<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057331_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
(Earulmtan<lb/>
h<lb/>
Serving (he Eastaroiina campus community since 1925<lb/>
ol. 55 No. ?0<lb/>
10 Panes<lb/>
I hursday, March 26. !s?Ki<lb/>
(.reenvillc. N(?rtharoiina<lb/>
( irculation 10,(MM<lb/>
Little Files Charges Against Sherrod<lb/>
( harlie Sherrod<lb/>
b pah con ins<lb/>
SGA President Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
has been charged with tour viola-<lb/>
tions of the bast Carolina Code of<lb/>
Conduct,The East Carolinian has<lb/>
learned.<lb/>
Ihe charges were filed Wednes<lb/>
da) b SGA Treasurer Kirk I ittle.<lb/>
He has alleged that Sherrod had a<lb/>
pun in switching a picture in Little's<lb/>
campaign advertisement that ap-<lb/>
peared in the March 3 edition ot The<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
Ihe advertisement was supposed<lb/>
to contain a picture ot Little in a<lb/>
coat and tie. it was altered to con-<lb/>
tain a picture of Little in an Air<lb/>
Force ROTC uniform.<lb/>
A source close to Little said,<lb/>
"Sherrod approached one. it not<lb/>
two, staff members and asked I<lb/>
they change the picture<lb/>
Thus, the source I ittle<lb/>
decided to file the charge against<lb/>
Sherrod rathei than the paper<lb/>
"The newspapei did everyth<lb/>
within its powei to rectify the situa-<lb/>
tion 1 ittle said ' 11 ve om-<lb/>
plami with them<lb/>
Though Sherrod ha- denied ha<lb/>
ing any pan in the matter, he has<lb/>
admitted to being I<lb/>
newspapei's office . ht ihe<lb/>
isue was being prepared<lb/>
"1 ynnaide; and I were a!<lb/>
office, we had letters to the editoi<lb/>
turn in. 1 was also complaining<lb/>
all the candidates' Mid plat<lb/>
tornis were noi in the papei<lb/>
According to Paul ' inck<lb/>
East Carolinian's directoi ol idvei<lb/>
tdvertisement was correct<lb/>
when the last member ol his siatt<lb/>
left th iffice between 10 and 11<lb/>
p.m that mgh<lb/>
"( huck I ostei was responsible<lb/>
sure that the ads were<lb/>
and the) were when he<lb/>
left I inc ke said.<lb/>
1 ittle fell tdvertisement,<lb/>
as it appealed, ma) have hurl his<lb/>
campaign<lb/>
"It was a definite detriment o my<lb/>
campaign b) picturing me in a<lb/>
military uniform fie said. "1 feel<lb/>
like ,i was done with the intentioi ol<lb/>
hurting no. re-election campaign<lb/>
He added that the use ol the pic-<lb/>
. :ated a problem foi him with<lb/>
commanding officers. "It im-<lb/>
plied that the Al-ROK was suppor-<lb/>
ting me, and that's illegal<lb/>
Sherrod has been officially charg-<lb/>
ed with violating sections F, G, Q<lb/>
and U of the Code ol Conduct,<lb/>
Ihe first charge deals with van-<lb/>
dalizing, maliciously destroying,<lb/>
damaging or misusing property.<lb/>
1 he next charge concerns stealing<lb/>
or receiving stolen property.<lb/>
The third charge is forging, alter<lb/>
ing or misusing as documents or<lb/>
other such materials.<lb/>
The final charge deals with the<lb/>
violation ol city ordinances, state<lb/>
law or federal law by students.<lb/>
"M) ad was vandalized Little<lb/>
said. "This is my legal recourse<lb/>
Sherrod has indicated that he will<lb/>
file counter charges against Little,<lb/>
He said he will charge I ittle with<lb/>
section A of theode ol Conduct,<lb/>
which deals with slander, lying and<lb/>
libel.<lb/>
"Kirk Little, the politician, is up<lb/>
to his old tricks again Sherrod<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Most people, when they look at<lb/>
the charges against me will consider<lb/>
the source. He tried the same thing<lb/>
last year Sherrod concluded.<lb/>
In last sear's campaign Little<lb/>
c u sed his o p o n e n t, Danny<lb/>
O'Connor, of rearing down hi<lb/>
paign posters<lb/>
I ittle has asked tor a preliminary<lb/>
hearing Thursday, at which time the<lb/>
charges will be formallv presented<lb/>
Set SHrRROI). Pat 3<lb/>
ECU To Sponsor Activities<lb/>
Bv 1)1 N WDrRsON<lb/>
-ne-<lb/>
I<lb/>
ean<lb/>
C (illl-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
on-<lb/>
Week<lb/>
March<lb/>
ise the<lb/>
idents,<lb/>
iblic in<lb/>
( (<lb/>
v<lb/>
Handicap-<lb/>
reek in<lb/>
North<lb/>
Is that<lb/>
he added. The program here at ECU<lb/>
is scheduled to last four full days<lb/>
and includes a wide variety of<lb/>
acitiv ities.<lb/>
It I . over the past few years, has<lb/>
spent approximately S3 million<lb/>
removing barriers that cause dif-<lb/>
ficulties tor the handicapped.<lb/>
William Haney and Cindy Mlylin-<lb/>
sk v , graduate students in<lb/>
Rehabilitation Counseling and<lb/>
chairpersons lor the Minority Arts<lb/>
( ommittee, explained that the Han-<lb/>
dicap Awareness Week activities<lb/>
will display everything that ECU has<lb/>
done to accomodate its disabled<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Throughout the week, simulation<lb/>
workshops will be held to provide<lb/>
able-bodied people with a first hand<lb/>
iook a! what it is like to be disabled.<lb/>
Wheelchairs will be provided f <lb/>
participants to experiment with.<lb/>
There will also be simulations to<lb/>
experience blindness and other han-<lb/>
dicaps.<lb/>
Rowe aKo indicated that 60 to "0<lb/>
percent ol the individual<lb/>
in the organiza nd supervision<lb/>
ly and the Circle K<lb/>
a national division of<lb/>
!so, organizations in<lb/>
i as the Employment<lb/>
Ol the week<lb/>
die<lb/>
ported by<lb/>
service sorori<lb/>
organization,<lb/>
the Kiwanis.<lb/>
the area sucl<lb/>
Security Commission Handicapped<lb/>
Services and Pitt County Services<lb/>
foi the Blind are also supporting<lb/>
this program.<lb/>
Ihe activities tor the week will<lb/>
begin on Sunday at 7:00 p.m. with a<lb/>
jazz concert by kav Codrington, a<lb/>
well-known recording performei<lb/>
Many ol the speakers at the various<lb/>
workshops held throughout the<lb/>
week are nationally k<lb/>
m the field I i i en ices<lb/>
rehabilit ition.<lb/>
EC!<lb/>
state with programs lor the deaf,<lb/>
and is recognized throughout the<lb/>
nation as having an excelleni overall<lb/>
awareness for tl e needs ol the<lb/>
physically disabled.<lb/>
Ill if<lb/>
11<lb/>
jVTJ j<lb/>
 I<lb/>
pyj<lb/>
<lb/>
0<lb/>
Photo By JON<lb/>
I be new Prograai Board of the Student I nion met Wednesday to discuss plans for the upcoming year. Pielured<lb/>
(trim. nuht to left) in the top row are harles Mine, Major Attractions (ommittee chairman: Keith McCorkale,<lb/>
Special Concerts; Steve Bachner. Films (ommittee; (re?onyers. Student Inion artist; Joe I ewis. Minority Arts<lb/>
and Sam Boyd, Travel (ommittee. In the seeond row areathy Edwards. Special Events: andammie Harris<lb/>
( offeehouse. Seated are Anyelia Brinn, Entertainer (ommittee. Ron Maxwell. Student Union president: and<lb/>
Teresa Guion, Artists Series. Art Exhibition Chairman Reid Jenkins is not pictured.<lb/>
Gay Students Win Case Against Georgetown<lb/>
v A S H 1 N (i 7 O N . I) . C . K ii?hf s I a w ret used in Tecran'7f f wn cav sturlpnl he intprnrAtAH Ki; mom  n,i,ir ivf? aF firnVn? . i u.  .1. . ??<lb/>
( I) '<lb/>
. - ? aps at<lb/>
a par-<lb/>
universi-<lb/>
inds and campus<lb/>
(. atholic Church<lb/>
osexuality.<lb/>
. Washington, D.C .<lb/>
in ? iled that d 's<lb/>
e Cav People ol<lb/>
d the Cav Rights<lb/>
: e t o w n<lb/>
i aw<lb/>
Rights I aw<lb/>
The ease will now go to a higher<lb/>
court, and probably he heard in<lb/>
September. That decision will help<lb/>
set a national precedent that could<lb/>
influence gay groups at other<lb/>
church-related schools<lb/>
The ruling will come too late to<lb/>
help the National Women's Studies<lb/>
Association, which was prevented<lb/>
from holding a conference at the<lb/>
University of San Francisco, a<lb/>
I atholic school, for similar reasons<lb/>
' SI administrators, who earlier<lb/>
refused to recognize two gay student<lb/>
groups, announced the women's<lb/>
studies group includes people who<lb/>
admit ti b . lesbia ' tier<lb/>
refusing the use ol US1 facilities,<lb/>
Vice President foi Student Deve!<lb/>
ment Ann Dolan wrote that the<lb/>
presence ol lesbians contradicts the<lb/>
Catholic doctrine that homosexuali-<lb/>
ty is sinful.<lb/>
Similarly, Georgetown Dean<lb/>
William Schuerman argued in court<lb/>
that "official subsidy and support<lb/>
of a gay student organization would<lb/>
Students Face Cuts;<lb/>
Awards To Be Late<lb/>
IIJ<lb/>
v<lb/>
be interpreted by many as endorse-<lb/>
ment of the position taken bv the<lb/>
ga movement on a lull range of<lb/>
issut Georgetown, he added,<lb/>
would not fund any student group<lb/>
se "philosophies collide with<lb/>
the c lunch's teachings<lb/>
Ihe university claimed it had a<lb/>
right to reject the gay students<lb/>
because it is a private, religious<lb/>
school.<lb/>
In response. Ronald Bogard, the<lb/>
student groups' lawyer, asked.<lb/>
"How can they be religious for pur-<lb/>
I<lb/>
s<lb/>
j<lb/>
poses of defending a civil rights suit<lb/>
but secular for receiving federal<lb/>
money?"<lb/>
Superior Court Judge Bleonard<lb/>
Braman agreed. calling<lb/>
Georgetown's rejection an un-<lb/>
mistakable violation of cav law. In<lb/>
September, a higher court will treat<lb/>
the issue o Georgetown's denial ol<lb/>
space to groups with non-doctrinal<lb/>
philosophies.<lb/>
East week's case, says Clint<lb/>
Hockenberry, president of the gay<lb/>
law students' group, was "the<lb/>
leanest confrontation yet betw<lb/>
religious schools and gay groups<lb/>
Hockenberry also asserts e iu<lb/>
ministration is inconsistent m ap<lb/>
portioning some $200,000 to about<lb/>
90 different s'udent groups.<lb/>
"The Womens Rights Collective<lb/>
disseminates information about<lb/>
abortion and contraceptives and<lb/>
puts ads about it in the paper he<lb/>
notes. "The Jewish group here ob-<lb/>
viously doesn't recognize Jesus a-<lb/>
Christ. If you accept Georgetow <lb/>
logic, that would be inconsistent<lb/>
with Catholic teachings<lb/>
<lb/>
Bv Pl I Ullll K<lb/>
Mhlri<lb/>
!) ? or of Fii<lb/>
Boudreaux, the I as'<lb/>
?id administra<lb/>
: ble problems<lb/>
anciai<lb/>
tid for<lb/>
I9S<lb/>
11 Dui its bv the<lb/>
Reagan administi federally<lb/>
funded appropriations foi financial<lb/>
aid have been reduced bv $660<lb/>
million. aff( the HI OG,<lb/>
i)M . SEOG, and Work Study<lb/>
pr igrams.<lb/>
2) 1 )ue n i ihe Basic c Irani I oun-<lb/>
dation's decision to stop the prin-<lb/>
ting ol studeni eligibility reports un-<lb/>
til June, qualified students will<lb/>
receive financial aid no earlier than<lb/>
the first ol August.<lb/>
J) f he total number ol E.( l .<lb/>
students qualifying foi financial aid<lb/>
will be considerably highei than last<lb/>
yeat 's numbet<lb/>
In the upcoming school year<lb/>
tederal funds foi the 1 .C.I finan-<lb/>
cial aid program will be cut<lb/>
significantly. Funding tor BEOG<lb/>
will be sliced from S2. million to S2<lb/>
million, a reduction ol approx-<lb/>
imately $700,000, according to<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
Io compensate for the lack ol<lb/>
funds, the Financial Aid administra-<lb/>
tion proposes to reduce individual<lb/>
basic grants bv sums ranging from<lb/>
$200 to $500 tor the following<lb/>
sch ? ?l yeai.<lb/>
With an average reduction ol<lb/>
about $200 foi each student.<lb/>
Boudreaux figures to compensate<lb/>
foi the deficiency in funds without<lb/>
ling away eligible applicants<lb/>
empty-handed.<lb/>
Boudreaux savs the allotment for<lb/>
the M)S1 has been chopped from<lb/>
$725,000to$663,000, a reduction of<lb/>
approximately $60,000, with in-<lb/>
terest rates remaining at four per<lb/>
cen t,<lb/>
Appropriations tor the SEOG<lb/>
(Student I qual Opportunity Grant)<lb/>
have been slashed from $269,000 to<lb/>
$164,000, a reduction ol approx-<lb/>
imately $105,000, according to<lb/>
Boudreaux.<lb/>
I unding foi the Work Siudv pro-<lb/>
gram received the smallest cut with a<lb/>
decrease ol about $14,000. The pro-<lb/>
gram will operate on a $592,000<lb/>
budget foi the forthcoming school<lb/>
vear. About 619 students were<lb/>
employed this semester, before a<lb/>
lack ol hinds caused the program to<lb/>
be terminated.<lb/>
'Next year 6(H) jobs will be<lb/>
available Boudreaux said, "but<lb/>
students will be allowed to earn no<lb/>
more than $500 a semester, and<lb/>
some students will be provided jobs<lb/>
tor only one semesir<lb/>
Ihe Sell Help and emergency<lb/>
loan programs will not be affected<lb/>
See All), Page 3<lb/>
NTS SU'PPL<lb/>
Liquor 'Flim-Flam'<lb/>
Plagues Greenville<lb/>
JHHnmHHBHL<lb/>
Pnotc B JON JORDAN<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity, in conjunction with the American lung<lb/>
Association, sponsored a rock-a-thon Wednesday on the roof of the<lb/>
Students Supply Store. More than $200 was raised, and proceed will go<lb/>
to the lung association. Sets of six "rockers" took turns rocking during<lb/>
the 12-hour event.<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPRCE<lb/>
Munuinic r dllor<lb/>
Caveat emptorl<lb/>
This old addage has been passed<lb/>
from generation to generation, but<lb/>
it seems a few students at Last<lb/>
Carolina University have recently<lb/>
been exposed to a new understan-<lb/>
ding oi the term.<lb/>
With current liquor prices ranging<lb/>
from $75 to $95 per case, it is not<lb/>
surprising that enterprising students<lb/>
would jump at the chance to obtain<lb/>
a case of their favorite ehxer at $50.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the person selling<lb/>
liquor at this price is somewhat<lb/>
more enterprising than his ECU<lb/>
customers.<lb/>
According to one student's ac-<lb/>
count, a black male around 20 years<lb/>
old ottered to sell his roommates li-<lb/>
quor at $50 a case, with the promise<lb/>
that it they purchased three cases<lb/>
they would receive half a case free.<lb/>
from there this story of fortune<lb/>
turns sour.<lb/>
"Two ot my roommates drove<lb/>
the guy to a house on Drum Street<lb/>
across the river the student<lb/>
reports. "You have to give him the<lb/>
money before he can get the liqour<lb/>
from inside the house. He said. '1<lb/>
have to go around back to pick u up<lb/>
and I'll be right back They said he<lb/>
walked around to the bask ol the<lb/>
house but never returned<lb/>
"The whole deal is illegal from<lb/>
the start, so he knows no one will go<lb/>
to the police the student con-<lb/>
tinued. "1 jus; want to let other<lb/>
students know about him so<lb/>
don't fall into the same trap we<lb/>
did<lb/>
Accotding to the source, several<lb/>
other ECl students have alreadv<lb/>
fallen victim to the flim-flam artist.<lb/>
"I understand some guvs at a<lb/>
couple of the traternaty houses have<lb/>
gone through the same thing he<lb/>
said. "There's nothing that can be<lb/>
done to this guy by the police, but<lb/>
I'd like to see him again sometime. 1<lb/>
think 1 could even the score<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Classifieds9<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Letters4<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057331_0002"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
1 HI 1 S i koi INIAN<lb/>
MARCH 26, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
coordinate h<lb/>
Regents Ete<lb/>
grams in Nu<lb/>
Sit) <lb/>
eveloi<lb/>
NURSING<lb/>
ai tvaluation in Nurs<lb/>
?ij an t s ?<lb/>
? - i scheduled foi Ma<lb/>
 .<lb/>
to Dr Mohd ad<lb/>
- ' man Ot th? v '<lb/>
?iopment C ttee ot the<lb/>
? 'q<lb/>
to nave<lb/>
featured Dr i. i B<lb/>
New vj; K<lb/>
. ?  ?? Pro<lb/>
.ng at the state<lb/>
Na orli MFhd<lb/>
? ' in her<lb/>
I wasunab<lb/>
iram will<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
? ? ??  I<lb/>
 ,  itlVI<lb/>
? ?? . made w<lb/>
?<lb/>
stude " ? '?<lb/>
?'<lb/>
?. ? i daily si<lb/>
? ?. . .<lb/>
SLAP<lb/>
The EC U sign language . luD will<lb/>
ha ? .1 neetinfl On Sunday March<lb/>
jv at 6 00  Mendenhall room 121<lb/>
That is the SGA meeting room We<lb/>
will be making some very impor<lb/>
tant arrangements lor the perfor<lb/>
mance on March 31 It is im<lb/>
perative that all members attend<lb/>
We will not have a cover dish sup<lb/>
pet All persons working in or on<lb/>
the performance are required to<lb/>
attend Prior to the pertormance<lb/>
we will need people to sell tickets<lb/>
and put up posters II you Have<lb/>
time or motivation please contact<lb/>
Dana Brown at 7S2 ?348 or the ol<lb/>
PAGEANT<lb/>
Appi v atlonj ? ?? . rjnteslants tc<lb/>
v s Black and Gold Pageant are<lb/>
. .i i . '? ?<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
re m ? ? imbassadors<lb/>
<lb/>
???nt Centc At<lb/>
versity day and<lb/>
.<lb/>
' AOrk on<lb/>
?he general<lb/>
<lb/>
CHI OMEGA<lb/>
COMMITTEES<lb/>
GAME ROOM<lb/>
The College Hill Game Room<lb/>
located in the Aycock basement<lb/>
leatures electronic games, pm<lb/>
ball pool pmg pong and tooseball<lb/>
Hours are Mon Thurs 12 11<lb/>
p m Friday 12 5pm and Sun 8<lb/>
U p m All proceeds are returned<lb/>
to the students through the Student<lb/>
Residence Association please<lb/>
support the game room<lb/>
BKa<lb/>
Beta Kappa Alpha the Banking<lb/>
8. Finance Fraternity will hold its<lb/>
March meeting Thursday the 26th<lb/>
at 4 00 m room 221 ol Mendenhall<lb/>
ihc guest speaker will be Kim<lb/>
Bass a loan ollicer with First<lb/>
on All interested persons are<lb/>
invited<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
The Media Board is presently<lb/>
.i i eptino. app'x ations lor General<lb/>
Manager ol WZMB For lurther in<lb/>
formation please can 757 6s0i<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will hold a<lb/>
short business meeting tonight<lb/>
I Thursday March 26) at 8 00 p m<lb/>
in room 221 Mendenhall Plans lor<lb/>
the Washington D C trip will be<lb/>
finalized Law Day ano other final<lb/>
club proiects will be discussed<lb/>
This is an important meeting and<lb/>
all members are urged to attend<lb/>
it attendance is not possible and<lb/>
you are nterested in the<lb/>
Washington trip please call Lynn<lb/>
Calder 1756 923' by Apm I<lb/>
RUNNING<lb/>
The ECU intramural Depart<lb/>
ment will sponsor two Cross<lb/>
Campus Fun Runs on Wednesday,<lb/>
April 8 at the ECU track There<lb/>
will be a 2 5 mile race begmninu at<lb/>
5 00 p m and a 5 mile race star<lb/>
ting at 5 30 p m Entry blanks are<lb/>
available at the intramural Office<lb/>
and are open to all ECU students<lb/>
fa ulty staff and alumr<lb/>
ANNOUNCER<lb/>
?<lb/>
Bl<lb/>
 and Sp- I<lb/>
. , ah meet on<lb/>
25 a t 6 30 p m<lb/>
-hall Stu<lb/>
? s are urg<lb/>
ed fc<lb/>
PROGRAM BOARD<lb/>
The Student union Program will<lb/>
meet on Wednesday March 25 at<lb/>
4 00 p m in Room 248 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Please plan to attend<lb/>
TWIG<lb/>
Did you know that the more you<lb/>
understand the Bible, the better<lb/>
you will feel inside? Do you know<lb/>
that il you understand the Bible<lb/>
believe it. and act accordingly<lb/>
you will have a meaningful and en<lb/>
loyable hie? II Tim 4 8, II Peter<lb/>
1 2 4) Thats our goal, to learn<lb/>
what the Bible says and apply it in<lb/>
our lives Then we can teach<lb/>
others so they can enioy the good<lb/>
life (II T,m 2 2. Col I 27. 28i<lb/>
Check out our fellowships Tues<lb/>
day March 24 and Thursday.<lb/>
March 26 at 12 00 noon Thursday.<lb/>
March 26 at 7 30 p m room no<lb/>
212 Mendermall Student Center<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Applications are now being<lb/>
taken for the positions of Day Stu<lb/>
dent Representative to serve on<lb/>
the Student Union Board of D ? I<lb/>
tors Interested individuals are re<lb/>
quested to submit their applica<lb/>
lions by April 6 Applications can<lb/>
be obtained from the information<lb/>
desk at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center or the Student Union office<lb/>
Any questions should be directed<lb/>
to the Student union office.<lb/>
757 6611 ext 210<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
This Sunday is Collegiate Sun<lb/>
day at the Memorial Baptist<lb/>
Church. 1510 Greenville Blvd Col<lb/>
lege students will be in charge of<lb/>
both Sunday School (9 45 am)<lb/>
ano worship services ill 00 a m i<lb/>
Don't miss this opportunity for a<lb/>
different type of celebration1 The<lb/>
Blue Angel" (our vans will be<lb/>
making its Sunday morning<lb/>
rounds on campus tor those who<lb/>
need a ride<lb/>
SPRING FLING<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau is sponsoring an<lb/>
all expense paid weekend for two<lb/>
at the Whaler Inn Atlantic Beach<lb/>
The winner may choose any<lb/>
weekend between Apr-1 10th and<lb/>
June 4th<lb/>
Donations are il 00<lb/>
may be obtained from,<lb/>
Tau<lb/>
The drawing will be held Friday<lb/>
April 3 at the Phi Tau house during<lb/>
our "Spring Fling party.<lb/>
3 00 6 30 p m The drawing will be<lb/>
at 6 00 Everyone is invited to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
CONSUMER ED<lb/>
Ways to slash grocery bills with<lb/>
manufacturers' coupons and re<lb/>
fund offers will be taught at a<lb/>
special consumer education<lb/>
seminar at East Carolina Univer<lb/>
sity m early April<lb/>
"Coupons and Refunds How to<lb/>
Save Money on Groceries will be<lb/>
offered twice. Tuesday. April 7. 7 9<lb/>
p m . and Wednesday April 8 10<lb/>
a m noon<lb/>
Instructor is Cheryl Pevehouse<lb/>
editor of two consumer interest<lb/>
newspapers whose success with<lb/>
coupons and relunds has beer) the<lb/>
subject ol numerous television and<lb/>
newspaper features<lb/>
The class is designed tor<lb/>
homemakers. single people<lb/>
students and all bargain hunter'<lb/>
interested m cutting costs of foodf<lb/>
and household products, says Ms<lb/>
Pevehouse<lb/>
Further information is available<lb/>
from the Office of Non Credit Pro<lb/>
grams Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education. East Carolina Univer<lb/>
Sity, Greenville. N C . telephone<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
An Episcopal service ot Holy<lb/>
Communion will be celebrated<lb/>
Tuesdsay evening March 24 ir  I<lb/>
chapel ot the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center (5th Street across from<lb/>
Garrett Dorm The servni<lb/>
be at 5 30 p m with the Episcopal<lb/>
Chaplain the Rev B Hadden,<lb/>
I elebrating<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS<lb/>
The Coop Office has intorma<lb/>
ton concerning summer interi<lb/>
ships for both graduate and<lb/>
undergraduate students who have<lb/>
backgrounds in compu I<lb/>
Students should review internship<lb/>
descriptions posted outside 313<lb/>
Rawi it interested and should<lb/>
tact the Co op Office for additional<lb/>
-ntormation<lb/>
BAWLING<lb/>
a No Tap bo Tournament,<lb/>
sponsored by Meflent II S'udent<lb/>
Center, will be t Marcl 23<lb/>
through April 13 foall ECU<lb/>
students A nine pm hit jnt <lb/>
strike In this mixed aout!s ?<lb/>
singles competition v<lb/>
The tournament began Monoa.<lb/>
March 23 with three w?-e?s ot<lb/>
qualifying for the mixed dou'<lb/>
roll off to be held Apr ill 3 Wirmi<lb/>
in the Singles event will be deter<lb/>
mined over the entire three a<lb/>
period<lb/>
Eight trophies will be awai<lb/>
to the top tmishers m the singles<lb/>
?ed ? ibles e<lb/>
Detailed information and r<lb/>
are available at it. b ???<lb/>
Center<lb/>
FOOSEBALL<lb/>
Mendenhall Studen' I . Il -<lb/>
par<lb/>
ticipriv n the I<lb/>
ment to be held ot<lb/>
Apr.i 8 at 6 00 p -<lb/>
competition m bi<lb/>
elimination will It<lb/>
to the first and ? ?<lb/>
teams<lb/>
Ail participants n isl ?<lb/>
by Monday April 6 a'<lb/>
B'lliards Center T ' ?<lb/>
S2 oc p lean lo I ?<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
CITY COUNCIL<lb/>
A spe Bl cal<lb/>
Greenville Cdy Council I ?<lb/>
called tor Thursda, Mat M ?'<lb/>
8 00 a m in the Cor n<lb/>
First Floor of "<lb/>
:? ? ? (he pur) i<lb/>
questmg the I ?<lb/>
? ew Ot Chai<lb/>
que- ling<lb/>
il act 1 e City ot<lb/>
,i eenville to lea l " ? ? "<lb/>
Greenville Chambi<lb/>
mer<lb/>
on the corner ol G" ? ?<lb/>
??, . ? . ? <lb/>
Taco Bell<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Special<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Monday Plu8 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/>
1 hursday<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/>
Tickets<lb/>
an, P h<lb/>
POLO<lb/>
B Ralph Lauren<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
v jm<lb/>
HHOOH D6UGHT<lb/>
Ralph Lauren tailors dusks.<lb/>
Meticulousls detailed shirts in the finest,<lb/>
all cotton fabriceach with the distinc-<lb/>
tive Polo signature. from our collection,<lb/>
choose the oxford cloth button-down in<lb/>
soft summer colors priced at S21.IM). For<lb/>
casual occasions, select the cotton isle<lb/>
Polo knit in an arras of light and bright<lb/>
colors.<lb/>
$21.50 to $23.(X)<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
 i<lb/>
10C Beverages while it last<lb/>
Friday, March 27<lb/>
4:00-7:00p.m.<lb/>
Admission 25<lb/>
Canned beverages<lb/>
only 60C<lb/>
AT<lb/>
THE ATTIC<lb/>
Sponsored by Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity<lb/>
a<lb/>
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No Sir1 It's America s Roast Beet Yes Sir'<lb/>
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Ytaair!<lb/>
Two more reasons<lb/>
why you A I<lb/>
love Arry's<lb/>
tuesdau<lb/>
march 31<lb/>
3-00<lb/>
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WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
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2 SUPERS!2 KINGS<lb/>
N rf WITH TH<lb/>
i &amp; 2R<lb/>
hendrix theater<lb/>
mendenhall student center<lb/>
ecu. campus<lb/>
fantasy is a group of hearing and<lb/>
hearim impaired students who, interpret<lb/>
popular music in sian language<lb/>
IS COUPON<lb/>
I<lb/>
ROAST<lb/>
BEEF<lb/>
$2.09<lb/>
?at all participating Arby's Limit! at a" Participating Arby's. L<lb/>
I one coupon per customer perone coupon per customer<lb/>
-visit. Not valid with any other of ? visit- Not va,ld witn anV otner of-ivisit<lb/>
Ifer fr MM,MMffifc<lb/>
imitlat all participating Arby's. Li<lb/>
perone coupon per customer<lb/>
Not valid with any other<lb/>
<lb/>
students svso, public $200<lb/>
tickets aval lab If at mendenhaW<lb/>
and at brewster building a n 4<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
ACROSS F-O A K-MART<lb/>
sponsored by the ecu. 5?pr ancuacte club<lb/>
 niiiiti<lb/>
si<lb/>
ha<lb/>
C7<lb/>
Iht<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057331_0003"/><lb/>
Aid Cuts Coming<lb/>
Continued I-rom Page 1 s,udents and everyone's provide I'oi student feels ihe funds would<lb/>
needs can be taken care financial aid needs be more farily<lb/>
idget cuts, of he added where othei programs distributed on a need<lb/>
are programs One such optton is do noi basis. I he federal<lb/>
solely by the GS1 (Guaranteed Presently, an stu governmeni is paying<lb/>
Studeni loan) which deni can appl foi a i he nine percent interest<lb/>
?vi  can provide a studeni CiM without assessing rate on formerh ob<lb/>
nen tinancial with up to $25,000 pei his 01 hei needs in a lained CiSL's, bui n<lb/>
letters in yeat Boudreaux feels Confidential State will not pa interest on<lb/>
month that the (M should ment, but Boudreaux future loam<lb/>
HasK<lb/>
Conference To Be Held<lb/>
s ? IUK Mis<lb/>
basic grants<lb/>
out of<lb/>
I he 1 went) tn si n<lb/>
nual Family 1 ife . on<lb/>
ference will be held at<lb/>
I as: (. at ohna I m et si<lb/>
dlerian child Care "Developing Intimacy<lb/>
Centers in Columbia in Male-Female Rela<lb/>
and Harbison, South tionships 2:(H) p.m<lb/>
Carolina; W'avne M Ms. Kathleen <lb/>
i on pril 1 and 2 I lie Motile, a<lb/>
ychologist Walton and Dr. Francis<lb/>
specializi ng in Walton<lb/>
psychotherapy for "Maintaining Intimacy<lb/>
adults and adolescents, in Relationships"<lb/>
Fhursday, April 2<lb/>
Ml daytime meetings 1(I,H) a m Dr. Wayne<lb/>
ologists will be held in room 129 M. Sotile "Impact of<lb/>
akers at the Speight Building. Ihe 'alt Sexuality on In<lb/>
rhursday night meeting terpersonal Relat<lb/>
will be in the School ol ships 2:00 p.m Di<lb/>
rt Auditorium. Wayne M. Sotile<lb/>
rhe schedule foi the 'Treating Problem<lb/>
two days is as follows: Relationships 8:00<lb/>
Wednesday, April 1: P-m Dr. Waynt M<lb/>
0:00a.m Dr. Francis Soi!l "Intimacy .<lb/>
 Walton and Ms. Interpersonal Relati<lb/>
theme ol this year's<lb/>
conference is Intimacy:<lb/>
Developing and Main<lb/>
taining Close Personal<lb/>
ships<lb/>
II ? are<lb/>
s Walton,<lb/>
iculty<lb/>
Xdlei In<lb/>
?<lb/>
?n ilinn a<lb/>
 li<lb/>
?n Walli'ii<lb/>
siun-<lb/>
S her rod<lb/>
Faces<lb/>
C h urges<lb/>
ntinued 1 rnm Pane 1<lb/>
Crawford Service Held<lb/>
I m<lb/>
for 1 ? K<lb/>
( at<lb/>
depai<lb/>
follow ng<lb/>
Mi . ra<lb/>
'U'i<lb/>
divid<lb/>
vere I eld Sunday ol security "As the students ki<lb/>
rd of ihe he always had time to stop and<lb/>
jrsity police His death was a great shock to<lb/>
i died Friday (.aider A&amp;dc that Mr. <lb/>
had pi.umed to retire<lb/>
2. was buried at year but had been una U<lb/>
tl Pat? ol a mix up in record -<lb/>
' ireem die and state<lb/>
el S. Navy, in- Surviving are his wife, ! lellen<lb/>
 V tr II. v iallow ay Crawl<lb/>
ECl Mrs. Graham ! I I oria<lb/>
Ellenrawford<lb/>
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vitaminC: bran ji.SSsU br?cen vitamin E<lb/>
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GNC QUALITY AT LESS THAN CHEAPEST CUT-RATE MAIL ORDER PRICES<lb/>
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CLIP THESE COUPONS FOR OLD-FASHIONED FAVORITES<lb/>
?net LMUMlTi Oat FkJi -<lb/>
rhp lecithin i ?i ???;???!<lb/>
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DIET PLAN : CRACKERS : FLOUR ? WHEAT jMayonnaiifSSoyOeans<lb/>
69 ! 49 ! 69 I 49 j 89 i 39<lb/>
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49 j 99 j M09 a?2" ; 39 i 99<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Wholesale Retail<lb/>
Ice Sales<lb/>
SPCCIAL reg OQc<lb/>
S LB BAG 89- ??<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
E?pir?t April I, 1991<lb/>
? . L ? D?H??'t<lb/>
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TO<lb/>
ritflk&amp;s&amp;mVLl :Im i<lb/>
HONEY : BANANA<lb/>
GRAHAMS : CHIPS<lb/>
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STRESS TABS " GERITOL<lb/>
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stress 0 We : GERI-GEN<lb/>
S179 I 59<lb/>
ME1AMUCH ' a ONE A DAY<lb/>
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S199 99<lb/>
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REDUCE SALT INIAKE<lb/>
W.K GNC ? Lo Sowk FooOv<lb/>
?????????????III.Kli<lb/>
General<lb/>
Nutrition<lb/>
Centers<lb/>
Tom?tO J S???m? Stick<lb/>
Juice SNACKS<lb/>
29 : 49<lb/>
f ? ?' HI S - ? a<lb/>
f ? S S s ?<lb/>
Mayonnaise! VEG-IT<lb/>
99 iv 99<lb/>
ti?i"( 1 ? ?<lb/>
t t l-R? J, <lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
L.jadczn?J 8,<lb/>
Are You Sick and Tired<lb/>
of<lb/>
Washing Clothes?<lb/>
Try our Wash, Dry, Fold Service<lb/>
We furnish Detergent, Bleach,<lb/>
Fabric Softener, Hangers<lb/>
Introductory Offer<lb/>
50 O 0ff Regular Price<lb/>
Offer Expires April 1, 1981 ? Valid with Coupon Only<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I HI I SAKOI IMN 1k H y yx<lb/>
PRESENTING:<lb/>
WILD CHERRY<lb/>
In Concert<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SUN MARCH 27 &amp; 29<lb/>
AT PAPA KATZ<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 8:30 P.M.<lb/>
SHOWTIME AT 10:00 P.M.<lb/>
ADVANCED TICKETS -<lb/>
AT THE DOOR ? $5.00<lb/>
TICKETS AVAILABLE<lb/>
AT RECORD BAR<lb/>
&amp; APPLE RECORDS<lb/>
$3.50<lb/>
&amp;$?,<lb/>
SOU ? r<lb/>
SURVIVOHS CANfl .<lb/>
PLAYING SUCH<lb/>
HITS AS: p<lb/>
PLAY THAT 4 Jt<lb/>
FUNKY MUSIC PJLf<lb/>
AND A fM<lb/>
w<lb/>
758-7912<lb/>
I FEEL<lb/>
SANCTIFIED'<lb/>
?? -<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057331_0004"/><lb/>
?lje lEaat (Earaltmatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C HR1S LlCHOK, Cram Mb?w?<lb/>
JlMM DuPRI I . t<lb/>
I'M I I INC kl . Dm wo) Mm PAUI CO! I INS, Vr?a?fc?<lb/>
Davi Sim kin. bmMowttf Charles Chandler v ??'<lb/>
Am i 1 c am i k. ?? m David Norris. ???. &amp;,<lb/>
March 26, 1481<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page ??<lb/>
The Handicapped<lb/>
ECU Sets Week Of Observance<lb/>
The United Nations has declared<lb/>
1981 to be the International Year of<lb/>
Disabled Persons. In conjunction<lb/>
with this East Carolina University<lb/>
had declared March 29 through<lb/>
April 2, 1981 Handicap Awareness<lb/>
Week.<lb/>
The program is designed to in-<lb/>
clude activities that will help<lb/>
everyone participating to gain in-<lb/>
sight into the world of the physically<lb/>
impaired. Workshops will be set-up<lb/>
in various locations around the<lb/>
campus with special emphasis on<lb/>
students, professors and employers<lb/>
and their specific needs in dealing<lb/>
with the handicapped. All of the<lb/>
events are open to the public, and<lb/>
are free of charge, with only one ex-<lb/>
ception.<lb/>
At 7:30 p.m on Tuesday,<lb/>
March, our own ECU sign language<lb/>
musical interpretation group.<lb/>
"Fantasy will put on a perfor-<lb/>
mance in Hendrix Theatre. Admis-<lb/>
sion is SI.50 for students and S2.00<lb/>
for the general public. Tickets are<lb/>
availat le at the cam us nt<lb/>
Ticket Office.<lb/>
There will also be simulation<lb/>
workshops that will allow par-<lb/>
ticipants to experience a world of<lb/>
blindness, for example, or find out<lb/>
what it is like to get around in a<lb/>
wheelchair. This is an excellent op-<lb/>
portunity to broaden the understan-<lb/>
ding of people to the problems of<lb/>
the disabled.<lb/>
For example, how would you<lb/>
function if you had no use of your<lb/>
amis or legs? How would you per-<lb/>
form such normal tasks as dressing<lb/>
yourself, brushing your teeth, tying<lb/>
your shoes, eating, etc.? On the<lb/>
CBS news magazine, "60 Minutes<lb/>
Sunday, March 22, one man dealt<lb/>
with these problems through the use<lb/>
of a specially trained monkey who<lb/>
could even properly brush the man's<lb/>
hair for him. Admittedly, this is not<lb/>
the answer to all quadraplegic's pro-<lb/>
blems, but it shows that there are<lb/>
alternatives to institutionalizing<lb/>
severely handicapped persons.<lb/>
Did you know that you should<lb/>
not pet a seeing-eye dog, even if it is<lb/>
sitting beside its owner, looking up<lb/>
at you and wagging its tail? How<lb/>
would you handle a class in which<lb/>
the professor drew many graphs and<lb/>
illustrations on the blackboard it"<lb/>
you were blind? The workshops<lb/>
during the coming week are design-<lb/>
ed to enlighten partipants on the<lb/>
many alternatives that are provided<lb/>
by the university to handle such<lb/>
frustrating situations.<lb/>
Handicapped men and women<lb/>
are not different from able-bodied<lb/>
people except that by some conse-<lb/>
quence they have a physical impair-<lb/>
ment. Sometimes, this disability can<lb/>
cause unimpaired individuals to be<lb/>
uncomfortable in dealing with the<lb/>
handicapped. Handicap Awareness<lb/>
Week is designed to alleviate some<lb/>
of this unsureness, and help<lb/>
students, faculty, and employers to<lb/>
relate in a positive and relaxed man-<lb/>
ner with disabled persons. Let's<lb/>
support Handicap Awareness Week<lb/>
by getting involved in some of the<lb/>
workshops and gain some insight in-<lb/>
to the world of the handicapped.<lb/>
Campaign Posters<lb/>
Clutter Hallways<lb/>
Okay guvs, enough is enough.<lb/>
is are I nal w i two<lb/>
ot the Student Government<lb/>
Association elections, with Lester<lb/>
Nail soon to be inaugurated as<lb/>
president and Denise Phthisic as<lb/>
secretarv.<lb/>
The only offices still undecided<lb/>
are vice-president where Marvin<lb/>
Braxton and Peggy Davison enter a<lb/>
runoff April 1 and treasurer with<lb/>
Angela Pepe and incumbant Kirk<lb/>
Little running neck-in-neck. This<lb/>
editorial does not apply to these<lb/>
candidates still running for office,<lb/>
only those who participated in other<lb/>
races.<lb/>
With this in mind, the question<lb/>
remains: why are campaign posters<lb/>
still displayed throughout many<lb/>
campus buildings? It can't be that<lb/>
students enjoy reading them so<lb/>
much, so what is the explanation?<lb/>
While the situation may seem<lb/>
ridiculous at this juncture, we<lb/>
would not want ever) poster to en-<lb/>
dure the fate of a particular<lb/>
"Charles Sune For Sophomore<lb/>
Class President" poster (vintage<lb/>
19) which still exists in the foyer<lb/>
of the Publications Building.<lb/>
We are not implying that these<lb/>
candidates should sprint through<lb/>
buildings grabbing their posters and<lb/>
rush to have them cremated, just<lb/>
that two weeks is plenty of time to<lb/>
rid our halls of this literature.<lb/>
NOBODY<lb/>
6GA<lb/>
PREZ.<lb/>
' NOBODY DOj<lb/>
IT BETTE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
PRE SIDE NT<lb/>
?'??jfl ?' '?"??'??'??'??V?f ?'? '? '? '? vlv IVil L. 1 f I<lb/>
SUPPORT <lb/>
THE <lb/>
jg WAt-K FOR. <lb/>
v.Vr: i in?<lb/>
tfr NAIL, ?r<lb/>
V0 BPttKPWA AftOUtfO AMO Nor HWC ToTWY<lb/>
t0 HW.MSfciF<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
ECU Hunger Walk Supported<lb/>
1 desire to know the rhetoric lhat will<lb/>
persuade the most to participate in the<lb/>
"Walk for Humanity yet there is an<lb/>
absurdity to rhetoric in speaking of star-<lb/>
vation; 1 know only to beg and plead for<lb/>
participation in the walk.<lb/>
The starving do not care to work for<lb/>
equal rights for minorities, or discuss<lb/>
ethics or logic with the philosopher, or<lb/>
demand-theory with the business<lb/>
analyst, or laws of thermodynamics with<lb/>
the physical scientist. What is so<lb/>
grievously true is that they cannot care<lb/>
about these things; a person can have no<lb/>
freedoms, liberties or privileges when<lb/>
they know not whether they shall die for<lb/>
want of food. Seneca is correct: "A<lb/>
hungry person listens not to reason, nor<lb/>
cares for justice, nor is bent by any<lb/>
prayers<lb/>
Yet so serious we seem, and so actual-<lb/>
ly absurd we are, in complaining about<lb/>
S.G.A. elections, or lack of a fall break,<lb/>
or allocations to the E.C.G.C; so<lb/>
serious we are in fighting over a loss of<lb/>
work-study funds and in complaining<lb/>
about foreign language requirements.<lb/>
Actually we are paltry, trite, crass peo-<lb/>
ple if we are capable of assigning any im-<lb/>
portance to our actions and at the same<lb/>
time perhaps denying a few moments<lb/>
freedom or life to another by not giving<lb/>
even so little of our time to help. Think<lb/>
of how much time we've spent on our<lb/>
social institutions, and how little time<lb/>
we've spent to help a starving person.<lb/>
Surely anyone with conscience will<lb/>
desire to help on April 11th. If you can-<lb/>
not help by actually walking, at least<lb/>
sponsor someone else and participate<lb/>
through your giving.<lb/>
If you do not wish to help at all, then<lb/>
one can only wonder if you really care,<lb/>
and I find such egoism revolting.<lb/>
STEVEN M. FISHER<lb/>
Senior, English<lb/>
Break Recommended<lb/>
Statements made in the "Fall Break"<lb/>
editorial in the March 19, 1981 issue ol<lb/>
The East Carolinian were incorrect I he<lb/>
Calendar Committee recommended a<lb/>
1983-84 calendar starting the las! week<lb/>
of August and incorporating a "Fall<lb/>
Break The Committee also recom-<lb/>
mended that a "I all Break" be placed in<lb/>
the 1981-82 calendar. These recommen-<lb/>
dations were rejected. The possibility ol<lb/>
classes starting later or classes lasting a<lb/>
longer period of time as reported in the<lb/>
editorial were not proposals of the<lb/>
Calendar Committee.<lb/>
FRANK W. SAl NDI Ks<lb/>
Calendar Committee Member<lb/>
Abortion Stand Challenged<lb/>
I am writing in response to Jesse<lb/>
Helms' column of March 24, 1981 on<lb/>
abortion. Helms makes several remarks<lb/>
which 1 strongly oppose. Helms in-<lb/>
dicates that he does not believe thai the<lb/>
taxpayers should be forced to finance<lb/>
the killing of an "unwanted babv Isn't<lb/>
that what the baby would be:<lb/>
"Unwanted"?<lb/>
Isn't it better lhat the child never be<lb/>
born rather than being born and going<lb/>
through life knowing that he or she<lb/>
wasn't wanted? Helms advocates that<lb/>
women or rape victims have no other<lb/>
choice but to have the child. In fact<lb/>
Helms is implying that no (me has the<lb/>
right to do with their body as they<lb/>
please.<lb/>
1 feel that a person's body, is his and<lb/>
his alone, and that government should<lb/>
not regulate a person's sex life. In my<lb/>
opinion government regulates our lives<lb/>
enough. These women who seek abor-<lb/>
tion did not plan to get pregnant. There<lb/>
is no one-hundred per cent reliable<lb/>
means ol birth control; except to obstain<lb/>
trom sex. And who should say that one<lb/>
must obstain trom sex: the government?<lb/>
Helms is biased because he only<lb/>
presents one side of the story. To be<lb/>
realistic one should look at both sides ol<lb/>
the issue. In our society it is said that we<lb/>
are free. However, if one does not have<lb/>
ihe means to carry out that freedom<lb/>
what good is freedom.<lb/>
GREG PARKER<lb/>
Sophomore, Psychology<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
1 he Last Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points oj view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
Eor purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature oj the author!s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters arc subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted.<lb/>
Economic Message Haunts US<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Ronald Reagan's economic message ?<lb/>
delivered on the night of a full moon bet-<lb/>
ween two Friday the 13ths ? was the most<lb/>
ominous omen the powerless in our society<lb/>
have seen in many years. When Reagan<lb/>
formally submitted his budget to Con-<lb/>
gress, the bad news was confirmed:<lb/>
military spending will soar, while the<lb/>
"safety net" of social services for the<lb/>
disadvantaged will be shredded.<lb/>
At first glance, the president's proposed<lb/>
budget cuts seem consistent with the<lb/>
laissez-faire philosophy Reagan has ar-<lb/>
ticulated for years. By slashing govern-<lb/>
ment spending and federal regulations<lb/>
governing commerce, his argument goes,<lb/>
Reagan will be getting "Big Government<lb/>
off the backs of the people restoring our<lb/>
liberties and entrusting the helm of the ship<lb/>
of state to the most productive members of<lb/>
society.<lb/>
A closer inspection of Reagan's policies<lb/>
reveals a less comforting vision. The<lb/>
Ronald Reagan who is, in theory, a cham-<lb/>
pion of free enterprise is, in practice, a<lb/>
guardian of frozen privilege. Like the<lb/>
liberals whom they have swept from the<lb/>
temple, Reagan and his apostles are<lb/>
perfectly willing to use the power of cen-<lb/>
tralized government to implement their<lb/>
political agenda.<lb/>
Thus, the administration can entertain a<lb/>
proposal made last November by its transi-<lb/>
tion team to shut off federal funding to<lb/>
municipalities with rent control laws. Such<lb/>
a proposal, if it is adopted, would invoke<lb/>
the power of Washington to crush the local<lb/>
and state autonomy Reagan claims to<lb/>
cherish. That would be inconsistent with<lb/>
American<lb/>
Journal<lb/>
Reagan's rhetoric, but perfectly intune<lb/>
with the reality of his presidency. Reagan<lb/>
doesn't care about cutting back govern-<lb/>
ment, per se; he cares about protecting the<lb/>
sanctity of private capital, especially for<lb/>
those who already have a lot of it. If drop-<lb/>
ping government regulations can best pro-<lb/>
mote capital, fine. If extending govern-<lb/>
ment powers does it best, Reagan will ex<lb/>
tend them.<lb/>
Ralph Nader, in an interview with<lb/>
Baltimore's City Paper, described the<lb/>
president and his aides this way: "ihe<lb/>
Reaganites are not really conservatives.<lb/>
They can be classified more as cor-<lb/>
poratists. They are not going to reduce the<lb/>
tax expenditures which involve tens of<lb/>
billions of dollars of indirect subsidies to<lb/>
business Moreover, Nader continued,<lb/>
"Reagandoes not believe in anti-trust<lb/>
laws, which are designed to preserve a<lb/>
competitive economy and, therefore, a free<lb/>
enterprise system<lb/>
Reagan's fiscal policies, if fully im-<lb/>
plemented, are as likely to be enmeshed in<lb/>
failure as his philosophy is in contradic-<lb/>
tions. Indeed, Reagan's economic package<lb/>
is almost guaranteed to accelerate the in-<lb/>
flationarv spiral we've been whirling in for<lb/>
more than a decade. The reason? Chiefly,<lb/>
his proposed massive increase in the<lb/>
military budget ? a form of spending<lb/>
fraught with cost overruns and delays, one<lb/>
which, moreover, produces relatively few-<lb/>
civilian jobs and virtually no consumer<lb/>
goods. Runaway inflation ? well over 10<lb/>
percent a year now, compared to 1.2 per-<lb/>
cent in 1962 ? began with the huge<lb/>
mihtarv expenditures of the Vietnam war;<lb/>
Reagan's policies will strengthen inflation,<lb/>
not combat it.<lb/>
The Reagan rhetoric does not draw at-<lb/>
tention to the fact that military spending is<lb/>
government spending. The president<lb/>
prefers to pin that label on "frills" such as<lb/>
food stamps, social security and<lb/>
unemployment compensation. In fact, the<lb/>
billions for boondoggles such as the<lb/>
neutron bomb, the Cruise missile and the<lb/>
1 missile ? a project that would rip up<lb/>
several Western states to put constantly<lb/>
circulating missiles on railway tracks ?<lb/>
comprise the most common kind of<lb/>
government spending. For Reagan, who<lb/>
has also proposed fatal cuts for Amtrak.<lb/>
it's only "government spending" if human<lb/>
beings, rather than weapons, ride the rails<lb/>
at Uncle Sam's expense.<lb/>
Seen in the light of day, Reagan's "new<lb/>
beginning" for Amrica is a transparent<lb/>
fraud. Promising to curtail govrenment<lb/>
powers, Reagan has merely rearranged<lb/>
them. Pledging to cut government spen-<lb/>
ding, he has taken funds from the needy<lb/>
and given them to an already overstuffed<lb/>
Pentagon ? thus increasing the chance<lb/>
that the brass hats will sally forth on<lb/>
another ill-fated foreign adventure. That's<lb/>
the bottom line in Reagan's bad news<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057331_0005"/><lb/>
- m i r a ,<lb/>
lit tiunian<lb/>
the rails<lb/>
new<lb/>
;rent<lb/>
nent<lb/>
arranged<lb/>
I spen-<lb/>
: needv<lb/>
'led<lb/>
chance<lb/>
ith on<lb/>
rhafs<lb/>
lad news<lb/>
l Ml I s c K? II 1 <lb/>
Features<lb/>
M K n 26 ivsI Paj<lb/>
Cheap Trick<lb/>
They 'Want You<lb/>
To Want' Them<lb/>
(heap I rick lead imitarist Rick Neilsen will be wielding his ae at 1(1 on pril 4.<lb/>
With just ten days remaining before the devastation<lb/>
of Minges Coliseum by superstar-statue rockers Ch<lb/>
Trick and special guest UFO, less than 2000 studi<lb/>
tickets are still available. Central Ticket Office (MS I<lb/>
operating hours will be extended until 6 p.m. beginni<lb/>
Monday in order to accomodate the usual las! min<lb/>
rush.<lb/>
"The Major Attractions Committee is very excited<lb/>
about this concert and has been having as much fun pi<lb/>
moling it as 1 can ever recall said Charles Sune,<lb/>
Chairperson of the Committee. "We're very pleased<lb/>
with ihe support that we have been receiving thus fai '<lb/>
The April 4 appearance of the two groups has<lb/>
distinction of being the only North Carolina date<lb/>
scheduled during the current tour.<lb/>
Since exploding onto the modern music scene in 1977,<lb/>
i ? gained mass appeal with theii live album<lb/>
? V Budokan" which featured ihe hii singles l Warn<lb/>
I Warn Me "Surrender and "Ain'i rhai <lb/>
singles by the group include the<lb/>
mbei one songs "Dream Police "Voices<lb/>
"I vt ?  ? If ou 1 el It" (from ihe sound<lb/>
ihe motion picture "Roadie"), "Slop <lb/>
Gamt " and iheii mosi recent nil "Baby Loves lo<lb/>
America with their latesi I (' "All Shook<lb/>
: been performing to capacity crowds<lb/>
Music Hall in New York, and ihe Boston<lb/>
Ga reviews throughout ihe lour,<lb/>
ricl concert are only $6.50 (in advai<lb/>
; I S8.50 for the public. n remaining<lb/>
b8.50 ai the doi,<lb/>
Handicap Awareness<lb/>
Week Begins Sunday<lb/>
Smokev Returns To ECU<lb/>
Hurt Reynolds, Sally Field, Jerry Reed and Jackie Gleason return to the<lb/>
screen in 'Smokey and ihe Bandit II' the Student Union Free Hick for this<lb/>
weekend, show times are 7 and u p.m. on Friday and 5, 7 and 9 p.m. on<lb/>
Saturda. dmission is free with student II) and activity cards.<lb/>
 number ol public activities are<lb/>
planned foi the observance of East<lb/>
( arolina I niversity's annual Han-<lb/>
dicap wareness Week. March<lb/>
29-April 2.<lb/>
Ihe events will begin with a 7<lb/>
p.m Sunday, March 29, concert on<lb/>
the 1(1 mall featuring Ka Codr-<lb/>
ington and Group Sax. Ram sue is<lb/>
Hendrix I heatre. ?<lb/>
Monday's program includes the<lb/>
opening ol awareness booths and<lb/>
simulation activities on campus and<lb/>
a ' p.m. film festival in the Leo<lb/>
i en kins Fine rI s Center<lb/>
uditoriun<lb/>
' 1 p.m I uesday, Pal Parker ol<lb/>
Community Services for the Blind<lb/>
jnd Sonai Glasses representative<lb/>
Bob Hun! will speak in the Student<lb/>
I nion. t 7:30 "Fantasy<lb/>
I i I 's sign language musical inter-<lb/>
pretation group, will perform in<lb/>
Hendrix I heatre.<lb/>
Members ol "Fantasy" are<lb/>
Michael lines! and Kathleen<lb/>
Beetham Westbrook of the ECU<lb/>
Program foi Hearing-Impaired<lb/>
Students, Greenville interpreters<lb/>
reresa Dims! and Donna Rehm,<lb/>
and several student sign language in-<lb/>
terpreters: Keith Stephens, an An-<lb/>
napolis, Md. senior; Rachel<lb/>
Ramsey, a New ork C"iiy senior;<lb/>
Michael Cotter and J.C . Watford,<lb/>
seniors from Greenville; Ron Gill, a<lb/>
junior from Zebulon; Donna<lb/>
Broun, a Cary junior; Laura Styers,<lb/>
a Winston-Salem junior; Sharon<lb/>
A cademy A wards<lb/>
Our Critic Makes Predictions<lb/>
B JOHN WKHLK<lb/>
?Mall W<lb/>
Coming up on March 30 those on<lb/>
the motion picture merry-go-round<lb/>
will have a chance to grab the brass<lb/>
ring he 53rd annual Academy<lb/>
Awards. Once again, Oscar (so call-<lb/>
ed either because he resembled<lb/>
Academy secretary Margaret Her-<lb/>
rick's uncle) will go to honor the<lb/>
besi of lasi year in film. Below arc<lb/>
the nominees for the major awards,<lb/>
with this filmmaker and film<lb/>
reviewer's predictions as to whom<lb/>
will win.<lb/>
The biggest excitement this year<lb/>
should be over the Best Actress<lb/>
award. I his is indicative of a new<lb/>
and much-welcomed trend in film:<lb/>
the resurgence of strong roles foi<lb/>
women. Ellen Burstyn is reputed to<lb/>
have given a dynamic performance<lb/>
in "Ressurrection" but the film was<lb/>
little-seen. Besides, she's won<lb/>
before, for "Alice Doesn't Live<lb/>
Here Anymore" in 1974. so against<lb/>
Miss ECU Pageant<lb/>
Held Tuesday Night<lb/>
Ihe Second Annual Miss II<lb/>
pageant was held Tuesday night in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Thirty-six contestants competed<lb/>
in the pageant, which was sponsored<lb/>
by Joe Hallow of Stroh's and the<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Fraternity.<lb/>
Ihe winner of ihe contest was<lb/>
I isa Ward, who was sponsored b<lb/>
the Chi Omega Sorority. She receiv-<lb/>
ed a $300 scholarship, plus a trophy<lb/>
and some roses.<lb/>
The first runner-up was Courtney<lb/>
( ox; second runner-up was Jennifer<lb/>
Coates; third runner-up was Kim<lb/>
Blevins and fourth runner-up was<lb/>
Kim I lora. Runners-up also receiv-<lb/>
ed scholarships, trophies and roses.<lb/>
Ihe Mistress of Cermonies was<lb/>
Diane Bowen, who was Miss North<lb/>
Carolina of 1976. Judges for the<lb/>
event included Joe Hallow, Jack<lb/>
Minges, Mrs. Ld Emory, Brent<lb/>
Heisner, Pat Bernetie and Lena<lb/>
Brown.<lb/>
The production was coordinated<lb/>
by Mark Mueller.<lb/>
The brothers of Kappa Sigma<lb/>
would also like to extend their<lb/>
thanks to Scott Hoover and Greg<lb/>
Needham for their help in conduc-<lb/>
ting the pageant.<lb/>
such stiff compel ion she won't be<lb/>
awarded again. Goldie Hawn is<lb/>
popular with both ihe critics and ihe<lb/>
public. She's so cute and engagingly<lb/>
daffy she makes you want to like<lb/>
her. The Academy would probably<lb/>
like to give her the grand prize but<lb/>
her time has not vet come. It pro-<lb/>
bably will someday soon, though.<lb/>
Mary Tyler Moore is another actress<lb/>
who's a hit with both critics and<lb/>
public alike. She of course has been<lb/>
honored and successful for years,<lb/>
but the Oscar is one honor that will<lb/>
be denied .her this time, I believe.<lb/>
Oena Rowlands gives a strong, gut-<lb/>
sy performance as "Gloria the ex-<lb/>
moll who engages in a one-woman<lb/>
war with the Mafia. But the<lb/>
cademy will contend that the film<lb/>
is basically just another violent<lb/>
shoot-em-up, and besides, her hus-<lb/>
band, John Cassasvettes, directed it<lb/>
just to give her something to do.<lb/>
My money is on Sissy Spacek for<lb/>
Best Actress. In "Coal Miner's<lb/>
Daughter" she impersonates a well-<lb/>
known celebrity from teenage to<lb/>
middle-age, and is perfectly<lb/>
believable the eniire time. She also<lb/>
sings her own songs in the film,<lb/>
which is quite rare. This actress has<lb/>
given striking, intriguing perfor-<lb/>
mances in a host of fine films. She<lb/>
always manages to appear in ex-<lb/>
cellent if 'unusual movies:<lb/>
Badlands "Carrie "Welcome<lb/>
to IA "Three Women<lb/>
See Ol R, page 7, col. 4<lb/>
1 a u 1 k n e r of ECnightdale, a<lb/>
sophomore; and recent ECU<lb/>
graduate Terry Brown of Ahoskie.<lb/>
Tickets, available at the campus<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, are SI.50 lor<lb/>
students and S2 for the general<lb/>
public.<lb/>
At 8 p.m. a wheelchair basketball<lb/>
game. Capital City Hustlers vs. the<lb/>
Greenville Steelw heels, will be<lb/>
played in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
On Wednesday, at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Leo Jenkins Fine Arts Center<lb/>
Auditorium, several expert speakers<lb/>
will discuss rehabilitation and public<lb/>
awareness. They include Chet Mot-<lb/>
tershead, stale liaison for the Inter-<lb/>
national Year of Disabled Persons;<lb/>
and George McCoy of the N.C.<lb/>
Division of Vocational Rehabilita-<lb/>
tion and the N.C. Hemophiliac<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Thursday's events include a 2<lb/>
p.m. demonstration of the Kurzwei<lb/>
Reading Machine for ihe blind in<lb/>
ECU's Joyner library and a 3:30<lb/>
p.m. concluding conference in room<lb/>
221 in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
All events are open to ihe public<lb/>
free of charge, except for the<lb/>
"Fantasy" sign language musical<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
Handicap Awareness Week is<lb/>
sponsored by ihe ECU Student<lb/>
Union and arranged by a campus<lb/>
committee chaired by two graduate<lb/>
students in rehabilitation counsel-<lb/>
ing, William Haney of Fayetteville<lb/>
and Cindy Myslinsky of New Mar-<lb/>
tinsville, West Va.<lb/>
Dinner heatre Tickets Still Available<lb/>
Paul Zindel's brilliant Broadway hit "And Miss Keardon Drinks A I it-<lb/>
tie" is being brought i? Mendenhall student (enter as a Dinner I heatre<lb/>
production under the direction of versatile Stephen B. Finan (pictured<lb/>
above). Ihe play will open ihis Monday. March 30, and run through<lb/>
April 4. Students can siill purchase tickets for three dessert performances<lb/>
at only $3.00 ($4.50 tor faculty and staff). Tickets for dinner perfor-<lb/>
mances are $7.00 lor students; $9.00 for faculty, staff and the general<lb/>
public, rickets are on sale at Ihe Central Ticket Office, MSC.<lb/>
Authors Louis Simpson and Louis Lieberman (pictured above) will appear together for a dramatic reading tonight<lb/>
at 8:00 p.m. in the Jenkins auditorium. On the following day, March 27. at 10:30 a.m they will conduct a<lb/>
workshop in room 221 Mendenhall. Simpson is the author of eight volumes of poetry, an autobiography, critical<lb/>
studies and a novel. He has won many awards, including a Pulitzer Prize for poetry. Lieberman has written two<lb/>
books of poetry and a collection of essays on contemporary poets, and has had poems and essavs published in<lb/>
many of the nation's leading magazines.<lb/>
Illumina Accepting Entries<lb/>
The Student Union Art Exhibi-<lb/>
tion Committee is sponsoring the Il-<lb/>
lumina Competition, an art show<lb/>
open to all current ECU students.<lb/>
This competition is one of the<lb/>
easiest ways for students interested<lb/>
in a career in the arts to accustom<lb/>
themselves to entering juried shows.<lb/>
A two dollar entry fee allows the<lb/>
student to enter up to two works for<lb/>
judging. Works or slides may be<lb/>
submitted between noon and 6 p.m.<lb/>
on March 27 in Room 212<lb/>
Mendenhall. Works must be readv<lb/>
for exhibition.<lb/>
Rejected works may be picked up<lb/>
on March 29 from 3-7 p.m. in Room<lb/>
212 Mendenhall and accepted works<lb/>
may be picked up on April 11 from<lb/>
noon until 4:00 p.m also in Room<lb/>
212 Mendenhall.<lb/>
First and second prizes will be<lb/>
awarded, at the judge's discretion,<lb/>
in the following categories:<lb/>
ceramics, communication arts,<lb/>
drawing, painting, metal design<lb/>
photography. printmaking,<lb/>
sculpture, textile design, weaving<lb/>
and wood design. In addition, the<lb/>
committee will award $400 in pur-<lb/>
chase prizes.<lb/>
The juror for this year's competi-<lb/>
tion, Ms. Cynthia Ference, is the<lb/>
director of the Greenhill Gallery in<lb/>
Greensboro.<lb/>
In addition to jurying the show,<lb/>
Ms. Ference will be speaking in the<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center<lb/>
Auditorium on Friday, March 27 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. Her lecture is titled "Out<lb/>
of the Ordinary: Art in North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
!<lb/>
<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057331_0006"/><lb/>
I HI 1 AS I CAROl IN1AN<lb/>
MARCH 26, W8I<lb/>
Happenings<lb/>
HAPPENINGS<lb/>
C ampus Events<lb/>
Thursday 26<lb/>
? 3:00 p.m. Men's Baseball lantield Harr-<lb/>
ington leld<lb/>
? 6:(K) p.m. Intramural Co-Rcc Inner lube<lb/>
Water Polo Team Captains' Meeting, Memorial<lb/>
Gym Pool<lb/>
? 8:00 p.m. I-A Film: .haver Soule-SPAIN,<lb/>
Hendnx Idealic<lb/>
? March 26-27 Intramural dolt c lassie Ayden<lb/>
cnlt Course<lb/>
Friday 27<lb/>
? 7:00 a.m5:00 p.m. Eastern Regional Science<lb/>
1 aii Minges Coliseum<lb/>
? 5:00 p.m Deadline Intramural lenms<lb/>
Doubles<lb/>
? . 7, &amp; 9:00 p.m. Movie: Smokes and the Han<lb/>
dil II Hendnx 1 heat re<lb/>
? March 27-28 Women's Softball: Western<lb/>
Carolina Invitational rourney, Cullowhee, N.C.<lb/>
Saturday 2<lb/>
? 8:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Comprehensive Exam in<lb/>
Education, Speight 1 29<lb/>
? 2(H) p m Sigma I beta lau. Beta Nu Chapter<lb/>
Induction, I .B A.<lb/>
? 3 00 p.m. Men's Baseball: William &amp;. Mary<lb/>
Harrington I icld<lb/>
? 5, 7, &amp; 9:00 p.m Movie: Smokey and the Ban-<lb/>
dit II Hendnx ! heatre<lb/>
Monday 30<lb/>
? Marcl JO pril 4 c.Rl Ik WEI K<lb/>
? 4:00 p.m. Intramural I emus Doubles<lb/>
Meeting. Memorial Gym 104<lb/>
? 7:15 p.m. MSC Dinner I heat re-Dessert Per-<lb/>
formance, I HI shadow BOX Student Center<lb/>
lid. 244<lb/>
? March 30-April 9 Intramural Badminton<lb/>
gles &amp; Doubles) Entries Due. Memorial Gym<lb/>
204<lb/>
? March 30 pril 13 Intramural Putt-Putt Goll<lb/>
(Individual) Entries Due. Memorial Gym 2(4<lb/>
? March 30-April 24 Intramural Co-Rec Inner<lb/>
lube Water Polo, Memorial Gym Pool<lb/>
I uesday 31<lb/>
? 4:30 p.m. Intramural Council Meeting,<lb/>
Memorial Gym 104<lb/>
? 6:00p.m. Men's Baseball: Atlantic Christian<lb/>
i 2 i Harrington field<lb/>
? 7:15 p.m. MSC Dinner Theatre Dessert Per<lb/>
formance, Student Center And. 244 THE<lb/>
Mino box<lb/>
? 8:15 p.m. ECU Concert Band Concert, AI.<lb/>
Fletcher Ree. Hall<lb/>
? March 31-April 2 Intramural Tennis Doubles<lb/>
Tournament, College Hills Courts<lb/>
Wednesday 1<lb/>
? 3:00 p.m. Women's Softball: N.C. State<lb/>
I niversity, Home<lb/>
? 5:00 p.m. Clothing &amp; Textiles Assn. Meeting,<lb/>
V an 1 andingham Room<lb/>
? 7:00p.m. Student Nurses Assn Nursing 101<lb/>
? 7:00 p.m. Psi Chi Meeting, Speight 129<lb/>
? 7:15 p.m. MSC Dinner Theatre Dessert Per-<lb/>
formance, THE SHADOW BOX Student Center<lb/>
And. 244<lb/>
? 10:00 p.m. April Fool's Concert, A.J. I lei<lb/>
chef Rec. Hall<lb/>
? 8:00 p.m. Movie: Grand Illusion Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
School of Music<lb/>
? March 26 Dowell Idol, piano; Junior Recital<lb/>
7:30 p.m Mark Hite, clarinet; Tercssa I assiter,<lb/>
piano; Senior Recital, 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
? March 27 Tanya Moor, flute; Martha Almon.<lb/>
piano; Senior Recital, 7:30 p.m. Eugene Cowan,<lb/>
trombone; Larry l.vles, violin; Senior Recital,<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
? March 28 Junior High School Choral Festival,<lb/>
All Day<lb/>
? March 29 String Orchestra Concert, 3:15 p.m.<lb/>
Stephen Maziarz, piano; Faculty Recital. 8:15<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
? March 30 Selma Gokcen, cello; Faculty<lb/>
Recital, 8:15 p.m. Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
? March 31 Sigma Alpha Iota Musicale, 6:00<lb/>
p.m Jazz Band Concert, 8:15 p.m. April 1<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
Buccaneer<lb/>
? ??less1' (PG) Shows at 1:00, 4:30. !v 8:00p.m.<lb/>
? "Ordinary People" (R) Shows at 2:00, 4:30,<lb/>
7:00, cV. 9:20 p.m.<lb/>
? "Raging Bull" (R) Shows at 2:15. 4:45, 7:15,<lb/>
v. 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
? Starting Friday: "Galaxina" (R) in place ol<lb/>
"Raging Bull"<lb/>
Plaa<lb/>
? ?"Tear No Evil" (R) Shows at 3, 5, 7, A: 9:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
? "Tun House" (R) Shows at 3:20. 5:15, 7:10,<lb/>
&amp; 9:05 p.m.<lb/>
? "Final c onflict" Shows at 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, &amp;<lb/>
9:15 p.m.<lb/>
? Starting lnda: "Tarthlmg" (PG) v.<lb/>
"Sphinx" (PC)<lb/>
Music Recitals Announced<lb/>
live ad v a n c e d<lb/>
students in the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
School ol Music will<lb/>
perform in campus<lb/>
recitals next weekend.<lb/>
All recitals are tree<lb/>
and open to the public.<lb/>
Performers are<lb/>
seniors Tanya Lynne<lb/>
M ore of Cary, a<lb/>
and Martha<lb/>
Brvan Almon of Wilm-<lb/>
umton.<lb/>
lanist<lb/>
two<lb/>
graduate students.<lb/>
flutist Ellen Kaner of<lb/>
Greenville and percus-<lb/>
sionist Mark Shelton of<lb/>
Bethel Springs, Tenn<lb/>
and a junior, organist<lb/>
Diane Lynn Bndger of<lb/>
Suffolk. Va.<lb/>
Miss Moore and Miss<lb/>
Almon will perform a<lb/>
joint recital Friday,<lb/>
March 27, at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
in the A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Music Center Recital<lb/>
Hall. Both are can-<lb/>
didates for Bachelor of<lb/>
Music degrees in music<lb/>
therapy.<lb/>
Miss Moore's por-<lb/>
tion of the program w ill<lb/>
include the J.S. Bach<lb/>
Sonata in G Minor,<lb/>
three Robert Schumann<lb/>
Romances for Flute<lb/>
Lecture Planned<lb/>
I he Area Studies<lb/>
Program in Medieval<lb/>
and Renaissance<lb/>
Studies i? presenting a<lb/>
lecture b Dr. I.iam B.<lb/>
de Paor, professor of<lb/>
history at the Universi-<lb/>
ty College Dublin,<lb/>
Ireland. Dr. de Paor is<lb/>
currently a visiting<lb/>
Fulbright Scholar at the<lb/>
University of Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh.<lb/>
The lecture, which<lb/>
includes slides, is on<lb/>
1 r i s h chalices and<lb/>
liturgy in the Middle<lb/>
Ages, will be held today<lb/>
at 4 p.m. in Room<lb/>
C-103 in the Brevster<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Interested members<lb/>
of the public are invited<lb/>
to meet Dr. de Paor at<lb/>
an informal coffee<lb/>
hour on Friday, March<lb/>
27 from 9:30 to 10:30<lb/>
ISAAD'S SHOL<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
1 I IGranHf Aw<lb/>
759-1228<lb/>
a.m. in the W.B. Graj<lb/>
Gallery in the Jenkins<lb/>
Fine Arts Center.<lb/>
Dr. de Paor's visit is<lb/>
sponsored by the Col-<lb/>
lege of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences, the Depart-<lb/>
ment of History and<lb/>
the School of Art.<lb/>
and Piano and a Len-<lb/>
nox BerkeK sonatina.<lb/>
Miss Almon, a stu-<lb/>
dent of Dr. Paul Tardif<lb/>
of the ECU keyboard<lb/>
faculty, will perform<lb/>
two Antonio Soler<lb/>
sonatas, the Chopin<lb/>
Polonaise in C Minor,<lb/>
Opus 40, No. 2 and two<lb/>
selections from<lb/>
Debussy's<lb/>
"Fstampes "La<lb/>
Soiree dans Grenade"<lb/>
and "Jardins sous la<lb/>
Pluie<lb/>
Ellen Kaner and<lb/>
Mark Shelton, both<lb/>
graduate teaching<lb/>
assistants in the ECU<lb/>
School of Music, will<lb/>
perform a joint pro-<lb/>
gram Sunday, March<lb/>
29, at 8:15 p.m. in the<lb/>
Music Center Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Miss Kaner will be<lb/>
featured in the Fran<lb/>
Schubert<lb/>
"Arpeggione" sonata,<lb/>
transcribed for flute<lb/>
and piano, and the<lb/>
Marcello Sonata in F.<lb/>
Shelton will perform<lb/>
"Variations on a<lb/>
Gailliard" by Ervin<lb/>
and "Tour Verses tor<lb/>
Timpani" by Houliff.<lb/>
Both students will<lb/>
peform Ingolt Dahl's<lb/>
" Duettino Concer-<lb/>
tante" for flute and<lb/>
multi-percussion.<lb/>
Diane B r i d ge r' s<lb/>
organ recital is schedul-<lb/>
ed for Sunday, March<lb/>
29, at 3:15 p.m. in the<lb/>
F l r s t Presbyterian<lb/>
Church here.<lb/>
Her program in-<lb/>
cludes Pinkham's Con-<lb/>
certante, the Bach<lb/>
Sonata VI in G, Per-<lb/>
sichetti's Sonata tor<lb/>
Organ and several<lb/>
selections from<lb/>
DuMage's "Premiere<lb/>
I ivre d'Orgue<lb/>
She is a candidate tor<lb/>
Bachelor of Music<lb/>
degrees in church music<lb/>
and organ performance<lb/>
and is a student of Dr.<lb/>
Robert Irwin of the<lb/>
ECU organ faculty.<lb/>
Qudlih<lb/>
r.<lb/>
WINE SALE<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
Check Cashing Cards<lb/>
For Facu'ty and Students<lb/>
Sp?<lb/>
PrK<lb/>
51 H ?'<lb/>
IX HI"<lb/>
Tavto Cltarl BurgunO<lb/>
"??;? Caajri Ch?bti,<lb/>
'trxy ??'? ???<lb/>
Tavfcx C ??'? Rom<lb/>
Aimadar Mou"la" 8u'guAj,<lb/>
Atma4?f Mou?tM ChatWts<lb/>
Almadar Mouftw Rot<lb/>
Almadan Mouxtw Sim<lb/>
nglnoo? Na?a Burguna,<lb/>
ingMnoot m?tCM0M<lb/>
ingttncot Navtlt Rot<lb/>
MgMjnooa mmK Rh?i?<lb/>
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i. tnr.vi Rom<lb/>
uncart ?ufo<lb/>
IJMM B'tnco<lb/>
CIwmc) Cat R'ics<lb/>
on Boor 4 "<lb/>
wnoinai n.taii lea S.t.? sc in Bag<lb/>
Keg &amp; ice I e- e,<lb/>
' si<lb/>
? Sl<lb/>
' it<lb/>
? ii<lb/>
? 5.<lb/>
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13 11<lb/>
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53 13<lb/>
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5: 'C<lb/>
53 It<lb/>
S3 'C<lb/>
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87 33<lb/>
?2 33<lb/>
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S3 at<lb/>
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 ?-<lb/>
Greer<lb/>
?napp M,<lb/>
vu<lb/>
WINE SALE<lb/>
J<lb/>
N.CSNo.l BEACH CLUB<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Presents ?<lb/>
Lucky Ladies' Night<lb/>
Every Tues. &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
Ladies' Lockout:<lb/>
8-10 p.m.<lb/>
with all the usual Chapter<lb/>
X specials for Ladies.<lb/>
Doors Open ? 10 p.rrr.<lb/>
for General Public<lb/>
Nightlife<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Thursday THE STATES<lb/>
Fridaj CHOICE ? Pi Kappa Phi H.H.<lb/>
30-7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday CHOICE<lb/>
Sundav STEVE BASSE IT<lb/>
Tuesday TUT PRODUCERS AND IHI<lb/>
 RANTS<lb/>
Wednesday No VACANCY<lb/>
Carolina Opry House<lb/>
rhursday LARRY 1 RANK1 IN BAND<lb/>
I ridaj 1 ARRY FRANKLIN BAND<lb/>
Saturday 1 ARRY FRANKLIN BAND<lb/>
Sunday I ARRY FRANKLIN BAND. AM<lb/>
Hi SH, &amp; FARGO<lb/>
Chapter X<lb/>
Thursday Pi Kappa Phi "Evening Delight"<lb/>
10 p.m.<lb/>
Friday Nu Pi "End of Week Party" 4-8<lb/>
"i.iu<lb/>
Saturday Best in Beach Music<lb/>
Sunday Kappa Alplha "Nickel Nite"<lb/>
Tuesday Sigma Phi Epsilon "ladies Night"<lb/>
Wednesday Sigma Nu "50, 50 Night"<lb/>
It you have anything you would like put in<lb/>
Happenings, please send it to: Nancy Morris, The<lb/>
last Carolinian, East Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Show<lb/>
Planned<lb/>
Paintings by Mark<lb/>
Ringrose of Raleigh,<lb/>
senior student in the<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty School of Art. will<lb/>
be on displav March<lb/>
22-28 in the T.( I Hap<lb/>
tist Studententer on<lb/>
Tenth St.<lb/>
The exhibition will<lb/>
include eight oil, acrylic<lb/>
and mixed media pain-<lb/>
tings and an intaglio<lb/>
print.<lb/>
Ringrose is a can<lb/>
didate for the HS<lb/>
degree in art education,<lb/>
with a minor concen-<lb/>
tration in painting.<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
IU AIM<lb/>
Souths No. 6<lb/>
Rock Nightclub A<lb/>
L<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
THE STATES<lb/>
Fri. - Sat.<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
K<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
W Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Happy Hour 4:00 7:00<lb/>
Sieve Bassett's<lb/>
Va. Breeze<lb/>
Tues. The X-Raves<lb/>
CHAPS, INC.<lb/>
HWY 258 NORTH<lb/>
KINSTON. N.C. 28501<lb/>
Eastern Carolinas<lb/>
Newest And Finest<lb/>
Private Club<lb/>
Fri March 27th<lb/>
Spontanes<lb/>
Sat March 28th<lb/>
Pieces Of Eight<lb/>
Sun March 29th<lb/>
Country Rock<lb/>
Every Tuesday With Eddie Dee<lb/>
Wednesday Night's<lb/>
are Ladies' Night<lb/>
Members and<lb/>
I heir Guests<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
All ABC Permi<lb/>
its<lb/>
From<lb/>
5:00-7:00pm<lb/>
Where Bonds mane it rock oncj Roadies makes it roll"1<lb/>
200 W Wair ? ,? Goldsboro 734 455)<lb/>
PRESENTS IN CONCERT:<lb/>
CO. ?? ??? RECORDING APTis<lb/>
'DAVID ALLAN C0E"<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
MARCH 28,<lb/>
81<lb/>
(Door Open At 7 30 PV,<lb/>
with special guest<lb/>
"BADGE"<lb/>
 ANCf -<lb/>
v ? . . .<lb/>
BE PURCHASED<lb/>
? Rl - P VERN0N<lb/>
 API - - -?<lb/>
' <lb/>
DAVID ALLAN C0E"<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
y<lb/>
n<lb/>
Flash 'Em A Coppertone<lb/>
Tan Bikini Contest<lb/>
at the<lb/>
AT<lb/>
THE ATTIC<lb/>
March 30,1981<lb/>
Live Band Doors Open at 8:30<lb/>
1st Prize $150.00 2nd $75-00 3rd $50.00<lb/>
Sponsored by:<lb/>
Contestants ? P"? T Live On<lb/>
Call: II ID 7ft Screen<lb/>
758-6899 T NCAA Basketball<lb/>
Finals<lb/>
<lb/>
and<lb/>
University Book Exchange, Inc.<lb/>
Domino's Pizza<lb/>
H. L. Hodges &amp; Bonds Sporting Goods<lb/>
Rick's Guitar Shop<lb/>
Tree House<lb/>
Area s Finest Salad Bar<lb/>
Hour I 1 AM u 1 AM M.m Sal<lb/>
1 N?in u I AM Sunda<lb/>
Hot Dog City Jffiv<lb/>
The Mushroom<lb/>
'i<lb/>
HI" ? -?????<lb/>
Overton's Ski Shop<lb/>
The World s Largest Ski Dealer<lb/>
Overton's Supermarket Inc.<lb/>
211 Jarvis St<lb/>
The Party Headquarters<lb/>
Crow's Nest wone 7$2?i<lb/>
Tho Beat Plima In Town (Hoaeat)<lb/>
WATS<lb/>
1 8004?2 M2t<lb/>
107 TRADE St<lb/>
tO BOX 105<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N C 27?J4<lb/>
In le Heart ol Oonion oreenviwe<lb/>
The Tolai Eiperierce m Sound<lb/>
jXQDmam<lb/>
SERVICE DEPARTMENT<lb/>
107 Trad. Strwi<lb/>
Grnviii N C 27834<lb/>
Phon. 752293<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057331_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH26. 1981<lb/>
? ???<lb/>
IC<lb/>
r<lb/>
es<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
LtAtuMG A&amp;our Coctccr Tnr fWp ?VJ?v<lb/>
UP flMP A 50TTLT Of<lb/>
tMUJe THATCQ37- 5" BUCc!<lb/>
AnO SAI0 SH? H)p7He ft-U<lb/>
WO TEfPcLfTV(l? Of JOY<lb/>
)fO0 COkjlPnt COr OUrZfc<lb/>
sy PIvjip AJois<lb/>
Our Critic Predicts<lb/>
Academy Winners<lb/>
Fosdick's Seafood Savers<lb/>
Nightly 5:00-yU0pm<lb/>
Tuet. Flth Fry- All Ite Ksh You Can fct With A Mug<lb/>
Of Your Favorite Beverage$3.99<lb/>
Wed. Shrimp Treat- Delicious Calabash Shnmp With French<lb/>
hries, Cole SlaW and Our Famous Hushpuppies$3.99<lb/>
Thur. Family Wight A Seafood Sampler With Calabash<lb/>
Shrimp, Fried Ksh, Oysters and Deviled Crab$499<lb/>
Tuet, Wed,Thur(Oyster Bar Only) 1 Doz. Fbllshell<lb/>
Oysters (Steamed or Raw) And A Mug Of Your Favorite Beverage<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
JEtfk IwSMCKS<lb/>
tflitil f irmlii a in<lb/>
? IVANS ST fXT<lb/>
Ph. 756-2011<lb/>
Maya Angelou Performing Monday<lb/>
Performer-author Maya tngelou will appear on the stage of Kasi<lb/>
( arolina I Diversity's .J. Fletcher Recital Hall on March 3(1 at 8<lb/>
p.m. rhe event. An Kvening wilh Maya Aagelou is being spon-<lb/>
sored bj the II Honors Committee and is open to the public. Ms.<lb/>
ngelou uill be available to the audience for a ajuestioB-aad-aaswer<lb/>
session aftei the perfoi nance, she is the author ??? five bestsellers in-<lb/>
5 Know n (he Caged Bird Sings<lb/>
clud<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
"Heartbeat If anyone is deserving<lb/>
of an Oscar, Sissie Spacek is.<lb/>
All the Best Actor nominees are<lb/>
excellent actors. Peter O'Toole<lb/>
won't win because too few people<lb/>
saw his film, "The Stunt Man<lb/>
Besides, audiences are mad at him<lb/>
for daring to appear in Penthouse<lb/>
magazine's multi-million dollar por-<lb/>
no Hick, "Caligula Jack I.emmon<lb/>
repeats his much-lauded stage per-<lb/>
formance as a dying publicist in the<lb/>
film version of "Tribute He's<lb/>
good, the film's bad. He's grabbed<lb/>
the gold twice before, anyway. Best<lb/>
Actor for "Save the Tiger" (1973)<lb/>
and Best Supporting for "Mister<lb/>
Roberts" (1955). John Hurl as<lb/>
"The Elephant Man" is definately a<lb/>
long shot. No actor has won for<lb/>
such a bizarre role since Frederic<lb/>
March for "Dr. Jekyll and Mr.<lb/>
Hyde" in 1931. He could, however,<lb/>
be given a humanitarian award for<lb/>
playing such a difficult role with<lb/>
heavy make-up for long hours under<lb/>
hot studio lights. Such a perfor-<lb/>
mance must have certainly made<lb/>
John hurt. Robert Duvall is effec-<lb/>
tive as a tough Marine who treats his<lb/>
family like a platoon in "The Great<lb/>
Santini He's given a long series of<lb/>
varied and impressive performances<lb/>
in many good pictures.<lb/>
Robert De Niro is one oi the most<lb/>
amazing actors around today. He<lb/>
goes to extremes, almost to<lb/>
masochistic length, to portray his<lb/>
roles. For his nominated perfor-<lb/>
mance as the vile and violent boxer<lb/>
Jake 1 a Motta in "Raging Bull lie<lb/>
learned to box and he gained seven-<lb/>
ty pounds to play the pugilist in his<lb/>
declining years, be Niro often plays<lb/>
potentially explosive people locked<lb/>
Film<lb/>
'Spain'<lb/>
Planned<lb/>
1 ler on<lb/>
nalh<lb/>
tin " I<lb/>
is ui<lb/>
VI ndenhail<lb/>
I I will<lb/>
Student Union Notices<lb/>
Mime Myron Carter will be appearing this Frida, March 27, at the<lb/>
( offeehouse located downstairs in Mendenhall Student (enter.<lb/>
( arter has studied under Keith Berger and has attended workshops<lb/>
directed h the Pocket Mime Theatre of Boston. I he show is spon-<lb/>
sored h the student Fnion Coffeehouse Committee.<lb/>
I he weekend film "Smoke) and the Bandit II" will be shown at 7<lb/>
and 9 p.m. onl this Friday. Saturday night shows are. as usual, 5,<lb/>
1. and 9.<lb/>
special Film "Grand Illusion" will not be shown on April 1, but<lb/>
has been rescheduled for an April 22 showing at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Special Film "It Happened One Night canceled last night (March<lb/>
25?, will be shown on April 15 at 7 p.m. All films sponsored b the<lb/>
student I nion Films Committee are shown in the Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
c entral 1 id el fftce at<lb/>
Mendenhall Studeni<lb/>
? ' i l l<lb/>
E.C.U. is will be<lb/>
b II) and .nii<lb/>
c ards, and b I Iniversi-<lb/>
alidated card foi<lb/>
and staff.<lb/>
BENNIES<lb/>
CiTCO<lb/>
WRECKER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Front End<lb/>
Alignment<lb/>
All Types of<lb/>
Auto Repair<lb/>
Forolgw a Oom?tic<lb/>
ioisonablo R?ta<lb/>
WOO t. lOthStrool<lb/>
Phono 7J? 4?4<lb/>
Electrolysis<lb/>
REMOVAL OF<lb/>
UNWANTED<lb/>
HAIR<lb/>
SUNTANS<lb/>
PERMS<lb/>
$20.00<lb/>
A&amp;B<lb/>
HAIR CARE<lb/>
756-0588<lb/>
212 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
behind a facade of solid steel, as<lb/>
best shown by his "Taxi Driver<lb/>
Martin Scorsese should win Best<lb/>
Director. His unique view of<lb/>
modern despair, urban anxiety, and<lb/>
big city blight, expressed in such<lb/>
films as "Mean Streets "Taxi<lb/>
Driver and "Raging Bull" can<lb/>
certainly relate to today's audiences.<lb/>
Coincidentally, all three films men-<lb/>
tioned above starred Robert De<lb/>
Niro. Their long experience of<lb/>
working together has produced a<lb/>
memorable motion picture in<lb/>
"Raging Bull It is amazing<lb/>
Scorsese has never even been<lb/>
nominated before.<lb/>
198()'s possibilities for Best Pic-<lb/>
ture are indeed an unusual lot. They<lb/>
range from three biographies: ? a<lb/>
neurotic boxer. "Raging Bull a<lb/>
country-western superstar,<lb/>
"C'oalminer's Daughter and a<lb/>
bizarrely deformed man, "The<lb/>
Elephant Man" ? to a lavish but<lb/>
realistic period picture based on a<lb/>
classic of English literature,<lb/>
"Tess to only one film about that<lb/>
which, its name states, "Ordinary<lb/>
People The Oscarrders love<lb/>
ail-American family d. i, itness<lb/>
last year's big winner "Kramer s.<lb/>
Kramer For this reason, I believe<lb/>
they'll bypass "Raging Bull" for<lb/>
"(rdinary People<lb/>
The Academy Awards are<lb/>
ridiculous, there's no doubt about<lb/>
it. How can one say. for instance,<lb/>
that John Hurt plays a freak better<lb/>
than Robert Duvall plays a Marine?<lb/>
And the Academy obviously plays<lb/>
favorites and loves sentimentality.<lb/>
Yet still the Oscars fascinate us ?<lb/>
most hkely because they are the last<lb/>
vestige of the glamor and glory thai<lb/>
was old-time Hollywood.<lb/>
SUPER SUNDAY<lb/>
March 29th .<lb/>
Three Bands <lb/>
The Larry Franklin Band<lb/>
Ambush - Fargo<lb/>
Doors Open 5:00<lb/>
Show Starts 7:00<lb/>
Adm. $4.00<lb/>
An Evening With<lb/>
Mike Cross<lb/>
One Show Only<lb/>
Doors Open 7:15-8:00p.m.<lb/>
For Adv. Ticket Holders<lb/>
Advance Tickets - $5.00<lb/>
Available At: Western Pleasure<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
Further Info: row<lb/>
Call 758-38" <lb/>
Win instant<lb/>
cash and prizes<lb/>
Play Pepsi Pay-off.<lb/>
Take it off.<lb/>
;sai<lb/>
WIN $500<lb/>
? jd. go ahead "? ? ? . ? ?ofPSiSP-<lb/>
I a chance to .?? ' ??<lb/>
Get in the act.<lb/>
Just peel back and<lb/>
enjoy the show.<lb/>
. Dike Don stop now. <lb/>
?me<lb/>
' ii ?<lb/>
Bottleo b Pepv Colo Bottling Co e(G?Mnnltatn(<lb/>
18WD.ck.nson Avenue Oeenv.ile NorthCo'olmo<lb/>
Umlii Ajj tent iom PepsiCo Inc . Purchase N V<lb/>
' ' ? " ? . ttlfg<lb/>
tore for our Peps Pay Off caps<lb/>
and ched t the display for ail<lb/>
Play Peps: Pay-Off Ana<lb/>
? ? i  rmer!<lb/>
Winning crown may be<lb/>
found on 10 and '6<lb/>
ounce returnable bottles<lb/>
o? Pepsi Cola. Diet Pepsi<lb/>
and Mountain Dew<lb/>
Winning crowns must<lb/>
contain the franchise<lb/>
identification on the<lb/>
skirt of the crown Void<lb/>
where prohibited No<lb/>
purchase necesscy<lb/>
The game terminates<lb/>
June 30 1981 or when<lb/>
the supply of starred<lb/>
ops has been exhusted<lb/>
IPEP8I1<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
? ?? a<lb/>
.????'??- f m, ;<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057331_0008"/><lb/>
1 HI I AM I AROl INIAN<lb/>
MARCH 26, 1981<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page H<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
vc"?<lb/>
JV<lb/>
Spring Has Sprung<lb/>
The East Carolina football<lb/>
team began its annual spring<lb/>
practices last week. Pictured<lb/>
at top left is secondary coach<lb/>
Garry Fast assisting two atten-<lb/>
tive team members. At bot-<lb/>
tom left, coach Bob Sanders<lb/>
(background right) and defen-<lb/>
sive tackle George Crump<lb/>
(background left) look on as<lb/>
two Pirates prepare to collide.<lb/>
In the above photo coach Jim<lb/>
Holland goes out o his way to<lb/>
show a player proper techni-<lb/>
que. (Photos by Jon Jordon)<lb/>
Bucs Take Two;<lb/>
Patterson Superb<lb/>
.<lb/>
Lefthander Bob Patterson pitch-<lb/>
ed a one-hit shutout Tuesday as East<lb/>
Carolina swept a doubleheader<lb/>
from Princeton, 10 4 and 1-0.<lb/>
The Pirates got complete games<lb/>
out of both Patterson (1-0) and Rick<lb/>
Ramey (4-0) in improving their<lb/>
record to 10-4.<lb/>
A sixth-inning rally broke up a<lb/>
pitcher's dual between ECU's Pat-<lb/>
terson and Priceton's Steve Kordish<lb/>
in the second game.<lb/>
Buc second baseman Mike Sorrell<lb/>
was first to reach base in the sixth,<lb/>
via a single. A I odd Evans single<lb/>
moved Sorrell to second. Mike<lb/>
Sage's single, which struck the se-<lb/>
cond base bag, scored Sorrell on<lb/>
what was to turn out to be the key<lb/>
hit of the contest,<lb/>
Patterson, a junior, struck out ten<lb/>
and walked none, giving up only a<lb/>
single to Paul Hauser in the first.<lb/>
Hausei was the second batter Pat-<lb/>
terson faced in the game.<lb/>
1 he Pirates did not commit an er-<lb/>
ror tor the entire contest. Patterson<lb/>
was one hit Mauser's ? away<lb/>
from a perfect game.<lb/>
"Overall, we probably played our<lb/>
best ganie in the second contest<lb/>
said 1I coach Hal Baird follow-<lb/>
ing the sweep. "They threw a fine<lb/>
pitcher against us. H course, Bobby<lb/>
had probably his best game ever<lb/>
In the opener the Bucs found an<lb/>
unexpected power supply in short-<lb/>
stop Kelly Robinette, centerfielder<lb/>
Robert Wells and freshman left-<lb/>
fielder Todd Evans. Each clubbed<lb/>
their first collegiate homers in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
A Sage sacrifice to center, a John<lb/>
Hallow single and a Todd Hendley<lb/>
double sent runs across the plate in<lb/>
the first to stake ECU to an early 3-0<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
In the fourth, Wells and Evans<lb/>
stroked a pair of three-run homers.<lb/>
Robinette closed out the Pirate scor-<lb/>
ing with a solo homer to left in the<lb/>
sixth.<lb/>
The Tigers, 1-2, scored al! four of<lb/>
their runs in the fifth. Paul<lb/>
Steinhause and Scott Minnich sand-<lb/>
wich RBI singles around Mark<lb/>
Eockemeyer's two-run single.<lb/>
Ramey, a senior righthander,<lb/>
gave up four of his seven singles<lb/>
allowed in the fifth en route to com-<lb/>
pleting his second game of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Second-year Buc coach Baud was<lb/>
most pleased following what might<lb/>
have been his team's most im-<lb/>
pressive day of the season.<lb/>
"We were real fortunate to get<lb/>
both of them he said. "They're a<lb/>
real quality team. Their pitching<lb/>
staff led the nation in earned run<lb/>
average last year<lb/>
Baird was also happy with the<lb/>
power display in the opener. "We<lb/>
were really thrilled that we were able<lb/>
to get the ball out of the park a few<lb/>
times<lb/>
Patterson<lb/>
Though the weather was ideal -<lb/>
there was no wmd to ?peai<lb/>
Baird said the trio ol homers might<lb/>
be attributed to a ball cl<lb/>
"We're wondering it il the<lb/>
new balls he noted "We brought<lb/>
out a couple oi new halls today,<lb/>
which are a little small try<lb/>
out<lb/>
The Bucs are bac ? day<lb/>
against airfield, a lea down-<lb/>
ed them less than a week ago by a<lb/>
single run. Gametime al Harring<lb/>
Field is 3 p.m.<lb/>
The team takes to the road I<lb/>
first time this season Friday, travel-<lb/>
ing north to take on William<lb/>
Mary. The club is back home Satur-<lb/>
day for another encounter with<lb/>
Fair field. Gametime<lb/>
chup is 1 p.m.<lb/>
Tournament Winding Down To Finals<lb/>
NCAA Fever<lb/>
I he current NCAA basketball<lb/>
tournament has caused quite a sin<lb/>
around the nation. I he 1981 version<lb/>
of the event certainly has turned the<lb/>
country on more than any in recent<lb/>
sears.<lb/>
I psets of the nation's top three<lb/>
ranked teams in their first outings ol<lb/>
the tourney beg e craze.<lb/>
I his area of the country is<lb/>
especially intrigued by the event,<lb/>
what with Atlantic Coast (<lb/>
ference members North Carolina<lb/>
and Virginia now in the elite Final<lb/>
Four.<lb/>
Adding to the local approval oi<lb/>
the tourney is the fact that many ol<lb/>
the big-name schools involved ?<lb/>
i.e. Oregan State, I1 A, DePaul<lb/>
and Kentucky ?- took early losses.<lb/>
There is no love lost between the<lb/>
ACT and outside teams. The ACC's<lb/>
success and the others' lack oi it has<lb/>
locals raving.<lb/>
Picking a favorite from among<lb/>
the Final Four ol UNC, Virginia,<lb/>
LSL' and Indiana is very difficult.<lb/>
This Final four may be the most<lb/>
balanced and best in many a year.<lb/>
I sually there is a Cinderella squad<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
<lb/>
that is a part oi the elite group each<lb/>
sear Not this time; each team is a<lb/>
recognized "power" and each has a<lb/>
imate shot at wearing the crown<lb/>
following the March 30th title game.<lb/>
Team Analysis<lb/>
INDIANA ? The Hoosiers won<lb/>
their last five Big Ten games to<lb/>
claim the championship of that con-<lb/>
ference, edging out Iowa in the final<lb/>
days oi the regular season.<lb/>
All-America point guard Isaiah<lb/>
Thomas ranks as the premier point<lb/>
guard in the nation. Only a<lb/>
sophomore. Thomas is touted by<lb/>
pro scouts as being ready for the<lb/>
NBA right now. He makes the<lb/>
Hoosiers go.<lb/>
The big tandem inside of Landon<lb/>
lurner and Rav Tolbert has been<lb/>
awesome for Bobby Knight's club<lb/>
over the last month. Thomas' un-<lb/>
canny ability to get them the ball in<lb/>
all sorts of situations makes Indiana<lb/>
seem even more powerful.<lb/>
In order to get by ESL' in the first<lb/>
semi-final game Saturday. Indiana<lb/>
must control the tempo. Though<lb/>
they are a good transition team, the<lb/>
Hoosiers don't want to go all out<lb/>
with the Tigers. Turner and Tolbert<lb/>
must be effective inside, also.<lb/>
against LSU's awesome front.<lb/>
LSL' ? The Tigers are something<lb/>
special. A senior-oriented team,<lb/>
LSU is both fast and strong. They<lb/>
have cruised through! NCAA play<lb/>
thus far. A real test lies ahead in In-<lb/>
diana, though.<lb/>
Keys for the Tigers? There are<lb/>
many. Things begin with the inside<lb/>
play of all-star Rudy Macklin &amp; Co.<lb/>
The LSU front ranks with the best.<lb/>
Point guard Ethan Martin is the<lb/>
perfect guy to get the big fellows the<lb/>
ball. He does an excellent job oi<lb/>
leading the Tiger fast break as well.<lb/>
Reserve Willie Sims is probably<lb/>
the best sixth man in the country.<lb/>
He is most likely the third most<lb/>
valuable Tiger behind Martin and<lb/>
Macklin.<lb/>
In order to get by Indiana the<lb/>
Tigers need to get their transition<lb/>
game clicking. Hoosiei coach Bob-<lb/>
by Knight will probably pull some<lb/>
stunts to prevent this from happen-<lb/>
ing. He know- only too well how<lb/>
awesome I SI can be when the<lb/>
came becomes a run-and-gun affair.<lb/>
VIRGINIA Ihe Cavaliers have<lb/>
bounced back well from their drub-<lb/>
bing in the t C tournament at the<lb/>
hands ol Maryland. In their last<lb/>
ng against Brigham Young.<lb/>
Ralph Sampson was only awesome.<lb/>
The (. avs are pitted against bitter<lb/>
rival UNC in the semi-finals and<lb/>
face the unenviable task ol trying to<lb/>
down the Heels tor a third time this<lb/>
season. Both earlier wins have been<lb/>
comebacks after the far Heels lost<lb/>
big leads<lb/>
There are doubts that the<lb/>
Cavaliers can make such a com-<lb/>
eback again. Therefore, they need<lb/>
to gel a quicker start this time.<lb/>
For Virginia to do so the team<lb/>
must take what is given them. Most<lb/>
likely, guards Othel Wilson and Jeff<lb/>
Jones will have outside shots<lb/>
available. 1 hey will need to take<lb/>
them when they become available.<lb/>
Jefl 1 amp can be counted upon<lb/>
to play his usual great game.<lb/>
Virginia can be sure oi this and<lb/>
Carolina may as well accept it.<lb/>
Trying to force the ball to Samp-<lb/>
son would probably be a big<lb/>
mistake. The big guy will have some<lb/>
openings. But trying to get the ball<lb/>
to him too often would only be play-<lb/>
ing into the hands oi the Carolina<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
Defensively, Sampson must be<lb/>
ready. He can not allow UNC <lb/>
front line to clear him out of re-<lb/>
bounding situations. Sampson is the<lb/>
key. more on the rebounding and<lb/>
defensive areas than on the offen-<lb/>
sive, though. If he is ready from the<lb/>
opening tap Carolina could be in for<lb/>
a long dav.<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA - Ah,<lb/>
revenge. This has to be on the Heels'<lb/>
minds after dropping two heart-<lb/>
breakers to Virginia this year.<lb/>
To avoid a 3-0 Virginia sweep of<lb/>
the years' games the Heels need to<lb/>
be ready for a fired-up Virginia<lb/>
team. It is not likely that Carolina<lb/>
will get the sort of early leads that<lb/>
they managed in the two regular<lb/>
season contests.<lb/>
What the Heels must do is avoid<lb/>
turnovers that allowed the Cavaliers<lb/>
to fight back in the last contest. Cav<lb/>
guards Othel Wilson and Bobby<lb/>
Stokes literally "stole" that game<lb/>
from Carolina's grasp.<lb/>
The Heels showed during the<lb/>
regular season games that they can<lb/>
keep Samp ? con-<lb/>
trol as is possible. W hat<lb/>
do is maintain posses the ball<lb/>
in crucial situatioi<lb/>
The game will be close and doing<lb/>
the above in crucial si ?? is<lb/>
most important for th ; leels. It<lb/>
Stokes and Wilson a d to<lb/>
have their way agaii<lb/>
game. Virginia is the winner.<lb/>
An advantage foi the Heels is<lb/>
their great inside play In<lb/>
nearly everv game in tl<lb/>
ment opposing frontline in<lb/>
foul trouble. If this happ<lb/>
Sampson, the Cavs an ble.<lb/>
Count on a great one. B ams<lb/>
are reads. This one shoul( lown<lb/>
to the wire<lb/>
Expect Anything<lb/>
It is nearly impossible to pick win-<lb/>
ners in the two semi-final contests.<lb/>
Picking names out ol a hal is just as<lb/>
safe as going with oddsmakers'<lb/>
favorites. Both games are just<lb/>
even.<lb/>
Anything can happen in either<lb/>
contest. So expect the most bizarre.<lb/>
With the tour great teams that re-<lb/>
main anything can happ<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
Sweep By Heels<lb/>
"<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Second game home runs by Kathy<lb/>
Riley and Cynthia Shepard powered<lb/>
last Carolina's lady Pirates past<lb/>
UNC-CH 6-1, thus giving the Bucs a<lb/>
sweep in the afternoon<lb/>
doubleheader at the ECU soft ball<lb/>
field.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs shut out the Tar<lb/>
Heels 3-0 in the first game as they<lb/>
pushed over two runs in the fourth<lb/>
and added one more in the sixth.<lb/>
"1 was glad to see us play well<lb/>
against a team of that caliber said<lb/>
head Coach Alita Dillon. "The state<lb/>
champion will be chosen on the<lb/>
basis of league play, so these games<lb/>
were very important<lb/>
In the first game, Shepard, Riley<lb/>
and freshman Jo 1 anda Clayton<lb/>
each had two hits in the win, as the<lb/>
Pirates out hit UNC eight to four.<lb/>
Freshman ace Jeanette Roth hurl-<lb/>
ed the Pirate win and upped her<lb/>
record to 8-1. UNC's Susan Spears<lb/>
took the loss and saw her record<lb/>
drop to 6-2.<lb/>
In the nightcap. East Carolina<lb/>
pushed over a run in the second and<lb/>
added two more in the fourth before<lb/>
Carolina got its only run of the day<lb/>
in the fifth.<lb/>
Shepard slammed her fifth homer<lb/>
of the year to lead the Lady Buc's<lb/>
attack. Shenard's shot tied the<lb/>
school record that Riley set last<lb/>
season. Riley also homered in the<lb/>
game, her second of the year.<lb/>
Clayton and UNC's Spears ripped<lb/>
triples, and Pirate second baseman<lb/>
Ginger Rothermel slammed a dou-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
Sophomore Angie Humphrey<lb/>
picked up her fifth win of the season<lb/>
while Spears was handed her second<lb/>
straight defeat.<lb/>
The sweep gave the Lady Bucs<lb/>
their 13th victory this season against<lb/>
two defeats. UNC's record fell to<lb/>
li-5 with the losses.<lb/>
"Our defense was really good<lb/>
Dillon noted. "The errors we made<lb/>
(three on the afternoon) came at a<lb/>
time when they really didn't hurt<lb/>
us<lb/>
The Pirate coach was pleased with<lb/>
the performance of Clayton, whom<lb/>
she said is "looking very good" and<lb/>
Rilev, who is "hitting the ball real<lb/>
well<lb/>
She is also impressed with the pit-<lb/>
ching of Roth and Humphrey.<lb/>
"We're real pleased with that<lb/>
aspect. That is one of the key points<lb/>
on our team. If our young people<lb/>
can do the job, then we shouldn't<lb/>
lose to anybody in North Carolina.<lb/>
"We're just getting better and<lb/>
better, and our depth is also improv-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
This weekend the Pirates travel to<lb/>
Itttffr Art<lb/>
-<lb/>
Publication Names<lb/>
Both Riley, Wright<lb/>
Honorable Mention<lb/>
-<lb/>
"BsgSiH<lb/>
??<lb/>
ECU Catcher Fran Hooks Smacks One<lb/>
Cullowee for the Western Carolina there Dillon remarked.<lb/>
Invitational that includes Catawba, Dillon said that teams will be<lb/>
Mars Hill, UNC-Wilmington, divided into two groups, and the top<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte. two teams will play each other in a<lb/>
"There are some top state Divi- double-elimination tournament<lb/>
sion II teams that are going to be Sunday.<lb/>
Two East Carolina basket-<lb/>
ball players have been award-<lb/>
ed honors by Basketball<lb/>
Meekly, one of the leading<lb/>
cage publications in the na-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Kathy Riley, a senior<lb/>
member of the sensational<lb/>
Lady Pirate basketball squad,<lb/>
received honorable mention<lb/>
on the publication's women's<lb/>
All-America team.<lb/>
Riley led the Lady Bucs in<lb/>
scoring this past season,<lb/>
averaging over 19 points per<lb/>
contest, and was a unanimous<lb/>
all-state selection. She finished<lb/>
second in state player-of-the-<lb/>
year voting behind N.C.<lb/>
State's Trudi Lacey.<lb/>
Receiving honorable men-<lb/>
tion for Basketball Weekly's<lb/>
freshman All-America team<lb/>
was ECU's Barry Wright.<lb/>
The Portsmouth, Va. native<lb/>
was the team's second leading<lb/>
scorer as a frosh, averaging<lb/>
10.3 points per game.<lb/>
Perhaps the highlight of<lb/>
Wright's season was his<lb/>
fallaway jumper at the buzzer<lb/>
that beat UNC-Charlotte. His<lb/>
biggest point output came in<lb/>
the team's next-to-last game<lb/>
against Richmond when he<lb/>
tallied 25 in a 67-65 Pirate win.<lb/>
Kath Rik-N<lb/>
Barry Wright<lb/>
ci<lb/>
We ca'<lb/>
?<lb/>
Bea<lb/>
and<lb/>
can<lb/>
I<lb/>
Award<lb/>
HOC<lb/>
MAR<lb/>
?<lb/>
NO-<lb/>
ch. ?<lb/>
BASS<lb/>
PL I<lb/>
tirr-i<lb/>
?MM<lb/>
I<lb/>
:<lb/>
imj<lb/>
pri<lb/>
T ?<lb/>
SU '??<lb/>
dec<lb/>
ird F?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?  <lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057331_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Is<lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 26, 1981<lb/>
Nieman Battles Out Of<lb/>
Brother's Long Shadow<lb/>
B BOB BENSON<lb/>
Spe.ml 1 ? I h Mlarolinmn<lb/>
Ivor wonder il Billy Carter, before all the<lb/>
political controversy arose, was always introduc-<lb/>
ed as Jimmy Carter's brother, or if professional<lb/>
pitcher hm Pern was always introduced as the<lb/>
greal Gaylord Perry's brother The same situa-<lb/>
tion once plagued one of East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty's top swimmers, Doug Nieman.<lb/>
In 1978 Done Nieman enrolled at East Carolina<lb/>
I niversit) to pursue a degree in business educa-<lb/>
tion and to compete among some top Division 1<lb/>
swimming talent.<lb/>
lwo years before Doug came to ECU, Doug's<lb/>
older brother, led Nieman, was setting ar?,itv<lb/>
swimming records at ECU. By the end of Ted<lb/>
Nieman's freshman year he had set three varsity<lb/>
records (2(H), 5(H). 1650 yard freestyle) and<lb/>
qualified for the National Collegiate Athletic<lb/>
Association's national championships in the<lb/>
200-yard freestyle.<lb/>
Mow does someone, especially a brother,<lb/>
follow an aci like that? One would figure Doug<lb/>
Nieman to be cast away in the wake of his<lb/>
brothei.<lb/>
'At firsl it sas always 'He everybody this is<lb/>
led's brother but il really didn't bother me that<lb/>
much because of all the people I met through<lb/>
I cd said Nieman.<lb/>
Outside ot the pool led might not have<lb/>
bothered Doug's performance, but in the pool<lb/>
led did create problems for younger brother<lb/>
Done.<lb/>
"Up until this year mv times were not thai<lb/>
at admitted Nieman. "But now thai led is<lb/>
gone, m times seem to be dropping<lb/>
Doug now teels he can settle down and work<lb/>
tor some good times. " 1 here is always that com-<lb/>
petition between brothers admitted Nieman.<lb/>
"Bui led has always been a more 'go out and get<lb/>
em' type guy<lb/>
According lo East C arolina head swim coach<lb/>
Kav Scharf, "Doug is really bearing down and<lb/>
setting some goals tor himself.<lb/>
"Doug has made vasi improvements over the<lb/>
years which proved his goal settings<lb/>
Doug's biggest goal this year is to make the<lb/>
N( national cutoff times. In order to make<lb/>
these nines. Doug must shave a full nine seconds<lb/>
ofi his 4(K)-yard individual medley time.<lb/>
"I have confidence in myself and 1 think since<lb/>
the team has been resting fot a week I'll have a<lb/>
good chance to make the NCAA cutoff times<lb/>
Nine seconds is not a lot ot time to drop, accor-<lb/>
ding lo Nieman. especially in the longer swimm-<lb/>
.v ents.<lb/>
"A loi ot people don't understand about swim-<lb/>
ming times he explained. "For a guv to drop a<lb/>
second ot even a tenth ot a second in a sprinting<lb/>
even! is nearly impossible, but to drop a second or<lb/>
even a tenth ot a second in a sprinting event is<lb/>
nearly impossible, but to drop nine seconds in the<lb/>
400-yard individual medley is not that difficult<lb/>
Now that Doug Nieman is starting to shine as a<lb/>
collegiate swimmer, he looks back at the hard<lb/>
work he has put into swimming. "1 have to give a<lb/>
lot of the credit to both my high school coach and<lb/>
my parents. They are the ones that really pushed<lb/>
me when I needed it<lb/>
IM Dept.<lb/>
Rankings<lb/>
The ECU Intramural Department would<lb/>
like to take this opportunity to publish an<lb/>
update of the current intramural point stan-<lb/>
dings. The various leaders and their totals<lb/>
are as follows:<lb/>
MKVSRKSIDrNC KHALI<lb/>
Aycock 947, Scott 1,143, Jones M7.5, Belk<lb/>
579.8, Slav I instead 307.9.<lb/>
FRATERNITY<lb/>
Kappa Alpha 992, Tau Kappa Epsilon 32.9,<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi 797.2, Kappa Sigma 72S.1,<lb/>
I ambda Chi Alpha 684.4, Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
667, Sigma Nu 570.5, Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
435.9. Sigma Tau Gamma 405.8, Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi 293, Delta Sigma Phi 230.7, Kap-<lb/>
pa Alpha Psi 275, Alpha Phi Alpha 118,<lb/>
Beta Theta Pi 98, Omega Psi Phi 115.<lb/>
CLUB IND(MEN)<lb/>
Renegades 515, ROTC 467,5, Scuzzmen 370,<lb/>
Six Killers 160. Barroom Sprinters 80, Tri-<lb/>
Humps 74.3.<lb/>
WOMEN'S RESIDENCE HALLS<lb/>
White 915, Cotlen 98, Greene 495. Ivler<lb/>
616, Fleming 446, Clement 151. Fletcher 83,<lb/>
Jarvis 30. Garret I 203. Slav Umstead 120.<lb/>
SORORITY<lb/>
Tri Sigma 1.151.5, Alpha Xi Delia 861.8,<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi 352.5, Delta Zdta 287.6,<lb/>
Alpha Phi 192.8, Chi Omega 110.2. Alpha<lb/>
Omicron Pi 168.5. Kappa Delta 22.<lb/>
CLUB IND(WOMEN)<lb/>
Oootv Colters 90, Worm Burners 237,<lb/>
ROTC 10. Bloxton House 10, IBAC 549.<lb/>
Cubnets 82, Dribblers 160, Past fense 135.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
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CONGRATULATIONS NAN!<lb/>
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VISA MASTER CHARGE<lb/>
PRE-MED?<lb/>
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Contact:<lb/>
AIR FORCE<lb/>
According to Nieman, his times were not that<lb/>
fast when he was coming up the ranks. "I can<lb/>
remember when my brother and some of the ECU<lb/>
swim team members came to Clearwater, Florida<lb/>
(Nieman's hometown) to workout one summer<lb/>
he said. "I didn't do too badly, but those guys<lb/>
were really fast<lb/>
While Doug was still in the high school ranks,<lb/>
he swam for the Amature Athletic Union-<lb/>
affiliated Blue Dolphins out of Clearwater.<lb/>
"My times were not that great when I swam<lb/>
ith the Dolphins he claimed. "My times<lb/>
stayed the same for about four years<lb/>
Nieman did, in fact, capture a few titles while<lb/>
with the Dolphins, but nothing too spectacular.<lb/>
According to Scharf, Doug is East Carolina's<lb/>
best all-around swimmer.<lb/>
"I wish all the kids were like him explained<lb/>
Scharf. "He makes coaching enjoyable. I know<lb/>
Doug will get even better next year. It's just in his<lb/>
blood to be a great swimmer<lb/>
:?<lb/>
? i<lb/>
ii tt<lb/>
ALLIGATORS<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
LOWEST PRICES<lb/>
IN AREA ON IZOD PRODUCTS"<lb/>
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i?! GORDEN FULPRQ<lb/>
LOCATED AT<lb/>
GREENVILLE CC,<lb/>
OPEN EVERY DAY<lb/>
8:00 A.M. TILL<lb/>
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756-0504<lb/>
by<lb/>
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The Fleming Center has been here for you slnoe J974<lb/>
providing private, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of aD ages at a reasonable oost<lb/>
Saturday abortion boor<lb/>
need us.<lb/>
Very early pragnaaoy<lb/>
Bv?aing birth oostrol boors<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when<lb/>
men you;<lb/>
anytbne.<lb/>
( )ptonx'trtt<lb/>
EYE CARE<lb/>
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OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
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Budget Eyewear 39.95 complete<lb/>
Frames, lenses and tint in<lb/>
plastic bifocals only 59.95<lb/>
Contact Lenses 149 complete<lb/>
Includes exam, fitting, heal disinfection and all<lb/>
lollow tor I month.<lb/>
SPRING SPECIAL<lb/>
Ray-Ban Sunglasses<lb/>
20 Off<lb/>
10 u ? bCU student &amp; stall discount<lb/>
on all materials excluding<lb/>
specials and contacts.<lb/>
Tipton Annex<lb/>
228 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
7 56-9404<lb/>
Dr. Pete Hollis<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
1st Annual "GREEK WEEK"<lb/>
PIG PICKIN<lb/>
Sunday, March 29<lb/>
12 Noon to 6 PM<lb/>
Tickets $3-00, includes<lb/>
1 BBQ Dinner and A Pepsi<lb/>
Sponsored<lb/>
Home Builders Supplv<lb/>
Lily Richardson. Galler Of Homes<lb/>
Head Hunter<lb/>
California Concepts<lb/>
Three Steers<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers<lb/>
Pipeline<lb/>
Bookbarn<lb/>
Coin &amp; Ring Man<lb/>
Chapter X<lb/>
Curry Copy<lb/>
Kings Department Store<lb/>
Burger King<lb/>
Pinewood Craft &amp; Furniture<lb/>
Heilig Meyers<lb/>
Nationwide Insurance<lb/>
A (leaner World<lb/>
Pirates Chest<lb/>
Pizza Inn<lb/>
Hollowells Drug<lb/>
Kings &amp; Queens<lb/>
Wicks Lumber<lb/>
Stereo Village<lb/>
Ricks Guitar Shop<lb/>
Zales<lb/>
Singer Bob Thompson)<lb/>
Wash House<lb/>
Richard K. Worsley. CPA<lb/>
Hair Pazazz<lb/>
Hrtly. Ann. ljndtt Katrin shirlr l.arr<lb/>
Szechuan Gardens<lb/>
I 100 lul 10th SI<lb/>
?kd??. I I.Jo ?.U3<lb/>
?k?-nd? II.3U 1030<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN<lb/>
STEAKHOUSE<lb/>
"The Family<lb/>
Steak House"<lb/>
55<lb/>
item I<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
TAKEOUT<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St. ?<lb/>
758-2712<lb/>
264 By-Pass ?<lb/>
756-0040<lb/>
20<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
ALL MENU ITEMS<lb/>
3:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. ONLY<lb/>
MON.thru FRI.<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
FREE DRINK<lb/>
with college I.D.<lb/>
20 O OFF ALLAAENU ITEMS;<lb/>
AAON.thru FRI. from 3:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057331_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
I HI I sI K( M ll W<lb/>
1 ki H 2t, 1981<lb/>
Track Team On Road To Success<lb/>
Wi-Uni Spurt t dttcH<lb/>
die Pirates will have, Frazier, Keith Clarke<lb/>
then it should be a greal and Clint Harris cap-<lb/>
one lured tn si place ith a<lb/>
If last weekend's per rhat i says Coach time ol 1:25.53 to edge<lb/>
mance in the Bill Carson, if the team out Indiana.<lb/>
Domino's Pizza sun stays healthy. 1 he Pirates also<lb/>
shme Kelavs i an m w Bucs' 4 :ik) came away with a third<lb/>
dication ol the type ol metei rela leant ol place finish in the 4 <lb/>
outdooi track season i mi Cenhus. Calrton 100 and captured fourth<lb/>
in the mile relay.<lb/>
1 he compel it ion<lb/>
opened the outdoor<lb/>
track season tor the<lb/>
Piraies.<lb/>
"()ui freshman per<lb/>
formed well at the<lb/>
meet Carson said.<lb/>
"As tor the mile relay.<lb/>
I think we can run a<lb/>
V06 The Bucs ran<lb/>
3:11.53 in Honda.<lb/>
1 his season the Bucs<lb/>
will run only in the<lb/>
spnnts and relays. 1 he<lb/>
key tor success, says<lb/>
Carson is whether the<lb/>
team can stay health).<lb/>
"Attei that lust meet,<lb/>
we're no! er <lb/>
healthy C arson said.<lb/>
Tim Cephus came<lb/>
awaj from Florida<lb/>
bothered by a trick<lb/>
knee, and teammate<lb/>
Aliens Fall To<lb/>
Loop Leaders<lb/>
Northarolina Soccer<lb/>
I eague<lb/>
 ? . i c a n<lb/>
Del S' ;cei lub<lb/>
Divisio<lb/>
5-0<lb/>
Defei<lb/>
tl b c '<lb/>
Bal a cornet ?<lb/>
b Mike I aw<lb/>
: l<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
from a pass<lb/>
??<lb/>
Bet! <lb/>
? a <lb/>
Del ayed N (<lb/>
W( in ki'<lb/>
1. da and<lb/>
pla the Kick S<lb/>
??<lb/>
:<lb/>
surtinulub<lb/>
Club Sport<lb/>
Review<lb/>
BY TIM WILLIAMS<lb/>
second place finish<lb/>
Sunda against Allan<lb/>
lie Christian College,<lb/>
South<lb/>
Ca i. Coastal<lb/>
Car oli i d U N C-<lb/>
 ilmington, who w<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
n the Nat oi al<lb/>
Si ling<lb/>
p ? - ted<lb/>
event, Wes nan<lb/>
and huck I ell ad<lb/>
lifinals foi 1 c I .<lb/>
? n the meet<lb/>
,u i ei med ver poor<lb/>
i hard to catch.<lb/>
Men's Rugb)<lb/>
??<lb/>
Dul<lb/>
m<lb/>
r esii<lb/>
 -earn losl<lb/>
number one K i<lb/>
. ,i 14 4<lb/>
( harlie Watkins pulled freshman speedsiei<lb/>
a hamstrina Clint Harris, whom<lb/>
Tennis Team Whips<lb/>
Campbell, Then Falls<lb/>
B IIM WILLIAMS<lb/>
Muff W nlrr<lb/>
I he ECU Men I en<lb/>
ins team beat C ampbell<lb/>
ruesda) by a 6-3<lb/>
margin, but lost<lb/>
Wednesday to a tough<lb/>
Guilford team. CM.<lb/>
Against the Camels,<lb/>
Ihe Pirates took five oi<lb/>
six singles matches to<lb/>
lock up the contest eat<lb/>
i Ihe team of Nor-<lb/>
"We will get better Carson said has hopes Miller<lb/>
( arson continued, outstanding lalei can tu<lb/>
"We could break all was very consistent. 1:4<lb/>
tour school relay Harris.arson said. rhe Piraii<lb/>
records will also run the 200 ,outh aga this<lb/>
In the 100, the Pirates along with teammate w ? I to compete in<lb/>
will be depending on I mieph ihe Florida ke,<lb/>
? I I m eric Cai n said the<lb/>
( arlton Bell will head competition should be<lb/>
the 40 includ<lb/>
( arlii m I raziei. C lai "Hopefully<lb/>
and raig Raine aid,<lb/>
" these kids are v<lb/>
solidai son noted<lb/>
Bill Miller head tei "<lb/>
Pirate hop<lb/>
mile. Millet ran a 48.9 (<lb/>
leg in the mile relax<lb/>
I lorida Ins first time li<lb/>
be ??<lb/>
man Bryant and I ed<lb/>
Pepper also won their<lb/>
doubles match.<lb/>
Singles winner were<lb/>
Keith Zengel, Barry<lb/>
Parker. Mark Byrd,<lb/>
Steve Petterson and<lb/>
I epper.<lb/>
1 he netters record<lb/>
presently stands at 6 2.<lb/>
I here is a home march<lb/>
Friday at 2 p.m. againsi<lb/>
Amhersi at the courts<lb/>
behind Minces.<lb/>
.<lb/>
runnuit! in the eveni<lb/>
@g)r<lb/>
LETS FOOL<lb/>
INFLATION!<lb/>
fi<lb/>
mar.cm. Ihe B team<lb/>
came away with a 7-0<lb/>
 ictory to even out the<lb/>
won loss record tor the<lb/>
day. This Saturday<lb/>
there is a home match<lb/>
againsi the 1 t. Bragg<lb/>
Rugby C lub at 2 p.m.<lb/>
on the Mlied Health<lb/>
Fields.<lb/>
 omen's Soccer<lb/>
I he V omen's Soccer<lb/>
t lub had their first<lb/>
match Sunday against<lb/>
c amp 1 ej.mne Soc<lb/>
cei Club and lost by a<lb/>
-l score. I )ale W esi<lb/>
tallied the only goal<lb/>
1 he girls play I N<lb/>
 ilmington this Satur-<lb/>
day in W ilmington<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
PRICES ARE UP!<lb/>
If you need money for fall clothet or football tickets, now It a<lb/>
good time to sell your gold and silver valuables. And here's a<lb/>
good way to get EXTRA CASH:<lb/>
SELL YOUR<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
TO COIN &amp; RING MAN!<lb/>
$<lb/>
Almost everyone has a high school or college class ring<lb/>
they don t wear anymore. Check your dresser drawers<lb/>
and bring your class ring Into Coin &amp; Ring Man. We're<lb/>
your professional buying service and we guarantee you<lb/>
fair prices and good service<lb/>
l?<lb/>
WI PAY CASH ON TMI SPOT<lb/>
FOI JIWItfY, VALUAILESARYTKI)fi<lb/>
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S COLO S<lb/>
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COLD ? IIACIliTS ? II00CMIS ? 10CKITS<lb/>
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PAYING OMTHIIROT<lb/>
C AiH FOR ITIMt MARRIC<lb/>
STIRLING SILVER<lb/>
IICAtOLISS OF CONDITION<lb/>
? COFFEE SERVICES ? GOBLETS<lb/>
? RINGS ? SPOONS ? TRAYS ? KNIVES,<lb/>
?FORKS ? NECKLACES ? BRACELETS<lb/>
? FRANKLIN AND HAMILTON MINT<lb/>
MERCHANDISE<lb/>
$<lb/>
&amp; RING<lb/>
OF SAlES C?v INC<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. ?" ?<lb/>
OPEN 9 30-5 30 MON SAI<lb/>
MONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER<lb/>
Watkins Products<lb/>
To Buy or Sell<lb/>
752-1201<lb/>
r?<lb/>
 f . i j (? . H ? 8 "  <lb/>
( hmlji ? ?? ??<lb/>
? i i I 11<lb/>
SAAD'SSHOE<lb/>
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758-1228<lb/>
Quality Repair<lb/>
WASH HOUSE<lb/>
(Acrossfrom Krispy Kreme)<lb/>
KORE-O-MAT<lb/>
(Across from University Car Wash)<lb/>
Use one Washer ? Get One<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Limit one Free Wash Per Visit<lb/>
Offer Expires April 1. 1981 - Valid w Coupon Only<lb/>
!<lb/>
THE SECOND CHANCE<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
nrRt<lb/>
? r<lb/>
<lb/>
BARGAIN HI NTFRSUONTMIS<lb/>
OUR OPENING APRn 1ST'<lb/>
Intersection of 5th &amp; 10th St.<lb/>
The Old A&amp;P Bldg<lb/>
Call 757 1322 For Information<lb/>
t:<lb/>
-V<lb/>
11<lb/>
Copyright 1981<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thurs . Mar 26<lb/>
thru Sat . Mar 28. 1981<lb/>
AD ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertnec items<lb/>
s required to be readily svsilabts tor<lb/>
see m each Kroge' Sav-on e?cept as specift-<lb/>
aTiy noted m this ad if we do run out of an item we wil of-<lb/>
er you your choice of a comparab;e item when available reflecting<lb/>
The same savings or a ramcheck which will entitle you to purchase thr adver<lb/>
sed item at the advertised price within 30 days<lb/>
One Stop<lb/>
Shopping on<lb/>
I lfl, Your Way to<lb/>
the Great<lb/>
W4-)<lb/>
OFFICIAL<lb/>
COLD TO GO<lb/>
Dudley ?l?MSfSH Busch<lb/>
Softball iStaWR Beer<lb/>
$3<lb/>
99<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
Kraft<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
$39<lb/>
AMERICAN OR MUSTARD<lb/>
6<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
32-Oz.<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
ALL-MEAT SLICED<lb/>
Oscar Mayer<lb/>
Bologna<lb/>
HecorasJl i apes chips &amp; Snacks<lb/>
rSKSjj 2 5 roisfelE? si 01<lb/>
 bsv i m. -M<lb/>
 (joob<lb/>
f?n???V<lb/>
K,)SN?M M , k<lb/>
" BOBRov<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 8 AM TO 10 PM<lb/>
tX MNTSr.?pAMv 600 Gwwv?e Blvd. - Greenv.ttf<lb/>
I AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
Phona 756-7031<lb/>
<pb facs="00057331_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>