<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057333_0001"/>
?he ?aat Carolinian<lb/>
H<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 No.<lb/>
o. si<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Thursday, April 2, 1981<lb/>
(Greenville. Northarolina<lb/>
( in illation 10,000<lb/>
Braxton, Little Win;<lb/>
Second Run-Off Looms<lb/>
By PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
Wednesday's SGA run-off elec-<lb/>
tion has yielded a clear winner in the<lb/>
vice-presidential contest and the<lb/>
possibility of yet another run-off in<lb/>
the treasurer's race.<lb/>
Marvin Braxton will be installed<lb/>
as the new SGA vice president after<lb/>
defeating Peggy Davison. Braxton<lb/>
finished with 600 votes to Davison's<lb/>
417.<lb/>
Incumbent Kirk little defeated<lb/>
challenger Angela Pepe bv seven<lb/>
votes in the treasurer's race, 515<lb/>
votes to 508.<lb/>
The close nature of the result has<lb/>
raised the possibility of another run-<lb/>
oft.<lb/>
SGA election rules provide for a<lb/>
run-off if a candidate's winning<lb/>
margin is less than two percent. It is<lb/>
not specified, however, if this rule<lb/>
applies in a run-off itself.<lb/>
"It doesn't make a lot of sense to<lb/>
have an additional run-off said Al<lb/>
Patrick, SGA election committee<lb/>
chairman. "That's the way we (the<lb/>
committee) look at it.<lb/>
'The rules are not clear,<lb/>
though he continued. "It doesn't<lb/>
exclude her right to a run-off<lb/>
Patrick said there was no prece-<lb/>
dent for an additional run-off.<lb/>
"Elections have been won by less<lb/>
than this he said.<lb/>
However, SGA President Charlie<lb/>
Sherrod felt that Pepe was entitled<lb/>
to another run-off. "If you add up<lb/>
the results of the two races Angela<lb/>
still came out ahead he said.<lb/>
Pepe has 48 hours to appeal the<lb/>
result. If she does, the SGA Review<lb/>
Board will decide whether or not<lb/>
another run-off is permissible.<lb/>
When asked if she will seek<lb/>
another run-off, Pepe said: "I'm<lb/>
not sure. The campaigns have taken<lb/>
too much time. I have school to<lb/>
think about. It's a possibility,<lb/>
though<lb/>
"I really don't know what to<lb/>
say Little responded when asked<lb/>
how he felt about the prospect of a<lb/>
second run-off. "I really don't<lb/>
know.<lb/>
"Angela ran a good campaign<lb/>
he added. "She definitely had some<lb/>
good ideas<lb/>
"It was very tight Pepe com-<lb/>
mented. "I feel like both Kirk and I<lb/>
ran good races<lb/>
Both candidates spent more than<lb/>
S300 in the two races combined.<lb/>
See RUN-OFF, Page 2<lb/>
Photo B JON JORDAN<lb/>
Students Cast their ballots at Mendenhall during Wednesday's run-off election. Marvin Braxton and Kirk Little<lb/>
were the winners.<lb/>
Selective Service Seeking Records<lb/>
(GPS) ? The days of private stu-<lb/>
dent records may be numbered, i<lb/>
cording to a variety of privacy law<lb/>
experts<lb/>
A number of the experts say that<lb/>
the immense political pressure now<lb/>
building to gel around laws protec-<lb/>
ting the privacy of student rec<lb/>
may succeed despite the opposition<lb/>
of administrators who keep the<lb/>
records, and students themselves.<lb/>
Mosl of the pressure comes from<lb/>
the Selective Service System, which<lb/>
has expressed interest in getting lists<lb/>
ot men who have (and have not)<lb/>
complied with military registration<lb/>
laws.<lb/>
The SSS. swears government<lb/>
lawyer Henry Williams, has no in-<lb/>
tentions of requesting information<lb/>
from schools to help locate draft<lb/>
registration dodgers. But the SSS<lb/>
lias long made it known it might ask<lb/>
schools to cooperate with it later on.<lb/>
I he SSS' ambiguity has pushed<lb/>
many administrators to research the<lb/>
legality oi such a request, if it's ever<lb/>
made.<lb/>
Most contend student records are<lb/>
protected by the Buckley Amend-<lb/>
ment to the Privacy Act of 1974.<lb/>
"The Privacv Act doesn't apply<lb/>
to colleges Williams flatly asserts.<lb/>
"And if a college ret used us infor-<lb/>
mation, it couldn't stand on the<lb/>
Buckley Amendment<lb/>
"Unfortunately, the Buckley<lb/>
Amendment wouldn't be very<lb/>
helpful in this situation agree<lb/>
privacy expert Trudy Haydn,<lb/>
formerly of the American Civil<lb/>
I iberties Union (ACLU). "If the<lb/>
Selective Service were to be refused<lb/>
by colleges, all Congress needs to do<lb/>
is pass a congressional statute over-<lb/>
riding Buckley, and the information<lb/>
will have to be given out<lb/>
The amendment makes directory<lb/>
information on a student ? name,<lb/>
address, birth date and place, phone<lb/>
number, and major field of study ?<lb/>
public knowledge. The law,<lb/>
however, gives a student the chance<lb/>
to object to having his or her<lb/>
records made public. Upon objec-<lb/>
tion, the school is prohibited from<lb/>
distributing the information.<lb/>
State laws protecting student<lb/>
records are already under frontal<lb/>
assault in California and Maryland.<lb/>
The California General Assembly<lb/>
is now considering a bill mandating<lb/>
school's permission to make student<lb/>
records available to military<lb/>
recruiters.<lb/>
Marie Gerich, aide to state Sen.<lb/>
John Schmitz, who wrote the bill,<lb/>
says the measure was designed to<lb/>
alleviate problems recruiters have in<lb/>
getting information to students<lb/>
about military careers.<lb/>
"This could set a dangerous<lb/>
precedent of cooperation warns<lb/>
Beth Meador, an AC I L) lobbyist in<lb/>
Sacramento. She forsees "a<lb/>
cooperation among government<lb/>
agencies to exchange informal ion<lb/>
about individuals<lb/>
Across the country, a Maryland<lb/>
couple has gotten a bill introduced<lb/>
Suspect Wanted To Impress Actress<lb/>
Reagan Improves, Walks Hospital Halls<lb/>
WASHINGTON (L PI) President<lb/>
Reagan got out of his hospital bed<lb/>
for a walk today and aides said he<lb/>
might return to the White House by-<lb/>
next week. Police probed evidence<lb/>
the young drifter charged with<lb/>
shooting him was seeking the love of<lb/>
a teen-age movie star.<lb/>
White House Chief of Staff<lb/>
James Baker described Reagan as<lb/>
"cheerful said he was up and<lb/>
about in his hospital room and still<lb/>
wants to go to Mexico in late April<lb/>
to meet with President Lopez Por-<lb/>
tillo.<lb/>
A mid-morning medical bulletin<lb/>
issue by Reagan's personal physi-<lb/>
cian at the White House said the<lb/>
president "continues to improve as<lb/>
well as can be expected Dr. Daniel<lb/>
Ruge added that his diet has been<lb/>
changed from liquid to solid food.<lb/>
Presidential press secretary James<lb/>
Brady, critically wounded when he<lb/>
was shot in the head in the<lb/>
assassination attempt, was reported<lb/>
by the White House to be making<lb/>
"astounding" progress and was<lb/>
even said to have played "catch"<lb/>
with his wife Sarah from his<lb/>
hospital bed.<lb/>
Brady also was able to speak for<lb/>
the first time, but there was still no<lb/>
indication whether he suffered any<lb/>
mental impairment from the bullet<lb/>
removed from his brain after a five-<lb/>
hour operation.<lb/>
Mental tests were planned today<lb/>
for John W. Hinckley Jr 25, the<lb/>
man police tackled after he allegedly<lb/>
tired six shots at Reagan, also<lb/>
wounding Brady, a Secret Service<lb/>
officer and a Washington policeman<lb/>
outside a downtown hotel Monday.<lb/>
Hinckley's father, a wealthy Col-<lb/>
orado oilman hired Washington's<lb/>
best known criminal law firm,<lb/>
Williams and Connolly, to defend<lb/>
the suspect. Law enforcement of-<lb/>
ficials, meanwhile, said there was<lb/>
evidence Hinckley wanted to im-<lb/>
press Jody Foster who played the<lb/>
role of a pre-teen prostitute in the<lb/>
movie "Taxi Driver<lb/>
"I will prove my love for you <lb/>
through a historic act the<lb/>
Washington Post said Hinckley<lb/>
wrote the actress in a letter<lb/>
recovered from the hotel room he<lb/>
was staying in the capital.<lb/>
As the president's condition im-<lb/>
proved steadily, presidential<lb/>
counselor Edwin Meese reported it<lb/>
"was business as usual" at the<lb/>
White House and at the hospital<lb/>
w here some of the Oval Office func-<lb/>
tions were transferred so Reagan<lb/>
could resume his functions as chief<lb/>
executive.<lb/>
Vice President George Bush took<lb/>
over the president's schedule at the<lb/>
White House, but the president<lb/>
would be making the major decisons<lb/>
from his hospital bed, aides said.<lb/>
"He's got a few more papers that<lb/>
he does have to sign and we will give<lb/>
him a national security briefing dur-<lb/>
ing the course of the day Baker<lb/>
said on CBS.<lb/>
The While House has not released<lb/>
any pictures ot Reagan in the<lb/>
hospital, but Baker said Reagan<lb/>
"will shortly be able to com-<lb/>
municate through the medium of<lb/>
television<lb/>
"We would sure be hopeful that<lb/>
sometime next week he could be<lb/>
back in the White House Baker<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Reagan and his wife Nancy stayed<lb/>
up until 11 p.m. EST Tuesday to<lb/>
watch part of the Academy Awards<lb/>
show, which included a message the<lb/>
president taped two weeks ago,<lb/>
aides reported.<lb/>
"The president is in good condi-<lb/>
tion but is experiencing some pain<lb/>
and fatigue in response to his in-<lb/>
jury Ruge said in the medical<lb/>
bulletin. "The president slept well<lb/>
during the night and is up and walk-<lb/>
ing this morning<lb/>
Baker added that Reagan<lb/>
"experienced some discomfort over-<lb/>
night" due to soreness from the<lb/>
operation.<lb/>
Baker said the president was<lb/>
"extremely pleased this morning"<lb/>
to hear about the Senate's vote<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
in their state legislature that would<lb/>
allow parents to see their children's<lb/>
confidential records as well as direc-<lb/>
tory information.<lb/>
Currently, Maryland law and the<lb/>
Bucklev Amendment bar disclosure<lb/>
ol student transcripts to anyone but<lb/>
school authorities, but Beverly and<lb/>
Jerome Kamchi contend the laws<lb/>
violate their rights as parents of a<lb/>
dependent child.<lb/>
"Without access to my son's<lb/>
1 do not have the option of<lb/>
counseling him and encouraging<lb/>
him Jerome Kamchi says. His<lb/>
son, Mark, has refused to tell his<lb/>
parents his grades since he entered<lb/>
the University of Maryland two<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
The ACLU's John Roemer<lb/>
doesn't see the Kamchi case as verv<lb/>
important, however. He observes<lb/>
the state already allows scholarship<lb/>
sponsors to see grades.<lb/>
"I would suspect they could re-<lb/>
quire release of transcripts to<lb/>
parents under that same idea<lb/>
Roemer says. "But I wouldn't call<lb/>
this an invasion of (students') rights<lb/>
offhand<lb/>
Neither Roemer or John Shad-<lb/>
dock of the ACLU's national office<lb/>
know of other legal challenges to<lb/>
privacy laws, but they say that the<lb/>
looming presence of the Selective<lb/>
Service has spread the issue around<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
Student governments in Illinois<lb/>
and Nevada, for example, have<lb/>
passed resolutions asking ad-<lb/>
ministrators not to allow the Selec-<lb/>
tive Service access to student<lb/>
records. Administrators at places as<lb/>
diverse at Stanford and the College<lb/>
of Wooster in Ohio have already an-<lb/>
nounced they would not cooperate<lb/>
with the SSS unless directed by law.<lb/>
Over 300 students at the Universi-<lb/>
ty of California-Santa Barbara<lb/>
recently marched to their ad-<lb/>
ministration building, demanding<lb/>
security of directory information.<lb/>
At California-Riverside, a student<lb/>
government official met with cam-<lb/>
pus officials asking for similar<lb/>
assurances of privacy.<lb/>
Nevertheless, privacy expert<lb/>
Haydn warns students have "little<lb/>
redress" if personal information<lb/>
were released, even over their objec-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The Buckley Amendment, she ex-<lb/>
plains, applies only to schools<lb/>
receiving federal funds, and<lb/>
threatens a school with a cutoff of<lb/>
funds if it violates the privacy law.<lb/>
Petitioners Set For<lb/>
Mendenhall Boycott<lb/>
A boycott of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center to protest the recent alledged<lb/>
political manipulation of the East<lb/>
Carolina University Media Board<lb/>
has been called for by a group w hich<lb/>
last semester organized a petition to<lb/>
show support for former WZMB<lb/>
general manager and advisor John<lb/>
Jeter.<lb/>
According to Van Brown, peti-<lb/>
tion organizer, administration of-<lb/>
ficials are manipulating the actions<lb/>
of Media Board members, thus tak-<lb/>
ing away student control. Brown<lb/>
and other petition organizers are<lb/>
saying Media Board Chairman<lb/>
David Creech is working hand-in-<lb/>
hand with Dean Rudolph Alexander<lb/>
and Vice-Chancellor Elmer Mever<lb/>
Photo By JON JORDAN<lb/>
These motorists evidently had their eye on something other than the road as they passed by ECU's west campus.<lb/>
Blood mobile Set<lb/>
For Spring Visit<lb/>
The annual Red Cross Spring<lb/>
Blood Drive will be held April 7<lb/>
and 8, according representatives<lb/>
of the sponsoring Inter-<lb/>
Fraternity Council of East<lb/>
Carolina University. The Blood-<lb/>
mobile will be located at Wright<lb/>
Auditorium from 10 a.m. to 4<lb/>
p.m. both Tuesday and Wednes-<lb/>
day. The fratefnity with the<lb/>
largest percentage of their<lb/>
membership donating blood will<lb/>
receive a plaque for their efforts.<lb/>
All East Carolina University<lb/>
students are urged to participate<lb/>
in what is considered "giving the<lb/>
gift of life<lb/>
American<lb/>
Red Cross<lb/>
to dominate the board as well as all<lb/>
of the student media.<lb/>
"That is completely, totally ab-<lb/>
surd says Creech. "Of course I<lb/>
work closely with them, as do all<lb/>
campus leaders, but there is no truth<lb/>
to those charges.<lb/>
"We have worked very hard to<lb/>
maximize the freedom of the cam-<lb/>
pus media; we have bent over<lb/>
backwards to guarantee this<lb/>
freedom<lb/>
WZMB petition organizers say<lb/>
the boycott will take place on the<lb/>
grounds of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Monday April 6 at noon.<lb/>
Brown and other petition supporters<lb/>
say they hope the boycott will make<lb/>
everyone aware of the fact that the<lb/>
Media Board, its chairman and ad-<lb/>
ministration officials are overstepp-<lb/>
ing their constitutional power in<lb/>
keeping the student media from<lb/>
operating at "free will thus not<lb/>
allowing the students to be totally<lb/>
informed.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials 4<lb/>
Classifiedsjo<lb/>
Features5<lb/>
Letters 4<lb/>
Sports g<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057333_0002"/><lb/>
1 HI I S K(?1 il <lb/>
U'KII : l"s<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
RED CROSS<lb/>
i<lb/>
ELDERHOSTEL<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? ? E as'<lb/>
pus<lb/>
?urse'<lb/>
? omy<lb/>
I approaci<lb/>
CO OP<lb/>
etnnn tc-ik ar oups<lb/>
RUNNING<lb/>
"UM<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
CHI BETA PHI<lb/>
 " ? i<lb/>
00 Apr,?<lb/>
 ?-?<lb/>
WORK<lb/>
church with a te a ?? group<lb/>
Sina'r is a minimum ot SICK'<lb/>
month The position I<lb/>
mediately ana continu)<lb/>
the Si '?"imer ii interest<lb/>
Dai I arnhardt a' the v. "<lb/>
Student center<lb/>
DOG DAY<lb/>
DOG day a nev program ot<lb/>
(! the Metriortist Student<lb/>
Iress 50<lb/>
PAGEANT<lb/>
Applications tor ontc ta "<lb/>
v ss Black, and Gold Paaear<lb/>
now being accepted It inter<lb/>
contact any member ' ?'? I'<lb/>
Alpha fratern.tv Oi <lb/>
MARSHALLS<lb/>
ah persons interest) ?<lb/>
U Marshalis ma-<lb/>
? A Ott.ce<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
now tx<lb/>
the <lb/>
? - ?<lb/>
? lent<lb/>
. ii ilsan<lb/>
 ? - . .<lb/>
FOOSEBALL<lb/>
? ? . .<lb/>
?<lb/>
peti 1<lb/>
AKA<lb/>
?. ? . ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
???<lb/>
YARD SALE<lb/>
FACULTY STAFF<lb/>
DISCOUNT DAYS<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
Heel<lb/>
-?  ion<lb/>
2 30 p m in Ro' '?<lb/>
luden! ?<lb/>
i ? i ? .<lb/>
Hinckley Sought Foster's Approval<lb/>
ECU LAW<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
v<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
PBL<lb/>
N CONCERT<lb/>
Apr, z, j. 30 rnn.<lb/>
whlvJst sti m it<lb/>
, Cater,<lb/>
kdtivssiai: tree<lb/>
Ink<lb/>
fujsi.ii.wJ. !m .  i ?<lb/>
rlnmn-emsl)ip<lb/>
GAME ROOM<lb/>
?<lb/>
STRING BASS<lb/>
WASHINGTON isolated undei 24-houi make sure that i.othing It<lb/>
a Pi) lohn Mm guard. happens to him said Woe,<lb/>
ckley I. the 25-year- rodav, he was to ap U.S. Marshal Larry tuples<lb/>
old lonei accused ot pear before I .S. Bullock.<lb/>
shooting Presideni Magistrate Lawrence Hie letter found by met'<lb/>
Reagan, left a letter in Margolis foi a investigators in Hin-<lb/>
his hotel room address preliminary hearing. ckley's om at<lb/>
ed to actress Jodie 1 he psychiatrist's Washington's Park<lb/>
lostc-t that said. "1 report was scaled and Central Hotel began,<lb/>
would abandon this will be turned ovei to "Deal lodie: rhere is a<lb/>
idea ol getting Reagan the court to help deter- definite possibiht that<lb/>
in a second if 1 could mine whether Hin- 1 will be killed n<lb/>
only ami your heart, ckley, the son ol a tempttogetReagan.lt<lb/>
wealthy D nvei is tor this reason that i<lb/>
The text ot the letter, oilman, is competent to am writing you now<lb/>
obtained from uniden ,tand trial and assist his I he neat, handwnt-<lb/>
tified "sources was lawyersinhisdefen.se. ten letter reviewed Hin<lb/>
n; today's Hinckley is charged ckley's attempt<lb/>
o 1 he with attempting to reach the<lb/>
Hn<lb/>
Run-Off Results<lb/>
Still Murky<lb/>
( iintinued I rom Paat<lb/>
lii<lb/>
puhlisliec<lb/>
editions<lb/>
Washington Post, and assassinate Reagan and thi ens<lb/>
: es the theory assaulting a Secret Ser- poems, lettei<lb/>
Hinckley acted in a vice agent. It eon me-<lb/>
bizarre hid foi the at- victed, lie could be ly, 1<lb/>
icnti the teen age sentenced to life ??' ??<lb/>
prisonment. lin8 Reagan u<lb/>
Authorities<lb/>
<lb/>
s t ude n<lb/>
I ed<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
S(<lb/>
Hinckley, vho vi-<lb/>
bdued b l ty at the<lb/>
1<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
PIANO RECITAL<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
and iftei the ' lack Ruby's whet! ei<lb/>
ting, a.) examin : of Lee obscurn<lb/>
Harve; O id. the what - i<lb/>
hitt- m a ed "Th<lb/>
app si ass; President wri<lb/>
ai the Marine orps lohn 1 Kennedy in I le, Pr?<lb/>
Va Dallas in 1963 Hotel<lb/>
where he lias been kept "We are going to wassn<lb/>
si<lb/>
M<lb/>
"Each of ?he?e ?dvrtitd l?m?<lb/>
Is required to c-f ??: . ?? ibl? or<lb/>
sale in each Kroger Sa. - as speo't<lb/>
Tally noted in this ad 11 we do run o, ????.<lb/>
iTTvou yout choice o? a comparable '? -<lb/>
a.moso. ara.ncheck hich will ? ? " ? ????<lb/>
used<lb/>
the same saving<lb/>
n?m at the advertised pnee with<lb/>
Copyright 1981<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thurs April 2<lb/>
thru Sat April 4 1981<lb/>
' <lb/>
<lb/>
f.<lb/>
V<lb/>
v<lb/>
 f<lb/>
4v<lb/>
?1<lb/>
A<lb/>
iV<lb/>
W i<lb/>
. ii?-<lb/>
v?<lb/>
<lb/>
(b<lb/>
?<lb/>
u<lb/>
 r<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
!<lb/>
h<lb/>
? .S<lb/>
??" '<lb/>
One Stop<lb/>
Shopping on<lb/>
your Way to<lb/>
the Great<lb/>
Outdoors!<lb/>
SHOPPING<lb/>
NEW ADVANCED FORMULA<lb/>
REGULAR OR MINT<lb/>
Crest<lb/>
COMPARE THE TASTE OF<lb/>
Schlitz<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
?-SS.V-S-<lb/>
MELLO YELLO OR<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
8CH49<lb/>
160:<lb/>
Ret<lb/>
BUs<lb/>
Pius<lb/>
Deposit<lb/>
KROGER LARGE<lb/>
OR SMALL CURD<lb/>
GWALTNEY<lb/>
Cottage Cheese f Great Dogs<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Roasted Peanuts<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
Records &amp; Tapes chips &amp; Snacks<lb/>
BEKSSj 2 51 ro6c??? si Oi<lb/>
SUSSS<lb/>
"voko<lb/>
? I i K<lb/>
mtDd<lb/>
fostHos<lb/>
e ob?TF?"aY<lb/>
 . ' ' ? - ?<lb/>
 Kia Ilk<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 8 AM TO 10 PM<lb/>
ra?m<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenvrtle<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
'?<lb/>
<lb/>
Sw<lb/>
Inv<lb/>
Mo<lb/>
Lei<lb/>
<pb facs="00057333_0003"/><lb/>
I Ml I M KOI IMAN<lb/>
APRM 2, I9HI<lb/>
INT DAYS<lb/>
 veil<lb/>
suits<lb/>
JFM POLICY<lb/>
ris?d items<lb/>
ltlJ for<lb/>
 as sp?cift-<lb/>
M? Will Of-<lb/>
l? reflecting<lb/>
 !h? advtr-<lb/>
P<lb/>
n<lb/>
Ito<lb/>
lat<lb/>
ks<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
Photo By JON JORDAN<lb/>
As the temperatures soared into the 80's Tuesday, these ECU students worked on their tans.<lb/>
Switch To Oil May Be Mistake<lb/>
GAINESVI1 1 E,<lb/>
Ha. (UPI) I tie Carter<lb/>
Administration may<lb/>
have underestimated<lb/>
natural gas reserves and<lb/>
mistakenly ordered the<lb/>
nation's power plants<lb/>
to convert from oil to<lb/>
coal, a University of<lb/>
Florida energy expert<lb/>
said I uesday.<lb/>
"The federal goverrt-<lb/>
meni came out hard-<lb/>
nosed b saying coal or<lb/>
else, and then someone<lb/>
reported lots of sup-<lb/>
plies of gas Dr. Alex<lb/>
Green, a physicist and<lb/>
graduate research pro-<lb/>
fessor, said. "There<lb/>
could be 10 times the<lb/>
natural gas in the coun-<lb/>
try, than the amount<lb/>
thai underlies their<lb/>
policy to switch to<lb/>
coal<lb/>
Green was ret erring<lb/>
to the 197 8<lb/>
Administration-backed<lb/>
energy legislation<lb/>
ordering power plants<lb/>
to draw up plans to<lb/>
switch from oil to coal.<lb/>
The government ex-<lb/>
perts at that time<lb/>
pessimistically<lb/>
estimated the country's<lb/>
known natural gas<lb/>
reserves at about 10<lb/>
years supply.<lb/>
But Cireen said recent<lb/>
discoveries o! major<lb/>
reserves of gas in the<lb/>
V est and in Oklahoma<lb/>
and Louisiana, enough<lb/>
to last up to 100 years<lb/>
at the current national<lb/>
rale of consumption.<lb/>
have drastically chang-<lb/>
ed the energy picture.<lb/>
Cireen. co-editor with<lb/>
Ray Jones of "Coal<lb/>
Burning Issues a<lb/>
book thai recommends<lb/>
conversion to coal as a<lb/>
way of "buying time"<lb/>
until other energy<lb/>
s mi rc e s can b e<lb/>
developed, also cited<lb/>
the deep gas theory of<lb/>
some Russian and<lb/>
American scientists.<lb/>
That theory holds<lb/>
that there ma be in-<lb/>
calulabk amounts ot<lb/>
natural gas deep in the<lb/>
earth, enough to pro-<lb/>
vide the entire world<lb/>
with energy for a<lb/>
millenia if it can be tap-<lb/>
ped.<lb/>
"But even without<lb/>
deep gas. there are<lb/>
enough new reports of<lb/>
gas to call for a re-<lb/>
evaluation of the<lb/>
government s pohev,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Referring to his<lb/>
book. Cireen said. "1<lb/>
am concerned thai we<lb/>
might have narrowed<lb/>
down our options in<lb/>
our book. Our new idea<lb/>
is to consider a broader<lb/>
range of energy options<lb/>
because even if the gas<lb/>
will last only until the<lb/>
year 2,000, we can<lb/>
come up with options<lb/>
that allow us to go in<lb/>
main directions<lb/>
Cireen said he is not<lb/>
advocating a total re-<lb/>
jection ot dirty-burning<lb/>
coal, but does support<lb/>
the development of<lb/>
technology that would<lb/>
enable powet plants to<lb/>
mix gas and coal into<lb/>
blends that burn like<lb/>
oil.<lb/>
He said billions of<lb/>
dollars could be saved<lb/>
it existing oil-burning<lb/>
plants could be con-<lb/>
verted to burn the gas<lb/>
coal blend.<lb/>
"Gas-coal produces<lb/>
a more benign flame<lb/>
than coal he said.<lb/>
Hinckley 'Stoned'<lb/>
Senator Says<lb/>
Insurance Rates<lb/>
May Change,<lb/>
Legislators Say<lb/>
RALEIGH (UPI)<lb/>
four senators have pro-<lb/>
posed a bill that would<lb/>
require insurance com-<lb/>
panies to change the<lb/>
system they use to set<lb/>
insurance rates for<lb/>
drivers.<lb/>
The measure in-<lb/>
troduced Tuesday in<lb/>
the Senate would<lb/>
abolish the industry's<lb/>
special point system. It<lb/>
was sponsored bv Sen.<lb/>
Joe Raynor,<lb/>
DCumberland; Sen.<lb/>
Carolyn Mat his,<lb/>
D-Mecklenburg, chair-<lb/>
man of the Senate In-<lb/>
surance Committee;<lb/>
Sen. Robert Swain,<lb/>
D Buncombe; and Sen.<lb/>
va ilham Redman,<lb/>
Rlredell.<lb/>
Insurance companies<lb/>
would be required to<lb/>
adopt the traffic viola-<lb/>
tion points system used<lb/>
bv the state Depart-<lb/>
ment of Motor Vehicles<lb/>
as the basis for deter-<lb/>
mining insurance rates.<lb/>
The DMV assigns<lb/>
points for moving<lb/>
violations and drivers<lb/>
with an excessive<lb/>
number within a<lb/>
specified time period<lb/>
risk having 1 h e i r<lb/>
licenses suspended.<lb/>
Insurance companies<lb/>
use a separate point<lb/>
system for violations<lb/>
that are used to deter-<lb/>
mine surcharges to<lb/>
basic auto insurance<lb/>
rales.<lb/>
The bill also says in-<lb/>
surance points may not<lb/>
be assessed unless a<lb/>
driver has been found<lb/>
guilty of a moving<lb/>
violation or is found<lb/>
liable for damages to<lb/>
another person.<lb/>
The Legislature was<lb/>
hit with a flood of bHJs<lb/>
luesdav as lawmakers<lb/>
met a deadline for sub-<lb/>
mitting local legislation<lb/>
for their home districts.<lb/>
One bill introduced<lb/>
called for an additional<lb/>
one-cent sales tax in<lb/>
Rutherford County for<lb/>
school construction<lb/>
and renovation.<lb/>
KM TICH (I PI)<lb/>
1 w o R epubl ican<lb/>
legislators sav they<lb/>
have collected about<lb/>
100 signatures on a<lb/>
resolution condemning<lb/>
an assassination at-<lb/>
tempt on President<lb/>
Reagan.<lb/>
In a related develop-<lb/>
ment, a state senator<lb/>
said luesdav the inci-<lb/>
dent was a reason the<lb/>
Legislature should not<lb/>
consider loosening the<lb/>
stale's marijuana laws.<lb/>
Sen. Ollie Hams.<lb/>
D-C leveland. told the<lb/>
Senate luesdav that<lb/>
Reagan's alleged<lb/>
assailant was apparent-<lb/>
ly a drug user.<lb/>
"In all probability<lb/>
the man started with<lb/>
marijuana, got on<lb/>
heavy drugs and is now<lb/>
a mental case Hairis<lb/>
said, and voiced his op-<lb/>
position to a pending<lb/>
oiII that would reduce<lb/>
marijuana penalties tor<lb/>
possession of up to<lb/>
four ounces.<lb/>
But Harris later ad-<lb/>
mit led to reporters he<lb/>
has no proof the man<lb/>
arrested bv police is a<lb/>
drug user and was bas-<lb/>
ing his opinion on news<lb/>
pictures he had seen.<lb/>
The bill Harris<lb/>
cha llenged would<lb/>
create a new misde-<lb/>
meanor penalty tor<lb/>
possession ot between<lb/>
one and tour ounces of<lb/>
mat 11 uana. Current<lb/>
state law now carries<lb/>
only a S50 fine for<lb/>
possession of an ounce<lb/>
or less, but possession<lb/>
ol over an ounce is a<lb/>
felony with a maximum<lb/>
penalty of five years in<lb/>
prison and a $5,000<lb/>
fine.<lb/>
1 egislation was in-<lb/>
troduced last month to<lb/>
create a maximum<lb/>
misdemeanor penalty<lb/>
of iwo years in prison<lb/>
and a S2,000 fine for<lb/>
people caught with<lb/>
amounts between one<lb/>
and tour ounces.<lb/>
Eastern Carolina<lb/>
School of Bartending<lb/>
A DIVISION OF BAR SFRVICES IMC<lb/>
LOCATED IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
218 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
E.C.S.Bs Experienced, Qualified Instructors can certify you<lb/>
as a Fully Trained Bartender upon completion of our<lb/>
Comprehensive Course in just Two Weeks!<lb/>
Bartending offers Career Opportunies, Great Pay, Flexible<lb/>
Hours, and Lots of Excitement!<lb/>
With Liquor by the Drink<lb/>
Qualified Mixologists are in GREAT DEMAND!<lb/>
Let us prepare you with The Ability and Diploma from<lb/>
Eastern Carolina School of Bartending!<lb/>
Upon Graduation you can take advantage of our Complete Job<lb/>
Placement Service! As a Qualified Bartender job opportunities<lb/>
are worldwide'<lb/>
Accepting Applications For Enrollment<lb/>
For Registration Information<lb/>
CALL NOW<lb/>
(919) 756-6644<lb/>
MONTLJfi - AVAILABLE FOR<lb/>
PRIVATE PARTIES - PAPA KATZ WILL<lb/>
CATER ANY PARTY OR FUNCTION. WE<lb/>
ALSO HAVE A MOBILE D.J. FOR ANY<lb/>
PARTY ANYTIME.<lb/>
WED. - "ORIGINAL LADIES' LOCKOUT"<lb/>
- 8:30-10:00 - LADIES ONLY - GENTS<lb/>
IN AFTER 10:00.<lb/>
THUR5. - "SUPER COLLEGE NIGHT-<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE SIG EPS - DOORS<lb/>
OPEN FROM 8:30 to 1:00 - NOW WITH<lb/>
THE BIGGEST SHAG CONTEST IN GREEN-<lb/>
VILLE. COME OUT FOR THE DANCE OFF.<lb/>
MAIN DANCE OFF ON MARCH 19th<lb/>
WITH OVER $300.00 IN CASH &amp; PRIZES.<lb/>
FRL?- ESCAPE THE DOWNTOWN<lb/>
CROWD &amp; INFLATION - JOIN THE<lb/>
CROWD AT THE KATZ FOR AN AFTER-<lb/>
NOON AND EVENING OF ENJOYMENT.<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 3:00 &amp; NEVER STOP.<lb/>
TOP 40 COUNTDOWN FREE ADMISSION<lb/>
TILL 7:00.<lb/>
SAT, - "LADIES' LOCKOUT II" - LADIES<lb/>
ONLY FROM 8:00 to 9:30 - GENTS IN AT<lb/>
9:30.<lb/>
SUNRECORD BAR SPONSORS "NEW<lb/>
WAVE NIGHT" AT THE KATZ WFOUR<lb/>
PRELIMINARY DANCE OFFS EACH SUN-<lb/>
DAY - $50.00 TO THE BEST DANCERS<lb/>
AND $25.00 TO THE BEST DRESSED<lb/>
MAIN DANCE OFF ON APRIL 5th FOR<lb/>
OVER $500.00 IN CASH &amp; PRIZES.<lb/>
COMING ? APRIL 10th -<lb/>
"BRUCE FRYE" WITH HIS<lb/>
LARGEST APPEARANCE IN<lb/>
GREENVILLE.<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION<lb/>
All members will be entitled to 1 guests per evening Neat dress<lb/>
and proper identification will be required of all members and<lb/>
ctuests<lb/>
This special INTRODUCTORY MEMBERSHIP is only 1100<lb/>
All applications and dues must be returned to this address P.O<lb/>
Bo? l??3, Greenville. N C J7IM N C State Law requires a thirty<lb/>
day membership waitmq period from date of application for<lb/>
clubs with brown bagging permits<lb/>
There's More<lb/>
Elbow Room in<lb/>
Our Attic!<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
Nam<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Ti?phon No.<lb/>
liitMot<lb/>
Occupation<lb/>
Hobbi <lb/>
Music pftofneo:<lb/>
DAT!<lb/>
<lb/>
SIGNATURE<lb/>
River Bluff Rd.<lb/>
Behind Putt Putt<lb/>
758-7912<lb/>
UA Touch<lb/>
Ojf Class"<lb/>
3t?(P(p?WIWrtHw<lb/>
mmmmmmmmimmmlimil,mgumim.<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057333_0004"/><lb/>
QHfe lEaat (Earnlfman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
CHRIS I l( 1IOK. Gnm Itaw<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREl. - e?m<lb/>
Paui i ic ki . .  Paul Collins, New,??<lb/>
Davi Severin, ensM Charles Chandler v???<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, ,?? l)in Norris. ???<lb/>
ii  im<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
SGA Meetings<lb/>
Legislators Disrupt Proceedings<lb/>
The Speaker's gavel had a work-<lb/>
out at the Student Government<lb/>
Association meeting Tuesday,<lb/>
March 31. In fact, more was heard<lb/>
from it than from many o' the<lb/>
representatives present at the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Private conversations were con-<lb/>
tinually in progress around the<lb/>
meeting room, in and out of context<lb/>
with the topic o' discussion during<lb/>
the meeting. Individuals were in and<lb/>
out of their seats, walking around to<lb/>
confer with their fellow legislators.<lb/>
rhese actions were called down<lb/>
regular!) by the Speaker, but con-<lb/>
tinued throughout the proceedings.<lb/>
Debate over the bills presented at<lb/>
the meeting varied from short and<lb/>
uncomplicated to lengthy and<lb/>
volatile. With little discussion or<lb/>
questioning, a proposal was in-<lb/>
troduced and approved to ap-<lb/>
propriate over S500 for a sports club<lb/>
on campus to purchase equipment.<lb/>
Later in the meeting, a long and in-<lb/>
volved debate broke out over the<lb/>
opening of two new po'ls to- yester-<lb/>
day's election, and the possible clos-<lb/>
ing o' two that seemingly were not<lb/>
in well-traveled locations.<lb/>
It seems questionable that an<lb/>
organization representing the<lb/>
students would spend more time<lb/>
arguing over polls for a run-off elec-<lb/>
tion than questioning the effective<lb/>
use of over $500 of the students'<lb/>
money.<lb/>
This is not to say that there are no<lb/>
interested students involved in the<lb/>
SGA. Many of the representatives<lb/>
are hard-working, enthusiastic in-<lb/>
dividuals who want to see legislation<lb/>
passed that will be of benefit to the<lb/>
students they represent. However, it<lb/>
is extremely unprofessional<lb/>
behavior when their dull roar of en-<lb/>
thusiasm makes it impossible to<lb/>
hear the comments of the person<lb/>
recognized by the Speaker to ad-<lb/>
dress the assembly.<lb/>
The loquaciousness of those<lb/>
representatives was contrasted,<lb/>
however, by the seemingly<lb/>
uninterested attitude of some of the<lb/>
others. Many of the student<lb/>
representatives did not participate<lb/>
in any of the discussions at all.<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association can only be as effective<lb/>
as the students who support it. As<lb/>
demonstrated by the small percen-<lb/>
tage o' students who participated in<lb/>
the last election, there is a definite<lb/>
epidemic of apathy throughout this<lb/>
campus. Some of this apathy has<lb/>
spread into the SGA as well.<lb/>
As students at East Carolina, we<lb/>
arc the foundation of the university.<lb/>
If we are not actively involved in<lb/>
our own student government and its<lb/>
activities, we can never hope to at-<lb/>
tain our potential excellence as a<lb/>
university.<lb/>
Election Results<lb/>
Remain Uncertain<lb/>
One more try for old times' sake?<lb/>
Well, maybe not.<lb/>
We've just completed 'Round 2'<lb/>
of the continuing saga of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Association elec-<lb/>
tions. Marvin Braxton came<lb/>
through with a convincing win<lb/>
(600-417) over Peggy Davison for<lb/>
vice-president, but incumbant<lb/>
Treasurer Kirk Little managed only<lb/>
a seven vote win over contender<lb/>
Angela Pepe.<lb/>
Lame-duck President Charlie<lb/>
Sherrod hopes for another run-off,<lb/>
but the students of ECU may be<lb/>
spared this anguish by Pepe who<lb/>
feels the campaign has been a drain<lb/>
of her resources.<lb/>
There is no doubt that Pepe could<lb/>
handle the duties of the office, and<lb/>
we applaud the dignified manner in<lb/>
which she ran her campaign.<lb/>
Media "Mislead9 American People<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? Some of the na-<lb/>
tion's most powerful news media ? in-<lb/>
cluding all three of the major television<lb/>
networks ? are engaged in what amounts<lb/>
to an effort to mislead the American peo-<lb/>
ple concerning President Reagan's efforts<lb/>
to reduce the federal government's deficit<lb/>
spending.<lb/>
There are two possible explanations:<lb/>
Either this is being done deliberately ? or<lb/>
it is an act of ignorance on the part of the<lb/>
media. One thing is for sure: Their reports<lb/>
are not based on an actual examination of<lb/>
the Reagan budgetary proposals.<lb/>
Meanwhile, seldom a night goes by<lb/>
without one or more "protest movements"<lb/>
being given nationwide television publici-<lb/>
ty. And I have not seen one instance in<lb/>
which President Reagan's side of the con-<lb/>
troversy has been given anything like ob-<lb/>
jective coverage.<lb/>
FOOD STAMPS ? A great deal of<lb/>
caustic criticism has been directed at me, as<lb/>
well. Following public hearings on the<lb/>
food stamp program ? hearings providing<lb/>
an equal balance of contrasting views ?<lb/>
the major media, in large measure, virtual-<lb/>
ly ignored testimony by several local and<lb/>
state administrators of the food stamp pro-<lb/>
gram ? testimony which made clear that<lb/>
countless millions of dollars are wasted<lb/>
each year due to fraud, waste and ineffi-<lb/>
ciency.<lb/>
These hearings were conducted by the<lb/>
Senate Agriculture Committee, of which I<lb/>
am chairman. I presided over the hearings<lb/>
for nearly five straight hours one day,<lb/>
carefully listening to testimony by<lb/>
Jesse<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
witnesses who came to Washington from<lb/>
various parts of the country.<lb/>
They spelled out the ways in which the<lb/>
taxpayers are being ripped off. their<lb/>
testimony confirmed precisely what we had<lb/>
been hearing from local and state ad-<lb/>
minstrators of the food stamp program<lb/>
over a long period o time.<lb/>
EDITORIALS ? Then came the usual<lb/>
spate of editorials. The morning paper in<lb/>
my hometown implied that 1 didn't really<lb/>
have much, if any, evidence of fraud and<lb/>
waste in the food stamp program. It I had<lb/>
such evidence, the paper sarcastically sug-<lb/>
gested, why did 1 not make it public?<lb/>
I was astonished. For five straight<lb/>
hours, two days earlier, I had done precise-<lb/>
ly that ? using food stamp administrators<lb/>
who are perfectly willing to testify under<lb/>
oath.<lb/>
The staff of the Agriculture Committee<lb/>
called the Washington correspondent tor<lb/>
The News and Observer, and left word that<lb/>
the detailed information his editor had<lb/>
demanded that morning was available :<lb/>
inspection. As 1 write this column, the<lb/>
paper has not published the evidence<lb/>
WHAT? ? What arc we supp<lb/>
do? How cari such journalism be offset?<lb/>
Perhaps the minds ol sonic editors are<lb/>
made v.p. and they don't wai be<lb/>
bothered b the facts.<lb/>
Just the same, unless the I<lb/>
program is tightened up considerably,<lb/>
will cost the American taxpi $1!<lb/>
billion this year, and far more tl<lb/>
years to come.<lb/>
1 he program has become so<lb/>
costly that it is absoluteK imperative to<lb/>
reduce its costs bv elimii ition<lb/>
o benefits. bv taking<lb/>
remove those persons wl<lb/>
above the poverty level, ai d .<lb/>
foregoing a portion ot a<lb/>
increases in the future.<lb/>
WORKFARI final n<lb/>
think it fair to require able-bodied<lb/>
to do a little work in exchange tor iheii<lb/>
food stamps<lb/>
 sear oi so ago, some ol us in c ongress<lb/>
included a requirement thai a few random<lb/>
tests be conducted to determine what<lb/>
would happen if such a "workfare" re-<lb/>
quirement were made a part ol the law.<lb/>
A few areas were chosen in different<lb/>
states for this test. Guess what it showed<lb/>
When able-bodied people were told that<lb/>
the) would have to work tor their food<lb/>
stamps, they decided they didn't want<lb/>
them. The test results show thai HS percent<lb/>
of the able-bodied food stamp applicants<lb/>
didn't report for work.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
East Carolina Pair Still Shows Support For Jeter<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is<lb/>
an account oj a conversation between<lb/>
supporters oj the HZ MB petition which<lb/>
was circulated on campus during Fall<lb/>
Semester, 1980. This account was sub-<lb/>
mitted to The East Carolinian by Van<lb/>
Brown and Tom Zielinski and is<lb/>
reprinted as submitted.<lb/>
Question: (Zielinski) It's seven mon-<lb/>
ths since the petition to reinstate John<lb/>
Jeter and save WZMB radio. What has<lb/>
or is happening concerning the station?<lb/>
Answer: (Brown) First, I would like to<lb/>
apologize to all those 2,500 who<lb/>
faithfully signed the petition for not<lb/>
coming forward before now, but unfor-<lb/>
tunately I was taken seriously ill during<lb/>
the petition and have spent the last mon-<lb/>
ths recovering.<lb/>
Q: Just what did you learn from peti-<lb/>
tioning the Media Board?<lb/>
A: Well, it only reinforced everything<lb/>
John Jeter originally complained to me<lb/>
about in the summer of 1980. The Media<lb/>
Board minutes show that Ms. Kill-<lb/>
ingsworth was originally accepted as a<lb/>
figurehead with Jeter remaining to do<lb/>
the technical work. She asked that he be<lb/>
removed from the staff when he ordered<lb/>
a piece of equipment while she was away<lb/>
on vacation. This equipment design was<lb/>
later accepted, I'll come to this later.<lb/>
Q: There was talk that the Media<lb/>
Board or the chairman forced Jeters<lb/>
resignation. What were the cicumstances<lb/>
under which Jeter resigned?<lb/>
A: John had been carrying the burden<lb/>
for some years. On the Friday before<lb/>
Labor Day 1980 Chairman (David)<lb/>
Creech told him he was not going to be<lb/>
able to finish the station and not to<lb/>
bother to sign up for school. At that<lb/>
point he -racked. This hurt John so bad<lb/>
after all the time he had put into it that<lb/>
we were unable to persuade him not to<lb/>
resign.<lb/>
Q: What was the problem with the<lb/>
original equipment order?<lb/>
A: Well in case you didn't know the<lb/>
original design was to be "state of the<lb/>
art" but because of budget problems the<lb/>
only way Jeter could do it was if he did<lb/>
all the hook up work himself supervised<lb/>
by the contractor. Mel (the contractor)<lb/>
balked on the contract because John<lb/>
resigned. He had already given us a<lb/>
sizeable price cut and if he had to pay to<lb/>
install the equipment himself he would<lb/>
have taken a big loss. Mel gave us a final<lb/>
delivery date anyway of the first week of<lb/>
December. Manager Killingsworth gave<lb/>
him an ultimatum that they had to have<lb/>
it by Nov. 15. She cancelled the order<lb/>
because she said it was taking too long.<lb/>
By the way, what month is it now?<lb/>
Q: What is the status of the broadcast<lb/>
equipment now?<lb/>
A: Since then, a state engineer who<lb/>
has helped with other university stations<lb/>
has redesigned our equipment order. It's<lb/>
no longer what you call state of the art.<lb/>
Chairman Creech allowed the original<lb/>
equipment order to be changed because<lb/>
he thought the state of the art transmit-<lb/>
ter design was illegal. The truth of the<lb/>
matter is that Mr. Jeter intended to use a<lb/>
more powerful high quality transmitter<lb/>
which is a type accepted by the F.C.C. to<lb/>
provide a clearer signal with less failure.<lb/>
This is perfectly legal as long as the ef-<lb/>
fective radiating power output does not<lb/>
exceed what is authorized by the F.C.C.<lb/>
Because Chairman Creech has no<lb/>
knowledge of broadcast electronics he<lb/>
was unable to conceive of the engineer-<lb/>
ing design or the reasons behind it. The<lb/>
new equipment design approved by the<lb/>
WZMB Faculty Advisory Board is se-<lb/>
cond rate at best. That's the good news!<lb/>
The bad news is that (the present<lb/>
manager that everyone wanted to give a<lb/>
chance) has not even ordered any new<lb/>
equipment. They have sent out for state<lb/>
bids. That took six months last time,<lb/>
and by the way the student body has lost<lb/>
another three or four thousand dollars<lb/>
due to inflation, taking into considera-<lb/>
tion the cancelling of the first order and<lb/>
paying a station staff that has only taken<lb/>
us backwards in time.<lb/>
Q: Why is it taking so long to ac-<lb/>
complish such a small feat?<lb/>
Q: 1 thought you'd never ask. During<lb/>
the debate over whether or not to accept<lb/>
the microwave unit which will save the<lb/>
students' money in the long run, Dean<lb/>
of Student Affairs Rudy Alexander buf-<lb/>
falowed the student members of the<lb/>
board by accusing John Jeter of<lb/>
violating state law by ordering the equip-<lb/>
ment without a requisition or going<lb/>
through normal channels. Chairman<lb/>
Creech asserted the same thing. This is<lb/>
how they got the rest of the board to<lb/>
support Killingsworth. This was a total<lb/>
lie. The administration refused us access<lb/>
to the paperwork which would move<lb/>
otherwise, violation of the Federal Truth<lb/>
and Information Act. As if that isn't<lb/>
bad enough, try reading Media Board<lb/>
minutes concerning Jeters resignation.<lb/>
There aren't any nor are there any<lb/>
minutes concerning the petition.<lb/>
Discussion: Further, in order to keep<lb/>
us from going to the Board of Trustees<lb/>
with the complaint they refused to take<lb/>
up the petition because they had more<lb/>
important work on their calendar. What<lb/>
they considered more important than<lb/>
WZMB's $43,000 budget was trying to<lb/>
make all media have a 2.5 average to<lb/>
work, and changing their own constitu-<lb/>
tion to add a new seat for next year. In<lb/>
this way the board stalled until after the<lb/>
Board of Trustees had already met for<lb/>
the semester.<lb/>
Q: Why would the board purposefully<lb/>
do this.<lb/>
A: At first I thought the board was<lb/>
responsible, but it really wasn't; at least<lb/>
o<lb/>
some of its student members weren't.<lb/>
The problem is that Dean Alexander and<lb/>
Dean Meyer run the entire Board with<lb/>
the help of student collaborator David<lb/>
Creech. Meyer said at the first o' the<lb/>
year he didn't want his children to listen<lb/>
to rock music. Alexander, meanwhile,<lb/>
has done everything possible to help this<lb/>
project fall on its face. This includes in-<lb/>
timidating the newspaper to print its<lb/>
December editorial refuting that<lb/>
anything was wrong at WZMB. In-<lb/>
timidating the newspaper is nothing<lb/>
short of blackmail. Censorship is illegal.<lb/>
Furthermore, the News and Observer<lb/>
first reported problems with the ECU<lb/>
administration over WZMB in a<lb/>
December 1979 article.<lb/>
Q: Where does WZMB go from here.<lb/>
A: A new student needs to be found<lb/>
who understands radio station opera-<lb/>
tions. There are quite a few who arc<lb/>
qualified. What disturbs me is that<lb/>
although Killingsworth's term officially<lb/>
ends April 14, Chairman Creech says<lb/>
that he will be keeping Ms. Kill-<lb/>
ingsworth in the office until June. What<lb/>
is to be gained from keeping her on since<lb/>
the board now admits it wants someone<lb/>
with electronic broadcasting credentials.<lb/>
Therefore, there really can be no solu-<lb/>
tion to the problem until the administra-<lb/>
tion quits manipulating the Media<lb/>
Board. There will never be a constitu-<lb/>
tionally democratic Media Board as long<lb/>
as Dean Alexander transgresses his ad-<lb/>
visory position. His advisory member-<lb/>
ship on the board is in no way in the stu-<lb/>
dent interest but merely an implement of<lb/>
political bargaining. With the aid of<lb/>
Dean Meyer, Chairman Creech plavs<lb/>
petty politics as petty people who have<lb/>
nothing better to do. Furthermore, Mr<lb/>
Alexander's conduct of slandering a<lb/>
former student I find nothing less than a<lb/>
disgrace for a state official.<lb/>
Therefore along with the rest of the<lb/>
W.MB petitioning committee. 1 per<lb/>
sonally urge each ol you, as the ripped<lb/>
ofl student body, to boycott the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center until you<lb/>
can decide what you want to do with<lb/>
your money instead of being told what<lb/>
you can spend it on.<lb/>
Humanity Walk<lb/>
I think that the Walk for Humanity,<lb/>
to be held on pnl 11th, is a SI PER ac-<lb/>
tivity to become involved in! The funds<lb/>
that are to be raised will be given to the<lb/>
hungry and the walking is very healthy . 1<lb/>
hope that all ECU students will become<lb/>
involved in this bemticial protect. Come<lb/>
on, put a little heart in your soul!<lb/>
1 l RA WHITE<lb/>
ECU Student<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points oj new. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
' or purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by (he<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
da vs.<lb/>
s<lb/>
Bv k V<lb/>
rickets<lb/>
tit kets now<lb/>
to met the l)<lb/>
For<lb/>
E<lb/>
B<lb/>
V<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ban<lb/>
Cel<lb/>
Mu<lb/>
B.<lb/>
ami.<lb/>
ovei<lb/>
pri<lb/>
citing t<lb/>
I n<lb/>
forts<lb/>
lion<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
Ba?i<lb/>
in the sprirJ<lb/>
of Menden<lb/>
tern from<lb/>
I auffer. h<lb/>
ing fever,<lb/>
tainment c<lb/>
and cratts<lb/>
Student<lb/>
dent Cente<lb/>
campus,<lb/>
speople<lb/>
<lb/>
. MMMH<lb/>
<pb facs="00057333_0005"/><lb/>
<lb/>
e<lb/>
 fcAST ki s<lb/>
Featu<lb/>
Xl'KIl<lb/>
Student Copes With Rare Handicap<lb/>
UOR S OTl I:<lb/>
ui a student at I j<lb/>
? who has a seven hat<lb/>
wishes in prest<lb/>
Ms kl HAKIM klMBLKI N<lb/>
oneni<lb/>
tificial kidney allow cxscss amounts<lb/>
ol such minerals as potassium,<lb/>
sodium, nitrogen, and phosphates<lb/>
diffuse through them until<lb/>
.is (a balance ol the chemicals<lb/>
w n hm and w ithoui) occui s.<lb/>
rhis complicated process means<lb/>
that two days, Don must go to<lb/>
the dialysis center in Doctor's Circle<lb/>
and spend about lour hours on a<lb/>
dialysis machine. Don has been on<lb/>
ichine foi Nun and<lb/>
yeai s. I he mosi nine he can -p.<lb/>
the machine is two da s;<lb/>
- to make an extended<lb/>
P, must plan it a month in<lb/>
I; L'hose .i destination<lb/>
as .1 dialylsis centei near In.<lb/>
and make reservations to use the<lb/>
clv machines there ! an ca<lb/>
ke material, lion<lb/>
su rounded<lb/>
?mains a He is also on ? ieted diet and<lb/>
?sar body must limit his fluid intake Because<lb/>
? the ai a it th machine places<lb/>
US i 1<lb/>
kidne)d sfunc-<lb/>
docshave one<lb/>
odv, iI does not<lb/>
and tle is<lb/>
1 "t him, and the amount ol time it<lb/>
nsumes, Don is forced to lake less<lb/>
urs in school, thus extending Ins<lb/>
iduation dale, Anothei ,op<lb/>
proaching problem is that the<lb/>
(ireenv ille dialy sis centei, w hich has<lb/>
been operating on three shifts<lb/>
seven to twelve, twelve to five, five<lb/>
? imateh is being<lb/>
'ui the ihird shift foi<lb/>
lomic reasons, rhis cut <lb/>
. ?<lb/>
Don and<lb/>
url<lb/>
:<lb/>
' as li i<lb/>
win i m<lb/>
on<lb/>
A ho<lb/>
to<lb/>
( l'l)<lb/>
ted to<lb/>
v is a<lb/>
g into<lb/>
dial sal<lb/>
artificial kidney, "he poisons drain-<lb/>
ed hack into the bat- are emptied<lb/>
out, and another two liters of<lb/>
dealsate are poured back. I his pro-<lb/>
cess is also lengthy, taking tour to<lb/>
six hours, and is also very, restric-<lb/>
tive.<lb/>
I he best alternative foi a dialysis<lb/>
patient is a kidney transplant. A<lb/>
transplant would tree the patient<lb/>
from almost all rest net ions except<lb/>
diet. I he operation itseit is not<lb/>
dangerous; the only danger lies m<lb/>
the possibility oi the body rejecting<lb/>
the transplant. I he first source con-<lb/>
ed tor transplation is relatives;<lb/>
howevei it the patient has no<lb/>
relatives who are willing or able to<lb/>
ate a kidney, the patient is<lb/>
carefully typed and coded, and the<lb/>
information is fed into a computer.<lb/>
It a kidney is donated, its type is<lb/>
also fed into the computer. The<lb/>
compute! then matches the organ to<lb/>
a patieni with a similar typing.<lb/>
Depending upon the rareness ol the<lb/>
patients type and the abundance ol<lb/>
donated organs, the match up could<lb/>
take from six months to ten years<lb/>
The more organs there are to choose<lb/>
from, the greater the chance ol a<lb/>
candidate finding one quickly<lb/>
The purpose ol the organ donor<lb/>
program is to increase the amount<lb/>
ol organs that can be used tor<lb/>
transplantation.<lb/>
Hie kidney is not the onlj i i gai<lb/>
needed for transplantation; medical<lb/>
advances in recent years have made<lb/>
possible the transplantation ot ovei<lb/>
2 different tissues and organs, in-<lb/>
cluding the heart, lungs, liver, bone<lb/>
marrow, and skin. As with kidney<lb/>
transplants, the success rate is high,<lb/>
and. m some cases, can save a lit<lb/>
I he I inform Anatomical (iifi<lb/>
Act has made it possible tor anyone<lb/>
in the U.S. over the age ot 18<lb/>
donate organs a' death by com<lb/>
pleting the I Iniform Donor (. ard.<lb/>
I heaid enable- one lo donate all<lb/>
organs, specific organs, or his entire<lb/>
body tor medical purposes. The<lb/>
condition ol the donor's bodv or<lb/>
aiis is irrelevant; the suitability<lb/>
of ilie donated organs can be made<lb/>
by the transplant team a' the nine ot<lb/>
dona! ion.<lb/>
(ireenville 1 ion'slub, the<lb/>
1 l Pre kdlub, and the<lb/>
I piscopal Fellowship are sponsor-<lb/>
ing an Organ Donoi Dine on April<lb/>
8, 1981 I he locations ot the Doi<lb/>
tables will be Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, the Allied Health Building.<lb/>
Wrighi Auditorium. Evans Street<lb/>
Ma Pin Plaza, and thearolina<lb/>
? as! Mall, "he limes ot the Drive<lb/>
will he from 10 to 12 and from 2 to<lb/>
4. So please, join Operation Sur-<lb/>
vival and help lo lengthen.<lb/>
strengthen, or save a lite<lb/>
Bad Habits<lb/>
Supressed, But Never Eliminated<lb/>
ItO rj, CHAP GURLEV<lb/>
Cheap Trick Tickets Selling Well<lb/>
In kits turheap 1 rick's 8:00 p.m. Saturday concert in Mingesoliseum have been selling well. I ess than 2.(KM)<lb/>
tickets now remain. I heentral ticket Office will be open until 6 p.m. Friday and from noon until 4 p.m. Saturday<lb/>
lo met the last-minute rush. Am tickets left at the door wil In S8.50.<lb/>
B DAVID NOKKIS<lb/>
Bad htabits are those little flaws<lb/>
can never be fully exorcised<lb/>
m people, no matter how hard<lb/>
we oi society may try.<lb/>
ceaseless wai against whai<lb/>
are deemed 'bad habits' begins in<lb/>
oui early childhoods. Parents<lb/>
tenth supress such activities as<lb/>
nting with toothpaste on the<lb/>
bathroom mirror or shaking up<lb/>
Cokes and spraying the ceiling with<lb/>
them, calling them bad habits.<lb/>
Indeed, some things like nailing<lb/>
back door shut never even get to<lb/>
Ms. since children seldom<lb/>
, than once after their<lb/>
parents tuid out about it.<lb/>
v hewing gum was regarded as a<lb/>
horrendous!) bad tiabn in elemen-<lb/>
tary school it was much worse<lb/>
than talking in class (hut not quite<lb/>
as bad as blowing up school<lb/>
buildings.)<lb/>
Despite the disadvantages of<lb/>
?ving gum, such as having to<lb/>
e T will not chew gum in class'<lb/>
. dreds ol times or getting sticky<lb/>
gum all over everything or getting<lb/>
sore jaws from too much chewing, it<lb/>
was still a popular vice among ki<lb/>
back in my time. (Prool ol this ex-<lb/>
ists in the millions ol pieces ol gum<lb/>
stuck under desks and tables<lb/>
every school in the country.)<lb/>
I eachers were not immune<lb/>
having bad habits. One ol their<lb/>
worst habits was that ol assigning<lb/>
sentences as punishment for almost<lb/>
any offense. I had one teacher who<lb/>
was making me write sentences<lb/>
every time I turned around. (Did<lb/>
you ever have to write 'i will<lb/>
turn around' fifty time- ?<lb/>
Bad posture is anothei vice that<lb/>
main ol us indulged in 1 never<lb/>
believed that the human bodv was<lb/>
meant to sit up straight with both<lb/>
feet flat on the floor, when<lb/>
slouching was so comfortable.<lb/>
(Until you develop permanent cur-<lb/>
vature ol the spine, you never<lb/>
believe things like that.)<lb/>
Another bad habit that can really<lb/>
rack you up is not eating properly.<lb/>
It's an understandable vice, since<lb/>
everything that tastes good rums<lb/>
your stomach, teeth, liver or<lb/>
something and the stufl that's g<lb/>
tor you tastes like axle grease<lb/>
robacco is the cause ol some ol<lb/>
the yuckiesi habits in existence, il<lb/>
don't smoke, as you can tell.) Y.<lb/>
tually, smoking is (kav in anything<lb/>
a closed environment, but chew-<lb/>
ing tobacco is pretty revolting, even<lb/>
in a well-ventilated area I here a<lb/>
to be fair, a couple of good thi<lb/>
about chewing tobacco chewers<lb/>
: accidentally burn anyone w<lb/>
il plug, and peopie dor<lb/>
ii leftover tobacco under desk<lb/>
tOps<lb/>
( racking knuckles is one bad<lb/>
habit 1 never succomb to, since I<lb/>
't get my knuckles to crack. 1<lb/>
:ss that good, since it 1 evei<lb/>
-tart wearing rings. won't have to<lb/>
worry about having fat fingers.<lb/>
Bad table manners are an unsight-<lb/>
ly habit, but they are a lot more tun<lb/>
than eating politely. Utensils are<lb/>
really a nuisance most of the time,<lb/>
unless you're eating spaghetti or<lb/>
See BAD, page 7. col. I<lb/>
For Black History Month<lb/>
Essay Wins SOULS Contest<lb/>
I! This essax,<lb/>
. i . <lb/>
Bv s I N lAJOM-s<lb/>
itelv<lb/>
side. 1 w . d<lb/>
1 all o<lb/>
'evolve . and<lb/>
i<lb/>
lid awaken. 1 il .<lb/>
veeks, I dei<lb/>
. d 1 told h<lb/>
tm I asl '<lb/>
pen it 1 eve: hit the<lb/>
i n g a t 11<lb/>
I<lb/>
mehow oi<lb/>
-? As 1 fell, niv bodv<lb/>
i<lb/>
?in. I<lb/>
?<lb/>
: hap-<lb/>
itom. Met<lb/>
became<lb/>
? -<lb/>
? i<lb/>
?<lb/>
n<lb/>
- I <lb/>
heine<lb/>
i and I<lb/>
them a.<lb/>
I b '?? e<lb/>
am now li<lb/>
In thi<lb/>
response was thai I w.<lb/>
ihlv<lb/>
all<lb/>
v sleep.<lb/>
Barefoot On The Mall<lb/>
Celebration To Include<lb/>
Music, Art And Fun<lb/>
Jen<lb/>
citi<lb/>
arolina I niversity Stu-<lb/>
l to their third<lb/>
t On I he Mall ex<lb/>
festival was<lb/>
c success i ? .a: and<lb/>
be an even more ex-<lb/>
Mlt<lb/>
8<lb/>
this veat. All Student<lb/>
ittees combine their el<lb/>
ie spectaculai produc-<lb/>
on the Mall. Apr.<lb/>
2:(H Noon until 10:00<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
Baretoo! ()n Die Mall originated<lb/>
in the spring ot 1979. It was the idea<lb/>
of Mendenhall Student Center's in-<lb/>
tern from Rose High School, I aura<lb/>
1 auffei Her proposal was for a<lb/>
festival that was the epitome ot spt<lb/>
ing fever, that would include enter-<lb/>
tainment of all kinds, food, games,<lb/>
and crafts.<lb/>
Student Union, Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent (enter, other organizations on<lb/>
campus, local vendors, and craft-<lb/>
speople combined their talents on<lb/>
April 3, lM). to provide a mixture<lb/>
of talent and entertainment that at-<lb/>
tracted 3,500 people, shirts,<lb/>
balloons, and banners helped en<lb/>
the carefree atmosphere so impoi<lb/>
it to the festival. Michael Marlin,<lb/>
a comedian - Higgler - musician.<lb/>
emceed the davs" activities Kate<lb/>
Bent ley and laskie Wildau, other-<lb/>
wise known as Mainly Mime, per<lb/>
burned smart and sassv routines<lb/>
twice on the mainstage and<lb/>
throughout the dav as they mingled<lb/>
in the audience.<lb/>
I ocal performers New Vintage, a<lb/>
young bluegrass band, and the<lb/>
Oreen Crass (loggers ottered the<lb/>
festival-goers a taste ot traditional<lb/>
music and dance, fantasy, a group<lb/>
of ECU students, faculty, and staff,<lb/>
used sign language to relav musical<lb/>
messages to the deat. The ECU Jazz<lb/>
I nsemble and karate Club also of<lb/>
tered demonstrations oi fun, excite-<lb/>
ment and skill.<lb/>
 s ven<lb/>
m a<lb/>
lop we have<lb/>
W reai hed a poim<lb/>
in e feel sate and<lb/>
free s a resuh. wc ? aken oui<lb/>
11 si fell asleep, li<lb/>
is Sunda m i iga n and it we<lb/>
continue t ide with<lb/>
deaih. Wake up Black America!<lb/>
I. struggles have been much loo<lb/>
long and n painful to end m<lb/>
a rapid, devast ill. Out<lb/>
forefatl slaveiv. postslavery,<lb/>
and the civi battles have<lb/>
cried, a ? j died I<lb/>
we mil ' and remain on top<lb/>
ot the mountain. ill all ol that be<lb/>
made unimportani because ol our<lb/>
neglect and disconcernment?<lb/>
W't musi awaken and realize that<lb/>
the struggle and climb is not over.<lb/>
We are slowl) slipping down and<lb/>
unless we unite as a group we will<lb/>
tall and the pain of a lifetime will be<lb/>
out s ai, nc.<lb/>
Noi doubi many blacks ate sued<lb/>
ot this storv and they do not dp-<lb/>
preciate the pa it w e have all been<lb/>
spoiled by being fortunate enough<lb/>
to be bom dining a lifetime where<lb/>
racial prejudice and violence is not<lb/>
as apparent as m the past. 1 oi this<lb/>
reason, the past must be<lb/>
remembered and its relationship to<lb/>
the present must be accepted.<lb/>
rhrough past works, toil, and<lb/>
education, the advancements and<lb/>
achievements ot blacks are prac<lb/>
tically endless. ins m itsell is a<lb/>
blessing, an upward step, vet s,?<lb/>
many blacks, because ot ignorance<lb/>
ot selfish reasons, have turned all<lb/>
the achievements to a curse, fhev<lb/>
have been blessed, they have made it<lb/>
to the "top ot the ladder and the)<lb/>
have forgotten as best they could<lb/>
where they came from and what so<lb/>
many others have done foi 'hem.<lb/>
I oi some reason they actually<lb/>
believe they made it on their own.<lb/>
I heir attitudes have become threats<lb/>
to the future and destroy our<lb/>
previously established groundwork.<lb/>
1 he knowledge ot the past instilled<lb/>
in black minds should be used in<lb/>
collective work and unity, not for<lb/>
personal gams alone. e must be as<lb/>
one, not as individuals who strive<lb/>
alone for self. Wake up Black<lb/>
America! It is not done this way. No<lb/>
one can survive alone, nor was<lb/>
an)one meant to do so.<lb/>
We have not made it vet. and no<lb/>
matter how wonderful things look,<lb/>
the struggle must continue. We must<lb/>
be made to realize that no matter<lb/>
what advancements we make, no<lb/>
matter how high we climb as in-<lb/>
dividuals, be it up a mountain or the<lb/>
socioeconomic ladder, we will still<lb/>
be black. We will still need each<lb/>
othei lo survive, and most lmpor-<lb/>
tant, we are si ill (or must be) a<lb/>
cohesive group. No height in the<lb/>
wot Id will change skin color.<lb/>
All oi this is not to say that<lb/>
achievements are meaningless but<lb/>
let us not forget our sense oi being.<lb/>
1 et us not forget how we got where<lb/>
we are. It was not bv our own works<lb/>
alone, it was not through the finan-<lb/>
cial assistance of our parents nor<lb/>
was u ilie twenty-five dollars a<lb/>
month allowance. Instead, it was<lb/>
the struggles that began long ago<lb/>
dining the davs oi slavery, up to the<lb/>
activities of the civil rights battles<lb/>
that paved the wav for us all. It was<lb/>
See LSS.AY, page 6. col. 1<lb/>
The Billy Taylor Trio will perform in Wright Auditorium Sunday April 5 at<lb/>
8:15 p.m. Tickets are $4 for adults and SI for students.<lb/>
Billy Taylor Trio<lb/>
To Give Concert<lb/>
The Billy Taylor Trio, widelv ac-<lb/>
claimed jazz group, will perform in<lb/>
ECU's Wright Auditorium Sunday,<lb/>
April 5 at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Also appearing on the Taylor pro-<lb/>
gram will be the LCI Jazz I nsem<lb/>
ble. The event, parr oi the 1(1<lb/>
School of Music's Spring festival of<lb/>
Misic, is co-sponsored by the 1I<lb/>
foundation, the Student Union<lb/>
Special Attractions Committee and<lb/>
the Greenville-Pitt County Aits<lb/>
Council. Taylor is a native oi<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
rickets are available from the<lb/>
campus Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center at $4.00<lb/>
tor adults and SI.00 for students.<lb/>
Profits will be used bv the ECU<lb/>
Foundation for student scholar-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Considered b many to be one of<lb/>
ia's great artists. Billy Taylor is a<lb/>
pianist, composer, recording artist,<lb/>
at ranger and conductor, with a doc-<lb/>
torate in music education from the<lb/>
See TAYLOR, page 6, col. 1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057333_0006"/><lb/>
Hi t s i KOI ll <lb/>
M'Kll 2. 1981<lb/>
Senior Shows<lb/>
Announced<lb/>
Paintings h Mar)<lb/>
Alison S m i ih of<lb/>
c amden, S.C senior<lb/>
student in the last<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
School of Art. are on<lb/>
displa) through April 4<lb/>
in the I eo Jenkins me<lb/>
Arts C enter here.<lb/>
The show, entitled<lb/>
"Conquistadora in-<lb/>
cludes oil, acrylic and<lb/>
mixed-media paintings<lb/>
? encompassing a<lb/>
variet) of styles and<lb/>
methods, such as<lb/>
figurative, design-<lb/>
oriented, and pattern-<lb/>
embedded.<lb/>
Miss Smith, a can<lb/>
didate tor the Bacheloi<lb/>
of line Arts degree in<lb/>
painting with a minor<lb/>
concentration i n<lb/>
ceramics, will be guest<lb/>
of honor at an April 4<lb/>
reception, 7-9 p.m. in<lb/>
the Jenkins Center<lb/>
foyer.<lb/>
She is a past pi<lb/>
dent of the 1 c I Visual<lb/>
Arts Forum, a student<lb/>
representative to the<lb/>
School Ol Art faculty<lb/>
executive board and a<lb/>
member of the Painting<lb/>
and Drawing Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
? r t works b y<lb/>
Patricia Anne Plaster<lb/>
of i nst on-Salem,<lb/>
senior student in the<lb/>
1 C I School ot Art,<lb/>
will be display April<lb/>
5-12 in the lower cases<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
! he woi ks include<lb/>
mixed media painting,<lb/>
(Mints, weavings and<lb/>
batiks.<lb/>
Mis Master is a can-<lb/>
didate for a B.S. degree<lb/>
in art education, with a<lb/>
minor in design.<lb/>
Her future plans in-<lb/>
clude student teaching<lb/>
in Greenville in the fall.<lb/>
She hopes later to open<lb/>
a crafts store.<lb/>
She is the daughter<lb/>
ol Mt and Mtv Don<lb/>
I Powell of Winston-<lb/>
Salem.<lb/>
Huntingdon's Disease<lb/>
Seminar Sponsored<lb/>
Photo by CHAP GURLEV<lb/>
Dinner Theatre Production<lb/>
Performances of the Mendenhall Student C enter Dinner Theatre Production of "And Miss Reardon<lb/>
Drinks A Little" continue through April 4. Tickets are on sale at the C entral Ticket Office. For infor-<lb/>
mation, call 757-6611. et. 266.<lb/>
GR1 ENV1LL1 Marjorie<lb/>
c,inline, wife ol the late Woody<lb/>
Guthrie, merica's celebrated<lb/>
folksinger, will addre ttewide<lb/>
symposium on Huntington's<lb/>
Disease. April II. in Durham<lb/>
Mrs Guthrie is the foundei and<lb/>
President I meritus ol theomn<lb/>
tee to Combat Huntington's<lb/>
Disease. Hei husband died in 1967,<lb/>
aftei 13 years ol gradually losing his<lb/>
ability to walk, talk and read,<lb/>
because ol the disease.<lb/>
T symposium is scheduled a)<lb/>
the Searle t entei ? ke l niversi-<lb/>
t. It is sponsored by the N.C. Ep<lb/>
silon C haptet ol Alpha Epsilon<lb/>
Delta, a pre-medical honor society,<lb/>
at East Carolina I nivei sity in con-<lb/>
junction with the C C HI) and is<lb/>
funded by the Belk-Tylei Founda-<lb/>
tion. 1 he public is united.<lb/>
Huntington's l)s :netic<lb/>
disorder, afl d more<lb/>
than 15,00 ns in the I S<lb/>
in most instances does not appeal<lb/>
until the ? ' her<lb/>
mid-thirties, i n ol the<lb/>
hi am begins to d md con-<lb/>
ol ol the body's phys<lb/>
movements decreases A! present.<lb/>
no known treatment can halt the<lb/>
progress ol the disease and there is<lb/>
no one proven medication that can<lb/>
relieve its symptoms.<lb/>
( hildren whose parents had the<lb/>
disease run a 50 50 chance<lb/>
developing it themselves. In the<lb/>
i S in estimated 20-50,000 persons<lb/>
are considered potential victims.<lb/>
One ol the problems with the<lb/>
disease, according I 'I ar Jet<lb/>
Webb ol Rocky Mount. a pre<lb/>
medical student at II . is the<lb/>
stigma that surrounds it. Patients<lb/>
are often misdiag nosed<lb/>
schizophrenic and families tend to<lb/>
deny the existence ol the disorder<lb/>
because of shame, tear, or guilt.<lb/>
 ebb said.<lb/>
In Woody (nit line's case, he<lb/>
been misdiagnosed, conside<lb/>
alcoholic, and shunted in and out ol<lb/>
mental hospitals tor years before<lb/>
diagnosis ot Huntington's Disease<lb/>
was finally made.<lb/>
I he objectives of the symposium,<lb/>
says Webb, is to "provide accurate<lb/>
and current information al<lb/>
Huntington's Disease to attc<lb/>
families<lb/>
Mike Tyzack<lb/>
To Lecture<lb/>
ABOttftdN<lb/>
Essay Wins SOULS Contest<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
the pam, toil,<lb/>
and hardship ol peo<lb/>
we never even met that<lb/>
put us w here we are to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Again, we are<lb/>
tunate to be born in a<lb/>
time period when most<lb/>
of the suffering has<lb/>
already occurred But<lb/>
the work is not finish-<lb/>
ed. We must wake up.<lb/>
go forth together, and<lb/>
continue the fight for<lb/>
freedom, rights, and<lb/>
equalities that havt<lb/>
been fought tor so I<lb/>
and must be preset<lb/>
in the present<lb/>
i ii<lb/>
O sC<lb/>
Black<lb/>
ins who have<lb/>
. ei r. about any<lb/>
those who<lb/>
rune already climbed<lb/>
too high, tor those who<lb/>
do not even want to<lb/>
listen, and most of all,<lb/>
those who have<lb/>
forgotten all together<lb/>
w hat being black is all<lb/>
about, 1 have nothing<lb/>
to otter except maybe<lb/>
and regret. These<lb/>
the people that have<lb/>
already been blinded<lb/>
and deceived b the<lb/>
disguise ol a freedom<lb/>
yet to come. These peo-<lb/>
ple are blinded to pre<lb/>
indices that still exist<lb/>
and most importantly.<lb/>
the<lb/>
not anticipate<lb/>
the fall that will occu<lb/>
quickly and with a<lb/>
great deal of pain.<lb/>
In order to prevent<lb/>
all ol tins we must all<lb/>
unite and we must<lb/>
become one. PI EAS1<lb/>
W K1 UP!<lb/>
W ake up 1)1 ack<lb/>
America! Realize you<lb/>
are black. We are all<lb/>
black and unless we act<lb/>
with unity, we will all<lb/>
be destroyed in our<lb/>
sleep. It will not matter<lb/>
then w heIhe r t he<lb/>
tms wei t h<lb/>
in bl<lb/>
a ill be<lb/>
the same foi ail a<lb/>
: i m e<lb/>
tms.<lb/>
T'm Hc4, Siu<lb/>
,<lb/>
11<lb/>
i -<lb/>
- - ; ?<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
a -? w - ; :<lb/>
i :<lb/>
H ?. 1 !<lb/>
Unidff v . 1 .<lb/>
. i ? N ? . ;<lb/>
, r s ? i ? . ?<lb/>
.? i<lb/>
 .<lb/>
Iii conjunction with<lb/>
Ihe Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Arts Festival, the ECU<lb/>
School ol Art is presen-<lb/>
ting a 111 s t Mike<lb/>
1 ask. who will give<lb/>
three lectures in the<lb/>
lenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
( enter uditorium.<lb/>
Born in the United<lb/>
Kingdom. 1 yzack has<lb/>
won main prestigious<lb/>
awards. His works are<lb/>
included in the late<lb/>
Gallery and the Vic-<lb/>
toria and Albert<lb/>
Museum in 1 ondon,<lb/>
among other places. He<lb/>
has a one-man exhibi-<lb/>
tion planned for the<lb/>
Spoleto Festival in<lb/>
Charleston. S.C. in<lb/>
May and June ot this<lb/>
year, plus others com-<lb/>
ing after that.<lb/>
I ack's fust lec-<lb/>
ture, concerning Ins<lb/>
work, will be held<lb/>
Monday, April 6 at<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
1 lie second lecture,<lb/>
on Color. Matisse arid<lb/>
e ttermath will be<lb/>
lmen on Tuesday.<lb/>
April 7, at 10 a.m.<lb/>
Ihe third lecture, on<lb/>
Monet at Giverny, will<lb/>
be given on Wednes<lb/>
day. April s at 10 a.m<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here for you Blnoe 1974.<lb/>
providing private, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of all ages at a reasonable cost<lb/>
Saturday abortion boon<lb/>
Fr?e pregnancy XmmU<lb/>
Very ?arty prCnanoy U?u<lb/>
Wexdnl birth control boxxzn<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when you need us<lb/>
Can 761-6SS0 In PjQd anytime<lb/>
FLEMING<lb/>
Technical<lb/>
Electronics<lb/>
And<lb/>
Maintenance,<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
756-1387<lb/>
u1i, ideo,<lb/>
&amp; 2 W a<lb/>
( ommunication:<lb/>
Maintenance<lb/>
(Preventive t?<lb/>
Overhaul)<lb/>
serlies oirecled b) l1<lb/>
( lass K licensed techni-<lb/>
cian. X Minim' ??i ptluil<lb/>
j'hiiv ui t a-i Molina<lb/>
C'onvenietet) located<lb/>
1 : Illock Off C ampus<lb/>
Pkk-t p and Deliver)<lb/>
Available<lb/>
90 I)a Warrarm<lb/>
Period<lb/>
OLD FASHIONED<lb/>
HAMBURGERS<lb/>
.35C OFF<lb/>
Am<lb/>
Sandwich<lb/>
h Cheap Trick<lb/>
2 Locations<lb/>
In Greenville<lb/>
264 BvPass 10th SI<lb/>
COncerf Ticket Stub<lb/>
j<lb/>
Taylor Gives Concert<lb/>
i<lb/>
; s<lb/>
? v<lb/>
( ontinued from page 5<lb/>
University t<lb/>
Massachuse<lb/>
Taylor began<lb/>
ing music ai the age ol<lb/>
seven in Washington,<lb/>
D.C. After graduation<lb/>
from Virginia Mate<lb/>
C ollege, he went to<lb/>
New York and became<lb/>
part ot the "he-bop"<lb/>
revolution ot the 194()<lb/>
and 50's. performing<lb/>
with Charlie Parker.<lb/>
Dizz) Gillespie, Billie<lb/>
Holliday and others.<lb/>
His trio includes<lb/>
basset Victor Gaskin<lb/>
and percussionist Keith<lb/>
C'opeland, veteran per-<lb/>
formers who have ap-<lb/>
peared with recording<lb/>
and concert artists<lb/>
?<lb/>
B<lb/>
KL<lb/>
Mitchell's<lb/>
Hairstyling Salon<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
SPEC1A L<lb/>
From Apr. 2nd-9th<lb/>
Haircut $5.00<lb/>
Open Mon. Sat.<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
756 2950 or 756 4042<lb/>
r?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
WASH HOUSE<lb/>
(Across from Krispy Kreme)<lb/>
and<lb/>
KORE-O-MAT<lb/>
(Across from University Car Wash)<lb/>
Use one Washer - Get One<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Limit one Free Wash Per Visit<lb/>
Otter Expires April B. 1981-Valid w Coupon Onlv<lb/>
"1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
7V-?7<lb/>
VJ<lb/>
WINE SALE<lb/>
,J<lb/>
PRE-MED?<lb/>
Current undergraduate pre-<lb/>
medical students may now<lb/>
compete for several<lb/>
hundered Air Force schol. r-<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 $400 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 GM, 1100 Navaho<lb/>
Dr<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27609<lb/>
(919)755 4134<lb/>
FORCE<lb/>
You Can Still Make<lb/>
A Difference<lb/>
Wt<lb/>
?? ? .  e a decade ag<lb/>
? ?? ? ?<lb/>
nthsottnl . ? ' '  '?<lb/>
.<lb/>
a Legal Assist t in I Ad<lb/>
mwialLaw YouwiHc worktrad<lb/>
eys You will ? irk in the dv<lb/>
- -<lb/>
ta Law, I<lb/>
Justi e.Eq ryWerJarel II I<lb/>
fety l aw<lb/>
Furtl ?<lb/>
? . ?<lb/>
We are the nation's I<lb/>
. ? trained more I<lb/>
4.0 ' ' ?<lb/>
landing<lb/>
'<lb/>
? ti<lb/>
We will visit youi campus on APRIL 13, 1981<lb/>
( )(mX'Uk.<lb/>
The<lb/>
Institute<lb/>
for<lb/>
Paralegal<lb/>
Training<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
?<lb/>
i4<lb/>
? .<lb/>
Approved by The Amencan Biir As<lb/>
Programs Earn Full Credit Toward M A in Legal Studies<lb/>
through Antioch School ot Law<lb/>
EYE CARE<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
P.A.<lb/>
Budget Eyewear 39.95 complete<lb/>
Frames, lenses and tint in<lb/>
plastic bifocals only 59.95<lb/>
Contact Lenses 14" complete<lb/>
Include, exam, lining, heal disinfection and all<lb/>
follow tor I month.<lb/>
SPRING SPfeCIAL<lb/>
Ray-Ban Sunglasses<lb/>
20 Off<lb/>
10 u n LCL student &amp; stalt discount<lb/>
on all materials excluding<lb/>
specials and contacts.<lb/>
Tipton Annex<lb/>
22b Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
736-9404<lb/>
Dr. Pete Holl.s<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
$12.00 Volue<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
Better Health Brings Better Grades<lb/>
Special Membership Offer<lb/>
Present This Coupon With $1.00 Cash<lb/>
WHOLESALE BUYINGCLUB<lb/>
Natural Food Supplements and Nutrition<lb/>
Counseling<lb/>
CLINICAL NUTRITION CENTER<lb/>
608 Arlington Blvd. Phone: 756-7075<lb/>
Hours 2:00 5:00pm Monday thru Friday<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS <lb/>
Fosdick's Seafood Savers<lb/>
Nifhtt) 3:00:0prn<lb/>
Tues. Fish Fry- All The Hsh You Can bet With A Mug<lb/>
Ot Your ravorite Beverage$3.9V<lb/>
Wed. Shrimp Treat- Delicious Calabash Shnmp With French<lb/>
hries, Cole Slafc and Our r-amous Hushpuppte?$3.99<lb/>
Thur. Family Night A Seafood Sampler With Calabash<lb/>
Shrimp, hned rish. 0sten and Deviled Crab$4.99<lb/>
Tuei,Wed,Thur(Oytter Bar Only) I Doz. HaUshrll<lb/>
Oysters (Steamed or Raw) And A Mug Ot Your havorite Beverag'<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
?i<lb/>
Ph. 756-2011<lb/>
(<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Ba<lb/>
( ontinued f<lb/>
be.<lb/>
hut<lb/>
lvt<lb/>
bx 5<lb/>
I<lb/>
4b<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057333_0007"/><lb/>
isease<lb/>
red<lb/>
 , sent,<lb/>
.ill ihe<lb/>
ind the<lb/>
diso<lb/>
r.oe 1974<lb/>
R care<lb/>
cost<lb/>
ieed us<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
llll<lb/>
Trick<lb/>
kel Stub ?<lb/>
E<lb/>
T<lb/>
ne<lb/>
?1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
irades<lb/>
ter<lb/>
Cash<lb/>
B<lb/>
utrition<lb/>
id y<lb/>
I HI S K()1 INIAN<lb/>
Af'kli 2. IS?KI<lb/>
ers<lb/>
'i'h A Mug<lb/>
IWith French<lb/>
3.99<lb/>
iabash<lb/>
1.99<lb/>
Halfsheil<lb/>
e Beverag'<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
-2Ull<lb/>
'M STILL M0???D AdOVT<lb/>
AW MSptfM TOOTH<lb/>
THIS 607 I Know) Hlp h<lb/>
)O$$0rA ivcrrh COT 0UT,<lb/>
fiMO H? jusr &amp;LEO<lb/>
All o?&amp;THr FLhcf <lb/>
Si PftJio AW is<lb/>
THANKS<lb/>
Happenings<lb/>
Varsity<lb/>
Cheerleaders<lb/>
Chosen<lb/>
The new ECU Varsi<lb/>
ty Cheerleading Squad<lb/>
was chosen after the<lb/>
tryouts held Tuesda)<lb/>
night in Memorial<lb/>
Gym.<lb/>
A panel of ten judges<lb/>
vorked on the selec-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Chosen tor the squad<lb/>
were Kim Blevins, Jen-<lb/>
nifer Cooper, Susan<lb/>
Dunn, Joanne Paul,<lb/>
Donna Pritchard, Page<lb/>
Stout and Rhonda<lb/>
Swaim.<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
Souths No. 6<lb/>
Rock Nightclub<lb/>
THURS. -<lb/>
Control Group<lb/>
(Same as Tues.)<lb/>
FRISAT.<lb/>
Rolz Royce<lb/>
(Former lead singer of<lb/>
Jesse Bolt)<lb/>
- Fri. H.H. 4:00-7:00<lb/>
SUN<lb/>
The<lb/>
Fabulous Knobs<lb/>
HAPPENINGS<lb/>
( ampus Events<lb/>
Thursday 2<lb/>
? 3:00 p.m. Men's Baseball: 'C State, Raleigh<lb/>
NC<lb/>
5:00 p.m. Deadline: Intramural Tennis Mixed<lb/>
Doubles<lb/>
? 7:00 p.m. Gamma Beta Phi, Biology 103<lb/>
? 6:30 p.m. MSC Dinner Theatre' Student<lb/>
Center Aud. 244<lb/>
? 8:00 p.m. Artists Series: Charles Rosen, Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre<lb/>
? April 2-11 School of Art Sponsored Art Week<lb/>
Friday 3<lb/>
? 3:00 p.m. Men's Baseball: UNCC Charlotte<lb/>
NC<lb/>
? 6:30 p.m. MSC Dinner Theatre. Student<lb/>
C enter Aud. 244<lb/>
? April 3-4 Women's Softball: Elager Invita-<lb/>
tional. Jacksonville, 1 la.<lb/>
Salurda 4<lb/>
? 6:30 p.m. MSC Dinner Theatre, Student<lb/>
C enter Aud. 244<lb/>
Sunda) 5<lb/>
? April 5-11 Ail Day-Fine Arts Festival AJ<lb/>
Fletcher Rec. Hall<lb/>
Monday 6<lb/>
? 6:00 p.m. Intramural Tennis Mixed Doubles<lb/>
Participants' Meeting, Mem. Gym 104<lb/>
? 7:00 p.m. c Vocational Assn Student Set<lb/>
24s<lb/>
? 7:00 p.m. Men's Baseball: North Carolina<lb/>
Harrington Field<lb/>
? ECU Playhouse Production, Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Singles &amp; Doubles) Entries Due. Memorial Gym<lb/>
204<lb/>
? April 6-10 National 1 ibrary Week<lb/>
? April 6-17 Intramural Horseshoes (Singles &amp;<lb/>
Doubles) Entries due. Mem. Gym 204<lb/>
Tuesday 7<lb/>
? ECU Palyhouse Production. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
? 8:00 p.m. Minority Arts Film Series: A Raisin<lb/>
In The Sun, Ledonia S. Wright Afro-American<lb/>
Cultural Center<lb/>
? April 7-8 8:30 a.m6 p.m. Red Cross Blood-<lb/>
mobile, TBA<lb/>
? April 7-9 Intramural Tennis Mixed Doubles,<lb/>
College Hill Courts<lb/>
? March 31-April 2 Intramural Tennis Doubles<lb/>
Tournament, College Hills Courts<lb/>
Wednesday 8<lb/>
? 10 a.m3 p.m. Friends of the Library Book<lb/>
Sale, Joyner Library<lb/>
? 3:00 p.m. Women's Softball: Campbell Col-<lb/>
lege, Home<lb/>
? 5:00 p.m. Intramural Cross Campus Run,<lb/>
Bunting Track<lb/>
? ECU Playhouse Production Matinee, Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre<lb/>
? 8:00 p.m. T-A Film: John Roberts: PUERTO<lb/>
RICO Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
SC Dinner Theatre Dessert Performance, THE<lb/>
SHADOW BOX Student Center Aud. 244<lb/>
School of Music<lb/>
? April 5 Billy Taylor Trio w ECU Jazz<lb/>
Ensemble, 8:15 p.m. Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
April 6 John Reardon, Metropolitan Opera<lb/>
baritone, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
? April 8 Martha Aarons, flute, NC Symphony<lb/>
first chair, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
School of Art<lb/>
March 22-April 12<lb/>
? East Carolina University National Competi-<lb/>
tion: Works on paper ? a juried competition<lb/>
jointly sponsored by the School of Medicine and<lb/>
School of Art as part of the Eastern Carolina Arts<lb/>
Festival, April 5-11<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
Buccaneer<lb/>
? "Tess" (PG) Shows at 1:00. 4:30, &amp; 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
? "Ordinary People" (R) Shows at 2:00, 4:30,<lb/>
7:00, &amp; 9:20 p.m.<lb/>
? "Galazina" (R) Shows at 1:10, 3:10, 5:10,<lb/>
7:10, &amp; 9:10 p.m.<lb/>
? Starting Fridav: "Hardly Working" (PG)<lb/>
Plaza<lb/>
? "Fear No Evil" (R) Shows at 3, 5, 7, &amp; 9:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
? "The Earthing" (PG) Shows at 3:10, 5:10,<lb/>
7:10, &amp; 9:10 p.m.<lb/>
? "Final Conflict" Shows at 3:15. 5:15, 7:15. &amp;<lb/>
9:15 p.m.<lb/>
? Starting Friday: "Sphinx"(PG) &amp; "The<lb/>
Postman Always Rings Twice" (R)<lb/>
Nightlife<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
? Thursday CONTROL GROUP<lb/>
? Friday ROLZ ROYCE w HILLEL HH<lb/>
4:00-7:00 p.m.<lb/>
? Saturday ROLZ ROYCE<lb/>
? Sunday THE FABULOUS KNOBS<lb/>
? Tuesday TOMMY G &amp; CO.<lb/>
? Wednesday THE PEDESTRIANS<lb/>
Carolina Oprv House<lb/>
? Thursday FARGO<lb/>
? Friday RONNIE MCDOW El 1 &amp; FARGO<lb/>
? Saturday LARGO<lb/>
? Sunday MIKE CROSS<lb/>
Chapter X<lb/>
? Thursday Pi Kappa Phi "Evening Delight"<lb/>
7-10 p.m.<lb/>
? Friday A Nu Pi "End of Week Party" 4-8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
? Saturday Best in Beach Music<lb/>
? Sunday Kappa Alplha "Nickel Nile"<lb/>
? Tuesday Sigma Phi Epsilon "Ladies Night"<lb/>
? Wednesday Sigma Nu "50, 50 Night"<lb/>
If you have anything you would like put in<lb/>
Happenings, please send it to: Nancy Morris, The<lb/>
East Carolinian, East Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville N.C. 27834.<lb/>
SUN. APRILS<lb/>
Doors open " 15 to 8 00 pm for Advance Tickets<lb/>
For More Information CalT58 393<lb/>
Greenville, JVC<lb/>
Ticket Locations: Apple Records Western Pleasure COH<lb/>
(.rneral admission available al the<lb/>
door starling at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Bad Habits Still Persist<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
soup or something else<lb/>
that requires special<lb/>
tools to consume.<lb/>
lots of rules of table<lb/>
etiquette are silly,<lb/>
anyway. When I wqasa<lb/>
kid, 1 had to eat peas<lb/>
and corn with a fork,<lb/>
because it was 'polite<lb/>
Today, I eat them with<lb/>
a spoon, because peas<lb/>
and corn always fall off<lb/>
of the fork.<lb/>
Putting elbows on<lb/>
the table doesn't really<lb/>
hurt anything (as long<lb/>
as they're clean), but it<lb/>
has been branded as a<lb/>
bad habit. Actually.<lb/>
I've found that putting<lb/>
your elbows on the<lb/>
table during the meal<lb/>
reduces the chances of<lb/>
falling onto your plate<lb/>
by 50? o.<lb/>
Procrastination is a<lb/>
bad habit that most<lb/>
people have, to some<lb/>
degree. (Isn't it nice<lb/>
that so many people<lb/>
can have things in com-<lb/>
mon?) Since I started<lb/>
this article six weeks<lb/>
ago, it makes me<lb/>
somewhat of an expert<lb/>
on the subject.<lb/>
There's something<lb/>
profoundly human in<lb/>
the way we have of put-<lb/>
ting off unpleasant or<lb/>
merely dull tasks, even<lb/>
though we know the<lb/>
logical thing to do is to<lb/>
go ahead and get it over<lb/>
with. Look at it this<lb/>
way, though ? if<lb/>
nobody ever put things<lb/>
off, everything would<lb/>
have been finished by<lb/>
now, and we wouldn't<lb/>
have anything to do.<lb/>
The total number<lb/>
and variety of bad<lb/>
habits available to peo-<lb/>
ple staggers the im-<lb/>
agination. Playing<lb/>
music too loud, curs-<lb/>
ing, saying "ain't<lb/>
telling people the en-<lb/>
dings oi movies they<lb/>
haven't seen yet and<lb/>
thousands of other<lb/>
things add up to make<lb/>
the world of bad habits<lb/>
a rich and diverse one.<lb/>
We really wouldn't<lb/>
be human without at<lb/>
least one or two bad<lb/>
habits. So, if you find<lb/>
yourself turning into a<lb/>
fish or something, you<lb/>
can save yourself simp-<lb/>
ly by sticking chewing<lb/>
gum under a desktop.<lb/>
OK TfU YOUK g?0Orsf 7<lb/>
ItWb'AftOKTIONICFTO<lb/>
"flswsLjItMWIBKO<lb/>
PRBONANCY<lb/>
tl?6 00"?UUKtHvi-<lb/>
pregnancy In. Mrtf can<lb/>
'?.5&amp;ss!t? W- trot, and proWnn pratnan-<lb/>
cy covnatiirvg Far torffwr<lb/>
LLr J4Minferfeattofl call ?? MIS (fait ' fraa numhar<lb/>
3mrKjtoo ?i ?? batwaan ?<lb/>
?? 1AMI F.M waanday.<lb/>
Hatal? waaa?-1<lb/>
M ? Qua alia tan<lb/>
fir WniMriHii<lb/>
;Sun Tannery<lb/>
.<lb/>
I<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/>
' a mile W. o<lb/>
Carolina E Mall<lb/>
on 264 ByPass<lb/>
CHAPS, INC.<lb/>
HWY. 258 NORTH<lb/>
KINSTON, NC. 28501<lb/>
Eastern Carolinas<lb/>
Newest And Finest<lb/>
Private Club<lb/>
Fri April 3rd<lb/>
THE FANTASTIC<lb/>
SHAKERS<lb/>
Sat April 4th<lb/>
The Best In Beach<lb/>
and Top 40 With<lb/>
Sun. Mike Jones<lb/>
- April 5th Top 40 &amp; Variety<lb/>
Wednesday Night's<lb/>
are Ladies' Night<lb/>
Members and<lb/>
I rieir Guests<lb/>
Welcome <lb/>
rrom<lb/>
Ail ABC Permits 3:U0-7:00pm<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN<lb/>
STEAKHOUSE<lb/>
"The Family<lb/>
Steak House"<lb/>
55<lb/>
item<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
TAKEOUT<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St.?<lb/>
758-2712<lb/>
264 By-Pass ?<lb/>
756-0040<lb/>
20<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
ALL MENU ITEMS<lb/>
3:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. ONLY<lb/>
 MON. thru FRI.<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
FREE TEA<lb/>
with college I.D.<lb/>
20 A OFF ALL MENU ITEMS;<lb/>
AAON. thru FRI. from 3:00 p.m. to6:30p.m,<lb/>
FREE DRINK with college I.D.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057333_0008"/><lb/>
UU EAST K()1 INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
IRII 2. IVKI<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Hallow-Led Bucs<lb/>
Win 2 Fr<lb/>
A three-hit pitching performance<lb/>
by Bob Patterson and some heavy<lb/>
hitting by outfielder John Hallow<lb/>
helped ECU defeat Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian 12-1 Tuesday and earn a sweep<lb/>
of the day's doubleheader.<lb/>
The Bucs won the first game 5-2<lb/>
as Bill Wilder hurled a seven-hitter,<lb/>
earning a complete game and im-<lb/>
proving his record to 3-2.<lb/>
The somewhat quiet ECU bats of<lb/>
the first game turned into bombs in<lb/>
the nightcap. Hallow was the big<lb/>
gun, going five-for-five with three<lb/>
singles, a triple and a home run. He<lb/>
also was credited with five RBI's<lb/>
and three runs scored.<lb/>
Patterson improved his record to<lb/>
2-0 and the team's to 14-5, striking<lb/>
out nine while allowing only one run<lb/>
on three hits.<lb/>
The Pirates scored their 12 runs<lb/>
on 13 hits.<lb/>
The Bucs got things going in the<lb/>
opening inning. Hallow singled and<lb/>
scored the game's first run on a<lb/>
single by catcher Fran Fitzgerald.<lb/>
ECU added four runs in the third.<lb/>
Again Hallow was the main cog in<lb/>
the attack, his two-run triple the in-<lb/>
ning's highlight.<lb/>
The Pirates came right back with<lb/>
three more runs in the fourth and<lb/>
two in both the sixth and seventh in-<lb/>
nings.<lb/>
Hallow's two-run homer ac-<lb/>
counted for the sixth-inning scoring.<lb/>
ACC scored their lone run in the<lb/>
sixth in taking their 14th loss of the<lb/>
season against seven wins.<lb/>
In the day's first game, the<lb/>
Pirates opened up their scoring in<lb/>
the third inning. Buc second<lb/>
baseman Mike Sorrell tripled and<lb/>
later scored on a fielder's choice hit<lb/>
by none other than Hallow.<lb/>
In the fourth, the Bucs added two<lb/>
more runs. Todd Hendley doubled<lb/>
and scored on a Charlie Smith<lb/>
single. Centcrfielder Robert Wells<lb/>
also crossed the plate in the inning.<lb/>
ACC scored for the first time in<lb/>
the bottom of the fourth. Mike Har-<lb/>
dison doubled and scored on a two-<lb/>
bagger by second baseman Chuck<lb/>
Downs.<lb/>
r.vv<lb/>
The Christians marked again in<lb/>
the fifth, Tim Hardison's solo<lb/>
homer narrowing the ECU lead to<lb/>
3-2.<lb/>
The Bucs closed the door on any<lb/>
ACC hopes, though, in the seventh<lb/>
with two runs. Both Mike Sage and<lb/>
Hendley walked and later scored on<lb/>
Charlie Smith's triple.<lb/>
Smith finsihed the game as the<lb/>
team's leading hitter, going two-for-<lb/>
four with two RBI's.<lb/>
Following the day's action ECU<lb/>
coach Hal Baird said he was pleased<lb/>
with the team's play and hoped that<lb/>
it would carry over into the upcom-<lb/>
ing road stand.<lb/>
"We played very well in two<lb/>
straight games he said. "Both<lb/>
games we got good pitching and our<lb/>
bats came alive in the second<lb/>
game<lb/>
The second-game explosion was<lb/>
just what the doctor ordered, Baud<lb/>
hinted.<lb/>
"1 was very happy with thai<lb/>
game he said. "We needed one<lb/>
like thai because all of them seem to<lb/>
 .<lb/>
have gone to the las innings lately.<lb/>
So we needed a laugher and I think<lb/>
maybe that is going to get us going a<lb/>
little bn down the road<lb/>
"Down the road" is jusl where<lb/>
the Pirates arc heading. Toda<lb/>
Pirates Score Another Run<lb/>
l NC-Charlotte and a doubleheader<lb/>
Saturday at Campbell.<lb/>
"We've definitely got a tough<lb/>
week coming up he said. "I cer-<lb/>
tainly hope we can continue to plav<lb/>
with the intensity we showed<lb/>
Next comes a game Friday at tonight<lb/>
(Thursday) the team takes on N.C.<lb/>
State in Raleigh. The Wolfpack no<lb/>
doubt has revenge in mind, the<lb/>
Pirates having defeated them three<lb/>
times consecutively.<lb/>
Did NCAA Make Right Decision?<lb/>
Much controversy has arisen in<lb/>
the past two days over the decision<lb/>
by the NCAA in deciding to go<lb/>
ahead with Monday's national<lb/>
championship basketball game bet-<lb/>
ween Indiana and North Carolina in<lb/>
the wake of the shooting o' Presi-<lb/>
dent Ronald Reagan.<lb/>
Most oi the complaints on the<lb/>
decision have come from papers<lb/>
from the metropolitan Northeast.<lb/>
Reading those papers would lead<lb/>
one to believe that the NCAA was<lb/>
cruel and non-patriotic. Such is<lb/>
simply not the case.<lb/>
"The whole business should have<lb/>
been called off claimed Mark<lb/>
Purdv of the Cincinnati Enquirer.<lb/>
"There are a few things more im-<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
<lb/>
portani than a national champion-<lb/>
ship basketball game, and the<lb/>
United States President lying<lb/>
wounded in an emergency ward<lb/>
would seem to qualify as one of<lb/>
them<lb/>
No doubt the shooting o the<lb/>
president was more newsworthy and<lb/>
important than the title game, but<lb/>
should the game have been cancell-<lb/>
ed?<lb/>
There are those that argue that<lb/>
the Academy Awards cancellation<lb/>
on Monday night and its reschedul-<lb/>
ing for Tuesday showed have been<lb/>
followed by the NCAA.<lb/>
"In phony, grease-painted<lb/>
Hollywood, Oscar bowed his shiny<lb/>
head said Hubert Miell of the St.<lb/>
Petersburg. Fla Times. "The peo-<lb/>
ple who invented the motto, 'the<lb/>
show must go on quickly voted to<lb/>
postpone the Academy Awards<lb/>
show.<lb/>
"People who pray prayed he<lb/>
continued. "My eyes became wet, as<lb/>
much for my wounded country as<lb/>
for mv wounded President It seem-<lb/>
ed no lime lo dribble, to shoot, lo<lb/>
dunk, to cheei<lb/>
rhough the nation was definitely<lb/>
stunned b) the day's assasination at-<lb/>
tempt, there was no wrong done in<lb/>
going on with the game. Not under<lb/>
ihe circumstances.<lb/>
pproximateh vine hour before<lb/>
gametime the word game from<lb/>
hospital Dr. Dennis O'Leary thai<lb/>
the presideni was in good condition<lb/>
following surgerv lo remove ihe<lb/>
bullet that lodged in his left lung<lb/>
and that chances for his complete<lb/>
recovery were "excellent<lb/>
Dr. 01 eary went on to say to a<lb/>
national television audience and the<lb/>
press assembled at George<lb/>
Washington Hospital that he fully<lb/>
expected Mr. Reagan to be able to<lb/>
make any decisions required by his<lb/>
job on the following day.<lb/>
Had O'l eary had worse news the<lb/>
NCAA would have, no doubt,<lb/>
cancelled the playing of the game. A<lb/>
final decision was not made until<lb/>
after the consolation game, not until<lb/>
the word came from O'l eary. The<lb/>
correct steps were taken in making<lb/>
the decision.<lb/>
Under the conditions, the<lb/>
cancellation of the game would have<lb/>
certainly put the crowd of nearly<lb/>
2U.IKK) already in Philadelphia's<lb/>
Spectrum in a state of havoc. What<lb/>
would they do? What about reserva-<lb/>
tions?<lb/>
VA hen would the game be<lb/>
rescheduled? All these questions<lb/>
and more would definitely take a<lb/>
backseat to a critical!) ill president.<lb/>
But with the chief executive in good<lb/>
condition, the show had to go on.<lb/>
Reagan himself commented later<lb/>
in the night when asked how he felt,<lb/>
"All in all. I'd rather be in<lb/>
Philadelhia<lb/>
Sure, the title game was played<lb/>
under adverse conditions. veryone<lb/>
on the courl certainly was affected<lb/>
b the terrible events of the after<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
The NCAA and NBC-TV simply<lb/>
made the best of a bad situation.<lb/>
They could not be asked to do any<lb/>
more than that.<lb/>
Record Improves To 21-2<lb/>
Lady Bucs Sweep Doubleheader<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
v.Mant Sport Kdiior<lb/>
On a perfect day for softball<lb/>
Tuesday, the Lady Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina hosted the Spartans of<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro. When the in-<lb/>
vaders had left, the Bucs stood<lb/>
unscathed as they registered their<lb/>
20th and 21st wins of the season<lb/>
against just two losses.<lb/>
With temperatures in the 80s and<lb/>
a good crowd on hand, the Lady<lb/>
Bucs swept a double-header from<lb/>
the undermanned Spartans by<lb/>
scores of 8-0 and 12-0.<lb/>
Even though the Lady Bucs put<lb/>
their best effort forward, they were<lb/>
merciful toward their visitors. "1<lb/>
don't want to say anything bad<lb/>
about their program said head<lb/>
Coach Alita Dillon, "but they will<lb/>
probably drop to Division III after<lb/>
this season, even though they are in<lb/>
Division I right now<lb/>
The Pirates had the opportunity<lb/>
to play most of their younger<lb/>
players so they could help the club<lb/>
more as the season winds down.<lb/>
They played nearly perfect ball,<lb/>
which was nearly like the warm spr-<lb/>
ing afternoon.<lb/>
The Bucs jumped ahead in the<lb/>
bottom of the first when a Mitzi<lb/>
Davis sacrifice fly drove in a run<lb/>
thanks to a couple of walks.<lb/>
Another run was added in the se-<lb/>
cond when Lydia Rountree reached<lb/>
on an infield hit, and Fran Hooks<lb/>
walked. Melody Ham reached base<lb/>
on another Spartan miscue, scoring<lb/>
Rountree, placing the Pirates up<lb/>
2-0.<lb/>
Mary Powell led off the Pirate<lb/>
fourth with a single to center. Roun-<lb/>
tree singled, but Powell was thrown<lb/>
out advancing. Rountree took se-<lb/>
cond, and scored the third run when<lb/>
Hooks singled.<lb/>
In the Pirate fifth, Jo Clayton<lb/>
singled to center, and Mitzi Davis<lb/>
reached first on an error. Kathy<lb/>
Riley drove in Clayton with a single<lb/>
to right, and the Pirates built their<lb/>
lead to 4-0. Powell then singled to<lb/>
center, driving in Riley and Davis to<lb/>
put the Pirates ahead 6-0.<lb/>
The Pirates loaded the bases in<lb/>
the bottom of the sixth due to a<lb/>
Angie Humphrey walk, a Melody<lb/>
Ham single to center and a walk to<lb/>
Clayton. Davis stepped up and<lb/>
drove in Humphrey and Ham with a<lb/>
double to right.<lb/>
Humphrey was the winning pit-<lb/>
cher and upped her record to 9-1.<lb/>
"Overall, the first game wasn't<lb/>
too good because we should have<lb/>
gotton more offense Dillon<lb/>
remarkedHowever, UNC-G S pit-<lb/>
ching was very inconsistent<lb/>
The Pirates provided plenty of of-<lb/>
fensive fireworks for their coach in<lb/>
the second game. They exploded for<lb/>
eight runs in the first inning and<lb/>
cruised to the win. The game was<lb/>
stopped at the Spartan half of the<lb/>
fifth because the Pirates were more<lb/>
than 10 runs ahead.<lb/>
Melody Ham walked to lead the<lb/>
barrage, and Clayton singled.<lb/>
Rountree reached first on an error,<lb/>
loading the bases. Cynthia Shepard<lb/>
singled to left, driving in Ham and<lb/>
Clayton, as the Bucs went up 2-0.<lb/>
Hooks then singled, but Shepard<lb/>
was forced out at second, putting<lb/>
runners on the corners. Powell<lb/>
singled to center, and Rountree<lb/>
scored to make the score 3-0. Leslie<lb/>
Bunn reached first on an error, and<lb/>
Hooks scored. Shirley Brown then<lb/>
singled up the middle, scoring<lb/>
Powell, and the Bucs were leading<lb/>
5-0.<lb/>
Bunn scored on an error, and pit-<lb/>
cher Jeanette Roth singled to left,<lb/>
scoring Brown. Ham walked,<lb/>
loading the bases. That brought<lb/>
Rountree up, and she reached first<lb/>
on an error that scored Barnes, and<lb/>
the Pirates were up 8-0.<lb/>
In the Pirate second, Powell<lb/>
walked, and Brown's single to right<lb/>
put runners on first and second.<lb/>
Barnes singled, driving in Powell<lb/>
and Brown, and advanced to third<lb/>
on the center fielder's error. Roth<lb/>
doubled to score Barnes.<lb/>
Bunn singled to left in the Buc<lb/>
fourth and took second on a bad<lb/>
throw from the outfield. Brown's<lb/>
sacrifice fly scored Bunn, and the<lb/>
Pirates had a 12-0 victory.<lb/>
The Pirates were supposed to host<lb/>
N.C. State Wednesday afternoon,<lb/>
but the game was postponed to a<lb/>
later date due to inclement weather.<lb/>
The game has been rescheduled for<lb/>
April 17th.<lb/>
Martin Inks With Tar Heels<lb/>
Pirates Lose Out<lb/>
Lady Pirate Mitzi Davis Scores<lb/>
From Staff and Wire Reports<lb/>
DRY FORK, Va. ? Less<lb/>
than 24 hours after losing to<lb/>
Indiana for the NCAA cham-<lb/>
pionship, North Carolina add-<lb/>
ed another recruit to its grow-<lb/>
ing list of all-stars that might<lb/>
lead the Tar Heels back to the<lb/>
Final Four.<lb/>
Warren Martin, Tunstall<lb/>
High School's 7-foot center<lb/>
and one of the state's most<lb/>
highly recruited players, said<lb/>
Tuesday he would accept<lb/>
UNC's offer of a basketball<lb/>
scholarship and wear Carolina<lb/>
Blue for the next four years.<lb/>
Martin said he chose among<lb/>
Carolina, Virginia, Virginia<lb/>
Tech, East Carolina, Jackson-<lb/>
ville, James Madison and<lb/>
Richmond. One of he reasons<lb/>
he wanted to become a Tar<lb/>
Heel was because of UNC<lb/>
Coach Dean Smith, he said.<lb/>
"I feel like he can teach me<lb/>
some more stuff about basket-<lb/>
ball. He can take up where<lb/>
Coach (Howard) West left<lb/>
off Martin said at an after-<lb/>
noon news conference at<lb/>
Tunstall. "I like the campus, 1<lb/>
like the plavers and their stvle<lb/>
of play<lb/>
Martin, who has only-<lb/>
played two years of organized<lb/>
basketball, said he informed<lb/>
Tunstall Coach Howard West<lb/>
of his decision Sunday night.<lb/>
The other schools in the runn-<lb/>
ing were called Monday after-<lb/>
noon prior to the news con-<lb/>
ference, West said.<lb/>
Martin joined a number of<lb/>
all-stars already committed to<lb/>
ihe Chapel Hill, N.C, school<lb/>
? 6-5 Mike Jordan of Wilm-<lb/>
ington, N.C; 6-11 John<lb/>
Brownlee of Ft. Worth, Texas;<lb/>
6-4 Buzz Peterson of<lb/>
Asheville, N.C; and 6-1 Lyn-<lb/>
wood Robinson of Dudlev,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Jordon made Parade<lb/>
Magazine's first-team All-<lb/>
America list, Brownlee the<lb/>
third team and Peterson the<lb/>
fourth.<lb/>
The high school senior, who<lb/>
celebrates his 18th birthday to-<lb/>
day, is the son of Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. Linsey Martin of Axton,<lb/>
Va who were both at the<lb/>
news conterence. Martin's<lb/>
father works at the Goodyear<lb/>
plant in Danville.<lb/>
Martin said he didn't see<lb/>
competing for a starting spot<lb/>
against either 6-9 freshman<lb/>
Sam Perkins, the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference's Rookie of<lb/>
the Year, and 6-8 sophomore<lb/>
James Worthy, as negative.<lb/>
"Wherever 1 go, there will<lb/>
be competition. 1 know 1 was<lb/>
going to have to earn a spot no<lb/>
matter where I went he said.<lb/>
College coaches and<lb/>
recruiters have said Martin has<lb/>
made tremendous improve-<lb/>
ment during the past two<lb/>
years. Thanks mostly to Mar-<lb/>
tin, Tunstall finished second<lb/>
to Group AA champion Mar-<lb/>
tinsville in the Region III tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
In 45 games during two<lb/>
years, Martin scored 801<lb/>
points, including a school-<lb/>
record 546 this season, for a<lb/>
23.7 points per game average.<lb/>
He shot 72 percent from the<lb/>
floor and blocked 111 shots<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
His career rebound total<lb/>
was 485, including 241 this<lb/>
season. He shot 69.7 percent<lb/>
from the foul line.<lb/>
"1 think he made a solid<lb/>
decision said Tunstall<lb/>
Coach West. "It's a good pro-<lb/>
gram and a good coach,<lb/>
definitely big-time. 1 think<lb/>
Warren has made a committ-<lb/>
ment to be the best player he<lb/>
can be. He'll get a good educa-<lb/>
tion and basketball will take<lb/>
care of itself<lb/>
There had been speculation<lb/>
that Martin would attend<lb/>
Jacksonville next season. The<lb/>
word was that Jacksonville<lb/>
head coach Tates Locke had<lb/>
offered West a job as an assis-<lb/>
tant as part of a package deal<lb/>
to obtain Martin's services.<lb/>
East Carolina coaches made<lb/>
no secret of the fact that they<lb/>
wanted Martin very badly.<lb/>
"He could be the franchise<lb/>
for us assistant George<lb/>
Felton said before the an-<lb/>
nouncement.<lb/>
In additon to Perkins and<lb/>
Worthy, Martin will have to<lb/>
compete for playing time<lb/>
against senior Chris Brust and<lb/>
freshman Brownlee.<lb/>
Ind<lb/>
PHil.ADl 1 P<lb/>
(UP1) Next v<lb/>
finals ot the n<lb/>
Basketball C ham<lb/>
ships are<lb/>
Philadelphia,<lb/>
doesn't mean InJ<lb/>
won't be hea I<lb/>
 olved in the<lb/>
another nati<lb/>
Ihe H<lb/>
their four<lb/>
crown Monday n<lb/>
the<lb/>
63-50<lb/>
their<lb/>
1976, whei<lb/>
captur.<lb/>
on the<lb/>
"1.<lb/>
does<lb/>
 <lb/>
:ne<lb/>
Ph<lb/>
lndiar.<lb/>
Ki<lb/>
pla?<lb/>
M<lb/>
te<lb/>
post;<lb/>
the<lb/>
temj ?<lb/>
Reag<lb/>
fie l.i<lb/>
sultai<lb/>
hold tl<lb/>
Reaga:<lb/>
pro<lb/>
will m<lb/>
siai.<lb/>
peel In .<lb/>
in the tl ?<lb/>
The H<lb/>
foui<lb/>
26-<lb/>
team.<lb/>
All- A m e i<lb/>
siah<lb/>
MVP<lb/>
ment afi<lb/>
points<lb/>
although NBA<lb/>
ild like<lb/>
6-foot-1<lb/>
turn pi<lb/>
"Right n<lb/>
ty sure 11<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
N<lb/>
Benn<lb/>
Still<lb/>
Hurtil<lb/>
ATI AM <lb/>
Leeman B<lb/>
time has c<lb/>
eae the v<lb/>
feels over<lb/>
Falc<lb/>
Super Bowl h<lb/>
allowing the<lb/>
Cowboys ?<lb/>
touchd. A<lb/>
ing mi i<lb/>
plaj me.<lb/>
"It still<lb/>
same the f<lb/>
coach<lb/>
watch;i $<lb/>
1980 highlights<lb/>
the back 1<lb/>
popular Peal<lb/>
St reel b<lb/>
? ? N o mat t<lb/>
great the I<lb/>
playing (while<lb/>
ing Atlanta's I<lb/>
12-4 re.<lb/>
division I<lb/>
ship) said H<lb/>
"you always wai<lb/>
a little be fartrn<lb/>
The Falcons,<lb/>
Jan. 4 game,<lb/>
10-point.<lb/>
with less tha<lb/>
minutes to pli<lb/>
their tans had<lb/>
gone int(<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
But Danny<lb/>
lofted two tou<lb/>
passes to Drew<lb/>
? the first a 1<lb/>
with 3:40 let!<lb/>
second a 2<lb/>
42 seconds lei:<lb/>
was Dalla-<lb/>
ta, headed for<lb/>
championship<lb/>
Bennett said<lb/>
to put that 30i<lb/>
out of his mind<lb/>
keeps comingl<lb/>
Just when o<lb/>
you've gotten<lb/>
pain of<lb/>
something hi<lb/>
(film) bring-<lb/>
again.<lb/>
"It's an upai<lb/>
thing said<lb/>
"1 guess it real<lb/>
go away until<lb/>
all some day<lb/>
Benneti belu<lb/>
day may net be<lb/>
awav<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057333_0009"/><lb/>
. t<lb/>
d to a<lb/>
L'alher.<lb/>
led tor<lb/>
Is<lb/>
t hi-<lb/>
enl<lb/>
(made a Aolid<lb/>
id Tuns! all<lb/>
ach,<lb/>
e. 1 think<lb/>
immitt-<lb/>
st player he<lb/>
good edu<lb/>
uld attend<lb/>
n. I he<lb/>
lacksonville<lb/>
It ke had<lb/>
ob a an assis-<lb/>
packate deal<lb/>
's service<lb/>
coaches made<lb/>
:act that the<lb/>
wr badly.<lb/>
the franchise<lb/>
tant George<lb/>
jtore the an-<lb/>
Perkins and<lb/>
?a ill have to<lb/>
I ing time<lb/>
hns Brust and<lb/>
ilee.<lb/>
fHEEASTCAROI INIAN<lb/>
APRIL 2. 1981<lb/>
Indiana Should Be Strong Again<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
iTb Ham ? <lb/>
PHILADELPHIA<lb/>
(UP1) ? Next year's<lb/>
finals of the NCAA<lb/>
Basketball Champion-<lb/>
ships are not in<lb/>
Philadelphia, but that<lb/>
doesn't mean Indiana<lb/>
won't be heavily in-<lb/>
volved in the chase for<lb/>
another national title.<lb/>
The Hoosiers won<lb/>
their fourth NCAA<lb/>
crown Monday night at<lb/>
the Spectrum with a<lb/>
63-50 victory over<lb/>
North Carolina. It was<lb/>
their first title since<lb/>
1976, when they also<lb/>
captured the big prize<lb/>
on the same court.<lb/>
"My first thought<lb/>
would be, really, when<lb/>
does the tournament<lb/>
committee want to<lb/>
come back to<lb/>
Philadelphia0" asked<lb/>
Indiana Coach Bobby<lb/>
Knight. "It's a good<lb/>
place for us to play<lb/>
Monday night's con-<lb/>
test nearly was<lb/>
postponed because of<lb/>
the assassination at-<lb/>
tempt on President<lb/>
Reagan, but NCAA of-<lb/>
ficials, after much con-<lb/>
sultation, decided to<lb/>
hold the contest when<lb/>
Reagan's condition im-<lb/>
proved.<lb/>
The 1982 Final Four<lb/>
will meet at the Loui-<lb/>
siana Superdome in<lb/>
New Orleans, and ex-<lb/>
pect Indiana to be right<lb/>
in the thick of things.<lb/>
The Hoosiers return<lb/>
four starters from the<lb/>
26-9 championship<lb/>
team. That includes<lb/>
All-America guard<lb/>
Isiah Thomas, named<lb/>
MVP oi the tourna-<lb/>
ment after scoring 23<lb/>
points in the finals,<lb/>
although NBA scouts<lb/>
would like to see the<lb/>
6-foot-l sophomore<lb/>
turn pro.<lb/>
"Right now I'm pret-<lb/>
t sure I'll be back at<lb/>
Indiana University<lb/>
Bennett<lb/>
Still<lb/>
Hurting<lb/>
ATLANTA (UPI) -<lb/>
Leeman Bennett says<lb/>
time has done little to<lb/>
ease the pain he still<lb/>
feels over the Atlanta<lb/>
Falcons blowing their<lb/>
Super Bowl hopes by<lb/>
allowing the Dallas<lb/>
Cowboys to score two<lb/>
touchdowns in the clos-<lb/>
ing moments of their<lb/>
playoff game.<lb/>
"It still ends the<lb/>
same the Falcons<lb/>
coach said sadly after<lb/>
watching his team's<lb/>
1980 highlights film in<lb/>
the back room of a<lb/>
popular Peachtree<lb/>
Street bistro.<lb/>
"No matter how<lb/>
great the film shows us<lb/>
playing (while describ-<lb/>
ing Atlanta's best-ever<lb/>
12-4 record and first<lb/>
division champion-<lb/>
ship) said Bennett,<lb/>
"you always want to go<lb/>
a little be farther<lb/>
The Falcons, in that<lb/>
Jan. 4 game, had a<lb/>
10-point, 27-17, lead<lb/>
with less than four<lb/>
minutes to play and<lb/>
their fans had already<lb/>
gone into a victory<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
But Danny White<lb/>
lofted two touchdown<lb/>
passes to Drew Pearson<lb/>
? the first a 14-yarder<lb/>
with 3:40 left and the<lb/>
second a 23-yarder with<lb/>
42 seconds left ? and it<lb/>
was Dallas, not Atlan-<lb/>
ta, headed for the NFC<lb/>
championship game.<lb/>
Bennett said he tries<lb/>
to put that 30-27 loss<lb/>
out of his mind. "But it<lb/>
keeps coming back.<lb/>
Just when you think<lb/>
you've gotten over the<lb/>
pain of losing,<lb/>
something like this<lb/>
(film) brings it up<lb/>
again.<lb/>
"It's an up and down<lb/>
thing said Bennett.<lb/>
"I guess it really won't<lb/>
go away until we win it<lb/>
all some day<lb/>
Benneti believes that<lb/>
day may not be very far<lb/>
away.<lb/>
Thomas said Monday<lb/>
night of his current<lb/>
plans.<lb/>
The other returning<lb/>
starters are 6-6 guard<lb/>
Randy Wittman, who<lb/>
bombed away from the<lb/>
outside against North<lb/>
Carolina for 16 points,<lb/>
6-10 center-forward<lb/>
Landon Turner and 6-8<lb/>
forward Ted Kitchel.<lb/>
Another player to<lb/>
figure prominently in<lb/>
Indiana's plans is 6-3<lb/>
reserve guard Jim<lb/>
Thomas, who made the<lb/>
All-Tournament team<lb/>
with his hustling all-<lb/>
around play.<lb/>
What may send<lb/>
shudders throughout<lb/>
the Big Ten is Knight's<lb/>
opinion that the best<lb/>
days of the current<lb/>
Hoosier team might be<lb/>
ahead.<lb/>
"We've undergone a<lb/>
Sports Trivia Quiz<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is a list of<lb/>
trivia questions that we at The East Carolinian<lb/>
felt were of interest to the student body. The<lb/>
sports staff put much time and ejjort into the<lb/>
compiling oj the facts that follow. Special thanks<lb/>
go to ECU Sports Information Director Ken<lb/>
Smith, who supplied the stafj with much oj the<lb/>
information that follows. Let it be known that<lb/>
anyone who can correctly answer 15 or more oj<lb/>
the following questions rales as a "Pirate<lb/>
genius. "<lb/>
QUESTIONS<lb/>
1.) Who is the ECU's all-time leading rusher in<lb/>
football?<lb/>
2.) Who is the all-time leading scorer in ECU<lb/>
basketball history?<lb/>
3.) The East Carolinian has named male and<lb/>
female Athletes of the Year for the past two<lb/>
years. Who were they in ? a. 1979 and b.1980?<lb/>
4.) Who was the Most Valuable Player in ECU's<lb/>
Independence Bowl victory in 1978?<lb/>
5.) How many undefeated football teams has East<lb/>
Carolina had and in what years did they exist?<lb/>
6.) What is the winningest sport overall in ECU<lb/>
sports history?<lb/>
7.) How many national championships does East<lb/>
Carolina have?<lb/>
8.) East Carolina has been affiliated with three<lb/>
conferences. Name them.<lb/>
9.) What year was East Carolina declared a Divi-<lb/>
sion I school?<lb/>
10.) Where on campus were the first Last<lb/>
Carolina basketball games played?<lb/>
11.) Against what team was Memorial gym<lb/>
dedicated and who coached that team?<lb/>
12.) Name the highest ranked men's basketball<lb/>
team to play against the Pirates in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum and name the coach of that team.<lb/>
13.) Ficklen Stadium was dedicated in 1963. What<lb/>
team did the Pirates play and defeat in the<lb/>
stadium's first contest that year?<lb/>
14.) What former ECU football standout was<lb/>
the<lb/>
named the Defensive Player of the Year in<lb/>
Canadian Football League this past season?<lb/>
15.) Who was the last person associated with<lb/>
ECU who was a member of the NCAA cham-<lb/>
pionship basketball tournament selection com-<lb/>
mittee?<lb/>
16.) What is ECU assistant coach Eddie Payne's<lb/>
most outstanding accomplishment?<lb/>
17.) ECU basketball player Michael Gibson<lb/>
played high school ball at Maggie Walker High in<lb/>
Richmond, Va. with what former Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference star?<lb/>
18.) What member of the current ECU basketball<lb/>
team was once listed among the top 50 prep pro-<lb/>
spects in the nation?<lb/>
19.) Who is one of ECU head baseball coach Hal<lb/>
Baird's best friends?<lb/>
20.) A former Olympic gold medal winner still<lb/>
holds a record in an ECU athletic facility. WHo is<lb/>
the athlete and in what sport did he participate?<lb/>
ANSWERS<lb/>
?uuuiuias Vjids fJEl'0Z sCAoy<lb/>
?l!3 sbsubi 3qi jo ipjg aSaoao dAW anSeai<lb/>
mommy 086L6I poo.wjapufj P!abq'8I WS<lb/>
?) rs jo uusny apno 9ML PDH iL6 m<lb/>
ISdJOj orA ie pjRn5 r 3iqw uiB3i luaiueujnoi<lb/>
D3V-ITV apBW9l uosb3s siqi jje'sj uai joi<lb/>
-09OQ rupiqiyci 3daj auubq japeqaui-ytri<lb/>
lSdioj ,rwn 3jmrpi uejj q psqauos<lb/>
'6961 u! BUfiOJrej qmos pajuBJ auo jaqiunNi<lb/>
ajmrpw JfireJJ i(3?03 pue buijojb;) quofsTU<lb/>
umuoiipnv iu.3u.woi W6L6 auajajuo<lb/>
s,BUflOJB3 pur; oibjs quoM 'UJ3qinoS"8 (6s"6l<lb/>
ptre lC61) 8uiuiuiims ui omj pur (i960 psqaseq<lb/>
ui suo 'aajqx? Ajojsnj ui uosbos gu;so ajuo<lb/>
si U61 'ipsqsseg 9 (Q-l) lfr6l ?! 'woi uoims<lb/>
ajopooqjf (tidWOM 'rreqjjos pui? nBqpsBq)<lb/>
A3iy qiei pue (uaiu 'Bqiooj) uaajQ<lb/>
japuc31 -q ;u3iuov 'iBqi3jSBq) uosduioqi<lb/>
aisoy pun (u3iu 'UBqiooj) uoims 3Jopo3qi-E?<lb/>
uosdiuoqi. oisoyj: jsidiunj jsissjjB.yi<lb/>
maturation process<lb/>
through the course of<lb/>
the year and through<lb/>
that have developed<lb/>
more experience said<lb/>
Knight, whose team<lb/>
was 7-5 in December<lb/>
before turning its<lb/>
season around. "This<lb/>
team has grown and<lb/>
developed. But I think<lb/>
they haven't finished<lb/>
maturing yet. That<lb/>
should come some time<lb/>
next year<lb/>
The only starter the<lb/>
Hoosiers will lose is 6-9<lb/>
center Ray Tolbert,<lb/>
who is Knight's choice<lb/>
for the Big Ten's Most<lb/>
Valuable Player.<lb/>
Tolbert scored just five<lb/>
points but pulled down<lb/>
a game-high 11 re-<lb/>
bounds against the Tar<lb/>
Heels.<lb/>
Indiana's five-game<lb/>
march through the<lb/>
NCAA tournament was<lb/>
devastating. Its<lb/>
smallest margin of vic-<lb/>
tory was 13 points, and<lb/>
the aggregate point<lb/>
spread over five con-<lb/>
tests was a whopping<lb/>
113 points, or nearly 23<lb/>
a game.<lb/>
As for North<lb/>
Carolina, which finish-<lb/>
ed 29-8, coach Dean<lb/>
Smith says farewell to<lb/>
two starters ? Al<lb/>
Wood, the silky 6-6<lb/>
forward who scored 57<lb/>
points in the two<lb/>
games, and guard Mike<lb/>
Pepper.<lb/>
But the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference team<lb/>
does return formidable<lb/>
inside strength in 6-9<lb/>
sophomore James<lb/>
Worthy and 6-9<lb/>
freshman Sam Perkins,<lb/>
plus dependable point<lb/>
guard Jimmy Black.<lb/>
"I feel sorry and<lb/>
disappointed for our<lb/>
seniors Smith said<lb/>
following the game.<lb/>
"History shows that<lb/>
nobody comes back to<lb/>
this (the Final Four) the<lb/>
next year. We'll have a<lb/>
good team but we have<lb/>
to deal with (Virginia<lb/>
center Ralph) Sampson<lb/>
in our own league<lb/>
If the Tar Heels are<lb/>
fortunate enough to ad-<lb/>
vance some distance in<lb/>
the NCAA tourna-<lb/>
ment, however. Smith<lb/>
figures he'll see a<lb/>
familiar face.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L-<lb/>
Wholesale &amp; Retail<lb/>
Ice Sales<lb/>
SPECIAL R?G OQC<lb/>
?-LB BAG ?? ,3<lb/>
win thii coupon<lb/>
E?plf?? ApriM 1"?1<lb/>
4J$ S &amp;<lb/>
lOtr i l??n? St<lb/>
T52-772<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
<lb/>
 ABM w? ? SrOBl '?<lb/>
 B i k XH ?  8 ! 6 ' ?r ' . ,?<lb/>
? . ? Ot'tk Ftijfcrt Sit,i:<lb/>
J If ? . ? . 'r? a ? . ??<lb/>
 Sror C I ir,r A '? i?<lb/>
, 'SOi.S f v(?i V<lb/>
????<lb/>
I<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Sivwnt iht' campus i i?munil<lb/>
urn r <lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
Thr East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ticial newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned.<lb/>
operated ano published for anc<lb/>
by the students of Eat,t Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business J35 yearly<lb/>
All others $J5 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage pad at<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Buildmg on the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
Telephone 7 57 434, 6367. 630?<lb/>
BENNIE'S<lb/>
crrco<lb/>
WRECKER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Frwrttnd<lb/>
AHfnm?it<lb/>
AIITypMOf<lb/>
Awtft Rptr<lb/>
' Rtaiohsblt Rt?i<lb/>
. Ittti Strtct<lb/>
Phont 7M-?I14<lb/>
fflPir-N<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE Snare drum Pearl,<lb/>
top of the line Exfra deep Ex<lb/>
cond Call 757 3110.<lb/>
FOR SALE Wedding gown and<lb/>
veil. Ivory Sue 3 pettite Call<lb/>
758-4238 after 6pm<lb/>
FOR SALE 1974 Dodge Coll. Ex<lb/>
cellent condition Good mileage<lb/>
$1950 Call Cynthia at 758 6793<lb/>
YARD SALE Saturday April 4th<lb/>
9 00 5 00 Winter clothes, anfigues<lb/>
(including blue lead beaded 1920 s<lb/>
gown). 350 Honda, mirrors, lamps<lb/>
jewelry (Navaio turquoise and<lb/>
silver), and misc odds and ends<lb/>
112 N. Summit St. Greenville. M.C.<lb/>
Call 757 1448<lb/>
FOR SALE 1974 Volvo, power<lb/>
steering brakes, air conditioning<lb/>
sunroof, automatic clean, 6 cly,<lb/>
good on gas $2500 Call 756 6814<lb/>
FOR SALE Pioneer car stereo<lb/>
components, excellent condition<lb/>
Cassette deck model KP 707G<lb/>
$150 Mam amp. model GM 40 $50<lb/>
Surface mount speakers 2 way<lb/>
model TS X6 $80 Graphic<lb/>
equalizer booster model AO 30 $95<lb/>
754 5323 leave message anytime.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1971 Fiat 124 Needs<lb/>
transmission. 3000 miles on<lb/>
rebuilt motor $800 firm. Call<lb/>
752 4400 after 6pm<lb/>
FOR SALE: 4.4 cu inch<lb/>
J.C.Penny refrigerator,<lb/>
woodgrain top. interior light,<lb/>
vegetable tray, egg holder,<lb/>
spacious freezer with push button<lb/>
defroster Retail $239, used tor 2<lb/>
yrs , sale for $100 Call 752 8643<lb/>
FOR SALE Jensen Tri Axial 6 by<lb/>
9 in speakers New. still in box<lb/>
$80 Call 752 6136<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
BANDS UNLIMITED BOOKING<lb/>
AGENCY Is now booking bands<lb/>
for the spring, summer, and fall<lb/>
We cater to every different<lb/>
musical need and price range We<lb/>
provide bands that range from<lb/>
Beach, Top 40, to easy listening<lb/>
and country The quality of a band<lb/>
can insure the success of your par<lb/>
ty. Let the Pros at BANDS<lb/>
UNLIMITED get the right band<lb/>
for your next party Call 757 3210<lb/>
FEMALE PUPPY needs good<lb/>
home 4 months old, half golden<lb/>
retriever Call 756 5671.<lb/>
OUR MAN ROBERT CON<lb/>
TINUES TO AMAZE! Pro<lb/>
mising to meet a young lady at<lb/>
Moser's farmhe met her at an<lb/>
after downtown party at Hunting<lb/>
Beaver Apts ), Robert is now lac<lb/>
ed with the task of slipping by<lb/>
security since he isn't in a sorority<lb/>
( or fraternity 1 Those security<lb/>
guards are mean too S they tore up<lb/>
a rent a Ohn for not flushing and<lb/>
beat up the band for not playing<lb/>
"Tie You're Mother Down").<lb/>
After a six pack and 10 minutes of<lb/>
shifty thought. Robert formulates<lb/>
a couple of not so complex alter<lb/>
natives A Putting on a<lb/>
buttondown and gatonng by B<lb/>
Getting in a crowd and trying to<lb/>
squeeze in a health teoper<lb/>
dizer ). C. Ball up and<lb/>
cover himself with aluminum foil<lb/>
and get carried in, disguised as a<lb/>
keg D None of the above<lb/>
You guessed it<lb/>
E Dnnk another 6 pack put on<lb/>
a wig, some kelly green pants, a<lb/>
pink buttondown. duck shots, add<lb/>
a beads, a name tag that says<lb/>
'Butty , and head for the security<lb/>
guard looking like you're ready to<lb/>
release a TECHNICOLOR<lb/>
YAWN!<lb/>
TYPING DONE: Term papers,<lb/>
thesis, resumes, etc Call Jane<lb/>
Pollock at 752 971?<lb/>
SPORT F.er's: E V E and Corn<lb/>
bread Cars and phone poles don t<lb/>
mix with D.U Is EnosandT J<lb/>
What is double secret probation?<lb/>
And why isn t Pharo included?<lb/>
G.P J and WaveDog Why do you<lb/>
record your phone calls? Heavy<lb/>
breathing or what? John Mc says<lb/>
grab a box of Boosh wisers and<lb/>
lets HEAD for 504 Clubhouse any<lb/>
Sunday! YEA!<lb/>
CLAUDIA: I was first attracted<lb/>
by your mind. Now 1 m attracted<lb/>
by what you don't mind. Happy 21<lb/>
Birthday L'ya, James.<lb/>
We speak TURABIAN, Little<lb/>
Brown. APA. PRC, etc. Profes<lb/>
sional typing editing, pro<lb/>
ofreading WRITE RIGHT<lb/>
756 9946.<lb/>
NEED PROFESSIONAL TYP<lb/>
ING Term papers, thesis,<lb/>
resumes, etc 758 4241.<lb/>
GUITAR PLAYER WANTED<lb/>
Money making Top 40, Beach<lb/>
band. Vocal ability a must. Call<lb/>
757 3210.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU SPRING FL<lb/>
ING FRIDAY APRIL 3RD<lb/>
Everyone is invited! Be sure and<lb/>
buy your raffle tickets tor the tree<lb/>
Beach Weekend<lb/>
PARTTIME AND FULLTIME<lb/>
HELP WANTED Apply in per<lb/>
son Hatteras Hammocks 1104<lb/>
Clark St Greenville<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FOR RENT Large house 12<lb/>
rooms. 2 baths Ideal tor student<lb/>
group $500 plus utilities 752 5296<lb/>
FOR RENT 2 bedroom<lb/>
townhouse apts 1 and halt baths<lb/>
appliances, cable TV hookups. 2<lb/>
locations. River Bluff and E 11th<lb/>
St. No pets. $280 and $300 units,<lb/>
lease and security deposit re<lb/>
quired. JL Harris and Sons Inc ,<lb/>
REALTORS. 204 W 10th St<lb/>
758 4711<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED To share apt inside<lb/>
house on E 3rd St beginning May<lb/>
1st Rent is $87 SO Call Beth at<lb/>
752 4550.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED 7 bedroom fully fur<lb/>
mslicd trailer Central air<lb/>
fireplace and 2 baths. $87 SO per<lb/>
month plus half utilities Call<lb/>
752 2898<lb/>
1981-82<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Pirate Calendar<lb/>
will be taking applica-<lb/>
tions for Male Models,<lb/>
Sunday, April 5th,<lb/>
from 3:00-5:00 p.m. at<lb/>
the Elbo Room.<lb/>
Please Bring Photograph<lb/>
AFTERNOON DEUGHT<lb/>
April 3 lii<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
lltMCIRl<lb/>
Sponsored by : Hille<lb/>
4Q0-7:00p.m.<lb/>
Admission 25t<lb/>
Canned beverages<lb/>
only BOC <lb/>
iEafit (Earollnfan<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday curing the academic<lb/>
year ana cver Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
fKial newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, ov.<lb/>
operated, and published for and<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business $35 yearly<lb/>
All others $25 yearly<lb/>
Second class postaqe paid at<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
SAAD'SSHOfc<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
I 1 3 Gtande Ave<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Quality Repair<lb/>
ROOMATES WANTED 2 male or<lb/>
female roommates wanted fo<lb/>
share spacious 3 bedroom house<lb/>
during summer and! or tall<lb/>
Convenient location to Carolina<lb/>
East Mall and Pitt Community<lb/>
College $80 month during sum<lb/>
mer, one third utilities and $60<lb/>
month, one fourth utilities during<lb/>
the fall Call 756 901! after 5 pm<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED 2 bedroom apt m<lb/>
Wilson Acres, 4 blocks from cam<lb/>
pus $145 mo. plus one halt<lb/>
utilities. Call 752 9194 after 4:30.<lb/>
RIVER BLUFF APARTMENTS<lb/>
has temporarily reduced its rent<lb/>
Call now for details 758 4015<lb/>
FOR RENT Spacious 12 room<lb/>
house 2 blocks from campus<lb/>
$500 plus deposit Call 752 5296<lb/>
FEMALE WANTED To share 3<lb/>
bedroom apt $82 00 pius one third<lb/>
utilities Non smoker preferred<lb/>
Ca'i Nancy at 758 8398<lb/>
APT FOR LEASE 600<lb/>
Georgetown. Runs from mid May<lb/>
to Mid August Call 758 0323<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS CAN BE PUR<lb/>
CHASED FROM 2 00 3:00 M F AT<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OF<lb/>
FICE<lb/>
PLANTERS OIL MILL, INC.<lb/>
1004 Cokey Road ? Rocky Mount, N.C. 442-0193<lb/>
We have recently completed the renovation and expansion<lb/>
of our Solvent Plant and are now able to fulfill all your needs<lb/>
for 44 Protein Soybean Meal.<lb/>
Any Size Order Accepted.<lb/>
Available Bagged or Bulk.<lb/>
No Appointment Necessary for Loading.<lb/>
Delivery Service Available. Including Auger Trucks.<lb/>
We are also buying soybeans.<lb/>
Call (919) 442-0193 For Price Quotations<lb/>
Open your windows and let out winter. Start your spring celebration with<lb/>
rock &amp; roll from the Record Bar. Pick up Steve Bassetts Virginia Breeze, and<lb/>
REO Speedwagon's Hi Infidelity, among many others.<lb/>
On sale April 2-8<lb/>
Steve Bassett, Virginia Breeze<lb/>
REO Speed wagon, Hi Infidelity<lb/>
l.rivtht'ttifl<lb/>
lit mush.<lb/>
W?k RECORDS &amp; TAPES ?<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Carolina East Mall<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057333_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
IMI l s( R1 INI w<lb/>
M'KIl 2. 1481<lb/>
Handball Team Back From West Pt.<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Soccer League<lb/>
The Stoh's Aliens<lb/>
took at tough come-<lb/>
from-behind victory<lb/>
Sunday over NC"<lb/>
Wesley an by a 2-1<lb/>
margin. The first half<lb/>
was scoreless although<lb/>
the Aliens had two wide<lb/>
open shots right in<lb/>
front of the goal. They<lb/>
also missed a penalty<lb/>
kick.<lb/>
In the second half,<lb/>
Wesleyan vsas awarded<lb/>
a penalty kick after a<lb/>
trip in the Alien's<lb/>
penalty area. Tons Fer-<lb/>
Club Sport<lb/>
Review<lb/>
BY TIM WILLIAMS<lb/>
rell converted the kick<lb/>
to give Wesleyan a 1-0<lb/>
lead with only 22<lb/>
minutes left in the<lb/>
match. At this point,<lb/>
the Aliens buckled<lb/>
down and tied the score<lb/>
on a well-placed shot<lb/>
from a narrow angle b<lb/>
Mike Hitchcock. Then,<lb/>
with only five minutes<lb/>
remaining in the game<lb/>
Steve Young hit an ex-<lb/>
cellent pass that found<lb/>
Jeff Karpovitch wide<lb/>
open in front of the<lb/>
goal. He fired the ball<lb/>
into the back of the net<lb/>
to give the Aliens the<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
As for the American<lb/>
Defender Soccer Club,<lb/>
defeat was tasted for<lb/>
the first time this<lb/>
season as they lost to<lb/>
NC Wesleyan Thursday<lb/>
in Rocky Mount, 1-0.<lb/>
After having numerous<lb/>
opportunities to score<lb/>
throughout the game,<lb/>
the Defender's defense<lb/>
made a mistake that<lb/>
cost them the match. A<lb/>
fullback was trying to<lb/>
pass the ball back to the<lb/>
goalie but instead push-<lb/>
ed the ball into the net<lb/>
to give Wesleyan the<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
On Sunday, though,<lb/>
the Defender's got back<lb/>
in the win column with<lb/>
a 3-1 win over the Kick<lb/>
Soccer Club in Wilson.<lb/>
All the goals were<lb/>
scored in the second<lb/>
half with Shawn Berry<lb/>
leading the way with<lb/>
two. Bill Merwin also<lb/>
hit the nets while Keith<lb/>
Soccer Clinic Set<lb/>
Johnston and Steve<lb/>
Brody each gave an<lb/>
assist to Berry.<lb/>
Team Handball<lb/>
Club<lb/>
The ECU Team<lb/>
Handball Club par-<lb/>
ticipated last weekend<lb/>
in the Sixth Annual<lb/>
West Point Team<lb/>
Handball Invitational<lb/>
Tournament in New<lb/>
York. Even though<lb/>
they played some very<lb/>
high-class competition,<lb/>
they made a respectable<lb/>
showing. As for the<lb/>
men, the event was<lb/>
double-elimination<lb/>
against 11 other teams<lb/>
from the United States<lb/>
and Canada. In their<lb/>
first game they lost<lb/>
11-10 to Citadeiles de<lb/>
Quebec who ended up<lb/>
in third place, and then<lb/>
were defeated by an ex-<lb/>
cellent Toronto All-<lb/>
Stars team, 13-7. In a<lb/>
consolation game, the<lb/>
men's team, soundly<lb/>
defeated the New York<lb/>
City Team Handball<lb/>
Club, 22-3.<lb/>
As for the women,<lb/>
they won the first game<lb/>
they played, defeating<lb/>
West Point Club 10-6.<lb/>
The girls, most of<lb/>
whom were playing in<lb/>
their first tournament,<lb/>
lost their next four<lb/>
games to some extreme-<lb/>
ly talented teams from<lb/>
Canada.<lb/>
Every one who made<lb/>
the trip got equal play-<lb/>
ing time, and much<lb/>
valuable experience was<lb/>
gained.<lb/>
Hubert Yogelsmger,<lb/>
former Australian pro-<lb/>
fessional soccer player<lb/>
and North American<lb/>
Soccei I eague coach,<lb/>
will direct the Puma<lb/>
Soccei Clinic at ECU<lb/>
April 3-5.<lb/>
Emphasis will be<lb/>
placed on skill develop-<lb/>
ment and tactics.<lb/>
Seperate session for<lb/>
coaches, beginners<lb/>
(boys and girls) and ad-<lb/>
vanced players ull be<lb/>
held. The clinic will be<lb/>
conducted at the ECU<lb/>
Soccer Field at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
 ogelsmger was one<lb/>
of the most successful<lb/>
pro coaches in the<lb/>
history of the NASL.<lb/>
He won four division<lb/>
titles, two with the<lb/>
Boston Mmutemen and<lb/>
two with the San Diego<lb/>
Sockers. His teams<lb/>
reached the playoffs<lb/>
every year and finished<lb/>
in the semi-finals<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Championships three<lb/>
times.<lb/>
A s a collegiate<lb/>
coach, he brought Yale<lb/>
University into national<lb/>
prominence when Yale<lb/>
participated for the<lb/>
first time in the Elis'<lb/>
soccer history in the<lb/>
NCAA playoffs and<lb/>
reached the New<lb/>
England finals.<lb/>
Vogelsinger is a<lb/>
member of the promo-<lb/>
tional board of Puma<lb/>
USA, the American<lb/>
marketing company for<lb/>
the internationally<lb/>
famous German sport<lb/>
shoe company.<lb/>
"Soccer is the com<lb/>
ing sport in America<lb/>
said Vogelsinger, who<lb/>
repeatedly pressed for<lb/>
"Americanization" of<lb/>
the game while an<lb/>
NASL coach. "1<lb/>
believe the United<lb/>
States has the greatest<lb/>
soccer potential of any<lb/>
nation in the world, but<lb/>
we need more ex-<lb/>
perienced coaches and<lb/>
we need to develop pro-<lb/>
per skills in the young<lb/>
players just starting the<lb/>
game. The Puma Soc-<lb/>
cer Clinics have been<lb/>
created to provide help<lb/>
in both cases<lb/>
At ECU , the April<lb/>
3rd session will be from<lb/>
7-9 p.m. This session is<lb/>
only for coaches and<lb/>
parents.<lb/>
The April 4th session<lb/>
will be from 10 in the<lb/>
morning until noon.<lb/>
This session is for ages<lb/>
7-13. The 2-4 p.m. ses-<lb/>
sion will be for the 14<lb/>
and up age group.<lb/>
Yanks Get Mumphrey<lb/>
In TradeWith Padres<lb/>
On April 5th, h in-<lb/>
vitation only, there will<lb/>
e another session from<lb/>
to I p.m.<lb/>
9MX ?! - to YDiSS MNE5 r a ,<lb/>
II<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
In Concert"<lb/>
EPIC Recording Artist<lb/>
NANTUCKET"<lb/>
with special guest<lb/>
"Control Group"<lb/>
From New York City<lb/>
Doors Open At 7:30<lb/>
Showtime At 9:00<lb/>
Must Be 18 With Valid ID<lb/>
I OK 1 1AH)1 R-<lb/>
DAI 1 . Ha. (UPI) -<lb/>
Switch-hitting out-<lb/>
fielder Jerry Mum-<lb/>
phrev of the San Diego<lb/>
Padres was traded to<lb/>
Nev? oi k Yankees<lb/>
1 uesdav night tor out-<lb/>
fielders Ruppert Jones<lb/>
and Joe I etebvre and<lb/>
pitchers I im I.ollar and<lb/>
Chris Welsh.<lb/>
Mumphrev, 28, stole<lb/>
52 bases last year, help-<lb/>
ing make the Padres the<lb/>
only team in baseball<lb/>
history to have three<lb/>
players with 50 or more<lb/>
stolen bases. He hit<lb/>
.298 and knocked in 59<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
In the deal, the<lb/>
Yankees also acquired<lb/>
John P a c e 11 a, a<lb/>
24-year-old right-<lb/>
hander who was landed<lb/>
b San Diego from the<lb/>
ew York Mets in a<lb/>
previous deal for left-<lb/>
hander Randy Jones.<lb/>
Pacella, 3-4 with a<lb/>
5 14 ERA last year, was<lb/>
immediately sent to the<lb/>
Yankees' AAA farm<lb/>
club in Columbus.<lb/>
One vear ago, Jones,<lb/>
2fr, was considered the<lb/>
"i ankees' center fielder<lb/>
of the future, but he<lb/>
suffered two major in-<lb/>
juries and played in on-<lb/>
lv 83 games, batting<lb/>
.223. rhe kev to the<lb/>
deal as tar as the<lb/>
Padres are concerned<lb/>
could very well be<lb/>
I etebvre. 25, who bats<lb/>
left and has a strong<lb/>
throwing arm L eteb-<lb/>
vre batted .22"? for the<lb/>
Yankees last year but<lb/>
showed some power,<lb/>
hitting eight home runs<lb/>
and driving in 21 runs<lb/>
in only 150 at-bats.<lb/>
Both Welsh, who will<lb/>
be 26 later this month,<lb/>
and I ollar, 25, pitched<lb/>
for Columbus, which<lb/>
won the International<lb/>
League championship<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
Lollar was 2-1 with a<lb/>
2.57 ERA for Colum-<lb/>
bus and went 1-0 with a<lb/>
3.43 ERA in 14 ap-<lb/>
pearances for New<lb/>
York, saving two<lb/>
games. Welch was 9-12<lb/>
with a 2.73 ERA for<lb/>
Columbus.<lb/>
The acquisition of<lb/>
Mumphrey further<lb/>
complicates the<lb/>
Yankees' outfield situa-<lb/>
tion. The only sure<lb/>
starter is free agent<lb/>
Dave Winfield, who<lb/>
could open in right<lb/>
because of an injury to<lb/>
slugger Reggie<lb/>
Jackson. The Yankees<lb/>
have already sent center<lb/>
fielder Bobby Brown to<lb/>
Columbus and veteran<lb/>
center fielder Elliot<lb/>
Maddox has been<lb/>
working in New York's<lb/>
camp on a tryout basis<lb/>
New York Manager<lb/>
Gene Michaels said<lb/>
Mumphrey will pro-<lb/>
bably be in the starting<lb/>
lineup as the Yankees'<lb/>
No. 2 hitter.<lb/>
"1 haven't seen Jerry<lb/>
Mumphrey play but the<lb/>
scouts say he's a good<lb/>
player said Michaels.<lb/>
"Right now, I'm think-<lb/>
ing of him being the<lb/>
No. 2 hitter<lb/>
Michaels, who<lb/>
managed Columbus<lb/>
last year, said he was<lb/>
impressed with Pacella,<lb/>
claiming, "He had the<lb/>
best arm in our<lb/>
league<lb/>
Taco Bell<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Special<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Monday PluS 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/>
CHICK?FILA<lb/>
SANDWICH SPECIAL -<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
FOR $1.09 EACH.<lb/>
Here's real special treat foi you and your friends oi family. You can<lb/>
gel all the delicious Chick-fil-A sandwiches ? the original boneless<lb/>
breast ol chicken sandwich tor onl $1.09 each with the coupon<lb/>
below. I hat's a deal that's hard to beat on the sandwich that's fun to<lb/>
eat.<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
CHICK?FIL'ASAHDYviCH<lb/>
SPECIAL COUPON$1.09each<lb/>
Jii-t ! : ?<lb/>
;avi<lb/>
'?"J?-<lb/>
tlu- rtM.<lb/>
Our rtm- !<lb/>
(M,i, per L<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
N<lb/>
jm<lb/>
.   11<lb/>
4-30-81<lb/>
( losrd ?undav<lb/>
? xX$?<lb/>
THE TAS1 L WORTH SHOPPING FOR.<lb/>
. OI CON<lb/>
UffM u'xxt 'I tlu tulliming hit k I it rt-l.ur.nl<lb/>
? General Nutrition Centers<lb/>
America's Best Nutrition Values are at GNC-Ovef 800 Stores from Coast to Coast<lb/>
? Coconut BROWN ??!iL<lb/>
BRAN I Matrons! RICE : VITAMIN<lb/>
500mg &amp;9k<lb/>
VITAMINW.<lb/>
99 ! 29 "I29! 39 ! 1"<lb/>
5 IKPIRIS 5 i-61 ' tlhBIS'i !6:<lb/>
fcXPIBES ???! ?<lb/>
GNC QUALITY AT LtSS THAN CHEAPEST CUT-RATE MAIL ORDER PRICES'<lb/>
STORE COUPON STORS COUPON STORE COUPON<lb/>
BONE MEAL"<lb/>
STORE COUPON pj 5TQHE COUPON<lb/>
gffilB ALFALFA Vtamin ? TMBK LEcr?HiN ZINC<lb/>
ss89c, I- 49 In M2? I 69 I ?14? I ?39c<lb/>
EXPIRES S 5 8' 1 EXPIRES ?ll 1 EXPIRES i) ?1 EXPIRES ? 5 ?l ? EXPIRES S S r ll EXPIRESl<lb/>
'JP"<lb/>
LOSE RAT<lb/>
UM<lb/>
STYLEX<lb/>
? Cootma b?mioctna<lb/>
?twh la approved<lb/>
by U S Gov t<lb/>
pani ol ??pert<lb/>
to app?tft? control<lb/>
SENSATIONAL I<lb/>
IRON<lb/>
PENNY SALE<lb/>
UNDER<lb/>
2170SELENIUM 2470<lb/>
A &amp; D.<lb/>
MOOD ? u -DOC U 100 12 P<lb/>
2O60 CALCIUM<lb/>
'?r LACTATE<lb/>
i-? ?? ROMS<lb/>
2090 RELAX t? 2786<lb/>
MULTI-<lb/>
MINERALS<lb/>
n.n ?yt? ?. I0OBB I ?"? ?"??' ???oo? tino IZSI!?<lb/>
Stress?!<lb/>
? Combat Strvaa<lb/>
? Maintain Energy<lb/>
Raaarvaa<lb/>
B-COMPLEX<lb/>
lancad<lb/>
ula<lb/>
49<lb/>
B SO BaUncad<lb/>
Formula<lb/>
CLIP THESE COUPONS FOR OLD-FASHIONED FAVORITES<lb/>
it it r? pr. 1 Mi.ij ic Qnf Cat P? Ctiiiow "h C:t,Mf i<lb/>
KUr LECITHIN 1 STORE COUPON<lb/>
VINEGAR. B-6 (? ?AJ<lb/>
DIET PLAN!<lb/>
u<lb/>
STORE COUPON I STORE COUPON<lb/>
STORE COUPON 1 STORE COUPON<lb/>
CKERS<lb/>
i<lb/>
.vi?OC ' I ?' AQC<lb/>
EIPIReTVis! EXP.RtSbi<lb/>
w?ol? wheat i gijLGUR Safflower Ic?l!tiorio<lb/>
FLOURi WHEAT JMayonnaiselSoypeans<lb/>
69c A 49? h 89 I 39<lb/>
s?tfe9c?Js49c. ius<lb/>
expires? s-?i i txKiRtssiti ? "i14" <lb/>
Men's Rugby<lb/>
The Men's Rugby<lb/>
team had a split deci-<lb/>
sion with the Fort<lb/>
Bragg Rugby Club last<lb/>
Saturday. In the "A "<lb/>
game, Ft. Bragg was<lb/>
the winner by a 39-14<lb/>
score. Scott Taylor<lb/>
scored two tries for<lb/>
ECU while Lee Essner<lb/>
added another.<lb/>
In the "B" game,<lb/>
ECU was the victor by<lb/>
a convincing 27-4<lb/>
margin. The men's<lb/>
Rugby Club par-<lb/>
ticipates this weekend<lb/>
in the Wake Forest In-<lb/>
vitational Rugby Tour-<lb/>
mment againast 16<lb/>
teams from all across<lb/>
the southeastern United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
Women's Rugby<lb/>
The Women's Rugby<lb/>
Club is entered this<lb/>
weekend in the 1981<lb/>
Michelob Rugby<lb/>
Classic at the Universi-<lb/>
ty of South Carolina.<lb/>
The field also includes<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte and<lb/>
Clem son. ECU plays<lb/>
USC Saturday at 12:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
STORE COUPON<lb/>
STORE COUPON<lb/>
STORE COUPON<lb/>
LOWFAT<lb/>
? YOGURTinC:<lb/>
? 8oz llM<lb/>
EXPIRES S S ?1<lb/>
? ?????? ????? ??????????<lb/>
??????????????????????????????<lb/>
STORE COUPON S STORE COUPON i<lb/>
Ro?flLtEs? IftSsfSrtl<lb/>
k'49c<lb/>
FRUIT<lb/>
JUICES<lb/>
SAVE 39c<lb/>
10<lb/>
C:<lb/>
POTATO YOGURT<lb/>
Ofl CORN<lb/>
f<lb/>
Ofl CORN V &amp; f n?<lb/>
CHIPS lci<lb/>
SAVE !9c MWST <lb/>
EXPIRES 5 S' ? EXPIRES 5 St'<lb/>
??????????????????????????????????????????????<lb/>
? ??????????????ill<lb/>
STICK<lb/>
' um QQC<lb/>
I m SKI11<lb/>
EXPIRES S 5 11 ! EXPIRES S-S-il<lb/>
S?vf UP<lb/>
TO<lb/>
60?(<lb/>
ITUU TAIS ; 6EMT0L?<lb/>
BOKT'<lb/>
STRESS-O-WTE<lb/>
GERI-GEN<lb/>
$179 J 59c<lb/>
IIWRfl 1 ?-?1 '?PMHI ?<lb/>
1Q0<lb/>
MtTAHHUCIL? i ONE-AJIAT<lb/>
of t ?AAM fommu ? wnmmn<lb/>
amttnt w?hih<lb/>
1 ????<lb/>
i EXPIRES Sir<lb/>
?????????????????????????????a IT<lb/>
STORE COUPON ? STORE COUPON li<lb/>
BANANA<lb/>
EXPIRES SS4I I<lb/>
HOLE WHEJ<lb/>
HONEY<lb/>
GRAHAMS S CHIPS<lb/>
69 s-89c<lb/>
BlBIC C , A 1 1 ODlQfC . <lb/>
?MVf<lb/>
15 4? a EXPIRE<lb/>
igh Blood Pressure:<lb/>
mumi sai 1 iniaki<lb/>
Sxvi<lb/>
expires; 541 S EXPIRES s sai<lb/>
????????????????????????????<lb/>
General<lb/>
Nutrition<lb/>
Centers<lb/>
I'Oin crxioN<lb/>
MO SAL 1<lb/>
Tomato<lb/>
?Juico<lb/>
svi QQc<lb/>
tic BB ? o,<lb/>
?run<lb/>
?ro?? coupon<lb/>
MayonnclM<lb/>
six CkflC<lb/>
STOMf COJIO<lb/>
NO 11. r<lb/>
Imwi Stick<lb/>
?MACKS<lb/>
?M<lb/>
Sit T,Mi I ??<lb/>
IIMHI I ? li<lb/>
49<lb/>
MO IAI'<lb/>
VEG-IT<lb/>
?w QQC .<lb/>
Ic 9S mlm<lb/>
SPRING SAVINGS<lb/>
Film DEVELOPING and PRINTING<lb/>
Foreign Film Not Included.<lb/>
12 exp. 2.49<lb/>
20 exp. 3.79<lb/>
24 exp. 4.19<lb/>
36 exp. 6.29<lb/>
ASA 400 slightly higher<lb/>
SATISFACTION<lb/>
GUARANTEED!<lb/>
April 6 - April 10<lb/>
Student Supply<lb/>
Store<lb/>
Wright Bldg.<lb/>
East Carolina University (g)<lb/>
R-rOTOTHOJ<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
PRICES ARE UP!<lb/>
If you ntad monty for fill clothot or football tlckata. now It a<lb/>
good tlma to aall your gold and allvar valuablaa. And hora ? a<lb/>
good way to gat EXTRA CASHI<lb/>
SELL YOUR<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
TO COIN &amp; RING MAN!<lb/>
$<lb/>
Almost everyone his i high school or college class ring<lb/>
they don't wear anymore. Check your dresser drawers<lb/>
and bring your class ring Into Coin &amp; Ring Man. Were<lb/>
your professional buying service and we guarantee you<lb/>
fair prices and good service.<lb/>
Wl PAY CASH ONTHISPOT<lb/>
FOI JfWUir, VAWAIUSAIVTMIK<lb/>
MAMIftlOI-UK-IIK.<lb/>
S GOLD $<lb/>
? MCI ? liCKUCIS ? WfcTCMS . DIAMOMOS<lb/>
? CUSS INKS ? WfMiK IAMS ? MMUl<lb/>
?0tB ? UACIUTS ? IM0CMS ? imkits<lb/>
? mum ? uqrrns?cuti umks ? umga<lb/>
PAVING ONTHIIHI<lb/>
CAIN rot ITIMf MAIKID<lb/>
STIRLING SILVER<lb/>
tie Aiousa of coajMTtoM<lb/>
? COfFEE SERVICES ? GOBUTS<lb/>
? RINGS ? SPOONS ? TRAYS ? KNIVES<lb/>
? FORKS?NECKLACES?BRACELtTl<lb/>
'FRANKLIN ANO HAMILTON MINT<lb/>
MERCHANDISE<lb/>
$<lb/>
&amp; RING<lb/>
0p ?V SALES CO iN-<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. 0fsw?:??.eaj sa<lb/>
iHARWONY KOIISf SOUTH) PHONE 7523866<lb/>
F YOUR PROFISSOM AL PERMANENT DEALER i<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057333_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>