb/>
beginning in September 1980 and or<lb/>
January 1981 fhe following trainee<lb/>
positions will be available:<lb/>
.Microbiology Trainee at Atlanta,<lb/>
t hemisi Trainee at Atlanta; Chemical<lb/>
I ngineer Trainee al Cincinnati; Com-<lb/>
puter Science Trainee at Atlanta;<lb/>
Mechanical Engineer Trainee al Cincin-<lb/>
nati; Biology Trainee al C incinnati; In-<lb/>
siructional Systems Specialist Trainee<lb/>
in Atlanta. Necessary forms and ap-<lb/>
plications can be obtained in the<lb/>
t ooperative Education Office. 313<lb/>
Kawl Application deadline is April 18.<lb/>
Students must be enrolled in an<lb/>
undergraduate or graduate program to<lb/>
he eligible; graduating seniors are not<lb/>
L-ligible Sophomores and juniors are<lb/>
urged 10 apply<lb/>
"1 lose iou" T-Shirts are now being<lb/>
sold bs the EC I Sign I anguage C lub<lb/>
T-shirts are black, blue, light blue. red.<lb/>
green, orange or burgundy in medium,<lb/>
large, and extra large sies All shirts<lb/>
are $5 00 Shirts are oh sale in A-114<lb/>
Brewster or may be purchased from<lb/>
members of the club Support the Sign<lb/>
language Club and show the world<lb/>
how you feel.<lb/>
Episcopal Service<lb/>
The last meeting of the Episcopal<lb/>
fellowship this year will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 23 at 6:00 pm. in the<lb/>
Melhodist Student Center (5th Street<lb/>
across from Garrett Dorm) The Holy<lb/>
Eucharist will be celebrated. An infor-<lb/>
mal supper will be served al 6:45 p.m.<lb/>
al the home of the chaplain, the Rev<lb/>
Bill Hadden<lb/>
Family-Child<lb/>
The Family Child Association will have<lb/>
an end of the school cook-oui Tuesday,<lb/>
April 22 at 500 pm ai the Elm Street<lb/>
Park<lb/>
Volunteers<lb/>
Volunteer work can play a vital role in<lb/>
getting the job you really want. If you<lb/>
are interested in work experience which<lb/>
will help you after you graduate contact<lb/>
the Easter Seal Society at 758-3230<lb/>
The Smithsonian Institute, beginning m<lb/>
1980, will conduct a program in<lb/>
cooperative education under which<lb/>
graduate students in selected fields mas<lb/>
pursue individual programs ol study at<lb/>
the Smithsonian The program features<lb/>
alternating semesters ol work at the<lb/>
Smithsonian followed by on-campus<lb/>
studs ol job related subjects The<lb/>
Following opportunities are among<lb/>
several now asailable to highly<lb/>
qualified siudents. Public Affairs<lb/>
Writer Assistant. National Air and<lb/>
Space Museum. Research Trainee.1<lb/>
( enter lor Earth and Planetary Studies.<lb/>
Museum Programs. Audio Visual Pro<lb/>
duction Assistant. Script Writer.<lb/>
Museum Programs. Audio Visual Pro<lb/>
duction Assistant, Video Studio; Na<lb/>
nonal Portrait Gallery, Bibliographic<lb/>
Researcher. History Department:<lb/>
Radiation Biology Laboratory,<lb/>
Physical Science I ngineering Student<lb/>
Trainee; Radiation Biology<lb/>
I ahoratory. Biological Science Student<lb/>
trainee. Office Ol Audits. Accounting<lb/>
Student frainee; Division ol Perform <lb/>
ing Aits.Genct.il Arts and Information<lb/>
Assistant. Smithsonian Institute Press.<lb/>
General Arts and Intormalion sw<lb/>
lam Necessary forms and applications<lb/>
can be obtained in the Cooperative'<lb/>
Education Office, 31s Rawl<lb/>
Poetry Forum<lb/>
The East Carolina Poetry Forum will<lb/>
have a regular workshop and meeting<lb/>
Thursday, May I, at 8 p.m in<lb/>
Mendenhall. room 248. fhe public is<lb/>
cordially insited<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
We wish to remind all<lb/>
students and faculty that we<lb/>
will not accept any an-<lb/>
nouncements for the An-<lb/>
nouncements column unless<lb/>
they are typed doublespacs<lb/>
and turned in before the<lb/>
deadline. No exceptions will<lb/>
be made. The deadlines are<lb/>
2.00 p.m. Friday for the<lb/>
Tuesday edition and 2:00<lb/>
p.m. Tuesday for the Thurs-<lb/>
day edition. We reserve the<lb/>
right to edit for brevity. We<lb/>
cannot guarantee that<lb/>
everything turned in will ap-<lb/>
pear in the paper, due to<lb/>
space limitations, but we will<lb/>
do our best.<lb/>
l Patronize I<lb/>
I The'Fast Crimtininn <lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
HEAPING tiny<lb/>
PORTIONS. p"cc<lb/>
Wendesday April 23,<lb/>
Smothered Chicken with<lb/>
vegatables<lb/>
Thursday April 24<lb/>
Liver and Onions with<lb/>
vegatables<lb/>
two<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
two $1.79<lb/>
Come home to eat at S&amp;S ? we're located in the<lb/>
Carolina East Mall in Greenville, at the intersection of<lb/>
West Haven Road (U.S. 264 Bypass) and Hwy. 11. Plenty<lb/>
of free parking too.<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Serving continuously daily<lb/>
from 11 a.m. till 8 p.m.<lb/>
(8:30 Friday &amp; Saturday)<lb/>
Ladies Nite Ladies Nite<lb/>
Wednesday Night<lb/>
April 23<lb/>
-a<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
Ladies Nite<lb/>
Bring Your Nickles<lb/>
Ladies Nite Ladies Nite<lb/>
The Complete<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Shops<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
E?ch of tries advertd Hem,  requ,red -c be read a?a iaD? for<lb/>
sale .n each Kroger Savon Store eicept as specit.caiiy -so-e-<lb/>
ad if we do njn out o? ar adverted item we win offer ,ou our cho.ee<lb/>
of a comparable 'tem h?o available reflecting the same sav- m<lb/>
rainchecu which win entitle you to purchase the adver.sed lem a' -he<lb/>
advertised pnee within 30 days<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Tuee April 22<lb/>
thru Set April 26. 1980<lb/>
TAB, SPRITE OR<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
Copyright 19S0<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights R???rv?d<lb/>
None sold to Dealers or Wholesalers<lb/>
on<lb/>
FOOD. DRUG. GEN<lb/>
MDSE. STORES<lb/>
2-Ltr.<lb/>
N.R.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Balls<lb/>
BURGUNDY, ROSE OR<lb/>
Carlo Rossi<lb/>
? Chablis<lb/>
$<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Cheese Pizza<lb/>
4-Ltr.<lb/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
BURGUNDY, CHABLIS OR RH,NE- P,NK CHABLIS OR<lb/>
Paul Masson Gallo Hearty<lb/>
Rose Burgundy<lb/>
$ 5?9 $??9<lb/>
Ltr. WHw 3-Ltr. ?<lb/>
DAILY LUNCHEUfi<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
jHOt DOgOnlyUif<lb/>
i Hamburger,<lb/>
French Fries $4<lb/>
&amp; 12-0z. Drink  ?<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4 00?00M? M0CARP.Y0UT<lb/>
SALAO-50? EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR99<lb/>
PIZZA. .Qfor I m<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREA0<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
REQ. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
8-Oz.<lb/>
Twin<lb/>
Pack<lb/>
ik<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
59?<lb/>
AMP<lb/>
mOMHUS<lb/>
20<lb/>
I Little Debbie Snack Cakes &amp; Archway Cookies<lb/>
I Chips, Snacks &amp; Bagged Nuts<lb/>
'?'? ?oucm pack<lb/>
Sauces &amp; Gravy Mixes<lb/>
PEPPffllOGE FARMS M I Mtt<lb/>
Bagged Cookies &amp; Snacks <lb/>
10<lb/>
i&amp;si<lb/>
?t I AH<lb/>
1<lb/>
OFF MANUFACTURER S ;<lb/>
SUOGESTEO RETAIL<lb/>
'? ' <lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback Books<lb/>
 .aaM? eflea. eft<lb/>
1<lb/>
only!<lb/>
Records and ?<lb/>
Tapes !I?UC<lb/>
SOLD<lb/>
iDJMJNTD<lb/>
Up<lb/>
To<lb/>
AS<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
COST<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
OPfAi SUH0A?<lb/>
SAM 'OIPH<lb/>
I<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
Phon? 756-7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 22.1980<lb/>
Tenure Demands Complex Path<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
tenure is in itself com-<lb/>
plex, requiring agree-<lb/>
ment from at least five<lb/>
sources.<lb/>
When the professor<lb/>
comes up for his final<lb/>
review, the Faculty Per-<lb/>
sonnel Committee in<lb/>
his school or depart-<lb/>
ment must approve<lb/>
him, passing that ap-<lb/>
proval along to the<lb/>
department head. The<lb/>
department head then<lb/>
passes on his recom-<lb/>
mendation to the vice<lb/>
chancellor for<lb/>
academic affairs, who<lb/>
in turn submits the case<lb/>
to the university<lb/>
chancellor. At this<lb/>
point, the matter goes<lb/>
to the UNC system's<lb/>
General Administra-<lb/>
tion in Chapel Hill for<lb/>
final approval of<lb/>
tenure.<lb/>
Even when the pro-<lb/>
fessor is tenured, the<lb/>
job security he seeks is<lb/>
not ironclad. Accor-<lb/>
ding to university pro-<lb/>
cedures, a tenured pro-<lb/>
fessor may be dismissed<lb/>
if he is judged incompe-<lb/>
tent, in neglect of his<lb/>
duties, or if he engages<lb/>
in "misconduct of such<lb/>
a nature as to indicate<lb/>
that the individual is<lb/>
unfit to continue as a<lb/>
member of the facul-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
While these offenses<lb/>
are phrased in broad<lb/>
terms, Dr. McDaniel<lb/>
contends that, when it<lb/>
comes down to the<lb/>
"nitty-gritty it is not<lb/>
hard to determine who<lb/>
is unfit.<lb/>
To complete the<lb/>
analogy: like rising<lb/>
hopefuls in the world<lb/>
of big business, univer-<lb/>
sity faculty members<lb/>
must constantly<lb/>
demonstrate their com-<lb/>
petence.<lb/>
Or so goes the<lb/>
theory. To have a com-<lb/>
plete picture of what is<lb/>
involved in<lb/>
demonstrating com-<lb/>
petence, one would<lb/>
need to know some of<lb/>
the criteria by which<lb/>
professors are judged.<lb/>
(Next issue: What<lb/>
happens to classroom<lb/>
teacher evaluation<lb/>
forms.)<lb/>
Greek News<lb/>
Reagan Rallies<lb/>
Dubious Support<lb/>
Among Students<lb/>
By RICKIGLIARMIS<lb/>
Greek CorrespoadeiU<lb/>
With the end of<lb/>
school just around the<lb/>
corner, fraternities and<lb/>
sororities are winding<lb/>
up the year with ban-<lb/>
quets, formals, and<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas<lb/>
are having Parent's<lb/>
Day Sunday, April 27.<lb/>
The Tri Sigmas held<lb/>
their Founder's Day<lb/>
dinner last night at the<lb/>
house. Two new<lb/>
BERKELEY, CA<lb/>
JCPS) ? Presidential<lb/>
candidate Ronald<lb/>
Reagan, who has fared<lb/>
poorly in student-<lb/>
dominated precincts<lb/>
during the primaries,<lb/>
has unwittingly rallied<lb/>
some dubious support<lb/>
on the University of<lb/>
California-Berkeley<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Calling itself the<lb/>
"Reagan for Shah<lb/>
Committee a group<lb/>
of allegedly pro-<lb/>
Reagan activists has an-<lb/>
nounced plans to pro-<lb/>
test the "ugly emergen-<lb/>
cy of neo-anti-war<lb/>
hysteria on America's<lb/>
campuses<lb/>
Zodiac News Service<lb/>
reports that committee<lb/>
members claim<lb/>
"thousands of clean,<lb/>
decent, obedient young<lb/>
Americans" support<lb/>
them. The committee<lb/>
plans university rallies<lb/>
to protest the<lb/>
"disturbing specter of<lb/>
draft resistance hang-<lb/>
ing over our univer-<lb/>
sities and colleges<lb/>
Organized support<lb/>
for the committee's ef-<lb/>
forts is said toe ome<lb/>
from such groups as the<lb/>
"John Wayne Peace<lb/>
Institute "Mutants<lb/>
for a Radioactive En-<lb/>
vironment "Berkeley<lb/>
Students for War<lb/>
"The National<lb/>
Grenade Owners<lb/>
Association and the<lb/>
"Peace Resistors<lb/>
League among<lb/>
others.<lb/>
Zeta would ttke to con- The Delta Zetas are<lb/>
gratulate Cindy having a pancake din-<lb/>
Rodger s for being in- ner on Wednesday,<lb/>
ducted into the sorori- April 23 from 5 p.m.<lb/>
ty. until 8 p.m. at their<lb/>
Dream Girl, the house.<lb/>
Delta Zeta's annual<lb/>
DledeeV Lvnn Calder spring formal, was held The Sig Eps would<lb/>
and 'aren Murray' last weekend. Awards like to thank Mark<lb/>
awards for their parting presented at the were presented to Tracy Duckworth for another<lb/>
seniors. banquet Blackwell, Dream Girl; great Beach Weekend.<lb/>
This past Sunday Te Sigmas held Kathy Swigard, Ann They are also holding<lb/>
night, the Chi Omegas their spring cocktail Winstead Award and<lb/>
held their Farewell party at the Scholarship Award; their annual Senior<lb/>
Banquet at the Beef Washington Yacht and Brenda Hawkes, Best Banquet this week<lb/>
Barn. The following Country club Friday Pledge; Becky Henry, honoring graduating<lb/>
night Best pledge Pledge Scholarship; seniors Steve Woodie,<lb/>
award went to Vera Susie Boyd, Most En- Jeff Triplett, Larry<lb/>
Nichols while the Best thusiastic; Krista Moss, Speed, Hudson<lb/>
Sister award was Best Scrapbook; and Howell, Mark<lb/>
presented to Sandy Dookie Scarboro, Duckworth, Chris<lb/>
Burke Always-on-Time Holloman, and Steve<lb/>
The sisters of Delta Award. Williams.<lb/>
seniors were presented<lb/>
with awards: Janet<lb/>
Nethercutt, Outstan-<lb/>
ding Alumni; Christie<lb/>
Priestly, Scholarship<lb/>
Award; Cathy<lb/>
McLean, President's<lb/>
Cup; Mara Flaherty,<lb/>
Most Spirited Senior;<lb/>
Cathy McLean, Sorori-<lb/>
ty Before Self Award;<lb/>
and Molly Jordan,<lb/>
Outstanding Senior.<lb/>
The Chi Omegas will<lb/>
be presenting their Spr-<lb/>
ing Pledge Class Friday<lb/>
night at their annual<lb/>
Spring Cocktail Party.<lb/>
The party will be held<lb/>
at the Washington<lb/>
Yacht and Country<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
The Kappa Deltas<lb/>
held initiation for their<lb/>
pledges Monday night.<lb/>
Congratulations to Kim<lb/>
Flora, Lynn Moore and<lb/>
Wanny Winslow.<lb/>
Journalism Professor Receives Award<lb/>
- Ira L Baker, coordinator of ECU's journalism program, was<lb/>
presented a Certificate of Appreciation by the National Council of the<lb/>
Society for Collegiate Journalists at their Spring Induction ceremony<lb/>
last Thursday night. ? ,<lb/>
The award was presented to Baker by W. Wilford Kale, Jr na-<lb/>
tional president of SCJ, for his service to the society. Baker has<lb/>
started three chapters of the organization, at High Point College, Fur-<lb/>
man University and East Carolina University.<lb/>
Baker will be retiring at the end of the semester after 12 years at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Van Replaces SGA Bus<lb/>
H FOR THE SUMM<lb/>
 WE ARE n<lb/>
Students Last Year<lb/>
Averaged $3500 For Summer<lb/>
SOUND GOOD? YOU BET!<lb/>
COME HEAR ABOUT IT TODAY<lb/>
? Must be hard working<lb/>
? Must be willing to travel out west<lb/>
Interviews will be at 3:00-7:00<lb/>
Tues. April 22 Wed. April 23<lb/>
 In 302-C Brewster <lb/>
? Please Be On Time ?<lb/>
FOXHUNTER<lb/>
(formally the Rathskeller)<lb/>
OFFERING<lb/>
LADIES NITE<lb/>
TUE.NITE8pm-lam<lb/>
LADIES<lb/>
BRING<lb/>
YOUR<lb/>
NICKELS<lb/>
L<lb/>
Owner and Operator<lb/>
Randy Alford<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
The SGA is also con-<lb/>
sidering reviving the<lb/>
third bus route for the<lb/>
fall. Abshire said the<lb/>
proposal is for the ex-<lb/>
isting Purple route to<lb/>
be split in half, with<lb/>
one half left as it is, to<lb/>
allow faster travel bet-<lb/>
ween apartments and<lb/>
the campus.<lb/>
The other half, Ab-<lb/>
shire noted, would be<lb/>
merged with the old<lb/>
Brown route, which ran<lb/>
between main campus<lb/>
and the downtown<lb/>
area, including some of<lb/>
tne apartments.<lb/>
The Gold route,<lb/>
which links main cam-<lb/>
pus with Minges, Allied<lb/>
Health, Oakmont<lb/>
Square apartments,<lb/>
Pitt Plaza and Green-<lb/>
ville Square, will not be<lb/>
affected by the new<lb/>
routes, Abshire noted.<lb/>
nBfc-r<lb/>
Heinoken<lb/>
Distributed<lb/>
By<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
Beverage Co.<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
THREE<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
MRC Banquet Held<lb/>
REASONS<lb/>
TO BUY'<lb/>
<lb/>
Last Friday members<lb/>
of the Men's Residence<lb/>
Council met for their<lb/>
final banquet and<lb/>
awards ceremony.<lb/>
MRC President<lb/>
Grady Dickerson open-<lb/>
ed the ceremony by<lb/>
citing some of the ac-<lb/>
complishments of the<lb/>
MRC during the past<lb/>
year, including concerts<lb/>
on the hill and institu-<lb/>
tion of the James<lb/>
Mallory Scholarship.<lb/>
Next academic year,<lb/>
the MRC will merge<lb/>
with the other residence<lb/>
councils to form the<lb/>
Student Residence<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Heineken<lb/>
HOLLAND BEER<lb/>
THE 1 IMPORTED BEER IN AMERICA.<lb/>
2.<lb/>
CHOOSE<lb/>
y<lb/>
A selection of 17 innovative<lb/>
and contemporary stytes on<lb/>
display this week only.<lb/>
ARTCARVED FEATURES MORE<lb/>
DESIGN VARIETY THAN ANY<lb/>
OTHER COLlfGE RING COMPANY.<lb/>
Save $20.00 on Four Ladies<lb/>
FREE RING<lb/>
Trade in your men's gold<lb/>
H.S. ring for oSUADIUM<lb/>
Colege ring free.<lb/>
ARTCARVEO ALSO ALLOWS<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/>
Fashion 3?<lb/>
R'ngs SAVE<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community<lb/>
for 54 yean.<lb/>
Published every Ta ?<lb/>
Thursday during the academ.c<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur.ng<lb/>
the summer. .<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
,iJlTnlpaPro.EastC.ro1,na<lb/>
university, owned, operated, and<lb/>
puTshi tor ad by the students<lb/>
of East Carolina Univers.ty<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
 ?; 15 vear,y<lb/>
Alumni $20 yearly<lb/>
tecorclass post, p I<lb/>
GTenenEisicaCro.inian oMicesar<lb/>
I , JaTed in the Old South Bu-ld.n<lb/>
ocamposofECU.Greenv<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Produced from a strong jeweler's<lb/>
alloy, SILADIUM? College rings<lb/>
are 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 specials! is on campus today<lb/>
to assist with this important and meaningful purchase.<lb/>
COLLEGE RINGS<lb/>
symbolizing your ability to achieve.<lb/>
April 22nd and 23rd<lb/>
rwp<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
Lobby<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
Deposit requ?d Mailer Charge or V?o accepted<lb/>
immnn -?- 0?f m??<lb/>
mmmm m ?? i m ??? r "? '?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0004"/><lb/>
M<lb/>
B<lb/>
QUie ?aat ffiaroKniati<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, ?m i iiur<lb/>
Richard Green, &amp;?<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, ???????mh? Diane Henderson, cw ??<lb/>
Chris Lichok, m. w Charles Chandler, ??? ??<lb/>
Terry Gray, ?? ?.? Debbie Hotaling, mm m??<lb/>
College Press Sefvicv<lb/>
TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
Freedom Of Choice<lb/>
It has often been said that politics<lb/>
makes strange bedfellows. In the<lb/>
sn.all Columbus County town of<lb/>
Nakima, the case of a book banning<lb/>
reminiscent of Carrie Nation and<lb/>
her hatches has become a political<lb/>
football just three weeks before the<lb/>
election of the county commis-<lb/>
sioners there. The old saying about<lb/>
bedfollows is at the heart of the<lb/>
argument.<lb/>
"Wifey a supposedly sexually<lb/>
explicit book, has been banned<lb/>
from the county library shelves by<lb/>
the commissioners following com-<lb/>
plaints from the Veterans of<lb/>
Foreign Wars and other groups.<lb/>
Apparently, one child's mother<lb/>
found out that her daughter was<lb/>
reading the novel and got so upset<lb/>
about it that she organized a suc-<lb/>
cessful effort to ban the book from<lb/>
the public library.<lb/>
Some observers, according to a<lb/>
story in the News and Observer,<lb/>
have painted a picture of a political<lb/>
issue where one hasn't existed<lb/>
before. The idea seems to be: there<lb/>
really aren't any pressing issues that<lb/>
we can disagree over for the voters<lb/>
? so why don't be get hot and"<lb/>
bothered about a book-banning?<lb/>
That will surely help us get votes,<lb/>
and it will be mud that can be slung<lb/>
against those on the other side,<lb/>
some commissioners are probably<lb/>
saying to themselves. Some of the<lb/>
more foresighted citizens of upstan-<lb/>
ding towns like Nakima and Old<lb/>
Dock are dismissing the entire affair<lb/>
as total nonsense.<lb/>
The issue here is not really the<lb/>
book in question. There is no in-<lb/>
dication from any authority that<lb/>
reading the book will make your<lb/>
child grow up to live an immoral<lb/>
life. It is the fear ? the fear of the<lb/>
unknown that has raised its ugly<lb/>
head yet again.<lb/>
No one who was interviewed by<lb/>
the News and Observer had read the<lb/>
book, save for one retired farmer<lb/>
who had photocopied some par-<lb/>
ticularly torrid passages from the<lb/>
work and who was showing it<lb/>
around to people at a country store.<lb/>
It doesn't seem that a person could<lb/>
get an idea of the sexual explicitness<lb/>
(if there is such a word) of a literary<lb/>
work without reading all of it, in its<lb/>
full context.<lb/>
If looked at in a different way, we<lb/>
see that the banning of any literary<lb/>
endeavor is as wrong as is forced<lb/>
reading of any piece of literature.<lb/>
The fact is ? no one is forcing<lb/>
anyone to read anything against his<lb/>
will. It is the freedom of the action<lb/>
which we are concerned with ? the<lb/>
freedom for us to make up our own<lb/>
minds about what we want to read<lb/>
and what we don't want to read. It<lb/>
is not the job ? and it should not be<lb/>
the concern ? of tthe Veterans of<lb/>
Foreign Wars or any other group to<lb/>
ban books for our children. If we let<lb/>
this go unchecked, the floodgates of<lb/>
censorship will swing wide open,<lb/>
and even seemingly innocuous<lb/>
works will come under suspicion.<lb/>
And that would be sad. For that<lb/>
would be close to the same thing<lb/>
Soviet dissidents have beenc<lb/>
omplaining about for the last 20<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Finally, we would hope that the<lb/>
attorney general's office will see<lb/>
these senseless battles for what they<lb/>
are and put an end to them forever.<lb/>
If this decision is not made, one<lb/>
of our basic and most important<lb/>
freedoms will be sadly diminished.<lb/>
WE BANNED TME ?MUT OF<lb/>
&amp;TEW&amp;ECK, HEMINGWAY &amp;<lb/>
FANNER, WT 7Tig) B?oK<lb/>
HA&amp;MORE FiLTHY W?R&amp;&amp;<lb/>
THAN ALL. OF THEM- WE<lb/>
CANT AUPW BooK? UKt.<lb/>
THI&amp;1NCUR l<lb/>
SCHOOL! jgj&amp;<lb/>
i<lb/>
g0CKV MTN.<lb/>
NEVJ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
9)<lb/>
O<lb/>
o<lb/>
Earth Day Is Being Revamped<lb/>
Just In Time For New Decade<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Exactly ten years ago today President<lb/>
Nixon, in perhaps the finest hour of his<lb/>
tenure, declared April 22, 1970 Earth Day.<lb/>
On January 1, in his first act of the new<lb/>
decade, Jimmy Carter proclaimed today<lb/>
the second Earth Day, and throughout the<lb/>
nation individuals are celebrating through<lb/>
such acts as sunrise ceremonies, acid rain<lb/>
conferences and aluminum recycling con-<lb/>
tests. Earth Day 1980 is a testament to the<lb/>
tremendous gains that our nation has made<lb/>
in such areas as pollution fighting, protec-<lb/>
tion of natural resources and public health<lb/>
efforts. At the same time, Earth Day is a<lb/>
clarion to the tremendous struggle that we<lb/>
have before us.<lb/>
A splendid fervor highlighted the acts<lb/>
and protests of the first Earth Day, when<lb/>
individuals decked themselves in green<lb/>
paint and arrangements of flowers. The<lb/>
proverbial peace symbol, once the object<lb/>
around which a generation had rallied,<lb/>
became eclipsed by a new standard, the<lb/>
ecos ? symbol for the fight to preserve our<lb/>
earth.<lb/>
The gains that we have made in these last<lb/>
ten years are very impressive. On the first<lb/>
day of the last decade, Nixon signed the<lb/>
National Environmental Policy Act that<lb/>
established the Environmental Protection<lb/>
Agency (EPA) to insure ecological impact<lb/>
assessments of proposed federal actions<lb/>
and to watch over the private sector. Since<lb/>
then, there have been many significant<lb/>
legislative landmarks such as the Clean Air<lb/>
Act Amendments of 1970 which set auto<lb/>
pollution standards, the Occupational<lb/>
Safety and Health Act, authorizing<lb/>
Federal workplace standards, the Water<lb/>
Pollution Act of 1972, setting the<lb/>
"fishable, swimmable" criterion for the<lb/>
nation's waters, the Endangered Species<lb/>
Act of 1973 and many others. The federal<lb/>
government is attacking environmental<lb/>
issues directly by monitoring air and water<lb/>
standards, limiting pesticide use, protec-<lb/>
ting wildlife and unspoiled lands and<lb/>
?generally being more observant in areas<lb/>
concerned with environmental depriva-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
This year, however, there is not the overt<lb/>
exposition of environmental concern like<lb/>
that which was manifested on the first<lb/>
Earth Day primarily because these issues<lb/>
have become internalized into the<lb/>
mainstream of the American psyche. Just<lb/>
as the civil rights struggles of the "60s<lb/>
brought about a change of attitudes within<lb/>
the average American, the environmental<lb/>
campaigns of the '70s have made concern<lb/>
for the environment a critical issue of our<lb/>
daily existence.<lb/>
As Douglas Costle, administrator of the<lb/>
EPA, puts it, "Ten years ago, there were<lb/>
only a handful of adults in this country<lb/>
who knew what the word 'ecology' meant.<lb/>
Today every schoolchild is taught ecology.<lb/>
Environmental protection is becoming a<lb/>
permanent part of our political value<lb/>
system<lb/>
Our past decade is something that we<lb/>
can be proud of, but the real fight is just<lb/>
over the horizon. Conversion to alternative<lb/>
sources that are unrenewable is a dubi<lb/>
possibility, for coal and ynthetic fuel<lb/>
contribute significantly to higher levels<lb/>
air pollution as does increased wood<lb/>
ing. The threat of nuclear proliferaiK<lb/>
the most ominous of proposed alterna<lb/>
energy sources. To become der<lb/>
upon such is to toy with potential disaster<lb/>
and place the welfare of future gene-<lb/>
in the hands of the profiteers. All<lb/>
above-mentioned sources of ene<lb/>
only prolong the immediate problem<lb/>
not solve permanently the crisis before<lb/>
The future depends on our abii<lb/>
make use of the resources that oui eartli<lb/>
has provided for us through en<lb/>
technological applications that surr<lb/>
as integrative beings in our enir<lb/>
rather than just abuser. Just as Earth<lb/>
1970 was the genesis of a new de<lb/>
committment to environmentalism. th<lb/>
cond Earth Dav could bring about <lb/>
consciousness of the ecological role<lb/>
ween man and his environment.<lb/>
The most tragic thing that ve cou d -<lb/>
to our planet is to destroy her because<lb/>
the inability of her inhabitant to<lb/>
together in peace. Above all, it m?<lb/>
remembered, whatever disagreements at<lb/>
have as nations and peoples, we must<lb/>
to resolve these problems in rational,<lb/>
telligent methods that are indicative o<lb/>
higher levels of communica:<lb/>
Militarism and threats of forceful a.<lb/>
are incompatible with sincere concern<lb/>
the welfare of our home and its pe<lb/>
Let's save the world, not destroy it.<lb/>
'Born To Run' To Be N.J. Theme?<lb/>
Here's some news you can't live<lb/>
without:<lb/>
New Jersey State Assemblyman Richard<lb/>
Visotcky is planning to sponsor a resolu-<lb/>
tion making Bruce Springsteen's song,<lb/>
"Born to Run the official state theme.<lb/>
Says Visotcky: "Bruce is a New Jersey<lb/>
native, he often talks about how much he<lb/>
loves the state, and most important, it<lb/>
would make young people in the state<lb/>
believe in politics again<lb/>
Personally, 1 love the idea. But as a true<lb/>
Springsteen fan who once traveled several<lb/>
miles just to eat breakfast in his home<lb/>
town, I'd like to recommend several other<lb/>
songs he's done. "Born to Run" doesn't<lb/>
really capture the true flavor of New<lb/>
Jersey. How about "Jungleland" or<lb/>
"Streets of Fire" or maybe "Badlands"<lb/>
instead?<lb/>
Hopefully the New Jersey vote will set a<lb/>
precedent that other states will follow.<lb/>
Think of all the possibilities.<lb/>
California could adopt the Eagles'<lb/>
"Hotel California" as its state theme.<lb/>
David Bowie's "Panic in Detroit" would<lb/>
do well as Michigan's state song. And<lb/>
Ohio, which has given this country many<lb/>
great rock stars, including DEVO (a group<lb/>
truly proud of its state heritage), could<lb/>
adopt "Are We Not Men?" as its theme.<lb/>
Somehoe I've always pictured people from<lb/>
Ohio as the type to go staggering about,<lb/>
chanting: "Are We Not Men? We Are<lb/>
OHIO<lb/>
Now that's something that will make us<lb/>
believe in politics again.<lb/>
 <lb/>
You say you've got a friend who's a<lb/>
political science major and you can't<lb/>
quite the right birthday gift? Richi<lb/>
Oldshue has the answer.<lb/>
The People's Primary toilet paper.<lb/>
Oldshue, president of a Detroit co<lb/>
party called All-in-good-fun, is marke<lb/>
this new item in various noveltv -<lb/>
around the country.<lb/>
It comes in six different varieties (one<lb/>
for each candidate), each featuring I<lb/>
caricature of a presidential candidate on<lb/>
every sheet.<lb/>
 According to Oldshue his producl<lb/>
"gives Americans the right to vote for a-<lb/>
many candidates as they mav wish - a-<lb/>
often as they wish ? in the privacv of their<lb/>
own homes<lb/>
I always thought Ronald Reaean would<lb/>
look better in a toilet.<lb/>
War Talk Abounds, "Heroes" Don't Know What Is In Store<lb/>
By CHARLES GRIFFIN<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
The smell is in the air. Blood leads<lb/>
to blood. Old soldiers chew their<lb/>
bits and kick at their stable doors.<lb/>
Newshawks gather around the fresh<lb/>
kills like the brethren of vultures<lb/>
that they are.<lb/>
Incident follows incident and the<lb/>
public finds that each new event<lb/>
raises a froth at the mouth and a<lb/>
fever to do something ? anything<lb/>
? about the world situation.<lb/>
Congress moves slowly toward a<lb/>
first step to a new draft, but<lb/>
presidential politics and the jackals<lb/>
of the global jungle feed on and<lb/>
enlarge each bloody event until one<lb/>
explodes.<lb/>
The explosion is coming. It may<lb/>
not be in Iran or Afghanistan. It<lb/>
could be in South America or in<lb/>
Israel or in Europe. Something is<lb/>
building ? lurching darkly this<lb/>
way. The pressure is too great for it<lb/>
to be otherwise. Some half-assed<lb/>
terrorist or politician will overdo it<lb/>
and the world will stumble into war.<lb/>
If war comes, this life of ours will<lb/>
cease to exist. Our only hope is that<lb/>
the war. may be limited in scope ?<lb/>
contained in the spark area. If it is,<lb/>
then we might win ? with a hell of a<lb/>
lot of luck. But we are far more like-<lb/>
ly to lose. Whatever happens in a<lb/>
limited war, at least we will survive<lb/>
as a society and be able to rebuild<lb/>
and, perhaps, change our ways.<lb/>
Unlimited war means only<lb/>
destruction ? the end of civilization<lb/>
as we know it:<lb/>
Either way, the big party is over<lb/>
for us. The frills win be gone. There<lb/>
is no room in a soldier's backpack<lb/>
for a silk pillow.<lb/>
War requires gas rationing, food<lb/>
rationing, and personal sacrifice.<lb/>
We have never been so short of na-<lb/>
tional shipping resources. Our mer-<lb/>
chant marine is now Liberian or<lb/>
Panamanian. The true owners may<lb/>
be American, but they are unlikely<lb/>
to risk their ships too often if supply<lb/>
lanes to America are cut by Soviet<lb/>
submarines.<lb/>
Things we have taken for granted<lb/>
will be in short supply. Coffee, tea,<lb/>
and bananas are not native to the<lb/>
U.S. I don't even want to think<lb/>
about strategic materials produced<lb/>
overseas.<lb/>
America will have to mobilize.<lb/>
The population will have to accept<lb/>
discipline, if we are to survive as a<lb/>
nation. Conscription will be a fact.<lb/>
Men and women will be in uniform<lb/>
if they are of age and capable. They<lb/>
will drill and train to defend or at-<lb/>
tack our enemies. They will not easi-<lb/>
ly be able to question or ponder the<lb/>
why of an order. When the captain<lb/>
of the hundreds says "go they will<lb/>
go. And by the pointing of a finger,<lb/>
men and women will die. Not in<lb/>
defense of liberty, for our liberties<lb/>
will be gone. Not in defense of our<lb/>
way of life, for our way of life will<lb/>
have changed forevermore. They<lb/>
will die to maintain the government<lb/>
and to overcome the foe.<lb/>
And the outcome is in doubt.<lb/>
We face an enemy whose whole<lb/>
population is prepared and trained<lb/>
for war, whose major point of pride<lb/>
in World War II was that they sur-<lb/>
vived everything the Germans could<lb/>
do, held their ground, then came<lb/>
back to overwhelm them. Moscow<lb/>
subways are ornate and practical<lb/>
bomb shelters. They are deep<lb/>
enough to withstand direct overhead<lb/>
hits ? nuclear hits. Except for a few<lb/>
well-protected cities, the rest of their<lb/>
people and industries are widely<lb/>
dispersed.<lb/>
The Soviet government may have<lb/>
problems with minority populations<lb/>
and with dissidents, but it has no<lb/>
qualms about putting down either.<lb/>
We could exploit taht, but our<lb/>
foreign policy is too weak to allow<lb/>
us to take advantage of the situa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Soviet citizen is a hard<lb/>
worker who knows little of personal<lb/>
luxury. He walks more and 'per-<lb/>
forms more physical labor than the<lb/>
average American. He makes a<lb/>
good soldier.<lb/>
During World War II most<lb/>
Americans entering the military had<lb/>
some prior experience with hard-<lb/>
ships. Today that is not true. The<lb/>
Russian is now hardier, more willing<lb/>
to obey orders, more pauiotic, and<lb/>
better trained and outfitted than his<lb/>
American counterpart.<lb/>
He is less independent, and his<lb/>
leaders are less felxibk, since Soviet<lb/>
strategy is more single-minded than<lb/>
anything we have. But the Soviet<lb/>
soldier is brave and willing to tr.<lb/>
the officer wastes little time worry<lb/>
ing about his orders, and his<lb/>
superior's strategy is to win.<lb/>
When there is nothing left to<lb/>
decide, there is little time for indeci<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
4i!aPh Waldo Emerson once said,<lb/>
?The dice of God are always load<lb/>
??" If he didn't say it, someone<lb/>
else equally wise did. We have<lb/>
always had the dice on our side. But<lb/>
Vietnam was a warning. Our roll<lb/>
can t last forever. It is high time we<lb/>
helped load the dice.<lb/>
Skip ideologies and make military<lb/>
i5aiH?s whcre wc ?"?. Bring our<lb/>
old allies into line or neutralize<lb/>
them. Sow dissension in the Soviet<lb/>
backyard. Tighten our belts and<lb/>
Pftpare for survival.<lb/>
t ? who survives the best wiH be<lb/>
-the victor. He may stand in triumph<lb/>
over at pile of slitt, but he will have<lb/>
won if he is able to stand.<lb/>
??? .??.<lb/>
??A-<lb/>
??- . ' V<lb/>
??"4- "irW- ???? ? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0005"/><lb/>
THl EASTCAROI INIAN<lb/>
PKIl 22, I9K0<lb/>
Toto<lb/>
More Than Just Studio Musicians<lb/>
ap-<lb/>
C ontinued from Page 6<lb/>
majesty in "Child's Anthem" and "Hydra<lb/>
1 oto included several upbeat numbers in their<lb/>
repertoire. These were usually placed between the<lb/>
more mellow pieces, keeping the audience alive<lb/>
with hand-clapping fervor. Rocking songs such as<lb/>
?All Us Boys" and "Rockmaker" may very well<lb/>
have been chosen over slower, more melodic<lb/>
pieces like "I orraine" because of audieno<lb/>
peal.<lb/>
Near the end of the show, two members of the<lb/>
band put on a long, vet exciting duet. David<lb/>
Paich and Steve Porcaro began the interlude with<lb/>
rich, strong keyboards, and gradually Paich took<lb/>
over, capturing the spotlight and the audience's<lb/>
p?!vntion along, until 1 ukather joined in with<lb/>
v ibrant guitar work.<lb/>
Patch then treated the audience to a view of his<lb/>
and Steve Porcaro's new invention. I hey call it a<lb/>
totar, which is a mini-moog synthesizer with all<lb/>
controls built into the neck. The totar is like a<lb/>
hand held keyboard, and Paich, standing, jamm-<lb/>
ed with I ukathei on guitar for several minutes.<lb/>
Each of the members of I oto was superb in his<lb/>
own right, but the band as a whole performed<lb/>
without the sense of group effort. Individual per-<lb/>
formers tried to steal the show. Because of this,<lb/>
description of I oto as a unit is difficult. The<lb/>
crowd lett Minges Coliseum elated, not so much<lb/>
because the) had seen a great group perform but<lb/>
because they had witnessed the excellence of six<lb/>
talented musicians.<lb/>
portraying the character in "Hydra" and "St.<lb/>
George and the Dragon" as he goes to slay the<lb/>
Hydra. The sword Porcaro holds in the two<lb/>
photos is fashioned after the one on the cover of<lb/>
Toto's first album. Porcaro noted that the sword<lb/>
may become a symbol for the band, used on each<lb/>
successive album, although this is still only a<lb/>
possibility.<lb/>
Asked about the lighting effect on the cover,<lb/>
where the sword appears to attain an almost neon<lb/>
glow, Porcaro explained, "He (photographer Jim<lb/>
Hagopian) kept having me tilt it at different<lb/>
angles where the light was, until it was just<lb/>
right<lb/>
"1 spent eight hours in the sewer in IA. to get<lb/>
those pictures. The green light (in the photo) was<lb/>
supposed to signify where the dragon is  The<lb/>
lyrics of 'St. George' are the dragon lives 'below<lb/>
Seventh Avenue It was me supposedly going<lb/>
to give a stage performance, but we do. We really after the dragon on the cover. Then the inside is<lb/>
like the aftershot, with my shirt all torn up<lb/>
Porcaro freely answered more personal ques-<lb/>
studio work because we still have a lot of friends<lb/>
who helped us when we were first starting. So<lb/>
when they ask us to do stuff for them, we like to<lb/>
oblige. If it wasn't for them, we wouldn't be<lb/>
here<lb/>
Porcaro explained that Bo Scaggs has been a<lb/>
long-time friend whom members of Toto worked<lb/>
with before the group was formed. This is the<lb/>
reason for three of Toto's members appearing as<lb/>
principle artists on Scaggs' new release.<lb/>
Porcaro also mentioned that the band owed<lb/>
much of their concert skill to traveling with Bo<lb/>
Scaggs, Gary Wright and others.<lb/>
"Going on the road with those guys was great.<lb/>
It kinda' gave us the experience to make decisions<lb/>
about the road and know what we were doing. A<lb/>
lot of people hear we're studio musicians and<lb/>
think we've never been on the road before with<lb/>
anyone, and we don't know what it's like or how<lb/>
do Porcaro said with a grin.<lb/>
After Toto's first album, critics complained<lb/>
Interview<lb/>
fter the concert, Steve Porcaro, Toto's<lb/>
keyboard and electronic wizard, discussed the<lb/>
group's status in an interview and defended their<lb/>
weaknesses with a smile.<lb/>
Porcaro made it jiear that Toto docs not mind<lb/>
being referred to as "studio musicians' even<lb/>
after the release of their second album. It's the<lb/>
image they started out with, and something which<lb/>
may sta with them for a while.<lb/>
"Being called studio musicians doesn't really<lb/>
bother us. We're just musicians, whether it's in<lb/>
the studio or live. We continue to do a lot of<lb/>
Headache 79<lb/>
that while group members were good musicians,<lb/>
they were not songwriters. One member of the<lb/>
band replied that precision playing made up for<lb/>
content. When asked to defend this point of view,<lb/>
Porcaro was reluctant, but, still smiling, explain-<lb/>
ed that he would never have made such a remark.<lb/>
"I like the songwriting myself. I would never<lb/>
have let it get past that. Of course, it's a matter of<lb/>
opinion, but I liked the songs a whole lot. They<lb/>
(the critics) might have been talking about the<lb/>
lyrics he added, "because that's what they<lb/>
think is one of our low points<lb/>
Porcaro then went on to discuss the making of<lb/>
the second album. Hydra, which the group had<lb/>
first considered making a double album.<lb/>
"Deciding against a double album was pretty<lb/>
much a joint agreement. We kind of wanted to do<lb/>
a double album because we had so much material<lb/>
all ready to go. So many different members of the<lb/>
group write a whole lot. But it just wasn't a wise<lb/>
idea for so early in our career<lb/>
Porcaro also mentioned the cover and inside<lb/>
photographs for Hydra. He appeared on both.<lb/>
lions about group members. He proudly remark-<lb/>
ed that both his father and David Paieh's father<lb/>
had influenced the group. Arranger Marty Paich<lb/>
and drummer Joe Porcaro introduced their sons<lb/>
David and Jeff 12 years ago.<lb/>
"I take lessons from David's father. He's a<lb/>
great orchestrator, one of the best in the<lb/>
business<lb/>
Asked about a rivalry between his brother Jeff<lb/>
(Toto's drummer) and himself, Porcaro replied.<lb/>
(Ontinued from Page 6<lb/>
quipped. She nodded in<lb/>
agreement. so I decided<lb/>
that conversation was<lb/>
out as a form o amuse-<lb/>
ment tor the evening.<lb/>
?n the soiree pro-<lb/>
gressed, most of the<lb/>
partiers reverted to<lb/>
their i d -1 e v e 1 s and<lb/>
engaged in all forms o<lb/>
body-pollution. My<lb/>
friend  was at the<lb/>
forefront o the gang,<lb/>
and he slowly began to<lb/>
pale.<lb/>
The evening had<lb/>
reached its zenith at<lb/>
about 10:30. Crazy go-<lb/>
ings on could be<lb/>
witnessed throughout<lb/>
the house, and<lb/>
everyone was happy<lb/>
because it had gotten to<lb/>
the point where even it<lb/>
we could have thought<lb/>
o something intelligent<lb/>
to say to each other, we<lb/>
no longer had the dex-<lb/>
terity to enunciate. We<lb/>
were getting complaint<lb/>
calls about the noise<lb/>
from Stubenville,<lb/>
Ohio.<lb/>
t 1 1 :(X) most people<lb/>
weren't feeling too<lb/>
well. Poor Z. was<lb/>
stooped over the toilet,<lb/>
his face contorted in a<lb/>
grim expression of<lb/>
serious nausea. The<lb/>
sound of his heaving<lb/>
took the glee out of the<lb/>
ambiance, and soon we<lb/>
had to pack him up like<lb/>
a sleeping bag and lay<lb/>
him brusquely on his<lb/>
bed. There, colorless<lb/>
and unconscious, he<lb/>
had the serene look o'<lb/>
an assassinated head o'<lb/>
state.<lb/>
. was the first to go,<lb/>
but not the last. His<lb/>
was an example follow-<lb/>
ed throughout the even-<lb/>
ing, and soon the house<lb/>
was littered with corp-<lb/>
ses and semi-ruminated<lb/>
let or.<lb/>
1 called the Z. the<lb/>
next afternoon to see if<lb/>
he had made it back to<lb/>
the 20th century. One<lb/>
of his r o o m m at es<lb/>
answered the phone,<lb/>
and in the distant<lb/>
background. I could<lb/>
hear my friend's voice<lb/>
reverberating off the<lb/>
porcelain o' the<lb/>
johnny. I heard him<lb/>
ambulate to the phone.<lb/>
"Hey, man, how are<lb/>
ya' today?" he said.<lb/>
"man, 1 had a great<lb/>
time last night 1<lb/>
heard him choke, and<lb/>
then there was a pause.<lb/>
"Man. 1 can't wait 'till<lb/>
next weekend<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
all inclusive"<lb/>
prccinni y test birtfl ton<lb/>
na proni. m preqnan<lb/>
ounseling For fui " ? ?<lb/>
reformation call<lb/>
? ? ? ? numbei<lb/>
800 ii ;S6H bi ? ? n v<lb/>
? ?  s p m weekday<lb/>
Raleiqh Worm n s<lb/>
Health Ornuation<lb/>
917 West (Worqan St<lb/>
Raleiqh N.C 27603<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N C NO 3 1 Nightclub<lb/>
LOUISIANA'S LeROUX<lb/>
Cap'toi Recording ArtistsTHURS. 24th<lb/>
tin; wmi:<lb/>
DHOITKI!<lb/>
Moderate &amp; Bettei<lb/>
Sportswear<lb/>
Dresses<lb/>
Pesigner Jeans 3Q 5Q<lb/>
&amp; Tops<lb/>
v?<lb/>
<lb/>
Just Arrived<lb/>
Junior Skirts<lb/>
756-4001<lb/>
<lb/>
$5.00 off on<lb/>
reg. price<lb/>
jeans for ECU<lb/>
students with ID<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
TtiMday Night<lb/>
OYSTERS $4.95<lb/>
FLOUNDER &amp;S.50<lb/>
TROUT ?$.95<lb/>
PERCH 2.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No taKoutt pUmam<lb/>
Frtnch PrlM, Cote ?tew<lb/>
Piano<lb/>
Recital<lb/>
A piano recital will<lb/>
he presented by ECU<lb/>
senior Deborah Anne<lb/>
Lambeth of Greenville<lb/>
on April 24 at 9 p.m. in<lb/>
the Fletcher Reeital<lb/>
Hall on eampus.<lb/>
For her reei'al. Miss<lb/>
l.ambeth will be play-<lb/>
ing two sonatas, I . 497<lb/>
in B flat Major and I .<lb/>
104 in C Major by<lb/>
Scarlatti, Polonaise in<lb/>
C sharp Minor, Op. 26,<lb/>
no. 1 by Chopin, three<lb/>
Scriabin preludes, Op.<lb/>
1 I (part I), no 6 in B<lb/>
Minor, an original<lb/>
composition entitled,<lb/>
"I'll Always<lb/>
Remember" and Scott<lb/>
loplin's "Magnetic<lb/>
Rag<lb/>
SPECIAL WORDS<lb/>
PUBLISHING<lb/>
BRANDY MUSIC<lb/>
and<lb/>
SOUNDS INC.<lb/>
Nashville, Tenn.<lb/>
proudly announce<lb/>
the debut album<lb/>
W? are proud to<lb/>
announce that wo<lb/>
have added<lb/>
ono of tho<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
lor your<lb/>
dining pleasure.<lb/>
WO R DS I ??? FOR LUNCH<lb/>
The versatility of this new artist is fan-<lb/>
tastic We m Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
should be very proud<lb/>
Steve Hardy,<lb/>
V-Pres. &amp; Gen. Manager<lb/>
WRQR-FM. Farmville, N.C.<lb/>
a very remarkable endeavor, one that<lb/>
is sure to catapult Richard Duane to na-<lb/>
t'onal acclaim<lb/>
Pat Minges<lb/>
Staff writer,<lb/>
East Carolinian,<lb/>
March 18,1980<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
an introduction to the language and style of a new artist<lb/>
by Richard Duane<lb/>
The man's music is superb. He writes<lb/>
the words, he composes the music and<lb/>
he sings the songs. The album will be a<lb/>
hit.<lb/>
Walt Cunningham<lb/>
Pianist a Music Arranger<lb/>
Nashville, Tennessee<lb/>
Dolly UtSO<lb/>
Dr. Richard Duane Logue has reached<lb/>
the unattainable<lb/>
Daily Reflector<lb/>
Sunday, December 2,1979<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
unquestionably head-<lb/>
Sun. - Tnur.<lb/>
4S30-OSOO<lb/>
Frl. and Sat.<lb/>
43-XOlOO<lb/>
as3?<lb/>
"There was alwavs that when l was younger, you<lb/>
know what I mean, wanting to make it, be a<lb/>
good-enough musieian. But I've already proven<lb/>
that to myself now <lb/>
Noting that the group seemed more sedate than<lb/>
mans bands who go on the road. I questioned<lb/>
about what the road is like for I oto.<lb/>
"We come on the road to relax. There's so<lb/>
much partying going on all the time back in I A.<lb/>
(where the) live), when we go on the road, we feel<lb/>
like it's time to rest<lb/>
With that, Steve Porcaro ended the interview,<lb/>
still smilinu and energetic.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUOf NT UNION<lb/>
(1ST CMKXM jaKHtV'<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
lit' CIWuU .?.(???<lb/>
I<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readii<lb/>
I below the advertised price in each ASP Store except as<lb/>
?n this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT APRIL 26 AT A&amp;P If<lb/>
y available for sale at or<lb/>
?s specifically noted<lb/>
-GREENVILLE<lb/>
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12 OZ<lb/>
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V Good Products T<lb/>
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Pepsi Diet Pepsi<lb/>
Mountain Dew<lb/>
2 lit. bot.<lb/>
yooll do better-<lb/>
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new low prices<lb/>
A4P QUALITY<lb/>
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FLO-THRU LIPTON<lb/>
TEA BAGS M<lb/>
AAP QUALITY BRIQUET<lb/>
CHARCOAL I<lb/>
HUNTS<lb/>
KETCHUP<lb/>
WELCH GRAPE JAM PRESERVES OR<lb/>
CRAPE JELLY<lb/>
ANN PAGE CREAMY OR CRUNCHV<lb/>
PEANUT BUTTER<lb/>
2MOi<lb/>
BUS<lb/>
JAR<lb/>
OZ<lb/>
JAR<lb/>
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?TONS St. frorn<lb/>
rJUint I larvcv<lb/>
iwnlown<lb/>
1 I I W. 4ih Si.<lb/>
ed for stardomThere is something very meaningful m the magnificent debut album<lb/>
for everyone who cares Gene Cash<lb/>
Songwriter, Sound Engineer<lb/>
Nashville, Tennessee<lb/>
Available at Record Bar &amp; Apple Records<lb/>
(Pitt Plaza)<lb/>
SAVE fiY<lb/>
0 ORANGE<lb/>
JUICE<lb/>
LIMIT ONE<lb/>
WITH THIS<lb/>
COUPON AND<lb/>
AOOITIONAl<lb/>
?7 SO ORDER<lb/>
SAVE 56c<lb/>
15c OFF LABEL<lb/>
CHEER<lb/>
LAUNDRY<lb/>
DETERGENT<lb/>
Effective April 18 Fosdick's will<lb/>
o longer accept personal<lb/>
V-GAL.<lb/>
BTL.<lb/>
693<lb/>
jT BT 694<lb/>
'ark i<lb/>
in<lb/>
Inrfil awl K ar-<lb/>
T<lb/>
LrHK- !L T !LgIe?n v ? ?,e<lb/>
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AT AAP IN<lb/>
I YOU MY ONLY<lb/>
I LIMIT ONE<lb/>
WITH THIS<lb/>
COUPON AMO<lb/>
I ADDITIONAL .Bft7<lb/>
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0 t0 0f a ?- <lb/>
?? jW r ??-?? ??, ' "<lb/>
?<lb/>
-???-<lb/>
M ?  ft f - m ? ??<lb/>
? - ? r  - ?<lb/>
 ?. v ,??<lb/>
I r lir 9 4-m ?? w? .? .? ?"?? ?????-?-??<lb/>
? - - ?<lb/>
p m m 00 0<lb/>
nmm?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0006"/><lb/>
ITHE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 22. 1980<lb/>
April Means Disaster<lb/>
V<lb/>
Continued from Page 6<lb/>
 TO STU0S<lb/>
THirri Hoots kn L<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
 V M!T fit STUriC<lb/>
The Cowards are another grup that uses a<lb/>
"not-studying" method in coping with exams.<lb/>
1 hey are the ones who even now are packing their<lb/>
things and buying bus tickets.<lb/>
A number o' people study with the help of elec-<lb/>
tronic aids, such as stereos, television and radios.<lb/>
Although these seem to help the particular in-<lb/>
dividual, they can greatly hinder the other 399<lb/>
people in the dorm. In case you want to use televi-<lb/>
sions to help your studies, I have found that<lb/>
movies of the 1930's and reruns of "Wild, Wild<lb/>
West" are the most helpful things to have on.<lb/>
Bribery is a dishonest, underhanded and unfair<lb/>
way o' passing exams that I would never con-<lb/>
sider, due to the expense.<lb/>
Cheating is a big problem at exam time, but<lb/>
one that I feel is blown out of proportion. Most<lb/>
o' my teachers have cheated very little on my ex-<lb/>
ams. I do think that students would benefit if they<lb/>
did know how professors who do cheat go about<lb/>
it, so here are a few things to watch for:<lb/>
Tables Turned<lb/>
?Coming in late. Some dishonest professors ar-<lb/>
rive very late for the exam, cutting the time<lb/>
students have to complete complex essay ques-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
?Complex essay questions.<lb/>
?Comprehensive finals.<lb/>
?Complex essay questions on comprehensive<lb/>
finals on material never covered in class.<lb/>
?Last, but the worst ? Saturday morning exams.<lb/>
The victims of this terrible practice are so sleepy<lb/>
and hungover that they don't know what has been<lb/>
done to them until their vacations are ruined by<lb/>
the arrival of their report cards.<lb/>
I do want to say that most faculty members do<lb/>
not cheat on our exams. Just as students who<lb/>
study properly don't need to cheat, the professors<lb/>
Usually make their courses hard enough to render<lb/>
the above-mentioned dishonest techniques un-<lb/>
necessary.<lb/>
I hope everyone's exams turn out as un-<lb/>
traumatic as possible. I have to go buy some ex-<lb/>
otic coffees for my own all-night coffee-tasting<lb/>
seminar, and see what's on the late shows on TV<lb/>
next week.<lb/>
12. Explain vajIov Tvarel'ne is<lb/>
d great poeno.<lb/>
 THOUGHT<lb/>
IT lvj,4s<lb/>
' J<lb/>
w<lb/>
y<lb/>
By WAYNKHOWE<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
Men have been gap-<lb/>
ing at breasty women in<lb/>
Ci-strings for years, and<lb/>
women have been<lb/>
Hocking wide-eyed to<lb/>
male exotic dance<lb/>
shows for several mon-<lb/>
ths, but the owner of<lb/>
Daniel's, an ultra-chic<lb/>
disco in New Haven,<lb/>
Conn has added<lb/>
mother provocative<lb/>
m ist.<lb/>
lor two hours or<lb/>
more, near-naked men<lb/>
perform for an ex-<lb/>
clusively female au-<lb/>
dience. Then, when the<lb/>
all-male revue is over,<lb/>
owner Danny Kearns<lb/>
opens the door to his<lb/>
male customers.<lb/>
When the swarm<lb/>
from the outside meets<lb/>
the swell on the inside,<lb/>
ihey mix faster than<lb/>
lka-Selt.er in water.<lb/>
Prior to the men's<lb/>
entrance one recent<lb/>
evening, there were an<lb/>
estimated 250 women<lb/>
stacked six deep around<lb/>
the dance floor, wat-<lb/>
ching Tony the "Italian<lb/>
Stallion" bump and<lb/>
twirl in his bulging<lb/>
G-string. Outside, a<lb/>
line of male customers<lb/>
waited. The show was<lb/>
running long, but no<lb/>
one left. They all seem-<lb/>
ed to want a peek at the<lb/>
fantasy land inside.<lb/>
The women came to<lb/>
Daniel's first "Ladies<lb/>
Night" in all shapes<lb/>
and sizes. Occasionally<lb/>
their applause drowned<lb/>
out the music.<lb/>
"We've come a long<lb/>
way said Delia, of<lb/>
Shelton, Conn<lb/>
through her round-<lb/>
rimmed secretary<lb/>
glasses. She was stan-<lb/>
ding on top of a bar<lb/>
stool to get a better<lb/>
view. "I didn't think<lb/>
the men would come. I<lb/>
didn't think they would<lb/>
accept that, all the<lb/>
women looking at other<lb/>
men's bodies<lb/>
Beverly is 22 and<lb/>
engaged. Her fiance<lb/>
didn't know she was<lb/>
here. Before the wed-<lb/>
ding, she will hold her<lb/>
own stag, and -he said<lb/>
she hopes to invite all<lb/>
three of the male per-<lb/>
formers at Daniel's.<lb/>
She said the show ex-<lb/>
cited her.<lb/>
"I couldn't give<lb/>
them a dollar. I only<lb/>
had four quartrs and<lb/>
there is no place to put<lb/>
them. You get to kiss<lb/>
him if you have a<lb/>
dollar Beverly said.<lb/>
"Next time I'd like to<lb/>
bring my mother<lb/>
There was louder ap-<lb/>
plause from the dance<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
Grant, the bartender<lb/>
farthest from the door,<lb/>
said that the crowds<lb/>
have been large, and he<lb/>
expects them to get<lb/>
larger each week.<lb/>
At the door, Robert<lb/>
Arbaszenski is the one<lb/>
to know. He enforces<lb/>
the dress code, which is<lb/>
left laigely to his inter-<lb/>
pretation, as at New<lb/>
York's Studio 54.<lb/>
"We look for clean,<lb/>
nice people, no<lb/>
punks explained Ar-<lb/>
baszenski, who is 19.<lb/>
"The underage, the im-<lb/>
properly dressed, peo-<lb/>
ple with the wrong at-<lb/>
titude don't get in<lb/>
The line of men grew<lb/>
impatient, and surged<lb/>
against the door. Ar-<lb/>
baszenski gave a two-<lb/>
minute warning. When<lb/>
the show was over, he<lb/>
would allow them in, a<lb/>
few at a time.<lb/>
Back at the bar, Mar-<lb/>
tha said she was turned<lb/>
on by the entire idea.<lb/>
Her daughter was home<lb/>
with a baby sitter. "It's<lb/>
my first time. You<lb/>
would have to be ab-<lb/>
normal not to get turn-<lb/>
ed on (by the dancers),<lb/>
especially when you<lb/>
come from an inky-<lb/>
dinky town like<lb/>
Cheshire (Conn.)<lb/>
Martha said.<lb/>
Dave was one of the<lb/>
first male customers to<lb/>
get in. For a moment he<lb/>
leaned against the bar,<lb/>
appearing slightly over-<lb/>
whelmed. "I came<lb/>
down to see the reac-<lb/>
tion he said.<lb/>
Danny Kearns, the<lb/>
club's owner, is 31 and<lb/>
single. He said he was<lb/>
proud of his<lb/>
"product To<lb/>
eliminate over-<lb/>
crowding, he plans to<lb/>
open an hour earlier<lb/>
and schedule two<lb/>
shows.<lb/>
'War Without<lb/>
Winners' Shown<lb/>
At Mendenhall<lb/>
MiKe Cross, the musical enigma, will appear at The Carolina Opr House<lb/>
tomorrow night. Tickets are $5 and are available at CON and Apple<lb/>
Records.<lb/>
Theatre Of Gesture<lb/>
Plays A t ECU<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Theatre of Gesture, a<lb/>
newly formed theatre<lb/>
group composed of<lb/>
both deaf and hearing<lb/>
actors, will bring its<lb/>
newest production to<lb/>
the campus of East<lb/>
Carolina University on<lb/>
April 23. The play will<lb/>
be NCTG's adaptation<lb/>
of the Japanese Noh<lb/>
drama entitled "The<lb/>
Monstrous Spider<lb/>
The performance will<lb/>
be shown on Wednes-<lb/>
day, April 23 at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, Room<lb/>
244. The performance<lb/>
will be free to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Along with the<lb/>
"Monstrous Spider<lb/>
NCTG will present a<lb/>
short play called "The<lb/>
Maids" and show some<lb/>
scenes from a work in<lb/>
progress to<lb/>
demonstrate some of<lb/>
their production and<lb/>
acting techniques.<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Theatre of Gesture was<lb/>
established as a non-<lb/>
profit corporation to<lb/>
promote deaf<lb/>
awareness through the<lb/>
dramatic arts. The<lb/>
group is also exploring<lb/>
the possibilities of a<lb/>
nonverbal theatre.<lb/>
"The Monstrous<lb/>
Spider" represents<lb/>
some of their research<lb/>
into non-verbal theatre<lb/>
? the play is perform-<lb/>
ed without any spoken<lb/>
or signed language.<lb/>
Michael I arson,<lb/>
creator and director of<lb/>
NCTG, is emphasizing<lb/>
movement, pan-<lb/>
tomime, gesture, and<lb/>
imaginative staging<lb/>
techniques in the pro-<lb/>
duction.<lb/>
"The Monstrous<lb/>
Spider" is based upon<lb/>
an old Japanese legend<lb/>
which tells of a race of<lb/>
spider-people who<lb/>
return to the surface of<lb/>
the earth to reclaim the<lb/>
land. The Queen of the<lb/>
spider-people uses her<lb/>
magical powers to<lb/>
transform herself into a<lb/>
beautiful Japanese<lb/>
maiden in order to get<lb/>
close enough to the<lb/>
Emperor to kill him<lb/>
with her venomous<lb/>
sting. Because of the<lb/>
fantasy and imagina-<lb/>
tion involved in the<lb/>
show, it is suitable for<lb/>
all ages.<lb/>
NCTG's Acting<lb/>
Company consists o<lb/>
three deaf performers.<lb/>
Donna McCord, who<lb/>
portrays the Monstrous<lb/>
Spider; Richard<lb/>
Glover, who plays the<lb/>
Emperor; Larry<lb/>
Smolik, who plays the<lb/>
old samaurai warrior.<lb/>
Elaine Montgomery,<lb/>
the interpreteractress<lb/>
portrays the Stage<lb/>
Hand in the produc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
NCTG is currently<lb/>
an Artist-in-Residence<lb/>
at North Carolina State<lb/>
University's Thompson<lb/>
Theatre for the Spring<lb/>
Semester. Thompson<lb/>
Theatre and NCTG are<lb/>
presently seeking funds<lb/>
to continue the residen-<lb/>
cy in the fall.<lb/>
The Spring Residen-<lb/>
cy was funded by<lb/>
grants and contribu-<lb/>
tions from the Z. Smith<lb/>
Reynolds Foundation,<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
Ar.ts Council, the<lb/>
Governor's Advocacy<lb/>
Council for Persons<lb/>
with Disabilities, North<lb/>
Carolina State Univer-<lb/>
An Evening<lb/>
with<lb/>
MIKE CROSS<lb/>
April 23rd<lb/>
Carolina Opry House<lb/>
758-5570<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
?MMM0M Miw?, in C DCili GrMovtii NamtCaro4in?<lb/>
nann<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT!<lb/>
Monday - Thursday<lb/>
Crab Cakes$2.95<lb/>
Trout$2.95<lb/>
Flounder$3.25<lb/>
CLIFF'S SUPER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CRAB CAKE SPECIAL<lb/>
2 Golden Fried Crab Cakes<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw, and<lb/>
Hush Puppies. $.99.<lb/>
sity, the Winston-<lb/>
Salem Foundation,<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome<lb/>
Co and IT&amp;T Cor-<lb/>
poration.<lb/>
Everyone is welcome<lb/>
to attend this unique<lb/>
style of theatre produc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
For many serious<lb/>
thinkers the issue ot the<lb/>
nuclear arms race has<lb/>
been difficult to com-<lb/>
prehend. It so often is<lb/>
linked with such other<lb/>
issues as nuclear power,<lb/>
pacifism and dratt<lb/>
registration that anv<lb/>
sort of moral analysis<lb/>
of this single issue is<lb/>
unclear at best.<lb/>
What is deterrence?<lb/>
What tvpe of defense is<lb/>
adequate' Are our<lb/>
nuclear stockpiles real-<lb/>
Is in danger? rhese are<lb/>
the big questions that<lb/>
demand our attention<lb/>
vet so often get glossed<lb/>
over.<lb/>
Tonight at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall a movie<lb/>
will be shown entitled<lb/>
II ur H ithoui II inners.<lb/>
It is put out bv the<lb/>
Center tor Defense In-<lb/>
formation. The man<lb/>
behind this organiza-<lb/>
tion and the film is<lb/>
Rear Admiral (retired)<lb/>
Gene I a Rocque. He is<lb/>
one person who seeks<lb/>
to discern some sort o!<lb/>
reasonable analysis in<lb/>
the contusing facts and<lb/>
figures ol military<lb/>
language.<lb/>
B<lb/>
Mr. la Rocque<lb/>
military man who sees .1<lb/>
need for an ad<lb/>
defense, but he<lb/>
critical thinker<lb/>
dares to wrondei<lb/>
the whole new arraj<lb/>
military techi<lb/>
now being offered<lb/>
Pentagon (l<lb/>
system, I r k:<lb/>
marine, and the<lb/>
bomber) W ill<lb/>
$100 billion m<lb/>
military pouci<lb/>
am safer?<lb/>
I his is flu<lb/>
question ?e<lb/>
ask. it ?c<lb/>
responsible<lb/>
nrovidci<lb/>
II ithtmi H ?<lb/>
IO ask sut<lb/>
questions m<lb/>
responsible <lb/>
expenditure- 1 I<lb/>
is directed r<lb/>
Wexlet H '<lb/>
the !? I ?<lb/>
n ho ?<lb/>
Virginia 1 '?<lb/>
?<lb/>
includes a<lb/>
p e r t v t r o: ?<lb/>
physicists<lb/>
eencrat <lb/>
negotiators<lb/>
To get the most money for<lb/>
selling your books,check<lb/>
with the Customer Service<lb/>
desk at the Student Supply<lb/>
Store. We now have a com<lb/>
plete list of books that will<lb/>
be required for the Summer<lb/>
and Fall terms.<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
D.A. Kelly's Circus Premiere<lb/>
MON. Buy a 'Cheeno' skirt and get an oxford<lb/>
shirt at 20 off<lb/>
TUES. All swimsuits, rompers, &amp; shorts 15<lb/>
off.<lb/>
WED. All pants 10 off.<lb/>
THURS. Buy a golf shirt and get a pa.r of<lb/>
regular priced 'Cheeno' pants at 15 off<lb/>
FRI. Buy a pair of shorts and get a T Shirt 2<lb/>
price.<lb/>
SAT. All regular priced Spring Mdse. 10 off.<lb/>
Special Events<lb/>
AH customers who purchase $10.00 or more<lb/>
will recieve a chance to "fich" j<lb/>
up to 30 off. 'or a d.scount<lb/>
A Clown will be in the store Sat from 2 4 to<lb/>
entertain Kids with free ballon, andTuckers<lb/>
bS5?2 tiCuetS t0 ?? Beany Cole<lb/>
Bros. Grcus. No purchase necessary.<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
MonSat. April 21-26<lb/>
Carolina East Mall Ony<lb/>
7568242<lb/>
'0-9 Daily<lb/>
1 ????? i<lb/>
qf 0 I <lb/>
?? ?. -p- .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Op-Ed<lb/>
Other Opinion<lb/>
APRIL 22, 1980<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Worst Case' Shouldn 't Be Basis For Deft<lb/>
B W.H.FF.RRN<lb/>
a orst case" analysis is a widely<lb/>
echnique for deciding between<lb/>
vo opposed forms of action. Ex-<lb/>
 traveler hastening to an<lb/>
tanl business meeting comes<lb/>
a shak bridge over a torrential<lb/>
1 here is a solid bridge miles<lb/>
It he chooses to drive to the<lb/>
bridge, he may arrive perfectly<lb/>
. Mt. he may be late, he may get<lb/>
he mav be so late that he misses<lb/>
appointment altogether and<lb/>
s business. This last possibili-<lb/>
worst case that can be made<lb/>
oosing the safe bridge. If he<lb/>
?ies the shakv bridge, he also<lb/>
?s certain possibilities. He may<lb/>
cross safely, he may stall ir the<lb/>
He of the bridge, his car may<lb/>
ff the bridge, the bridge may<lb/>
k and hurl him into the river<lb/>
re he loses his life. This last is<lb/>
torsi case that can be made for<lb/>
?sing ttic shaky bridge. The in-<lb/>
dent traveler w.ll weigh both<lb/>
possibilities and decide on the<lb/>
of 'heir comparative threats to<lb/>
e problem is the uniqueness of<lb/>
situation. We have no tested<lb/>
jides to policy or action. We are.<lb/>
us, prospective agents o col-<lb/>
ve extermination and collective<lb/>
cide. lodav we can kill other na-<lb/>
s, cultures, civilizations. We<lb/>
e indeed the capability o an-<lb/>
iting the world. So have the<lb/>
riis. number of other na-<lb/>
ns could make a good try at it.<lb/>
History cannot help us; there has<lb/>
,er been such a possibility before.<lb/>
1 his accounts for our inability to<lb/>
nk clearly about it. and for our<lb/>
lingness to confront ourselves as<lb/>
ral beings with duties to our<lb/>
?w-beings and to posterity.<lb/>
1 he main issues arc not how<lb/>
,v bombs, bombers, tanks and<lb/>
ops 1 he arc moral issues. By<lb/>
at right will this or any subse-<lb/>
? generation murder millions ot<lb/>
? ? ; ings, wipe our civilizations<lb/>
built up over tens of centuries, and<lb/>
poison the world' The matter seems<lb/>
? satanic devising. For we are<lb/>
skidding unluckily into<lb/>
lastrophe but are being tempted<lb/>
calamity by our own<lb/>
hnological virtuosity. And it is<lb/>
made to appear that we have no<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
The argument for the arms race is<lb/>
the presence of an enemy awaiting<lb/>
the opportunity to subjugate its op-<lb/>
ponent. Russia believes this is the<lb/>
aim of the U.S. We believe that it is<lb/>
Russia's aim.<lb/>
"Worst case" analysis furnishes a<lb/>
stark definition of the choices<lb/>
before us. Worst cases occur at the<lb/>
far ends of the military-political<lb/>
spectrum.<lb/>
Radical disarmers occupy one end<lb/>
of the spectrum. They are a con-<lb/>
siderable group in the West though<lb/>
far from a majority. They are not in<lb/>
favor of arms control but of disar-<lb/>
mament, with the United States<lb/>
leading the way. Some want disar-<lb/>
mament done f;?si. others in phases.<lb/>
To the many moral reasons<lb/>
clustered under the question, BY<lb/>
WHAT RIGHT, they add practical<lb/>
considerations. They assert that<lb/>
growing militarization of the<lb/>
economy is chiefly responsible for<lb/>
inflation, that the arms race has<lb/>
produced pernicious divisions<lb/>
among Americans, that the prospect<lb/>
of atomic war haunts generations of<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Radical disarmers also point to<lb/>
the steady progress from atomic to<lb/>
hydrogen bombs, to battlefield<lb/>
nuclear weapons, to cruise missiles,<lb/>
to laser beams to scour the heavens,<lb/>
and thereafter to the superstroke<lb/>
that will shatter the earth. This is the<lb/>
Doomsday Machine popularized by<lb/>
Herman Kahn 19 years ago.<lb/>
and helpless against them. They<lb/>
would have nothing to gain. One the<lb/>
contrary they would have a mighty<lb/>
industrial nation at their feet, one<lb/>
rich in resources, technology, skills,<lb/>
capital. This is an utterly hateful<lb/>
prospect but it is one that radical<lb/>
disarmers must accept as a most<lb/>
likely outcome of their policies. This<lb/>
is one pole of the "worst case"<lb/>
argument.<lb/>
The vast majority of Americans<lb/>
are not, of course, radical<lb/>
disarmers. It is a lamentable pro-<lb/>
bability that most Americans are at<lb/>
the other end of this argument: that<lb/>
they see their security and welfare<lb/>
bound up with the arms race. So<lb/>
most Americans also must take<lb/>
responsibility for the worst results<lb/>
of the military policies that they ad<lb/>
vocate and pay for.<lb/>
The "worst case" here is all-out<lb/>
nuclear exchange between this coun-<lb/>
try and Russia. This supposes a<lb/>
storm of nuclear weapons of every<lb/>
dimension from submarines, silos,<lb/>
and aircraft, the Russians on<lb/>
American cities, industries and<lb/>
military installations, our on theirs.<lb/>
The military majority must accept<lb/>
that there is no defense against such<lb/>
attacks.<lb/>
As long ago as 1968 Secretary of<lb/>
The "worst case" that advocates<lb/>
of radical disarmament must accept<lb/>
is that following their advice would<lb/>
result in the domination of this<lb/>
country by the Soviets. They must<lb/>
accept that the United States would<lb/>
be overrun, that American institu-<lb/>
tions would be transformed into the<lb/>
service of Communist aims, that the<lb/>
Soviets would do their best to<lb/>
remove the rights and comforts to<lb/>
which Americans are accustomed.<lb/>
Radical disarmers must stipulate<lb/>
their acceptance of every<lb/>
disagreeable result that might ensue<lb/>
from a takeover of the nation by<lb/>
Russia.<lb/>
No one seriously supposes that<lb/>
the Communists would bomb this<lb/>
country if we appeared disarmed<lb/>
Defense McNamara put into the<lb/>
record an estimate of the conse-<lb/>
quences of a limited version of<lb/>
nuclear war. He said that an attack<lb/>
by 20 of our nuclear-armed sub-<lb/>
marines alone would kill 74 million<lb/>
people and destroy 76 percent of<lb/>
Russian industry.<lb/>
These unimaginable figures do<lb/>
not begin to meet the "worst case"<lb/>
test, since they deal solely with sub-<lb/>
marine power. They are 12 years<lb/>
old, and in that period there have<lb/>
been numerous refinements, so-<lb/>
called, in these exotic arms, both in<lb/>
their effectiveness and in the preci-<lb/>
sion of delivery.<lb/>
Many years ago Lewis Mumford<lb/>
foresaw the deadly trap that nuclear<lb/>
weaponry was laying. Our leaders,<lb/>
he said, are mad, and "the fatal<lb/>
symptom of their madness is this:<lb/>
they have been carrying on a series<lb/>
of acts which may lead eventually to<lb/>
the destruction of mankind, under<lb/>
the solemn conviction that they are<lb/>
normal, responsible people, living<lb/>
sane lives, and working for<lb/>
reasonable ends<lb/>
There is no happy ending to a<lb/>
worst case analysis of the ther-<lb/>
monuclear confrontation. But it at<lb/>
least permits us to see that the real<lb/>
enemy is not Russia. It is war. at<lb/>
least permits us to see that our<lb/>
choice is literally between the life W.H. Ferry is a writer and con-<lb/>
and death of civilizations. If sultant to foundations and non-<lb/>
Americans want life they must turn profit organizations. For 15 years he<lb/>
away from arms and violence. They was vice-president of the Center for<lb/>
must renounce nuclear war. There is the Study of Democratic Instil li-<lb/>
no other choice. lions.<lb/>
Why<lb/>
Worry?<lb/>
Get Summer<lb/>
Work Today<lb/>
 travel and good profits interest you,<lb/>
12 30 3 30 6 30<lb/>
nterviews Tues &amp; Wed. Brewster 204 D<lb/>
Those selected can make<lb/>
$249<lb/>
a week<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
03.59<lb/>
Mon. -Fri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
Mon. Tues. 6:00 8:00<lb/>
758-6266 Evening buffet S2.79<lb/>
Hwy 264 bypass Greenville , N. C.<lb/>
ENDOF SCHOOL PARTY at<lb/>
(EbapfrrX<lb/>
With<lb/>
JANICE<lb/>
Monday April 28th, 1980 Showtime 9:30 pm<lb/>
to 1:30 am doors will open at 9:00<lb/>
Advance tickets $5 and are available at H.L. Hodaes<lb/>
during the day and during Business hours at<lb/>
Chapter x.<lb/>
(limited number of advanced tickets)<lb/>
Del Monte Cream Golden Corn, Whole Golden Corn,<lb/>
Cut Green Beans, French Beans or Garden Peas<lb/>
SuprrriMrkrt, In<lb/>
3 cans 38C<lb/>
 A "<lb/>
Grade " A'<lb/>
Whole Fryers<lb/>
Edgemont Whole or Half<lb/>
Tenderized Hams<lb/>
John Morrell<lb/>
Hot Dogs<lb/>
Q<lb/>
,(- a<lb/>
e johw<lb/>
MORRELL<lb/>
HOT<lb/>
DOGS<lb/>
41 C per lb.<lb/>
88C per lb.<lb/>
89C per 12oz. pkg<lb/>
<lb/>
mini 1i idHll n ?? ??'<lb/>
38<lb/>
?i. i<lb/>
Grade "A" Pitt County<lb/>
Medium Brown Eggs 2 dozen7I .UU<lb/>
None sold to dealers at this price.<lb/>
Golden Bananas 4 lbs. for $1.00<lb/>
Fresh Green Cabbage 10C per lb.<lb/>
Quantity rights reserved. None sold to dealers at this<lb/>
price. <lb/>
Clip This Coupon<lb/>
<lb/>
1m<lb/>
A Super Buy<lb/>
Del Monte Giant size<lb/>
Catsup<lb/>
78C per 38oz. bottle<lb/>
TOMATO<lb/>
CATSUP<lb/>
V1<lb/>
Coca Cola 1 Ooz. carton of 6 - 68C with this coupon and<lb/>
$7.50 food order. (Excludes Specials) Without coupon<lb/>
98C. Limit one coupon per customer. Expires 4-26-80.<lb/>
Sealtest 100 pure Fresh<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
98C fc Gallon Carton<lb/>
White Cloud<lb/>
Toilet Tissue 4 roll pkg. bV<lb/>
Limit 2 with $7.50.food order.<lb/>
Bold Trial Size<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
3oz. pkg. 15 for1.00<lb/>
! Overton's<lb/>
! ECU Pirate Coupon<lb/>
! 5 Discount on all food<lb/>
I orders $20.00 or more (excluding<lb/>
I keg beer). Present this coupon<lb/>
 and show ECU ID card to<lb/>
 cashier. m??<lb/>
I Coupon effective ID n?<lb/>
through m29.980 Amt. Purchase.<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
APRIL 22. 1980<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Toto Plays ECU<lb/>
Guitarist Steve Lukather<lb/>
Headache No. 79:<lb/>
The Helluva Time<lb/>
By DIANE HENDERSON<lb/>
Copy Lditor<lb/>
Minges Coliseum was only slight-<lb/>
ly mote than half filled last Thurs-<lb/>
day night when Toto took the stage,<lb/>
but those who came were entertain-<lb/>
ed with beautiful .sights and, most<lb/>
importantly, sounds. The 2000 plus<lb/>
that missed the superb show could<lb/>
never make up for the loss simply by<lb/>
listening to Toto's albums. You had<lb/>
to be there.<lb/>
After a brief and uninspiring<lb/>
opening act, the audience became<lb/>
anxious. Applause spread through<lb/>
the crowd when roadies strolled<lb/>
across the stage. The 45 minutes bet-<lb/>
ween shows passed laboriously, but<lb/>
finally the lights went down, and a<lb/>
vision of the hydra flashed on the<lb/>
sheet behind the stage. Clouds of<lb/>
fog rolled slowly out into the au-<lb/>
dience.<lb/>
On the sheet, an image of green<lb/>
that looked somewhat like a<lb/>
distorted headlight was focused on<lb/>
the right, and a purple neon ladder<lb/>
was set against a blue-green bricked<lb/>
wall. It was the inside cover of<lb/>
Hydra larger than life. Absent only<lb/>
was the figure of the "soldier of for-<lb/>
tune sword in hand, in search of<lb/>
the dragon.<lb/>
Combined with visual enticement,<lb/>
the majestic strains of "Hydra"<lb/>
captured the audience in hushed ex-<lb/>
citement ? until the moment the<lb/>
stage lights flashed on and the first<lb/>
verse began.<lb/>
From the very start, it was ob-<lb/>
vious Toto loved performing to an<lb/>
audience. The various members<lb/>
smiled, cajoled, pranced, danced<lb/>
and generally overwhelmed us with<lb/>
charm. A love for every note of<lb/>
music came through with their<lb/>
precision.<lb/>
"Hydra" led into "St. George<lb/>
and the Dragon" without a pause.<lb/>
David Paich, keyboardist, lent his<lb/>
strong vocals to the lead in both<lb/>
songs.<lb/>
"Mama also from Hydra,<lb/>
seemed to drag a bit. The repetitious<lb/>
beat and chording which worked so<lb/>
well in "St. George" stifled the<lb/>
slower song, but the audience atten-<lb/>
tion was quickly regained by new<lb/>
visuals and the following succession<lb/>
of songs from the first Toto album.<lb/>
An animated creation of the first<lb/>
Toto cover astonished the crowd. A<lb/>
large circle appeared in the center of<lb/>
the screen. From the top, a shining<lb/>
sword pierced the circle. Then from<lb/>
the image of the sword, a "T" was<lb/>
formed and an "O" from the circle<lb/>
Lead Singer Bobby Kimball<lb/>
until "TOTO" stood above the<lb/>
emblem. On either side, a golden<lb/>
ribbon flowed toward the center.<lb/>
finally encircling the emblem like a<lb/>
banner. The audience went wild<lb/>
with whistles and cheers<lb/>
Images behind the band changed<lb/>
throughout the concert, from dif-<lb/>
ferent styles of numerals during<lb/>
"99" to the face of a beautiful<lb/>
young woman during Angela<lb/>
one of Toto's most emotional<lb/>
melodies.<lb/>
The music went far beyond the<lb/>
visual trappings, however. Each<lb/>
song was executed with finesse and<lb/>
precision. David Paich was especial-<lb/>
ly notable for his beautiful piano<lb/>
work on songs like the instrumental<lb/>
"Child's Anthem<lb/>
Steve Lukather. lead guitarist, ad-<lb/>
ded gentle vocals to his fine guitar<lb/>
work. Lukather sang lead on<lb/>
"Angela Georgy Porcv" and<lb/>
the groups biggest hit vei. 'w " Hi<lb/>
softer stle wax perfect ! i<lb/>
songs and a nice offset to the<lb/>
more blues-sule vocals<lb/>
singer Bobby kimball<lb/>
At no point did the g<lb/>
vocals, background or lead<lb/>
even brought another singe<lb/>
road to insure this quah<lb/>
The rhvthm section wa- <lb/>
ding. Jeff Porcaro on drun<lb/>
Porcaro and David Pa<lb/>
keyboards and David Hl<lb/>
ing bass, made up the ba ?<lb/>
the band. The heart of alma<lb/>
song wav tronglv depcrv-r<lb/>
these members. The keyboai<lb/>
rangements set the mood I<lb/>
concert, bringing beauty an<lb/>
to such tunev as "Git! Goodb<lb/>
"Angela" and "Georgv p<lb/>
and evoking an air M mystei<lb/>
See TOTO Page 7. C ol. 1<lb/>
By ROBERT ALBANESE<lb/>
Assistant Features Kditor<lb/>
The flowers and verdure are<lb/>
almost enough to make me forget<lb/>
a single experience I had during<lb/>
the winter, but before my<lb/>
memory of it passes into obli-<lb/>
vion, I'd like to share it with our<lb/>
readers.<lb/>
"This is going to be a big<lb/>
one rasped my friend Z.<lb/>
"Man, we bought a keg, and we<lb/>
got all kinds of interesting frolick<lb/>
lined up. Yeeeeeooooo he<lb/>
cried out the window of the<lb/>
Chevy van, making me spill my<lb/>
Coke.<lb/>
It was colder outside than<lb/>
usual. (I don't really like having<lb/>
to do this paragraph, but all you<lb/>
readers are probably going to<lb/>
want what they call "the set-<lb/>
ting) There was the hint of<lb/>
coming snow in the air, and all<lb/>
was grey. The month was<lb/>
December, and though exams<lb/>
were nigh, Pirates from all cor-<lb/>
ners of campus were thinking of<lb/>
noise and strong drink and going<lb/>
home for Chrisimas. (Will that<lb/>
do? If you have any questions,<lb/>
write me care of this newspaper.)<lb/>
Z. was listening i ud music<lb/>
on the radio of the van, rocking<lb/>
and rolling his body and head<lb/>
with the music. We were weaving<lb/>
on the road. "Man, I need this. I<lb/>
been busting my hind parts with<lb/>
all that school trash, and now I'm<lb/>
ready to cut loose!<lb/>
Yceeooooooo Another Coke<lb/>
bites the dust.<lb/>
I found myself at Zs house<lb/>
around 8:30 that cold Friday<lb/>
night. I say "house I mean<lb/>
dwelling. It was a den of iniquity,<lb/>
where no righteous man wouid<lb/>
have the unmitigated temerity to<lb/>
go. Naturally, everyone wa, hav-<lb/>
ing a good time.<lb/>
I was toot-sweet equipped with<lb/>
a beer and a joint, the latter of<lb/>
which I immediately snuffed out<lb/>
on the carpet so as not to under-<lb/>
mine my moral character.<lb/>
Around me were winsome lassies<lb/>
of all descriptions: blondes,<lb/>
brunettes, red-heads and dance<lb/>
majors with their sinewy legs.<lb/>
Tall business majors with fuzzy<lb/>
chins lined the walls, talking<lb/>
about investment procedure and<lb/>
conjuring images of broken pen-<lb/>
cil points and drinking their cof-<lb/>
fee black. They were thinking<lb/>
about the blondes, brunettes,<lb/>
red-heads and sinewy legs.<lb/>
The music was so loud it was<lb/>
breaking window panes down the<lb/>
street. I went up to a particularly<lb/>
winsome fraulein and said, "Hi.<lb/>
Did you come here alone?"<lb/>
"What?"<lb/>
"Did you come here alone?"<lb/>
"What?<lb/>
"I SAID, DID YOU COME<lb/>
HERE ALONE?"<lb/>
"WHAT?"<lb/>
"Your father's a pimp I<lb/>
See HEADACHE Page 7, Col. 1<lb/>
New Group Seeks Changes<lb/>
By DEBBIE HOTALING<lb/>
Features Fdiior<lb/>
How old are most freshmen and<lb/>
sophomores ? 18, 19, mavbe 20?<lb/>
Upon high school graduation, many<lb/>
young people decide to enroll in a<lb/>
four-year college where thev will re-<lb/>
main until the ripe old average age<lb/>
of 22. B <lb/>
What about those in the Armed<lb/>
Forces who have served their coun-<lb/>
try and wish to get their education<lb/>
after being out of high school for<lb/>
three or four years? there are also<lb/>
those who had to work for a few<lb/>
years because they could not afford<lb/>
a college education immediately.<lb/>
East Carolina University has<lb/>
many students who are encounter-<lb/>
ing problems as a result of the age<lb/>
differences.<lb/>
Returning Older Students Seeking<lb/>
Education (ROSSE) is a new<lb/>
organization attempting to help find<lb/>
solutions to the problems these non-<lb/>
traditional students are facing<lb/>
Membership will not only be open<lb/>
to retired service personnel, but also<lb/>
to handicapped students and late<lb/>
returning high school graduates.<lb/>
"We represent at least 1,000<lb/>
students on this campus explained<lb/>
Cid Ross, an ex-serviceman. "We're<lb/>
on a limited income. Our mamas<lb/>
and daddies don't pay our bills so<lb/>
we can't move off campus, but the<lb/>
noise is terrible in the dorms, and we<lb/>
can't study like we want to. Let's<lb/>
fact it, older students are a little<lb/>
more responsible<lb/>
"AH activities are geared to<lb/>
younger students Roy Pate, a<lb/>
wheelchair student living in Slay<lb/>
commented. "Whether it's with<lb/>
alcohol or without alcohol, we<lb/>
would like to be able to have a de-<lb/>
cent social gathering<lb/>
Not only do these older students<lb/>
want better social functions and liv-<lb/>
ing arrangements, they would like<lb/>
the opportunity to concentrate on<lb/>
their studies.<lb/>
"Sometimes, the only time I<lb/>
could sleep was between 1 and 4 in<lb/>
the morning Terry Wall, another<lb/>
handicapped student in Slay dorm,<lb/>
complained. "How can you study<lb/>
for an exam when guys on the hall<lb/>
are having shaving cream fights,<lb/>
water balloon fights and everything<lb/>
else? And when you ask them to be<lb/>
quiet, they tell you to go to the<lb/>
library<lb/>
The possibility of setting aside<lb/>
one special dorm for these students<lb/>
has been discussed. "Maybe setting<lb/>
aside one dorm for older students or<lb/>
 lower housing costs in off-<lb/>
campus apartments set aside<lb/>
specifically for ECU older students<lb/>
would be the answer Ross of-<lb/>
fered.<lb/>
At the present time, no organiza-<lb/>
tion exists on the ECU campus to<lb/>
assist these students with their<lb/>
various problems. ROSSE is the<lb/>
first attempt at an organizational<lb/>
pull, and all students interested are<lb/>
invited to attend the final spring<lb/>
meeting on Friday, April 25 at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Room 248, Mendenhall.<lb/>
ECU Student Roy Pate<lb/>
by LARRY Z C?-E?? VAN<lb/>
April Brings Showers, Exams, Disaster<lb/>
?a ROSSE Member<lb/>
By DAVID NORRIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
April has been a traditional month for disasters The<lb/>
Revolutionary War and the Civil War both began in<lb/>
April - not the same one, luckily. The San Francisco<lb/>
earthquake, and the sinking of the Titanic also occurred<lb/>
ib April. What may for many East Carolina students be<lb/>
?rtSi!T'l?r d,saster' the sPri"g Semester Examinations of<lb/>
1980, begin April 30, continuing a long and honorable<lb/>
tradition of springtime catastrophes.<lb/>
Exam time is a time of furious activity all over the<lb/>
university community. Some art majors turn out what is<lb/>
supposed to be a semester's work in as little as three<lb/>
days, although I work in such a careful and meticulous<lb/>
manner that it takes me a week to do a semester's work<lb/>
Typewriters work overtime as last-minute term papers<lb/>
are hastily thrown together. Happy hours and parties<lb/>
abound, so that students can unwind from all the last-<lb/>
minute panic.<lb/>
Proper study habits can make exam time much easier<lb/>
but it's probably too late for that now. You should have<lb/>
dropped by your classes a little more often. Attending<lb/>
class can give you good notes to study from, as well as<lb/>
tell you when the exam is going to be.<lb/>
Over the years, students have perfected a number of<lb/>
Fatal&amp;ts<lb/>
ways to cope with exams. Some study a few hours each<lb/>
week all semester. Others say this is a waste of time, and<lb/>
do all their studying at once, two days before the exam<lb/>
to make more efficient use of study hours.<lb/>
To further increase efficiency, many students<lb/>
eliminate sleep in the last couple of days before an ex<lb/>
am. If you decide to stay up all night studying, I can of-<lb/>
fer a couple fo tips. One is to get one of those little<lb/>
samplers of different kinds of coffee. This makes drink-<lb/>
ing coffee all night an educational experience in itself<lb/>
No matter how your exam turns out, at least you can be<lb/>
pretty much of a coffee connoisseur after trying fifteen<lb/>
kinds in one night. Another thing to remember is this<lb/>
after staying up all night, there is no such thing as "a lit-<lb/>
tle nap before the test These "little naps" have a way<lb/>
of turning into big naps, lasting until just after the exam<lb/>
is over.<lb/>
There are other methods of study, such as not study-<lb/>
ing. This curious way of getting through exams was<lb/>
originated by the Fatalists, a strange cu!t of students<lb/>
who are convinced that they are predestined to fail by<lb/>
s?m? omnipotent force called a "professor They<lb/>
spend their time in a continuous ycle Qf wild, drunken<lb/>
parties.<lb/>
See APRIL Page S, Col. 1<lb/>
) ?MTAfcn?5? ;  ?v-<lb/>
 6acJSDOg A -oU i<lb/>
<lb/>
MjanwuiMit?W?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0009"/><lb/>
H<lb/>
f' her<lb/>
t i<lb/>
?Wt<lb/>
THE LAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
APRIl 22. Imi<lb/>
?<lb/>
ist Of Cage Signees Numbers Six<lb/>
Carolina's basketball<lb/>
jng has all but come to an<lb/>
i players have been signed.<lb/>
remains is waiting on one or<lb/>
ters to make final decisions.<lb/>
Pirates have thus far inked<lb/>
i Gilchrist, a 6-1 point guard<lb/>
illington; Quan Roseboro, a<lb/>
uid from Fayettville and a<lb/>
transfer; 6-4 shooting guard<lb/>
?ox of Raleigh; 6-5 Willie<lb/>
i o Dunn; 6-7 Morris<lb/>
kes of Pinecrest; and 6-8<lb/>
d-center Jeff Best of<lb/>
ic.<lb/>
Iboro is somewhat different<lb/>
H Ihc other recruits in that he has<lb/>
?H ? h the Pirates since the mid-<lb/>
eoil the past season. Unhappy<lb/>
tth tfu situation at a muddled<lb/>
orida program, the ex-Seventy-<lb/>
First High star joined the Pirates for<lb/>
half a season of practice and will be<lb/>
eligible for action by second<lb/>
semester next year.<lb/>
Gilchrist and Hargroves have<lb/>
received rants and raves from the<lb/>
ECU coaching staff for quite some<lb/>
time. Hargroves is supposedly a<lb/>
super small forward while Gilchrist<lb/>
is looked upon as the point guard in<lb/>
the Pirates' future.<lb/>
McNair is a strong, muscular<lb/>
power forward. He is expected to<lb/>
add some much-needed bulk to the<lb/>
Bucs' inside attack. Fox hails from<lb/>
Sanderson High and is said to have<lb/>
a fine outside shooting touch.<lb/>
Best is the sleeper of the group. A<lb/>
very slim 6-8, Best was overlooked<lb/>
when the 3-A All-East team was<lb/>
selected earlier ? Gilchrist was a<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
first-teayn selection ? but is highly-<lb/>
regarded by ECU coach Dave Odom<lb/>
and his staff. Best is said to have a<lb/>
good outside touch and a good deal<lb/>
of quickness. All he needs to be<lb/>
really something, say the coaches, is<lb/>
a little work with weights.<lb/>
The Pirate staff is still awaiting<lb/>
word from the Goldsboro boys ?<lb/>
6-5 Cecil Exxum and 6-9 Anthony<lb/>
Teachey. Both are in that stage of<lb/>
confusion that many high school<lb/>
stars reach before makine a final<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
Teachey is set to visit Virginia<lb/>
Tech this weekend, another in a<lb/>
long line of schools that he has<lb/>
entertained thoughts of attending.<lb/>
Word has it that Exxum is down<lb/>
to two schools ? North Carolina<lb/>
and ECU. The Tar Heels recently<lb/>
signed two star players, one ot them<lb/>
6-9 super Sam Perkins, to go along<lb/>
with a previous signing of 6-7 All-<lb/>
America Matt Doherty.<lb/>
The Heels have supposedl) had<lb/>
Exxum on somewhat of a "waiting<lb/>
list The word has been that the<lb/>
Heels would otter him a scholarship<lb/>
if 6-5 Alt-American James Banks<lb/>
did not decide to attend the Chapel<lb/>
Hill-based school.<lb/>
Banks is reportedly considering<lb/>
INC. Georgia. Georgia lech and<lb/>
Maryland at this time. Should he<lb/>
opt for the Heels, it is believed that<lb/>
Exxum is signed, sealed and<lb/>
delivered a Pirate.<lb/>
The signing ot Exxum would be a<lb/>
big one as he is one of the better su<lb/>
mg prospects in the state ? the un-<lb/>
questioned leader of state 4-A<lb/>
champ Southern Wayne.<lb/>
The las; Carolina Purple-Gold<lb/>
intrasquad football game is slated<lb/>
for this Saturdav afternoon in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium at 3 p.m.<lb/>
The Pirate grid team held a<lb/>
"draft" last night in preparations<lb/>
for the intrasquad contest, lust.<lb/>
the seniors were divided equally.<lb/>
Next came the draft.<lb/>
Ihc seniors 'hen held a drat'<lb/>
the services ol the remaining<lb/>
plavers. The Purple squad, headed<lb/>
bv offensive coordinatoi W ?<lb/>
Anderson, came awa with I<lb/>
running q u ar terbacV<lb/>
Nelson, fullback Ro Wilev <lb/>
America candid i fback An<lb/>
thonv Collins, Ml- Vmei<lb/>
Wayne Inman .split<lb/>
Davenport, defensive :i  v ?<lb/>
Da is and punter Rodnev t<lb/>
Gold coat<lb/>
dinator Parker . fullbacl<lb/>
I heodore Sutton, ? '<lb/>
Hawkins, del - h <lb/>
Smith andi<lb/>
back Willie Hollev<lb/>
backs Greg Stt d Henry<lb/>
I revathan.<lb/>
fn Ten-Run 8th<lb/>
ECU Stages Rally<lb/>
?jfCH ARIES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
"All tiood thines must come to an<lb/>
;nd<lb/>
Someone said this a long time ago<lb/>
and, though it may not always be<lb/>
true, it was certainly the case for the<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington baseball team<lb/>
and Seahawk pitcher Mike Williams<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
Williams held a strong East<lb/>
Carolina team to one run and three<lb/>
hits through seven innings. Going<lb/>
into the bottom of the eighth he<lb/>
owned a 6-1 lead. Things were go-<lb/>
ing just fine. Then it happened.<lb/>
The long-dormant Pirate bats ex-<lb/>
ploded for ten runs in the eighth,<lb/>
chasing V llliams away, and earning<lb/>
ECU it- 20th win oi the season<lb/>
against only five losses with the 11-6<lb/>
victory<lb/>
ECU coach Hal Baird was<lb/>
evidenth disgusted with his squad<lb/>
for mo si o! the contest, but praised<lb/>
the team following the eighth inning<lb/>
revival<lb/>
"They did it themselves he<lb/>
said. "1 didn't say anything special.<lb/>
They just wanted it and they went<lb/>
out there and got it. I'd have to say<lb/>
that was our best comeback o the<lb/>
year<lb/>
The Pirates were first on the<lb/>
scoreboard when Kelly Robinette<lb/>
reached on an error and later scored<lb/>
on a Raymie Styons double in the<lb/>
first inning.<lb/>
Williams then held the Pirate bats<lb/>
in check until the eighth. Mean-<lb/>
while, the Seahawks built a sizeable<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
Wilmington erupted for four runs<lb/>
in the top of the second. Tom Jones<lb/>
led off with a walk, which was<lb/>
followed by a Clyde Holley single.<lb/>
With one down, John Tallent<lb/>
grounded to third. ECU third<lb/>
baseman Todd Hendley scooped it<lb/>
up and turned in an attempt to tag<lb/>
out Jones, who was headed for<lb/>
third. Hendley missed and was<lb/>
subsequently late on his throw to get<lb/>
Tallent, loading the bases.<lb/>
Seahawk Jim Montague then lin-<lb/>
ed a timely double to left, scoring<lb/>
Jones and Holley. Tallent then<lb/>
scored on a sacrifice. Two singles<lb/>
by Mark Scalf and Tom Phillips<lb/>
scored Montague and gave UNC-W<lb/>
a 4-1 lead.<lb/>
Wilmington added a fifth run in<lb/>
the fifth stanza and scored its final<lb/>
run in the top of the eighth.<lb/>
The Pirate eighth inning massacre<lb/>
began with a Butch Davis walk.<lb/>
Shortstop Kelly Robinette then<lb/>
singled to left. Davis scored<lb/>
thereafter on a Billv Best double to<lb/>
rightfield.<lb/>
The crucial play of the inning<lb/>
then followed. ECU catcher<lb/>
Raymie Styons rocketed a long fly<lb/>
ball to centerfield that was dropped<lb/>
at the fence, allowing Robinette to<lb/>
score.<lb/>
Macon Move then extended his<lb/>
hitting streak to 14 games with a<lb/>
single that scored Best. Walks to<lb/>
designated hitter John Hallow and<lb/>
pinchhitter Bob Sage loaded the<lb/>
bases and forced in Styons.<lb/>
It was then "make-up" time for<lb/>
Hendley as he compensated for the<lb/>
prior fielding mishap with a two-run<lb/>
single, giving the Pirates a 7-6 ad-<lb/>
vantage. The necessary runs for the<lb/>
un may have been in but the<lb/>
onslaught was not over yet.<lb/>
Davis grounded to short and<lb/>
reached first as a wide throw to<lb/>
home plate allowed Hallow to get<lb/>
around the tag and score. Best was<lb/>
then intentionally walked after an<lb/>
infield out. A subsequent wild pitch<lb/>
scored Hendley.<lb/>
A two-run single by Styons, scor-<lb/>
ing Davis and Best, completed the<lb/>
ECU scoring and sealed the doom<lb/>
of the visiting Seahawks.<lb/>
Styons and Hendley were the bat-<lb/>
ting stars for the Pirates as both got<lb/>
two hits.<lb/>
Pirate Baserunner Heads Home<lb/>
Lady Bucs<lb/>
Sweep Four<lb/>
B JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant sports Editor<lb/>
?The Lady Pirates continued on<lb/>
Kir winning trail Monday with a<lb/>
H i r o victories over St.<lb/>
?ugustine's 13-0 and 11-2 at the<lb/>
8K U soft ball field Monday.<lb/>
East Carolina eliminated<lb/>
CAIAW Division II UNC-<lb/>
ilmington Sunday 11-4 and 4-0 in<lb/>
It her weekend softball action at<lb/>
lc I .<lb/>
Third sacker Cindy Meekins<lb/>
cached base on an error in the first<lb/>
fining of the opener and freshman<lb/>
ihti Davis followed with a single.<lb/>
"he pair scampered home on Cyn-<lb/>
hia Shepard's double to deep left.<lb/>
Shepard trotted home on a drive<lb/>
'the fence by junior Kathy Riley<lb/>
which the speedy leftfielder legged<lb/>
tor an inside-the-park home run.<lb/>
Mary, Powell singled and scored on<lb/>
an error by the St. Augustine left-<lb/>
fielder to close out the first inning<lb/>
barrage.<lb/>
Davis, a steady slugger from<lb/>
Iavlorsvilk. lead off the third with<lb/>
a homer to center as the Pirates<lb/>
igain attacked the visitors per-<lb/>
miable defense.<lb/>
Shepard singled and scored when<lb/>
 vonne "Flea" Williams' smash<lb/>
a as booted by the second sacker.<lb/>
Rile) came through with a ground-<lb/>
rule double and crossed home of a<lb/>
fielder's choice by Shirley Brown.<lb/>
Brown was plated by a triple from<lb/>
(nnger Rothermel, and winning pit-<lb/>
cher Judy Ausherman helped the<lb/>
ause with an RBI double and a run<lb/>
on catcher Jan McVeigh's single.<lb/>
The Pirates added a pair of in-<lb/>
surance runs in the fourth to<lb/>
guarantee an abbreviated contest.<lb/>
Shepard singled and Riley followed<lb/>
with her second double of the after-<lb/>
noon. Powell gathered a pair of<lb/>
KBIs with a single to plate Shepard<lb/>
and Riley.<lb/>
Powell, a veteran shortstop from<lb/>
Jacksonville, suffered a slight mus-<lb/>
cle pull late in the contest which<lb/>
forced her to the bench for the re-<lb/>
mainder of the afternoon. Dillon<lb/>
reports that Powell should be<lb/>
available for action when the Pirates<lb/>
next take to the field.<lb/>
Ausherman scattered a pair of<lb/>
hits by St. Augustine's, while the<lb/>
visitors provided four errors which<lb/>
aided the lop-sided victory.<lb/>
Riley notched a perfect three of<lb/>
three on the game with her homer<lb/>
and two doubles, along with three<lb/>
of three for Shepard and Davis who<lb/>
added a pair in three trips to the<lb/>
plate.<lb/>
East Carolina coach Alita Dillon<lb/>
went to her bench in the second con-<lb/>
test of the day, but the results were<lb/>
virtually the same as the Pirates<lb/>
again jumped on the visitors in the<lb/>
first inning.<lb/>
Freshman recruit Terry Andrews<lb/>
drove in Maureen Buck with a single<lb/>
to left as St. Augustine again fell by<lb/>
the wayside in the early going.<lb/>
McVeigh singled and Riley followed<lb/>
with yet another homer to left,<lb/>
worth three RBls.<lb/>
Sophomore Lillion Barnes single<lb/>
followed by another by Brown ac-<lb/>
counted for the other first inning<lb/>
run.<lb/>
Buck scored another run in the se-<lb/>
cond after rapping out a single and<lb/>
McVeigh reached on an error and<lb/>
was driven in by Andrews' single.<lb/>
Jackie Conyers and Brenda<lb/>
Rozier accounted the St. Augustine<lb/>
runs in the second aided by a defen-<lb/>
sive lapse by the Pirate infield on a<lb/>
run-down situation at first.<lb/>
Brown claimed another RBI in<lb/>
the fifth as she belted home Robin<lb/>
faggart on a single up the middle.<lb/>
Fagart again made her mark in<lb/>
the fifth with a homer after An-<lb/>
drews and Riley each belted<lb/>
doubles.<lb/>
Senior Mary Bryan Carlyle claim-<lb/>
ECU Thinclads<lb/>
Take Second<lb/>
Photo by KIP SLOAN<lb/>
Kathy Riley Takes A Cut<lb/>
ed the victory, her 18th in 24<lb/>
outings, while allowing just five St.<lb/>
Augustine safeties.<lb/>
Andrews led the Lady Prates<lb/>
with an unblemished three of three,<lb/>
with Riley, Brown and Faggart each<lb/>
punching a pair of hits in three at-<lb/>
bats. Buck followed with two out ot<lb/>
four.<lb/>
"The teams we played the last few<lb/>
days are not up to the caliber of<lb/>
competition we've had during the<lb/>
year admitted Dillon. "We were<lb/>
able to give everyone game ex-<lb/>
perience, which is valuable because<lb/>
they did not get as much during the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"They know that if they're not<lb/>
hitting they can be replaced by so-<lb/>
meone off the bench Dillon stated<lb/>
in reference to the team's depth.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will carry their<lb/>
25-4 record into the NCAIAW tour-<lb/>
nament as the top seed, having<lb/>
beaten all Division I opponants at<lb/>
least twice.<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPRKK<lb/>
ssislant sports r ditor<lb/>
East Carolina captured second in<lb/>
a tri-meet o' women's track at the<lb/>
University o Georgia Saturday,<lb/>
with the host Lady Bulldogs claim-<lb/>
ing top honors and Berry College<lb/>
finishing in the cellar.<lb/>
The Lady Pirate thinclads posted<lb/>
67 points on the day, with Georgia<lb/>
claiming 153 and Berry 63.<lb/>
East Carolina placed first in a<lb/>
variety of events, but the lack of<lb/>
depth nullified any hopes of a pur-<lb/>
ple and gold victory.<lb/>
"Winning isn't our goal this<lb/>
year said ECU coach Laurie Ar-<lb/>
rants. "We want to have good times<lb/>
in the events we run and we just<lb/>
didn't have very good times Satur-<lb/>
day<lb/>
Arrants noted that conditions<lb/>
were not in East Carolina's favor<lb/>
throughout the day, as the hot and<lb/>
humid Georgia weather proved to<lb/>
be a hinderance for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates. Senior Linda Mason suf-<lb/>
fered heat exhaustion during the<lb/>
3000 meter event and was forced to<lb/>
retire for the remainder of the meet.<lb/>
"We hadn't had any training in<lb/>
the heat at all so far and that really<lb/>
seemed to bother us said Arrants.<lb/>
"Linda came off the track hot and<lb/>
pale and had bad cramps, but just<lb/>
wasn't able to sweat. She told me to-<lb/>
day (Monday) that she still had<lb/>
cramps<lb/>
Freshman standout Eve Brennan<lb/>
captured first place in the 1500m<lb/>
with a time of 4:48, three seconds<lb/>
off her best time as a Pirate. Bren-<lb/>
nan also placed second in the 800<lb/>
meters, an showing which greatly<lb/>
pleased the veteran Arrants.<lb/>
"1 guess if you're looking for a<lb/>
highlight of the day Eve's 800<lb/>
meters was it said Arrants. "To<lb/>
have her come from the 1500m to<lb/>
the quarter-mile and do that well<lb/>
was just great<lb/>
The quarter-mile relay unit of<lb/>
Dawn Henderson, Catherine Suggs,<lb/>
Irdie Williams dnd Lydia Rountrct<lb/>
posted a :59.3 first-place finish.<lb/>
Senior Roz Majors Seeped 17 feet,<lb/>
10 inches to first in the lo a np,<lb/>
but Arrants explain  .<lb/>
competitor surpassed 173<lb/>
Rountree placed second in the<lb/>
100m dash, clocking in ai : 12 6. also<lb/>
oi her best time of the season.<lb/>
The lady Pirates suffered<lb/>
without the services of senior 800m<lb/>
specialist Cookie McPhatter, who<lb/>
was absent to take the National<lb/>
Teachers' Examinations.<lb/>
"We could have scored a few<lb/>
more points if cookie had been<lb/>
there, but they simply beat us<lb/>
nnumbers maligned rrants.<lb/>
"For the conditions. 1 guess uv<lb/>
didn't do to badly, <lb/>
The I ady Pirates enter the North<lb/>
Carolina Association of Inter-<lb/>
collegiate Athletics for Women<lb/>
championships Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day, and Arrants is concentrating<lb/>
on individual titles rather than team<lb/>
glory.<lb/>
"UNC and State are just too<lb/>
strong she says. "There's just no<lb/>
way we can compete with them.<lb/>
They take track very seriously at<lb/>
those schools and recruit heavily.<lb/>
"This year Ro is going to have to<lb/>
have good jumps in order to win.<lb/>
The girl at Carolina is jumping in<lb/>
the high 18-foot range<lb/>
McPhatter is favored to win het<lb/>
event, but even that could be in<lb/>
jeopardy if she is not at her best.<lb/>
Arrants touts the 800m sprint<lb/>
medley group o Williams, Hender-<lb/>
son, Rountree and McPhatter as the<lb/>
favorites in the state meet, but adds<lb/>
that injuries will be a factor for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates to conquer<lb/>
beforehand.<lb/>
"Dawn Henderson has had trou-<lb/>
ble with her legs recently and we've<lb/>
had trouble with flu and virus, but<lb/>
that is to be expected said Ar<lb/>
rants. "It's just caught us at a bad<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"It's going to be tough<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0010"/><lb/>
 ? 1 <lb/>
10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 22, 1980<lb/>
AYCOCK HALL<lb/>
Aycock Men's Residence Hall, located on Col<lb/>
lege Hill, is No.l in Campus Life. It's<lb/>
facilities include a gameroom with pinball,<lb/>
pool, footsball, and a color T.V as well as<lb/>
laundry facilities for your convenience. This<lb/>
gameroom also serves as an equipment<lb/>
checkout area. Through the House Council,<lb/>
the dorm is provided with movies, suppers,<lb/>
guest speakers, and recreation tournaments.<lb/>
Each year Aycock Dorm has been a strong<lb/>
competitor in intramural activities. Other<lb/>
activities for the year include t-shirt sales<lb/>
and socials.<lb/>
BELK HALL<lb/>
Belk Hall is "on top" of College Hill. Belk<lb/>
houses a large portion of East Carolina's<lb/>
athletes including members of the football,<lb/>
basketball, baseball, soccer and track teams.<lb/>
These are not the only residents who par<lb/>
ticipate in athletics, however, Belk Hall<lb/>
always produces competitive intramural<lb/>
teams. Laundry services are provided for<lb/>
students "on the hill" in the basement of<lb/>
Belk along with several recreational items.<lb/>
These elements combined with various other<lb/>
features make Belk Hall a nice place to live.<lb/>
JONES HALL<lb/>
Jones Hall, the Hotel Hollywood of College Hill, is a very<lb/>
nice place to live and meet friends. It is Said that the gover-<lb/>
ning body of the dorm tries to make things as nice as possi-<lb/>
ble for the residents, through movies, socials, pig pickings<lb/>
and recreational tournaments. So far we have had two<lb/>
movies, a couple of socials, and a few recreational tour-<lb/>
naments. Before the semester ends, we plan to have another<lb/>
movie, a social and to end the yoar with a pig picking and<lb/>
Softball day. When up on the hill we ask that you "check in"<lb/>
the Hotel and see exactly what we are doing. We're sure<lb/>
you'll have a nice stay.<lb/>
SCOTT HALL<lb/>
Scott Hall, a Men's Residence Hall, is one of<lb/>
the two university dormitories which has the<lb/>
suite design. It is comprised of students who<lb/>
excel in a variety of campus activities.<lb/>
Recently, the dorm was named the Red Cross<lb/>
Blood Drive winner in the dorm classifica-<lb/>
tion. Scott Hall is proud of it's outstanding<lb/>
intramural record. Presently, the "Scott<lb/>
Rogues" won the All-Campus Track and<lb/>
Field Meet. We also have tremendous par-<lb/>
ticipation in the other intramural sporting<lb/>
events. Scott Hall is also working towards<lb/>
it's fifth consecutive Chancellor's Cup Award.<lb/>
By offering a study hall room, the dorm pro-<lb/>
vides students on the hill with a quiet place to<lb/>
study. The Scott House Council is actively in-<lb/>
volved in planning and organizing many<lb/>
dorm functions. Such activities include:<lb/>
dorm socials, free doughnuts and hot<lb/>
chocolate for the residents, a resume<lb/>
workshop, films, and question and answer<lb/>
sessions with prominent speakers.<lb/>
1979 HOMECOMING QUEEN<lb/>
LISA ZACK<lb/>
MRC REPRESENTATIVE<lb/>
MRC GAMEROOM<lb/>
LOCATED IN BASEMENT<lb/>
OF AYCOCK ALSO SERVES<lb/>
AS CHECKOUT AREA<lb/>
FOR EQUIPMENT<lb/>
MRC STRIVES FOR<lb/>
IMPROVEMENTS SUCH AS:<lb/>
PARKING, GROUNDS, AND<lb/>
VISITATION<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0011"/><lb/>
m i asi Akoi im-w<lb/>
prii  ivso<lb/>
11<lb/>
Califi<lb/>
To Take Western Pennant<lb/>
HHRI ES-<lb/>
( H VND1 VK<lb/>
Spot K I dilor<lb/>
v assessing the<lb/>
1 eague divi<lb/>
es ol 1980 one<lb/>
one<lb/>
facl that Detroil would<lb/>
have finished second in<lb/>
the W est with its Ss "6<lb/>
mat k Instead, I he<lb/>
1 igeis finished tilth in<lb/>
the Easl<lb/>
Ml ol this is not to<lb/>
downgrade the quality<lb/>
ol the Western Divi<lb/>
sion, but to shov how<lb/>
things wei right a<lb/>
I at deal more lot the<lb/>
easterners last yeai<lb/>
m those in the op<lb/>
?site di ision.<lb/>
Ihe 1980 season<lb/>
. mid tut n out the same<lb/>
as ' 79 sn more va<lb/>
in one as the 1 ast<lb/>
- again supet ioi Also,<lb/>
ngels should<lb/>
epeat as class ol the<lb/>
We<lb/>
Many ward off pick<lb/>
( alifornia because<lb/>
? free agent<lb/>
i het Nolan Ryan<lb/>
s that though<lb/>
at times<lb/>
h e w a s<lb/>
sporadic. His<lb/>
mine percentage is<lb/>
the l?l<lb/>
?<lb/>
this nua , the tree<lb/>
agent acquisition ol e-<lb/>
Pittsburgh star Bruce<lb/>
Kison compensates<lb/>
tank well.<lb/>
1 he ngels have all<lb/>
the hitting necessai to<lb/>
win a great deal more<lb/>
games than last season<lb/>
it the regulars stay in<lb/>
food health. Brian<lb/>
Downing, Rod Carew,<lb/>
Bobby (nich. Carney<lb/>
I ansford, Don Bay lot,<lb/>
Dan 1 ord, Joe Rudi<lb/>
and M Co wens<lb/>
V hew '<lb/>
lust thinki iif ol<lb/>
those eight players in<lb/>
the same ba; ing ordei<lb/>
each day must di ive op-<lb/>
posing managei s i ray.<lb/>
1 oi ngel leader lim<lb/>
i regosi it must be like a<lb/>
dream come true<lb/>
Ba lot. mainly a<lb/>
designated hitter, won<lb/>
the 1 Most Valuable<lb/>
av ei u a t d last<lb/>
season with his $6<lb/>
homers, league leading<lb/>
! ?9 KBIs and<lb/>
averaj Bayioi was<lb/>
, . the<lb/>
outfield some ol last<lb/>
season, something that<lb/>
is considered nsk by<lb/>
defensive experts.<lb/>
I herefore, the acquisi<lb/>
tion ol Cowens from<lb/>
Kansas City is vital.<lb/>
Cowens, a one tune<lb/>
all stai would could<lb/>
easily reach that level<lb/>
again, came in the trade<lb/>
that sent Willie Mays<lb/>
Aikens to the Royals.<lb/>
Mkens is a superb<lb/>
young talent but out-<lb/>
field help is what<lb/>
( ah tor nia needed and<lb/>
got.<lb/>
I he Angels' pitching<lb/>
strengths rest heavily<lb/>
on the light arm ol<lb/>
frank 1 anana If the<lb/>
young flamethrowei<lb/>
stavs healthy, he will 20<lb/>
 antes I' s<lb/>
guaranteed.<lb/>
1 he star ting rotation<lb/>
alsincludes Kison,<lb/>
Dave Frost (16-10 last<lb/>
season), Chris Knapp<lb/>
(coming ofl injury<lb/>
marred 5 5 ampaign)<lb/>
and Don Aase, ?lhe<lb/>
relievers weren't tiood<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
Downed<lb/>
i Dint wii 11 ms<lb/>
Staff N nit r<lb/>
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tjCA'IQN? E 5XCESS OF OUR SURVEY REQUIRES YOUR RESPONSE WETHER YCU<lb/>
AP? RECEI ING FINANCIAL AID OR NOT. WE NEED YOUR HELP! The THREE KEYS<lb/>
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- FILL OUT THE QUESTICTfVMPE<lb/>
ND<lb/>
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IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS OR NEED A NEW QUESTIONNAIRE, PLEASE CALL:<lb/>
Wendy Dellefielo at: 300-638-278 or 80f638-2785<lb/>
942 Wsyrw Avmt ? Suit 701<lb/>
SUv?r Sprmf. Mwyiand 20910<lb/>
last season with the<lb/>
single exception oi<lb/>
Mark Cleai but<lb/>
could improve. 1 lie<lb/>
pn tout oi )a v e<lb/>
1 aRoche could decide a<lb/>
lot about the div isional<lb/>
i ace<lb/>
c hallenging the<lb/>
ngels v ill he a strong<lb/>
rexas Rangei ballclub<lb/>
and the perennially<lb/>
powerful Kansas City<lb/>
Royals.<lb/>
1 he Rangers appear<lb/>
strong and deep<lb/>
ai most positions.<lb/>
Behind the plate is Jim<lb/>
Sundberg, perhaps the<lb/>
best defensive catcher<lb/>
in the league. Veteran<lb/>
John bills is a good<lb/>
backup and serves as<lb/>
part tune DM<lb/>
1 he infield is also<lb/>
strong ith Pal Put-<lb/>
nam (18 HRs, 64 RBIs,<lb/>
.277) oi Willie Mon-<lb/>
lanc (8 HRs, 24 RBIs,<lb/>
,319 in lust Vs games<lb/>
alter corning over from<lb/>
1ets las! year) at first<lb/>
base. Hump ills is tht<lb/>
second baseman. Hud<lb/>
d Bell (In. 101, .299)<lb/>
had a super yeai ai<lb/>
third last season and<lb/>
n. peei <lb/>
Second-year shortstop<lb/>
Nelson Norman<lb/>
defenshe hi.<lb/>
Ihe out held is a<lb/>
 ? - u ea in V<lb/>
ington. I lungs are so<lb/>
crowded, in fact, that<lb/>
Richie Zisk is now a<lb/>
full-time DM . Zisk was<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
injured much oi last<lb/>
season but still blasted<lb/>
I H homers<lb/>
I he Ranger outfield<lb/>
corps consists of AI<lb/>
Oliver, who hit .323<lb/>
last season, e Yankee<lb/>
Micke Rivers, John<lb/>
Grubb, Hillv Sample,<lb/>
Jim Norris and possibly<lb/>
Montane Over<lb/>
crowding is an<lb/>
u n d e r s t a t e m e n t .<lb/>
I a len ted is a n<lb/>
understatement.<lb/>
Still, the kev to the<lb/>
Ranger fortunes lies<lb/>
with the pitching and<lb/>
more specifically the<lb/>
pitching o f I o n<lb/>
Matlack. Due to in-<lb/>
juries Mat lack saw ac-<lb/>
tion m onlv 1" games<lb/>
last season. Had he-<lb/>
had a normal Matlack<lb/>
yeai the Rangers could<lb/>
have edged b Califor-<lb/>
nia. I he year betore he<lb/>
had won 1 5 games with<lb/>
a 2.27 earned run<lb/>
average.<lb/>
1 he other starters are<lb/>
n e v i v acquired<lb/>
Gaylord Perry, Steve<lb/>
c omer (17-12), old pro<lb/>
1 erg us on I enkins<lb/>
(16 14) and Doc<lb/>
Medieh 110-7).<lb/>
I he bullpen is poten-<lb/>
tially spectacular with<lb/>
rjoth Jim Kern; the<lb/>
tgue's best reliever<lb/>
last yeai with 13 wins,<lb/>
29 saves and a<lb/>
ERA; and Spark I yk<lb/>
around.<lb/>
in Kansas City thing<lb/>
have been in an uproar<lb/>
There was big noise<lb/>
made last season when<lb/>
the Rovals tailed to win<lb/>
the division tor a<lb/>
fourth straight yeai<lb/>
Changes were made, in<lb/>
eluding the tiring oi<lb/>
manager W hitev Hei<lb/>
og in favor oi lim<lb/>
1 rev.<lb/>
Ihe big change,<lb/>
though, was the trade<lb/>
that sent AIowei<lb/>
Calfifornia in exchange<lb/>
tor first bagger V illie<lb/>
Mavs Aikens and short<lb/>
stop Ranee Mulliniks<lb/>
Aikens is one oi the<lb/>
bright young hittei<lb/>
the game today and will<lb/>
add m u c h ne ede d<lb/>
power.<lb/>
ikens . who nil<lb/>
homer- with 81 RBI<lb/>
only .s trips to the<lb/>
plate last season, will<lb/>
be the first basem<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Roundhouse<lb/>
ThursLouisi-<lb/>
ana's Le Roux<lb/>
Fri SatSun.<lb/>
Sidewinder<lb/>
Frank v hue is superb<lb/>
ir econd while George<lb/>
Brett is the best at third<lb/>
in the circuit.<lb/>
Bret! tunshed second<lb/>
in the M P voting<lb/>
v e a r with his 42<lb/>
ibIt 20 t ripies, 23<lb/>
RBI<lb/>
 29 a<lb/>
i l v. ?<lb/>
M<lb/>
<lb/>
sh<lb/>
- )<lb/>
29! <lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
it as his 21 average<lb/>
: 20 homers attest<lb/>
Pitching in Ro<lb/>
1 and - uld e very<lb/>
Busby<lb/>
returns to his old form<lb/>
ters are<lb/>
D e n i<lb/>
?<lb/>
McR<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Test<lb/>
Very Early Pregnancy Test<lb/>
Call 781 8580 anytime<lb/>
The Fleming Center<lb/>
We Buy<lb/>
Furniture<lb/>
Appliances<lb/>
Antiques<lb/>
Surplus<lb/>
Furniture<lb/>
752-3223<lb/>
$62.50<lb/>
value<lb/>
 19?<lb/>
I , led pay me<lb/>
 day fiarge<lb/>
Major Cre I<lb/>
Cards Honored<lb/>
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The gift of love<lb/>
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ember . . .<lb/>
her very first<lb/>
sparkling<lb/>
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Set so<lb/>
beautifully<lb/>
in bright<lb/>
10k gold.<lb/>
Now at specia<lb/>
savings that<lb/>
are easy o<lb/>
'Our younc<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
Free ham!<lb/>
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One coui zi ?<lb/>
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Fast. Free Delivery<lb/>
1201 Charles BU I<lb/>
7586600<lb/>
- ?. - - ?'<lb/>
uj 3 any aw<lb/>
OPEN TILL 200am DURING EXAMS<lb/>
SORRY NOT ACCEPTING CHECKS<lb/>
DURING EXAMS<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
PAID<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
books m he.<lb/>
516 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C<lb/>
<pb facs="00057264_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 22, 1980<lb/>
Activities Come To A Close<lb/>
Frazier Dominates IM Putt-Putt<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
Intramural Correspondent<lb/>
Putt-Putt<lb/>
It was "Freddie<lb/>
Frazier Night" at the<lb/>
1980 Intramural Putt-<lb/>
Putt Championships in<lb/>
Greenville on April 8.<lb/>
"Fast Freddie as he<lb/>
is known around the<lb/>
Intramural office,<lb/>
dominated the field of<lb/>
36 participants with an<lb/>
exceptional score of 64,<lb/>
to capture the men's in-<lb/>
dividual championship.<lb/>
Art Graepel and Jeff<lb/>
Von Cannon tied for<lb/>
second place with a<lb/>
score of 65 while Buddy<lb/>
I uper shot a 5-under<lb/>
par 67 to receive third<lb/>
place honors.<lb/>
In the women's com-<lb/>
petition, Jennifer Daly<lb/>
and Cindy Rouse battl-<lb/>
ed it out for the in-<lb/>
dividual championship<lb/>
with Daly outshooting<lb/>
Rouse to claim the title.<lb/>
In the team competi-<lb/>
tion, "Fast Freddie"<lb/>
teamed up with Graepel<lb/>
to beat out 11 other<lb/>
teams for the overall<lb/>
championship. Their<lb/>
score of 55 gave them<lb/>
the win while three<lb/>
teams vs ith a score of 58<lb/>
ended up with a three<lb/>
way tie for second<lb/>
place.<lb/>
The Intramural<lb/>
Department would like<lb/>
to thank all those who<lb/>
participated in the<lb/>
event and would<lb/>
especially like to thank<lb/>
Don Edmonson and<lb/>
Putt-Putt of Greenville<lb/>
for their cooperation.<lb/>
Team Tennis<lb/>
The regular season<lb/>
matches are over, but<lb/>
the best is yet to come.<lb/>
Good competition was<lb/>
seen throughout the<lb/>
season and this should<lb/>
continue all the way to<lb/>
the finish.<lb/>
In the fraternity divi-<lb/>
sional playoffs, Kappa<lb/>
Sigma, Sigma Phi Ep-<lb/>
silon, Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
and Pi Kappa Phi will<lb/>
battle it out for a spot<lb/>
in the All-Campus<lb/>
finals. The Dolemites<lb/>
and Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
are the representatives<lb/>
from the<lb/>
ClubIndependent divi-<lb/>
sion, while the Aycock<lb/>
"Aces" survived the<lb/>
dormitory division<lb/>
competition to reach<lb/>
the finals.<lb/>
In the women's All-<lb/>
Campus competition,<lb/>
Tri Sigma sorority out-<lb/>
dueled its only oppo-<lb/>
nent Alpha Phi to claim<lb/>
the women's All-<lb/>
Campus Champion-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
Divisional cham-<lb/>
pionships will be played<lb/>
April 22 at 7 p.m. and<lb/>
the All-Campus cham-<lb/>
pionships will be decid-<lb/>
ed April 24 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The matches will be<lb/>
played on the College<lb/>
Hill tennis courts.<lb/>
Good luck to all teams.<lb/>
Badminton<lb/>
Twenty teams were<lb/>
entered in the women's<lb/>
badminton doubles<lb/>
competition with Gail<lb/>
O'Brien and Lynne<lb/>
Alexander of Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta scheduled to meet<lb/>
the winner of the match<lb/>
between Dana<lb/>
SalmonsMary Sawyer,<lb/>
and Amy WilsonTam-<lb/>
my Welsh.<lb/>
Salmons advanced<lb/>
through four rounds of<lb/>
play in the singles com-<lb/>
petition to meet Jen-<lb/>
nifer Counterman in<lb/>
the finals of that divi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Participation in the<lb/>
men's division was<lb/>
sparse. Hank Wylie<lb/>
was matched against<lb/>
James Rouse in the<lb/>
singles division while<lb/>
John Russ and Zack<lb/>
Valentine were paired<lb/>
in doubles against<lb/>
Bruce Hollmuller and<lb/>
Joe Moore.<lb/>
Cross Campus Run<lb/>
Despite a small tur-<lb/>
nout, a field of 18 run-<lb/>
ners competed in a well<lb/>
organized and suc-<lb/>
cessful Cross Campus<lb/>
Run.<lb/>
Stan Shue captured<lb/>
the five-mile race with a<lb/>
time of 29:21 and Rusy<lb/>
Jenkins ran to a win in<lb/>
the 2.5 mile race with a<lb/>
time of 13:47.<lb/>
Bob Morrison finish-<lb/>
ed second to Shue with<lb/>
a 31:27 finish. Ellen<lb/>
Bond was the top<lb/>
female racer in the five-<lb/>
mile with a time of<lb/>
34:56 for sixth place<lb/>
overall.<lb/>
John Russ, with a<lb/>
time of 14:32, finished<lb/>
second in the 2.5 mile<lb/>
run. Susan Davenport<lb/>
was the top female run-<lb/>
ner in the 2.5 mile race<lb/>
with a time of 22:03,<lb/>
fourth place overall.<lb/>
Horseshoe<lb/>
Horseshoe doubles<lb/>
competition began<lb/>
April 21 with a single<lb/>
elimination tournament<lb/>
being held. A total of<lb/>
11 men's and 1 1<lb/>
women's teams entered<lb/>
the competition.<lb/>
Last year's cham-<lb/>
pions were Jackie Har-<lb/>
ris and Sylvia Jones of<lb/>
Fleming Dorm and<lb/>
Bobby Little and Kurt<lb/>
Baumwart.<lb/>
Sylvia Jones will be<lb/>
teaming up with the<lb/>
1979 singles champion<lb/>
Lisa Davis to defend<lb/>
her crown.<lb/>
Constitution<lb/>
A constitution for<lb/>
the Intramural Coun-<lb/>
cil, written by the Stu-<lb/>
dent Advisory Commit-<lb/>
tee, was read and<lb/>
unanimously approved<lb/>
by the representatives<lb/>
at the final meeting of<lb/>
the school year.<lb/>
A discussion and<lb/>
evaluation of the In-<lb/>
tramural Program<lb/>
followed, with the sug-<lb/>
gestions being made to<lb/>
delete team tennis from<lb/>
next year's calendar<lb/>
and to add frisbee and<lb/>
team golf. The ten<lb/>
dollar forfeit fee and<lb/>
the hiring of officials<lb/>
for the volleyball<lb/>
playoffs were also<lb/>
discussed.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAROUNA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1?7? Cotless.<lb/>
sunroof,power brakes, power<lb/>
steering, power windows and<lb/>
locks, cruise controll. Call Brian<lb/>
752 0373.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Red 1971 MGB. AM-<lb/>
FM Cassette, new convertable top.<lb/>
Many more extra's. Excellent<lb/>
condition. Call 752 154.<lb/>
FOR SALE t pair A.Rll<lb/>
speakers, new wotfers and<lb/>
tweeters 7SI-0J04 before 10:00 a.m.<lb/>
or after 6:00p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: good used couch only<lb/>
$25. Call 752-0172, ask for Cynthia.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1971 Ford Capri<lb/>
automatic, 4 cylinder, good gas<lb/>
milage. Call 750551 or 752-0111.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING: Day or<lb/>
Night, individual or groups. Tri<lb/>
County Stables Grimesland. Call<lb/>
752-4W3.<lb/>
MARY KAY COSMETICS: to<lb/>
reach your consultant tor a facial<lb/>
or reorders phone 754-365?<lb/>
SW ATTENTION: Business Ma-<lb/>
jors, summer work, practical<lb/>
business experience. Tremendous<lb/>
for job resume. Hard work equals<lb/>
good pay. Call 750-3719 for inter<lb/>
view.<lb/>
TYPING: dissertations, theses,<lb/>
term papers. Excellent skills and<lb/>
reasonable rates. Call 7S4-9U9.<lb/>
WANTED: Tank, wet suit(med),<lb/>
regulator, etc Call Sam at<lb/>
750-3911 weekdays 6:00 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
SUMMER WORK: are you tired of<lb/>
the same old job A national Co. on<lb/>
campus is interviewing Wednes-<lb/>
day, April 23 for $350 per week Ob.<lb/>
Interviews at 1:00, 4:00, 7:00 in<lb/>
Brewster D-104.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENTS FOR RENT:<lb/>
Duplexes and Townhouses $175 to<lb/>
$270 per month Call 752 6415 9:00<lb/>
til 5:00.<lb/>
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 0836<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share<lb/>
three bedroom duplex near cam<lb/>
pus for summer only. $47 plus<lb/>
third utilities. Washer dryer, fur<lb/>
nished bedroom. Call 752 5977.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: $80 month<lb/>
plus utilities. Close to campus,<lb/>
available May 15th Call 758 3545<lb/>
NEEDED ONE MALE, to share<lb/>
duplex from May until August<lb/>
Rent $40 a month. Call Phil or<lb/>
Mike at 758 7724<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT:<lb/>
tor summer. Village Green Apart<lb/>
ments 10th street. Call 752 0442.<lb/>
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES:<lb/>
Needed to share furnished apart<lb/>
ment at Riverbluff 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. 750-4317.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private rooms for<lb/>
summer school or yearly. Share<lb/>
kitchen and bath $75 plus<lb/>
OD U Blanks<lb/>
Buc Netters<lb/>
Bv<lb/>
ALEX<lb/>
CUNNINGHAM<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
ECU ran up against a<lb/>
verv strong Old Domi-<lb/>
nion University tennis<lb/>
team last Friday ?t the<lb/>
Minges courts, losing<lb/>
9-0.<lb/>
At the number one<lb/>
singles position Kenny<lb/>
Love was beaten by Bill<lb/>
Clark 6-3, 6-1; Henry<lb/>
Hostetler was crushed<lb/>
b Robert Hale 6-2,<lb/>
6-0; Keith Zengel was<lb/>
edged by Colin Davis<lb/>
6-4, 6-4; Ted Lepper<lb/>
was downed by Todd<lb/>
Furniss 6-2, 6-2; Barry<lb/>
Skakle<lb/>
Succumbs<lb/>
By<lb/>
ALEX<lb/>
CUNNINGHAM<lb/>
Staff w riter<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM<lb/>
? The University of<lb/>
North Carolina receiv-<lb/>
ed the sad news Friday<lb/>
morning that Don E.<lb/>
Skakle, the head tennis<lb/>
coach, was found dead<lb/>
at his sister-in-law's<lb/>
home. Skakle ap-<lb/>
parently died in his<lb/>
sleep of a heart attack.<lb/>
Parker was defeated by<lb/>
Ken Phelen 6-3, 6-3;<lb/>
and Mark Byrd was<lb/>
outlasted by John Har-<lb/>
rison 6-3, 6-3.<lb/>
ODU continued to be<lb/>
tough in the doubles as<lb/>
they swept through all<lb/>
three matches. In the<lb/>
number one flight<lb/>
Zengel and Lepper<lb/>
were retired by Clark<lb/>
and Furniss 6-0, 6-2;<lb/>
Love and Hostetler<lb/>
were defeated by Hale<lb/>
and Phelan 6-3, 6-1;<lb/>
and Parker and Nor-<lb/>
man Bryant were turn-<lb/>
ed back by Davis and<lb/>
Harrison 6-2, 6-3.<lb/>
The Pirates are<lb/>
hosting the ECU In-<lb/>
vitational this weekend<lb/>
at the Minges courts.<lb/>
The matches will begin<lb/>
Saturday and continue<lb/>
on through Sunday.<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/>
AFTERNOON<lb/>
DEUGWT<lb/>
FEATURING<lb/>
the band:<lb/>
wSdIr<lb/>
His death occurred<lb/>
the morning that the<lb/>
ACC Tennis Tourna-<lb/>
ment was to begin. The<lb/>
Carolina players met<lb/>
after his death and<lb/>
decided to play because<lb/>
it would be his wish.<lb/>
Skakle was the fifth<lb/>
winningest coach in the<lb/>
United States. His ef-<lb/>
forts have been praised<lb/>
for making tennis in<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
stronger. Jim Leighton,<lb/>
the Wake Forest tennis<lb/>
coach, said, "Carolina,<lb/>
in my opinion, is one of<lb/>
the great tennis colleges<lb/>
in the country<lb/>
A memoriai service<lb/>
was held for Skakle<lb/>
during the tournament<lb/>
on Sunday.<lb/>
PRESENTED BY<lb/>
SIGMA TAU GAMMA<lb/>
Friday, April 25th<lb/>
3S30?7:OOp.m.<lb/>
Domestic beverages<lb/>
only 504<lb/>
Admisson 254<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
utilities. Two blocks from cam<lb/>
pus. 752 5796<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT at<lb/>
Tar River Estates for the sum<lb/>
mer. Call 752 8860<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: apartment located one<lb/>
mile from campus, furnished,<lb/>
assume half rent and half utilities.<lb/>
Available May 15th Call Debbie<lb/>
758-0269 after 5:00 p.m. for more<lb/>
information<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
May 11 thru Aug 20 Own room<lb/>
plus one-third utilities Call<lb/>
752 0172 ask for Cynthia<lb/>
FURNISHED ROOM for two<lb/>
females available for summer<lb/>
rental One block from campus on<lb/>
Charles Street 585 monthly<lb/>
(including utilities) Phone<lb/>
758 7010 afternoons<lb/>
FOR RENT: large, furnished, one<lb/>
bedroom apartment May 1 thru<lb/>
August. S13S a month Low<lb/>
utilities. Close to campus Call<lb/>
758 7630<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
for three bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Eastbrook One third rent and<lb/>
utilities Call 758 5201<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
(female) fo share two bedroom<lb/>
townhouse Call 756 3851 after<lb/>
500<lb/>
TWO ROOMMATES needed for 4<lb/>
bedroom house three blocks from<lb/>
campus $87 50 per month<lb/>
752 6901<lb/>
CLASSIFIED HOURS FOR TAK<lb/>
ING ADDS ARE 3:00 4:00 MON<lb/>
DAY THRU FRIDAY<lb/>
II<lb/>
AFTER 3:<lb/>
CH1CKFILA<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
FORW.<lb/>
2hick-fil-A. It's America's rigin;il tx neless breast i i chicken sandwich.<lb/>
And now .with the coupon below .you can tet all the Chick -fil-A s<lb/>
wiches vou want for 99c each .once"the d ck strikes three in the; ifo n ?<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
OUR CHICKRLA SANDWICHES ARE 99 EACH AFTER<lb/>
3OORM. JUST RUIN THE NUMBER YOU WANT<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
Present this coupon at your<lb/>
Chick fi! A restaurant Well<lb/>
give you all the Chick fil A<lb/>
sandwiches vou want for<lb/>
99c each after 3:00 P.M.<lb/>
One coup n per pers m per<lb/>
visit. Offer expire<lb/>
@U-<lb/>
?M. <lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
THE TASTE WORTH SHOPPING FOR<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
Offer ????- ;?<lb/>
Drop your guard for a<lb/>
minute. Even though you're<lb/>
in college right now, there<lb/>
are many aspects of the<lb/>
Army that you might find<lb/>
very attractive.<lb/>
Maybe even irresistible.<lb/>
See for yourself.<lb/>
MB) SCHOOL, ON US<lb/>
You read it right.<lb/>
The Army's Health Professions Scholar-<lb/>
ship Program provides necessary tuition,<lb/>
books, lab fees, even microscope rental dur-<lb/>
ing medical school.<lb/>
Plus a tax-free monthly stipend that<lb/>
works out to about $6,450 a year. (After<lb/>
July 1, 1980, it'll be even more.)<lb/>
After you're accepted into medical<lb/>
school, you can be accepted into our program.<lb/>
Then you're commissioned and you go<lb/>
through school as a Second Lieutenant in the<lb/>
Army Reserve.<lb/>
The hitch? Very simple. After your resi-<lb/>
dency, you give the Army a year as a doctor<lb/>
for every year the Army gave you as a med<lb/>
student, and under some conditions, with a<lb/>
minimum scholarship obligation being two<lb/>
years' service.<lb/>
&amp; CASH BONUSES<lb/>
Besides scholarships to medical school,<lb/>
the Army also offers AMA-approved first-<lb/>
year post-graduate and residency training<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Such training adds no further obligation<lb/>
to the student in the scholarship program.<lb/>
But any Civilian Graduate Medical Educa-<lb/>
tion sponsored by the Army gives you a one-<lb/>
year obligation for every year of sponsorship.<lb/>
But you get a $9,000 annual bonus every<lb/>
year you're paying back medical school or<lb/>
post-graduate training.<lb/>
So you not only get your medical educa-<lb/>
tion paid for, you get extra pay while you're<lb/>
paying it back.<lb/>
Not a bad deal.<lb/>
A GREAT PLACE TO BE A NURSE<lb/>
The rich tradition of Army Nursing is<lb/>
one of excellence, dedication, even heroism.<lb/>
And it's a challenge to live up to.<lb/>
Today, an Army Nurse is the epitome<lb/>
of professionalism, regarded as a critical<lb/>
member of the Army Medical Team.<lb/>
A BSN degree is required. And the clinical<lb/>
spectrum is almost impossible to match<lb/>
in civilian practice.<lb/>
And, since you'll be an Army Officer,<lb/>
you'll enjoy more respect and authority than<lb/>
most of your civilian counterparts. You'll<lb/>
also enjoy travel opportunities, officer's pay<lb/>
and officer's privileges.<lb/>
Army Nursing offers educational oppor-<lb/>
tunities that are second to none. As an Army<lb/>
Nurse, you could be selected for graduate<lb/>
degree programs at civilian universities.<lb/>
ADVANCED NURSING COURSE,<lb/>
TUITION-FREE<lb/>
You get tuition, pa and living allowances.<lb/>
You can also take Nurse Practitioner<lb/>
courses and courses in many clinical special-<lb/>
ties. All on the Army.<lb/>
While these programs do not cost you<lb/>
any money, most of them do incur an addi-<lb/>
tional service obligation.<lb/>
A CHANCE TO PRACTICE LAW<lb/>
If you're about to get your law degree<lb/>
and be admitted to the bar, you should con-<lb/>
sider a commission in the Judge Advocate<lb/>
General Corps. Because in the Army you get<lb/>
to practice law right from the start.<lb/>
While your classmates are still doing<lb/>
other lawyers' research and other lawyers'<lb/>
briefs, you could have your own cases, your<lb/>
own clients, in effect, your own practice.<lb/>
Plus you'll have the pay, prestige and<lb/>
privileges of being an Officer in the United<lb/>
States Army. With a chance to travel and<lb/>
make the most of what you've worked so<lb/>
hard to become. A real, practicing lawyer<lb/>
Be an Army Lawyer.<lb/>
R0TC SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Though you're too late for a 4-year<lb/>
scholarship, there are 3 2 and even 1-year<lb/>
scholarships available.<lb/>
They include tuition, books,<lb/>
and lab fees. Plus $100 a month<lb/>
living allowance. Naturally<lb/>
they're very competitive. Because<lb/>
besides helping you towards your<lb/>
degree, an ROTC scholarship<lb/>
helps you towards the gold bars<lb/>
of an Army Officer.<lb/>
Stop by the ROTC office on<lb/>
campus and ask about details.<lb/>
UP TO ST70 A MONTH<lb/>
You can combine service in<lb/>
the Army Reserve or National<lb/>
Guard with Army ROTC and<lb/>
get up to $6,500 while you're still<lb/>
in school.<lb/>
It's called the Simultaneous<lb/>
Membership Program. You get<lb/>
$ 100 a month as an Advanced<lb/>
Army ROTC Cadet and an addi-<lb/>
lonal $70 a month sa<lb/>
Kant's pa) j a Am<lb/>
Reservist.<lb/>
When you graduate,<lb/>
you'll be commissu<lb/>
Second Lieutenant, bui<lb/>
necessarily assigned to a.<lb/>
five duty. Find out about ii<lb/>
A BONUS FOR PART-TIME WORK<lb/>
You can get a $1,500 bonus just for enlist-<lb/>
ing in some Army Reserve units. Or up I<lb/>
$2,000 in educational benefits.<lb/>
You also get paid for your Reserve duty.<lb/>
It comes out to about S 1,000a year tor about 16<lb/>
hours a month and two weeks annual training.<lb/>
And now we have a special program to<lb/>
help you fit the Army Reserve around your<lb/>
school schedule. It's worth a look.<lb/>
A SECOND CHANCE AT COLLEGE<lb/>
Some may find college to he the right<lb/>
place at the wrong time for a variety of reasons<lb/>
The Army can help them. loo.<lb/>
A few years in the Army can help them<lb/>
get money for tuition and the maturity to use it<lb/>
wisely.<lb/>
The Army has a program In which mone<lb/>
saved for college is matched two-f or-one by the<lb/>
government. Then, if one qualifies, a generous<lb/>
bonus is added to that.<lb/>
So 2 years of service can get you up to<lb/>
$7,400 for college.years up to12,100, and 4<lb/>
years up to $14,100. In addition, bonuses up to<lb/>
$3,000 are available for 4-year enlistments in<lb/>
selected skills.<lb/>
Add in the experience and maturity gained,<lb/>
and the Army can sendan individual ba'ckiocol-<lb/>
lege a richer person in more ways than one.<lb/>
We hope these Army opportunities have in-<lb/>
trigued you as well as surprised you. Because<lb/>
there is indeed a lot the Army can offer a bright<lb/>
person like you.<lb/>
or more information, send the coupon.<lb/>
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