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<pb facs="00057332_0001"/>
uUte iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
?<lb/>
k<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 N<lb/>
oO<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, March 31, 1981<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Reagan Wounded In Washington<lb/>
B DEAN REYNOLDS<lb/>
WASH INC, ION (UPI) A young<lb/>
gunman ambushed President<lb/>
Reagan at close range Monday and<lb/>
fired half-dozen shots, one of them<lb/>
piercing the president's lung inches<lb/>
from his heart. Doctors removed the<lb/>
bullet m a two-hour operation and<lb/>
said Reagan would recover.<lb/>
The would-be assassin, identified<lb/>
as John Warnock Hinckley Jr 25.<lb/>
ol Evergreen, Colo was tackled<lb/>
and pinned to the pavement, whisk-<lb/>
ed away, in a squad car and charged<lb/>
with attempted murder. Officials<lb/>
said that last fall during the<lb/>
presidential campaign Hinckley had<lb/>
been arrested for carrying three<lb/>
guns.<lb/>
The shots outside a Washington<lb/>
hotel, crackling through a dismal<lb/>
rainfall like balloons bursting at a<lb/>
child's birthday party, gravely<lb/>
wounded presidential press<lb/>
secretary James Brady and left a<lb/>
Secret Service agent and a police of-<lb/>
ficer in serious condition.<lb/>
The shooting stunned the world<lb/>
and a nation whose citizens seem<lb/>
unable to shake the stigma of seem-<lb/>
ingly mindless murder of public-<lb/>
figures.<lb/>
Sen. Edward ML Kennedy, who<lb/>
buried two assassinated brothers in-<lb/>
cluding the last president shot,<lb/>
deplored the incident: "Violence<lb/>
and hatred are alien to everything<lb/>
this country is about. With our<lb/>
prayers must go our resolution to<lb/>
rid our society of violence and its<lb/>
cause<lb/>
But Reagan himself look the<lb/>
event in stride, joking with<lb/>
bystanders as he walked into the<lb/>
hospital under his own power. At<lb/>
8:50 p.m. he handed doctors in the<lb/>
recovery room a hand written note<lb/>
paraphrasing W.C. Fields: "All in<lb/>
all, I'd rather be in Philadelphia<lb/>
Doctors at George Washington<lb/>
University Hospital said the<lb/>
70-year-old Reagan is an excellent<lb/>
physical specimen with the body of<lb/>
a young man and his survival never<lb/>
was in doubt.<lb/>
The prognosis for complete<lb/>
recovery is "excellent and Reagan<lb/>
should be able to resume presiden-<lb/>
tial duties Tuesday morning from<lb/>
his hospital bed.<lb/>
And Vice President George Bush,<lb/>
ordered back to Washington from<lb/>
Texas, said "I can reassure this na-<lb/>
tion and a watching world that this<lb/>
nation is functioning fully and nor-<lb/>
mally<lb/>
The stunning murder attempt oc-<lb/>
curred outside the sprawling<lb/>
Washington Hilton Hotel, one mile<lb/>
from the White House, where<lb/>
Reagan had just delivered a speech<lb/>
to a union convention.<lb/>
Waving and smiling, Reagan<lb/>
neared the bulletproof presidential<lb/>
limousine when the gunfire crackl-<lb/>
Atlanta Toll Reaches 21<lb/>
Another Body Discovered<lb/>
ed. The grin on Reagan's face turn-<lb/>
ed to froen horror as a Secret Ser-<lb/>
vice agent shoved him into the car.<lb/>
Pandemonium erupted.<lb/>
Bystanders screamed in horror.<lb/>
Guns were drawn in an instant. Hin-<lb/>
ckley was buried immediately under<lb/>
a mass of agents.<lb/>
And the bloody bodies ol Brady,<lb/>
Secret Service agent Timoth) Mc-<lb/>
Carthy and District ol Columbia<lb/>
police officer Thomas Delahantv<lb/>
were sprawled on the rainswept<lb/>
pavement.<lb/>
An attorney for his family said<lb/>
Hinckley had a history of<lb/>
psychiatric care. Federal law en-<lb/>
forcement officials said he was ar-<lb/>
rested in Nashville for earning<lb/>
firearms near the time both then-<lb/>
President Carter and Reagan were<lb/>
to make campaign appearances in<lb/>
Tennessee.<lb/>
William Bnsscy, captain of the<lb/>
Nashville, Tenn Airport secuntv<lb/>
VI L ANT A (UPI) A young man<lb/>
irving out a new outboard motor<lb/>
found the bodv of a black youth<lb/>
iting in the Chattahoochee River<lb/>
Monda) and police said it was the<lb/>
21st victim of Atlanta's child killers.<lb/>
Fulton County Police Chief Clin-<lb/>
ton c hafin said identification of the<lb/>
y, "that of a young black<lb/>
male was unlikely before Tues-<lb/>
da).<lb/>
Bui wl t vas asked if it was<lb/>
the late- i string of murders of<lb/>
black children that began 20 months<lb/>
e said "1 don think there's<lb/>
question about that<lb/>
The bodv was pulled out of the<lb/>
rivei in a rural, sparsely-populated<lb/>
area of southwest Fulton County,<lb/>
about three miles from the spot<lb/>
where the body ol I ubie Geter, 14,<lb/>
was found Feb. 5. Chafin said a<lb/>
young resident of the area was on<lb/>
the river trying out a new boat<lb/>
motor when he saw the bodv<lb/>
floating on top of some debris.<lb/>
Fhe corpse, clad only in<lb/>
underwear, "seems to be in<lb/>
reasonably good shape Chafin<lb/>
said, but authorities said its features<lb/>
were unrecognizable due to decom-<lb/>
position and Chafin said "1 would<lb/>
not think the body will be identified<lb/>
until tomorrow. It will take other<lb/>
means than personal identifica-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
He said it was impossible to deter-<lb/>
mine immediately how long it had<lb/>
been immersed, but he said<lb/>
"everybody agrees it's been in the<lb/>
river for several days<lb/>
Assistant Medical Examiner Dr.<lb/>
John Feegel said "1 think it's been<lb/>
in the river for a long time<lb/>
Only a one-lane, dirt road led to<lb/>
the spot where the body was found<lb/>
and authorities finally had to resort<lb/>
to four-wheel-drive vehicles to get<lb/>
the body out and deliver it to the<lb/>
Fulton County morgue.<lb/>
Of the 22 children on the list be-<lb/>
ing handled bv the task force, 20<lb/>
have been found dead and two are<lb/>
listed as missing. One of them. Dar-<lb/>
ron Glass, vanished in September<lb/>
and authorities said it was highlv<lb/>
unlikely that his bodv would be in-<lb/>
tact by now.<lb/>
The other missing child on the list<lb/>
is Joseph Bell, 15, who disappeared<lb/>
March 2. Timothy Hill, 13, has been<lb/>
missing since March 13, but police<lb/>
have remained convinced that he is a<lb/>
runaway and have not turned his<lb/>
case over to the task force, although<lb/>
the Missing Persons bureau has<lb/>
assigned several officers to his case.<lb/>
W.R. Beddenfield, a farmer who<lb/>
lives near the spot where the body<lb/>
was found Monday, said the corpse<lb/>
was clothed only in jockey shorts<lb/>
and appeared to be 5-feet-5 to<lb/>
5-feet-6 tall, and weigh about 120<lb/>
pounds.<lb/>
Bell was 5-54 and weighed 110.<lb/>
Monday's discovery was the first<lb/>
since March 6, when the bodv of<lb/>
Curtis Walker. 13. was found in the<lb/>
South River in Dekalb County, on<lb/>
the opposite side of the<lb/>
metropolitan area. Walker, who<lb/>
vanished Feb. 1. had been suf-<lb/>
focated.<lb/>
Walker, loo. was dad only, in his<lb/>
undershorls. Most of the children's<lb/>
bodies have been fully clothed when<lb/>
found.<lb/>
W alker's was the third body to be<lb/>
found in a river.<lb/>
Aid Application Processing Halted<lb/>
WASHING ION. D.C. (CPS) ?<lb/>
In an attempt to make families con-<lb/>
tribute more to their offsprings' col-<lb/>
lege education, the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration has imposed an un-<lb/>
precedented temporary freeze on<lb/>
processing federal financial aid ap-<lb/>
plications.<lb/>
I ast week Secretary of Education<lb/>
lerrel Bell announced the govern-<lb/>
ment wanted to change certain<lb/>
eligibility requirements for Fell<lb/>
Grants (formerly Basic Educational<lb/>
Opportunity Grants), and would<lb/>
not process any more applications<lb/>
tor the grants until Congress voted<lb/>
on the change in requirements.<lb/>
Congress has until April 28 to<lb/>
react to the proposed rules changes,<lb/>
though Rep. Peter Peyser (D-NY) of<lb/>
the House Postsecondary Education<lb/>
Subcommittee hopes to debate the<lb/>
proposals sooner than that to<lb/>
minimize the freeze's impact.<lb/>
If the requirements are changed<lb/>
as Bell requested, "maybe 100,000<lb/>
students" would be knocked out of<lb/>
the Pell Grant program, estimates<lb/>
Skee Smith of the U.S. Department<lb/>
of Education's Student Special Ser-<lb/>
vices office.<lb/>
In the meantime, the freeze effec-<lb/>
tively stops the awarding of all<lb/>
.federal financial aid for the moment<lb/>
because Pell Grants are used to<lb/>
determine students' eligibility for<lb/>
other forms of financial aid, says<lb/>
Dallas Martin of the National<lb/>
Association of Student Financial<lb/>
Aid Administrators.<lb/>
Martin calls the freeze a<lb/>
"travesty. They're going through a<lb/>
process both questionable and il-<lb/>
legal<lb/>
The freeze is a new procedure,<lb/>
concedes a House education com-<lb/>
mittee staffer. "Normally when<lb/>
final regulations are printed (as Pell<lb/>
Grant regulations were printed in<lb/>
January), they are not withdrawn<lb/>
for reconsideration<lb/>
"1 am sure (the freeze) will be an<lb/>
inconvenience for many financial<lb/>
aid officers Smith understates.<lb/>
The House of Representatives is<lb/>
expected to conduct hearings into<lb/>
the legality of the administration's<lb/>
maneuver.<lb/>
The administration's aim is to<lb/>
change the way families figure their<lb/>
police, said Hincklev had been ar-<lb/>
rested Oct. y for trying to board an<lb/>
airliner with three handguns and 50<lb/>
rounds ol ammunition in a suitcase.<lb/>
I here was no immediate indica-<lb/>
tion how a person once so detained<lb/>
bv authorities could have placed<lb/>
himself, without detection and car-<lb/>
rying a .22 caliber handgun, 10 teet<lb/>
from Reagan<lb/>
Brady's prognosis was grim. Doc-<lb/>
tors said the bullet had entered his<lb/>
skull over his right eye and passed<lb/>
through his brain, and Dr. Dennis<lb/>
OT.earv said even if the 40-year-old<lb/>
press secretary lives, permanent<lb/>
brain damage is likely.<lb/>
I he Academv Awards Oscar<lb/>
presentation scheduled for Monday<lb/>
night was postponed until Tuesday<lb/>
night because of the shooting, ABC<lb/>
television announced.<lb/>
Photo By CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
What A (heap Trick!<lb/>
After purchasing their tickets for Saturday night's Cheap Trick-UK) concert, these girls stopped by the "big<lb/>
bed" display at Mendenhall Student Center for a little cheesecake photography session.<lb/>
eligibility for Pell Grants, and to<lb/>
make families contribute more<lb/>
toward their kids' education.<lb/>
A December, 1977 study by the<lb/>
College Entrance Examination<lb/>
Board found that the wealthier the<lb/>
family, the less willing it is to pav<lb/>
more than is needed for its offspring<lb/>
to qualify for student aid.<lb/>
"We don't think we ought to be<lb/>
subsidizing the very wealthy in this<lb/>
country Bell explained on the<lb/>
"Good Morning, America" televi-<lb/>
sion show.<lb/>
At present, a family's eligibility<lb/>
for aid is calculated by subtracting<lb/>
certain living expenses from total<lb/>
family income. Regulations sav<lb/>
families can increase their living ex-<lb/>
penses estimates by 12 and one-half<lb/>
percent to cover inflation.<lb/>
The administration, however.<lb/>
wants to scrap the 12 and one-half<lb/>
percent increase, thus saving SI83<lb/>
million in the next fiscal year.<lb/>
By figuring eligibility the ad-<lb/>
ministration's way, more families<lb/>
would show higher net incomes, and<lb/>
thus become ineligible for Pell<lb/>
Grant s.<lb/>
Secretary Bell also wants to set<lb/>
upper limits on how much a student<lb/>
can deduct from his or her income<lb/>
estimate. New regulations would set<lb/>
maximum amounts on how much a<lb/>
student could spend ? at least for<lb/>
purposes of determining eligibility<lb/>
for Pell Grants ? for housing,<lb/>
books and related school expenses.<lb/>
Talk about changing the rules of<lb/>
getting Pell Grants, Martin says, is<lb/>
affecting other federal financial aid<lb/>
programs. Administration promises<lb/>
to reform the Guaranteed Student<lb/>
loan program are "frightening"<lb/>
some banks, which are waiting to<lb/>
make student loans until the issues<lb/>
are settled.<lb/>
Photo Bv JON JORDAN<lb/>
The SGA Legislature observed a moment of silence Monday for Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan and those injured in the assassination attempt.<lb/>
Reappearance Slated<lb/>
For Ebony Herald<lb/>
By OTIS ROBINSON<lb/>
Staff Wnicr<lb/>
After a one-year absence, the<lb/>
Ebony Herald is scheduled to begin<lb/>
publication in the fall.<lb/>
Lamont Byrd was named editor<lb/>
of the minority newspaper by the<lb/>
East Carolina Media Board. He will<lb/>
have the responsibility of re-<lb/>
establishing the publication.<lb/>
"The purpose of the paper is to<lb/>
inform people living at the Interna-<lb/>
tional House and any ethnic group<lb/>
thai is a minority Byrd said. "We<lb/>
want to cover activities about<lb/>
minorities on campus which are not<lb/>
reported in the East Carolinian<lb/>
Byrd has been working with the<lb/>
ECU Media Board to finalize a<lb/>
budget for the newspaper. The<lb/>
budget is expected to be completed<lb/>
in April.<lb/>
"We want to sec how much<lb/>
money is needed and how many<lb/>
people we can employ Byrd said.<lb/>
"We're planning on getting the staff<lb/>
together next week<lb/>
Byrd has named Edward Nesbitt<lb/>
to aid him in selecting students for<lb/>
the newspaper's staff.<lb/>
David Creech, chairman of the<lb/>
Media Board, said, "We are work-<lb/>
ing with him (Byrd) on putting<lb/>
together the figures for the paper.<lb/>
The figures have to be kicked<lb/>
around in the Media Board before<lb/>
we can propose a budget.<lb/>
"The advantage of the Ebony<lb/>
Herald is that it will be another<lb/>
medium. We need a publication for<lb/>
the minority students on campus. I<lb/>
think the paper will be able to cover<lb/>
events that the East Carolinian for<lb/>
some reason or another has been<lb/>
unable to cover<lb/>
Gracie Wells, president of<lb/>
SOULS added, "I think it can only<lb/>
be an asset to the students. There<lb/>
were a few problems with the other<lb/>
paper, but I'm sure that this one will<lb/>
be a better paper<lb/>
Students wishing to apply for<lb/>
positions as writers for the paper<lb/>
can pick up applications at the<lb/>
Media Board office.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Classifieds11<lb/>
Features6<lb/>
Letters4<lb/>
Sports9<lb/>
Remember To Vote Wednesday<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0002"/><lb/>
IHl I SI . AKOI IN! W<lb/>
NlARt H 31, ISS 1<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
1 '?? Coffeehouse Committee will<lb/>
- Thursday. April 2 1981 at<lb/>
2 30 p m in Room 238 of<lb/>
I ?hail Student Center All<lb/>
members arc urged to attend<lb/>
GAME ROOM<lb/>
 , Room<lb/>
? basement<lb/>
? ? I<lb/>
Win l hurs l 11<lb/>
S v IY1 and Su" 8<lb/>
? Hirnea<lb/>
? ?? udent<lb/>
<lb/>
STRING BASS<lb/>
. perform in<lb/>
-   ?S1 at<lb/>
i , I<lb/>
. i ? ? it .iss si<lb/>
CONSUMER ED<lb/>
Ways to slash grocery bills KrtWl<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 in early April<lb/>
Coupons and Refunds How to<lb/>
Save Money on Groceries will oe<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 refunds has been the<lb/>
Subject of numerous television and<lb/>
newspaper features<lb/>
The class is designed for<lb/>
natters single people,<lb/>
students and an bargain hunters<lb/>
interested n cutting costs of fooof<lb/>
and household products, says Ms<lb/>
Pevehouse<lb/>
Furlher information is available<lb/>
from the Office of Non Credit Pro<lb/>
grams. Division o Continuing<lb/>
Education East Carolina Univer<lb/>
 ?. Green le N C , telephone<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
FOOSEBALL<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center in<lb/>
vites all ECU students to par<lb/>
ticipate in the Fooseball Tourna<lb/>
ment to be held on Wednesday<lb/>
April 8 at 6 00 p m This team<lb/>
competition will be double<lb/>
elimination with trophies awarded<lb/>
to the first and second place<lb/>
teams<lb/>
All participants must register<lb/>
by Monday April 6 at 'he MSC<lb/>
Billiards Center The entry fee is<lb/>
S2 00 per team to be paid at the<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Applications are now being<lb/>
taken for the positions of Day Stu<lb/>
unit Representative to serve on<lb/>
the Sludent union Board of Direi<lb/>
tors interesteu individuals sip re<lb/>
quested to submit their applica<lb/>
tions Dy 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. exl 210<lb/>
-<lb/>
A II l'i<lb/>
. nord.<lb/>
v <lb/>
and <lb/>
I . la<lb/>
PIANORECITAL<lb/>
? hop m will<lb/>
lha<lb/>
l of<lb/>
 . . ?<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? nfl tor<lb/>
?? 'o be<lb/>
n the<lb/>
. letei<lb/>
?eriod<lb/>
entered tor<lb/>
ophies a it be awarded<lb/>
ers m the 5<lb/>
YARD SALE<lb/>
? '<lb/>
RUNNING<lb/>
The ECU intramural Deparl<lb/>
ment will sponsor two Cross<lb/>
Campus Fun Runs on Wednesday<lb/>
April 8 at the ECU track There<lb/>
a II be a 2 5 mile race beginning at<lb/>
5 00 p m an ? . race star<lb/>
t.ng at 5 30 i n I lr? blanks are<lb/>
 ,  , ? ?, ?? viiurai Office<lb/>
pen 1 all ECU students,<lb/>
tacul'v s'J"<lb/>
FACULTYSTAFF<lb/>
All ECU faculty and staff<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
take advantage of your<lb/>
un1 day a! 'he Bowling<lb/>
in Mendenhall Every<lb/>
Wednesday from 5 00 p m unM<lb/>
8 00 p m faculty and staff MSC<lb/>
members may bowl two I 2' games<lb/>
. t a 3rd game FREE Don t<lb/>
Wednesday is savings<lb/>
It the Bowling Center<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
The Preprofessional Health<lb/>
? .(, will meet Thursday April<lb/>
2 a' 6 00 in 'he Ledon,a S Wright<lb/>
Afro ?'? I ??' ? Cultural Cl '?<lb/>
ns for nex' u S<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
I nter Varsity Christian<lb/>
fellowship will meet Thursday<lb/>
n,qht a' 7 30 in the Methodis' Stu<lb/>
This week we wll be<lb/>
a special concert by Jerr,<lb/>
 . .  a Contemporary<lb/>
? . $1 i v ,i" E . ? rone is<lb/>
TWIG<lb/>
Did you know 'ha' 'he more you<lb/>
understand the Bible, the bettei<lb/>
you will feel inside7 Do you know<lb/>
tha' it you understand the Bible<lb/>
believe it. and act accord<lb/>
you will have a meaningful and en<lb/>
lOyable life' (! Tim 4 8 n Peter<lb/>
. 4 Thats our goal, to learn<lb/>
what'he Bible says and app . I<lb/>
our uves Then we can teach<lb/>
others so thev la enioy the good<lb/>
lite (II Tim 2 2. Col 1 27 28)<lb/>
Check out our fellowships Tues<lb/>
uav Ma'h 24 and Thursday<lb/>
March 26 at 12 00 noon Thursday<lb/>
March 26 a' 7 30 p m room no<lb/>
212. Mendenhall S'uden' Center<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
The following co op oppor<lb/>
tumties are now available<lb/>
1 The Galleon Esplanade Nags<lb/>
Head, NC A representative<lb/>
from the Galleon Esplanade will<lb/>
be on campus March 25, 1981 inter<lb/>
viewing students for summer<lb/>
work Pick up application and sign<lb/>
up tor interview in the Co op Of<lb/>
fice, 313 Rawl<lb/>
2 NIH Normal Volunteer Pro<lb/>
gram, Bethesda MD A<lb/>
representative from the National<lb/>
Institutes ol Health will be on cam<lb/>
pus March 26. 1981 interviewing<lb/>
?s tor the Normal Volunteer<lb/>
program for summer, 81 or Fall<lb/>
81 Help physicians in their<lb/>
studies 0' how the normal bod.<lb/>
tunc'ions During your free lime<lb/>
work alonq side scientists m the<lb/>
laboratories Yoo'H receive trei<lb/>
room board laundry service<lb/>
recreation 'ranspor'ation to and<lb/>
from NIH. plus a daily stipend<lb/>
3 Navy Civilian Personnel Com<lb/>
mand A representative of NC PC<lb/>
? on campus March 31 and<lb/>
April I interviewing students tor<lb/>
'he Navy Co op program Majors<lb/>
m business, computer science,<lb/>
psychology soooloqy. and INDT<lb/>
arc needed Sign up for interviews<lb/>
today in 313 Rawl1<lb/>
PAGEANT<lb/>
Applications tor contestants tor<lb/>
Miss Black and Gold Pageant are<lb/>
. , : . no. a epted it interested<lb/>
,?? . . , ? "iber of Alpha Phi<lb/>
. fraternity or i alll '52 9875<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be an ambassadors<lb/>
meeting April 5. 1981 at 7 00 in<lb/>
nhall Studenl Center We<lb/>
?suss university day ana<lb/>
home tours It is important tha'<lb/>
?? ? students w sh.no to work on<lb/>
ictivities attend the general<lb/>
? ? . etina Apr.i 5. 1981 meel "u<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
nil ates are<lb/>
me 'o 'he multi<lb/>
purpose room of Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
 . .  by 7 15 p m on<lb/>
? . ' ' ? ' ?'<lb/>
i "<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
AED<lb/>
De for<lb/>
. i the iV "<lb/>
The Kast Carolinian<lb/>
S Tl ???<lb/>
wiir IttJ<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ng 'he summer<lb/>
The Eas' Carolinian s 'he of<lb/>
ficiai newspaper of Eas'<lb/>
Carolina University owned.<lb/>
operated, ana published for and<lb/>
. ?? ? student;  Eas' Carolina<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business S3' ?? ??<lb/>
:L .? h<lb/>
Second class pos'agi- pa<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
The Eas' Carolinian offices<lb/>
are loca'ed in 'he Old South<lb/>
Buildmo on ?? i apuS of ECU.<lb/>
. ille n c<lb/>
Telephone 7S7 6366 6367 630'<lb/>
PRE-MED?<lb/>
Current undergraduate pre-<lb/>
medical students may now<lb/>
compete for several<lb/>
hundered Air Force scholar-<lb/>
ships are to be awarded to<lb/>
students accepted into<lb/>
medical schools as freshmen<lb/>
or at the beginning of their<lb/>
sophomore year. The<lb/>
scholarship provides for tui-<lb/>
tion, books, lab fees and<lb/>
equipment, plus a S400 mon-<lb/>
thly allowance. Investigate<lb/>
this financial alternative to<lb/>
the high cost of medical<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Contact:<lb/>
TSgt. Bob Payne<lb/>
U.S.A.F. Health Profes<lb/>
sions Recruiting<lb/>
Suite Gl-1. 1100 Navaho<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27609<lb/>
(919) 755 4134<lb/>
AIR FORCE<lb/>
&amp;?<lb/>
204 E. 5th ST.<lb/>
Across from Newby's<lb/>
Sub Shop<lb/>
INFLATION<lb/>
FIGHTER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
BRING THIS AO AND<lb/>
receive$1.00OFF:<lb/>
LIST W AD<lb/>
FABULOUS KNOBS 4 99 3.99<lb/>
X-TEENS 499 3.99<lb/>
SECRET SERVICE 4 99 3.95<lb/>
ARROGANCE'S RUMORS LP 3 99 2.99<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S SALE<lb/>
ALBUMS<lb/>
ALL CURRENT RELEASES<lb/>
OPEN TIL 9:30 P.M. NIGHTLY<lb/>
Carolina Protective<lb/>
Services, Inc.<lb/>
Kent A Bouncer<lb/>
For Your Party or<lb/>
Function<lb/>
Office 758 0675<lb/>
Call Anytime<lb/>
Don Jefferson (Bail Bonasmen)<lb/>
8.98 FOR 5.99<lb/>
RK SPEI DW V.ON<lb/>
RIM) STEWART<lb/>
I'M rRAVl Rs<lb/>
V II I II MISON<lb/>
f Rl( C I M'loN<lb/>
7.98 F0R 4.99<lb/>
NAZARI IH<lb/>
I l is c OSTI LLO<lb/>
DAVID AI I NOl<lb/>
15.98 FOR 10.99<lb/>
BRlI<lb/>
SPR1NGST1 IN<lb/>
ALL PARAPHANALIA ON<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
MOST IS 50 OFF<lb/>
APPLE RECORDS<lb/>
T-SHIRTS<lb/>
$99<lb/>
Ri'K. 4.50 with coupon<lb/>
?M mm. ??? m- MM MHB M ??? "? J<lb/>
 WE Bl Y USED ALBUMS <lb/>
Available<lb/>
All Day<lb/>
Every Day<lb/>
Open<lb/>
1 I a m 9p m<lb/>
Sun thru Thurs<lb/>
Mom 10 p m<lb/>
Fri &amp;Sot<lb/>
Wwhstcrn Stccr0<lb/>
Family<lb/>
STEAKH0USS<lb/>
3005 E<lb/>
1 Oth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
(Beh.nd Hait.ngj Ford)<lb/>
Toke Out Service<lb/>
Available<lb/>
7588550<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
$2.49<lb/>
DELIC IOUS 30 ITEM SALAD BAR<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
8 oz. Chop Sirloin<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
$2.49<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
8 oz. Chop Sirloin<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Family Night<lb/>
Petite Sirloin Filet<lb/>
Salad and Drink<lb/>
$4.75<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
8 oz. Rib Eye<lb/>
$4.69<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
SPRING FLING<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau is sponsoring an<lb/>
all expense paid weeKend tor two<lb/>
at the Whaler inn Atlantic Beach<lb/>
The winner may choose any<lb/>
weeKend between April 10th and<lb/>
June 4th<lb/>
Donations are SI 00 Ticket:<lb/>
may be obtained from any Phi<lb/>
Tau<lb/>
The drawing will be held Friday,<lb/>
April 3 at the Ph. Tau house during<lb/>
our "Spring Fling" party,<lb/>
3 00 6 30 p m The drawing will be<lb/>
at 6 00 Everyone rwited to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
The Media Board is presently<lb/>
accepting applications for General<lb/>
Manager of WZMB For furthei In<lb/>
formation please call 7i7 6501<lb/>
MARSHALLS<lb/>
All persons interested in tiling<lb/>
for ECU Marshalls may do so by<lb/>
going by SGA Ottice Room ?J8<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center not<lb/>
later "an April 3<lb/>
AKA<lb/>
The Ivies of t- ? ' I ? I I<lb/>
chpater of Alpha Ka<lb/>
sorority will)<lb/>
eo tood drive on Thurs<lb/>
?? . oorms The proi i<lb/>
donated to an area Ian<lb/>
needy Your support w<lb/>
appreciated<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS<lb/>
The Coop Ott'ie has ini<lb/>
tion concerning summer intern<lb/>
ships tor both graduate and<lb/>
undergraduate students who have<lb/>
? .ounds m computer science<lb/>
Students should review internship<lb/>
descriptions posted ou'Side 313<lb/>
Rawl it interested and should con<lb/>
tac? the Co op Office tor aco.tionai<lb/>
information<lb/>
CHEMISTRY<lb/>
?<lb/>
? old a<lb/>
31 in Flanagan 20V at 7 p m The<lb/>
wilt be discuss<lb/>
ed All members and ottH<lb/>
leresti ? jrged to at<lb/>
DELTA ZETA<lb/>
There is a meeting ot ail Delta<lb/>
Zeta B'9 Brothers on April 1 8 30<lb/>
p m . at the house Bring your ,pr<lb/>
,ng at' . nj '? ' it you haven '<lb/>
direadr<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chap'?? M I PI N?<lb/>
t.onai Honor Fraternity will meet<lb/>
at 6 00 p m Wednesday m 132<lb/>
Aust:n All brothers should attend<lb/>
because elections will be held<lb/>
Group pictures also will be taKen<lb/>
FILMS<lb/>
The Student union Films Com<lb/>
mittee will meet on Tuesday<lb/>
31 1981 at 6 30 i<lb/>
Room 22 of Mendenhall<lb/>
All members are urged to<lb/>
? "?<lb/>
CHEERLEADING<lb/>
varsity cheerleader ri .<lb/>
be held Tuesoa. I ??) a" 8 00 in<lb/>
ii interesK<lb/>
sons a 'end<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
The Man?<lb/>
31 l?81 at 4 00 p m m Rl<lb/>
if MH  Kit SI<lb/>
mem<lb/>
UNION<lb/>
The Univei<lb/>
Comrr ??<lb/>
March 31. at 4 OOP n<lb/>
of MenoenhaH SI 'er An<lb/>
members .?<lb/>
Ax<lb/>
 Sun Tannery<lb/>
15 sessions $30,00<lb/>
Free Introductory<lb/>
Sun Session<lb/>
To ECU Students<lb/>
756-2820<lb/>
United Figure Salon<lb/>
Red Oak Plaza<lb/>
1 j mile W. of<lb/>
Carolina E Mail<lb/>
on 26J By Pass<lb/>
OLD FASHIONED<lb/>
HAMBURGERS<lb/>
.35C OFF<lb/>
Anv<lb/>
Sandwich<lb/>
wCheap Trick<lb/>
2 Locations<lb/>
In Greenville<lb/>
264 By Pass 10(h St.<lb/>
Concert Ticket Stub<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
MARVIN BRAXTON<lb/>
tor<lb/>
SGA VICE-PRESIDENT<lb/>
April 1,1981<lb/>
&amp;ft<lb/>
APRIL 4.1981<lb/>
MINGES COLISEUM<lb/>
$6.50 STUDENTS<lb/>
(in advance)<lb/>
8.50 PUBLIC<lb/>
WITH SPECIAL<lb/>
GUEST; UFO<lb/>
WHEN WAS THE<lb/>
LAST TIME YOU<lb/>
A<lb/>
 (i<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
H<lb/>
O<lb/>
( I<lb/>
Fun<lb/>
Yes<lb/>
As<lb/>
-<lb/>
 -<lb/>
U<lb/>
loc I<lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
"I i<lb/>
ih? 1?<lb/>
nuc I<lb/>
1961<lb/>
inf<lb/>
"Bi<lb/>
inquirj<lb/>
there<lb/>
radioJ<lb/>
he adj<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0003"/><lb/>
tERLEADING<lb/>
1 FACTIONS<lb/>
UNION<lb/>
)FF<lb/>
ich<lb/>
Trick<lb/>
vet Stub<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
NT<lb/>
WSEUM<lb/>
If NTS<lb/>
lie<lb/>
O<lb/>
<lb/>
I HI lAST CAROLINIAN MARC H 31, 1981<lb/>
Pfioto By JON JORDAN<lb/>
ECU students watch the latest developments in the Reagan assassination attempt on a television set in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student (enter.<lb/>
Harvard Historian To Speak<lb/>
On Economics At ECU<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
A prize-winning Har-<lb/>
vard historian will be a<lb/>
featured speaker at a<lb/>
business and<lb/>
economics related<lb/>
Humanities Conference<lb/>
April 9, sponsored by<lb/>
the N.C Department<lb/>
of Cultural Resources<lb/>
and East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Dr. Albro Martin.<lb/>
editor of the Business<lb/>
History Review<lb/>
published at Harvard.<lb/>
Further<lb/>
Tests<lb/>
Asked<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(I PI) Rep. Charles O.<lb/>
Whitley, D-N.C, has<lb/>
aked tor further<lb/>
radioactivity tests at a<lb/>
farm near Faro, N.C,<lb/>
where an Air force<lb/>
bomber with two<lb/>
nuclear bombs aboard<lb/>
crashed more than 20<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
Whitley said he was<lb/>
sure the area was sate.<lb/>
but wanted to reassure<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
"I've got faith in the<lb/>
Air force lie said. "1<lb/>
don't think the Air<lb/>
force would have left a<lb/>
hazardous situation<lb/>
A B-52 carrying two<lb/>
24-megaton atomic<lb/>
bombs from Seymour<lb/>
Johnson Air Force<lb/>
Base in Goldsboro<lb/>
crashed on Jan. 24.<lb/>
1961 on the farm of<lb/>
Buck and Ellen Tyndall<lb/>
near faro. One bomb<lb/>
was apparently<lb/>
recovered, but the se-<lb/>
cond split apart and<lb/>
parts ol it were never<lb/>
recovered.<lb/>
Whitley said last<lb/>
week he accepted the<lb/>
Air force's contention<lb/>
ihat the unrecovered<lb/>
piece of the bomb poses<lb/>
no threat to residents.<lb/>
Many details of the<lb/>
crash are still classified,<lb/>
and the Defense<lb/>
Department has refus-<lb/>
ed to say how large a<lb/>
fragment of the second<lb/>
was not recovered.<lb/>
The crash site was<lb/>
monitored extensively<lb/>
for several months<lb/>
alter the test, but the<lb/>
testing was discon-<lb/>
tinued years ago.<lb/>
I he 1961 crash resur-<lb/>
faced in the news last<lb/>
year with reports that<lb/>
one of the two bombs<lb/>
on the plane nearly<lb/>
detonated, but Whitley<lb/>
said his request is<lb/>
focused only on the<lb/>
possibility of lingering<lb/>
radioactivity.<lb/>
"1 raise no question<lb/>
whatsoever in terms of<lb/>
ihe likelihood of a<lb/>
nuclear explosion in<lb/>
1961 Whitley said.<lb/>
"That is really whipp-<lb/>
ing a dead horse.<lb/>
"Bui it is a legitimate<lb/>
inquiry lo ask what<lb/>
assurances we have thai<lb/>
ihere is no residue of<lb/>
radioactive material<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
will speak on "The<lb/>
Role and Responsibility<lb/>
of Business in Creating<lb/>
Public Expectations<lb/>
and Modifying<lb/>
Values<lb/>
Martin also teaches<lb/>
business history in the<lb/>
Harvard Graduate<lb/>
School of Business Ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
His PhD dissertation<lb/>
at Columbia University<lb/>
entitled, "Enterprise<lb/>
Denied: Origins of the<lb/>
Decline of American<lb/>
Railroads. 1897-1917<lb/>
won the first Allan<lb/>
N e v i n s prize in<lb/>
Economic History. A<lb/>
Martin article. "The<lb/>
Troubled Subject of<lb/>
Railroad Regulation in<lb/>
the Gilded Age won<lb/>
the Binkley-Stephenson<lb/>
Prize of the Organiza-<lb/>
tion oi American<lb/>
Historians tor the best<lb/>
article published in<lb/>
94 in the Journal of<lb/>
American History.<lb/>
In 1976 Oxford<lb/>
University Press<lb/>
published his "James<lb/>
J. Hill and the Opening<lb/>
of the Northwest a<lb/>
definitive biography of<lb/>
one of the major<lb/>
business leaders of the<lb/>
nineteenth and early<lb/>
twentieth century. He is<lb/>
now at work on a book<lb/>
on the social and<lb/>
cultural impact of the<lb/>
railroad and telegraph.<lb/>
The Humanities<lb/>
Conference scheduled<lb/>
at ECU's Willis<lb/>
Building is open to<lb/>
business and profes-<lb/>
sional men and women,<lb/>
civic leaders and others<lb/>
concerned with<lb/>
economic and cultural<lb/>
development of eastern<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
"American business<lb/>
is confronted with a<lb/>
new challenge the<lb/>
sponsors said. "A new<lb/>
understanding of civic<lb/>
responsibility, and the<lb/>
impact of technological<lb/>
and commercial<lb/>
development on com-<lb/>
munity values, is essen-<lb/>
tial<lb/>
The theme of the<lb/>
conference will be<lb/>
"Private Institutions<lb/>
and Public Good: An<lb/>
Exploration of How<lb/>
the Humanities and<lb/>
Sound Business Prac-<lb/>
tices Can Complement<lb/>
and Inform One<lb/>
Another<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
University Chancellor<lb/>
Thomas B. Brewer,<lb/>
himself a business<lb/>
historian, will be<lb/>
moderator.<lb/>
Dr. William Blood-<lb/>
worth, professor of<lb/>
English at ECU, will<lb/>
discuss "A Critical<lb/>
View of Business and<lb/>
Culture in America<lb/>
Dr. Henry C. Ferrell<lb/>
Jr professor of<lb/>
history at ECU , will<lb/>
speak on "The Impact<lb/>
of Industrial and Com-<lb/>
mercial Development<lb/>
and the Resulting Im-<lb/>
plications for Tradi-<lb/>
tional Community<lb/>
Values in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Issue To Be Decided<lb/>
(C PS) ? The fate of all<lb/>
federal college programs for<lb/>
helping handicapped students<lb/>
will be in the balance when the<lb/>
U.S. Supreme Court decides<lb/>
the case of deal student Walter<lb/>
Camenisch, who wants the<lb/>
University of Texas to pay<lb/>
SI,245 a year for his sign<lb/>
language interpreter.<lb/>
The court two weeks ago<lb/>
gave the U.S. Department of<lb/>
Justice permission to defend<lb/>
Camenisch.<lb/>
Texas claims that schools<lb/>
are not required to spend<lb/>
money to accomodate han-<lb/>
dicapped students. That view,<lb/>
if validated in court, would<lb/>
change the standard inter-<lb/>
pretation of the 1973<lb/>
Rehabilitation Act, the high<lb/>
court said.<lb/>
Under Section 504 of that<lb/>
act, federally-funded schools<lb/>
can't discriminate against<lb/>
otherwise qualified handicap-<lb/>
ped persons.<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
THE PLACE TO BE <lb/>
WHERE SPRING<lb/>
IS IN BLOOM.<lb/>
- - Tib o x'<lb/>
V<lb/>
-A. 4<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
i i is<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
'Ur-<lb/>
, "W ' CJ . ?; ! ??' t J . f<lb/>
m<lb/>
'to,<lb/>
"v<lb/>
?-N<lb/>
 <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
"jgi<lb/>
&amp;h<lb/>
A<lb/>
Vm H.ihn<lb/>
s<lb/>
if<lb/>
ee What's New A for Spring!<lb/>
Two Fashion 4 Shows-<lb/>
Friday. April 3rd.7pm<lb/>
Saturday, April 4th. 2pm.<lb/>
and Carolina East Centre<lb/>
264 By-pass on Hwy 11. Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
(wreck Week 1981<lb/>
The 4th Annual<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
m<lb/>
- ?PRING<lb/>
0S<lb/>
?<lb/>
te<lb/>
LING<lb/>
At the Phi Kappa Tau House<lb/>
409 Elizabeth St.<lb/>
3-6:30 p.m.<lb/>
April 3rd<lb/>
r<lb/>
Sponsored By Our Friends At:<lb/>
Marathon<lb/>
Stereo Village<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
The Pipeline Restaurant<lb/>
Hallow Distributing Co. inc.<lb/>
The Happy Store<lb/>
General Heating Inc.<lb/>
Malpass Muffler Shop<lb/>
Southern Pride Car Wash<lb/>
Chapter X<lb/>
Sports World<lb/>
Arbor Room at Ramada Inn<lb/>
Overton's Supermarket<lb/>
Papa Katz<lb/>
Alligood Motors<lb/>
Shirley's Cut &amp; Style Shop<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
King's Sandwich<lb/>
Jolly Roger<lb/>
California Concepts of Greenville<lb/>
Pizza Inn<lb/>
Bissette's of Greenville<lb/>
University Book Exchange<lb/>
The Pirate Pit Stop<lb/>
Domino's Pizza<lb/>
The Tree House Restaurant<lb/>
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Greenville<lb/>
Everyone Is Invited To Attend<lb/>
WHY SHOULD<lb/>
KIRK LITTLE<lb/>
BE RE-ELECTED?<lb/>
Perhaps<lb/>
It's because LITTLE favored the VISUAL ARTS FORUM EILL<lb/>
which Charlie Sherrod vetoed.<lb/>
Or Perhaps<lb/>
It's because LITTLE favors the MARCHING PIRATES, SCHOOL<lb/>
OF MUSIC, and ECU PLAYHOUSE.<lb/>
Or Perhaps.<lb/>
It's because LITTLE wants to right the many wrongs that<lb/>
have been done ECU students over the past years.<lb/>
Or Perhaps<lb/>
It's because certain people are afraid of having facts<lb/>
revealed to the public.<lb/>
Or Perhaps<lb/>
It's because LITTLE has instituted sound business policies<lb/>
and procedures to orevent mismanagement of YOUR student fees.<lb/>
Or Perhaps<lb/>
It's because LITTLE has begun revamping the SGA Loan md<lb/>
to enable more students to receive more money.<lb/>
YOU DECIDE<lb/>
RE-ELECT<lb/>
KIRK LITTLE<lb/>
SGA TREASURER<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0004"/><lb/>
?tje last Ear0lmian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Lincke.<lb/>
Dave Si u kin. ? m.<lb/>
 I 1 N STER,<lb/>
C'HKls I I. 1UK. Gmrr tfemvo<lb/>
Jln DuPRI 1 ? tA?wcM??Mr<lb/>
PAUI CO! 1 INS, r?WJ.W<lb/>
CHAR1 1 S CHANDI IK Sports Edtloi<lb/>
DA ID NORKIS. tart! Erfiw<lb/>
March<lb/>
lsl<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Pane 4<lb/>
Media Freedom<lb/>
?Ct Board Oversteps Bounds<lb/>
SGA President Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
announced last night that he is ap-<lb/>
pointing Robert M. Swaim to take<lb/>
over his seat on the media board for<lb/>
she remainder of his term as presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
An amendment o the Media<lb/>
Board Constitution was passed last<lb/>
year thai allows members of the<lb/>
board to appoint people to serve in<lb/>
their place if they so desire. Sher-<lb/>
rod's appointment of Ssaim was<lb/>
made under the provisions of that<lb/>
amendment.<lb/>
Swaim, a veteran newspaper<lb/>
employee who was a driving force<lb/>
behind the creation o' the Media<lb/>
Board said that he was "humbled<lb/>
and honored" by the appointment.<lb/>
Swaim resigned from his position<lb/>
as assistant to the general manager<lb/>
of The East Carolinian Monday<lb/>
afternoon to later accept the ap-<lb/>
pointment.<lb/>
1 aM week, the board heard com-<lb/>
ments, remarks, and gri. an<lb/>
concerning personnel mattersat The<lb/>
lasi Carolinian. Instead ot setting<lb/>
forth its findings in the form of sug-<lb/>
gestions to the general manager<lb/>
Chris Lichok or actually bringing<lb/>
formal charges against the staff<lb/>
member(s) involved, the Media<lb/>
Board decided to use pressure to<lb/>
force Lichok to resolve the matter<lb/>
to its satisifaction. This area is<lb/>
clearly out o' the realm of control<lb/>
of the board although they deemed<lb/>
themselves a judicial body and<lb/>
found the accused guilty,denying<lb/>
him any due process of law.<lb/>
Actions taken thus far by the<lb/>
board set a grim precedent. At no<lb/>
time in the stormy history of the<lb/>
Media Board has that organization<lb/>
so blatantly exceeded their constitu-<lb/>
tional authority.<lb/>
If any outside board or authority<lb/>
is permitted to have such great con-<lb/>
trol over personnel matters at The<lb/>
East Carolinian, this newspaper<lb/>
may lose its freedom and become<lb/>
merely a rubber-stamp newsletter,<lb/>
answering to the whims of the con-<lb/>
trolling board.<lb/>
"STICKS AND STONES MAY BREAK MY BONE 5 ,<lb/>
BUT NAM?5 MLl NEVER HURT Mg<lb/>
Pentagon Prepares US Hospitals<lb/>
Secret Service's Actions<lb/>
Prevent National Tragedy<lb/>
As the United States and indeed<lb/>
the entire world recovers from the<lb/>
shock of an assasination attempt on<lb/>
the President, it becomes appearant<lb/>
that terrorism has replaced<lb/>
diplomacy as the most affective<lb/>
means of gaming recognition and<lb/>
acceptance.<lb/>
The bullets which would have<lb/>
ended the life of Ronald Wilson<lb/>
Reagan on Monday March 30, 1981<lb/>
marked the first assasination at-<lb/>
tempt against the chief executive<lb/>
since a pair during the Gerald Ford<lb/>
term of office.<lb/>
The Secret Service should be ap-<lb/>
plauded for their prompt action to<lb/>
prevent further injury to the Presi-<lb/>
dent. Many people watching the<lb/>
videotape of the incident are shock-<lb/>
ed by their sense of duty to prevent<lb/>
injury to the commander-in-chief.<lb/>
This group is trained to surrender<lb/>
their lives rather than permit harm<lb/>
to come to the President. Their ac-<lb/>
tions Monday may very well have<lb/>
saved George Bush from the<lb/>
ominous task of leading a nation in<lb/>
mourning. For this accomplish-<lb/>
ment, the people oi the United<lb/>
States will be eternally in debt.<lb/>
B DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
When clouds of war till the sky, they<lb/>
sometimes gather thunderously, other-<lb/>
times in porteniious silence. Thus, while<lb/>
Ronald Reagan and Alexander Haig issue<lb/>
their clamorous pronouncements on world<lb/>
affairs, the Pentagon is working quietly<lb/>
behind the scenes, preparing Stateside<lb/>
hospitals to receive large numbers o<lb/>
wounded GIs in a lightening-swift foreign<lb/>
war of the near future.<lb/>
1 In discreet effort is pan ot a Pentagon<lb/>
program called the Civilian-Military Con-<lb/>
tingency Hospital Ssiem (CMCHS).<lb/>
Designed to handle expected overflow war-<lb/>
time casualties by setting aside unoccupied<lb/>
beds in advance - or by emptying beds ot<lb/>
unfortunate civilians, pronto, once war<lb/>
breaks out ? CMCHS is eventually ex-<lb/>
pected to enlist 1,000 major hospitals in 13<lb/>
cities, including Washington. D.C<lb/>
Baltimore, St. Louis, Denver, Seattle, San<lb/>
Francisco and San Diego.<lb/>
In a 43-page booklet distributed to<lb/>
hospital administrators in early March, en-<lb/>
titled "CHMCHS: In Combat. In the<lb/>
Community, Saving lives Together the<lb/>
Pentagon introduces CMCHS and pro-<lb/>
vides its rationale. "It is no secret that the<lb/>
Soviet Union's awesome military power<lb/>
poses a threat to the United States the<lb/>
booklet begins. Adding that. "We assum-<lb/>
ed there would not be an attack on the<lb/>
U.S. homeland the unnamed authors go<lb/>
on to state that, "a future large scale war<lb/>
oerseas will probably begin and end very<lb/>
rapidly and produce casualties at a higher<lb/>
rate than any other war in history due to<lb/>
the spread ot sophisticated modern<lb/>
weapons.<lb/>
The devastation of the next war thus<lb/>
established, the Pentagon booklet goes on<lb/>
to ask hospitals to join CMCHS<lb/>
"independently of emergency wai legisla-<lb/>
tion" (i.e a draft of doctors and military<lb/>
appropriation of hospitals). As advantages<lb/>
ot the program, the authors promise in-<lb/>
teresting wartime medical problems ("the<lb/>
types and severity of injuries and il-<lb/>
lnesseswill present a challenge to your<lb/>
hospital staff) and improed community<lb/>
relations ("the public has always been sup-<lb/>
portive ot a strong national defense)<lb/>
I he Pentagon wants 50,000 beds,<lb/>
minimum, tor CMCHS. Just how his ex<lb/>
tensive program will be financed goes<lb/>
unexplained in the booklet. Ihe military is<lb/>
more forthcoming about public relations<lb/>
aspects ot ihe program, providing ad-<lb/>
ministrators with a sample letter with<lb/>
which to com nice employees ot the merits<lb/>
ot the plan, and a sample press release tor<lb/>
officials who decide to reveal their<lb/>
hospital's participation to the media.<lb/>
Although CMCHS has been lightly-<lb/>
covered in the mass media (the small An-<lb/>
lioch, Calif. Daily Ledger revealed the pro-<lb/>
gram's existence in its March 13 issue),<lb/>
CMCHS is sparking considerable heat in<lb/>
medical circles. Its defenders see the pro<lb/>
gram as patriotic and humanitarian, while<lb/>
critics are worried about ethical questions<lb/>
posed by participation in CMCHS.<lb/>
"This is in-keeping with the president's<lb/>
desire that the nation have a maximum<lb/>
defense capability said Edward Leibson,<lb/>
an Oakland health official. "We ought no;<lb/>
to dramatize it beyond that Other<lb/>
medical professionals are less sanguine<lb/>
about the program. Dr. Walter Carr, a<lb/>
California public health official, said that<lb/>
"There has been a concern by some physi-<lb/>
cians (about) getting ready for war and all<lb/>
that means. There's a dichotomy on<lb/>
preparations for war and preparations tor<lb/>
peace Carr also wondered aloud what<lb/>
moving out civilian patients on the 24 to 48<lb/>
hour notice the Pentagon would require in<lb/>
nine of war would do to those patients.<lb/>
According to the Daily ledger, the<lb/>
CMCHS plan originated last summer in<lb/>
the office ot John M. Maxley HI. the<lb/>
Assistant Secretary ot Defense tor Health<lb/>
Xttairs. Since then. Pentagon lobbying for<lb/>
the program has gone quietly and per-<lb/>
sistently forward, with hospital ad-<lb/>
ministrators around the country invited to<lb/>
view slide shows on the Soviet military and<lb/>
attend Department ot Defense briefings on<lb/>
CMCHS.<lb/>
In addition to worrying manv medical<lb/>
people, the CMCHS plan has boggled<lb/>
minds m official Washington. David<lb/>
Passage, a State Department spokesper-<lb/>
son, called the program "almost incredi-<lb/>
ble" in a brief interview with the Oakland<lb/>
Tribune, averring that "The State Depart-<lb/>
ment has nothing to do with this Could<lb/>
it be that the left hand o government<lb/>
doesn't know what the right hand is doing<lb/>
? again?<lb/>
Other questions remain, t-or example,<lb/>
who is going to pay for what promise-<lb/>
be an expensive program involving 1.000<lb/>
major hospitals, their administrators, and<lb/>
mihtarv coordinators for each hospital?<lb/>
Can we believe the disclaimers certain to<lb/>
come from the Pentagon that this sudden<lb/>
need for empty hospital beds has nothing<lb/>
to io with U.S. plans for intervention in<lb/>
Central America or the Persian Gulf? The<lb/>
prognosis ? for getting straight answers.<lb/>
and for peace in our time ? doesn't look<lb/>
good.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
1<lb/>
Run-off Candidates Present Platforms To Students<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: The first four en-<lb/>
tries in today's "Campus forum" are<lb/>
the platforms oj the candidates involved<lb/>
in the SGA run-off elections which will<lb/>
be held tomorrow. Kirk I it lie and<lb/>
Angela Pepe arc competing for the of-<lb/>
fice of treasurer, while Marvin Braxton<lb/>
and Peggy Davison are up for vice-<lb/>
president. These platforms were submit-<lb/>
ted to The East Carolinian by the in-<lb/>
dividual candidates and we are proud to<lb/>
provide this space for their publication.<lb/>
H e hope that alt ECl students will take<lb/>
the tune to vole April I.<lb/>
?<lb/>
 big job with lots of responsibilities.<lb/>
I hat is the only way to describe the job<lb/>
ol SGA Treasurer. 1 know, I've been<lb/>
holding that job for the past year. Some<lb/>
people might try to pull ihe wool over<lb/>
your eves bv telling you that anybody<lb/>
can hold the job o' SGA Treasurer even<lb/>
if they have no qualifications or ex-<lb/>
perience. Don't be fooled. They have<lb/>
probably never even seen a meeting ol<lb/>
the SGA legislature. I have. They<lb/>
haven't staved up late at night trying to<lb/>
find solutions to getting the most money<lb/>
appropriated to the most groups. 1 have.<lb/>
They haven't had to implement, from<lb/>
scratch, effective policies where none<lb/>
have existed before. 1 have. Over this<lb/>
past year I have demonstrated that 1<lb/>
have the commitment and the resolve to<lb/>
sec thai the SO A is in the best financial<lb/>
situation possible. This past year. I have<lb/>
utilized all that 1 have been taught in the<lb/>
School of Business to implement effec-<lb/>
tive procedures and guidelines for the<lb/>
best administration ot your money. By<lb/>
these actions, I have proven myself as an<lb/>
effective administrator.<lb/>
Students involved with the performing<lb/>
and visual arts might wonder what my<lb/>
attitude is toward their respective field<lb/>
ol studv. Quite simply, the Arts could<lb/>
not have a better friend in the SGA. Cast<lb/>
fall, when many members of the SGA<lb/>
were busy doing everything they could to<lb/>
keep the Visual Arts Forum from receiv-<lb/>
ing an appropriation, 1 was the lone ex-<lb/>
ecutive officer who spoke in behalf of<lb/>
the VAF urging the legislature to grant<lb/>
them an appropriate sum of money. You<lb/>
don't need lo guess where I stand, 1 am<lb/>
staunchly behind the performing and<lb/>
visual arts.<lb/>
By holding office this past year, 1 have<lb/>
acquired the experience and proven the<lb/>
leadership necessary to fulfill the office<lb/>
o SGA Treasurer. ! would appreciate<lb/>
your vote of confidence in me in my bid<lb/>
tor re-election on March 4th.<lb/>
KIRK LITTLE<lb/>
I have been a student at ECU for over<lb/>
three years and I want to become involv-<lb/>
ed in Student Government. As<lb/>
Treasurer, I feel I would enter a position<lb/>
which I have the competence, capability,<lb/>
and knowledge to excel.<lb/>
1 am a junior Finance major with an<lb/>
Accounting background. As current<lb/>
1 reasurer of Sigma Sigma Sigma Sorori-<lb/>
ty, I have to deal with ledgers, receipts,<lb/>
and disbursements in supervising the<lb/>
financial transactions of the organiza-<lb/>
lion. Through other official sorority<lb/>
positions such as director of in-<lb/>
tramurals, parlimentarian, social chair-<lb/>
man, and Executive Board and Rho<lb/>
lambda member, I feel 1 have proven a<lb/>
leadership ability.<lb/>
In not having been involved with Slu<lb/>
dent Government in the past, 1 am not as<lb/>
politically inclined as some other can-<lb/>
didates. However, 1 feel the Treasurer<lb/>
should concentrate on running the<lb/>
business end of SGA and restrict most<lb/>
political opinions to Executive Council<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
1 am sincere in wanting to work hard<lb/>
and do a good job for East Carolina<lb/>
students and would appreciate support<lb/>
on March 4th.<lb/>
ANGELA PEPE<lb/>
My name is Peggy Davison and I'm a<lb/>
candidate for SGA Vice-President. I'm a<lb/>
junior majoring in foreign language.<lb/>
I have been involved in the legislature<lb/>
since I've been at E.C.U. I was elected<lb/>
vice-president of the sophomore class,<lb/>
and then due to the resignation of the<lb/>
president, I took over. This past fall 1<lb/>
was elected Speaker of the Legislature.<lb/>
The vice-president's powers are not<lb/>
specified in the constitution; they are<lb/>
delegated by the president. My basic<lb/>
goal if elected is to make the students<lb/>
aware of what is going on at E.C.U. The<lb/>
students need to know what is going on<lb/>
here and why things are happening. 1<lb/>
don't feel like there is enough com-<lb/>
munication between the administration<lb/>
and the students, and communication is<lb/>
necessary if this University is to grow,<lb/>
not only in number but also in stature.<lb/>
PEGGY DAVISON<lb/>
I've noticed during the time period 1<lb/>
have attended E.C.U. there seems to be<lb/>
a lack of communication between the<lb/>
administration and the students.<lb/>
Everybody is aware of the recent con-<lb/>
troversy over the firing of work-study<lb/>
students and I think it is a shame that<lb/>
students weren't notified ahead of time,<lb/>
even in the private sector they give you<lb/>
more than 5 days prior notice if they are<lb/>
going to terminate your employment.<lb/>
The relationship between the city<lb/>
council and students seems to be strain-<lb/>
ed as shown by the treatment of the Kap-<lb/>
pa Deltas and the negative press students<lb/>
received during the liquor by the drink<lb/>
referendum, according to the press we're<lb/>
a campus at 13,000 alcoholics. 1 think<lb/>
it's time for the S.G.A. to exert it in-<lb/>
fluence in such matters, and 1 feel that if<lb/>
I am elected I can provide competent<lb/>
leadership within the power alloted to<lb/>
me to give students a much needed voice<lb/>
as to their special needs. 1 would ap-<lb/>
preciate your vote on March fourth and<lb/>
1 hope you join me in my desire to make<lb/>
E.C.U. as great as it should be.<lb/>
MARVIN BRAX I ON<lb/>
Little Supported<lb/>
l would like to take this opportunity<lb/>
to remind everyone who is involved with<lb/>
the Arts (whether art, music, or drama)<lb/>
that there is a candidate running for re-<lb/>
election that has been a constant and<lb/>
consistent supporter of the arts ever<lb/>
since he was in the legislature. SGA<lb/>
Treasurer Kirk Little has helped and<lb/>
supported us in the past, now it is up to<lb/>
us to help and support him on Election<lb/>
Day.<lb/>
DASHAK.EF1RD<lb/>
Senior Class Vice-Pres.<lb/>
Davison Backed<lb/>
As the present SGA Secretary and<lb/>
with three years experience in Student<lb/>
Government. 1 know SGA politics.<lb/>
There have been many times when I have<lb/>
lived and breathed nothing but Student<lb/>
Government. 1 know what it takes to<lb/>
win and more importantly, I know what<lb/>
it takes to make a leader.<lb/>
Peggy Davison is a winning leader.<lb/>
When she is elected to the office of SGA<lb/>
Nice President this week. Peggy will<lb/>
represent the students in an enthusiastic<lb/>
manner that will keep the students ot<lb/>
Fast Carolina proud.<lb/>
Peggy Davison is experienced. Twice,<lb/>
she has been elected to represent day<lb/>
students as a Day Student Represen-<lb/>
tative in the Legislature. She has served<lb/>
on the Rules and Judiciary Committee.<lb/>
Yet, most importantly Peggy Davison<lb/>
has been elected from the members of<lb/>
the legislature this year to represent<lb/>
them as their leader! Peggy has run the<lb/>
legislature this year efficiently and effec-<lb/>
tively as Speaker of the I egislature.<lb/>
In this week's race for the oifwc o<lb/>
SGA Vice President, there is NO alter-<lb/>
native. Peggy Davison is the choice for<lb/>
SGA Vice President.<lb/>
MARIANNE EDWARDS<lb/>
Junior, Business<lb/>
1 have only known Peggy Davison for<lb/>
one year but within that year I have got-<lb/>
ten to know her very well. 1 personally<lb/>
feel that her three years in the Student<lb/>
Government Association has provided<lb/>
her with the necessary knowledge of the<lb/>
duties of the SGA Vice-President. Her<lb/>
own enthusiasm and rapport in the com-<lb/>
munity gives her the best chance to serve<lb/>
the students of East Carolina University.<lb/>
I urge you, the students, to vote for<lb/>
Peggy Davison for SGA Vice-President.<lb/>
DOUGLAS R. HAMILTON<lb/>
Freshman, Business<lb/>
Sp<lb/>
( Ol I INS<lb/>
II (UPI) I<lb/>
and Di ?<lb/>
plotting<lb/>
politica<lb/>
nearly a p<lb/>
didate 1<lb/>
no: I<lb/>
usually<lb/>
but<lb/>
ot '<lb/>
defui<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
!<lb/>
Norti<lb/>
Accei<lb/>
KM EIG<lb/>
N<lb/>
Hu<lb/>
?<lb/>
tax hik<lb/>
! he re-<lb/>
position<lb/>
increase<lb/>
?<lb/>
mpsmim inwwm i?i? ?pm ?p<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0005"/><lb/>
ES<lb/>
75"<lb/>
HAMIl rON<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Spring Starts Campaigns<lb/>
! HI I MKOI IM-W VAKi H M, I9KI<lb/>
(() I 1NSV 11 1 I ,<lb/>
111. (I PI) It's spring<lb/>
and Pakin Williams is<lb/>
plotting ei another<lb/>
political campaign.<lb/>
1 he Illinois lawyer is<lb/>
nearl) a perennial can<lb/>
didate. lour times he<lb/>
lias sought the gover-<lb/>
norship and the Senate,<lb/>
usuall) as a Democrat<lb/>
but once as a member<lb/>
o! George Wallace's<lb/>
defunct American Par-<lb/>
ty, and Foui times he<lb/>
has lost.<lb/>
Bui that has not af-<lb/>
fected his humor. One<lb/>
year he ran for office<lb/>
on the back of a motor-<lb/>
cycle. Another tune he<lb/>
dragged a plastic foam<lb/>
cross around the slate<lb/>
to dramatize his op-<lb/>
position to abortion.<lb/>
During a guber-<lb/>
natorial campaign,<lb/>
Williams called a news<lb/>
conference, served te-<lb/>
quila sunrises to the<lb/>
assembled reporters<lb/>
and solemnly promised<lb/>
it elected to move the<lb/>
state Capitol to the<lb/>
Ritz-Carlton Hotel in<lb/>
Chicago. The press<lb/>
room, he said with a<lb/>
iwmkle in his eye,<lb/>
would be in the hotel's<lb/>
(losh bar.<lb/>
But that's all past,<lb/>
W illiams is going tor<lb/>
greater goals: 1 he 1984<lb/>
Democratic nomina-<lb/>
tion for president. And<lb/>
he sas he's going to<lb/>
win.<lb/>
"It (Sen Edward)<lb/>
Kenned) is m only op-<lb/>
ponent (in the New<lb/>
Hampshire primary),<lb/>
I'll have an advantage<lb/>
because the editor<lb/>
there, (William) 1 oeb,<lb/>
hates Kennedy<lb/>
Williams said gleefully.<lb/>
 T h e o n 1 y w a <lb/>
Carter could get back<lb/>
in the White House is<lb/>
b btcaking and enter-<lb/>
ing. Mondale' George<lb/>
McGovern is an exam-<lb/>
ple ot what you can do<lb/>
tunning from a small<lb/>
state<lb/>
Williams, t h e<lb/>
younger brother of<lb/>
playwright rennessee<lb/>
W illiams, plans to cam-<lb/>
paign on what he calls<lb/>
the "no sweat" plat-<lb/>
torm.<lb/>
1 he 62-year-old<lb/>
lawyer speaks Chinese<lb/>
and said Americans can<lb/>
learn much from studv-<lb/>
ing Oriental customs.<lb/>
"One of the reasons<lb/>
Chinese don't have<lb/>
problems Americans<lb/>
have, such as ulcers and<lb/>
high blood pressure, is<lb/>
that they have mei yo<lb/>
guan chi Williams<lb/>
said. "It means 'no<lb/>
sweat' in our transla-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Williams said disar-<lb/>
mament would be the<lb/>
"hallmark" ot his ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
"In other words,<lb/>
we're going to make<lb/>
love, not war he said.<lb/>
"The Russians are in a<lb/>
position where they<lb/>
can't afford both bread<lb/>
and bullets. As presi-<lb/>
dent, I would go to<lb/>
Russia and put the<lb/>
cards on the table: 'I'll<lb/>
make a deal with you.<lb/>
We'll throw our arms<lb/>
in the river, or lake, if<lb/>
you do the same<lb/>
thine<lb/>
Despite his tormer<lb/>
affiliation with the con<lb/>
servative American<lb/>
Party, Williams said<lb/>
the current political<lb/>
climate requires that he<lb/>
be more liberal.<lb/>
"I'll be an aging<lb/>
flower child in this<lb/>
campaign he said.<lb/>
"I'll be a lot more<lb/>
liberal. It's not going to<lb/>
be a dull campaign it<lb/>
I'm in it<lb/>
Program Helps Junkies'<lb/>
CHICAGO (UPI) ? At the age<lb/>
of 11. Monica Pencz and David<lb/>
Kahn were addicts. They spent most<lb/>
of their waking hours satisfying a<lb/>
habit in front of a glowing box.<lb/>
Television had taken control ot<lb/>
their lives so that the youngsters<lb/>
could not stop themselves from<lb/>
automatically switching on the set.<lb/>
But with the help ot a new<lb/>
psychology program at DePaul<lb/>
University, Monica, David and<lb/>
doens of other children ? all of<lb/>
them television junkies ? have been<lb/>
able to get rid of the habit that once<lb/>
ruled their world.<lb/>
"I couldn't get away from it<lb/>
recalled Monica, who once watched<lb/>
at least five hours of TV daily. "My<lb/>
homework wasn't getting done. I<lb/>
just torgot about all my friends<lb/>
Said David, a 10-hour-a-dav ad-<lb/>
dict, "Once I got hooked on it. I<lb/>
couldn't get oft. I just watched any<lb/>
show<lb/>
David and Monica now watch an<lb/>
average of no more than three hours<lb/>
oi TV daily. Some days they don't<lb/>
watch any. By the end of the DePaul<lb/>
program, the children should be<lb/>
watching no more than two hours of<lb/>
TV on weekdavs, and three hours<lb/>
on weekends.<lb/>
North Carolinians<lb/>
Accept Increase<lb/>
RALEIGH (UPI)<lb/>
N o r 1 h Caroli ni a n s<lb/>
responding to a poll<lb/>
would accept a small<lb/>
increase in the gasoline<lb/>
rax or other taxes if<lb/>
persuaded it w a s<lb/>
necessarv to maintain<lb/>
the state's highways,<lb/>
Ciov. James B. Hunt Jr<lb/>
saj s.<lb/>
Hunt sard Sundav he<lb/>
commissioned a poll<lb/>
earlier this month to<lb/>
gauge the public's<lb/>
views on declining<lb/>
highway revenues, and<lb/>
denied reports the<lb/>
survey found over-<lb/>
whelming opposition to<lb/>
rax hikes.<lb/>
1 he poll showed op-<lb/>
position to a "steep"<lb/>
increase in gasoline<lb/>
taxes, but acceptance<lb/>
o a small increase it<lb/>
necessary. Hunt said in<lb/>
a prepared statement.<lb/>
He did not sav how<lb/>
much of an increase<lb/>
would be acceptable.<lb/>
The Greensboro Dai-<lb/>
lv News said Sunday<lb/>
the poll conducted<lb/>
earlier this month<lb/>
showed residents want<lb/>
highways maintained,<lb/>
but do not want to pay<lb/>
higher gasoline taxes.<lb/>
The new paper said<lb/>
sources revealed the<lb/>
poll results.<lb/>
"The poll shows that<lb/>
people are opposed to a<lb/>
sleep increase in<lb/>
gasoline taxes, but they<lb/>
are willing to pay some<lb/>
additional taxes it they<lb/>
are convinced it is<lb/>
necessarv Hunt said.<lb/>
PRESENTING<lb/>
THE GREENVILLE JAYCEES<lb/>
SPRING BEACH MUSIC<lb/>
uR.no FESTIVAL<lb/>
THE FABULOUS<lb/>
a<lb/>
EMBERS<lb/>
1)<lb/>
THE ORIGIN A L<lb/>
DRIFTERS<lb/>
1)<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
APRIL 12 1-5 P.M.<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
NEW CAROLINA WAREHOUSE<lb/>
ON CHARLES ST. NEXT TO<lb/>
MINGESCOLISEUM<lb/>
$6 ADVANCE TICKETS $8 GATE ADMISSION<lb/>
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE CENTRAL TICKET OFF ICE<lb/>
TICKETS SPONSORED BY MCDONALD'S<lb/>
BEVERAGES AVAILABLE ON PREMISES<lb/>
NO CANS OR GLASS ALLOWED<lb/>
GATESOPEN<lb/>
AT 11:00 A.M.<lb/>
RAIN OR SHINE!<lb/>
I<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale at or<lb/>
below the advertised price in each A&amp;P Store, except as specifically noted<lb/>
in this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT APRIL 4 AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE. N C<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL<lb/>
DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
f l&amp;P QUALITY 10 TO 14 LB. AVG. WT<lb/>
Butter Basted<lb/>
 Turkeys<lb/>
Built In Pop Up<lb/>
Timer In Every<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
68?<lb/>
AAP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Whole Bottom &amp;<lb/>
Eye Round<lb/>
T79<lb/>
Cut Free Into Steaks.<lb/>
Roast and Trimmings<lb/>
EXTRA LEAN SPECIAL TRIM COUNTRY FARM PORK<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Pork Roast<lb/>
Boston<lb/>
Butt lb.<lb/>
1"<lb/>
MARKET STYLE<lb/>
Sliced Bacon<lb/>
QQC<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Ill<lb/>
JAMESTOWN<lb/>
Pork Sausage<lb/>
Hot<lb/>
or 1 lb.<lb/>
Mild pkg.<lb/>
77c<lb/>
EXTRA LEAN SPECIAL TRIM COUNTRY FARM PORK<lb/>
Pork Chops<lb/>
Combination AQ<lb/>
8 Lbs. Pk9' lOO<lb/>
Or More<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS<lb/>
1 Fryer Quarters<lb/>
QQC<lb/>
Breast Or<lb/>
 LegQtrs.<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Ill<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
Soft Drinks<lb/>
89c<lb/>
2 liter<lb/>
plastic btl<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
Regular<lb/>
or 8oz.<lb/>
Rippled twin<lb/>
PLAIN-SELF-RISING<lb/>
Pillsbury Flour<lb/>
5 a 79?<lb/>
DEXO PURE VEGETABLE<lb/>
Shortening<lb/>
3 1<lb/>
M0 can<lb/>
49<lb/>
Save<lb/>
40c<lb/>
IN QUARTERS<lb/>
Mrs. Filberts<lb/>
Margarine g Klfl<lb/>
Save 54 A ,w "UU<lb/>
on 2<lb/>
2 1<lb/>
?M pkqs.<lb/>
GRADE A" WHITE<lb/>
Large Eggs<lb/>
dozen<lb/>
only<lb/>
69<lb/>
c<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
12 LowfarMilk<lb/>
Gal. Jug<lb/>
1<lb/>
75<lb/>
IDATREAT FROZEN<lb/>
Shoestring Potatoes<lb/>
3 0.100<lb/>
OUR OWN<lb/>
Tea Bags<lb/>
Hearty &amp; Vigorous<lb/>
100<lb/>
ct.<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
129<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
Eight O'Clock<lb/>
Bean<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
1-lb.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
89<lb/>
GREAT VALUE'<lb/>
Tony Dog Food<lb/>
5 100<lb/>
15'oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
ASSORTED ? DECORATED<lb/>
Soft N Pretty<lb/>
Bath<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
4 99<lb/>
c<lb/>
-?L&amp;B?r<lb/>
Dole Golden<lb/>
Bananas 3<lb/>
SUNKIST GROWN SWEET JUICY V-M&amp;fIRST OF THE SEASON?FRESH<lb/>
Navel Oranges jRV Asparagus<lb/>
Large 88 Size 15?<lb/>
Sunkist<lb/>
Save<lb/>
40 lb.<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
99<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0006"/><lb/>
II EAST -KI IM-n<lb/>
MARCH 31. m<lb/>
L?flli0j06 fifrXJT C0LL?tt Ttif HfaP lAMf<lb/>
5S OAviO h)oti$<lb/>
IV<lb/>
?mln I heatre on<lb/>
; entral fickel Of-<lb/>
y<lb/>
ent<lb/>
A<lb/>
m.<lb/>
he<lb/>
in-<lb/>
ra!<lb/>
flftS<lb/>
 'Hip ? usband.<lb/>
je's real name?<lb/>
? Hawkeye, what<lb/>
from?<lb/>
1 ed to Henrv Blake<lb/>
?red home?<lb/>
psychiatrist who<lb/>
is the MASH unit<lb/>
? pane 8. col. 1<lb/>
IT TH?T ?hfiT<lb/>
FipiY might!<lb/>
YOU FKIDA1 AJIGHT.<lb/>
! OOrOr (L?rt?tbEfl- MUCH<lb/>
AfccXTT THtT PNTTI, so Vn<lb/>
CTieap Trick Hit<lb/>
ime<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
rock &amp; roll; raw. loud<lb/>
guitar (one offset by<lb/>
witt songs and ar-<lb/>
rangements. Critics lik-<lb/>
ed Cheap 1 nek's in-<lb/>
telligent rock &amp; roll,<lb/>
but the album never<lb/>
found its audience. Too<lb/>
smart for Kiss fans, too<lb/>
loud tor AOk. Cheap<lb/>
Trick sold about<lb/>
150,000 copies.<lb/>
Barel) six months<lb/>
later. Cheap 1 rick tried<lb/>
again, this lime with<lb/>
1 pic staff producer<lb/>
I om erman. In Col-<lb/>
or had a cleaner, pop-<lb/>
oriented sound; W er-<lb/>
man turned down the<lb/>
guitar and brought the<lb/>
melod up front.<lb/>
Around this time,<lb/>
reviewers began mak<lb/>
ing Be a t le s - C h e a p<lb/>
Trick comparisons. In<lb/>
Color sold slightly bel-<lb/>
ter than the first I P.<lb/>
but not enough to make<lb/>
a difference. Mean-<lb/>
while. Cheap 1 rick was<lb/>
performing, according<lb/>
to Ken daman. an<lb/>
average ol 250 one-<lb/>
nighters a year, open-<lb/>
ing for Kiss, the Kinks,<lb/>
Santana and Boston.<lb/>
Maybe American<lb/>
didn't lump on Cheap<lb/>
Trick's bandwagon,<lb/>
but 6,000 miles away,<lb/>
Cheap Trick mama was<lb/>
in full force. "Clock<lb/>
Strikes Ten from In<lb/>
Color, reached Number<lb/>
One on the Japanese<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
Week<lb/>
Planned<lb/>
charts, followed b "1<lb/>
Want You to Want<lb/>
Me The press, more<lb/>
influential in Japan<lb/>
than in the U.S. made<lb/>
Cheap Trick its darl-<lb/>
ings. Two months after<lb/>
the release of In Color,<lb/>
the major Japanese<lb/>
music magazines began<lb/>
clamoring for inter-<lb/>
views.<lb/>
Ihe break-through,<lb/>
when it came, surprised<lb/>
everyone. Cheap Trick<lb/>
had recorded two per-<lb/>
formances from the<lb/>
tour in Osaka and<lb/>
lokyo and released a<lb/>
record called Cheap<lb/>
I rick I ive at Budokan<lb/>
for the Japanese<lb/>
market. It was a rough.<lb/>
hastily prepared recor-<lb/>
ding ("Some o the<lb/>
songs Zander<lb/>
remembers, "were<lb/>
single takes), but it<lb/>
contained the best<lb/>
songs from the three<lb/>
studio albums. Import<lb/>
copies sold so briskly in<lb/>
the I .S. that Epic rush-<lb/>
ed it out and later<lb/>
released a live version<lb/>
oi "I Want You to<lb/>
Want Me Budokan is<lb/>
now just shy of the<lb/>
platinum mark, "1<lb/>
Want You" is rising on<lb/>
the charts, and Cheap<lb/>
Trick's completed<lb/>
studio UP, Dream<lb/>
Police, is being held<lb/>
back until Budokan's<lb/>
popularity fades.<lb/>
Thanks to Budokan,<lb/>
Cheap Trick is now a<lb/>
major U.S. concert at-<lb/>
traction; their spring-<lb/>
summer tour of large<lb/>
halls and stadiums is<lb/>
their first full tour as a<lb/>
headline act.<lb/>
It's ironic thai Cheap<lb/>
Trick should get their<lb/>
first big hit by fluke;<lb/>
from the beginning,<lb/>
very little in their career<lb/>
has been left to chance.<lb/>
They've toured in-<lb/>
cessantly, created four<lb/>
quirky, distinct per-<lb/>
son as and have<lb/>
marketed themselves<lb/>
with savvy. The Cheap<lb/>
Trick logo, a bleeding<lb/>
typeface designed by<lb/>
Peterson with the help<lb/>
of artist friend<lb/>
Christopher Crowe,<lb/>
adorns everything from<lb/>
album covers to<lb/>
underwear crotches. A<lb/>
Chicago-based writer<lb/>
remembers seeing logo<lb/>
stickers in every<lb/>
tollbooth on the<lb/>
Chicago-to-Rock ford<lb/>
portion of Interstate 95<lb/>
as early as 1975.<lb/>
"Everywhere, people<lb/>
were saying, 'Who are<lb/>
these guvs?'<lb/>
"Isn't it much more<lb/>
interesting this way?"<lb/>
Rick asked me last<lb/>
year, after I'd inter-<lb/>
viewed him for a half-<lb/>
hour and gotten a half-<lb/>
hour of quick quips,<lb/>
fantastic fibs and not-<lb/>
so-serious stores.<lb/>
1 had to agree. As<lb/>
every performer<lb/>
knows, the best way to<lb/>
keep them entertained<lb/>
is to keep them guess-<lb/>
ing. Cheap Trick does<lb/>
the Kiss routine one<lb/>
better: they don't need<lb/>
the makeup. Music,<lb/>
marketing, a carefully<lb/>
crafted image ? it all<lb/>
adds up to one smart,<lb/>
irresistible rock &amp; roll<lb/>
package.<lb/>
But who are these<lb/>
buvs?<lb/>
ECU Playhouse<lb/>
To Present 'Caesar'<lb/>
A number of events<lb/>
are scheduled this week<lb/>
as part ol Creek Week,<lb/>
lie Interfratermty<lb/>
t ouncil Banquet is<lb/>
scheduled for 00 p.m.<lb/>
Tuesday, March 31.<lb/>
The Sigma Tau Cam-<lb/>
ma Tug-O-War is plan-<lb/>
ned for 2-8 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday, April 1.<lb/>
This event is spon-<lb/>
sored b Miller Brew-<lb/>
ing Company.<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma<lb/>
"Tunk Naussau" par-<lb/>
ty begins at the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma House at 3:30<lb/>
p.m. on April 2.<lb/>
Among the events is a<lb/>
chugging competition<lb/>
tor" sororities and<lb/>
fraternities.<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
??Spring Fling 'HI" will<lb/>
be held at the Phi Kap-<lb/>
pa Tau house on Fri-<lb/>
day, April 3. from<lb/>
3:00-6:30 p.m. It's an<lb/>
all-campus event with<lb/>
kegs o beer and music.<lb/>
The annual Moser's<lb/>
farm event will top oil<lb/>
the week on April 4.<lb/>
Open to all fraternity<lb/>
and sorority members,<lb/>
Moser's I arm keg par-<lb/>
ty is sponsored by the<lb/>
FC and Pan-Hellenic<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
play that shows what happens when<lb/>
personal judgment tries to move ex-<lb/>
clusively on a political plane, where<lb/>
issues are simplified and distorted.<lb/>
"Julius Caesar" clearly points<lb/>
out how men come to deliver<lb/>
themselves to illusion and how they<lb/>
construct for themselves a world in<lb/>
which they inevitably come to<lb/>
disaster<lb/>
Even though the ECU production<lb/>
will be a unique presentation of the<lb/>
drama, it will retain the original<lb/>
language and make no specific<lb/>
political references.<lb/>
Playhouse General Manager Scott<lb/>
Parker commented that the<lb/>
"excitement" the production has<lb/>
generated around eastern North<lb/>
Carolina "has been wonderful<lb/>
"We will have nearly 2,000 high<lb/>
school students bused in from as far<lb/>
away as Raleigh and Elizabeth Ci-<lb/>
ty he said.<lb/>
Tickets are available for all even-<lb/>
ing performances and will go on sale<lb/>
Monday, March 30, at the ECU<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, telephone<lb/>
757-6390.<lb/>
r<lb/>
BENNIES<lb/>
CITCO<lb/>
WRECKER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Front End<lb/>
Atfrtmtwt<lb/>
All Ty?M o<lb/>
Awl RMir<lb/>
Ffttm A Pfnwtk<lb/>
ftMMMW ???<lb/>
JWI IWItrn'<lb/>
Phont 7M-43M<lb/>
ATTIC ATiTIC<lb/>
Souths No. 6<lb/>
Rock Nightclub<lb/>
WED. - NO<lb/>
VACANCY<lb/>
THURS. -<lb/>
CONTROL GROUP<lb/>
(All College Hill<lb/>
Residents - FREE<lb/>
Admission)<lb/>
Taco Bell<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Special<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Monday P,us tax<lb/>
Enchirito, Bean Burrito - Small Drink<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Burrito Surpreme, Tostada - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Beefy Tostada, Taco -Small Drink<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Beef Burrito, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Combo Burrito, Taco - Small Drink<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Two Taco Surpremes - Small Drink<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Two Tacos, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
MARVIN BRAXTON<lb/>
SG A V1CE-PRES1DEN T<lb/>
April 1,1981<lb/>
VOTE FOR EXPERIENCE<lb/>
RE-ELECT<lb/>
KIRK LITTLE<lb/>
SGA TREASURER<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
FIRST<lb/>
tr <lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0007"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
l HI I SI C ROl INI N<lb/>
M-XKl'H H, 11<lb/>
Honors Its Heritage<lb/>
coupon<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
tieers who have completed master<lb/>
degree programs in a variety oi cur<lb/>
riculums, as well as professional<lb/>
military courses, including academic<lb/>
instructor training designed to<lb/>
prepare them for the college en-<lb/>
vironment.<lb/>
Selection of instructors is based<lb/>
not only on academic status, but<lb/>
also takes into the consideration the<lb/>
diversity of previous assignments.<lb/>
For example, Majoi Billy D.<lb/>
Tudor, an Assistant Professor, has<lb/>
accumulated more than 5,000 hours<lb/>
of thing in various aircraft, some Ol<lb/>
which circled the globe and visited<lb/>
more than 30 countries. He has sen<lb/>
ed at Headquarters Air Force Man-<lb/>
power and Personnel Center where<lb/>
he vsas responsible tor the assign-<lb/>
ment of 17,000 officers. Major<lb/>
rudor also has 238 combat hours in<lb/>
Vietnam as an u Commando.<lb/>
Lieutenant Colonel James (<lb/>
lhomas. Chairman of the<lb/>
-erospace Studies Department, has<lb/>
fourteen vears experience on the<lb/>
faculty at the Air Force Academy<lb/>
where he was a tenured professor.<lb/>
Other staff members have similar-<lb/>
ly varied backgrounds in missiles<lb/>
and security police.<lb/>
I he Air Force provides more than<lb/>
6 000 scholarships to college<lb/>
students in the ROTC program,<lb/>
c adets can compete for tour<lb/>
three and two-year scholarships,<lb/>
with the majority going to those<lb/>
students majoring in math, physics,<lb/>
computer science, or business ad-<lb/>
ministration with a concentration in<lb/>
qualitative methods. Cadets on<lb/>
scholarship and all POC cadets<lb/>
receive $100 per month tax tree.<lb/>
Dunne the last decade some im-<lb/>
portant people-related<lb/>
developments have occurred in the<lb/>
AFROTC program at ECU. For ex-<lb/>
ample, enrollment of minority<lb/>
cadets has increased to 37 percent.<lb/>
and since 1969 when the Air Force<lb/>
opened ROTC to women, the<lb/>
number of females enrolled and<lb/>
commissioned through the<lb/>
AFROTC program has steadily in-<lb/>
creased.<lb/>
What does all this mean? It means<lb/>
that AFROTC is an integral part of<lb/>
campus and community life, and the<lb/>
curriculum is closely related to the<lb/>
needs of today's society. And from<lb/>
the looks of things in LCU's<lb/>
Detachment 600, AFROTC is facing<lb/>
up to the challenges of the 80's.<lb/>
OF1M 1? HOUtl<lb/>
Wholesale &amp; Retail<lb/>
Ice Sales<lb/>
SPECIAL REG OQ<lb/>
i-LB BAG W 3<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
EKpif?iApr?M.1981<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
$fe<lb/>
JB33HJ<lb/>
Student Publishes Review<lb/>
TV Trivia Quiz<lb/>
For 'MASH' Fans<lb/>
A book review by<lb/>
Chad Buffkin of<lb/>
Whiteville, an East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
student, appears in a<lb/>
recent issue of<lb/>
"Challenge a journal<lb/>
published by the U.S.<lb/>
Department of Hous-<lb/>
ing and Urban<lb/>
Development.<lb/>
Buffkin's review<lb/>
discusses Bruce C.<lb/>
Vadeck's "Unloving<lb/>
Care: The Nursing<lb/>
Home Tragedy The<lb/>
published version of<lb/>
Buffin's review evolved<lb/>
from a class assignment<lb/>
in an ECU English class<lb/>
in advanced writing for<lb/>
business and industry<lb/>
taught by Dr. Bertie<lb/>
Fearing.<lb/>
At the time his<lb/>
review went to press,<lb/>
Buffkin was working as<lb/>
a H.U.D. writer intern,<lb/>
under sponsorship of<lb/>
the ECU Office of<lb/>
Cooperative Educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Now enrolled on<lb/>
campus as a full-time<lb/>
student, Buffkin is a<lb/>
candidate for the<lb/>
bachelor's degree in<lb/>
English with a concen-<lb/>
tration in technical<lb/>
writing.<lb/>
TUES w - r<lb/>
MARCH 31 ?,? V<lb/>
the . n pCV<lb/>
IF YOU<lb/>
COME BEFORE 10:30 AND WEAR<lb/>
3 OR MORE BUTTONS - ADMIS-<lb/>
SION $1.00 - PRIZES FOR MOST<lb/>
ORIGINAL BUTTONS<lb/>
<lb/>
J<lb/>
t<lb/>
Buffet Specials AH You Can Eat<lb/>
'IKECROS<lb/>
hJ<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
9. What document does Klinger<lb/>
really want?<lb/>
10. Who runs the Korean bar that<lb/>
MASH members go to?<lb/>
11. Which member of the MASH<lb/>
unit is of Lebanese ancestry?<lb/>
12. What strange device does Col.<lb/>
Flagg, the fanatical intelligence of-<lb/>
fice, have implanted in his throat?<lb/>
13. Name the tent inhabited by<lb/>
Hawkeve and, at one time or<lb/>
another. Trapper, B.J Frank and<lb/>
Mai. Winchester.<lb/>
14. Who in the radio operator<lb/>
often spoken to b Radar?<lb/>
15. What is Major Winchester's<lb/>
full name?<lb/>
16. Name Col. Potter's hobb.<lb/>
17. Name the MASH theme song.<lb/>
18. Who wrote the original<lb/>
"MASH" novel?<lb/>
19. What was Klingers' vote's<lb/>
name?<lb/>
20. What town is Frank Burns<lb/>
from?<lb/>
Trivia Quiz Answers<lb/>
pr;q siqi ajeos pno? aBj-pJjaj<lb/>
B uo :p3JJO? J3M3J jo i isi siq<lb/>
uo oiufu jno. smi S3eH oj m<lb/>
ipnui os HSV1 MiUOt au.1 ?noclB<lb/>
lore wous no a : p3.no: p- Pu!1<lb/>
isauij : po.no: 3-ioui jo cj :sjods<lb/>
EUBipUJ '3UB JH<lb/>
(: 3UJ3AB1 61 ?5OOH P-lBlp'y '81<lb/>
.ssohhbj si appins 'LI 8uuured<lb/>
'l) (Jl J31S3lpUl. UOSJ3U13 S3JElO<lb/>
?g NNurds "tl duties oqi<lb/>
?? unjp pS iouubo 3q os joqo3rB<lb/>
sirjinru Bqi MlA3p V Z J3UI<lb/>
IN 11 IS?1 01 J3dcd 38jretpstp<lb/>
X uoipas V '6 uciupaajj aupis '8<lb/>
UB3DO 3U.1 I3AO UMOp loqs SBM 0URd<lb/>
siq u?qv poqii sew an L ?u?W<lb/>
po3iddrjqej.o 9 33J3td uinuEJ-j<lb/>
uuuBfusa "$ uo3sqou3d Pluoci<lb/>
103 n t 33d E aBJ j3JJ3-i z<lb/>
EidsoH pKMSms uijv 3imv ? 1<lb/>
MonFri.<lb/>
MonTues.<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
11:30 - 2:00 Soup-Salad-Pizza<lb/>
6:00 - 8:30 Soup-Salad-Pizza<lb/>
12:00 - 2:00 SpagSalad Pizza<lb/>
Wednesday Spaghetti Day 11:00 - 11:00<lb/>
Spaghetti-Toast Coffee or Tea<lb/>
All You Can Eat $2.49<lb/>
Coming, Sun April 5th<lb/>
In Concert<lb/>
Thursday Lasagna Day 11:00-11:00<lb/>
Buy One Lasagna At Regular Price Get<lb/>
Second One For A Dollar<lb/>
Phone 758-6266<lb/>
1840 E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Advance Tickets 5<lb/>
Tickets available at:<lb/>
Western Pleasure<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
COH<lb/>
Doors open: 7:15-8:00 p.m.<lb/>
or advance ticket holder<lb/>
00<lb/>
ALWAYS FRESH<lb/>
DAIRY FOOD<lb/>
1<lb/>
Home of Greenville's Best Meats'<lb/>
Clip This Coupon<lb/>
l<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Heavy Western Sirloin<lb/>
or T-Bone Steaks<lb/>
$1 89<lb/>
? i<lb/>
ScotTowels Paper<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
48<lb/>
Gt. Roll with this coupon and $7.50<lb/>
food order<lb/>
69 C<lb/>
Limit one roll per customer.<lb/>
Without Coupon W J? JTHKLtffLJ<lb/>
i ? ? ??- ? ?? ? <lb/>
Overton's Finest Full Cut<lb/>
Round Steak<lb/>
$179<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Pepsi or<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
98<lb/>
7 Liter Bottle<lb/>
Limit 4<lb/>
ll ??<lb/>
Pride of the Farm<lb/>
Gwaltney<lb/>
Franks<lb/>
12 Oi Pkg.<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
99<lb/>
Cream Corn 303can<lb/>
Garden Peas<lb/>
Little DarlirT Cut<lb/>
Green Beans<lb/>
303 can<lb/>
3M<lb/>
Grade 'A<lb/>
1 Lb Hot or<lb/>
Kraft<lb/>
Jumbo Eggs<lb/>
78C<lb/>
Dozen<lb/>
Macaroni &amp;<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Generic Frozen<lb/>
Chicken or Turkey<lb/>
Pot Pies<lb/>
4l<lb/>
8 0z.<lb/>
La<lb/>
H Uil I I M<lb/>
It<lb/>
dowi<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
prou<lb/>
led r<lb/>
i<lb/>
"I<lb/>
H<lb/>
Coad<lb/>
Upse<lb/>
Show<lb/>
Bv MI 1 I M<lb/>
V<lb/>
you'd<lb/>
"VV?<lb/>
weekend<lb/>
the Pii<lb/>
was ven<lb/>
guy<lb/>
The B<lb/>
?<lb/>
ed in a ? '<lb/>
ven <lb/>
run;<lb/>
?<lb/>
"C ep<lb/>
( ?<lb/>
enougl<lb/>
4 20<lb/>
pa<lb/>
Yi<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0008"/><lb/>
c<lb/>
is<lb/>
)0<lb/>
I fcAR<lb/>
ADMIS<lb/>
? MOST<lb/>
f<lb/>
'111 ! s v ROI I SI <lb/>
Sports<lb/>
M Ki I!<lb/>
Lady Pirates Win Tourney, Now 19-2<lb/>
Bv NMl ! I 1 UIMKION<lb/>
M.I?III V <lb/>
M you k h'em knock<lb/>
dow . ? been<lb/>
Cullow ? ckend.<lb/>
 ? thai<lb/>
ral Patton<lb/>
ud, I as- arolina's 1 ady Bucs,<lb/>
led b 1 I' 1 ??; ! avis, cruised to<lb/>
v ?? V arolina In<lb/>
Bui - del siaic<lb/>
?, t w ic<lb/>
? ip<lb/>
I'n.i Davis was<lb/>
able playei in the<lb/>
is sie banged oul II<lb/>
hits in ? and w as the<lb/>
leadei in pi<lb/>
"I'd o say w - J. pretty<lb/>
Jam good rent; I eado<lb/>
 ita Dilloi w . ball really<lb/>
I, and I tee! like we are gaining<lb/>
n as the sea es on<lb/>
In 1 i iday s fii si game, tht I ady<lb/>
Pirates w hipped c atawba I" a<lb/>
l'i e runs w i<lb/>
(. y nthia<lb/>
V H<lb/>
1 ydia R<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
s<lb/>
?<lb/>
 md bs<lb/>
Coach Is<lb/>
Upset With<lb/>
Showing<lb/>
Bv Wll I lM I I BIOS<lb/>
Ute<lb/>
:<lb/>
?<lb/>
said, rt ferrinj<lb/>
Pii ates the<lb/>
I rida P<lb/>
ry<lb/>
?<lb/>
B<lb/>
-<lb/>
Kile, who had het second ol the<lb/>
afternoon. Shirley Brown and Jo<lb/>
i anda c layton each had one round<lb/>
tripper.<lb/>
Dillon sas Davis was a worth)<lb/>
choice foi most valuable player.<lb/>
"She's been really steady, she had<lb/>
an excellent at m and most ol all. she<lb/>
really thinks out there<lb/>
In the win ovei the Seahawks,<lb/>
Davis, Kile and Shepard were all<lb/>
2 $, and Humphrey notched hei<lb/>
seenth win ol the season.<lb/>
In the third game, the Hues had to<lb/>
rally with tour runs in the bottom ol<lb/>
the sixth to edge N. State, 8 5<lb/>
Rile hammered a double and drove<lb/>
in three i uns in the hard-fought eon<lb/>
test.<lb/>
Shepard also was 2-3, including a<lb/>
double, as pitchei Jeanette Roih up<lb/>
ped her reeoid to 9-1.<lb/>
In Saturday's first game, the Bui <lb/>
dow ned arc h -rival Westet n<lb/>
Carolina, 6-1.<lb/>
1 he second game proved to be a<lb/>
marathon, as the Pirates nipped<lb/>
State in a 12-inning slugfest, 14<lb/>
I he Buss svl"ed foui iuns in the<lb/>
the sixth to tie the game<lb/>
all. I he teams remained<lb/>
I until the 10th when Stale picked<lb/>
up tour more runs and tool 11-7<lb/>
 I ady Pirate ba<lb/>
?<lb/>
the inning I he Pack picked<lb/>
up one more in the top ol<lb/>
but once more -lie Pirates ca<lb/>
bat. k to tie the<lb/>
In the top hall ol the 12th,<lb/>
pieked up anothet i uri ? ! 12<lb/>
lead I he Wn came b; and<lb/>
scored two tuns in<lb/>
inning to win, ? 13<lb/>
 I his was a crucia<lb/>
Dillon said V<lb/>
we weren't gi ?ing <lb/>
showed me a lot about rls v e<lb/>
had to come ba nes,<lb/>
and out team j knu<lb/>
undei<lb/>
1 he Bucs wei lii ley<lb/>
H'ow n andiingei Rothei mel. e<lb/>
chipping in w ii h a 4-1<lb/>
h was ; het as she<lb/>
relieved M<lb/>
pieked up<lb/>
I he I ad ? I'<lb/>
W oil pack<lb/>
to captun<lb/>
Hues were le<lb/>
( la ton, eat I<lb/>
Man Powell i<lb/>
t lump<lb/>
S t a<lb/>
 .??<lb/>
11<lb/>
;<lb/>
dv<lb/>
I ady Pirate First Baseman Shirley Brown lakes ihnm<lb/>
"I rom here on out, we i take<lb/>
game ai a time e can de<lb/>
mi ben,<lb/>
?etween<lb/>
in the<lb/>
sea<lb/>
I he I ady Bucs <lb/>
tini winning<lb/>
el I Gi een I<lb/>
noon in Greenville D<lb/>
"st G is n ?? as pDv, ? ?<lb/>
Pirates, bul<lb/>
dangerous. "I<lb/>
'<lb/>
(<lb/>
rd a let-<lb/>
the ECl<lb/>
 B<lb/>
i<lb/>
??w<lb/>
- .<lb/>
babl<lb/>
.<lb/>
Comeback Pushes<lb/>
Bucs Past Fairfield<lb/>
leftl<lb/>
 bea<lb/>
Mil<lb/>
i d<lb/>
El after 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
??<lb/>
ECL Piti her Bill Wilder<lb/>
Hai<lb/>
Lady Netters Lose To<lb/>
Both Guilford, At C<lb/>
.eman lo Ha<lb/>
"?<lb/>
o lead w tici (airfield<lb/>
- k ?<lb/>
I . ans to si<lb/>
S e win push,<lb/>
lourth and 12-5 on the season I i<lb/>
ime head coach Hal Baird<lb/>
lei t bird<lb/>
 I lei dley Designated ability<lb/>
I e Zap was disappointed w i<lb/>
rd baseman loe I evellis areas<lb/>
? RBI single. "We seen;<lb/>
red on an<lb/>
ei lay (. ai i away.<lb/>
games this B<lb/>
om ol the fifth inning to was not satisfied wit<lb/>
? never play.<lb/>
d. " e executed evei al<lb/>
 mer in the fourth b Biw as well as we could draw<lb/>
w t "But he's<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
-<lb/>
travel<lb/>
<lb/>
 I j<lb/>
aw n<lb/>
me in men<lb/>
arked. "1<lb/>
e<lb/>
tve revenge in<lb/>
N . . al well<lb/>
; : ' ? " Keit h CIar 1<lb/>
: (a<lb/>
11 until<lb/>
ain.<lb/>
I<lb/>
i irl - - ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
n!he mile relay was<lb/>
d a 17<lb/>
:<lb/>
e i't<lb/>
? <lb/>
behind I i<lb/>
?  rhe Bu rai a II 19.<lb/>
 I<lb/>
' it wat<lb/>
Bucs will be<lb/>
P rung in the<lb/>
! lie sprint<lb/>
le iela<lb/>
BvM)I( I M I III s<lb/>
?<lb/>
1 asi : a's l v<lb/>
team had a busy schedule lasi week.<lb/>
playing two top Division II teams<lb/>
and one I )iv ision 1 team.<lb/>
ruesday, the Lady Netters met<lb/>
Guilford ollege, last year' -<lb/>
) ision 11 ruunei -up. As was ?<lb/>
peeled, Guilford took the match,<lb/>
lefferys, the number foui<lb/>
single's player, lock the only win.<lb/>
The match was played indoors,<lb/>
which was quite a change for ECl .<lb/>
"It was dil ficull tor oui players to<lb/>
adapt. " d oac h aroline<lb/>
Brown " e didn't adapt as quickly<lb/>
as would've liked us to<lb/>
1 hui sday. the team played<lb/>
theii first home meet ol the<lb/>
nsi Atlantichristianollege.<lb/>
ECl fell to c. 4 "We were<lb/>
down 4 2 al the end ol the singles<lb/>
said Brown " I his put us in a dil<lb/>
i 'ii. V e should have been<lb/>
easi 3 J<lb/>
In order to win, the I ady Netters<lb/>
?<lb/>
second<lb/>
? I<lb/>
 <lb/>
w et<lb/>
?-aid ?<lb/>
WOI<lb/>
rracey I<lb/>
won <lb/>
ee doul <lb/>
au let!<lb/>
"Is<lb/>
progran assessment<lb/>
s.ud Bi ? V. e wei<lb/>
expectations. 1 really I<lb/>
w e<lb/>
State due to<lb/>
periences<lb/>
rhe Ead<lb/>
( ollege edi<lb/>
match. 1 hen on Satui<lb/>
Davidson (<lb/>
son was last yeat 's D 11<lb/>
C h a m p<lb/>
ECU Assistant Football Coach lerry Lewis Drills Players During Spring Practice<lb/>
Indiana Wins<lb/>
Game Nearly Cancelled<lb/>
PHII ,)1 1 PHI il PI) On a night<lb/>
ive belonged to Indiana,<lb/>
ketball was ihe least ol the nation's con<lb/>
cerns.<lb/>
In a game nearly postponed because ol<lb/>
?n attempt on President Reagan,<lb/>
V erica guard Isiah rhomas scored 23<lb/>
points and Indiana, a team toughened to<lb/>
rnament pressure, won the N cham<lb/>
nship Monday night with a 63 50 vict<lb/>
ovei Northarolina. rhomas, who scored<lb/>
IS points in the second half, was named the<lb/>
tournament's Most v aluable Playei<lb/>
Ordinarily the premier spectacle in college<lb/>
spoi is. (he title .name lost much ol its edge in<lb/>
?: the shooting ol Presideni Reagan.<lb/>
I he stat i ol the game was in doubt until 30<lb/>
utes before tipoff. Wayne Duke, Chaii<lb/>
man ol the N Basketball Committee,<lb/>
then announced the game would proceed as<lb/>
eduled.<lb/>
"Based upon reports we have obtained in<lb/>
pas! several minutes Wayne s.ud. "we<lb/>
have decided to proceed as planned with the<lb/>
mpionship game. 1 he two coaches ol the<lb/>
competing teams were consulted separate<lb/>
ly<lb/>
Duke met with N Presideni Iim<lb/>
Prank, N Secretary rreasurei lohn<lb/>
roner, and the presidents, athletic directors<lb/>
ind faculty representatives ot both schools<lb/>
as well as Athletic c oas;onference (. om<lb/>
missionei Mob lames.<lb/>
Duke said NBC, which televised the game<lb/>
io a viewing audience ol about 50 million,<lb/>
did no lak : part in the final decision.<lb/>
Before the start of the game, Dr. Donald<lb/>
I uh ve a prayei before the sellout<lb/>
crowd ai Ihe Spectrum. A moment ot<lb/>
silence followed. In the consolation game.<lb/>
Jcfl I amp scored 2 points and I ee Rakei<lb/>
ovei 1 ouisiat  S a<lb/>
Did lid tin ag<lb/>
ed a<lb/>
the 1<lb/>
1 ? v i! ?<lb/>
site ol theii<lb/>
now<lb/>
title sea<lb/>
comii<lb/>
" 1 nev ei<lb/>
V<lb/>
was 11' y ii didn't - ughi we<lb/>
migl<lb/>
hune<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
and l hey a first two minu<lb/>
did S<lb/>
day<lb/>
Die 1<lb/>
for Coa i <lb/>
short six tin he 1 inal i yi Smith<lb/>
look<lb/>
' 11 omas' sec hall pei I ? ?i mani e<lb/>
(7-ol lit tto Heldi wa<lb/>
Sum ii said "It diana' vt as vei a<lb/>
live. I don' - we played as well as we<lb/>
lid but I'm very<lb/>
Indiana w i<lb/>
In light of i v- on,<lb/>
Smith said he as unsure is ol the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"We did: - w we were goii play<lb/>
foi su;e urn it v  he said.<lb/>
"It was<lb/>
Rea ????<lb/>
hospital and<lb/>
repoi ledly I ' his den<lb/>
tois which read: "All in ail, I'd rathct be in<lb/>
Philadelphia<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0009"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
Last Pins Fall<lb/>
CO-REC BOWLING<lb/>
Co-Rcc Bowling drew to a finish Sunday,<lb/>
March 2. tight teams participated in the<lb/>
playoffs from a division total of 24. These<lb/>
teams were chosen based on their respective<lb/>
records during regular season play.<lb/>
Results from the first round included a 4-0<lb/>
sweep bv "BOPARASM" over<lb/>
"ASSORTED NUTS RICHARD PAR<lb/>
RISH led his team with a fine 470 series. 1 he<lb/>
?'Misfits" triumphed b a 3-1 score over<lb/>
?AVHd Bunch I BOBBY JONES rolled a<lb/>
458 and LARUE YOUNG had a 389 series to<lb/>
secure the victory.<lb/>
Other first round scores included a 4-0<lb/>
sweep for the "Rolling Rocks" oveT the<lb/>
??Strikers" and a 3-1 victory by "BSU" over<lb/>
??Bolton's Pin Busters<lb/>
The semi-final round again saw the Rocks<lb/>
and Misfits score wins. JUDY GODDARD<lb/>
rolled a fine 451 series to lead the Rolling<lb/>
Rocks She receded able support from team-<lb/>
mates CHUCK Hll 1 . BUZZ CHADWICK<lb/>
and SUSIE BO D. JEFF WAGSTAFF and<lb/>
1 ICE H1NHS led the misfits over BSU in<lb/>
the other semi-final match. WAGSTAFF<lb/>
bowled a 505 series while HINFS had a 362.<lb/>
In the finals it proved difficult for either<lb/>
the Misfits or the Rolling Rocks to gain<lb/>
much of an advantage. After the Rocks won<lb/>
the first game by 65 pins, the Misfits' came<lb/>
hack to win the second game by 75 pins.<lb/>
1M Sports 'N' Shorts<lb/>
By Dwayne Grooms<lb/>
?and?<lb/>
Gregg Melton<lb/>
Therefore, going into the final game only 10<lb/>
pins separated the two teams.<lb/>
Both teams bowled superbly and only a<lb/>
big 10th frame by the Misfits assured the vic-<lb/>
tors bv 11 total pins. High scorers for the<lb/>
Misfits' were BOBBY JONES with a 464 and<lb/>
IARUE YOUNG with a 409. CHUCK<lb/>
Hll I. led the Rocks with a 430.<lb/>
The 1M Department would like to con-<lb/>
gratulate to Misfits and all the bowlers on a<lb/>
great season.<lb/>
C ROSS-CAMPl S FUN RUNS<lb/>
The ECU Intramural Department will<lb/>
sponsor two "Cross-Campus Fun Runs" on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 8, at the ECU track.<lb/>
There will be a 2.5 mile race beginning at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. and a 5 mile race starting at 5:30<lb/>
p.m. Entry blanks are available at the In-<lb/>
tramural Office and are open to all ECU<lb/>
students, faculty, staff and alumni.<lb/>
Lady Pirates Send Four<lb/>
MAI<lb/>
HEWS<lb/>
CANDICE<lb/>
M?fl ttnln<lb/>
Competing in less<lb/>
than perfect weather<lb/>
conditions, ECl 's<lb/>
A1AW track team senl<lb/>
four people to the<lb/>
finals m the Universit)<lb/>
of Virginia 1 in na-<lb/>
tionals l-rida.<lb/>
All three freshmen<lb/>
advanced to the finals<lb/>
in their eents. Carolyn<lb/>
Moore won her heat in<lb/>
the 200. taking seventh<lb/>
m the finals. Felicia<lb/>
Warren took second in<lb/>
the hurdles, placing her<lb/>
in the finals. Anne<lb/>
Hariman placed sixth<lb/>
in the 400 meter<lb/>
hurdles.<lb/>
The relay team did<lb/>
not have a good day,<lb/>
missing a hand-off tor<lb/>
the second time in two<lb/>
weeks. Gwen Dancy<lb/>
advanced to the finals<lb/>
in the 100. finishing<lb/>
seventh.<lb/>
'T had wanted to see<lb/>
more this meet said<lb/>
coach 1 aurie Arrants. pionships.<lb/>
"However, considering<lb/>
the weather conditions. "We don't expect to<lb/>
I wasn't too disap- sc?" well team-wise<lb/>
pointed since we haw s"cnA a<lb/>
small team said At<lb/>
The 1 adv iracksters rants. "Instead. I'm<lb/>
travel to Raleigh this going to b<lb/>
weekend to compete in good<lb/>
the NCAIAW Cham- scores.<lb/>
n d i v idua<lb/>
iEaat (fjaroltman<lb/>
?" ?<lb/>
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P<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0010"/><lb/>
Netters Defeat Amherst<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
CLASSIFIED<lb/>
B I1M WILLIAMS<lb/>
Mall Wrllti<lb/>
1 tie ECU men's ten-<lb/>
nis team took an ex-<lb/>
pected eas victor over<lb/>
Amherst College of<lb/>
Massachusetts last Fri-<lb/>
day b a 7-2 margin.<lb/>
1 he Pirates" number<lb/>
Zengel, got the match<lb/>
started in a positive<lb/>
way with a very im-<lb/>
pressive 6-1. 6-4 victory.<lb/>
Keith played<lb/>
superbly stated head<lb/>
coach rim Ricks. "He<lb/>
simply beat his oppo-<lb/>
nent to death<lb/>
Following Zengel's<lb/>
one player, Keith win, Ted Lepper, Barry<lb/>
Buc Golfers<lb/>
Finish 10th<lb/>
In Tourney<lb/>
Parker and Steve Pet-<lb/>
lerson also won their<lb/>
singles matches to give<lb/>
the team a 4-2 lead<lb/>
entering the doubles<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
The Bucs locked up<lb/>
the victory by sweeping<lb/>
all three doubles mat-<lb/>
ches as Zengel-Parker,<lb/>
1 epoper-Norman<lb/>
Bryant and Cole King-<lb/>
Jeff Farfour all beat<lb/>
their opponents.<lb/>
The victory upped<lb/>
the Pirates' record to<lb/>
7-3 as they prepare for<lb/>
a match on Wednesday<lb/>
in Con way, South<lb/>
Carolina, against<lb/>
Coastal Carolina.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
1 c EasJ C arolina<lb/>
golf team posted a<lb/>
54-hole total of 938 to<lb/>
finish tenth in lasl<lb/>
weekend' Camp 1 e-<lb/>
jeune Invitational.<lb/>
IVw er t ul W ake<lb/>
1 oresi won the event<lb/>
with a three-day total<lb/>
of 871. 1 emple was se-<lb/>
cond at 873 while<lb/>
lames Madison finish-<lb/>
d third with an S9<lb/>
lal.<lb/>
1 he Pirates were<lb/>
playing without iheii<lb/>
lop four golfers in<lb/>
Steve I ones. Don<lb/>
Gafner, Mike Helms<lb/>
and Mike Move.<lb/>
Don Sweeting and<lb/>
Dan I aw ink were the<lb/>
top 1 CU finishers,<lb/>
each carding three-day<lb/>
totals of 230.<lb/>
Chris lucker of<lb/>
I C-Charlotte gained<lb/>
top individual honors<lb/>
for the event with a 212<lb/>
total. Wake's loin<lb/>
Knox and Temple's<lb/>
David O'Kcllv tied foi<lb/>
second at 21 5 .<lb/>
I he Pirates now gel a<lb/>
well-deserved w eek<lb/>
layoff alter playing in<lb/>
si tournaments in Five<lb/>
weeks. I he team's next<lb/>
action is m the Tar Heel<lb/>
Invitational, April<lb/>
10 12.<lb/>
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Tankard Co inc The competion is<lb/>
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Mainlenance<lb/>
(Preventive lo<lb/>
Overhaul)<lb/>
serurv dim U-d l ? Is1<lb/>
 lass Klicensed leihni-<lb/>
lian. Niudcni of Applied<lb/>
Prnsics al fr a? arolina<lb/>
( omenieleh located<lb/>
? 2 Block Offampus<lb/>
Pick-l pand Deliver<lb/>
Available<lb/>
90 l)a Warrant<lb/>
Period<lb/>
JUax- Vue.<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
option<lb/>
r?'i<lb/>
10 Discount to Students &amp; Focualty<lb/>
OVER 1,000 FRAMES TO CHOOSE FROM<lb/>
Single Vision-White Glass Lenses$19.50<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses ? White Glass$30.50<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Lenses$2fc50<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Extra$32.50<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses Photo Gray$38.50<lb/>
Soft Contact Lenses $79.95<lb/>
CLEAR-VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
OMCNVIllI M C<lb/>
MYMCIMI OU0?ANOll<lb/>
tun dim a<lb/>
IMW ITMiT<lb/>
Oron?WM (lor Only<lb/>
TM1M<lb/>
ornci ovf<lb/>
?on TN? TBWtt ??i<lb/>
? ?? ?? ?<lb/>
wttmtcf<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
Glossy or silk finish<lb/>
is available<lb/>
COME TO THE STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
FOR FAST, QUALITY PHOTO FINISHING AT<lb/>
EVERY DAY LOW PRICES<lb/>
12 exp. color film 2.99<lb/>
20 exp. color film 4-55<lb/>
24 exp. color film 5-46<lb/>
36 exp. color film 7 84<lb/>
We offer complete film processing services:<lb/>
Black &amp; White, Color Slides, Movies, Enlargements, Reprints<lb/>
Satisfaction Guaranteed<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
owned and operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
Win instant<lb/>
cash and prizes<lb/>
Play Pepsi Pay-off.<lb/>
Take it off.<lb/>
. ? ? ? . ? - I ? U I ? l<lb/>
? - ?? ' ? ? ?? i ? - ivegol<lb/>
?? ?.?? ? " <lb/>
PeDS Pd- "<lb/>
Just peel back and<lb/>
enjoy the show.<lb/>
tstopi<lb/>
COl' ? ? ? ?' '<lb/>
msl ???'<lb/>
Bonied by Pepv (-ol? Boitl.ng Co o? Greenv.n, Inc<lb/>
1809 D.ckmson Avenue. (jwvlle North Corol'no<lb/>
Under Appointment from PepsiCo Inc Purchose N V<lb/>
? ' '<lb/>
chance to win<lb/>
1<lb/>
WIN $500<lb/>
pi<lb/>
SPIRIT<lb/>
Get in the act.<lb/>
Pay Off caps<lb/>
?<lb/>
Winning crown may be<lb/>
found on 10 and '6<lb/>
ounce returnable bottles<lb/>
o Pepsi Cola, Diet Peps<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 necessary<lb/>
The gome terminates<lb/>
June 30 1981 or when<lb/>
the supply of starred<lb/>
aps has been exhusted<lb/>
IPEPSll<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0011"/><lb/>
enteen returns<lb/>
an investment.<lb/>
? iil wlriiilwiiil<lb/>
Mil"11" iM<lb/>
?- .MSkJ<lb/>
??<lb/>
?pi<lb/>
, :<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0012"/><lb/>
1 lit I si i KOl IN1AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Japan Tour<lb/>
Students 'All Shook Up'<lb/>
Over Cheap Trick Concert<lb/>
Drummer Bun E. Carlos<lb/>
?the look In Japan: '<lb/>
haseball-bat-sied sticks-<lb/>
keens the Cheap Trick pace, while impossibly pretty lead singer Rob,B ande,ms<lb/>
AVhn C arh,s sPmkin, his eternal cigarette, ended 'Surrender' v. ,th -a m.ghty roll ot<lb/>
-well, a night worth of critical apprehensions got pummeled.<lb/>
Tickets are selling fast tor this<lb/>
Saturday night's Cheap Trick-UFO<lb/>
concert at Minges Coliseum. Sm<lb/>
dent tickets, priced at only $6.50,<lb/>
are moving especially fast.<lb/>
"It is advisable tot anyone in-<lb/>
terested in going to purchase their<lb/>
tickets by Thursday. Response to<lb/>
the pairing of these two groups tor a<lb/>
'once only' North Carolina ap-<lb/>
pearance has been great thus far<lb/>
according to Major ttractions<lb/>
Chairperson Charles Sune.<lb/>
Public tickets arc still available in<lb/>
Greenville at both Record Bar loca<lb/>
lions. Apple Records, as well as the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
The following is an excerpl from<lb/>
the June 14, 1979 issue ot Rolling<lb/>
Stone magazine (pages 48-49;<lb/>
reprinted by permission). 1 he article<lb/>
was written following Cheap hick's<lb/>
massive tour ol Japan:<lb/>
Cheap Trick wasn't making a lot<lb/>
of money the tust tew years alter<lb/>
they formed in 1974, but the<lb/>
always carried themselves as it thej<lb/>
would someday. Midwest rock scene<lb/>
regulars remember seeing them ar-<lb/>
rive at club dares m a white<lb/>
limousine with the best-looking<lb/>
women in town. This is not to sav<lb/>
Cheap Trick was spoiled or lazy; in-<lb/>
dolence is a hard trail to develop<lb/>
when you're playing one-nights in<lb/>
places like Waukesha, Wisconsin.<lb/>
But from the beginning it was evi-<lb/>
dent thai Cheap Trick was being<lb/>
groomed tor the top.<lb/>
And the had Ken Adamany<lb/>
behind them. The son of Lebanese<lb/>
immigrants, Adamany had aban-<lb/>
doned a musical career (he played<lb/>
kevboards with Steve Miller and<lb/>
Bo Scaggs m a band called the<lb/>
Fabulous Knight Trains) to become<lb/>
a powerful booking agent in the<lb/>
Northern Illinois-Southern Wiscon-<lb/>
sin area. Insiders and rivals nick-<lb/>
named him "the millionaire playboy<lb/>
of Janesville, Wisconsin" (his<lb/>
hometown). By the time Cheap<lb/>
I rick and Adamany joined torces.<lb/>
he controlled a hefty chunk of the<lb/>
club and concert traffic in the<lb/>
region; needless ro sa, Cheap Trick<lb/>
had no trouble getting booked.<lb/>
Adamany held out for two years<lb/>
before signing Cheap Trick to label<lb/>
? Epic Records in August 1976.<lb/>
Soon afterward, the band cut its<lb/>
first album with Jack Douglas<lb/>
(Aerosmith, Star). Cheap Trick<lb/>
was a tour de force of heavy-metal<lb/>
see CHEAP, page 7, col. 1<lb/>
AFROTC Remembers Past<lb/>
Developing Heritage Wall To Honor Alumni<lb/>
By BUI A D. TUDOR<lb/>
Easi Carolina University's An<lb/>
Force Reserve Officer Training<lb/>
Corps (AFROTC) is one the oldest<lb/>
and most successful programs in the<lb/>
country, and officials here arc plan<lb/>
ning to honor some ol the sacrifices<lb/>
and achievements made bv former<lb/>
.adets from Detachment 600 (as the<lb/>
ECl unit is known) who have made<lb/>
significant contributions to the<lb/>
freedom ol our country.<lb/>
?AVe are developing a "Heritage<lb/>
Wall" to commemorate some ol the<lb/>
sacrifices and achievements ol EC I<lb/>
alumni who were commissioned<lb/>
here as An force officers said<lb/>
I ieutenant Colonel James C<lb/>
rhomas, himself a 1954 graduate ol<lb/>
ECU and currentlv the AFROTC<lb/>
Commander. "People from EC I.<lb/>
have given their lives in service to<lb/>
their country, or made significant<lb/>
accomplishments and contributions<lb/>
to our freedom in other ways, and<lb/>
we wan: to create more awareness ol<lb/>
their efforts<lb/>
1 xamples cited are Captain Glen<lb/>
Dyer, an All-American Diver from<lb/>
 CU who was killed in Southeast<lb/>
Asia (SEA) in 1964. and Major<lb/>
Film 'Grand Illusion' Rescheduled<lb/>
Due to drama department rehearsals of the play Julius<lb/>
Caesar the special film "C.rand Illusion" will .Ol be shown<lb/>
,his Wednesday right, April 1, as originally intended I he<lb/>
classic French drama has been rescheduled for an April 22shim-<lb/>
inK at 7 p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center Hendm Theatre.<lb/>
Following "(.rand Illusion the regularly scheduled film<lb/>
?Peppermint Soda" will be shown, as planned, at 9 p.m.<lb/>
The American comedy "It Happened One Night cancelled last<lb/>
Vednesdav. will be shown as the first half of a double teature at<lb/>
7 p m. on Wednesday, April 15 in the Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
1<lb/>
General Charles E. Woods, a 1950<lb/>
graduate who served two SEA<lb/>
tours, flew UK) missions over North<lb/>
Vietnam, and is presently Com<lb/>
mander o the Air force Com-<lb/>
missary Service. General Woods will<lb/>
speak at the commissioning<lb/>
ceremony on May S and also preside<lb/>
at the ceremony to official!) open<lb/>
the "Heritage V all<lb/>
In tracing the histor) and purpose<lb/>
o FROT( . Colonel Thomas<lb/>
pointed out thai the Air force was<lb/>
established as a separate military<lb/>
service in 1947, and one year later<lb/>
Detachment 6X) was formed, mak-<lb/>
ing this one of the oldest AFROTC<lb/>
tinits in the country. It is one of the<lb/>
4" detachments where only the Air<lb/>
force program is offered, and in<lb/>
1969 it was chosen as one o only<lb/>
five detachments in the United<lb/>
States to accept women.<lb/>
Today, approximately 25?'o of the<lb/>
cadets here are female, and during<lb/>
the past 32 years thousands o!<lb/>
students have participated in the<lb/>
ROTC program at ECU, many ol<lb/>
them being commissioned as Second<lb/>
Lieutenants in the United States Air<lb/>
Force.<lb/>
This summer when 30 cadets<lb/>
receive their commissions from<lb/>
Detachment 600, they will join ap-<lb/>
proximately 3,000 other new of-<lb/>
ficers from AFROTC units across<lb/>
the country, rhese officers will<lb/>
become part of the 43 per cent ol ac-<lb/>
tive duty officers, including 24"<lb/>
generals, who are ROTC graduates.<lb/>
Students at ECU who arc in<lb/>
crested can choose between a two<lb/>
or four-year program, freshmen<lb/>
and sophomores in the four-year<lb/>
program enroll m the General<lb/>
Military Course (GMC) and stud)<lb/>
the history oi military aviation and<lb/>
the contemporary Air force, each a<lb/>
one-hour course. Juniors and<lb/>
seniors enroll in the Professiona<lb/>
Officer Course (POO and study<lb/>
principles ol management and na-<lb/>
tional security in contemporary<lb/>
American Society .<lb/>
i ntrv into the HOC is com-<lb/>
petitive, based on a national screen<lb/>
ing system. Onl) aftei being ac-<lb/>
cepted into the POC, oi accepting<lb/>
an -ir Force paid scholarship, do<lb/>
cadets become obligated to serve on<lb/>
active duty upon commissioning<lb/>
freshmen and sophomores in the<lb/>
CMC can "look-see" to determine<lb/>
if the program is suitable tor their<lb/>
goals, or perhaps enhance their<lb/>
possibility o a scholarship, all<lb/>
without incurring any obligation or<lb/>
commitment.<lb/>
Classroom instruction for all<lb/>
cadets is provided by active duty of-<lb/>
See AFROTC, page 8, col. 1<lb/>
Pianist To Appear<lb/>
Pianist Charles Rosen will appear in concert in the HjfTJoT<lb/>
1 hursdav April 2 at 8:00 p.m. Tickets, available m the C entralJ.cket Of-<lb/>
fice in Mendenhall are S2.00 for student and $5.00 for the puhhe.<lb/>
Dinner Theatre Play<lb/>
Is Good Entertainment<lb/>
B JOHNWEYLER<lb/>
SUM Wnltr<lb/>
SS??Sr??. riW?aBeP. oessin as His version - en,ph?si,e .he poHUca. ,?.ne?e I.<lb/>
the drama's plot.<lb/>
Playhouse Presents 'Julius Caesar'<lb/>
"Julius Caesar one of<lb/>
Shakespeare's most powerful and<lb/>
compelling dramas, will be<lb/>
presented by the East Caro hna<lb/>
Playhouse April 7, 9, 10 and 11 at<lb/>
8-15 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
The production will not be a<lb/>
trad.tional interpretation ot the<lb/>
celebrated classic. Director Edgar<lb/>
Loessin has assembled a cast of 30<lb/>
actors and as many technicians who<lb/>
will present a chilling version of the<lb/>
play which relies heavily on such<lb/>
techniques as motion picture film<lb/>
recorded music and bold lighting ef-<lb/>
fects.<lb/>
Efforts have been underway tor<lb/>
several months to furnish Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre with the necessary equip-<lb/>
ment and stage scenery. Scaffolding<lb/>
for the lighting instruments, lighting<lb/>
control boards and sound equip-<lb/>
ment have been brought in from<lb/>
around the state to augment the<lb/>
theatre's already extensive film<lb/>
facilities.<lb/>
"We want to make the play live in<lb/>
the ambiance of Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
said Loessin. "We hope to achieve a<lb/>
sense of the political cycle that is so<lb/>
evident in 'Julius Caesar This is a<lb/>
play that speaks directly to some of<lb/>
our recent politics in this country, a<lb/>
See ECU, page 7, col. 2<lb/>
Last night the Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center Dinner Theatre<lb/>
premiered its production ol Paul<lb/>
Zindel's "And Miss Rcardon<lb/>
Drinks A Little" mdel is known<lb/>
for his unusual works with names<lb/>
such as 'The Effects of Gamma<lb/>
RavS on Man-in-the-Moon<lb/>
Marigolds" and "My Darling. My<lb/>
Hamburger His reputation is pro-<lb/>
ved bv this play, a bizarre but enter-<lb/>
taining tale of three sisters, all<lb/>
warped in one way or another.<lb/>
The Story revolves around Anna.<lb/>
a teacher who recently suffered a<lb/>
nervous breakdown in school and is<lb/>
the cause of much commotion.<lb/>
She is paranoid, obsessed with<lb/>
death and has a phobia against<lb/>
meat, fur, and anything animalistic.<lb/>
She lives with sister Catherine, a<lb/>
wise-cracking woman who seems the<lb/>
most normal of the three, but has<lb/>
her own dark secrets. This terrible<lb/>
trio is completed by Ceil, a cold,<lb/>
guarded gargoyle.<lb/>
The rest of the major cast consists<lb/>
of Fleur and Bob Stein, a feather-<lb/>
brained guidance teacher and her<lb/>
bellicose bear o! a husband.<lb/>
They stop by Catherine and An-<lb/>
na's apartment, the setting of the<lb/>
entire play, for an enjoyable evening<lb/>
of shouting, invective and near-<lb/>
insanity.<lb/>
Entertainment is provided by a<lb/>
blank-loaded gun that is loudly fired<lb/>
at people, Bob's telling ot why he<lb/>
hasn't used his own apartment's<lb/>
bathroom in nine years of marriage<lb/>
(because Fleur steals all the<lb/>
bathroom supplies from school), a<lb/>
feast of raw meat, zucchini, and<lb/>
giound-up kiwi fruit and kumquats,<lb/>
and general hysteria from all con-<lb/>
cerned.<lb/>
The pla ends on a happ note<lb/>
with the reconciliation ot Anna and<lb/>
Catherine. Apparently the theme ot<lb/>
this production is that everyone is<lb/>
insane, so don't worry if you are.<lb/>
All o the cast is competent and<lb/>
some are excellent, including Julie<lb/>
Haskett, who had to take on an ex-<lb/>
tra small pan. as well as her regular<lb/>
role of Fleur, due to a cast<lb/>
member's illness.<lb/>
Karen Baldwin sumds out as<lb/>
Catherine, flawless and funny<lb/>
throughout, resembling a cross bet-<lb/>
ween Jane Fonda and Anne Meara.<lb/>
Dianne Picketl is excellent as Anna.<lb/>
Mane Farr as Ceil and Dwight<lb/>
Eastwood as Bob deliver pleasing<lb/>
professional performances.<lb/>
Ihc show will continue through<lb/>
Saturday, April 4. Performances<lb/>
through April 1 will be dessert shows<lb/>
at 7:15 p.m curtain at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
The final three performances will be<lb/>
full dinner shows with seating begin-<lb/>
ning at 6:30 p.m curtain at 8:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
I ickets are on sale at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office. 1-or information call<lb/>
757-6611. ex 266.<lb/>
TV Trivia Quiz<lb/>
For 'MA SH' Fans<lb/>
By DAVID NORRIS<lb/>
and<lb/>
WILLIAM YE1.VKRTON<lb/>
"MASH" is one of the most<lb/>
popular shows on television today,<lb/>
as shown bv the number of reruns<lb/>
available every day. Since everyone<lb/>
can watch "MASH" two or three<lb/>
times a day, the following twenty<lb/>
questions shouldn't be too difficult.<lb/>
1. What does "MASH" stand<lb/>
for?<lb/>
2. What was Frank Burns'<lb/>
nickname?<lb/>
3. Name B.T's wife?<lb/>
4. Name Hotlips' ex-husband.<lb/>
5. What is Hawkeye's real name?<lb/>
6. Speaking of Hawkeye, what<lb/>
town does he hail from?<lb/>
7. What happened to Henry Blake<lb/>
after he was transferred home?<lb/>
8. Name the psychiatrist who<lb/>
periodically visits the MASH unit<lb/>
for poker games.<lb/>
See TV page 8, col. 1<lb/>
For A3HAT<lb/>
PA<lb/>
Che<lb/>
Big<lb/>
( ontinued tr??m p<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
whi <lb/>
pei<lb/>
ing tor K<lb/>
Maybe<lb/>
didn't jump<lb/>
r r ic k' ?<lb/>
Cheap<lb/>
in full<lb/>
?<lb/>
Color.<lb/>
One<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
M eek<lb/>
Plctnnl<lb/>
 nun<lb/>
are sc<lb/>
The<lb/>
Coui<lb/>
Tuesdav Ma<lb/>
I h 5<lb/>
ma 11<lb/>
?<lb/>
v w<lb/>
"I unk Na<lb/>
t v bef<lb/>
Among<lb/>
chuggii<lb/>
?<lb/>
frater;<lb/>
"Spi '<lb/>
pa la<lb/>
3 OJ<lb/>
all .<lb/>
kegs ol<lb/>
The a <lb/>
lu'lV, C<lb/>
the week i<lb/>
Open to a<lb/>
and soi<lb/>
Moser's I at<lb/>
t is spon<lb/>
II C and<lb/>
Council<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057332_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>