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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057329_0001"/>
She Safit (Earnltmatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Ihursday. March 19, 1981<lb/>
(.reenville. North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation HUMMl<lb/>
NewMediaHeadsNamed;<lb/>
WZMB Post Still Vacant<lb/>
Bv KR1 WEND!<lb/>
Sllfl ril.i<lb/>
New heads for the various cam-<lb/>
media were named by the E I<lb/>
Media Board in a closed session just<lb/>
hciore spring break, with the excep-<lb/>
tion ol radio station WZMB.<lb/>
 ken will serve as the<lb/>
S2 Buccaneer, while<lb/>
will have Angelia Brinn<lb/>
 d was named editor<lb/>
i Herald. Byrd will<lb/>
bility ol re-<lb/>
it ion after a<lb/>
the position of head of the Photo<lb/>
1 ah. Gurle) took over that post<lb/>
after the former head photographer<lb/>
Pete Podezwa resigned during the<lb/>
fall semester of 1980.<lb/>
Paul Collins was named general<lb/>
manager of The lasi Carolinian<lb/>
after serving only tour monthes as<lb/>
news editor. Chris I ichok assumed<lb/>
that post m December to fulfill the<lb/>
unexpired term of Richard Green.<lb/>
1 hough there were several ap-<lb/>
plicants tor the WZMB post, no one<lb/>
was named to the position and the<lb/>
Media Board has chosen begin ac-<lb/>
cepting tun her applications for the<lb/>
job. Application forms are available<lb/>
ai the Media Board oft ice in the Old<lb/>
South building.<lb/>
'?We're starting the whole process<lb/>
over again tor WZMB said Media<lb/>
Board Chairman David Creech.<lb/>
The station was expected to begin<lb/>
broadcasting during the 1980-81<lb/>
term, but delays in the delivery of<lb/>
equipment have prohibited current<lb/>
general manager Glenda K ill -<lb/>
ingsworth from fulfilling that<lb/>
desire.<lb/>
It is believed that no one was con-<lb/>
sidered qualified to take over the<lb/>
technical work involved in getting<lb/>
the 1 M station on the air.<lb/>
"We feel that the complexity ol<lb/>
running a radio station and the laws<lb/>
involved must be taken into con-<lb/>
sideration Creech continued.<lb/>
"We feel obligated to search for the<lb/>
most qualified person available.<lb/>
"In addition to having a good<lb/>
knowledge oi radio stations and<lb/>
FCC regulations, the general<lb/>
manager must have at least a 2.5<lb/>
grade average<lb/>
Creech, however, was pleased<lb/>
with the other selections.<lb/>
"We arc very pleased with the<lb/>
people we have at this time. We are<lb/>
looking forward to working with<lb/>
them next year<lb/>
The new media heads will take of-<lb/>
fice at noon on April 15, in accor-<lb/>
dance with the Media Board C con-<lb/>
stitution.<lb/>
Aim Pickett, shown here distributing yearbooks, has been named as the<lb/>
editor of the Buc for the upcoming school ear.<lb/>
ippointed to ai mc wcuw owu? ???? ?? "? v<lb/>
Pitt Psychiatric Patients Enjoy New<lb/>
  ??. -?,?i;?? etitiitp dt Mental Health, the em- on some patients.<lb/>
Bv GEORGt 1111. HlDRKk<lb/>
in K<lb/>
icipal<lb/>
. unit don't sta<lb/>
street clothes.<lb/>
re dances and<lb/>
i<lb/>
a loom to watch<lb/>
television. The)<lb/>
repare their snacks in the<lb/>
? walk down the hall<lb/>
ig room. On<lb/>
ns the) go bowl-<lb/>
veekends the may go<lb/>
eii families or<lb/>
obvious dif-<lb/>
etween patients on the<lb/>
psychiatric unit and those on other<lb/>
I atients at<lb/>
( unt Memorial Hospital en-<lb/>
me ? e else that makes them<lb/>
facility that opened<lb/>
December.<lb/>
I he 18-bed addition to the<lb/>
psychiatric unit represents an expan-<lb/>
sion oi psychiatric services at Pitt<lb/>
Memorial to meet the increasing<lb/>
regional need for inpatient beds.<lb/>
When the new beds opened, the old<lb/>
14-bed unit closed for renovation.<lb/>
which should be completed in<lb/>
March. When the enure project is<lb/>
finished, the unit will have 36 beds<lb/>
and modern support facilities, in-<lb/>
cluding a multipurpose room for<lb/>
group therapy, rooms for occupa-<lb/>
tion and recreation therapy, a<lb/>
classroom, a new dining area and<lb/>
ofti.es for physicians dd staff. It<lb/>
will be the largest inpatient<lb/>
psychiatric unit in a community<lb/>
hospital Ui eastern North I arolina.<lb/>
Whs is there an increased demand<lb/>
for inpatient psychiatric beds?<lb/>
Several reasons, according to Dr.<lb/>
W.R. Walker, assistant professor of<lb/>
psychiatry at the Past Carolina<lb/>
University School ol Medicine.<lb/>
"The public is beginning to unders-<lb/>
tand mental illness better, and so are<lb/>
psychiatrists. Recent research,<lb/>
which has identified biochemical<lb/>
components in some mental il-<lb/>
lnesses, has also given us more ef-<lb/>
fective approaches to diagnosis and<lb/>
treatment he said.<lb/>
"Mental illness has lost some ol<lb/>
the stigma that once prevented pa-<lb/>
tients from entering a voluntary unit<lb/>
such as the one at Pitt Memorial.<lb/>
Not so many years ago, patients had<lb/>
a choice between admitting<lb/>
themselves to a state hospital or<lb/>
entering a private hospital, if they<lb/>
could afi it Toda many pa-<lb/>
tients find psychiatic care in a com-<lb/>
munity hospital more attractive per-<lb/>
sonallv and financially<lb/>
According to the National In-<lb/>
stitute oi Mental Health, the em<lb/>
phasis for treating mental illness<lb/>
shifted between 1955 and 1975 from<lb/>
the larger state mental hospitals to<lb/>
community programs, particularly<lb/>
mental health centers and inpatient<lb/>
psychiatric services in general<lb/>
hospitals like the one at Pitt<lb/>
Memorial. This shift in the selection<lb/>
of a facility was responsible for a<lb/>
reduction in the average length o'<lb/>
stay, which decreased from 38 days<lb/>
to 16 das.<lb/>
The average stay in the Greenville<lb/>
unit is 18 days, a short-term visit<lb/>
that Walker sas is good for the pa-<lb/>
tient mentally and economically.<lb/>
After the patients are discharged,<lb/>
they receive outpatient therapy in<lb/>
mental health centers or with private<lb/>
psvchiairists.<lb/>
"The problem with long-term<lb/>
care is the institutional effect it has<lb/>
Coast Shows Striking Change<lb/>
Census Shows N.C. Population Growth<lb/>
on some patients Walker said.<lb/>
"They start to regard the hospital as<lb/>
their home, and they adapt to that<lb/>
setting rather than maintain bonds<lb/>
with their families, friends and com-<lb/>
munities<lb/>
The unit at Pitt Memorial offers<lb/>
treatment for the full range of<lb/>
psychiatric illnesses, including<lb/>
schizophrenia, depression,<lb/>
psychiatric complications ol alcohol<lb/>
and drug abuse, and geriatric<lb/>
disorders. Severe depression and<lb/>
manic depression are the most fre-<lb/>
quently treated illnesses.<lb/>
Physicians do not know what<lb/>
causes manv forms ol mental il-<lb/>
lness. It may be triggered by an<lb/>
emotional :onflicl in a re: on's M<lb/>
or it may be the result ol chemical<lb/>
changes in the brain. Generally all<lb/>
forms of the disease are characteriz-<lb/>
ed by the patient's inability to cope<lb/>
with reality, and treatment usually<lb/>
involves psychotherapy in conjunc-<lb/>
tion with drug therapy. A<lb/>
psychiatric evaluation determines<lb/>
the patient's need for inpatient care.<lb/>
Although the majority o patients<lb/>
in the unit are from Pitt County,<lb/>
Walker said more referrals are com-<lb/>
ing in from psychiatrists, other<lb/>
physicians and mental health centers<lb/>
throughout the region. When the<lb/>
original 14-bed unit was open, pa-<lb/>
tients frequently had to be placed on<lb/>
a waiting list for admission. "We<lb/>
simply were not able to deliver the<lb/>
services the patients needed he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"The old unit was too crowded<lb/>
tor patient and staff and lacked<lb/>
privacy. The new unit will help us<lb/>
lake referrals promptly, and we<lb/>
hope that a wait will no longer be<lb/>
necessary. We want to make treat-<lb/>
ment for mental illness as available<lb/>
and convenient as treatment for<lb/>
other diseases<lb/>
Since the train, goal ol the unil<lb/>
to prepare patients to return to their<lb/>
homes and work, the staff is par-<lb/>
ticularly concerned with helping pd-<lb/>
tients keep their ties with the outside<lb/>
world. Patients receive as much<lb/>
freedom as possible to make their<lb/>
own decisions and express their likes<lb/>
and dislikes. Recreation therapy<lb/>
may, while it is providing entertain-<lb/>
ment, show a patient how to use<lb/>
See MEDICAL, Page 3<lb/>
(I PI) Population in<lb/>
? mountains grew<lb/>
. area ol the<lb/>
h 1970s, but it was<lb/>
tsl that showed<lb/>
. inc change from the<lb/>
tde.<lb/>
ipulation grew<lb/>
decade, accor-<lb/>
igures from the<lb/>
S<lb/>
l. the<lb/>
c ensuj<lb/>
I he I<lb/>
iedmont<lb/>
s in the<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Recommends<lb/>
Rape Payments<lb/>
 i 1GH (I PI) rhe House<lb/>
M , i! Committee has recom-<lb/>
n seeking the pav-<lb/>
S500 to rape victims<lb/>
foi medical care and recovery<lb/>
Ipy .<lb/>
dei the bill, the state would<lb/>
women up to S500 tor the<lb/>
medical treatment they receive alter<lb/>
the rape and the therapy they receive<lb/>
jp them recover from the<lb/>
ma. The state later would get<lb/>
nursed it a man is convicted for<lb/>
 had a 15.6 percent gam and<lb/>
the coast 13.2 percent.<lb/>
atewide, North Carolina's<lb/>
population grew 15 percent in the<lb/>
decade to .S"4,429.<lb/>
In the 1IK, bv comparison, the<lb/>
Piedmont had a population gain o<lb/>
17 percent, the Mountains 11.4 per-<lb/>
cent and the coast 4.5 percent.<lb/>
Although the 1970s figures,<lb/>
released Tuesday b the VC. Office<lb/>
o State Budget and Management,<lb/>
showed the mountains with the<lb/>
atest region-wide growth,<lb/>
county-by-county figures showed<lb/>
the most remarkable growth on the<lb/>
coast.<lb/>
I'hree coastal counties- Dare,<lb/>
C urrittick and Brunswick had<lb/>
population growths of 77 percent,<lb/>
s9 percent and 46 percent, respec-<lb/>
tive. A decade earlier, the greatest<lb/>
countvwide growth was in the<lb/>
state's more populous counties,<lb/>
Cumberland, Wake and Orange in<lb/>
the Piedmont.<lb/>
While the birth rate was the most<lb/>
significant factor in population<lb/>
growth in the 1960s, the state-issued<lb/>
studv said people migrating to<lb/>
North Carolina from other slates<lb/>
were the kev element in the 1970s.<lb/>
Growth in the birth rate actually<lb/>
declined 6 percentage points from<lb/>
1970 to 1980. By contrast, the<lb/>
number of new residents moving in-<lb/>
to the state grew 7.18 percent in the<lb/>
1970s; in the 1960s, the state lost<lb/>
1.54 percent to migration.<lb/>
rhe change in migration patterns<lb/>
were again most striking along the<lb/>
coast. the studv said. The region<lb/>
had 10 percent more people leave<lb/>
than arrive in the 1960s, but the<lb/>
number of new residents in the<lb/>
1970s was 3 percent grater than the<lb/>
number leaving, a shift o 13 per-<lb/>
cent .<lb/>
In the mountain, the numbc ol<lb/>
people leaving the area came close<lb/>
to negating the number of new ar-<lb/>
rivals in the 1960s. By 1980. those<lb/>
arriving outnumbered those leaving<lb/>
by 11 percent.<lb/>
Reagan Plan Called<lb/>
Disaster Blueprint<lb/>
reim<lb/>
i i c ui v .<lb/>
rhe House Appropriations Com-<lb/>
mittee now receives the proposal tor<lb/>
consideration. Hep. ?e'h<lb/>
Spaulding, D-Durham, the hi 1 s<lb/>
sponsor. declined comment I uesday<lb/>
he measure's chances in the<lb/>
committee. <lb/>
(an lames B. Hunt Jr. as well as<lb/>
rney General Rufus Edm.sten<lb/>
support'Spauldmg's bill, Edm.sten<lb/>
recentIv took the unusual step ol at-<lb/>
tending a committee meeting to pro-<lb/>
mote the measure.<lb/>
I d.msten and other proponents<lb/>
lunc wanted to expand the victim<lb/>
compensation idea to help murder<lb/>
and other violent crime vict.ms as<lb/>
well, hut Spaulding said he wanted<lb/>
entrate on rape victims first,<lb/>
members ol boards of education m<lb/>
c.tv and county school systems with<lb/>
populations under 7,500 from state - . t k n the new ots on Ninth Street. Parking is open to all<lb/>
conflicts of interest laws when the Tne administration is urging students and faculty to park in me ne<lb/>
board members are doing business venices displaying an ECU sticker.<lb/>
with the local school systems.<lb/>
Parking Available<lb/>
Photo Bv JON JORDAN<lb/>
W A SHIN G T O N<lb/>
(SPS)?President Reagan's educa-<lb/>
tion proposal is a "blueprint foi<lb/>
disaster" according to educators<lb/>
who are gearing up to fight the plan.<lb/>
This month Reagan proposed giv-<lb/>
ing federal money for 57 education<lb/>
programs directly to the states. This<lb/>
package also includes a "massive<lb/>
and unprecedented" 25 percent<lb/>
reduction in funding to those pro-<lb/>
grams, according to Office ol<lb/>
Management and Budget Director<lb/>
David Stockman.<lb/>
Washington lobbyists have pledg<lb/>
ed all-out opposition to the plan<lb/>
which American Federation o<lb/>
Teachers President Albert Shanker<lb/>
called "reverse Robin-Hooding<lb/>
Said Shanker, "most of the pro-<lb/>
grams he is cutting are specifically<lb/>
helping the poor<lb/>
"We see a declaration of war<lb/>
against public education said<lb/>
Thomas Shannon, National School<lb/>
Boards Association executive direc-<lb/>
tor. Shannon said that the budget<lb/>
cuts, combined with the administra-<lb/>
tion's support of tuition tax credits<lb/>
for private schools shows Reagan<lb/>
has turned his back on public educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
As part of his effort to "return<lb/>
control of education to the states"<lb/>
Reagan proposes combining federal<lb/>
programs into two big grants and<lb/>
then letting the states and local<lb/>
school districts decide how to spend<lb/>
that money.<lb/>
Reagan contends that local agen-<lb/>
cies would reduce paperwork and<lb/>
have much greater flexibility to<lb/>
spend federal money according to<lb/>
local needs.<lb/>
Other experts, however, say that<lb/>
his approach will allow states to ig-<lb/>
nore the needs of certain students.<lb/>
"Budgetary cuts of 25 percent are<lb/>
awesome in themselves, but the<lb/>
stripping away of all targeting, pro-<lb/>
cedural safeguards, parent involve-<lb/>
ment and civil rights provisions<lb/>
completely nullifies lb vears of<lb/>
federal legislation said Children's<lb/>
Defense bund President Marian<lb/>
Wright Edelman.<lb/>
She explained that school districts<lb/>
could choose not to serve handicap-<lb/>
ped children under the Reagan pro-<lb/>
posal. Title 1 grants for disadvan-<lb/>
taged students, basic skills and han-<lb/>
dicapped education would be ad-<lb/>
ministered by local schools rather<lb/>
than the federal government. The<lb/>
state agencies would be responsible<lb/>
for career education, consumer<lb/>
education, law-related education,<lb/>
women's educational equity, pro-<lb/>
grams for gifted and talented<lb/>
students and school libraries<lb/>
The second part of the Reagan<lb/>
program would cut 25 percent of the<lb/>
education budget. Reagan's propos-<lb/>
ed 1982 budget would cut SI.46<lb/>
billion from the current spending<lb/>
levels, bringing total education fun-<lb/>
ding down to $4.5 billion.<lb/>
National Education Association<lb/>
Executive Director Terry Herndon<lb/>
is concerned that states will not be<lb/>
able to raise taxes to make up for<lb/>
the lost federal aid. "Reagan won't<lb/>
be able to cut the number of<lb/>
children who attend schools he<lb/>
See Bl'iXiET, Page 3<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Classifieds1"<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Letters4<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
-   ?<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0002"/><lb/>
hi I s i. Ki l li W<lb/>
l Ki<lb/>
IV. WM<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SRA<lb/>
A '<lb/>
V<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
Cultural<lb/>
COMICS<lb/>
FINANCING SCHOOL S<lb/>
AKA<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
? a ng co op oppor<lb/>
ire i an? a a I<lb/>
1 The Galleon i Nags<lb/>
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 . , -hi student I '<lb/>
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I . i nt - v a n the C( oj CH<lb/>
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?. H Normal Vol '<lb/>
? i<lb/>
? entativi ? '? ?' lnai<lb/>
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pus March ;6 198! interviewing<lb/>
stud '? ?! voiui ?? ? '<lb/>
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PSI CHI<lb/>
Applu ations are now available<lb/>
National Honor ? ' ? ?<lb/>
sycl . ? n the ps, '<lb/>
???? is open to all ps?cr,<lb/>
, - .? ? n rn ? ? ?'?: ?' '<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?? east fivi<lb/>
?<lb/>
WATER SPORTS<lb/>
i! . ti i i" i jiai ah<lb/>
? iba diving a<lb/>
 thi: ? at I as'<lb/>
? <lb/>
NAUI or PAD!<lb/>
? ? ? ? ,? ? I'jenmg to<lb/>
adult swimmers, is si T'dulect<lb/>
for Tuesday ai rhui<lb/>
I provide t<lb/>
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pment in be rented<lb/>
luring thi<lb/>
I , , .? hrectoi ?? ? ?<lb/>
TAX ASSISTANCE<lb/>
begu<lb/>
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roon ?<lb/>
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CORSO<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
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HEALTH CAREERS<lb/>
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MUSIC<lb/>
mo ? ??? <lb/>
SOCIAL WORKER<lb/>
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? ? '<lb/>
here v. ? lepresenta<lb/>
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A'<lb/>
FOOSEBALL<lb/>
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A . I .<lb/>
GERMAN<lb/>
BILLIARDS<lb/>
ELECTIONS<lb/>
GAME ROOM<lb/>
? '<lb/>
FOL<lb/>
?<lb/>
MADRID<lb/>
DA-<lb/>
ANNOUNCER<lb/>
?? .<lb/>
O Be i<lb/>
THIS SUNDAY<lb/>
COME SHOW YOUR<lb/>
FLORIDA TAN AND<lb/>
WIN A PRIZE! ! !<lb/>
1st<lb/>
1<lb/>
v?<lb/>
<lb/>
I- <lb/>
prize:<lb/>
$100!<lb/>
Znd prize:<lb/>
1 free month at<lb/>
The Body Shoppe<lb/>
PLUS A SLAVE FOR A<lb/>
DAY!<lb/>
S?<lb/>
<lb/>
3rd, 4th, etc.<lb/>
prizes donated by<lb/>
HAIR PIZZAZ<lb/>
MITCHELL'S STYLING<lb/>
GEORGE COIFFURE<lb/>
ALL ENTRIES WILL RECEIVE A PRIZE<lb/>
1st place winner will<lb/>
receive a bouquet of<lb/>
BALLOONS FROM THE<lb/>
MUSHROOM<lb/>
and<lb/>
Jolly Roger<lb/>
Tan Contest<lb/>
Sunday, March 22nd - 9 p.m.<lb/>
Contestant sign-up 752-9151, 752-4668 or 758-6401<lb/>
? , ? ? ?<lb/>
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How to Develop S.i ?<lb/>
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Taco Bell<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
j<lb/>
Special<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Monday PJus tax<lb/>
Enchirito, Bean Burrito - Small Drink<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Burrito Surpreme, Tostada - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Beefy Tostada, Taco -Small Drink<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Beef Burrito, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Combo Burrito, Taco - Small Drink<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Two Taco Surpremes - Small Drink<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Two Tacos, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Telephone " 636 63?? 630?<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thurs , Mar 19<lb/>
thru Sat . Mar 21. 1981<lb/>
Copyright 1981<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
-??<lb/>
AD ITEM P<lb/>
Eac" : I these ad?e seo -ems<lb/>
is requ'red to be 'eady ava<lb/>
sale m eacn Kroger Sav-on eicep' as S -<lb/>
aTly noted in this ad II we do run out ot - mm w<lb/>
fer you your choice of a comparable item when sta lable -e' a<lb/>
The same savings or a ramchecK whicn will entitle you I se te adver<lb/>
tTsed item at the advertised cce withm 30 days<lb/>
One Stop<lb/>
Shopping on<lb/>
Your Way to<lb/>
the Great<lb/>
Outdoors!<lb/>
TOOTHPASTE &amp;<lb/>
MOUTHWASH IN ONE<lb/>
Close-Up<lb/>
Toothpaste<lb/>
susc; gysq msQl iusqj<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
Tube<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
<lb/>
KROGER V2<lb/>
Lowfat<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
BUSCH<lb/>
$199<lb/>
DIET PEPSI. SUNKIST<lb/>
ORANGE. MT. DEW OR<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS CUT-UP<lb/>
MIXED FRYER PARTS OR<lb/>
GRADE A<lb/>
Limit 3<lb/>
Please!<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
U.S. NO. 1<lb/>
ALL PURPOSE<lb/>
White<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
$18<lb/>
Records &amp; Tapes<lb/>
rS5uSSl25<lb/>
 ?-?Tm K( lit) j i i , .<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
Hssr<lb/>
YOKO<lb/>
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fx<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
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NONE SOLO<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 8 AM TO 10 PM<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY<lb/>
9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenvile I<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
B<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0003"/><lb/>
I HI I M ko IN1AN<lb/>
MR(II 14. 19X1<lb/>
Budget Cuts Criticized<lb/>
( ontiaucd From Page I<lb/>
said "School districts<lb/>
vs. ill tune the same<lb/>
numbei oi kids and less<lb/>
? Something will<lb/>
hae to give<lb/>
 ocational and bil-<lb/>
ingual education, child<lb/>
ion and aid to<lb/>
school districts on<lb/>
federal lands will still<lb/>
administered b the<lb/>
federal government,<lb/>
but are up foi he<lb/>
spending cuts.<lb/>
se large funding<lb/>
is have some<lb/>
itors on (. apitol<lb/>
Hail upset "We have<lb/>
n to see<lb/>
Si . : a! asststai<lb/>
? pi o e Knit ? it<lb/>
. on<lb/>
 n<lb/>
 . IOOI is :<lb/>
  to sati . .<lb/>
npaign promise- to<lb/>
imeni ofl oui<lb/>
said Rep i arl<lb/>
? ns, ! K c hail<lb/>
1 ducation and 1 abor<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
One Pet kins stall<lb/>
membei predicated a<lb/>
"tough tight and<lb/>
said Perkins will not<lb/>
yield to the President<lb/>
on all points. "He'll<lb/>
tight out his last ounce<lb/>
ol strength to stop the<lb/>
budget cuts he said.<lb/>
Lobbyists have<lb/>
c iiai ged that t he<lb/>
Reagan cuts are not<lb/>
tan, because the poor<lb/>
will suffei most.<lb/>
1 de! man said I he<lb/>
Reagan proposals are<lb/>
" profound i s ine<lb/>
quitable" and he is cut-<lb/>
pi ogi anis that<lb/>
ve the neediest while<lb/>
ss e r v i n g less<lb/>
necessan programs like<lb/>
vocational education.<lb/>
s.ud 1 delman, "He is<lb/>
iking a mockers ol<lb/>
the commitment to<lb/>
make all groups in out<lb/>
. ietv !x share<lb/>
1  sacrifice.<lb/>
Despite the accusa-<lb/>
tions that Reagan's<lb/>
plan is designed to rob<lb/>
from the poor and give<lb/>
to the rich. Education<lb/>
Secret ar 1 errel Hell<lb/>
said federal education<lb/>
monej will continue to<lb/>
support the nation's<lb/>
disadvantaged and han-<lb/>
dicapped students.<lb/>
Although the plan in-<lb/>
cludes no safeguards<lb/>
tor ensuring a percen-<lb/>
tage ot that money will<lb/>
go to such students.<lb/>
Hell said the students<lb/>
will still receive ade-<lb/>
quate services. "It's<lb/>
just that the federal<lb/>
role will be limited he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
1 muting the federal<lb/>
role raises the question<lb/>
ot whethei the Depart<lb/>
ment of Education will<lb/>
be needed under the<lb/>
Reagan local control<lb/>
plan " I his new pro-<lb/>
gram will force us to<lb/>
look at what the house<lb/>
o education at the<lb/>
tedeial level ought to<lb/>
be and build a new<lb/>
home for it said Bell.<lb/>
He said no decision has<lb/>
been reached so far,<lb/>
but that the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration will be for-<lb/>
warding a proposal<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
Former Education<lb/>
S e c r e t a i S h i lie)<lb/>
Hutstedlei said, "The<lb/>
impending destruction<lb/>
ot the department will<lb/>
be a grave disservice to<lb/>
American students<lb/>
1 he real issue is the<lb/>
basic level of support<lb/>
for public education.<lb/>
" I he loss of Cabinet<lb/>
status will mean less<lb/>
money Hutstedlei<lb/>
said. "Education will<lb/>
not get its fair share in<lb/>
this combat one unless<lb/>
there is a secretary at<lb/>
the Cabinet table with<lb/>
an equal voice in the<lb/>
budget decisions and<lb/>
direct access io the<lb/>
President<lb/>
Medical Advances Come To Pitt<lb/>
( (intiiuii'd from Page 1<lb/>
residents, physicians lion. The project is part Eastern Carolina<lb/>
activitv ol a $5.3 million con Health Systems Agenc<lb/>
bine struction package that, avs those figures ma<lb/>
theii special ways ol with the addition ol a K h,8her for eastern<lb/>
preparing the patients 144-bed patient tower, North Carolina due to<lb/>
i return to their will add 166 beds to low income, low educa-<lb/>
lives Patients Pitt Memorial. tlonal level and tne<lb/>
aKo are ver supportive rural setting. In projec-<lb/>
each other and often rhe 1978 President's ting the needs ol the<lb/>
develop strong friend- Commission on Mental 29-count) area from<lb/>
"Re? ships here " Health estimated that 1980 to 1985, the agen-<lb/>
15 percent of the c noted that the<lb/>
State appropriations population is in need ol number ol short-term<lb/>
School of mental health services beds should be increas-<lb/>
'? . led the and that 25 percent suf- ed, especially in Pitt.<lb/>
hers funding the fer from depression, Onslow, 1 enoir,<lb/>
i,es, psy( unit's ex- anxiety, or other men- Roanoke-Chowan and<lb/>
idents, pansion and renova- tal disorders. 1 he lbermarle counties.<lb/>
SRA To Sponsor Battle Of Bands<lb/>
?<lb/>
B PAl I I Ol 1 INS<lb/>
s, - I<lb/>
i i i e S<lb/>
Residence Association<lb/>
announced that it<lb/>
will sponsor a "Battle<lb/>
of the B x-nl 2<lb/>
on the Mall.<lb/>
1 he contest<lb/>
beg at ' i<lb/>
all<lb/>
d playing<lb/>
con-<lb/>
bands<lb/>
? limit ol it) bands<lb/>
has been set. and each<lb/>
uili have one hour oi<lb/>
:ing time. There are<lb/>
no restrictions on the<lb/>
type ot music that can<lb/>
be plav<lb/>
A prize o S5(K) will<lb/>
given to the winning<lb/>
band. The runner-up<lb/>
band will receive $300<lb/>
and the third-place<lb/>
band a kee ot bee:<lb/>
 panel of five<lb/>
judge- will be drawn<lb/>
from SKA board<lb/>
member<lb/>
In addition, the SRA<lb/>
is now accepting ap-<lb/>
plications tor its Ex<lb/>
ecutive Board elections.<lb/>
I iling dates are March<lb/>
18-26.<lb/>
1 he positions<lb/>
available are preside!1<lb/>
vice president.<lb/>
secretary. treasurei and<lb/>
publicity chairman.<lb/>
1 he campaign will be<lb/>
from March 26 through<lb/>
April 2, which is the<lb/>
day of the election.<lb/>
Students running<lb/>
must have a minimum<lb/>
grade average of 2.0, be<lb/>
enrolled full time and<lb/>
live in a dorm.<lb/>
Western Sizzlin<lb/>
Steak House<lb/>
"The Family Steak House"<lb/>
THURSDAY SPECIAL<lb/>
12 8oz. Chopped Sirloin; Served<lb/>
With Mushroom Gravy or Fried<lb/>
Onions. Baked Potatoe or<lb/>
French Fries and Toast.<lb/>
$1.79<lb/>
 THURSDAY ONLY<lb/>
55 Item Salad Bar and Take Out Service<lb/>
264 By-Pass 756-0040<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St. 758-2712<lb/>
MONTUES, - AVAILABLE FOR<lb/>
PRIVATE PARTIES - PAPA KATZ WILL<lb/>
CATER ANY PARTY OR FUNCTION. WE<lb/>
ALSO HAVE A MOBILE D.J. FOR ANY<lb/>
PARTY ANYTIME.<lb/>
WED, - "ORIGINAL LADIES' LOCKOUT"<lb/>
- 8:30-10:00 - LADIES ONLY - GENTS<lb/>
IN AFTER 10:00.<lb/>
THURS. - "SUPER COLLEGE NIGHT-<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE SIG EPS - DOORS<lb/>
OPEN FROM 8:30 to 1:00 - NOW WITH<lb/>
THE BIGGEST SHAG CONTEST IN GREEN-<lb/>
VILLE. COME OUT FOR THE DANCE OFF.<lb/>
MAIN DANCE OFF ON MARCH 19th<lb/>
WITH OVER $300.00 IN CASH &amp; PRIZES.<lb/>
FRI. ESCAPE THE DOWNTOWN<lb/>
CROWD &amp; INFLATION - JOIN THE<lb/>
CROWD AT THE KATZ FOR AN AFTER-<lb/>
NOON AND EVENING OF ENJOYMENT.<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 3:00 &amp; NEVER STOP.<lb/>
TOP 40 COUNTDOWN FREE ADMISSION<lb/>
TILL 7:00.<lb/>
SAT. - "LADIES' LOCKOUT II" - LADIES<lb/>
ONLY FROM 8:00 to 9:30 - GENTS IN AT<lb/>
9:30.<lb/>
SUN.RECORD BAR SPONSORS "NEW<lb/>
WAVE NIGHT" AT THE KATZ WFOUR<lb/>
PRELIMINARY DANCE OFFS EACH SUN-<lb/>
DAY - $50.00 TO THE BEST DANCERS<lb/>
AND $25.00 TO THE BEST DRESSED.<lb/>
MAIN DANCE OFF ON APRIL 5th FOR<lb/>
OVER $500.00 IN CASH &amp; PRIZES.<lb/>
COMING ? MARCH 27 &amp; 28 - LIVE<lb/>
"SURVIVORS" FROM NAGS HEAD -<lb/>
BEST IN ROCK-N-ROLL.<lb/>
COMING ? APRIL 10th - "BRUCE<lb/>
FRYE" WITH HIS LARGEST AP-<lb/>
PEARANCE IN GREENVILLE.<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION<lb/>
All members will be entitled to 3 guests per pvenmq Neat dress<lb/>
and proper identification will be required of all members and<lb/>
quests<lb/>
This special INTRODUCTORY MEMBERSHIP is only SI 00<lb/>
All applications and dues must be returned to this address P O<lb/>
Bo? 1943. Greenville. NC 77834 NC State Law requires a thirty<lb/>
day membership waitinq period from date of application for<lb/>
clubs with brown baqqmq permits<lb/>
?MEMBERSHIP <lb/>
Name.<lb/>
There s More<lb/>
Elbow Room in<lb/>
Our Attic!<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Telephone No.<lb/>
Birrhdate<lb/>
Occupation<lb/>
Hobbies<lb/>
Music preference:<lb/>
DATE<lb/>
SIGNATURE<lb/>
When was the<lb/>
last time you<lb/>
had a<lb/>
$8.50(public)<lb/>
$6.50(ECU students)<lb/>
Coming to Minges Coliseum SatApril 4, 8 PM<lb/>
with special guest UFO<lb/>
Tickets now on sale<lb/>
a<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
???<lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0004"/><lb/>
Site iEaat (Earnltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Chris Lichok, nManager<lb/>
JIMMY DuPREE, 1jntiKtns t dltui<lb/>
Pai t I.iv ki . v.w? 44 Paul Collins, ,&amp;&amp;<lb/>
Davi Si vi kis  w, MtMc Charles Chandler ?&amp;?<lb/>
AMI 1 l Sl I K. Production Itaqn DAVID NORRIS, heatum. hduor<lb/>
! c?<lb/>
March 1. 1 ss I<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Fall Break<lb/>
Faculty Senate Turns Down Appeal<lb/>
The proposed 1981-82 fall break<lb/>
was defeated at the Faculty Senate<lb/>
Committee Meeting on Tuesday,<lb/>
March 17. However, the senate<lb/>
members did a great deal of<lb/>
brainstorming to determine what<lb/>
changes could be made in future<lb/>
school calendars that would make<lb/>
the schedule more attractive to the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Johnson, chairper-<lb/>
son of the Faculty Senate, explained<lb/>
that it would be difficult to change<lb/>
the calendar for next year because<lb/>
the catalogue copy containing the<lb/>
1981-82 schedule has already been<lb/>
put into print.<lb/>
"1 would say there really isn't op-<lb/>
position to a fall break he said,<lb/>
but the calendar committee is con-<lb/>
sidering every alternative before<lb/>
they make any changes in the<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
At the meeting on Tuesday, the<lb/>
1983-84 calendar v - rented,<lb/>
and the committee was asked to<lb/>
possibly reconsider the starting<lb/>
date, with instructions to include a<lb/>
fall break, although not necessarily<lb/>
at the time proposed. The calendar<lb/>
committee has certainly come up<lb/>
with some interesting ideas.<lb/>
One possibility is that classes<lb/>
could be scheduled to begin later in<lb/>
the Fall. The reasoning behind this<lb/>
suggestion is, first of all, that it<lb/>
would be an energy conservation<lb/>
measure. The last week in August<lb/>
and the first few weeks in<lb/>
September are extremely hot, and it<lb/>
takes a considerable amount of<lb/>
energy for air conditioning during<lb/>
this time.<lb/>
If school was delayed a couple of<lb/>
weeks, it may save energy, and give<lb/>
the students a break from the<lb/>
unbearable heat.<lb/>
Another suggestion along the<lb/>
lines of energy conservation is to<lb/>
have a winter break during the two<lb/>
coldest weeks in the year. This sug-<lb/>
gestion does not especially seem<lb/>
practical since the coldest month of<lb/>
the year in Greenville is usually<lb/>
February.<lb/>
The second consideration for<lb/>
starting the fall session later is to<lb/>
allow students who work summer<lb/>
jobs to have an extra week or two to<lb/>
earn money for the school year,<lb/>
which might be helpful.<lb/>
Instead of extending the spring<lb/>
semester into June to accomodate<lb/>
the delayed return to classes in the<lb/>
fall, the calendar committee sug-<lb/>
gested the possibility of classes<lb/>
lasting a longer period of time. This<lb/>
would mean that even though the<lb/>
fall semester would begin a couple<lb/>
of weks later, the school year would<lb/>
still end at the same time.<lb/>
According to Dr. Johnson, all of<lb/>
these possibilities would call for ma-<lb/>
jor changes in the calendar, and are<lb/>
only preliminary suggestions. He<lb/>
said that at the next senate meeting<lb/>
the Calendar Committee may have<lb/>
some more concrete suggestions to<lb/>
present. Finally, the decision is not<lb/>
solely dependant on the Faculty<lb/>
Senate nor the Calendar Commit-<lb/>
tee; the Administration has the final<lb/>
authority.<lb/>
In the meantime, it sounds like<lb/>
there are some interesting<lb/>
possibilities for the calendars in the<lb/>
years to come.<lb/>
Does CBS Miss<lb/>
Cronkite Savvy?<lb/>
It's been almost two weeks since<lb/>
veteran CBS Nightly News anchor-<lb/>
man Walter Cronkite delivered his<lb/>
final telecast from that chair, but<lb/>
the program has not suffered the<lb/>
way many skeptics expected.<lb/>
Under new anchor Dan Rather,<lb/>
the news has still been clearly and<lb/>
concisely presented. Their "60<lb/>
Minutes" news magazine will still<lb/>
enjoy his services for a while, as<lb/>
replacement Ed Bradley waits his<lb/>
turn on that highly touted show.<lb/>
Undoubtedly there are those who<lb/>
never seem to comprehend the<lb/>
necessity of change, such as those<lb/>
who narrowmindedly condemn<lb/>
Rather without giving him a chance<lb/>
to adjust to the new role of full-time<lb/>
anchor.<lb/>
Let it be remembered that<lb/>
Cronkite was not the first to sit in<lb/>
that chair, and we have no reason to<lb/>
belive that Dan Rather will be the<lb/>
last.<lb/>
HMGOD?. THIS HA!) TO 6ETKE IdOftft OF<lb/>
CfUNZED UJNVTCSmOfS THE FACULTY 5eNAT?!<lb/>
Comics Record War Triumphs<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
When I was growing up in ihe fifties, I<lb/>
devoured comic books, all kinds of comic<lb/>
books, as many as six a day. For a subur-<lb/>
ban kid in the demerol calm of the<lb/>
Eisenhower era, comics were a revelation.<lb/>
They provided adventure, fantasy,<lb/>
escape? and instruction in prevailing<lb/>
social values, didactic morality tales that<lb/>
went down easier with a dollop of enter-<lb/>
tainment.<lb/>
Popular comic books of the fifties<lb/>
routinely celebrated America's triumphs in<lb/>
war. Paper-and-ink Gls defeated the Get<lb/>
mans, the Japanese, the North Koreans<lb/>
and Red Chinese in tour-color splendor<lb/>
that established beyond a doubt tor<lb/>
crewcut readers that the United States was<lb/>
right? even blessed? in its battles with<lb/>
foreign infidels. By the mid-sixties, the<lb/>
Viet Cong replaced earlier foes as the chief<lb/>
villains in war comics. Yellow-skinned<lb/>
fanatics in black pajamas- their<lb/>
machineguns spitting "BUDDA! BCD-<lb/>
DA? the VC attacked American<lb/>
homeboys on the frontiers of democracy.<lb/>
I seldom read comic books nowdays, but<lb/>
curiosity recently prompted me to take a<lb/>
look at the current crop. A reading o DC<lb/>
Comics' Gl Combat and other popular<lb/>
books turned up some interesting<lb/>
changes? and an underlying continuity?<lb/>
in war comics.<lb/>
Even a casual reading o war comics<lb/>
shows that "the Vietnam syndrome" has<lb/>
invaded their pages. Reflecting American<lb/>
reluctance to engage in foreign adventures<lb/>
during the Carter years, our present-day<lb/>
adversaries are seldom depicted directly.<lb/>
Instead, wartime tales are set in fantastic<lb/>
parallel worlds, in ancient times and,<lb/>
especially, in World War II. The enemy of<lb/>
choice is Nazi Germany, evoking a time<lb/>
when America was unquestionably<lb/>
justified in waging war, and providing an<lb/>
enemy that everyone can hate, without<lb/>
troubling questions ol conscience in-<lb/>
truding on the action.<lb/>
Thus, when the editors of Gl Combat<lb/>
decided to tackle the story o the American<lb/>
hostages in Iran in their April 1CS1 issue,<lb/>
they did so by nol depicting the situation<lb/>
directly, but by having the Sazis seize<lb/>
American hostages. I hat established, the<lb/>
editors advanced the plot in ways both<lb/>
similar and strikingly dissimilar to the way<lb/>
the hostage crisis actually unfolded.<lb/>
Instead of sending a single rescue team,<lb/>
as did real-life Pentagon planners, the<lb/>
comic book commanders dispatch two<lb/>
units. When the first strike force is<lb/>
discovered and destroyed by Luftwaffe<lb/>
planes, the story shows Hitler himsell<lb/>
gloating over the tragedy. News reports<lb/>
blare that "Surprise mission to rescue<lb/>
hostages fails "American rescue attempt<lb/>
a disaster "Nazies display American<lb/>
dead<lb/>
However, "unknown to the enemy jeer-<lb/>
ing at America's humiliation the nar-<lb/>
rative reads, a second mission is "landing<lb/>
at a remote site in the Austrian Alps I his<lb/>
effort is a complete success, springing all<lb/>
the American hostages. In the old days,<lb/>
American Gls would have been shown<lb/>
blasting their way into Tehran and treeing<lb/>
the hostages on the verv first try. oday's<lb/>
comics are more subtle. Gl Combat incor-<lb/>
porates the suggestion o declining<lb/>
American power as a dramatic device,<lb/>
while still giving the story a happy en-<lb/>
ding and setting the rescue in a war that<lb/>
readers emotionally support.<lb/>
I he same issue includes a curious tale<lb/>
a World War II tank commander who flies<lb/>
the Southern stars and bars and follows<lb/>
advice from the ghosl ol a Confedei<lb/>
general, hi a storv called "Blood and<lb/>
Hi'tior German field Marshal! Rommel<lb/>
spares the lite ol the American in battle<lb/>
and is later spared by him. Worrying<lb/>
whether he did the right thing bv letting the<lb/>
Nazi go, the commander is assured bv the<lb/>
ghostiv general that "War isn't only kill-<lb/>
ing- it's repaying an ad ol honor rhis<lb/>
storv. with its morality tale told by a<lb/>
defender ol a slave-holding oligarchy,<lb/>
could have been lifted verbatim from a<lb/>
magnolia-scented tract of a century ago.<lb/>
Other things have changed in war com-<lb/>
ics, to be sure. Blacks and women are now<lb/>
occasional subjects t admiring stories.<lb/>
Even so. however, the presumed natural<lb/>
order ot things is respected. Black soldiers<lb/>
are shown as brave fighters, but rarely as<lb/>
high-ranking strategists. Women are pop<lb/>
traved firing machineguns with aplomb in<lb/>
emergencies (and barely mussing theii<lb/>
hair), but they go back to the unglamorous<lb/>
business ot packing parachutes tor the men<lb/>
when things return to normal.<lb/>
Normal, in the pages oi wai comics, is<lb/>
explicit or implicit support for the status<lb/>
quo. America is always the wronged partv.<lb/>
Society's pecking order is tested and con-<lb/>
firmed by war. America sometimes suffers<lb/>
setbacks, but our side wins in the end. War<lb/>
is a justifiable- even honorable? wav ot<lb/>
settling scores. Despite their more cautious<lb/>
story lines and nods to racial and sexual<lb/>
equality, war comics convev yesterday's<lb/>
message- to today's kids.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Legislator Defends Position<lb/>
The Tuesday March 17, 1981 issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian contained a letter to<lb/>
the editor entitled "ECGC Defended<lb/>
This article was written by Mickey Skid-<lb/>
more. I have been wondering who this<lb/>
person is.<lb/>
However, I was attacked for speaking<lb/>
against an appropriation to the East<lb/>
Carolina Gay Community. As an ECU<lb/>
student government legislator, 1 must<lb/>
abide by what I feel the ECU students<lb/>
want as a majority.<lb/>
1 don't believe the majority of East<lb/>
Carolina University students want their<lb/>
student fees to sponsor any ECGC pro-<lb/>
grams. None of my friends that are<lb/>
students have expressed they would want<lb/>
the ECGC to spend their student fees.<lb/>
I was merely trying to serve the ECU<lb/>
student body as a fair and competent<lb/>
legislator.<lb/>
As for Mickey Skidmore, I will not<lb/>
personally smear you; the need is not<lb/>
prevelant. You said yourself that my<lb/>
position on the ECGC appropriation<lb/>
was in keeping with the democratic ma-<lb/>
jority of East Carolina University. You<lb/>
also said you didn't understand how we<lb/>
as a modern university could be so<lb/>
assinine.<lb/>
Mickey Skidmore, if everyone here<lb/>
seems so assinine, why the Hell don't<lb/>
you go somewhere else?<lb/>
1 will continue to work for legislation<lb/>
that best exemplifies the majority of the<lb/>
students opinions at East Carolina<lb/>
Univeristy.<lb/>
JESSE G. YATES, 111<lb/>
SGA legislator<lb/>
Walk For Hunger<lb/>
As a member of the Greenville<lb/>
Hunger Coalition, I would like to take<lb/>
this opportunity to introduce to ECU's<lb/>
students, faculty, and staff a most ex-<lb/>
citing upcoming event in the city of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
In positive response to the ongoing<lb/>
crisis of world hunger, the Greenville<lb/>
Hunger Coalition will be pledging its<lb/>
awareness for action by conducting the<lb/>
10th Annual Walk for Humanity, on<lb/>
Saturday, April 11, 1981.<lb/>
The Walk, itself, is sponsored by the<lb/>
Greenville Hunger Coalition and Cam-<lb/>
pus Ministers and is supported by Dr.<lb/>
Thomas Brewer and Don McGlohon.<lb/>
mayor of Greenville, who has declared<lb/>
April 11, "A Day of Awareness of<lb/>
World Hunger<lb/>
The goal of the walk this year is<lb/>
$10,000. The proceeds will be divided<lb/>
with half going to the Campus<lb/>
Ministers' Emergency Kitchen Fund for<lb/>
use of Pitt County residents. The re-<lb/>
maining half will go directly to Oxfam-<lb/>
America which is sending funds to the<lb/>
Horn of Africa area, especially Somalia.<lb/>
There will be several levels of par-<lb/>
ticipation for the walk:<lb/>
1. Walk yourself and get sponsors? the<lb/>
more the better.<lb/>
2. Sponsor one or more walkers or give<lb/>
an outright donation by sending a check<lb/>
to: Walk for Humanity, co Newman<lb/>
Center, 953 E. 10th St Greenville.<lb/>
3. Supply sandwiches and or apples tor<lb/>
the walkers at the end of the 20 km.<lb/>
walk. These can be taken to the Baptist<lb/>
Student Union (511 E. 10th St.)<lb/>
Because ECU is such an integral pan<lb/>
of the city o Greenville, the coalition is<lb/>
looking forward to combining its<lb/>
strengths with the students, faculty and<lb/>
staff in order to reach our SIO.(XX) goal.<lb/>
For more information concerning the<lb/>
10th Annual W alk for Humanity, please<lb/>
call the Newman Center, 752-4216.<lb/>
MARY CATHERINE HANIFER<lb/>
Junior, French<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
da vs.<lb/>
Hck<lb/>
rhea<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
. <lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0005"/><lb/>
y<lb/>
y<lb/>
w<lb/>
ten<lb/>
res letters<lb/>
I or<lb/>
 s<lb/>
a letters<lb/>
and<lb/>
l number<lb/>
I etters<lb/>
tn pages,<lb/>
. All let<lb/>
I v,<lb/>
 a-<lb/>
rs n 7f<lb/>
i each 30<lb/>
THL I AST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
1Rt H IV. IVM<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
'It Ain't Much Fun'<lb/>
Twenty Years Of Panhandling<lb/>
Cheap Trick Comes To Minges Coliseum<lb/>
B PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
SfHv ditoi<lb/>
"Hey.<lb/>
"Hey, man. Hey. Come 'ere1<lb/>
Hul the white man keeps walking,<lb/>
leaving the grizzled old black man<lb/>
standing alone on the sidewalk.<lb/>
He brightens in a moment,<lb/>
however, when a well-dressed<lb/>
woman walks in his direction.<lb/>
"Hey, lady. ome 'ere. I gots to<lb/>
show you somethin<lb/>
The woman pity, curiosity,<lb/>
revulsion on her face stops.<lb/>
The old man wobbles toward her.<lb/>
He wears a tattei t) suit coat<lb/>
that may once have been, tweed. 1 he<lb/>
pants thai hang horn his waist are a<lb/>
nondescri green, laded beyond<lb/>
recognition.<lb/>
His boots are as battered as his<lb/>
gray-bearded face, and with a<lb/>
toothless smile he approaches the<lb/>
woman.<lb/>
Ton reaches into his coal pocket<lb/>
and pulls out a small medicine bot-<lb/>
tle.<lb/>
"I isten, tad) he sa)s, "I gots<lb/>
o I can buy my<lb/>
Tickets went on sale Monday for Cheap Trick's Saturday, April 4 concert in Minges Coliseum. Also appearing with to get some mone<lb/>
Cheap Trick will he special guest UFO. The concert will hegin at 8 p.m. Tickets are S6.50 and S8.50. medicine<lb/>
The Legion Lives On<lb/>
But Without Camels And Desert Forts<lb/>
 BAGNl . fiance ? The<lb/>
camels have been replaced by four-<lb/>
el drive vehicles or parachutes.<lb/>
Headquarters has been moved from<lb/>
Sidi-bel- Abbes in the Algerian<lb/>
desert to the less glamorous en-<lb/>
virons ol Marseille. And even the<lb/>
men man) of whom still have<lb/>
something in their past they don't<lb/>
talk about - have changed with the<lb/>
times.<lb/>
Hut the essence remains, a<lb/>
"tamilv" held together by a long<lb/>
tradition of camaraderie, service.<lb/>
honor and fidelity. The French<lb/>
Foreign L egion has not changed<lb/>
since King Louis Philippe signed it<lb/>
into being 150 vears ago ? March<lb/>
10, 1831.<lb/>
The 8.000 or so legionnaires who<lb/>
have pledged to defend the interests<lb/>
oi trance anywhere in the world are<lb/>
undoubtedly the toughest troops at<lb/>
the disposal of the French govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The government has called on the<lb/>
ion often. In its 150 years,<lb/>
legionnaires have fought and died<lb/>
on Five continents. It last saw com-<lb/>
bat in May 1978, when 600 members<lb/>
of the 2nd Legion Paratroop Regi-<lb/>
ment jumped into Zaire's Shaba<lb/>
Province to help fend oii an inva-<lb/>
sion bv Katangan exiles living in<lb/>
ngola.<lb/>
le I egion museum at head-<lb/>
quarters here in Aubagne is filled<lb/>
with memorabilia from campaigns<lb/>
in Mexico, North Africa, In-<lb/>
dochina, Norway and Madagascar.<lb/>
Throughout its history, France<lb/>
has had a tradition of foreign troops<lb/>
in its army and today nearly half of<lb/>
the men in today's Legion come<lb/>
from outside France. More than 35<lb/>
nationalities are represented.<lb/>
And, of course, all are volunteers<lb/>
? an important political fact in a<lb/>
countrv where it takes a vote of<lb/>
Parliament to send a unit composed<lb/>
oi conscripts out oi the countrv.<lb/>
But the days of Beau Geste are<lb/>
gone. There are no more lonel)<lb/>
desert garrisons. No more romantic<lb/>
campaigns against treacherous<lb/>
rebels on horseback. Not even a de-<lb/>
cent oasis to defend.<lb/>
"Except for a few oldtimers. Bel<lb/>
Abbes is nothing now but another<lb/>
part of the Legion's history says<lb/>
Gen. Paul Lardry, commander ol<lb/>
the Legion, nodding toward a legion<lb/>
monument transported from<lb/>
Algeria to the parade ground here<lb/>
after the final pulloul from Sidi-bel-<lb/>
Abbes in 1962.<lb/>
Today's legionnaire is different<lb/>
from his counterpart oi the past,<lb/>
says Lardry. He is a reflection ot the<lb/>
society in which he has grown up.<lb/>
But the reasons for joining what still<lb/>
is viewed as one oi the toughest and<lb/>
most highly disciplined military<lb/>
organiz.atii.nis in the world are not<lb/>
all thai much different.<lb/>
"There are main motives tor a<lb/>
man to join the Legjon, but mone)<lb/>
is certainl) not one oi them. He is a<lb/>
young man who likes action, who<lb/>
likes arms. He is a young man who<lb/>
ma) have problems ? political pro<lb/>
blems in his home countrv. tamilv<lb/>
problems, love problems or even<lb/>
legal problems.<lb/>
"The) like the idea oi living<lb/>
under a rigid regime, and not feel<lb/>
Kst or isolated. We speak of the<lb/>
Foreign I egion family. It realh is a<lb/>
tamilv where the ensemble oi the<lb/>
corps, the officers, non-<lb/>
commissioned officers and legion-<lb/>
naires feel linked together. They feel<lb/>
that their leaders are interested in<lb/>
them<lb/>
The Legion is picky these davs<lb/>
about those it accepts into this fami-<lb/>
ly. Three out of four candidates are<lb/>
rejected. What's more, those ac-<lb/>
cepted are given a couple of weeks<lb/>
to think it over before making the<lb/>
decision final.<lb/>
?ttei a series oi physical,<lb/>
psychological, intelligence and<lb/>
securit) checks, the new legionnaire<lb/>
is packed oii to boot camp in<lb/>
Castelnaudary, near Toulouse,<lb/>
where he spends four to five months<lb/>
before assignment to a regular regi-<lb/>
ment. Although nearlv halt oi the<lb/>
recruits have previous militarv ex-<lb/>
perience, all start their training from<lb/>
tch.<lb/>
I ardry, who has spent aboui halt<lb/>
ot his 3o year militar) career in the<lb/>
1 egion, savs what makes command<lb/>
here so interesting is the wide vunetv<lb/>
ol personalities and cultural levels<lb/>
among the men. Among the<lb/>
volunteers arc to be found manual<lb/>
laborers, butchers, writers, teachers<lb/>
and engineers. 1 here is even a<lb/>
former rrappist monk in the ranks.<lb/>
I he 1 egion on duty is spit and<lb/>
polish; off-duty there is unusual in-<lb/>
formality. Officers, non-coms and<lb/>
legionnaires mingle iieciv.<lb/>
Inendlv relations cut across rank.<lb/>
?"Io command somebod) today,<lb/>
you have to like the people you com-<lb/>
mand says the general. "And to<lb/>
like them, you have to know them.<lb/>
It's important to talk with the<lb/>
legionnaires. You learn a lot.<lb/>
Perhaps even more todav than in the<lb/>
past, human relations play an im-<lb/>
portant rote in command<lb/>
1 ot men who are disappointed<lb/>
with ordinarv lite, who have trouble<lb/>
with ordinarv pursuits, who are<lb/>
haunted bv personal tragedy, the<lb/>
I egion's mix ot rigid discipline with<lb/>
the rough warmth ot a substitute<lb/>
tamilv often provides contentment.<lb/>
Perhaps (hat's win nearlv 60 per-<lb/>
cent re-enlist after their first five-<lb/>
year hitch.<lb/>
As il to emphasize the urgency oi<lb/>
his request, he shoves the pill bottle<lb/>
in her face.<lb/>
Though she has a dubious look on<lb/>
her face, the woman silently opens<lb/>
her purse and hands I ony a quartet.<lb/>
She then hurries away, glad to be<lb/>
gone as quickly as possible.<lb/>
1 ony, triumphant, places the com<lb/>
carefully in his pocket and declares,<lb/>
"Shoot, that was eas<lb/>
As someone else approaches I onv<lb/>
begins his spiel.<lb/>
"Hell, man the approaching<lb/>
teenager replies. "I know what kind<lb/>
ot medicine you're buying<lb/>
onv shuffles away muttering<lb/>
something about uppity.<lb/>
"I reckon I'm about 65 years<lb/>
old Tony savs. " been at this<lb/>
(panhandling) for neat 20 oi 'em. It<lb/>
ain't much fun<lb/>
lon is a wino who spends his<lb/>
days bumming mone) on downtown<lb/>
streets. He figures he makes enough<lb/>
mone) to afford a bottle every two<lb/>
or three davs.<lb/>
"I don't buy none of that cheap<lb/>
stuff neither. Can't abide it, tastes<lb/>
just like koolaid. Don't catch no<lb/>
buzz on it neither<lb/>
lonv enjoys catching a buzz.<lb/>
"Helps me forget my troubles he<lb/>
puts it.<lb/>
"1 ost my job in '62 and I ain't<lb/>
worked since. I looked for a job for<lb/>
a while, but wouldn't nobod) hue<lb/>
me. So 1 nisi give up<lb/>
lonv had worked as a janitor in a<lb/>
store in Wilson, but it closed in<lb/>
1962.<lb/>
"I been driftin' ever since<lb/>
loin's wife left him shorilv after<lb/>
he lost his job, taking their six<lb/>
children with hei.<lb/>
"1 ain't seen none ot them in<lb/>
Yolanda King Gives<lb/>
Dramatic Lecture<lb/>
In Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
B OTIS ROBINSON<lb/>
v?ff Wrilrr<lb/>
Yolanda King, daughter of the<lb/>
late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr<lb/>
gave a dramatic lecture Monday<lb/>
night in ECU'S Hendrix Theatre en-<lb/>
titled: "Black Theatre: Moving Us<lb/>
Higher<lb/>
With emphasis on progress for<lb/>
blacks, Miss King quoted black<lb/>
American writers and civil rights<lb/>
leaders. She began her presentation<lb/>
by reciting "A Dream Deferred" by<lb/>
Langston Hughes. She stated the<lb/>
poem emphasizes everyone has the<lb/>
"freedom to dream<lb/>
According to Miss King, it is im-<lb/>
portant for blacks to remember<lb/>
their ancestry. "In the words of<lb/>
Malcolm X she said, "A people<lb/>
cannot know where they are going<lb/>
unless they know where they have<lb/>
been<lb/>
Miss King explained there is a<lb/>
need for blacks to pursue a course<lb/>
of unity. She said: "The common<lb/>
goal has been as Ben Hooks, presi-<lb/>
dent of the NAACP, put it, "to get<lb/>
all you can. . .can all you get. . .and<lb/>
sit on the can. . We need to join<lb/>
hands and work together<lb/>
On civil rights. Miss King quoted<lb/>
her father on the issue of non-<lb/>
violence. "Either there is non-<lb/>
violence or there will be nonex-<lb/>
istence. Quality, not quanity is the<lb/>
measure of one's life<lb/>
Miss King, who was 12 years old<lb/>
when Dr. King was assassinated, ex-<lb/>
pressed her feelings about her<lb/>
father's death. "I was not sad at the<lb/>
death of my father. I only thank<lb/>
God for sending a r an like Martin<lb/>
Luther King Jr She added later,<lb/>
"If we can observe April Fool's Day<lb/>
and Halloween, we can certainly<lb/>
observe Martin Luther King Day<lb/>
The lecture ended on a note of en-<lb/>
couragement to students in the area<lb/>
of politics and education.<lb/>
"Voting does make a difference.<lb/>
If you get behind them<lb/>
(Congressmen), they will work for<lb/>
you<lb/>
"It is important that black<lb/>
students seek all of the knowledge<lb/>
they can get<lb/>
Miss King received a bachelor's<lb/>
degree in Theatre Arts from Smith<lb/>
College in North Campton, Mass.<lb/>
She received her master's of fine<lb/>
arts degree from New York Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
The lecture was sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Union Minority Arts Com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow<lb/>
This couple enjoys a sentimental goodbye scene on campus.<lb/>
more than 15 years. Ven<lb/>
know where the) at. Sometimes I<lb/>
wondei<lb/>
"Wanda (his wife) wa d<lb/>
woman. I don't blame her none<lb/>
leavin' me. I was drmkm" h<lb/>
the time, (mess 1 drink h<lb/>
When f onv tires i 1 ? me ' w n he<lb/>
simplv leaves. He estimat tha he<lb/>
usually siavs m a town al<lb/>
weeks at a time. He thi i heads tor<lb/>
another, but he<lb/>
eastern Viiharolina.<lb/>
"I got me a brothei in K<lb/>
Sometimes I stav with<lb/>
don't like to imp <lb/>
mostly I just sleep ?<lb/>
comfortable<lb/>
1 onv sleeps in pai k . i<lb/>
buildings, m tram<lb/>
buses, in abandoned<lb/>
wherever he can find<lb/>
fords him protection<lb/>
elements.<lb/>
"Winter's the hard-<lb/>
place. Got to look tor a <lb/>
warm. Ram don't h<lb/>
much. I can always find me<lb/>
to stand under<lb/>
Part ot rony's n<lb/>
does go tor tood. He will <lb/>
food when he cannot get<lb/>
way.<lb/>
"Sometimes people <lb/>
or sometimes i find it.<lb/>
throws awav lot- of good food.<lb/>
"But I don't steal n<lb/>
don't take nothin' from<lb/>
ment neither. 1 ma) be a bun<lb/>
least 1 don't take nothin'<lb/>
don't want to give me.<lb/>
"Well. 1 got to go get mt<lb/>
more money lonv savs ambling<lb/>
a way.<lb/>
He). man. (<lb/>
ou<lb/>
'?'<lb/>
These Jobs Are<lb/>
Especially Tough<lb/>
NEW YORK, I PI ? Manv<lb/>
Americans complain about their<lb/>
jobs but People magazine has put<lb/>
together a list of the six people who<lb/>
"eminently qualify" tor the six<lb/>
"Worst Headache" jobs in the na-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
In its latest edition the magazine<lb/>
says David Stockman, 34, director<lb/>
oi President Reagan's Office of<lb/>
Management and Budget, has a<lb/>
tough assignment working an 110<lb/>
hour work week while cutting $48<lb/>
billion from federal programs and<lb/>
making powerful enemies.<lb/>
The magazine said other<lb/>
"headache jobs" are held bv: ?<lb/>
? O.A. "Bum" Phillips. 58, new<lb/>
coach oi the New Orleans Saints, a<lb/>
team that claimed one "win" last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
? dale Hovey, 48, director of the<lb/>
crippled Unit 2 reactor at the Three<lb/>
Mile Island nuclear power plant in<lb/>
Pennsylvania.<lb/>
? Robert F. Thompson, 55,<lb/>
aeronautical engineer, strugglii<lb/>
get the much delayed Space Shi<lb/>
oii the ground.<lb/>
? Ruth Love, 48, the superinten-<lb/>
dent oi Chicago's trouble beset<lb/>
school district, who makes $120<lb/>
a year, while coping with a v<lb/>
million deficit.<lb/>
? And entrepeneur E. Sterling<lb/>
Hunsaker of Salt Lake City, Utah,<lb/>
who is $613 billion in debt ? a<lb/>
figure about two thirds of the na-<lb/>
tional debt. People magazine said<lb/>
Hunsaker. who has found and lost<lb/>
40 businesses and easily qualities tor<lb/>
the "crowning award" r job<lb/>
headaches is philosophical about his<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
"I may be wiped out he told the<lb/>
magazine. "But if worse come-<lb/>
worst there's always the Guinness<lb/>
Book oi World Records<lb/>
It's Those Little<lb/>
Things That Really<lb/>
Drive You Crazy<lb/>
By DAVID NORRIS<lb/>
r eitliirri r dilor<lb/>
I suppose everyone has their per-<lb/>
sonal list of little things that other<lb/>
people do that drives them crazy.<lb/>
Ranging in seriousness from<lb/>
knuckle-cracking to scratching up<lb/>
borrowed albums, these little an-<lb/>
noying things can add up to alot of<lb/>
headaches (or, alot of laughter,<lb/>
depending on how you look at it.)<lb/>
I hate coming u to play a pinball<lb/>
machine and finding cigarette ashes<lb/>
all over the top. It doesn't really af-<lb/>
fect the way the machine works, but<lb/>
it's still a disgusting sight.<lb/>
Another thing 1 hate is having to<lb/>
read a letter shown on a TV show<lb/>
that is halfway cut off by the bot-<lb/>
tom of the screen. It's especially bad<lb/>
if the letter is an important plot<lb/>
device, and they don't read it out<lb/>
loud or explain it later on.<lb/>
Most entrances to buildings on<lb/>
campus have a set of two doors.<lb/>
But, it never does any good, because<lb/>
one of the twin doors is always lock-<lb/>
ed. 1 always try to go out the locked<lb/>
door first, and usually run into it<lb/>
pretty hard before 1 realize that it's<lb/>
not going to open.<lb/>
Lots of annoying things can hap-<lb/>
pen while going to a movie. Having<lb/>
to go to the bathroom during an im-<lb/>
portant part oi the movie is one:<lb/>
another one (1 especiall) hate this) is<lb/>
having to sit behind people who are<lb/>
much taller than 1 am, blocking half<lb/>
oi the screen.<lb/>
I hate forms and coupons that sav<lb/>
"tear along dotted line and then<lb/>
rip down the middle when you try to<lb/>
separate them.<lb/>
I don't really like writing checks<lb/>
because of the number oi mistakes 1<lb/>
make on them. There are probablv<lb/>
dumpsters full of torn-up checks o<lb/>
mine where 1 had written "Pay to<lb/>
the order to Twelve dollars and<lb/>
thirty-five cents" or some such<lb/>
foolishness.<lb/>
Did you ever loan a pencil or pen<lb/>
to someone who returned it with<lb/>
toothmarks all over it? Or, have you<lb/>
ever loaned a book to somebody<lb/>
who gave it back scuffed, tattered<lb/>
and with loose pages? If you have,<lb/>
then you can see why these things<lb/>
are high on my list of things to hate.<lb/>
Light bulb packs always say on<lb/>
the side that they have an average<lb/>
life of 2,000 hours or some such<lb/>
claim. I think 1 always get the sick<lb/>
ones that conk out after a couple of<lb/>
See SOMK, page 6, col. 9<lb/>
n<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
wmwmMmimmmtf:<lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0006"/><lb/>
lilt K u I I <lb/>
t Kl H I lws<lb/>
Happenings<lb/>
H KPI N1N IS<lb/>
( ttm i i cnt<lb/>
da 19<lb/>
Men - H iseball v lemson, Han<lb/>
? s<lb/>
? <lb/>
I i e<lb/>
miul I tack &amp; I ield Meet,<lb/>
 sv a Phi Biolog 103<lb/>
S ' ball ll'ie Reason &amp;<lb/>
v Brewstei B102<lb/>
P e Season Softball<lb/>
1 )i essed to Kill"<lb/>
??1 ei li Be" Hendrix<lb/>
"Dressed to Kill"<lb/>
? ei li Be" Hendrix<lb/>
 c Slate<lb/>
? <lb/>
I uesda 24<lb/>
V00 p m Men's Baseball Pi ! I<lb/>
1 ield<lb/>
5:00 pin N ounjj Hom I '<lb/>
.in I andingham Room<lb/>
5:00 i1 in I ainiK c hild Assn Hi i V-<lb/>
5:00 p m Deadline. Intramural c o ki Innei<lb/>
ube W atei Polo<lb/>
8 15 p.m. Voice Faculthambei Pi<lb/>
VI Fletchei Rev Hall<lb/>
March 24 pril 24 Intran<lb/>
Minges (. i m<lb/>
Wednesda 25<lb/>
i oo p.m Men's Baseball I  field 11<lb/>
igton I ield<lb/>
5:00 pan Deadline' Intramura <lb/>
1 earn &amp; Individual)<lb/>
. k Intramural tiolf C'ki<lb/>
lndi idual) I earn t aptains' &amp; Pai<lb/>
Meeting, Brewstei BK)2<lb/>
School oj Art<lb/>
? March 22- pnl 12 I a<lb/>
National Competition: Works <lb/>
 ' juried competition sponsored<lb/>
Vale (2) Harrington School of Medicine and School ol n<lb/>
the 1 as! v arolina rts F? al V<lb/>
School t Mush<lb/>
el Hill, Home aua, 19 Sigma lpha Una 1<lb/>
Musicale, 7 30 p.m.<lb/>
? March 20ynthia I I<lb/>
Recital, 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
ball ream (dp ? Jennie Watson, violii <lb/>
Officials' Clinic, Senioi Recital, 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
? March 21 Northai 1 M 1<lb/>
i ble( oncert, ssociation, All Da<lb/>
? March 22 Donna Colemai<lb/>
nis Mixed Recital,  1 5 p.m.<lb/>
Ciym 2 ? March 22 I Hawk<lb/>
s i. ampus Recital, s. Iv :<lb/>
? March 2; 1 1 n I<lb/>
j ft ball p.m.<lb/>
March 25 lauilt hambei oncert, 8 I<lb/>
p. m<lb/>
M<lb/>
? I 1<lb/>
Da I I law k ins. oboe I a. ult<lb/>
; Pei 1 u ion I nsemble C 01 - !s n<lb/>
Mai<lb/>
P "<lb/>
1 i uh y c hambei c oncei 1. -<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
? <lb/>
Buccaneer<lb/>
People" (R) Show - al 2:00, 4 U), ? I<lb/>
IK) a m. N1 'V<lb/>
Bull" (R) Show  I . 15 ? I<lb/>
M V ,I<lb/>
Long" (R) Shows al I, 3, 5, 7 &amp; K<lb/>
M .11<lb/>
11 nlisc<lb/>
Some Pet<lb/>
Peeves<lb/>
( ontinued from paw<lb/>
1<lb/>
like i<lb/>
I noi only hate,<lb/>
n whei<lb/>
ifl<lb/>
IDD1 I<lb/>
Dl I<lb/>
1)1 i<lb/>
11<lb/>
Plaza<lb/>
R) a 5, 7 &amp; 9:00<lb/>
e" (R) Shi I 20, 5 15, 7:10?&amp;<lb/>
(P i) SI, iw al 2 ?0,<lb/>
Lridax 'real N ? L-vil" (R) Show<lb/>
(R) Shows al 3:20. 5:15, 7:10 &amp;<lb/>
( R 1 S( ?? a 1 1:15, 5:15,<lb/>
m.<lb/>
n,n 11111<lb/>
ttic<lb/>
II ss B( )1 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
10 pan<lb/>
-<lb/>
i<lb/>
Cinema Society<lb/>
Showing 'Orpheus<lb/>
GNC<lb/>
neral Nutrition<lb/>
America's Best Nutrition Values are at<lb/>
mm<lb/>
 .?(? ??? . 11<lb/>
1 't'ir i 1-<lb/>
:<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
 . i<lb/>
.  li'avi (Ma<lb/>
1978 woi k b<lb/>
aUo<lb/>
bea<lb/>
R<lb/>
3<lb/>
? ? lawyei<lb/>
tense ol<lb/>
i 1 ? accused<lb/>
nui dei involves<lb/>
vitamin O ij RAISINS HONEY vitamin C<lb/>
99. 39 s119 99 s1"c<lb/>
1<lb/>
GNC Quality at less than Cheapest Cut-Rate Wait Order Prices!<lb/>
 ITEMS AT COUPON MICC LIMITED TO ONC EACH K CUSTOMER WITH COUPONCSI<lb/>
ZJNC DpLOM1" Ginseng KELP ?1'<lb/>
29 39 SP9 39 M29<lb/>
r"i" .??? -?. 1 siv'i ??-?? 1 ?' ??? ??-? -? 1 ? ? ? ?' ? ' " ??? 1<lb/>
89 69<lb/>
Lecithin<lb/>
-?<lb/>
Ssve<lb/>
IC61<lb/>
i"e $139<lb/>
B-1 2 ?<lb/>
. S"39<lb/>
L03EFAT<lb/>
SENSATIONAL 1C SALE<lb/>
39<lb/>
STRESS?<lb/>
IVlodeletts SggMfl &amp; 2 ibo potassium 9WJ<lb/>
? jCOD LIVER OIL 2230 ZINC ' B-C0MPLEX<lb/>
$C99 fsUPFR GARLIC 2o8r,VITAMINBl?l221 fi49<lb/>
mwrrjmwwvmmwn w??e ??<lb/>
ITEMS AT COUPON PRICE UMTCO TO ONC IACM KM CIMTOMCR WITH<lb/>
 lL HI l? I<lb/>
SIV'I'M '???? I V f<lb/>
igWTTWrmWm<lb/>
Igranola dates<lb/>
i. 39 l! s179,<lb/>
ROLLED<lb/>
OATS<lb/>
-I SI "<lb/>
cu Macaroni &amp;<lb/>
Soybean ,Cheese Dinnef<lb/>
? -<lb/>
49 19<lb/>
ib<lb/>
( ilen<lb/>
Karen<lb/>
11 e<lb/>
Departmeni<lb/>
? 1 !l movies are<lb/>
Hendrix<lb/>
?  are follow<lb/>
ents and<lb/>
I DDuurc aaeau?I. ? it r 11 Lii 1 ? .li i m .i i i ? ?a<lb/>
II r nUfito y.Ti.ri Ht-irrzr Hwri naxnrzm WSSEU5MSZ,<lb/>
89: YOGURT Juices chips<lb/>
BROWN<lb/>
RICE<lb/>
39<lb/>
10' w 10<lb/>
C BRAN<lb/>
29<lb/>
piZJVJJ ??-? . 1<lb/>
FLOUR<lb/>
49<lb/>
lentils g?s shmpo? ?s 'wsr1<lb/>
 69 ?? sl09 s<lb/>
;2"<lb/>
Green 1 '7V Af 11- C oa?<lb/>
Scheduled Sunday<lb/>
General Nutrition Center<lb/>
Caroliiia-tast Mall<lb/>
1.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Thurs Jesse<lb/>
Bolt<lb/>
FriSat<lb/>
Pegasus Plus<lb/>
Tues. in the<lb/>
Phoenix Room<lb/>
Tommy G &amp; Co.<lb/>
 only Greenville<lb/>
appearance<lb/>
in almost half a year<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
AC OS1 Youi favorite<lb/>
00k. I he famous alligator<lb/>
111 lots ol lahuloiis colors<lb/>
. ol the rainbow<lb/>
ee. 520.00<lb/>
llOU<lb/>
S16.99<lb/>
V<lb/>
Co<lb/>
C???<lb/>
HW<lb/>
??k<lb/>
TheDesign<lb/>
Diamond Collectit<lb/>
from ArtCarved.<lb/>
f Beautiful. Fashionable.<lb/>
I Surprisingly Affordable.<lb/>
k ArtCarved proudly<lb/>
introduces its exclusive Designer<lb/>
Diamond Collection. A choice<lb/>
of college rings in three<lb/>
graceful styles, all with genuine<lb/>
diamonds And each available<lb/>
in 10K and 14K yellow or<lb/>
white gold.<lb/>
The beautiful, yet affordable<lb/>
Designer Diamond<lb/>
Collection. Available onV<lb/>
from ArtCarvet.<lb/>
(All ring styles are also<lb/>
available in the elegant<lb/>
diamond substitute, Cubic<lb/>
Zirconia.)<lb/>
rTORVED<lb/>
V CLASS RINGS INC<lb/>
March 23, 24, 25 bLU St. I Supply Store Lobby<lb/>
M<lb/>
Pit<lb/>
hon<lb/>
pan<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0007"/><lb/>
I HI t SI KOl IN1AN MARCH 1st, WM<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
iWjndrush<lb/>
LaJIsjc teour Cottar. Tut Hep lAi<lb/>
ft pw.c AJwejus<lb/>
IT1!) rTHGooplLBUvi<lb/>
l' yTpoT cqTiJ<lb/>
HAS Comffttvy I<lb/>
mill v <lb/>
Music Recitals Planned<lb/>
Soprano Mysa Smith perform in recital lit<lb/>
of Cairo. Ga and day, March 20. in the<lb/>
violinist Jennie Watson Fletcher Music Centei<lb/>
Raleigh, senior Recital Hall here.<lb/>
students in the Fast 1 heir program will<lb/>
i arolina University begin at 9 p.m. Both<lb/>
School ot Music, will are candidates tor the<lb/>
Fabric Workshop<lb/>
Planned Next Week<lb/>
Joan 1 intault, of the<lb/>
University ot Illinois,<lb/>
will be gimg a two-da<lb/>
workshop in<lb/>
photomedia techniques<lb/>
on fabric on Monday,<lb/>
Match 23 and luesda.<lb/>
March 24 in the Jenkins<lb/>
1 ine Vrts Center.<lb/>
Monda evening,<lb/>
there will also be a slide<lb/>
presentation given be<lb/>
Ms. l intault in the<lb/>
Jenkiiu Auditorium.<lb/>
The workshop and<lb/>
lecture are organized by<lb/>
Craftsmen Fast and<lb/>
sponsored by the Visual<lb/>
Aits Forum with funds<lb/>
from the SGA.<lb/>
Bachelor of Music<lb/>
Education degree, and<lb/>
Miss Watson is also<lb/>
pursuing a second<lb/>
degree program in<lb/>
music therapy.<lb/>
Alvsa Smith will per-<lb/>
form "The Blessed<lb/>
Virgin's Expostula-<lb/>
tion" by Purcell,<lb/>
C hausson s "Fes<lb/>
Papillons Massanet's<lb/>
"Adieu. Notre Petite<lb/>
Table" from<lb/>
"Manon Brahams's<lb/>
"In W al desei m -<lb/>
samkeit, Fanny<lb/>
M e n d e 1 s s o h n ' s<lb/>
"Sehnsucht two<lb/>
Aaron Copland songs<lb/>
and "Nancy Hanks"<lb/>
bv Katherine Davis.<lb/>
She will be accom-<lb/>
panied by pianist<lb/>
Elizabeth Braxton.<lb/>
Miss Smith is a stu-<lb/>
dent o' Virginia Finn<lb/>
o the ECU voice facul-<lb/>
ty and the daughter of<lb/>
David and Faye W.<lb/>
Smith of Cairo. Ga.<lb/>
Jennie Watson's por-<lb/>
tion of the program will<lb/>
include the Adagio<lb/>
movement from Sin-<lb/>
ding's Suite in A<lb/>
Minor, Opus 10:<lb/>
Handel's Sonate da<lb/>
Camera, No. 12 in F<lb/>
Major; Stravinsky's<lb/>
"Duo Concertante"<lb/>
and Felix<lb/>
Mendelssohn's I<lb/>
Waited for the Ford<lb/>
Her piano accom-<lb/>
panist will be Stephanie<lb/>
Tingler.<lb/>
Miss Watson is a stu-<lb/>
dent of Dr. Rodney<lb/>
Schmid of the ECU<lb/>
School . f Music strings<lb/>
faculty and daughter of<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J. Perry<lb/>
Watson o' 4208 Union<lb/>
St Raleigh.<lb/>
Ready to teach<lb/>
home nursing, first aid,<lb/>
parenting, child care,<lb/>
water safety, CPR.<lb/>
Redross: Read for a new century.<lb/>
j<lb/>
The Fleming Center hae been here for you slnoe 1974.<lb/>
providing private, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of all ages at a reasonable cost<lb/>
Saturday abortion hoars<lb/>
Free pregnancy tsst<lb/>
Very early prefnanoy tests<lb/>
Bvenlnf birth control hoars<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when you need us.<lb/>
Pan 781-SeSO in Falrijh anytime.<lb/>
THE FLEMING<lb/>
H M C<lb/>
A Pu:? -  e ot This Newspaoei i'? A I. ? ? -unai<lb/>
m<lb/>
Electrolysis<lb/>
REMOVAL OF<lb/>
UNWANTED<lb/>
HAIR<lb/>
SUNTANS ?<lb/>
PERMS<lb/>
$20.00<lb/>
A&amp;B<lb/>
HAIR CARE<lb/>
7560588<lb/>
222 Greenville BUd<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
OHKllHOlill ,<lb/>
Wholesale &amp; Retail<lb/>
l Ice Sales<lb/>
 SPECIAL REG<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
39c<lb/>
8-LB BAG 89- <lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
Expire April 1 1981<lb/>
?Hl ic Dai'1<lb/>
. ?? a tew iw.?- r<lb/>
Fosdick's Seafood Savers<lb/>
Nisthtly OO-OOpm<lb/>
Tues. Fish Fry- All 1W hish You Un bat With A Mug<lb/>
Ot Your r-avorite Beverage$3.99<lb/>
Wed. Shrimp Treat- Delicious Calabash Shnmp With trench<lb/>
tries. Cole SlaW and Our tamous Hushpuppie$$3.99<lb/>
Thur. Family "Night A Seafood Sampler With Calabash<lb/>
Shrimp, tried tlsh. Oysters and Deviled Crab$4-99<lb/>
Tues,Wed,Thur(Oyster Bar Only) 1 Doz Halbhell<lb/>
Oysters (Steamed or Raw) And A Mug Ot Your Favorite Beverage<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
41<lb/>
10th l??n? SI<lb/>
TM-I77J<lb/>
Ph. 756-2011<lb/>
iUbOUi<lb/>
L-<lb/>
L.J<lb/>
SPRING SAVINGS DAYS<lb/>
Save A Total of $15<lb/>
On These Newest Fashions For Spring<lb/>
Coupons Redeemable Today Thru Sat March 21<lb/>
CHEENO WORK PANTS $3 $4<lb/>
Get $3 Off Any Style<lb/>
Twill CHEENO Brand Work<lb/>
Pants<lb/>
Present (oupon<lb/>
For Purchase<lb/>
mr rurcnasc Cl ? Sid<lb/>
Offer Kxpires Sal Mar. 21 3?$l <lb/>
DESIGNER JEANS $4<lb/>
Get $4 Off Any Designer<lb/>
Jean Including CALVIN KLEIN<lb/>
and GLORIA VANDERBILT<lb/>
$4<lb/>
Presentoupon<lb/>
lor Purchase<lb/>
Offer Kxpires Sat Mar. 21<lb/>
$4 1 $4<lb/>
DRESSES<lb/>
Get $4 Off Any Reg. Priced<lb/>
Dress, Suit or Skirtset.<lb/>
Many Styles To Choose From.<lb/>
Present (oupon<lb/>
I-or Purchase<lb/>
Offer Kxpires Sat Mar. 21<lb/>
SWIMSUITS<lb/>
Get $4 Off Any Swimsuit<lb/>
In Stock. Beautiful New<lb/>
Styles and Colors<lb/>
Present (Oupon<lb/>
lor Purchase<lb/>
Offer Kxpires Sat Mar. 21<lb/>
$4<lb/>
D.A. Kelly's<lb/>
Downtown and Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Phone: 752-8965 - Downtown<lb/>
Phone: 756-8242 - Mall<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
F ? RECORDS 4 TAPES m SjjJS<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
SOVSDS DELICIOUS<lb/>
presents<lb/>
NEW WAVE NIG<lb/>
every Sunday at<lb/>
FA PA EAT<lb/>
fj 50.00 to the<lb/>
2 best dressed<lb/>
A<lb/>
d Ladies 1.75<lb/>
m<lb/>
i Gents 2.75<lb/>
s<lb/>
s.<lb/>
l<lb/>
o<lb/>
n<lb/>
doors open 830<lb/>
FREE beverage all night<lb/>
ri<lb/>
A- T V<lb/>
A<lb/>
H L HODGES<lb/>
COMPANY<lb/>
Sale Starts Friday At 3:00<lb/>
Saturday All Day!<lb/>
WAREHOUSE<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
Tremendous Savings In All<lb/>
Departments<lb/>
Shoes Basketball Softball<lb/>
Running Shorts and Tops<lb/>
Decoys Tennis Rackets<lb/>
Jerseys Fishing Lures<lb/>
Sweatshirts Boots<lb/>
EVERYTHING MUST GO<lb/>
Schools and Teams Welcome<lb/>
Cash Only<lb/>
No Charge Cards<lb/>
Located In Parking Lot Behind<lb/>
H.L. Hodges &amp; Co.<lb/>
210 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
j<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0008"/><lb/>
1 HI 1 sl (. R 1 1 <lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Clemson Homers Down Pirates, 14-4<lb/>
.s<lb/>
K'l Baseball Coach Hal Baird<lb/>
1 radiiional N A tournameni<lb/>
participant Clemson banged out 14<lb/>
tins, including three home runs, and<lb/>
capitalized on five East Carolina ei<lb/>
rors en route to a convincing 14 4<lb/>
win ovei the Pirate baseball team<lb/>
Wednesday ai Harrington Field.<lb/>
1 he 1 igeis. now 15-7, got thh<lb/>
going in the second enning, taking<lb/>
advantage ol two Pirate errors<lb/>
score the first three runs ol the<lb/>
test.<lb/>
The tnsi Clemson homei came in<lb/>
the fifth, when Hob Paulling la<lb/>
ched .i three-run round-trippei to<lb/>
pui the I igei s up 6-0.<lb/>
1(1. now 5-3, got back in the<lb/>
game in the bottom ol the fifth<lb/>
when 1 odd 1 vans hit a bases loa<lb/>
triple to score three Pirate urns.<lb/>
The Hues nevei threatened aftei<lb/>
thai point, though, asleim i<lb/>
tinned to la it on the Cireemille<lb/>
d,f,<lb/>
I<lb/>
1 1 ?<lb/>
I Mill<lb/>
Sweeps Twin Bill<lb/>
 u<lb/>
w awAyA'yA,r Aw A ?y<lb/>
rrvurwmsm<lb/>
Bombs Wesley a<lb/>
Wmm mmmm Revils Falls<lb/>
First Round<lb/>
Hn Ml II M M 1 l KUIN<lb/>
k y M<lb/>
i 1 . Davis led girls went two foi lour;<lb/>
: a homer as shows me a lot abo .<lb/>
 ? irled the win. " 1 hese two garner<lb/>
hitters include n tbout where w -<lb/>
a 2-4 as did infieldei defensive!) and iffensively<lb/>
N.<lb/>
W .<lb/>
n.<lb/>
. cond game, the I ad)<lb/>
. ame out smoking as<lb/>
, ted three runs in the se<lb/>
. more in the thud.<lb/>
Melod) Ham, a<lb/>
Snow Hill, led the<lb/>
? mei in the fourth.<lb/>
continued. " M! in all, the I<lb/>
shaping up as expeited<lb/>
Dillon also impressed w.<lb/>
pla ol freshman first I<lb/>
I amm) Pai ham. "She i<lb/>
some clutch plays for us she<lb/>
1 he I ad l'n ates takt<lb/>
this weekend as the) will pan<lb/>
ft VH&amp;4<lb/>
Davis added hei second ol the in a round robin tournan<lb/>
? e seven N.C state. 1 oes includ i<lb/>
leanette Roth picked Western Ca ind <lb/>
? the 1 ad) Pirates as state, along with the Wo<lb/>
rd improve to 5-1. rhe 1 ad Bucs also pla i<lb/>
Dilkn was impressed with the doublehead ?' N.C . State on<lb/>
n's offensive punch. "Hall our Sundav aft?rm<lb/>
fy&amp;&amp;4<lb/>
? R SR<lb/>
Spring Drills<lb/>
Set To Begin<lb/>
A <lb/>
: day.<lb/>
<lb/>
M I<lb/>
?<lb/>
M SH II M I N I H ins<lb/>
H<lb/>
I Ha<lb/>
4 si unj Split end (ierald<lb/>
came in at 4.2 while<lb/>
ic Redmond ran a 4.54.<lb/>
les and Mike Davis<lb/>
? ?p finishers among<lb/>
nan.<lb/>
and 4 67, re<lb/>
until the Vpi<lb/>
Purple-Ciold game.<lb/>
Riley Switching Sports<lb/>
Kaihv Kill vsit from Ihe<lb/>
completion ol her -jkv-<lb/>
slmlikti senioi season on<lb/>
Hie I ad Pirate basketball<lb/>
team, now is set i? join the<lb/>
1(1 softnall team.<lb/>
Walden, Johnson Head Signee List<lb/>
s H Kl I s( II SI)I IK<lb/>
tiona ?<lb/>
1 as' (<lb/>
a n I I<lb/>
1 d I<lb/>
: ol 2s<lb/>
Pirate fos,p.ii.<lb/>
-<lb/>
Walden, from V<lb/>
1 Hi School<lb/>
had<lb/>
I I<lb/>
e came<lb/>
w her. he<lb/>
erioved<lb/>
i .<lb/>
Sport I<lb/>
"Kko :<lb/>
it .<lb/>
Ml the 5-1 fbacl<lb/>
i ,575 ?). in 121 can<lb/>
a z ' i ansl;<lb/>
ime 13 ? ?'? pei -?<lb/>
Walden's biggest i<lb/>
,ga : Rockinghan Hi<lb/>
rush' ? i<lb/>
on!) 11 tan ies<lb/>
ton<lb/>
(bv iouslv. I "1' i) i<lb/>
with oughts ol having al<lb/>
iund for foui yeai<lb/>
"He' I Finitely one of th I ? ?<lb/>
premiei runt backs in the<lb/>
I the second yeai n o,<lb/>
he has a keen desire to pla) earl)<lb/>
H ?h( ?uld help us right awa)<lb/>
I he recruiting race foi Walden<lb/>
reported!) same down to ECU,<lb/>
N State and Auburn<lb/>
nothei true blue ; ei was<lb/>
also mked b Emory and his stall.<lb/>
being 6 4, 275-pound defensive<lb/>
tackle 'sieve ohnson from Brevard<lb/>
High.<lb/>
I mor listed the all-state pet<lb/>
former as one oi the top two deten<lb/>
sie linemen in the state Such<lb/>
powers as Southern C al. Alabama<lb/>
t Dame joined nearly 100<lb/>
a ho ol fered lohnson<lb/>
p In the end. K'l beat<lb/>
it N tharolina foi the stalwart.<lb/>
re's no reason Steve should<lb/>
? one Emory said.<lb/>
"He I and runs like a deer.<lb/>
 c Mas a high sense ol com<lb/>
a id wants to play and<lb/>
. now <lb/>
I moj een went so tar as to<lb/>
honor- foi the Brevard<lb/>
nati.<lb/>
Su  has a great chance to play<lb/>
make honors as a freshman<lb/>
a d "He really has a chance at<lb/>
V America freshman team<lb/>
I he II coach called the sign-<lb/>
ings ol Johnson and Walden "a<lb/>
great honor tor our program Moth<lb/>
players have been selected to play in<lb/>
the Slit me Bowl game.<lb/>
I he third all stater mked by the<lb/>
Pirates is Greenville's own c urtis<lb/>
spell.<lb/>
I he 6-5, 230-pound Ros?, High<lb/>
was named all-state at defensive<lb/>
tackle, with Johnson giving ECU a<lb/>
lok on that position on the all-star<lb/>
squad<lb/>
Spell's athletic abilities are well-<lb/>
respected, Despite his sie, he runs a<lb/>
4 7 4( yard dash and high jumps<lb/>
6'9<lb/>
Othei award-winning piepsters<lb/>
the Bucs mked include a couple ol<lb/>
out-of-state stars.<lb/>
Defensive end Aaron Carter (6-3,<lb/>
21M hails from Gaithersburg, Md.<lb/>
and was named to every All-Metro<lb/>
team in the D.C. area He was<lb/>
recruited by every major college in<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
W ide receiver Ricky Nichols from<lb/>
Chesapeake, Va. received second<lb/>
team all-state status and was named<lb/>
the ridewatei area playei ol the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
1 he Pirates also signed i<lb/>
brotheis ol former N.C . State<lb/>
Ricky Adams, Calvin and Stefon.<lb/>
Calvin was named all-conference<lb/>
at quarterback at Sou! Invest<lb/>
Guilford while Stefon gamed 1,270<lb/>
yards for the same team.<lb/>
During his final two high sch i<lb/>
seasons Stefon tallied ovei 2,000<lb/>
vards rushing and scored 4!<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
Besides Calvin Adams, the only<lb/>
other quarterback signed bv Emory<lb/>
was All-l ast perfoi met raig<lb/>
Brown oi Goldsboro High Brown<lb/>
is also an excellent baseball player.<lb/>
Brown, who threw tor over I.immi<lb/>
yards and 13 touchdowns on the<lb/>
gridiron this past season, is so good<lb/>
on the diamond thai Emory tears<lb/>
losing him to a pro baseball con-<lb/>
tract.<lb/>
A number ol junior college<lb/>
signees also dot the list of Pirate<lb/>
signatures. Several are expected to<lb/>
contribute immediately<lb/>
Tops among the .IC newcomers is<lb/>
6-3, 225-pound defensive end lody<lb/>
Schulz.<lb/>
Schuiz, a former Chowan c ollege<lb/>
standout, was named to the junioi<lb/>
college All-America team this past<lb/>
year and was recruited by all majoi<lb/>
colleges in the nation.<lb/>
Emory expressed satisfaction with<lb/>
his second recruiting class, though<lb/>
he said he would like to have signed<lb/>
all the blue-chippers he sought<lb/>
"1 think this is the best recruiting<lb/>
year hast Carolina has evei had<lb/>
he boasted. "For once we went attei<lb/>
the kids everybody else did and<lb/>
,a<lb/>
Ste<lb/>
er<lb/>
Fred rrett<lb/>
Br ? t<lb/>
Stev n<lb/>
peatc?<lb/>
Tba<lb/>
Uillia<lb/>
St <lb/>
Ri ky ' i ch<lb/>
Kenny PI I '<lb/>
Damon P<lb/>
Ld<lb/>
JuJ ius<lb/>
Jody Schulz<lb/>
Thad Smith<lb/>
Curt i s Spell<lb/>
Aroos Twitt y<lb/>
Ji ?<lb/>
 ?: ? 'alkei<lb/>
St 'in t<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
' ft<lb/>
T<lb/>
H<lb/>
LB<lb/>
LB<lb/>
tv<lb/>
LB<lb/>
Dl<lb/>
LB<lb/>
RR<lb/>
.<lb/>
C<lb/>
ro,<lb/>
-<lb/>
t. i<lb/>
i<lb/>
5 r<lb/>
I 190<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
e<lb/>
i<lb/>
:<lb/>
; ?<lb/>
I -<lb/>
MCA.l<lb/>
 l<lb/>
i s<lb/>
?no<lb/>
2 ?. 5<lb/>
220<lb/>
5-10 I<lb/>
 11 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
s t<lb/>
teville, N'( i st<lb/>
iston-Salem, !<lb/>
irritu<lb/>
ike VA Great<lb/>
, nv Llle UC ' Chowan tint i<lb/>
Athens GA t e Central<lb/>
HS<lb/>
Currit uck urri tucl<lb/>
jtei " howan Junior Colle<lb/>
h Point , i'lC '  "in<lb/>
vill<lb/>
t . r SC'Chowan Junior<lb/>
r i nsl oro , MCAlort heast Cui " I i<lb/>
? J.I .<lb/>
? i<lb/>
' V :<lb/>
J'ini oi Coll ??. i i<lb/>
ava w ni.<lb/>
l i k, if 1 had known when we<lb/>
came here last yeai we would<lb/>
have tins sort oi yeai 1 probabl) continued recruiting success it the<lb/>
would ha ?' Pirate program reach sup-<lb/>
building in Greenville<lb/>
1 moi v said it ' i!<lb/>
portet s expect;<lb/>
"We nee.<lb/>
yeai s like this ? back I<lb/>
back. We are definitel) headed in<lb/>
right direction, thoufi<lb/>
"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0009"/><lb/>
mi i sikoi iman<lb/>
M K( H IV, 1981<lb/>
d<lb/>
Lady Thinclads'<lb/>
Season To Begin<lb/>
i <lb/>
Buc Tennis Team In Action<lb/>
MAI1HAN1)KK<lb/>
SUII Wrilrr<lb/>
1 ast Carolina's<lb/>
MAW track team<lb/>
starts out its season this<lb/>
Saturday, traveling to<lb/>
Gainesville, 1 la. to<lb/>
compete in the 1 ady<lb/>
Gatot Relays.<lb/>
I his year's team,<lb/>
with 11 members, is<lb/>
relative!) smasll. It is<lb/>
also young. I he Pirate<lb/>
tracksters return only<lb/>
tso seniors and one<lb/>
junior. I he rest oi the<lb/>
cam in evenly spin bet-<lb/>
ween sophmores and<lb/>
freshmen.<lb/>
Seniors Catherine<lb/>
Suggs and Daw n<lb/>
Henderson hold, and<lb/>
a c held for the past<lb/>
three years, the top two<lb/>
spots on the relay team.<lb/>
Suggs and Henderson<lb/>
both run the 1(H) and<lb/>
200 meter sprints also.<lb/>
Junior Ros Majoi<lb/>
runs on the relax team,<lb/>
and also competes in<lb/>
the long jump and high<lb/>
jump.<lb/>
Rounding out the<lb/>
'cam aie sophomores<lb/>
Eve Brennan, Gwen<lb/>
Dane). 1 isa Gray, and<lb/>
Debbie Mulvey,<lb/>
Newcomers include<lb/>
Margie Rose<lb/>
B u m garner, A n n e<lb/>
H a r t m a n, Carol) n<lb/>
Moore and Felicia<lb/>
Warren.<lb/>
Due to bad weather<lb/>
the 1 ad) tracksters<lb/>
have not had a smuch<lb/>
pre-season experience<lb/>
as they had wanted.<lb/>
1 he) were only able to<lb/>
compete in three in-<lb/>
door meets. Instead,<lb/>
the) have been concen-<lb/>
trating on weight train-<lb/>
ing programs<lb/>
"The girls have<lb/>
responded very well to<lb/>
the weight lifting said<lb/>
coach 1 auric Arrants.<lb/>
" 1 hey're beginning to<lb/>
see results and I think<lb/>
that the weights have<lb/>
really helped us<lb/>
This year's schedule<lb/>
is also different from<lb/>
before<lb/>
"1 tried to schedule<lb/>
meets with mostlv<lb/>
southern schools this<lb/>
year so the team would<lb/>
get a chance to compete<lb/>
in good weather said<lb/>
Arrants. "Our schedule<lb/>
also is stepping oft in<lb/>
high lime. We start ol f<lb/>
against much suffer<lb/>
competition<lb/>
1 his weekend the<lb/>
ti ack team will compete<lb/>
in all events, except foi<lb/>
the 100 and 200 meter<lb/>
sprints.<lb/>
' I his meet is going<lb/>
to be high!) com-<lb/>
petitive Arrants said.<lb/>
"We don't reallv ex-<lb/>
pect to score very<lb/>
highly. This is just a<lb/>
chance to compel e<lb/>
under good weather<lb/>
conditions, arid<lb/>
eliminate some oi the<lb/>
pre-season butterflies<lb/>
? ? ' ' -<lb/>
-rrr<lb/>
I -? ? . -<lb/>
I'iji f- ???;?<lb/>
ECU Tennis Action<lb/>
State Women Advance<lb/>
K AI EIGH, NX<lb/>
lead North Carolina<lb/>
State past Georgia<lb/>
State 85-66 in the first<lb/>
round of the A1AW na-<lb/>
tional women's basket-<lb/>
ball tournament.<lb/>
The Wolfpack trailed<lb/>
11-5 in the early going,<lb/>
but Rouse came in and<lb/>
Angie Armstrong ad-<lb/>
ded 13 points and eight<lb/>
assists while Beth<lb/>
Fielden had 10 points<lb/>
lor the Wolfpack,<lb/>
whose record went to<lb/>
21-4. N.C. State ad-<lb/>
vances to the AI AW se-<lb/>
cond round at Cheyney<lb/>
State College in<lb/>
Cheyney, Pa.<lb/>
Georgia State, the<lb/>
A I AW Region 111<lb/>
champion, was paced<lb/>
by Terese Allen's 18<lb/>
points. Sherry Stin-<lb/>
combe had 13 points<lb/>
and Denise Lloyd and<lb/>
Sheryl Martin had 12<lb/>
apiece for the Panthers,<lb/>
which finished their<lb/>
season at 28-5.<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
men's tennis team takes<lb/>
its 3-2 record to Wilm-<lb/>
ington today<lb/>
(Thursday) in hopes of<lb/>
continuing the momen-<lb/>
tum it picked up during<lb/>
last week's spring<lb/>
break.<lb/>
After losing its<lb/>
opener to North<lb/>
Carolina, the team<lb/>
rallied to win three of<lb/>
four matches while<lb/>
most other ECU<lb/>
students were vacation<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The most recent vie<lb/>
lory came this past<lb/>
Sunday over High<lb/>
Point, 5-4.<lb/>
Ther other wins came<lb/>
over George<lb/>
Washington. 7-2, and<lb/>
Lehigh, 6-3. The loss<lb/>
c a m e a gainst<lb/>
Presbyterian. 8-1.<lb/>
In the Sunday win<lb/>
over High Point, Steve<lb/>
Peterson. Ted Leppei<lb/>
and Kevin Covington<lb/>
all gamed singles wins.<lb/>
The teams of Mark<lb/>
Byrd-Jeff Farfour and<lb/>
1 epper-Norm Brvant<lb/>
picked up wins in the<lb/>
doubles competition to<lb/>
give the Bues a win.<lb/>
1 epper and Brvant<lb/>
competed in the last<lb/>
match of the day with<lb/>
the match tied, 4-4. The<lb/>
1I duo fell behind<lb/>
High Point's twosome,<lb/>
losing the first set of<lb/>
the match 6-7, before<lb/>
battling back to take<lb/>
the next to sets, 6-4 and<lb/>
6-2. to give the Bucs<lb/>
their third win ot the<lb/>
young season.<lb/>
Following today's<lb/>
match with Wilmington<lb/>
the Pirate netters host<lb/>
Salisbury State on the<lb/>
Mmges tennis courts<lb/>
Saturday, with action<lb/>
beginning at 2 p.m.<lb/>
Lacrosse Club At Richmond<lb/>
Lacrosse Club<lb/>
1 he 1 acrosse Club<lb/>
began its season with a<lb/>
game W ednesday .<lb/>
March 4 against Fer-<lb/>
rum College of Ferrum,<lb/>
Virginia losing bv a<lb/>
14 margin. I he game<lb/>
was played on the field<lb/>
at the bottom of Col<lb/>
lege Hill Drive.<lb/>
The Lacrosse Club<lb/>
travels to the I niversit)<lb/>
of Richmond this<lb/>
Saturday March 2! to<lb/>
tangle with their next<lb/>
opponent.<lb/>
NC Soccer league<lb/>
There will be a match<lb/>
this weekend between<lb/>
the two Greenville en-<lb/>
tries in the NC SI .<lb/>
but Rouse came in and I ? f f ?  J f<lb/>
hit s.xot seven shots to I rf S S II PQS<lb/>
put N.C. State ahead "?wwi ? ? WW 4?r<lb/>
M.17 ?<lb/>
P<lb/>
23-1<lb/>
Georgia State was<lb/>
thin six points several<lb/>
?he second<lb/>
wi<lb/>
times<lb/>
Golf Tourney<lb/>
Set; Changes<lb/>
umes m i ne second<lb/>
hall, but could run gel<lb/>
closet as N.t State<lb/>
graduallv pulled awav<lb/>
to the 19-poinl win.<lb/>
Still<lb/>
Made<lb/>
The Department of<lb/>
Marketing and<lb/>
Management in the<lb/>
1 CU school oi<lb/>
Business is still holding<lb/>
Us golf tournament ai<lb/>
Brook Valley April 16,<lb/>
but a tew changes have<lb/>
been made.<lb/>
The tourney will be a<lb/>
Iwo Man Best Ball<lb/>
lour Handicap com-<lb/>
petition. Contestants<lb/>
may choose their own<lb/>
partners instead ol be-<lb/>
ing assigned one as in<lb/>
the original format.<lb/>
rhirty-two players<lb/>
(16 teams) are needed in<lb/>
order for the tourna-<lb/>
ment to be field. The<lb/>
first place team wili<lb/>
receive $200 dollars,<lb/>
while the second place<lb/>
team receives SKK) and<lb/>
the third place finisher<lb/>
wins $50.<lb/>
1 here is a S2( entry<lb/>
tee. and the deadline<lb/>
for entries has been ex-<lb/>
tended to Wednesday,<lb/>
TUH.WQS<lb/>
April 1. Applications<lb/>
mav be picked up at the<lb/>
Department oi<lb/>
Marketing and Finance<lb/>
and must be turned in<lb/>
lo that department<lb/>
bet ore the deadline.<lb/>
To be eligible for this<lb/>
event, you must be an<lb/>
ECU student or faculty<lb/>
or staff member.<lb/>
Members oi the ECl<lb/>
golf team are not eligi-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
It will he an 18-hcle<lb/>
tournament, and the<lb/>
entry fee includes cart<lb/>
and ereens fee.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE Snare drum Pearl,<lb/>
lop ol the line Extra deep Ex<lb/>
cond Call 757 3210.<lb/>
FOR SALE Becker stereo<lb/>
speakers, new. 32 watts<lb/>
Superscope power amp S200 Call<lb/>
758 1773<lb/>
FOR SALE J C Penny 8 track<lb/>
tape player Excellent condition<lb/>
475 Call 752 4379 and ask tor<lb/>
Keith<lb/>
FOR SALE Weddmq gown and<lb/>
veil Ivory Size 3 pettite Call<lb/>
758 4238 alter 6pm<lb/>
FOR SALE New 14 K gold one<lb/>
third carat diamond engagement<lb/>
ring Appraised at 4800 Will take<lb/>
SSSO Call 758 1084. ask lor Mike<lb/>
FOR SALE Bike Peugot ex<lb/>
cellent condition New tires<lb/>
tunes, brake pads 5180 Call<lb/>
757 3156 or 758 7699 ask lor Steve<lb/>
FOR SALE One Western Wood<lb/>
Caribbean slalom water ski 530<lb/>
One pair ol Cypress Garden<lb/>
Mustang skis 420 One underdash<lb/>
8 track player 510 Call 758 9889<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FOR RENT Large house. 12<lb/>
rooms. 2 baths Ideal lor student<lb/>
group 5500 plus utilities 752 5296<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED 185 mon<lb/>
thly plus one third utilities 7<lb/>
blocks Irom campus 757 1064<lb/>
anytime Availiable now<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Room<lb/>
tor rent m trailer to gay person<lb/>
Will rent only to responsible per<lb/>
son Will share kitchen 425 per<lb/>
week Bellstork Rd Call 756 9504.<lb/>
ask lor Danny<lb/>
APT FOR SUBLEASE During<lb/>
summer Irom mid May to mid<lb/>
August 600 Georgetown Apts<lb/>
Call 758 0323<lb/>
FOR RENT Spacious 12 room<lb/>
house 2 blocks Irom campus<lb/>
4500 plus deposit Call 752 5296<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT: Kitchen<lb/>
privileges 470 per month Call<lb/>
756 8657 alter 4 30 pm<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
3 bedroom duplex near campus<lb/>
483 a month plus one third utilities<lb/>
Call 756 9456<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Convenient<lb/>
cheap rates Call Amy 758 6994<lb/>
TYPING DONE: At home during<lb/>
evening hours and on weekends<lb/>
(or students, businesses or items<lb/>
ol personal nature 527 7645 (<lb/>
Kmston area Call alter 6pm<lb/>
FREE Yoga, exercise and medita<lb/>
tion classes Call 752 2076<lb/>
SUMMER HELP NEEDED 20<lb/>
students who can leave the Green<lb/>
ville area long hours, good pay<lb/>
Send name and phone no to Sum<lb/>
mer Placement. 43 Creekwood<lb/>
Court. Franklin, Tn 37064<lb/>
OHM 14 KOVll<lb/>
Che'ge Groceries Bee' Wine<lb/>
o Masle- Charge Visa or<lb/>
Oadit Cards<lb/>
in- - i i- -i-i n rwoi'lii<lb/>
mm ??<lb/>
OB ?? ?w- a. ??? ?? - ' "<lb/>
mm I. ii.<lb/>
W I mi I Wy<lb/>
Keg 1 ice Deny<lb/>
'tit A Ivan Si<lb/>
rtl-IHI<lb/>
at you want.<lb/>
Your ArtCarved representative will be on campus soon to show you the<lb/>
latest in class ring designs. With dozens of styles to choose from, you'll be proud to select<lb/>
your one-of-a-kind design. Just tell us what you want. And be on the<lb/>
lookout for posters on campus to get you where you want.<lb/>
March 23, 24, 25<lb/>
ECU Student Supply Store Lobby<lb/>
Technical<lb/>
Electronics<lb/>
And<lb/>
Maintenance,<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
756-1387<lb/>
Audio,Video,<lb/>
&amp;2VNa<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
Maintenance<lb/>
(Preventive to<lb/>
Overhaul)<lb/>
Services directed h a W<lb/>
( lass Klicensed techni-<lb/>
cian. Mudenl of Applied<lb/>
Phssics ai l-ast Carolina<lb/>
t niursitv.<lb/>
C onvenietelv Located<lb/>
1 j Block Oft Campus<lb/>
Pick-l pand Delivery<lb/>
Available<lb/>
90 Dav Warranty<lb/>
Period<lb/>
Ladies' Wrap Skirts<lb/>
by Wrangler Sizes S,M,L<lb/>
Ladies' Wrangler Knit T-tops<lb/>
Jrs. Shirtmaker Dresses<lb/>
Sizes 5 6 15 16<lb/>
Men's Knit Shirts by Oxford<lb/>
Men's Hooded Sweatshirts<lb/>
zipped front Sizes S,M,L XL<lb/>
Men's Lee Jeans on cotton)<lb/>
264 By Pass Greenville N.C<lb/>
Across From Nichols<lb/>
Hours: 9:30 to 6 00 Mon Sat<lb/>
MASTER CHARGE ana VISA accepted Call 756 1474<lb/>
MILL OUTLET CLOTHING<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
SUNSHINE STUDIOS Offering<lb/>
baliet, ia2i. yoga, and exercise<lb/>
classes to students at a discount<lb/>
Also ottering a very special belly<lb/>
dance in preparation for the<lb/>
Greenville Arts Festival All in<lb/>
terested in learning the art or<lb/>
helping n anyway please contact<lb/>
Sunshine at 7S8 0?36 Classes<lb/>
begin soon Sping break taken in<lb/>
to account<lb/>
NEED PROFESSIONAL TYPIST<lb/>
tor your term paper thesis<lb/>
manuscript eel Call Susan<lb/>
Byers 758 82J! or 7S8 S488<lb/>
WANTED Someone to record an<lb/>
album on 8 track cartidgt- Call<lb/>
758 8338<lb/>
BASS PLAYER GUITAR<lb/>
PLAYER WANTED For Part<lb/>
time money making Top 40 beach<lb/>
band Vocal ability required Can<lb/>
757 3210 or 752 9288<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY SPEAKERS<lb/>
Small pair ot used Bose or Infinity<lb/>
speakers Will pay resonable<lb/>
price Call 757 3210.<lb/>
YOUR CAREER What are you<lb/>
doing this summer to prepare for<lb/>
it? Find out why I BM, Xerox, Pro<lb/>
ctor and Gamble. Upiohn and hun<lb/>
dreds of others want students that<lb/>
have worked with us For inter<lb/>
view call 758 4513<lb/>
TYPING DONE Term papers<lb/>
thesis, resumes etc Call Jane<lb/>
Pollock at 752 ?71?<lb/>
FEMALE PUPPY NEEDS GOOD<lb/>
HOME 5 months old Call<lb/>
756 5671 after 5pm<lb/>
HAS REAGAN S BUDGET CUT<lb/>
CAUGHT YOU SHORT' Then<lb/>
get a high paying summer iobwith<lb/>
a good Ob recommendation For<lb/>
interview call 758 4513<lb/>
J GREEN You re more then a<lb/>
number m my little black book'<lb/>
Hope you had fun in Lauderdale I<lb/>
wish i could have seen more of<lb/>
you E Queen<lb/>
WANT TO BUY SELL OR<lb/>
TRADE Comics artwork<lb/>
albums, posters. magazines ect ?<lb/>
Come to the 7th annual Greenvill<lb/>
Mini Con at The Attic. Sunday<lb/>
March 22 Dealers tables are tree<lb/>
For further information call Th.<lb/>
Nostalgia Newstand at 758 6909<lb/>
SUMMER WORK Must be in<lb/>
dependent and willing to work<lb/>
hard For interview call 758 45U<lb/>
PRICE SI 00 for 15 words OS for<lb/>
each additional word<lb/>
Make checks payable to The Eas<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Abbreviations count as one word<lb/>
as do phone numbers and<lb/>
hyphenations<lb/>
MAIL TO<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Classified Ads<lb/>
Old South Building<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson<lb/>
Jewelers<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
SEIKO Watch Headquarters<lb/>
Diamonds Loose and Mounted<lb/>
Gold-Filled, Sterling,<lb/>
and 14K Gold Jewelry<lb/>
Cash Paid for Diamonds and Gold<lb/>
Dealers for J.O. Pollock<lb/>
Fraternity &amp; Sorority Jewelry<lb/>
F,oyd G.Robinson va' Horns<lb/>
Mike Robinson<lb/>
Phone 758-2452<lb/>
Downtown on the Mall<lb/>
Independent Jewelers<lb/>
204 E. 5th Street<lb/>
Across From<lb/>
Newby's Sub Shop<lb/>
Open Til 9:30 Nightly<lb/>
THIS WEEKS SALE ALBUMS<lb/>
ALL CURRENT RELEASES<lb/>
7.98 M)R 4.99<lb/>
STEVE W1NWOOD<lb/>
LOVER BOY<lb/>
ELVIS COSTEI 1 O<lb/>
NAZARETH<lb/>
GARLAND II FFRIES<lb/>
DAVID AI I AN COL<lb/>
YARBOROUGH &amp;<lb/>
PEOPLES<lb/>
8.98 m.k 5.98<lb/>
ERIC CLAPTON<lb/>
WII I II NI 1 SON<lb/>
PAT TRAVERS<lb/>
TED NUGENT<lb/>
ISI LY BROTHERS<lb/>
STYX<lb/>
AEROSMITH'S HITS<lb/>
9.98 mm, 6.99<lb/>
Mil DIAMOND<lb/>
STEELY DAN<lb/>
13.98 m.k 9.99<lb/>
HEAR1 I IVI<lb/>
I U,l ES I IVI<lb/>
15.98 h,k 10.99<lb/>
BRl CE SPRINGSTE1N<lb/>
ALL PARAPH AN OJA ON SALE<lb/>
MOST IS 50?o OFF<lb/>
j APPLE RECORDS T-SHIRTS<lb/>
Regularly S4.50<lb/>
I $3.99 WITH COUPON<lb/>
<lb/>
 WE BUY USED ALBUMS <lb/>
Club Sport<lb/>
Review<lb/>
BY TIM WILLIAMS<lb/>
I he American<lb/>
Defendei Soccer Club<lb/>
sports a 3-n record and<lb/>
is in second place<lb/>
behind league-leading<lb/>
Atlantichi istian Col-<lb/>
lege, !u own a perfeel<lb/>
4-0 mark.<lb/>
Meanw hile, I he<lb/>
Stroh's Aliens, made<lb/>
up ot ECl students, is<lb/>
in 5th place and is of!<lb/>
to a slow start alter<lb/>
making the Stae<lb/>
playoffs the last two<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
I lie E( I game is at<lb/>
the 1I Soccer Field<lb/>
at 2 p.m. 1 he public is<lb/>
united.<lb/>
V omen's Rugbv<lb/>
I he V omen's Ru<lb/>
i lub is taking pai<lb/>
double match this<lb/>
Saturday, March 21 in<lb/>
Greensboro against<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro and<lb/>
Reed t reek Rugb)<lb/>
Club oi Raleigh<lb/>
I'm sure this will be<lb/>
quite a gruelling ex-<lb/>
perience.<lb/>
CHAPS, INC.<lb/>
HWY 258 NORTH<lb/>
KINSTON, N.C. 28501<lb/>
<lb/>
Eastern Carolinas<lb/>
Newest .And Finest<lb/>
Private Club<lb/>
Kri March 20th<lb/>
JANICE<lb/>
Sat March 21st<lb/>
The Best In Beach<lb/>
and Top 40 With<lb/>
Mike Jones<lb/>
Sun March 22nd<lb/>
MIGHTY MAJORS<lb/>
Wednesday Night's<lb/>
are Ladies' Night<lb/>
Members and<lb/>
Their Guests<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
Ail ABC Permits<lb/>
From<lb/>
5:UO-7:OOpm<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
donation<lb/>
from<lb/>
every<lb/>
pizza sold<lb/>
Fast, free delivery<lb/>
1201 Charles Blvd.<lb/>
Telephone: 758-6660<lb/>
Pizza ???<lb/>
e$l<lb/>
. ? i rdered on dat<lb/>
send our track tea<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
NCAi<lb/>
amg<lb/>
und<lb/>
. be<lb/>
lay March<lb/>
. ? S Sunday March 22<lb/>
196' - ? s o? the<lb/>
' top oertorme'S<lb/>
in Doth "rack &amp; F.e I<lb/>
,e a S500 scholar-<lb/>
sO'ed by<lb/>
no's Pizza Inc<lb/>
You can order a ho!<lb/>
? ' us meal from<lb/>
Domino s Pizza and help<lb/>
port our team '<lb/>
Free 30 minute de .<lb/>
. . ? iiS a call'<lb/>
sS <lb/>
IN OS O0.<lb/>
Drivers carry less than $10<lb/>
Limited delivery area<lb/>
<lb/>
,1<lb/>
'? I M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
1 Ml I M l Ki)l IM N<lb/>
M Ki H 14. 1981<lb/>
I<lb/>
y<lb/>
Government To End<lb/>
Search For Victims<lb/>
MONTtiOMl R ,<lb/>
Ala. (UPI) Seven black<lb/>
men who were used as<lb/>
human guinea pigs in i<lb/>
government expei imeni<lb/>
on untreated s philis<lb/>
have another three<lb/>
months to come tor-<lb/>
ward and claim their<lb/>
share of a S million<lb/>
settlement of the ease.<lb/>
I S. Circuit Court<lb/>
Judge Frank M.<lb/>
Johnson Jr. Tuesday<lb/>
set a final deadline of<lb/>
June IS to complete the<lb/>
six year nationwide<lb/>
search<lb/>
"We think between<lb/>
now and June we can<lb/>
really wrap it up said<lb/>
Fred Gray, a Iuskegee<lb/>
attorney ?ho<lb/>
represented the men<lb/>
and their heirs. "We<lb/>
just need this one last<lb/>
push on it<lb/>
Gray said he mas<lb/>
have located t he<lb/>
relatives of two of the<lb/>
seven men.<lb/>
The federal govern-<lb/>
ment settled a SI.8<lb/>
billion sun filed by the<lb/>
NAACP. which charg-<lb/>
ed that federal and<lb/>
state agencies inticed<lb/>
more than 6(X) black<lb/>
men to join the experi-<lb/>
ment in Tuskegee in<lb/>
1932 with offers ol tree<lb/>
food, tree rides and<lb/>
cheap burials.<lb/>
The Public Health<lb/>
Service studied the ef-<lb/>
fects o syphilis among<lb/>
black males who had<lb/>
less than a sixth grade<lb/>
education. About 400<lb/>
men deliberate!) were<lb/>
given no treatment to<lb/>
cure their disease even<lb/>
after penicillin was<lb/>
discovered as a cure in<lb/>
the 1950s.<lb/>
At least 28 men died<lb/>
from the experiment,<lb/>
which was terminated<lb/>
in 1972.<lb/>
Ciray, who was given<lb/>
the tak ol finding the<lb/>
men. said he had found<lb/>
or confirmed as dead<lb/>
all but seven of the 62:<lb/>
men. or their relatives.<lb/>
who took part in the<lb/>
studv.<lb/>
"We started out with<lb/>
623 and were able to<lb/>
find 616 he said.<lb/>
"We've got only seven<lb/>
left and we want the<lb/>
opportunity to make it<lb/>
100 percent<lb/>
Three ol the seven<lb/>
men George Anderson,<lb/>
Alfred Campbell and<lb/>
Reuben Law son Ruff<lb/>
are dead, but their heirs<lb/>
are entitled to compen-<lb/>
sation.<lb/>
Information on the<lb/>
other tour, George T.<lb/>
Anderson, Will<lb/>
Blackburn, Shepherd<lb/>
1 . Jones and I om Rob-<lb/>
bins, is incomplete and<lb/>
it is unknown whether<lb/>
the) are alive. Most of<lb/>
the men were last<lb/>
teported in the central<lb/>
Alabama area.<lb/>
Gray, who received<lb/>
more than SI million in<lb/>
legal tees from the case,<lb/>
said he believes he may<lb/>
have found the grand-<lb/>
child and great-<lb/>
grandchild of the two<lb/>
Anderson men.<lb/>
He said articles in a<lb/>
black publication. Jet<lb/>
Magazine, helped find<lb/>
some of the survivors.<lb/>
And he has also receiv-<lb/>
ed help from Sheridan<lb/>
Broadcasting Co the<lb/>
black news network.<lb/>
The FBI and the<lb/>
Social Security Ad-<lb/>
ministration were<lb/>
ordered by Johnson in<lb/>
1979 to help in the<lb/>
search, but Gray said<lb/>
they had provided little<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Under the settlement,<lb/>
the government agreed<lb/>
to pay $37,500 to each<lb/>
living syphilitic partici-<lb/>
pant, SI5,(XX) to each<lb/>
living participant who<lb/>
did not have the<lb/>
disease. $15,000 to the<lb/>
estates of each deceased<lb/>
syphilitic participant,<lb/>
and $5,000 to the<lb/>
estates of each deceased<lb/>
participant who did not<lb/>
have the disease.<lb/>
EASTERN REGIONAL JETPORT<lb/>
LIMOUSINE SERVICE<lb/>
Van Limousine Service available to and from Kinston Jet-<lb/>
port 7 days per week all flights. 1 person $25.00 - 2 people<lb/>
$12.50 each - 3 or more $10.00 each including baggage.<lb/>
Also Charter trips to Beaches in season and other points of<lb/>
interest.<lb/>
Call JETPORT LIMO. SERVICE anytime 522-3850<lb/>
Kinston N.C.<lb/>
He Pick Up Anywhere, We Go Anywhere<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
PRICES ARE UP!<lb/>
If you nttd monty for fall clothos or football tickets, now It ?<lb/>
good time to tall your gold and tllvor valuables. And hart's a<lb/>
good way to gat EXTRA CASH!<lb/>
SELL YOUR<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
to COIN &amp; RING MAN!<lb/>
JP<lb/>
Outlook Improves<lb/>
For Bilingual Ed<lb/>
SUMMER WORK<lb/>
TRAVEL, EXPERIENCE, HARD<lb/>
WORK, ADVENTURE<lb/>
$1,098 per month<lb/>
INTERVIEWS TODAY<lb/>
Brewster 103-D<lb/>
1:00 or 4:00 or 7:00<lb/>
W ASH1NGTON<lb/>
(SPS)?The outlook<lb/>
tor bilingual education<lb/>
plans brightened this<lb/>
month after a high level<lb/>
meeting between<lb/>
Republican ad-<lb/>
ministrators and the<lb/>
Congressional Hispanic<lb/>
Caucus.<lb/>
Caucus members<lb/>
persuaded Education<lb/>
Secretary Terrel Bell<lb/>
and David Stockman,<lb/>
Office of Management<lb/>
and Budget director.<lb/>
not to include bilingual<lb/>
education program in<lb/>
a plan that would give<lb/>
the administration of<lb/>
education money to<lb/>
states, something ad-<lb/>
vocates of bilingual<lb/>
education say would<lb/>
destroy bilingual pro-<lb/>
grams<lb/>
" rhe consolidation<lb/>
ol bilingual education<lb/>
programs into a block<lb/>
grant would have had a<lb/>
disastrous effect said<lb/>
Rep. Edward Roybal,<lb/>
D-Calif "but the<lb/>
Secretary oi Education<lb/>
was most cooperative<lb/>
and has assured me that<lb/>
bilingual education will<lb/>
continue to be a<lb/>
separate federal<lb/>
responsibility<lb/>
Last month Bell<lb/>
withdrew Carter -<lb/>
supported bilingual<lb/>
regulations which<lb/>
would have required<lb/>
that children who do<lb/>
not speak English be<lb/>
taught in their native<lb/>
language.<lb/>
Bell called the regula-<lb/>
tions "harsh, inflexi-<lb/>
ble, burdensome, un-<lb/>
workable and i n -<lb/>
credibly costly and<lb/>
when President Reagan<lb/>
announced his plans to<lb/>
cut funding 25 percent<lb/>
and give the a d -<lb/>
ministration of federal<lb/>
education money to<lb/>
school districts and<lb/>
states, things looked<lb/>
bad for bilingual pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
Under Reagan's<lb/>
plan, states and school<lb/>
districts would have<lb/>
complete control of<lb/>
education money ami<lb/>
could fund programs at<lb/>
whatever levels the)<lb/>
think are appropriate.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057329_0011"/><lb/>
Grandmas are real particular about their biscuits; but even Grandmas like Hardees Biscuits,<lb/>
because Hardees is real particular about biscuits, too. They use only the choicest ingredients:<lb/>
buttermilk, flour, shortening?and every batch is made from scratch every morning-<lb/>
right on the premises. Then they fill each biscuit with ham and eggs or sausage or chopped beefsteak-<lb/>
so you get the best breakfast in town, up and down and all around. That's why Grandma<lb/>
doesnt make biscuits any more?she gets them at Hardees!<lb/>
? Hardees Food Systems Inc. 1981<lb/>
. . . <lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0012"/><lb/>
Best Deals InTown<lb/>
On The Best Eatin'AII Around!<lb/>
Hardeei.<lb/>
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A HAM AND EGG BISCUIT AND<lb/>
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Good at all participating Hardee s Please present this coupon before ordering One<lb/>
coupon per customer please Customer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase<lb/>
price This coupon not good in combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer Good Until 10:30 A.M. Through March 25,1981<lb/>
Za2ei<lb/>
0<lb/>
A STEAK AND EGG BISCUIT AND<lb/>
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Good at all participating Hardee s Please present this coupon before ordering One-<lb/>
coupon per customer please Customer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase<lb/>
price This coupon not good in combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer Good Until 10:30 A.M. March 26-April 1,1981<lb/>
?Hardeei<lb/>
H<lb/>
TWO SAUSAGE BISCUITS<lb/>
FOR $1.00<lb/>
Good at all participating Hardee s Please present this coupon before ordering One<lb/>
coupon per customer please Customer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase<lb/>
price This coupon not good in combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer Good Until 10:30 A.M. April 2-8,1981<lb/>
Harde?x.<lb/>
D<lb/>
A SAUSAGE AND EGG BISCUIT AND<lb/>
ORANGE JUICE FOR 95<lb/>
Good at all participating Hardee s Please present this coupon before ordering One<lb/>
coupon per customer please Customer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase<lb/>
price This coupon not good in combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer Good Until 10:30 A.M. April 9-15,1981<lb/>
Mardeei.<lb/>
?<lb/>
TWO BIG FISH " SANDWICHES<lb/>
FOR $1.69<lb/>
Good at all participating Hardee s Please present this coupon before ordering One<lb/>
coupon per customer please Customer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase<lb/>
price This coupon not good in combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer Good Through March 25,1981<lb/>
itafi<lb/>
?<lb/>
A BIG FISH SANDWICH, REGULAR FRIES AND<lb/>
APPLE TURNOVER FOR $1.39<lb/>
Good at all participating Hardee s Please present this coupon before ordering One<lb/>
coupon per customer please Customer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase<lb/>
price This coupon not good in combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer Good March 26-April 1.1981<lb/>
JhM<lb/>
cjkkjl<lb/>
n<lb/>
TWO REGULAR ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES<lb/>
FOR $1.79<lb/>
Good at all participating Hardee s Please present this coupon before ordering One<lb/>
coupon per customer please Customer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase<lb/>
price This coupon not good in combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer Good April 2-8.1981<lb/>
Mardeci<lb/>
?<lb/>
A BIG deluxe; regular fries and<lb/>
MEDIUM SOFT DRINK FOR $1.69<lb/>
Good at all participating Hardee s Please present this coupon before ordering One<lb/>
coupon per customer please Customer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase<lb/>
price This coupon not good in combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer Good April 9-15,1981<lb/>
A UAy"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057329_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>