<?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="00057336_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
(ftarnltman<lb/>
Serving<lb/>
the I aslarolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
 ol. 55 No. -<lb/>
r<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
luesday, Vpril 14. 1 ??l<lb/>
(.rttHMllr. Northarolins<lb/>
( iniilatiun 10.000<lb/>
Second Run-Off Looms<lb/>
Little To File Appeal<lb/>
H I'M I Ol I INS<lb/>
 i in-1<lb/>
.1 h<lb/>
Hoard<lb/>
(,?!s. Jim Him' toured<lb/>
Milt rhursda. Hun(<lb/>
Minm's t oliseum.<lb/>
II Oraj Vrt Cial<lb/>
caused quite a stir<lb/>
ler as purl ol nis isii to l?reen-<lb/>
when Ins helicopter landed at<lb/>
1 he I niversity 1l<lb/>
voted Monda to g nj<lb/>
Pepe's appeal foi a ?nd run oil<lb/>
in the race foi s iA treasurei<lb/>
1 he board decided by a 3 2<lb/>
that though the lang i I SO A<lb/>
election rules is ambiguous, a se-<lb/>
cond run-ofl is in ordei. accord<lb/>
to Kevin McKenie, the boat<lb/>
iirn an.<lb/>
Kirk 1 ittle, the in<lb/>
treasurer, has announced his deci<lb/>
sion to appeal the decision to I Imet<lb/>
Mey? ? ? - ? hancelloi lor stud<lb/>
1 ittle won the oi ij<lb/>
eight col iftci Pept outdistai<lb/>
him b 49 in tl<lb/>
"We just l 'he rul<lb/>
undei run offs in rticle 10 (ol the<lb/>
ules). and we iusi det<lb/>
.i mea<lb/>
said McKen.ic, ?<lb/>
 ????<lb/>
SOA Pi<lb/>
d to influence meml<lb/>
: . meml I la B ? ? ant<lb/>
 illia . voted i l tht<lb/>
?' I<lb/>
re the<lb/>
 Briggs -aid<lb/>
"Ht iched<lb/>
?<lb/>
gri : Dodd "1 know them,<lb/>
Jt;irr: ! '?<lb/>
i ? i i i,  , t ?? ?a ire vsntten.<lb/>
with Charlie bherroa. the board<lb/>
i  i, ?? . ? i rhai ??? ti : ? its decision, me otwu<lb/>
she a so nuisateu tnai sin. .<lb/>
 . . a ven guidelines bv Dean James<lb/>
notified ol the meeting three hou<lb/>
it began and that she was noi N'<lb/>
sure ol ihe hear,ne's subject until 20<lb/>
, k t  it h, M i oi ked thai the board<lb/>
mimiie : it Degan.<lb/>
"Bui 1 did feel like I was able to I ?'? (lA<lb/>
makeafai. decision die said. el VI p Genera<lb/>
Williams said when she asked that there were<lb/>
Sherrod aboul the ease he expressed<lb/>
the opinion that a econd i m ol<lb/>
Brigi<lb/>
proa<lb/>
aid be held ?? Pepc wo<lb/>
be a certain winnei<lb/>
"He made I ?<lb/>
have to be cray to vote again<lb/>
:? V illiams sai<lb/>
? ?v. ? ? the deci-<lb/>
 Pepe said. "I'm<lb/>
a second<lb/>
 . . day<lb/>
i I<lb/>
1 he othei membei<lb/>
were not available tor coi<lb/>
SI . denied<lb/>
?? i hey're i ?us he said.<lb/>
He said ol his discussions with<lb/>
. already m-<lb/>
intention I<lb/>
 ii doesn't surprise<lb/>
he decision.<lb/>
i lefinitely<lb/>
. al<lb/>
Students Continue To Drink<lb/>
Despite Increased Age Limits<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
w to<lb/>
?<lb/>
I : ? rexas<lb/>
? nkii iusl went y students tend t<lb/>
? , i i i th(<lb/>
i<lb/>
i liverts th<lb/>
ental he<lb/>
Massac<lb/>
I ,lin<lb/>
?<lb/>
tl<lb/>
i<lb/>
R .<lb/>
? strai<lb/>
Legislative Year Closes<lb/>
For StudentGovernment<lb/>
B I'M I l Oil INs<lb/>
-<lb/>
h s <lb/>
iexas d<lb/>
K. m, I'Ma<lb/>
rhe nu<lb/>
able<lb/>
?<lb/>
? 11 ' B<lb/>
? <lb/>
 1<lb/>
.seel l Ht<lb/>
moi<lb/>
I) (iarvev istanl<lb/>
studem affairs al the Li<lb/>
New Hampshire,<lb/>
violence definitely inert<lb/>
the drinkii<lb/>
n 1979<lb/>
"It (raising the ace) has had a rea<lb/>
ba l on the university h(<lb/>
students are getting<lb/>
I Y esiampus is a prim<lb/>
Rape Prevention<lb/>
, ri foi wouW-be rap sine Its dorms h?e all-female populations.<lb/>
Rules To Remember<lb/>
<lb/>
s.s(i<lb/>
<lb/>
thy<lb/>
ontro<lb/>
 ? ot<lb/>
I; m attempt to tie up loose end-<lb/>
slature suspended its rule<lb/>
.?- during tl e ?<lb/>
Sher- Jims. Mo<lb/>
j byetoth( 1 ej letL<lb/>
rsbeen i ,  <lb/>
as on campus, Vmhersi <lb/>
( hiel Donald Maia reports adrastK<lb/>
praised his I rllow increase in the numbei ol<lb/>
members ol the SOA Executive bances and arrests for possess<lb/>
. Presideni Lvnn alcoholic beverages in a<lb/>
month period aftet Massachust<lb/>
C a<lb/>
lea-arc- Kirk I ittle.<lb/>
s( , tradition, Senioi<lb/>
Rapt<lb/>
. . not a sex at<lb/>
tills<lb/>
I lowevei  I<lb/>
iy Police 1 ?<lb/>
interested m tie<lb/>
 and<lb/>
.sibility ot way s exists<lb/>
o! the pas d We<lb/>
fact'<lb/>
1 ai<lb/>
? ol ? ?<lb/>
ng single women; easy access to<lb/>
kec<lb/>
h<lb/>
? Dasha<lb/>
I , . ts need<lb/>
a M Patrick closed time, 65 stud<lb/>
meeting, the I egislature's 22nd<lb/>
ol the veai<lb/>
no sinaie women, un j1 ? ??<lb/>
da variety ,<lb/>
ne scenes (doi i tones, emptv ?<lb/>
lss  ,ms, oded and isolated<lb/>
? : r-  -<lb/>
<lb/>
police aectu.es the<lb/>
ssdSTf ru <lb/>
areas, fhey also agree that the vast u<lb/>
majority ol campus rapes involve i<lb/>
strangers oi slight aquaintances Ua  <lb/>
compar-ed to 17 in the preceding 12 Umvers, .puses servt as V,h,le th, ,s and .ndMcdiv a<lb/>
months. unds fo' thc rap7s a large numbe, ol rapes in-<lb/>
1979. During thai thai woman should know<lb/>
n.<lb/>
i V er<lb/>
if An<lb/>
II, 1 d v tilers<lb/>
all<lb/>
seen<lb/>
i 1<lb/>
i<lb/>
e ??. o t<lb/>
i he 1<lb/>
d<lb/>
Mr<lb/>
the<lb/>
.  :<lb/>
? iblish<lb/>
dudent<lb/>
?11) olol-<lb/>
ege Hill Mendenhall and West<lb/>
campu ns<lb/>
heldWedi<lb/>
Polling p a<lb/>
Belk buildini <lb/>
because ol<lb/>
I, gislati ? Hunter<lb/>
' rhe 1 egislature als i appropnatec<lb/>
$761 2 '?? the 1 l nandball team.<lb/>
rhemone will ard i tying<lb/>
entry tees in two tournaments and<lb/>
purchasing uniforn<lb/>
In a tl min ous vote.<lb/>
legislai 5595 to the Campus<lb/>
Alcohol-Drug Program.<lb/>
puMshinTllrmaL;  ? ? M , m, ,? ,  ,??<lb/>
volving persons known each<lb/>
othei probabh go unrepoi - tl<lb/>
Most frequently involved is the<lb/>
 , livisl oi habitual Keef<lb/>
Japist meaning one rapis, would ail times. Do not open your a<lb/>
be responsible for several rapes on . q .<lb/>
"Mou'raDes do no. occut in dot habit Vary vour routine -<lb/>
JJXs Tapists are no, fond ol trc<lb/>
areas which have large populations time every<lb/>
o1 people moving around. Rapists ? ? '? &amp;?r<lb/>
runTess chance of detection in dark ?ho are unknown to<lb/>
wok oi open areas, where there -<lb/>
au no witnesses, than in dorm Rape is one o! the majoi violent<lb/>
rooms. Still it is a very good idea to crimes in the I nited States. One<lb/>
keep vour dorm room locked at all which also has the most potential<lb/>
times, even it you are jusl going dangei of any crime other than<lb/>
down' the hall or to the showei murdei Rape has the potential lor<lb/>
room 1 his will aKo help prevent<lb/>
lhef1 See RAPE, Pajje 3<lb/>
Other universities report that ???<lb/>
most campus rapes occui outdoors 1 IZI.<lb/>
in open areas at night, while othe. Q fg InSlUB<lb/>
police agencies report that there is<lb/>
no likely site on campus.<lb/>
program,<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Rape can aKo happen to you Announcements<lb/>
while you are ot! campus Iheie are 1 ditonaU<lb/>
some common sense rules that will C lassifieds<lb/>
help Keep you from becoming a vie 1 eatures<lb/>
1 etters<lb/>
, should nevei ?  ' sP?rls<lb/>
(?rtvk NHeek.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057336_0002"/><lb/>
2 THE HAS I" CAROLINIAN APRIL 14,1981<lb/>
?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CHESS<lb/>
We have moved! Yes. the<lb/>
Greenville Chess Club is no<lb/>
located m the basement ot the<lb/>
Senior Citizens' Center on the cor<lb/>
ner ot 4th and Greene We meet<lb/>
regularly at 7 15 on Monday<lb/>
nights It's lust a short walk from<lb/>
campus Join us'<lb/>
PASSOVER<lb/>
Community Passover Sarer at<lb/>
the Rotary Club Saturday April<lb/>
18 SS 00 per person Call Mrs<lb/>
Warshauer at 7S2 57?6 or Mrs<lb/>
ResniK at 756 5640 tor more into or<lb/>
reservations All are invited to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
HILLEL<lb/>
Come to the HiHel Passover<lb/>
Brunch at 12 00 on April 26 at the<lb/>
synagoque. U20 E UthStWewill<lb/>
hold elections tor next years ot<lb/>
liters It you wish to run tor an ot<lb/>
tice. want a ride, or more into .<lb/>
call Jerry at 752 5942<lb/>
DISCOUNT DAYS<lb/>
Mendenhaii Student Center's<lb/>
discount days are Wednesday<lb/>
and Fridays Every week you can<lb/>
save one third on the cost ot bowl<lb/>
no billiards and table tennis at<lb/>
M- ndenhall Bowling s one third<lb/>
ott each Friday from 3 00 until<lb/>
5 30 p m and billiards and table<lb/>
tenms are one third utt each<lb/>
Wednesday trom 3 00 p m until<lb/>
5 30 p m Don t rr.ss it'<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
1 he East Carolina Camera Club<lb/>
is sponsoring a "slide photc I<lb/>
que workshop to be held at the<lb/>
Willis Building, corner ot First<lb/>
and Read Streets on Thursday<lb/>
evening. Apr 16 at 6 30 p m<lb/>
The program is tree ot charge<lb/>
and open to all individuals wtio<lb/>
have slides and wish to par<lb/>
ticipate The category is open as to<lb/>
subiect matter<lb/>
Those wishing to partic ipate are<lb/>
encouraged to br ng up to ten<lb/>
slides with their name written on<lb/>
the boarder ot the slide tor iden<lb/>
titication Some ot the ten will be<lb/>
selected tor the cr 'ique workshop<lb/>
and others will '? selected to be<lb/>
used m a general slide show im<lb/>
mediately following the critique<lb/>
program<lb/>
A critique pannel will be on hand<lb/>
to otter constructive suggestions<lb/>
and or to point out excellence<lb/>
Comments will be made on com<lb/>
position, exposure and the overall<lb/>
general photograph! ava <lb/>
the slide The obiecv. ? rtnept<lb/>
gram is to improve awareness ot<lb/>
elements that make tor better pic<lb/>
tures<lb/>
Members ot the East Carolina<lb/>
Cam'era Club are exhibiting<lb/>
photographs at the Willis Bu ld.no<lb/>
through Apr,I 16 The exhibit m<lb/>
eludes landscapes, still life and<lb/>
abstract photographs in black and<lb/>
white as well as color prints<lb/>
This event is being scheduled m<lb/>
connection with the Eastern<lb/>
Carolina Arts Festival The<lb/>
festival is made possible by an ap<lb/>
propr.ation trom the Pitt County<lb/>
Board of Commissioners, an arts<lb/>
development grant trom the N.C<lb/>
Arts Council, funding trom cor<lb/>
porations and individual contnbu<lb/>
lions<lb/>
ELDERHOSTEL<lb/>
Persons over 60 years old who<lb/>
wish to speno a summer week on a<lb/>
university campus and enroll in<lb/>
non credit college courses, are in<lb/>
vited to participate in an<lb/>
Elderhoster program at East<lb/>
Carolina University June 28 July 4<lb/>
or July 5 11<lb/>
ELderhostel' students who<lb/>
wll be housed on campus, may<lb/>
enroll m these special courses<lb/>
Descriptive Astronomy ' a<lb/>
non mathematical approach to<lb/>
Studying the universe, with em<lb/>
phasis on recenl discoveries in the<lb/>
solar system and current theories<lb/>
on cosmology<lb/>
Folk Traditional America an<lb/>
introduction to tolkhfe as an im<lb/>
portant aspect of American<lb/>
culture, with a sampling ot trad<lb/>
tions from American regional, oc<lb/>
cupational and ethnic folk groups<lb/>
' Cultures m Collision The Ar<lb/>
chaeology and Early History of<lb/>
the Carolina Coast a detailed<lb/>
study ot English exploration here<lb/>
between 1584 and 1587 and. the<lb/>
eventual "cultural collision" bet<lb/>
ween European settlers and the<lb/>
Carolina Algonkian Indians<lb/>
No previous background in any<lb/>
of Itie subiects to be taught is re<lb/>
quired Each course will be<lb/>
enhanced by the use ot tilms and<lb/>
artifact displays or live<lb/>
performances Instructors are<lb/>
ECU professors No formal<lb/>
"homework' is necessary<lb/>
"Eiderhostel " inspired by the<lb/>
youth hostels and the folk schools<lb/>
vt Europe is designed to give<lb/>
retirement aged persons the ex<lb/>
penences and intellectual stimuia<lb/>
lion of on campus life<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
program and application<lb/>
materials are available trom Dr<lb/>
Ralph Worthmgton, Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education. ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N C 27834<lb/>
WORK<lb/>
Par' time work available A<lb/>
position is open for a student to<lb/>
work on Sundays in a near by<lb/>
church with a teen age group The<lb/>
. s a minimum of S100 per<lb/>
month The position begins im<lb/>
mediately and continues through<lb/>
the summer it interested, contact<lb/>
Dan Earnhardt at the Methods!<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
DOG DAY<lb/>
DOG DAY A new program ot<lb/>
tered at the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center will be lunch on Thursdays<lb/>
Hot dogs (50 centsl and soft drinks<lb/>
trom 11 30 until 1 30 Address 501<lb/>
East Fifth Street<lb/>
PAGEANT<lb/>
Applications tor contestants tor<lb/>
Miss Black and Gold Pageant are<lb/>
now being accepted if interested<lb/>
contact any member ot Alpha Phi<lb/>
Alpha fraternity or calll 752 9875<lb/>
TWIG<lb/>
We strive to make the Bible a<lb/>
real part ot life, that can be en<lb/>
joy able (II Tim 6 17' Check it out<lb/>
Thursday. Apni 9 and Tuesday<lb/>
April 14 at 12 noon Monday. April<lb/>
13 at 7 30 p m at Mendenhali Stu<lb/>
dent Center, Rm 212<lb/>
CHEMISTRY<lb/>
The American Chemical Society<lb/>
Student Afto ate wll hold a<lb/>
business meeting on April 14. at<lb/>
6 30 p m m Flanagan 202 The<lb/>
plans for the picnic will be finalii<lb/>
ed All members and other in<lb/>
terested persons are urged to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
SRA<lb/>
There wll be a very Tnportan'<lb/>
SRA meetng Tuesday April 14<lb/>
1981 in 130 Rawl Building at 5 00<lb/>
p m All members are urged to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
HONOR COUNCIL<lb/>
Anyone wishing to apply for the<lb/>
1981 81 Honor Council may do so in<lb/>
the SGA Office, Room 228.<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
Decline tor applications Friday.<lb/>
Apnl 17, 1981<lb/>
MANAGER<lb/>
Anyone wishing to apply tor<lb/>
Refrigerator Manager tor the<lb/>
1981 82 scno .y oo so by<lb/>
com.n, by I GA Office, Room<lb/>
228. Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
inter Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will meet this Thurs<lb/>
day night at 7 30 m the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center This week we will<lb/>
have a special Easter Service<lb/>
Everyone is welcome<lb/>
BINGO<lb/>
Tonight is the night tor bingo<lb/>
and ice cream at Mendenhali Stu<lb/>
dent Center Mendenhall's mon<lb/>
thly BingoIce Cream Party will<lb/>
be held at 7 00 p m in the Mult,<lb/>
Purpose Room Play bingo, win<lb/>
priies and eat delicious ice cream<lb/>
absolutely free This is the last<lb/>
party ot the semester so don't miss<lb/>
it1<lb/>
FACULTYSTAFF<lb/>
All ECU faculty and staff<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
members take advantage of your<lb/>
discount oay at the Bowling<lb/>
Center ,n Mendenhali Every<lb/>
Wednesday trom 5 00 pm until<lb/>
8 00 p m faculty and staff MSC<lb/>
members may bowl two (2) games<lb/>
and uet a 3rd game FREE Don't<lb/>
forget Wednesday is savings<lb/>
day at the Bowling Center<lb/>
YARDSALE<lb/>
The international House at ECU<lb/>
is collecting materials tor a yard<lb/>
sale fund raiser if you have any<lb/>
books, clothes, costume iewelry<lb/>
household articles, or pieces ot<lb/>
furniture you would like to donate<lb/>
please deliver to the international<lb/>
House at 306 East Ninth Street by<lb/>
Friday, April 10<lb/>
ART<lb/>
Two dimensional art works by<lb/>
Allen Jones McDavid ot Santord<lb/>
will be on display April 12 19 in the<lb/>
gallery ot the Baptist Student<lb/>
Center on Tenth St.<lb/>
The exhibition will include<lb/>
woodcut and intaglio prints<lb/>
photographs illustrations and<lb/>
mixed media items<lb/>
McDavid is a candidate tor the<lb/>
BA degree in communication arts<lb/>
at ECU and the son ot Mr and<lb/>
Mrs Phihp H McDavid ot Route<lb/>
1 Sanford<lb/>
PHYS ED<lb/>
Students planning to declare<lb/>
physical education as a maior dur<lb/>
ing this semester are required to<lb/>
satisfactorily complete a motor<lb/>
and physical fitness test r.nor to<lb/>
CO OP<lb/>
Seymour Johnson Air Force<lb/>
Base, Goldsboro NC will have a<lb/>
Co op position ,n recreation open<lb/>
for Fall '81 Interested students<lb/>
should apply to the Co op Office<lb/>
313 Rawl Building, 757 6979 before<lb/>
the end ot this semester<lb/>
The Department ot Energy Co<lb/>
op positions available tor Fall, '81<lb/>
tor the following maiors<lb/>
chemistry physics, geology, com<lb/>
puter science, health sciences,<lb/>
biology, business administration,<lb/>
and lournalism Contact the Co op<lb/>
Office today!<lb/>
DELTA ZETA<lb/>
There s a very -mportant<lb/>
meeting ot all Delta Zeta big<lb/>
brothers Wednesday night Apr,l<lb/>
!5at9pm at the nouse MiSStt<lb/>
one and you'll miss the end of the<lb/>
year exam iam<lb/>
HOLYTRINITY<lb/>
"Holy Trinity United Methodist<lb/>
Church, located at 1400 Red Banks<lb/>
Rd in Greenville, directly across<lb/>
from Aycock Junior High School<lb/>
will be hosting The New Direc<lb/>
tions" Apr.I 11 12 "THe New<lb/>
Directions" is an mter racial, n<lb/>
terdenommational group ot young<lb/>
adults head quartered in Bur!<lb/>
ingfon, N C Their specialty s con<lb/>
temporary Christian Music<lb/>
"The New Directions will be m<lb/>
concert at Holy Trinity, Saturday<lb/>
April 11, at 8 00 p m Then the<lb/>
wnl be m charge ot the worship<lb/>
service. Sunday, April 12. at 11 00<lb/>
a m Come early to assure<lb/>
yourself a seat ano plan to stay<lb/>
after the worship service on Sun<lb/>
day tor the covered dish dinner<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
" ? ?  - i . ? ?. E mpl . - , '<lb/>
and Training Oft . ? . I<lb/>
applications from nsmq<lb/>
college students ano graduate<lb/>
school students for summer<lb/>
employment as youth coor<lb/>
dmators College graduates who<lb/>
are interest, employ<lb/>
ment or actively see<lb/>
full time employment are also en<lb/>
ipply For more mtor<lb/>
natio ? ? . ? m Gaddis at<lb/>
? ? . and Place<lb/>
ment Otf ? ? ' 6393<lb/>
SCHOLASTIC SEARCH<lb/>
Scholastic All Am,<lb/>
now accep<lb/>
? nq rU ; ?' ' (tie 1981 Spr<lb/>
mu Sen identi ho are<lb/>
active ; ? ations<lb/>
.  ? ?<lb/>
ked to iom<lb/>
? , ?<lb/>
an honor ?. founded to<lb/>
recognize this country's top<lb/>
undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
students Students are selected<lb/>
from over 1,280 schools covering<lb/>
all 50 slates Members participate<lb/>
,n various nationally org<lb/>
each year<lb/>
Students i ted tor con<lb/>
Sideration based on the extent of<lb/>
?nic ana scholastic per<lb/>
tormance both m and out ot the<lb/>
classroom No one factor is weigh<lb/>
ea hea. rtber Is<lb/>
considered A student's best asset<lb/>
must ' I ' well<lb/>
rou<lb/>
?? ? ? ted students arc asked to<lb/>
' tmped, self addressed<lb/>
envelope to Application<lb/>
Scholastic All American. Ad<lb/>
ministrative Offices, P O Box 237<lb/>
Clinton. New York. 13323<lb/>
All students are encouraged to<lb/>
? an application regardless<lb/>
of then ?? cioint aver a<lb/>
GAME ROOM<lb/>
The College Hill Game Room<lb/>
located in the Aycock basement,<lb/>
features electronic games, pm<lb/>
ball. pool, ping pong and fooseball<lb/>
Hours are Mon Thurs 12 11<lb/>
p m , Friday 12 5pm and Sun 8<lb/>
11pm All proceeds are returned<lb/>
to the students through the Student<lb/>
Residence Association please<lb/>
support the game room<lb/>
DISCOUNT DAYS<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center's<lb/>
d.siount days are Wednesdays<lb/>
and Fridays Every week you can<lb/>
save 1 3 on the cost of bowling<lb/>
b-lliards and table tennis at<lb/>
Mendenhali Bowling is 13 ott<lb/>
each Friday trom 3 00 p m until<lb/>
5 30 p m and billiards and table<lb/>
tenn.s art' 1 3 off each Wednesday<lb/>
from 3 00 p m until 5 30 pm<lb/>
Don t miss if<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma, freshman honor<lb/>
socety, will award book scholar<lb/>
ships to a rising iunior ano a rising<lb/>
senior .n the amount ot SlOO each<lb/>
to be used dur.na the 1981 82 school<lb/>
year Applicants must be<lb/>
members of Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Qualifications emphasize par<lb/>
ticipation m the ECU chapter of<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma and high academic<lb/>
achievement Interested students<lb/>
should see Dr John D Ebbs Pro<lb/>
tessor ot English, at 214 Austin<lb/>
POETRY FORUM<lb/>
In Mendenhali room 248 anyone<lb/>
wishing to get feed back tor your<lb/>
poem bring an extra copy<lb/>
SCJ<lb/>
The Society tor Collegiate jour<lb/>
nahsts will hold a reorganizat.onai<lb/>
meeting Tuesday. April 14. at 7<lb/>
Austin 301 AH members<lb/>
are urged to attend<lb/>
Harvard Endowment Soars<lb/>
Cambridge, Mass.<lb/>
(I.P.) ? Harvard<lb/>
University's Financial<lb/>
Report, prepared by-<lb/>
Treasurer George Put-<lb/>
nam and Financial Vice<lb/>
President Thomas<lb/>
O'Brien. recently<lb/>
reported that the<lb/>
market value of the<lb/>
University's endow-<lb/>
ment rose $176,710,000<lb/>
to SI,491,060,000 dur-<lb/>
30, 1980.<lb/>
The Harvard<lb/>
Management Com-<lb/>
pany, which handles<lb/>
the investment port-<lb/>
folio of the University's<lb/>
SI.7 billion endow-<lb/>
ment, concluded<lb/>
another banner year in<lb/>
which the Harvard<lb/>
portfolio increased by<lb/>
approximately 15.2<lb/>
percent, according to<lb/>
dent of the company.<lb/>
A major thrust of the<lb/>
Management Com-<lb/>
pany's investment<lb/>
strategy has been a<lb/>
move away from bonds<lb/>
and into common<lb/>
stocks, a move which<lb/>
has paid oi successful-<lb/>
ly in terms of the<lb/>
overall market; the<lb/>
Standard &amp; Poor's 500<lb/>
stock index for corn-<lb/>
rose by 17 percent this<lb/>
year, while bonds<lb/>
declined by 2 percent.<lb/>
Harvard's common<lb/>
stocks are heavily posi-<lb/>
tioned in energy and<lb/>
energy-related com-<lb/>
panies, according to<lb/>
Cabot. I his resulted<lb/>
from decisions made<lb/>
five years ago, during<lb/>
the sharp increases in<lb/>
the price of oil, when<lb/>
ing the year ended June Walter Cabot, presi- mon stocks nationwide major oil investments<lb/>
Disease Affects Thousands<lb/>
were made. " 1 h e<lb/>
reason we bought<lb/>
energy stocks says<lb/>
Cabot, "is that we<lb/>
believed the price of<lb/>
energy on a world-wide<lb/>
basis would continue to<lb/>
git up, and that the<lb/>
price o' U.S. energy<lb/>
would be deregulated.<lb/>
Therefore, those com-<lb/>
panies that had the<lb/>
assets would rise in the<lb/>
market<lb/>
By OTIS ROBINSON<lb/>
Stuff V? nlrr<lb/>
More than 15,000<lb/>
people in the United<lb/>
States suffer from a<lb/>
genetic disorder of the<lb/>
central nervous system<lb/>
known as Huntington's<lb/>
Disease.<lb/>
Neurologists say that<lb/>
of those correctly-<lb/>
diagnosed, there are<lb/>
from 25,000 to 50,000<lb/>
people who have the<lb/>
potential for develop-<lb/>
ing the disease because<lb/>
a parent had the illness.<lb/>
Dr. Frank Fleming<lb/>
of the Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Neurological Associa-<lb/>
tion said that though<lb/>
there is no cure for<lb/>
Huntington's Disease,<lb/>
there are cases where<lb/>
the disease stabilizes<lb/>
and progresses no fur-<lb/>
ther. He added that cer-<lb/>
tain medications con-<lb/>
trol the movements and<lb/>
emotional problems<lb/>
that arise from the il-<lb/>
lness.<lb/>
Involuntary<lb/>
movements such as<lb/>
twitches or facial<lb/>
spasms are physical<lb/>
symptoms of the il-<lb/>
lness. There are<lb/>
noticeable personality<lb/>
and emotional changes<lb/>
such as irritability, loss<lb/>
of memory, and lack of<lb/>
concern for personal<lb/>
hygiene.<lb/>
The hereditary<lb/>
disorder usually ap-<lb/>
pears at 35 to 45 years<lb/>
of age and progresses<lb/>
gradually. According<lb/>
to Oscar Jet Webb, an<lb/>
ECU pre-medical stu-<lb/>
dent, "some persons<lb/>
have been diagnosed as<lb/>
early as 20 years old<lb/>
and as late as 70 years<lb/>
old. If one parent has<lb/>
the disease, there is a<lb/>
50-50 chance the child<lb/>
may have it<lb/>
Webb said that one<lb/>
of the problems<lb/>
associated with Hun-<lb/>
tington's Disease is that<lb/>
persons are viewed as<lb/>
schizophrenics or<lb/>
drunkards.<lb/>
"The people who<lb/>
have the disease shy<lb/>
away from being public<lb/>
because their<lb/>
movements are<lb/>
misinterpreted as<lb/>
drunkenness he ex-<lb/>
plained. "When thev<lb/>
try to walk down the<lb/>
streets, they're often<lb/>
picked up<lb/>
People unable to<lb/>
handle family members<lb/>
that have the illness<lb/>
need to be informed,<lb/>
according to Mary<lb/>
Cannoning, an ECU<lb/>
biology major and<lb/>
member of the Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon Delta Pre-<lb/>
medical Society.<lb/>
Educating the family<lb/>
on how to take care of<lb/>
the patient is the impor<lb/>
tant thing she said.<lb/>
Glossy or silk finish<lb/>
is available<lb/>
COME TO THE STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
FOR FAST. QUALITY PHOTO FINISHING fIT<lb/>
EVERY DAY LOW PRICES<lb/>
12 exp. color film 2.99<lb/>
20 exp. color film 4.55<lb/>
24 exp. color film 5.46<lb/>
36 exp. color film 7.84<lb/>
We offer complete film processing services:<lb/>
Black &amp; White, Color Slides, Movies, Enlargements, Reprints<lb/>
Satisfaction Guaranteed<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
owned and operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
i<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for<lb/>
 below the advertised price in each A&amp;P Store, except as specifically<lb/>
io this ad.<lb/>
sale at or<lb/>
noted 1<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT . APRIL 18, AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE. NX<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER<lb/>
RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS.<lb/>
Highway 264 By-Pass Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Aa&amp;p quality<lb/>
Butter Basted<lb/>
Turkeys<lb/>
(10 lbs. and up)<lb/>
Built In Pop-Up<lb/>
Timer In Every Pkg<lb/>
WHOLE<lb/>
Smoked<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
(16-19 lb. avg.)<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
Pork<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
MARKET STYLE<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Bacon<lb/>
Sunbalhrrv arl<lb/>
Kap<lb/>
A&amp;P MEDIUM<lb/>
GRADE "A"<lb/>
White Eggs<lb/>
63?<lb/>
dozen<lb/>
only<lb/>
Grade "A" 2 Lovvfat or<lb/>
Homogenized Milk<lb/>
OR<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
fc LOWFAT<lb/>
MILK, -75 llon<lb/>
83<lb/>
IN QUARTERS<lb/>
Parkay Margarine<lb/>
2 I00<lb/>
TATER BOY FROZEN<lb/>
French Fries<lb/>
Crinkle<lb/>
Cut<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
79c<lb/>
32 02.<lb/>
jar<lb/>
CHICKEN OF THE SEA?LIGHT<lb/>
Chunk Tuna<lb/>
In<lb/>
Oil<lb/>
6Va OZ<lb/>
can<lb/>
79<lb/>
c<lb/>
WHITE ? YELLOW ? BLUE<lb/>
White Cloud<lb/>
Bath<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
4J9<lb/>
c<lb/>
SAVE 50<lb/>
Super Suds<lb/>
99c<lb/>
Laundry<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
40 oz<lb/>
pkg-<lb/>
Schlitz Beer<lb/>
399<lb/>
Ctn.of<lb/>
12<lb/>
12 oz. cans<lb/>
GOOD ONLY IN GREENVILLE. N.C<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
Eight O'clock<lb/>
.1"<lb/>
Bean<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
8oz.<lb/>
twin<lb/>
pack<lb/>
79<lb/>
c<lb/>
Coca-Cola, Mello Yello<lb/>
Tab, Orange Crush<lb/>
Grape Crush<lb/>
R No return WW<lb/>
bottles<lb/>
1<lb/>
?&amp;?&amp;!&amp;<lb/>
FOft n?fMss ?o SAVINGS<lb/>
ED RIPE SWEET JUICY<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
Jane Parker 6ct. -<lb/>
Shortcakes Pk9 59 1<lb/>
ggc<lb/>
quart<lb/>
box<lb/>
CALIFORNIA SWEET JUICY<lb/>
Navel Oranges<lb/>
15,100<lb/>
FARM FRESH<lb/>
Asparagus<lb/>
ftftC<lb/>
Low In<lb/>
Calories<lb/>
<lb/>
them a;<lb/>
?<lb/>
tuna ;<lb/>
?<lb/>
thro<lb/>
Rt<lb/>
V<lb/>
rep<lb/>
old<lb/>
?<lb/>
obje<lb/>
chost<lb/>
Supj<lb/>
that we<lb/>
youi<lb/>
ma<lb/>
tie ph<lb/>
<lb/>
rape,<lb/>
be<lb/>
ATi<lb/>
South<lb/>
RockNI<lb/>
Tues<lb/>
3n<lb/>
Annl<lb/>
SPRll<lb/>
Zll<lb/>
Wl<lb/>
Dl<lb/>
FLI!<lb/>
THI<lb/>
Su<lb/>
Gi<lb/>
w<lb/>
su<lb/>
GI<lb/>
TH1<lb/>
BRI<lb/>
<pb facs="00057336_0003"/><lb/>
tof sale at or<lb/>
liy noted<lb/>
re<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
IOZEN<lb/>
ries<lb/>
139<lb/>
U?LIGHT<lb/>
ma<lb/>
IC<lb/>
9<lb/>
luds<lb/>
kAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
Clock<lb/>
I89<lb/>
lllo Yello<lb/>
Crush<lb/>
ish<lb/>
9<lb/>
barker 6c,<lb/>
:akes NO?<lb/>
I HI I SIAkOl.lNlAN<lb/>
APRIL 14, 1981<lb/>
tKU&amp;E?<lb/>
Sunhalhers are a common sight on campus now that spring and warm weather are here.<lb/>
Rape Prevention Discussed<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
death, serious injurj and severe psychological<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
A rapist is trying to vent his hostility. Some of<lb/>
them apparently premeditate their attacks in the<lb/>
sense of imagining various opportunities and<lb/>
developing approaches for each. 1 he actual at-<lb/>
tack is a case of opportunity and occurs when the<lb/>
rapist realizes that this is a suitably low-risk situa-<lb/>
tion. 1 he victim is selected through an unfor-<lb/>
tunate coincidence. Any woman displacing high-<lb/>
risk behavior, such as walking alone each night<lb/>
through a deserted area is more likely to be a vic-<lb/>
tim.<lb/>
Realizing that you could be a victim ol sexual<lb/>
assault is the first step in protecting yourself.<lb/>
Anyone can be a victim. Rapes have been<lb/>
reported in which the victims were three months<lb/>
old to 86 years old. Remember, sex is not the ob-<lb/>
ject. I he venting of rage and hostility is the<lb/>
object-the human bodv is the weapon and the<lb/>
chosen object of hostility is another human body.<lb/>
Suppose you should take all the precautions<lb/>
that we have talked about so far and you still find<lb/>
yoursell in a rape situation. What do you do to<lb/>
maintain control of the situation and suffer as lit-<lb/>
tle physical harm as possible?<lb/>
Firsl of all siav calm 50 that you can be obser-<lb/>
vant and try to maintain some control of the<lb/>
situation. If you stay calm enough to think clearly<lb/>
you might seize on an opportunity to prevent the<lb/>
rape.<lb/>
Remember that your attacker is another human<lb/>
borne and trv to establish some line of com-<lb/>
munication with him. Talk to him. It may not<lb/>
prevent the rape but it might save your life or br-<lb/>
ing you through the ordeal without bodily injury.<lb/>
Do not try to use force or to physically fight<lb/>
your way clear. There is little hope of being able<lb/>
to achieve that goal and you will set the tone of<lb/>
violence that will surely cause your attacker to use<lb/>
more violence. He wishes to dominate you and<lb/>
will use the amount o' force necessary to achieve<lb/>
that end.<lb/>
If you have become a victim of rape, then what<lb/>
do you do? First ot all get lo a safe place. Do not<lb/>
wash or change clothes.<lb/>
I he evidence needed to successfully prosecute a<lb/>
rapist, if you should decide to prosecute, is verv<lb/>
fragile and should be taken immediately.<lb/>
Call someone to help you. Call the campus<lb/>
police or the Greenville Police Department ol the<lb/>
Real Crisis Center. Calling the police department<lb/>
does not obligate you to prosecute. You can make<lb/>
that decision "later, but it does give you someone<lb/>
to help you with the medical and legal details that<lb/>
should be taken care of immediately.<lb/>
the emergency room personnel are especially<lb/>
trained to take evidence from a rape victim and<lb/>
will also give you any emergency treatment that<lb/>
you might need as well as giving you protection<lb/>
against venereal disease and pregnancy.<lb/>
Reporting a rape is very important for your<lb/>
protection. Most rapists are repeat rapists. Even<lb/>
if you do no prosecute your report mav give<lb/>
police information needed to apprehend a rapist<lb/>
and protect others from rape and possible death.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Souths No. 6<lb/>
Rock Nightclub<lb/>
Tues. 14th<lb/>
3rd<lb/>
Annual<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
ZING<lb/>
WING<lb/>
DING<lb/>
FLING<lb/>
THING<lb/>
with<lb/>
Super<lb/>
Grit<lb/>
75C<lb/>
Admission<lb/>
LIMITED<lb/>
50<lb/>
Beverage<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
SUPER<lb/>
GRIT<lb/>
CHICK?FIL?A<lb/>
SANDWICH SPECIAL -<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
FOR $1.09 EACH.<lb/>
Here's real special treat for you and your friends or family. You can<lb/>
get all the delicious Chick-fil-A sandwiches ? the original boneless<lb/>
breast of chicken sandwich ? for only $1.09 each with the coupon<lb/>
below. That's a deal that's hard to beat on the sandwich that's fun to<lb/>
eat.<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
Juslf.<lb/>
CHICK-FiL A SANDWICH<lb/>
SPECIALCOUPON $1.09 each<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
, she uumsVi<lb/>
I<lb/>
sandu ii tit mi wai !<lb/>
wii o i r<lb/>
ihe rest.<lb/>
One cou- !<lb/>
pon per L<lb/>
SAV E tMftr good ?l ItK toHcmt?tt kk'fH?A rnUuraiU<lb/>
person p . ??. -it<lb/>
OthTCN .n-?: 4-30-81<lb/>
Cto?d Sund???<lb/>
(kM<lb/>
THE TASTE WORTH SHOPPING FOR.<lb/>
t OlPON<lb/>
THURS.<lb/>
BRICE ST.<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
?PRESENTS?<lb/>
THE 2ND ANNUAL<lb/>
MISTER LEGGS CONTEST<lb/>
ATTHEELBO<lb/>
Tues April 14th<lb/>
GRAND PRIZE - S100.00 CASH!<lb/>
2nd Prize - S25.00 Dinner For Two &amp; Haircuts<lb/>
3rd Prize - Dinner For Two &amp; Haircuts<lb/>
Plus T-shirts For 1st, 2nd, &amp; 3rd Place Winners<lb/>
Judges will include one Representative from<lb/>
each Sorority and Former Miss N. C. USA and the<lb/>
reigning Miss ECU 1981<lb/>
?SPONSORED BY-<lb/>
PIZZA INN SHIRLEY'S CUT &amp; STYLE<lb/>
JUST PANTS TREE HOUSE<lb/>
T-SHIRTS PLUS SWEET CAROLINES<lb/>
AND THE ELBO<lb/>
Registration Tues. Night - Must be registered by<lb/>
9:30<lb/>
MON. TUES. - AVAILABLE FOR<lb/>
PRI ?Ti PARTIES - PAPA KATZ WILL<lb/>
CATER ANY PARTY OR FUNCTION. WE<lb/>
ALSO HAVE A MOBILE D.J. FOR ANY<lb/>
PARTY ANYTIME.<lb/>
WED. "ORIGINAL LADIES' LOCKOUT"<lb/>
- 8:30 10:00 - LADIES ONLY - GENTS<lb/>
IN AFTER 10:00.<lb/>
THURS. - "SUPER COLLEGE NIGHT"<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE SIG EPS - DOORS<lb/>
OPEN FROM 8:30 to 1:00 - NOW WITH<lb/>
THE BIGGEST SHAG CONTEST IN GREEN-<lb/>
VILLE. COME OUT FOR THE DANCE OFF.<lb/>
MAIN DANCE OFF ON MARCH 19th<lb/>
WITH OVER $300.00 IN CASH &amp; PRIZES.<lb/>
FRI ESCAPE THE DOWNTOWN<lb/>
CROWD &amp; INFLATION - JOIN THE<lb/>
CROWD AT THE KATZ FOR AN AFTER-<lb/>
NOON AND EVENING OF ENJOYMENT.<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 3:00 &amp; NEVER STOP.<lb/>
TOP 40 COUNTDOWN FREE ADMISSION<lb/>
TILL 7:00<lb/>
SAT. - "LADIES' LOCKOUT II" - LADIES<lb/>
ONLY FROM 8:00 to 9:30 - GENTS IN AT<lb/>
9:30.<lb/>
SUN. - SUPER SUNDAY<lb/>
AT THE KATZ. NO ADMIS-<lb/>
SION CHARGE ALL NIGHT<lb/>
LONG. DOORS OPEN 8:30<lb/>
P.M. TO 1:00 A.M.<lb/>
There s More<lb/>
Elbow Room in<lb/>
Our Attic!<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION<lb/>
All members will be entitled to 1 guests per evening Neat dress<lb/>
and pruper dentilication will be required ol all members and<lb/>
guests<lb/>
This special INTRODUCTORr MEMBERSHIP is only SI 00<lb/>
All applications and dues must or returnedTO 'bis address P O<lb/>
Bo? !9J3 G - - N C Sta'c Law requires a thirty<lb/>
day membership waiting period from date ot application tor<lb/>
dubs Aith bfowr bagging permits<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
Nome<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Telephone No<lb/>
BirrMofe<lb/>
Occupation<lb/>
Hobbies<lb/>
Music preference:<lb/>
DATE<lb/>
SIGNATURE<lb/>
"fte ECU Suvrf CU is<lb/>
(5' "1 ECU OpIKviUotuC<lb/>
Wlne<lb/>
- hr ia- n<lb/>
V)Wen- &amp;Ttr- VtkcL - Ap<lb/>
MeSW Uf rt.co to.AH ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057336_0004"/><lb/>
2tlE East Ear0liman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
PAUl f INC kl , Snoot o) Arnam<lb/>
Daw Si i rin. mm itar<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, ???? ? m<lb/>
ChrisLk hok,  v<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE, ?-?? e?<lb/>
PAUl COI I INS. wm -<lb/>
Chari is Chandj IK v ??"? ???<lb/>
David Norris. J(??-<lb/>
April 14, W81<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
30<lb/>
"All good things must come to<lb/>
pass Famous words aren't they?<lb/>
It is tradition that every general<lb/>
manager of the newspaper write a<lb/>
farewell editorial and being a good<lb/>
conservative, I will not break with<lb/>
tradition.<lb/>
1 suppose it would be appropriate<lb/>
to first go over the accomplishments<lb/>
of the last six months, but actually<lb/>
nothing was done differently during<lb/>
these last six months than in the<lb/>
preceding six months when Richard<lb/>
Green was in charge, something that<lb/>
1 am very proud of.<lb/>
Richard was one helluva guy and<lb/>
filling his shoes was no small task.<lb/>
He and numerous others have forg-<lb/>
ed a newspaper out of near<lb/>
nothingness, into something which<lb/>
has never been seen on this campus,<lb/>
or in this county before.<lb/>
It was, in the words of Sir<lb/>
Winston Churchill, "blood, sweat,<lb/>
toil, and tears That is what our<lb/>
employees r " 'mo tVis r er and 1<lb/>
am proud to vatry. on in uieii hard-<lb/>
working tradition.<lb/>
Producing this newspaper is a<lb/>
team effort that requires above all<lb/>
loyalty and a dedication to a com-<lb/>
mon purpose. Many people have<lb/>
contributed to that team effort and<lb/>
that purpose: Robert Swaim,<lb/>
Richard Green, Terry Herndon,<lb/>
Paul I incke, Ric Browning, George<lb/>
Hettich, Bill Shipley, Waverly Mer-<lb/>
ritt, Dave Severin, Jimmy DuPree<lb/>
are' the names that come to mind<lb/>
right now.<lb/>
These people were and are hard<lb/>
workers possessing a tremendous<lb/>
espirit de corps. They worked<lb/>
tirelessly in the cause to produce a<lb/>
quality product and to make the<lb/>
paper as profitable as possible. Effi-<lb/>
ciency was their chief goal, which<lb/>
thev achieved consistently.<lb/>
The people who made this place<lb/>
tick were known among friends as<lb/>
"the old guard They were the<lb/>
ones who slaved for years to lay the<lb/>
foundations of what is today the<lb/>
finest college newspaper in North<lb/>
Carolina. Long time employees, like<lb/>
Steve Bachner, Robert Swaim, and<lb/>
Anita Lancaster devoted untold<lb/>
hours to the paper. Their devotion<lb/>
was slave-like and incomparable in<lb/>
student affairs.<lb/>
It is sad to say that their breed is<lb/>
gone and there does not appear to<lb/>
be many successors who will devote<lb/>
the time and energy to this place as<lb/>
in the past.<lb/>
There is no way to compensate<lb/>
them for the missed classes and the<lb/>
sleepless nights that they put in here<lb/>
in the publications center.<lb/>
Five years ago this student<lb/>
newspaper was an unattractive high<lb/>
schoolish "rag" that more closely<lb/>
resembled a newspaper version of<lb/>
Mad magazine than anything else.<lb/>
Thev transformed it into a respec-<lb/>
table and professional newspaper. It<lb/>
took people with strong wills, ambi-<lb/>
tion, pride, and a desire to ac-<lb/>
complish something significant in<lb/>
transforming this paper into what it<lb/>
is today.<lb/>
They never backed down and they<lb/>
always did what was in the best in-<lb/>
terest of their paper and thei pecs.<lb/>
1 am very proud to have been a<lb/>
part of that group. 1 was trained<lb/>
?md enlightened by the "old ??'ard"<lb/>
ui the technique and as oi<lb/>
newspaper work the way they had<lb/>
learned it. They came up through<lb/>
the ranks over a period of years,<lb/>
nobody handed them anything on a<lb/>
silver platter, they earned what they<lb/>
got. They arc the essense of the<lb/>
American work ethic.<lb/>
Many frivolous and air-headed<lb/>
people over the years have come<lb/>
through the front doors of the<lb/>
newspaper pretending to be<lb/>
newspaper people, but only the<lb/>
strong survive, and the gifted. The<lb/>
core, the hard core, are the<lb/>
backbone of the paper. They didn't<lb/>
live in the idealistic world of "hold<lb/>
the presses they were realists and<lb/>
dealt shrewdly and effectively with<lb/>
every problem and crisis that came<lb/>
up.<lb/>
They represent a proud tradition<lb/>
that is coming to an end. But, 1 and<lb/>
my colleages have high hopes that<lb/>
one day some promising freshmen<lb/>
will come along and once again<lb/>
plow the rows that were once the<lb/>
pride and joy of "the old guard<lb/>
This is not, I hope, the end of an<lb/>
era, but just a temporary pause,<lb/>
that will pass in the not too distant<lb/>
future.<lb/>
CHRIS LICHOK<lb/>
General Manager<lb/>
<lb/>
7W BACK. yOU CAN STOP TAKING CHARGE N0U,AL.<lb/>
Paper Guided Through Troubles<lb/>
As was the case last December when ,<lb/>
Richard Green retired as general manager<lb/>
of this newspaper, the task, or maybe 1<lb/>
should say the privilage, of writing a<lb/>
farewell column honoring our out-going<lb/>
general manager has fallen to me probably<lb/>
because 1 have seen nine, count 'em. nine<lb/>
general managers come and go. 1 suppose<lb/>
after that many 1 should know their ups<lb/>
and downs.<lb/>
rhris I ichok, our fearless leader about<lb/>
depart, shares main common<lb/>
characteristics with his predecessor.<lb/>
Richard Green. Both loved this place and<lb/>
constantly sought ways to protect and im-<lb/>
prove our lot, the paper and the people.<lb/>
Chris rose through the ranks and work-<lb/>
ed two years to become the general<lb/>
manager. He started out as an aide in the<lb/>
advertising and business department later<lb/>
being promoted to business manager and<lb/>
finally to the position ot general manager.<lb/>
He worked hard to get there, he paid his<lb/>
dues and served his time.<lb/>
"To those upon whom much is bestow-<lb/>
ed, much is expected Chris lived b this<lb/>
motto and worked with it. He was tireless<lb/>
! devoted to the people who worked under<lb/>
him and looked after every one of them,<lb/>
even those who really did not deserve it in<lb/>
m opinion. He would even be gracious to<lb/>
a Democrat.<lb/>
If he has a fault it is probably that he is<lb/>
too nice to people and doesn't put them in<lb/>
-i<lb/>
Robert M.<lb/>
Swaim<lb/>
<lb/>
their place when they need it. He was more<lb/>
o an Eisenhower than a Patton.<lb/>
He was fiesty and didn't give an inch<lb/>
when the cause was just and he was right.<lb/>
Seldom did he get riled up but when he did<lb/>
there was no compromising, even i! it<lb/>
meant jeopardizing his own security and<lb/>
well being.<lb/>
He possesses a quality that cannot be<lb/>
bought with gold or riches; loyalty. I hat is<lb/>
a quality that is prized and valued among<lb/>
men and a quality which few people<lb/>
possess, its value is untold.<lb/>
1 can count on one hand the people that<lb/>
1 genuinely trust and have faith in, the) are<lb/>
so rare. Perhaps that is why Chris will<lb/>
always stand out in my mind as an outstan-<lb/>
ding individual. There will alwavs he a<lb/>
warm spot in all our hearts for him.<lb/>
With a tew possible exceptions, no one<lb/>
has ever devoted so much of themsehe<lb/>
and their time to furthering the cause<lb/>
this campus paper than Chris.<lb/>
He worked nights and weekends doing<lb/>
the things that nobody else would d<lb/>
cleaning the office, gathering cinder blocks<lb/>
to anchor down the newspaper rack- a<lb/>
going around to emptv out the racks<lb/>
Saturdays.<lb/>
He was alwavs m the trenches, on the<lb/>
front lines fighting the battles for the paper<lb/>
right along with the old timers. He t<lb/>
the barbs and felt the heat right along w<lb/>
the rest o us who looked after this plac<lb/>
He was one hell ot a captain on a ship<lb/>
that has sailed some verv storm) seas tl<lb/>
semester. Alwavs cool and calm, nc<lb/>
panicking, he kept his head when all at<lb/>
him were losing theirs. Indeed, these las-<lb/>
tew months were "the times that try mens'<lb/>
souls<lb/>
Enough .anno! be said for Chris an<lb/>
tremendous devotion and hard work<lb/>
he has put into this place.<lb/>
It Cod was giving out awards foi<lb/>
best human being on Earth, undoubu<lb/>
Chns would be the recipient this vear.<lb/>
Without his leadership 1 have doubts<lb/>
about the future o this newspaper beca<lb/>
the talent he has is not common among<lb/>
men.<lb/>
No doubt he will go tar in life and will be<lb/>
success, that is his destiny.<lb/>
Sherrod Notes SGA Improvements<lb/>
By CHRIS UCHOk<lb/>
Tomorrow SGA President Charlie Sher-<lb/>
rod will turn the, reins o' power over to<lb/>
Lester Nail.<lb/>
After three vears in student government,<lb/>
Sherrod says that he is glad to be moving<lb/>
on.<lb/>
The outgoing president reflected on his<lb/>
year in office in a recent interview citing<lb/>
the accomplishments of his administra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Sherrod considers the revamping ot the<lb/>
transit system a major feat. This year tran-<lb/>
sit maintenance costs were reduced, there<lb/>
were no accidents, a new bus was purchas-<lb/>
ed and a transit advisory board was<lb/>
established.<lb/>
By creating the transit board Sherrod ef-<lb/>
fectively eliminated the politics so long<lb/>
associated with the system. The position ot<lb/>
transit manager had long been a prized<lb/>
political patronage plum handed out by-<lb/>
each incoming president. Now the transit<lb/>
manager is appointed by the advisory<lb/>
board.<lb/>
Last summer Sherrod consolidated the<lb/>
printing of all SGA documents into one<lb/>
publication. This resulted in a $2,000 sav-<lb/>
ings to the SGA.<lb/>
A major crusade that Sherrod and the<lb/>
SGA embarked upon was for the establish-<lb/>
ment of a fall break. Although they came<lb/>
close to getting the break on the university<lb/>
calender, the proposal got bogged down in<lb/>
the faculty senate and was never approved.<lb/>
Sherrod said that the defeat of the break<lb/>
proposal was his biggest complaint of the<lb/>
year. He said that he was very disap-<lb/>
pointed with the faculty senate's action<lb/>
considering that the students voted 93 per-<lb/>
cent in favor of a break.<lb/>
Sherrod had contacts with many impor-<lb/>
tant university officials as a member of the<lb/>
Board of Trustees. He says that meeting<lb/>
and working with many fine people was<lb/>
one of his most rewarding experiences.<lb/>
Sherrod said that the administration can<lb/>
be very helpful, but some administrators<lb/>
have been a hinderance to him during his<lb/>
term of office.<lb/>
Sherrod said that a major problem he<lb/>
had to deal with was the uncooperative at<lb/>
titude of Elmer Meyer, vice chancellor for<lb/>
student life.<lb/>
"Brewer seems to delegate a lot of<lb/>
authority to Meyer said Sherrod. "The<lb/>
chancellor should realize that students will<lb/>
not always be as passive as they are now,<lb/>
he should deal with students more himself<lb/>
rather than dealing with them through<lb/>
Mever<lb/>
Sherrod added that he feels Meyer is<lb/>
misrepresenting Brewer.<lb/>
"I received absolutely no help or<lb/>
cooperation this year from Elmer Meyer,<lb/>
he always takes the other side said Sher-<lb/>
rod.<lb/>
Sherrod had high praise for other ad-<lb/>
ministrators.<lb/>
"Cliff Moore is one of the finest ad-<lb/>
ministrators at ECU. Mr. Moore has<lb/>
always offered advice and assistance to the<lb/>
SGA. The students of ECU are fortunate<lb/>
to have him as vice chancellor for business<lb/>
affairs. He has been a positive influence<lb/>
during my tenure as president<lb/>
Sherrod described Dick Blake, assistant<lb/>
to the chancellor, as "a super talentone<lb/>
of ECU's most capable administrators<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, director of the stu-<lb/>
dent center, was described by Sherrod as<lb/>
"a fine gentleman who has helped me since<lb/>
my days as vice president<lb/>
Of the students Sherrod has worked<lb/>
with, Sherrod gave high marks to Nicky<lb/>
Francis, Charles Sune, Danny O'Conner,<lb/>
and Lynn Calder.<lb/>
"I thoroughly enjoyed my relationships<lb/>
with these people. They have always been<lb/>
very loyal to me and they are first class<lb/>
people said Sherrod.<lb/>
Sherrod says that he sees lot of room for<lb/>
improvement in the SGA.<lb/>
"In my three years of SGA involvement<lb/>
I have noticed that superior students tend<lb/>
not to get involved in student government.<lb/>
1 have been disappointed with the majority<lb/>
of the legislators said Sherrod.<lb/>
Sherrod said that the legislature has<lb/>
become nothing more than "a giant ap-<lb/>
propriation committee.<lb/>
"They are only concerned with how<lb/>
much money to give some special interest<lb/>
group said Sherrod.<lb/>
Sherrod was also critical of the media<lb/>
board. .  .<lb/>
"There are some class people on that<lb/>
board but it has been ruined by poor<lb/>
leadership said Sherrod.<lb/>
He went on to say that he feels that the<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
delay in getting WZMB on the air is the<lb/>
fault of the media board.<lb/>
Sherrod said that after three years in<lb/>
SGA he sees some flaws in the way campus<lb/>
organizations, boards and committees<lb/>
operate.<lb/>
"1 leave ECU with a lot of great<lb/>
memories but I feel like I got overinvobed<lb/>
The SGA and Student Union took me out<lb/>
of the gym and off the tennis courts too<lb/>
much. All the hours I spent in meetings<lb/>
became very frustrating. Most of those<lb/>
meetrings were completely worthless. It<lb/>
there is one thing 1 learned from my ex-<lb/>
perience, it is that the comcept of commit-<lb/>
tees and boards making decisions is fatal to<lb/>
productivity and itr stifles good ideas<lb/>
said Sherrod.<lb/>
Sherrod says that he may return to<lb/>
television and film as a career. Before col-<lb/>
lege Sherrod was a film and television pro-<lb/>
ducer for the United States Army. After<lb/>
he returned from the service he worked<lb/>
with WITN in Washington, N.C. and with<lb/>
WCPS-WKTC in Tarboro. For his pro-<lb/>
ducing career in the army Sherrod received<lb/>
the Thomas Jefferson Award from the<lb/>
producers of 60 Minutes. He also received<lb/>
the Gold Screen Award from the National<lb/>
Association of Government Com-<lb/>
municators.<lb/>
Sherrod doesn't rule our the possibility<lb/>
of a career in government. "I am always<lb/>
facinated with the government. Working<lb/>
in Washington is a possible goal<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
it<lb/>
Iht- I M i'lavh.<lb/>
I ntertainmi<lb/>
Try<lb/>
Bv k I<lb/>
?<lb/>
;<lb/>
-<lb/>
EC<lb/>
Sym<lb/>
Rah<lb/>
)<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
H<lb/>
be s<lb/>
Ore<lb/>
The<lb/>
the ore<lb/>
I <lb/>
I V<lb/>
Yv<lb/>
junior, sei<lb/>
Tes<lb/>
TV<lb/>
Bv 1<lb/>
and W 11 1<lb/>
1. v-<lb/>
dian<lb/>
2 v<lb/>
charao I<lb/>
3. Ge <lb/>
space! v Spr<lb/>
nam,<lb/>
petitoi ?<lb/>
4 Name<lb/>
teenag <lb/>
5. V<lb/>
dog'<lb/>
6. Wl<lb/>
son'<lb/>
7 Y hat i<lb/>
Flintst<lb/>
g A<lb/>
drews<lb/>
S 1 H<lb/>
and Bull <lb/>
and N<lb/>
10. Spea<lb/>
Natasha, wh<lb/>
as?<lb/>
11. '<lb/>
sidekick.<lb/>
12. v<lb/>
villain who<lb/>
Jonny Que<lb/>
villain was<lb/>
giant robot<lb/>
stuff.)<lb/>
13. Who<lb/>
who accomj<lb/>
<pb facs="00057336_0005"/><lb/>
!<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
K<lb/>
UJ<lb/>
3<lb/>
es<lb/>
nselves<lb/>
;ng<lb/>
do.<lb/>
i the<lb/>
?a per<lb/>
took<lb/>
a ship<lb/>
mens'<lb/>
? the<lb/>
btedly<lb/>
will be<lb/>
nts<lb/>
herrod<lb/>
in<lb/>
r.pus<lb/>
" iireat<lb/>
nvolved.<lb/>
k me out<lb/>
mrts too<lb/>
in meeiings<lb/>
1' sl oi tilt se<lb/>
It<lb/>
rom my ex-<lb/>
nccpl of commit -<lb/>
us is fatal to<lb/>
id ideas<lb/>
may return to<lb/>
ueer. Before col-<lb/>
nd television pro-<lb/>
les Arm) After<lb/>
crvice he worked<lb/>
?l, N and with<lb/>
I ii his pro-<lb/>
Sher eivcd<lb/>
j trom the<lb/>
H also received<lb/>
rom the National<lb/>
ernment Com-<lb/>
Kir the possibility<lb/>
Kent. "1 am always<lb/>
rernment. Working<lb/>
?ible goal<lb/>
I HI l AS I C AkOl INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
APKII 14. 1981<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Science Fair Brings<lb/>
Memories Of School<lb/>
Photo by CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
Playhouse Presents 'Julius Caesar'<lb/>
rite ECU Playhouse production of 'Julius Caesar" was presented last week. For a review of the plav see the<lb/>
V n terrain men l Section, page 6.<lb/>
Kids and science. Now that's a<lb/>
combination that brings back<lb/>
memories of growing up, and of a<lb/>
little creek in Warren County and<lb/>
the crayfish we used to scoop out of<lb/>
it and inject with a-fluid concocted<lb/>
from a deluxe model Gilbert's<lb/>
Chemistry Set. They just swelled up<lb/>
and died. Instantly.<lb/>
Well, so much for a career in<lb/>
medical research.<lb/>
Here at the Eastern Regional<lb/>
Science Fair at East Carolina<lb/>
University there is not a single pro-<lb/>
ject involving crayfish. Come to<lb/>
think of it, I haven't seen a crayfish,<lb/>
dead or alive, in years. Pollution got<lb/>
'em, I suppose.<lb/>
Speaking of pollution, there are a<lb/>
lot of projects on that subject. Holly<lb/>
Baker of Windsor, N.C. is studying<lb/>
pollution on the Chovvan River.<lb/>
John Gamble of Pikeville has one<lb/>
on the "Effects of Insecticides on<lb/>
Aquatic Animals" and Scott Dean<lb/>
of Raleigh studies the pollution of<lb/>
Crabtree Creek. 1 wonder if there<lb/>
are any crayfish in Crabtree.<lb/>
Ah! "Innoculations with a Wilt-<lb/>
Causing Plant Disease Bacterium<lb/>
Try Baking Cakes A nd Bread<lb/>
By KATHY WEYLER<lb/>
stuff Wnirr<lb/>
Bake sales are virtually an<lb/>
American way of life. If you belong<lb/>
to an type of organization, the<lb/>
chances are that one day, sooner or<lb/>
later, you're going to be called upon<lb/>
to produce baked goods. Even if<lb/>
you're remarkably lucky and this<lb/>
never happens to you, the chance is<lb/>
still there that you'll have to furnish<lb/>
baked noods for a family dinner or<lb/>
company picnic one day. Rather<lb/>
than rushing to the closest bakery in<lb/>
a panic, why not try your hand at<lb/>
home-made breads and cakes? They<lb/>
can be surprisingly easy to make, as<lb/>
the following recipes demonstrate.<lb/>
Quick breads are a good choice<lb/>
for beginning breadmakers since<lb/>
they require no yeast. BANANA<lb/>
NUT BREAD is a tasty, simple type<lb/>
o quick bread. You'll need: three<lb/>
mashed bananas, 34 cup sugar.<lb/>
two beaten eggs, 12 cup liquid<lb/>
shortening or melted Crisco, two<lb/>
cups sifted all-purpose flour, 1 2<lb/>
teaspoon salt, one teaspoon baking<lb/>
soda, one cup chopped nuts. Sift<lb/>
dry ingredients together. In another<lb/>
bowl, gradually add sugar to<lb/>
shortening and beat until creamy.<lb/>
Add dry ingredients to shortening<lb/>
mixture alternately with mashed<lb/>
bananas, then add nuts. Stir just<lb/>
enough to combine thoroughly, but<lb/>
That's an interesting project by Billy<lb/>
Daughtry ol Clayton. Billy gives the<lb/>
plant a little dose of poison and it<lb/>
shrivels up. Dr. Frankenstein would<lb/>
love it. So do the judges. An<lb/>
Honorable Mention Award is not<lb/>
bad.<lb/>
Down the long rows of science<lb/>
fair exhibits there are model<lb/>
rockets, solar furnaces, weather<lb/>
machines, fossils, plants, animals<lb/>
and a working model of the human<lb/>
circulatory system. There are others<lb/>
that go beyond my science<lb/>
background.<lb/>
"Response of Isopods to En-<lb/>
vironmental factors by Fred<lb/>
Hampton of Greenville. "You mean<lb/>
a 7th grader did this?" I asked. Im-<lb/>
pressive! A first place winner for<lb/>
certain.<lb/>
Now here's one 1 can understand.<lb/>
David Rubright of Mebane is in-<lb/>
vestigating glues (or call them<lb/>
adhesives which is the more<lb/>
sophisticated way to describe the<lb/>
white stuff that Elmer makes) and<lb/>
the epoxies, contact cements and<lb/>
even the so-called super glues that<lb/>
will, in a split second, attach your<lb/>
forefinger to your thumb so effec-<lb/>
tively that you could end up spen-<lb/>
ding a couple of days waving the cir-<lb/>
cle and three fingers sign to your<lb/>
friends which means okay but is a lie<lb/>
because your finger and thumb have<lb/>
ECU Symphony Orchestra,<lb/>
Symphonic Band To Play<lb/>
Saxophonist Kenneth Hubbard of<lb/>
Raleigh and soprano Anne Gunn of<lb/>
Durham, winners o' the 1981 Fast<lb/>
Carolina University Concerto Com-<lb/>
petition, will be featured soloists<lb/>
with the ECU Symphony Orchestra<lb/>
in a Tuesday, April 14, concert.<lb/>
The program is set for 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Robert Hause<lb/>
is conductor of the orchestra.<lb/>
Hubbard, a graduate student, w ill<lb/>
be soloist in the Villa-Lobos Fan-<lb/>
tasia for Soprano Saxophone and<lb/>
Orchestra. Miss Gunn, a senior, will<lb/>
sing Samuel Barbaur's "Knoxville:<lb/>
Summer of 1915<lb/>
The program will conclude with<lb/>
the orchestra's performance of<lb/>
Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 5 in<lb/>
E Minor.<lb/>
Winners in the annual concerto<lb/>
competition arc selected from<lb/>
junior, senior and graduate level<lb/>
sinners and instrumentalists in the<lb/>
ECU School of Music.<lb/>
Hubbard is an alumnus of ECU<lb/>
and a saxophone student of Brad<lb/>
Foley. He will graduate this spring<lb/>
with the Master of Music degree in<lb/>
performance. The son of Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. B.K. Hubbard of Raleigh,<lb/>
Hubbard was also a winner in his<lb/>
category at the N.C. Music Teachers<lb/>
Association compeition last October<lb/>
and the winner of the annual ECU<lb/>
Young Artists Competition earlier<lb/>
this spring.<lb/>
Anne Gunn, a senior student of<lb/>
Gladys White of the ECU voice<lb/>
faculty, will graduate next<lb/>
December with the Bachelor of<lb/>
Music degree in voice performance.<lb/>
During her freshman and<lb/>
sophomore years at ECU, she won<lb/>
the state and regional divisions in<lb/>
her category in contests sponsored<lb/>
by the National Association of<lb/>
Teachers of Singing and, last fall<lb/>
took first place in the vocal category<lb/>
of the N.C. Music Teachers<lb/>
Association auditions.<lb/>
She is the daughter of Dr. and<lb/>
Mrs. Bill Gunn oi' Durham and<lb/>
plans to continue her studies next<lb/>
year at Indiana University,<lb/>
specializing in opera. She has been<lb/>
an active performer in ECU Opera<lb/>
Theatre productions, local oratorio<lb/>
performances and the annual ECU<lb/>
Madrigal Christmas Dinner series.<lb/>
The ECU Symphonic Band will<lb/>
perform in Wright Auditorium on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 15 at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Among works to be performed<lb/>
will be "Flourish for Wind Band"<lb/>
by R. Vaughn Williams, "Mazoni<lb/>
Requiem" (excerpts) by G. Ver-<lb/>
di Mollenhauer and "March for the<lb/>
Sultan Abdul Medjid" by<lb/>
Rossini Townsend.<lb/>
The Symphonic Band is con-<lb/>
ducted bv Tom Goolsbv.<lb/>
do not beat. Turn into a well-<lb/>
greased loaf pan and bake at 325"<lb/>
for one hour.<lb/>
Muffins, too, are simple to make,<lb/>
particularly if you use a packaged<lb/>
mix. Or you can make your own<lb/>
from scratch. In either case, you'll<lb/>
need one or two well-greased muffin<lb/>
pans, or eliminate greasing and line<lb/>
the pans with paper baking cups.<lb/>
For MUFFINS you'll need: one and<lb/>
three-fourths cups sifted all-purpose<lb/>
flour, 34 teaspoon salt, 1 4 cup<lb/>
sugar, two teaspoons double-acting<lb/>
baking powder, two beaten eggs,<lb/>
two to four tablespoons melted but-<lb/>
ter, 34 cup milk. Sift dry ingre-<lb/>
dients together. Add the butter and<lb/>
milk to the beaten eggs. Combine li-<lb/>
quid and dry ingredients. Fill muf-<lb/>
fin cups two-thirds full. If you don't<lb/>
have enough dough to fill every cup,<lb/>
put a few tablespoons of water in<lb/>
the empty cuts. Bake A 4008 tor<lb/>
twenty to twenty-five minutes. Muf-<lb/>
fins are easier to remove from the<lb/>
pan if left in the pan for a few-<lb/>
minutes after removing from the<lb/>
oven.<lb/>
Perhaps you'd prefer to bake<lb/>
something sweeter. PUDDING<lb/>
CAKE is a delicious cake recipe sim-<lb/>
ple enough for novice cooks. You'll<lb/>
need: one two-layer size package<lb/>
yellow or white cake mix, one four-<lb/>
serving size package Jell-O Instant<lb/>
Pudding and Pie Filling (vanilla,<lb/>
lemon or banana makes a tasty<lb/>
cake), four eggs, one cup water,<lb/>
one-fourth cup oil. Combine all in-<lb/>
gredients in a large mixing bowl.<lb/>
Blend; then beat with an electric<lb/>
mixer at medium speed for four<lb/>
minutes. Pour into a greased and<lb/>
See TRY, page 7, col. 1<lb/>
Test Your Memory:<lb/>
TV Cartoon Trivia<lb/>
B DAVID NORMS<lb/>
and WILLIAM YET VERTOV<lb/>
1. Who is Jonny Quest's East In-<lb/>
dian companion?<lb/>
2. Name the only cartoon<lb/>
character from Tasmania.<lb/>
3. 1 George Jetson works for<lb/>
Spacely Sprockets. What is the<lb/>
name of his company's major com-<lb/>
petitor?<lb/>
4. Name Space Ghost's twin<lb/>
teenage sidekicks.<lb/>
5. Who was the voice of Under-<lb/>
dog?<lb/>
6. What was the name of the Jet-<lb/>
son's dog?<lb/>
7. What was the name of Fred<lb/>
Flintstone's boss?<lb/>
8. What town does Archie An-<lb/>
drews live in?<lb/>
9. From what country are Rocky<lb/>
and Bullwinkle's adversaries Boris<lb/>
and Natasha?<lb/>
10. Speaking of Boris and<lb/>
Natasha, what was their boss known<lb/>
as?<lb/>
11. Name Secret Squirrel's<lb/>
sidekick.<lb/>
12. Name the sinister oriental<lb/>
villain who is the arch enemy of<lb/>
Jonny Quest and his father. (This<lb/>
villain was the one who built that<lb/>
giant robot spider, among other evil<lb/>
stuff.)<lb/>
13. Who was the little pet monkey<lb/>
who accompanied Space Ghost and<lb/>
his friends on their adventures?<lb/>
14. In what town did the Flint-<lb/>
stones live?<lb/>
'5. Who was Dudley Do-Right's<lb/>
girlfriend?<lb/>
16. From what company did the<lb/>
coyote buy the raw materials for the<lb/>
traps he built for the Road Runner?<lb/>
17. What was significant about<lb/>
Frostbite Falls, Minnesota?<lb/>
18. Name George Jetson's kids.<lb/>
For a bonus, name the handyman in<lb/>
their apartment building.<lb/>
19. In what park did Yogi Bear<lb/>
live in his old cartoons?<lb/>
20. Name the members of the<lb/>
Fantastic Four (from their old car-<lb/>
toon show, not the recent one.)<lb/>
(tpjoi ueiunH aqi) uijois Xuuqof<lb/>
puB '(3utqx aqi) uiuiuq uag '(WO<lb/>
3qist,ui 3M0 spJBqDiy an$ '(qDiajjs<lb/>
prnoa oqw auo aqi) spjBqoty<lb/>
Py o: JEd auoisAipr 61 uBiuAp<lb/>
-UBq s.Sutpitnq aqi si ATu3H -sp?<lb/>
siq 3jb Xpnr pue Aojjg gj ajaqj 3am.<lb/>
aiuivqing puB Xpoy i auioy '91<lb/>
jpiMiwj pn cj pojpae fl diQ<lb/>
?1 U'Z JOJDOa Z 3IOl OODOJOJAj<lb/>
J J3pB3T SS3JB3J 01 BIUBAjXS<lb/>
-HOd 6 3JBpi3Aiy ? 31?1S -?1<lb/>
? i ojisv '9 o3 A"in?M c a:Bf puB<lb/>
UBf f SSO.3 I3ttS803 ? IA3a UBIU<lb/>
-blusbjl aqx "i tfpBH :sj3msuv<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
New Cheerleaders Chosen<lb/>
Pictured above is Jennifer Cooper, another of the eight newly chosen<lb/>
1981-82 ECU Cheerleaders. She served last year on the J.V. cheerleading<lb/>
squad at ECU and has had six years of formal training in gymnastics and<lb/>
sixteen years of training in dance.<lb/>
been welded together by the stuff.<lb/>
Stick with the right glue and use<lb/>
white glue, concludes Rubright. It is<lb/>
strong, fast and easy.<lb/>
There's more for consumers.<lb/>
Angela Bass of Wilson compares<lb/>
Favoris and Lisierine on bacteria.<lb/>
You'll have to guess the results of<lb/>
that one.<lb/>
Maybe science doesn't need<lb/>
crayfish to experiment with. It still<lb/>
has mice and rats.<lb/>
Harold Moses Jr. of Smithfield<lb/>
:nes to determine if the sense of<lb/>
direction of mice is affected by a<lb/>
magnetic field. It is.<lb/>
There are also intelligent mice ac-<lb/>
cording to Billy Warren of Green-<lb/>
ville. Nobody could argue with that.<lb/>
There are intelligent people too<lb/>
such as Michael Boyd of Fumberton<lb/>
who studies rhizoctonia antagonists,<lb/>
whatever they are.<lb/>
But I guess I still enjoy the more<lb/>
basic, or call it simpler, subjects of<lb/>
scientific investigation. Take Tam-<lb/>
my Irwin of Bethel. Her project was<lb/>
"The Benefits of Horse Manure"<lb/>
and included a big pile of it, which<lb/>
was a real attention getter.<lb/>
There is something for everyone<lb/>
at this science fair and Vernice<lb/>
Royal of Newton Grove makes my<lb/>
day. "Does Freezing Dull the<lb/>
Memory of Cockroaches?" You<lb/>
better believe it does!<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
On The Run<lb/>
The Intramural Cross-Campus Run was held last Wednesday.<lb/>
Survey Indicates<lb/>
Some Interesting<lb/>
Student Statistics<lb/>
Ye shall know them by their pro-<lb/>
ducts. And yea. those products shall<lb/>
multiply.<lb/>
Take, for example, the fact that<lb/>
three out of four college students<lb/>
own hand-held calculators. Half<lb/>
have 10-speed bikes, and six out of<lb/>
ten own tennis rackets. What with<lb/>
calculating, biking and tennis play-<lb/>
ing, you'd think students would be<lb/>
kept pretty busy. But lo ? 38 per-<lb/>
cent of college students say they<lb/>
own a backgammon set.<lb/>
This is only a sampling of the fin-<lb/>
dings from two recent surveys, one<lb/>
by Monroe Mendelsohn Research<lb/>
Inc. and the other by Communica-<lb/>
tions &amp; Advertising Services to<lb/>
Students (CASS). Together, the<lb/>
surveys are a veritable Who Buys<lb/>
What among college students.<lb/>
Herewith, some of the more in-<lb/>
teresting tidbits:<lb/>
The "natural look" not withstan-<lb/>
ding, cosmetic use is booming on<lb/>
campus. Eight out of 10 female<lb/>
undergrads use mascara and<lb/>
blusher, and nearly as many (72 per-<lb/>
cent) use eye shadow. Two-thirds<lb/>
use nail polish. And ? here's a '<lb/>
puzzler ? lipstick is most apt to be<lb/>
used in the South and least in the<lb/>
West.<lb/>
Next to the calculator, the most<lb/>
popular appliance is the blow-dryer.<lb/>
Eight out of 10 women own one; six<lb/>
out of 10 men.<lb/>
Here's encouraging news: only 18<lb/>
percent of students smoke cigaret-<lb/>
tes, and 65 percent of those<lb/>
undergrads who do smoke, smoke<lb/>
low-tar brands.<lb/>
Playboy is the leading magazine<lb/>
among men on campus, reaching an<lb/>
astonishing 43 percent of all male<lb/>
students. The leader among women<lb/>
is Glamour, reaching one in three<lb/>
female students.<lb/>
"School spirit" is high, with 83<lb/>
percent of students saying they<lb/>
drink alcoholic beverages. The most<lb/>
popular inebriant is beer, with 70<lb/>
percent of students drinking it.<lb/>
Among liquors, vodka is the<lb/>
favorite, used by 49 percent. Rum is<lb/>
a close second at 46 percent.<lb/>
In the soft drink department,<lb/>
students rank their favorites in this<lb/>
order: Coke, Pepsi, Tab, Dr. Pep-<lb/>
per and 7-Up. Least favorite are<lb/>
Fresca, Vernors, Schweppes and<lb/>
Diet-Rite.<lb/>
Favorites in domestic beer, in<lb/>
order, are Miller High Life,<lb/>
Budweiser, Lite, Michelob and<lb/>
Coors. Among imports, the clear<lb/>
favorite is Molson Golden Ale.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057336_0006"/><lb/>
Ml I M . K(?I IM W<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Lew<lb/>
Xl'kil 14, lSl<lb/>
.<lb/>
Capra Movie, Swedish Epic<lb/>
Showing Wednesday Night<lb/>
1 Ins Wednesday night at 7 and 9<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
(.enter's Hendrix Iheatre. the Stu<lb/>
dent Union Films Committee will<lb/>
present two fine films including<lb/>
Frank Capra's classic film of 1934<lb/>
"It Happened One Night<lb/>
rescheduled from an earlier date<lb/>
Also playing is the Swedish epic<lb/>
"The 1 migrants" (1972). "It Hap<lb/>
pened One Night" will ran al 7 p.m.<lb/>
followed h "The Emigrants" at 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Admission is by ECU ID and <lb/>
tivity Card for students and MS<lb/>
Membership Card for faculty and<lb/>
stall.<lb/>
rhere are a few serious moments<lb/>
in "It Happened One Nigh (Best<lb/>
Picture winner ot 1934). and it there<lb/>
is a welter ot improbable incidents<lb/>
these hectic doings serve to generate<lb/>
plenty of laughs. I he suspense is<lb/>
kept on the wing until a tew seconds<lb/>
before the picture ends, but it is a<lb/>
foregone conclusion that the pro<lb/>
ducers would never dare to have the<lb/>
characters acted b Clark Cable and<lb/>
Claudette Colbert seperated when<lb/>
the curtains close.<lb/>
In tin merry romance, which is<lb/>
an adaptation of a magazine story<lb/>
b Samuel Hopkins Adams, Pet<lb/>
Warne (Mr. Cable) and Ellie V<lb/>
drews (Miss Colbert) enjoy the<lb/>
discomforts ot a long-distance bus<lb/>
ride. they also experience the pain ot<lb/>
hitch-hiking and the joys ot tou<lb/>
camps.<lb/>
Besides these glimpses, i<lb/>
beholds Alexander Andrews sea<lb/>
ching for his daughter in an<lb/>
airplane, expostulating<lb/>
secretaries and sleuths because he is<lb/>
unable to find the missing girl, in-<lb/>
cidental!) an heiress.<lb/>
Warne is one ot those u.kk<lb/>
new spapei men frequently<lb/>
Max Mm Sydow and 1 i I llmann<lb/>
in "The Emigrants<lb/>
discoverd in Hollywood's spacious<lb/>
stlldlOs.<lb/>
He does not hesitate to tell his<lb/>
sup m outbursts of slang<lb/>
precisely what he things ot them,<lb/>
even though his finances at the time<lb/>
ate at a low ebb.<lb/>
1 llie is an obstinate young per-<lb/>
son, who to spue her lather, has<lb/>
become the wife (in name only) ot a<lb/>
dashing young man named King<lb/>
Westley.<lb/>
She finds hersell virtually a<lb/>
prisoner on her father's yacht and,<lb/>
in the introductory scenes, she is on<lb/>
tungei strike<lb/>
Soon afterward she darts from<lb/>
hei cabin to the deck, leaps over-<lb/>
board and smis tor Florida and<lb/>
freedom.<lb/>
It i? ? t ; on hei way from<lb/>
Miami to New York that she en<lb/>
counters Warne, an audacious per<lb/>
si n<lb/>
To t ? matte: s more in-<lb/>
the producers oi the<lb/>
decide thai the fiery Ellie<lb/>
must have hei suitcase stolen.<lb/>
C days go by, Warne and Ellie<lb/>
expei ence the pangs ol hunger and.<lb/>
at one .  the) havt to content<lb/>
themselves with a meal of raw car-<lb/>
's.<lb/>
"It Happened One Night" is a<lb/>
good piece of fiction, which, with<lb/>
all its feverish stunts, is blessed with<lb/>
bright dialogue and a good quota ot<lb/>
relatively restrained scenes.<lb/>
I he immigrant experience is the<lb/>
great appealing myth ot American<lb/>
society, the common theme on<lb/>
which its disparate peoples played<lb/>
their ethnic variations.<lb/>
The history ot very nearly every<lb/>
American family traces itsell back<lb/>
to an ocean crossing. " 1 he<lb/>
Emigrants" tells this same storv<lb/>
from the other end, following the<lb/>
flight of the Swedish peasantry from<lb/>
the bottom rung ot a stratified<lb/>
society to the open promise o Min-<lb/>
nesota.<lb/>
lhis two-and-a-half-hour saga<lb/>
was an enormous hit in its native<lb/>
Sweden but it also speaks to us<lb/>
about our own origins, making us<lb/>
see our country through the eyes ot<lb/>
our antecedents America, the<lb/>
egalitarian dream, a mecca ot in-<lb/>
finite promise and illusion, the land<lb/>
ot new beginnings.<lb/>
Jan Troell's intelligent, thrifty<lb/>
direction does more than animate<lb/>
historv without vulgarizing it.<lb/>
Taking the classic novel by<lb/>
Vilhelm Moberg, he harmonizes its<lb/>
scope and demand tor sweep with<lb/>
the more refined, detailed re-<lb/>
quirements of personal cinema.<lb/>
The predicament o tenant farmer<lb/>
Karl Oscar (Max von Sydow) and<lb/>
his wite, Kristina (1 iv Ullmann), is<lb/>
set out clearly in social terms.<lb/>
1 he exigencies ol his immigration<lb/>
emerge from sequences ot Karl<lb/>
Oskar breaking the stubborn<lb/>
Swedish earth with a handcrafted<lb/>
plow and a pair ol oxen, the<lb/>
malevolent seasons that cover his<lb/>
earth with snow in spring and burn<lb/>
his crops with drought in autumn;<lb/>
the futility of fighting a caste sstein<lb/>
enforced bv landowners, sheriffs<lb/>
and deacons, and the inevitable per-<lb/>
sonal catastrophes ? a burned barn<lb/>
and the earlv death of a daughter.<lb/>
But 1 roell also follows the<lb/>
adolescence ot Karl's brother<lb/>
Robert, whose sacrifice to social in-<lb/>
equity is nothing less than his youth<lb/>
? he must work another farmer's<lb/>
land from dawn to dat kness, dream-<lb/>
ing fantasies , sofl hair and pink<lb/>
bodies as he stares from his wooden<lb/>
bunk at the ceiling, his thoughts<lb/>
ultimately turning to an America he-<lb/>
knows only from an immigration<lb/>
booklet.<lb/>
As Eddie Axberg plays him with<lb/>
charm and shy reserve. Robert is<lb/>
Troell's vehicle tor those little<lb/>
scenes and moments that humanize<lb/>
historical narrative.<lb/>
I roell spends a few poetic<lb/>
moments with, Robert at the edge of<lb/>
a stream as lie loses a wooden shoe<lb/>
in the water, makes a boat of the se-<lb/>
cond shoe, then sails his hat<lb/>
downstream ? his carefree years<lb/>
compressed into a few vagrant<lb/>
moments of irresponsibility.<lb/>
We watch his eyes glow as he<lb/>
reads his book ot dreams about<lb/>
America to his brutish but kind<lb/>
hunk mate, and we sense what<lb/>
America must have meant to each<lb/>
voting man and woman who saw no<lb/>
hope elsew here.<lb/>
I he middle panel ot this triptych<lb/>
captures the horror o the crossing,<lb/>
hundred- ol peasants jammed in the<lb/>
hold for ten weeks, vomiting on<lb/>
each othei during sionns, picking<lb/>
lice o!t each other, dying by the<lb/>
dtov es.<lb/>
1 hen America the tin ill ol<lb/>
sighting land, the tortuous overli<lb/>
trek to Minnesota and the final<lb/>
triumphant staking ot a claim.<lb/>
(lark Gabk andlaudette olberi in fin- famous hitchhiking scene<lb/>
from "It Happened One Night" Hup photo). Below: "The V alls ol<lb/>
Jericho I he film will be shown this Wednesday at 7 p.m.<lb/>
'Julius Caesar'<lb/>
'New Meaning Infused Into Play'<lb/>
Photo by JON JORDAN<lb/>
'All You Can Eat This Thursday At The Rathskeller<lb/>
(.reenvilles hottest new band "All ou (an hat" will he performing this Thursday night at 9:43 p.m. in<lb/>
The Rathskeller located on fifth street in downtown Greenville. This assemblage of "moderns" tore the<lb/>
proverbial house down last Vednesda and Thursday nights at 1 he Rat with their patented blend of<lb/>
traditional and progressive rock. The foursome have been called back to play for another paeked house.<lb/>
Pietured above are Oft. to rt.) bassist Bruce Hall: lead vocalist Stacy Heller; drummer Gregg Boykin,<lb/>
and guitarist Henry White.<lb/>
Robin Lane Performs<lb/>
At Attic This Saturday<lb/>
By KAlin WEI LER<lb/>
staff Wnlrr<lb/>
from Aprii 7 to April 1 1.<lb/>
Mendenhall's Hendrix Theater<lb/>
reverberated with the immortal lines<lb/>
o Shakespeare during the East<lb/>
( arolina Playhouse presentation ol<lb/>
Julius Caesar. This production had<lb/>
an interesting twist, however, as it<lb/>
was enacted in modern dress. All<lb/>
too frequently modern dress pro<lb/>
ductions o Shakespeare seem to be<lb/>
living loo hard to relate to contem-<lb/>
porary life and simply appear<lb/>
ridiculous. Expecting a mutilation<lb/>
of a classic play, 1 was pleasantly<lb/>
surprised when, with the skillful<lb/>
direction ol Edgar R. I oessin and<lb/>
the contemporary costumes bv<lb/>
Patrice Alexander, the production<lb/>
not only worked but infused<lb/>
Shakespeare's play with new mean<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The story o ambition, power,<lb/>
and the rise and fall ol demagogues<lb/>
in ancient Rome was lifted into the<lb/>
realm ot the universal bv I oessin<lb/>
and an excellent cast. Caesar the<lb/>
power-hungry became Any Man m<lb/>
Any Country. Perhaps because our<lb/>
own times have been marked bv the<lb/>
rise and v iolent tail ot na<lb/>
1 e a d eis t he au sc e 11<lb/>
unusually attentive. As . assius says<lb/>
in cl 111: "How ma lj s hence<lb/>
shall this our loitv scene be acted<lb/>
over in states unborn and accei<lb/>
yel unk now n?"<lb/>
Gregory Buch's spartan scet<lb/>
provided selling for the action with<lb/>
mottled, multi level platforms. Ad-<lb/>
ded to this was an inventive idea<lb/>
a movie screen as a backdrop. The<lb/>
production began with an explicit<lb/>
film sequence by Carlton Ben,<lb/>
graphically depicting the horror;<lb/>
man pitted against man in the name<lb/>
o ambition. The iscd<lb/>
periodical! ? ut the plav to<lb/>
project storms, colors and stills with<lb/>
live a:o - producing a silhouette el<lb/>
feet.<lb/>
I ighting was designed bv David<lb/>
F. Downing and was creatively used<lb/>
to suggesi moods.<lb/>
Violence, an element ever-present<lb/>
in Julius Caesar, was dealt with<lb/>
through creative lighting m this pro-<lb/>
duction. Instead of a tvpis.il<lb/>
melodramatic si age death. C aesai<lb/>
met his fate with the use of red lights<lb/>
and red cloves to mar k his assassins.<lb/>
I oessin, Buch, Down<lb/>
ander truly deserve a standii i<lb/>
lor turning the<lb/>
the inventive.<lb/>
I anally deserv i . landing<lb/>
o.ation (though they did not receive<lb/>
one the night this writer viewed the<lb/>
plav i was the . . Julius C aesai<lb/>
1 ach and everv member exhibited a<lb/>
high degree o! professionalism and,<lb/>
for the most pan, recited<lb/>
Shakespearean blank verse as<lb/>
ugh they had been doing it all i<lb/>
their lives Several members,<lb/>
however, were particularly outstan-<lb/>
ding. Among those were Gary<lb/>
Carter as the coollv calculating<lb/>
v assius. who delivered his lines with<lb/>
azing naturalness, and Bill<lb/>
Roberson as Marcus Brutus, who<lb/>
created great sympathy and<lb/>
understanding for his more<lb/>
cerebrally-inclined character.<lb/>
McCoy Baugham also gave a<lb/>
powerful performance as t aesai<lb/>
himself, depicting the man like an<lb/>
ordinary Joe who has achieved<lb/>
greatness and with it. a stupendous<lb/>
ego and sense of elitism.<lb/>
see NTH. page 7, eol. 1<lb/>
By Bll I KAKIOII<lb/>
Staff W tftr<lb/>
This Saturday night, April 18, at<lb/>
The Attic in downtown Greenville,<lb/>
students will have a rare opportuni-<lb/>
ty to see one of the best new rock<lb/>
bands touring today when Robin<lb/>
Lane and the Chartbusters take to<lb/>
the stage tor one night only.<lb/>
After a solid debut album which<lb/>
featured their top-ten single "When<lb/>
Things Go Wrong and a<lb/>
devastating extended play effort en-<lb/>
titled Five live, the band began<lb/>
work on their latest album. Imita-<lb/>
tion life which they are currently<lb/>
touring to promote. Their sets for<lb/>
The Attic will include material from<lb/>
the new album as well as old<lb/>
favorites and even some unrcleased<lb/>
songs. As for the new album . . .<lb/>
Imitation Life is for real. Robin<lb/>
Lane and the C hartbusters' second<lb/>
Warner Bros, album is an<lb/>
astonishing melding ot new wave<lb/>
and mainstream stylings, a giant<lb/>
step forward tor one o this<lb/>
decade mosl exciting new bands<lb/>
and a breathtaking exercise in the<lb/>
mechanics ot modern rock and roll.<lb/>
The emotional resonance o Im-<lb/>
itation 1 ife's ten tunes reveal a<lb/>
songwriter at the peak of her powers<lb/>
and a performance-tested group ful-<lb/>
ly equal to translating that power to<lb/>
vinyl.<lb/>
Produced bv Gary I yons, the<lb/>
album ranges from the mounting<lb/>
cyclical tensions o "What The Peo-<lb/>
ple Are Doing" to the anthemic<lb/>
chimes ot "Solid Rock" to the<lb/>
lilting melodic turns of "Pretty<lb/>
Mala<lb/>
It is a work that reasserts the<lb/>
blood and thunder of basic rock<lb/>
while reaching forward in new and<lb/>
articulate ways.<lb/>
I m e r g i n g from Boston's<lb/>
burgeoning music scene in the late<lb/>
'70s, Robin Lane and the Chart-<lb/>
busters comprise some of the city's<lb/>
most luminous talent.<lb/>
Guitaristsvocalists Leroy Radcliffe<lb/>
and Asa Brebner first appeared in<lb/>
the music limelight as members of<lb/>
Jonathon Richman's Modern<lb/>
Lovers.<lb/>
Bassist vocalist Scott Baerenwald<lb/>
served time in the locally renowned<lb/>
Reddy Teddy while drummer Tim<lb/>
Jackson has been connected with<lb/>
many of the bands comprising<lb/>
Boston's vast floating talent pool.<lb/>
As for Robin, the California born<lb/>
singer began her career in folk<lb/>
music, garnering recording time by<lb/>
singing backup with a variety of<lb/>
established acts including Neil<lb/>
Young. She moved to Boston in<lb/>
1976 and, fired by the exploding<lb/>
new wave scene of that year, formed<lb/>
the Chartbusters.<lb/>
Try<lb/>
( onto<lb/>
New<lb/>
Into<lb/>
( on tin<lb/>
Captured above at The Pier in Raleigh by Spectator Magazine photographer Chris Seward, New Wave artists<lb/>
Robin Lane and the Chartbusters will be appearing in Greenville this Saturday night at The Attic. The Boston<lb/>
based band has released three albums to date including a five-song EP that features a live version of their<lb/>
smash single "When Things Go Wrong The band is currently promoting their new IP Imitation Life<lb/>
5l<lb/>
Sol<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057336_0007"/><lb/>
1 HI t S1 I K() IM <lb/>
<lb/>
yv Wave artists<lb/>
tic. t he Boston<lb/>
ersiofl of their<lb/>
tuition 1 ife.<lb/>
M'KIl 14, 19X1<lb/>
?<lb/>
L?tisnjG Akjt CocctG The Hp Way<lb/>
N fcOOW I GOT TO S??<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
7Vy Baking Bread, Cakes<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
floured 139 inch pan.<lb/>
Bake at 350' for tons<lb/>
to forty-five minutes,<lb/>
or until cake springs<lb/>
back when lightly<lb/>
pressed and begins to<lb/>
pull away from the<lb/>
sides of the pan. Cool<lb/>
in the pan for fifteen<lb/>
minutes before remov-<lb/>
ing. Sprinkle with con<lb/>
fectioner's sugar, if<lb/>
desired. (Or bake in a<lb/>
ten inch tinted tube pan<lb/>
foi fifty to fifty-five<lb/>
minutes).<lb/>
It cookies are your<lb/>
cup of tea, you'll find<lb/>
PIXIES a lot of fun to<lb/>
make. You'll need: 1 4<lb/>
cup shortening, four<lb/>
squares unsweetened<lb/>
baking chocolate, two<lb/>
cups sugar, four eggs,<lb/>
one teaspoon vanilla,<lb/>
two cups sifted all-<lb/>
purpose flour, two<lb/>
teaspoons baking<lb/>
powder, 12 teaspoon<lb/>
salt, 34 cup chopped<lb/>
walnuts (pecans are<lb/>
good, too). Melt<lb/>
shortening and<lb/>
chocolate together over<lb/>
low heat. Remove from<lb/>
heat and cool. Blend<lb/>
sugar into shortening-<lb/>
chocolate mixture, then<lb/>
add eggs (one at a<lb/>
time), blending well<lb/>
after each addition.<lb/>
Add vanilla and blend.<lb/>
Sift dry ingredients<lb/>
together and stir into<lb/>
New Meaning Infused ?"<lb/>
Refrigerate for two<lb/>
Into 'Julius Caesar'<lb/>
Continued from page 6<lb/>
I he only two major<lb/>
women characters in<lb/>
the plav, Patricia<lb/>
Peters and Sails Nell<lb/>
Clodfelter, who por-<lb/>
t rayed Calpurnia,<lb/>
c aesar's wife, and Por-<lb/>
tia, Brutus' sv i f e,<lb/>
respectively, handled<lb/>
their small parts well.<lb/>
Ms. Clodfelter's ac-<lb/>
tions cons meed one ol<lb/>
her deep lose and con-<lb/>
cern for Brutus but, un-<lb/>
fori u nately, s he<lb/>
delivered her lines in a<lb/>
rather stilted manner.<lb/>
Ms. Peter- brought a<lb/>
regal grace in addition<lb/>
to fine acting to the<lb/>
part of tormented<lb/>
Calpurnia. All in all,<lb/>
each cast member did a<lb/>
fine job of bringing<lb/>
Julius Caesar to life.<lb/>
With Julius Caesar<lb/>
the East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse succeeded in<lb/>
making its iewers a bit<lb/>
more ass are of the shit-<lb/>
ting sand- oi fortune<lb/>
on which the mighty<lb/>
luxuriate. Perhaps this<lb/>
was their purpose in<lb/>
presenting the play. In<lb/>
any case, the obvious<lb/>
hard ssork of all con-<lb/>
cerned definitely suc-<lb/>
ceeded in producing a<lb/>
'professional presenta-<lb/>
tion. 1, foi one, eagerly<lb/>
await future presenta-<lb/>
tions of an equally high<lb/>
caliber.<lb/>
hours. After dough is<lb/>
chilled, shape it into<lb/>
long rolls about one<lb/>
inch in diameter by<lb/>
rolling the dough with<lb/>
your hands on a lightly<lb/>
floured surface. Cut<lb/>
off one inch pieces and<lb/>
shape into balls. Roll<lb/>
balls in confectioner's<lb/>
sugar, place on a lightly<lb/>
greased baking sheet,<lb/>
and bake at 350? for ap-<lb/>
proximately fifteen<lb/>
minutes. Cool before<lb/>
storing. Makes about<lb/>
seven dozen cookies.<lb/>
If putting together<lb/>
anything from scratch<lb/>
gives you chills and<lb/>
sweaty palms, do not<lb/>
fret. Your cooking ven-<lb/>
ture may still be a suc-<lb/>
cess, thanks to the<lb/>
many packaged mixes<lb/>
now available. There is<lb/>
absolutely no reason<lb/>
why you shouldn't<lb/>
make a proud contribu-<lb/>
tion to your bake sale,<lb/>
family dinner or com-<lb/>
pany picnic when<lb/>
preparing baked goods<lb/>
can be so simple, and<lb/>
yes, even fun.<lb/>
JTues. April 14<lb/>
Where Bands make it Rock Roadies makes it<lb/>
 Roll! 200 W Walnut St Downtown Goldsboro ph.<lb/>
734 4551<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
"In Concert"<lb/>
Capitol Recording Artist<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/>
"DELBERT<lb/>
McCLINTON"<lb/>
with special guest "Steve BdSSett<lb/>
and Virginia Breeze"<lb/>
Doors Open At 7:30<lb/>
Showtime At 8:45<lb/>
You are only 45 miles from the Rock n Roll ai<lb/>
Roadies<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN<lb/>
STEAKHOUSE<lb/>
"The Family<lb/>
Steak House"<lb/>
&amp;&amp; item<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
TAKEOUT<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St<lb/>
758-2712<lb/>
2M By-Pass<lb/>
756-0040<lb/>
20 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 OFF ALLMENU ITEMS;<lb/>
MON. thru FRI. from 3:00p.m. to6:30p.m.<lb/>
FREE DRINK with college I.D.<lb/>
UJ)5 SO<lb/>
 Guess <lb/>
REtfemez amh cf it !<lb/>
r <lb/>
tc<lb/>
ft<lb/>
Emergency<lb/>
Meeting<lb/>
Scheduled<lb/>
There will be an<lb/>
emergency reorganiza-<lb/>
tion meeting for the<lb/>
Society of Collegiate<lb/>
Journalists on Tues-<lb/>
day, April 14. The<lb/>
meeting will be held in<lb/>
Austin 301.<lb/>
The Media Board is<lb/>
presently accepting<lb/>
applications for<lb/>
Media Board<lb/>
Day Representative<lb/>
Applications may be picked<lb/>
up in the Media Board of-<lb/>
fice in the Publications<lb/>
Bldg. from 8-1 and 2-5<lb/>
Monday thru Friday.<lb/>
PRE-MED?<lb/>
Current undergraduate pre-<lb/>
medical students may now<lb/>
compete for several<lb/>
hundered Air Force scholar<lb/>
ships are to be awarded to<lb/>
students accepted into<lb/>
medical schools as freshmen<lb/>
or at the beginning of their<lb/>
sophomore year. The<lb/>
scholarship provides for tui-<lb/>
tion, books, lab fees and<lb/>
equipment, plus a $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 CM, 1100 Navaho<lb/>
Dr<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27609<lb/>
(919)755-4134<lb/>
AIR FORCE<lb/>
( )nt metric<lb/>
Fosdick's Seafood Savers<lb/>
Nightly 5:UO-9:UOpm<lb/>
Tue. Fish Fry- All The Fish You Un bat With A Mug<lb/>
Ot Your Favorite Beverage$3.99<lb/>
Wed. Shrimp Treat- Delicious Calabash Shnmp With French<lb/>
Fries, Cole Slaw and Our ramou' i iu.snpuppies$3.99<lb/>
Thur. Family Night A Seafood Sampler With Calabash<lb/>
Shrimp. Fried Fish, Oysters and Deviled Crab$4.99<lb/>
Tue,Wed,Thur(Oy?ter Bar Only) 1 Do rUhhefl<lb/>
Oysters (Steamed or Raw) And A Mug Oi Your Favorite Beverage<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
EYE CARE<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
P.A.<lb/>
Budget Kyewear 39.95 complete<lb/>
Frames, lenses and lint in<lb/>
plastic bifocals only 59.95<lb/>
Contact Lenses<lb/>
149<lb/>
complete<lb/>
Ph. 736-2011<lb/>
: ? exam, fitting, heat disinfectioi and all<lb/>
A 'Mill.<lb/>
SPRING SPECIAL<lb/>
Ray-Ban Sunglasses<lb/>
20 Off<lb/>
10 fcOJ student &amp; staH discount<lb/>
on all materials excluding<lb/>
specials and contacts.<lb/>
Tipton Annex<lb/>
228 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
7 56-4404<lb/>
Dr.PeteHolhs<lb/>
iff<lb/>
?<lb/>
'<lb/>
A<lb/>
ti<lb/>
<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
MARK YOUR CALENDARS!<lb/>
3rd Annual<lb/>
SENIOR SOCIAL<lb/>
Sponsored by<lb/>
THE ECU ALUMNI<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
Thursday, April 16, 1981<lb/>
5-7 P.M.<lb/>
A<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
MULTIPURPOSE ROOM<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
SOFT DRINKS<lb/>
SNACKS<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057336_0008"/><lb/>
1 HI i s! i k? ?l :<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Al'kll 14. ivm Page k<lb/>
ECU Is Ranked Best In Nation<lb/>
No. 11<lb/>
Sporting a 30-3 record and<lb/>
coming off the championship<lb/>
of the N. C. State Invitational<lb/>
last weekend, the 1 ad) Pirates<lb/>
are now the number one-<lb/>
ranked collegiate slow;<lb/>
team in the country, according<lb/>
to Mike Ricciardi oi Women's<lb/>
Collegiate Sports Rankings<lb/>
inc.<lb/>
"I certainly feel we are<lb/>
deserving of this ranking"<lb/>
coach Ahta Dillon said. "I<lb/>
just hope we can maintain it<lb/>
The Lad) Seminoles ol<lb/>
Florida State, the team I<lb/>
lady Bucs defeated for '<lb/>
weekend's crown, are ranked<lb/>
second, in front oi 1 lorida, a<lb/>
team the Pirates also defeat<lb/>
at the Carolina Pines tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The Wolf pack oi N.C<lb/>
State, a team the Pirates havt<lb/>
defeated six times this sea<lb/>
are ranked fourth, and Pfiel<lb/>
fer is number five. Roui d<lb/>
out the top 10 arc 1 Ion. V<lb/>
thern Kentucky, <lb/>
Florida Southern ai d <lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Ranked teams arc ail I)ii<lb/>
sion I schools thai have<lb/>
slowpitch softball<lb/>
There are some division 1<lb/>
schools playing womei<lb/>
ball, but it is of the fa<lb/>
variety, such as on the esi<lb/>
Coast.<lb/>
1 ast year the 1 a<lb/>
were Region 11 Champ-<lb/>
that being as tar as a ?<lb/>
could go because oi no<lb/>
tional tournament. 1 hi<lb/>
however, there is a A! W<lb/>
tournament, to be held a<lb/>
be-named site Ma) 14 16<lb/>
The Lady Pirates have<lb/>
MOT-W<lb/>
?Ml<lb/>
MMSr<lb/>
Wins NCSU Tourney<lb/>
YX i - pitcherJeannene K?th<lb/>
lenri. on the weekend of May<lb/>
aI he national competition<lb/>
will be held the following<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
I he l ady Pirates' number<lb/>
one-ranking was determined<lb/>
?when their record was 23-2<lb/>
:before their double-header sweep of Campbell last<lb/>
Wednesda) and prior to their<lb/>
11tournament championship last weekend.<lb/>
B WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
WMunl Spurs rdilur<lb/>
Refusing to be deterred by a 12-0<lb/>
shellacking at the hands of Florida<lb/>
Stale, East Carolina's I ady Pirates,<lb/>
the top-ranked women's slow-pitch<lb/>
softball team in the nation, gritted<lb/>
their teeth and defeated the Lady<lb/>
Seminoles twice on Saturday to win<lb/>
the N.C. State Invitational at<lb/>
C arolina Pin -s.<lb/>
The lady Piue defeated Nor-<lb/>
thern Kentucky ana Florida Frida)<lb/>
to move into the winners' bracket<lb/>
semifinals oi the double-elimination<lb/>
tournament. Florida State then<lb/>
handed the Lady Bucs their third<lb/>
loss oi the season b scoring 10 runs<lb/>
in the third inning to wrap up the<lb/>
ictor later in the afternoon.<lb/>
The loss put the Pirates in a tough<lb/>
position by having to play arch-rival<lb/>
N.C. State in the losers' bracket<lb/>
finals. The Pirates defeated State<lb/>
6-2, and then moved into the finals<lb/>
against the 1 ady Seminoles. To win<lb/>
the crown, the Bucs defeated FSl<lb/>
twiee, 9-4 in the first game, and<lb/>
came back to win the second, 5-3, in<lb/>
eight innings.<lb/>
"Our girls were just super said<lb/>
a proud Coach Ahta Dillon oi her<lb/>
30-3 Pirates. "Overall, the most im-<lb/>
pressive thing was our consistent<lb/>
defense. We did have a breakdown<lb/>
in the first game against Florida<lb/>
State since the) scored 10 runs in one<lb/>
inning, but there was no way the)<lb/>
should have scored that many runs<lb/>
againsl us. Alter that game, 1 just<lb/>
told our girls to forget about it<lb/>
The Lad) Pirates opened the<lb/>
tournev cm Frida) with a 7-0 whipp-<lb/>
ing ol Northern Kentuck) behind<lb/>
third-inning homers by Cynthia<lb/>
Shepard and Kathy Riley. Shepard<lb/>
drove in three runs while Rilev's ac-<lb/>
counted for two. The Bucs added<lb/>
two more in the fourth inning.<lb/>
Oil ensue stars were Shepard.<lb/>
who was 3-3, while Jo Fanda<lb/>
Clayton and Miti Davis chipped in<lb/>
with two hits each.<lb/>
In the second game against a<lb/>
Florida team that had handed the<lb/>
Bucs one of their two losses this<lb/>
season, the Pirates took a 7-3 lead<lb/>
on a Shepard grand slam, and stop-<lb/>
ped a Ciator rally that accounted for<lb/>
two runs in the bottom of the<lb/>
seventh that finished the scoring at<lb/>
7-5.<lb/>
The Florida game, Dillon said,<lb/>
was a "real pick-me-up. .After that<lb/>
game, we didn't have to play unto<lb/>
the next morning. We real!) came<lb/>
through in that game<lb/>
On Saturday, FSl was sparked<lb/>
by a Darby Cottle homer in the third<lb/>
to defeat the Pirates. Ginger<lb/>
Rothermel was 2-2 at the plate tor<lb/>
the Lady Bucs.<lb/>
The I ady Pirates, facing elimina-<lb/>
tion, bounced back to beat State 6-2<lb/>
on homers by Shirley Brown and<lb/>
Clayton in the seventh to spark a<lb/>
tour-run rally. The Wolf pack had<lb/>
tied the game with runs in the fourth<lb/>
and sixth innings before the Pirates'<lb/>
assault.<lb/>
The victory over State led to a<lb/>
showdown against the Seminoles.<lb/>
and the Pirates needed two wins to<lb/>
take the championship. I he Bucs<lb/>
scored twice in the top of the first,<lb/>
but I SL bounced back to score once<lb/>
in the bottom of the inning. Rile)<lb/>
put the I ad) Pirates up b two with<lb/>
a homer in the third, but the Lad)<lb/>
Seminoles took the lead bv scoring<lb/>
three more on a Charlotte Cates<lb/>
round-triper.<lb/>
Once again, the 1 ad) Pil<lb/>
would not quit, as Rilev belted her<lb/>
second homer ol the game and third<lb/>
oi the tournev in a six-run tourth in-<lb/>
ning to give the Pirates a V-4 win<lb/>
and force a do-or-die championship<lb/>
game.<lb/>
I ach team scored in their halt ol<lb/>
the first. East ' arolina held a<lb/>
run lead until the seventh when the<lb/>
Seminoles pulled even 1 lorida Si<lb/>
took the lead in the top<lb/>
eighth, but the Pirates stormed back<lb/>
in the bottom halt oi the inning on a<lb/>
Shepard homer to score three runs<lb/>
and win 5-3.<lb/>
Rothermel was three-for-f(<lb/>
while (lav ton and Shepard had<lb/>
hits each. Rile) added a double.<lb/>
"The) didn't have<lb/>
weaknesses Dillon said oi No-<lb/>
State. "You can'l make en<lb/>
against them like we did in the I<lb/>
game and win. 1 he had a loi<lb/>
good hitters, and to heat them ,<lb/>
have to do everything well<lb/>
Rilev was named MVP in the<lb/>
tournev. and she had to fight ofi a<lb/>
minor injur) to perform. "She had<lb/>
a good all-around tournament. I<lb/>
ly Saturday, she twisted her ankl<lb/>
practice, and she didn't plav the<lb/>
first time we played Florida State<lb/>
We put it on ice, and she tried it.<lb/>
She played ver) well<lb/>
Dillon also praised Shepard,<lb/>
Rothermel and Roth, who pitched<lb/>
the majorit) t the games in I<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
I he 1 ad) Pirate- travel to C hape!<lb/>
this afternoon louble-<lb/>
tder with North t arolina. "We'll<lb/>
have to come down out oi the<lb/>
clouds for these games Dillon<lb/>
noted.<lb/>
Mike Hawkins Ruled Ineligible<lb/>
Kathy Rilev (standing ai left) wuits another turn ai bai on the<lb/>
bench of the top-ranked Lad) Pirates.<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sprK t dilor<lb/>
I he hast Carolina football team<lb/>
suffered a blow yesterda) when it<lb/>
was announced thai the Pirate's<lb/>
leading rusher from this past season<lb/>
would not return as had been ex-<lb/>
pected for the W81 campaign.<lb/>
Mike Hawkins, a 5-10 halfback<lb/>
who would have been a fifth-year<lb/>
senior, was ruled ineligible bv<lb/>
E 1 s NCAA representative. Dr.<lb/>
Earnie Schwarz.<lb/>
Hawkins and Pirate head coach<lb/>
Ed 1 morv had called on Schwarz to<lb/>
determine the eligibility ol the<lb/>
Henderson native, hoping that he<lb/>
would receive another year's<lb/>
eligibility. T hev claimed that he had<lb/>
not particpated in am games Ins<lb/>
t res lima n season and was.<lb/>
therefore, redshirted.<lb/>
N A rules state that a player<lb/>
can receive an extra year's eligibility<lb/>
if he plays in no more than three<lb/>
games before the halfway point ol a<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Statistics from Hawkins'<lb/>
freshman season ? 1977 ? show<lb/>
him carrying the ball twice and par-<lb/>
ticipating in five games. Hawkins<lb/>
and Emroy denied this and went to<lb/>
Sehwar for a final say-so.<lb/>
Emory said on several occasions<lb/>
that 1977 game films had been ex-<lb/>
amined and that no trace ol Mike<lb/>
Hawkins could be found. There was<lb/>
another Hawkins on the '77 team ?<lb/>
senior running back, Willie.<lb/>
Schwarz took over the issue about<lb/>
two weeks ago and came through<lb/>
with a decision yesterday.<lb/>
"In my opinion, from the records<lb/>
I have, he's not eligible for another<lb/>
year Schwarz said.<lb/>
"Facts are tacts. 1 told Mike I'd<lb/>
do all I could to get him eligible and<lb/>
1 did. There is jusl no way that is<lb/>
possible from all I've been able to<lb/>
find<lb/>
Emory could not be reached for<lb/>
comment but Hawkins expressed<lb/>
quiet disappointment.<lb/>
"It's a pretty big blow he said<lb/>
solemnly. "But there's nothing I<lb/>
can do about it<lb/>
Hawkins now joins fullback<lb/>
Theodore Sutton and halfback An-<lb/>
thony Collins as graduating<lb/>
members oi the '80 starting<lb/>
back field that will now be eyed in<lb/>
the May draft of collegiete players<lb/>
by the National Football league.<lb/>
"I've begun to make some con-<lb/>
tacts Hawkins said of his sudden<lb/>
forced interest in making himself<lb/>
more known among the pros.<lb/>
Assisting him is local agent and<lb/>
ECU halfback Mike Hawkins, seen here running against<lb/>
Richmond this past season, will not return to the Pirates in<lb/>
I "o 1 .<lb/>
former ECU assistant coach Ken<lb/>
Hutcherson.<lb/>
The loss oi Hawkins coupled with<lb/>
the losses oi Sutton and Collins<lb/>
make a clean sweep of the team's<lb/>
starting running back from a year<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
Seahawks Get Best Of Bucs Twice<lb/>
a errors<lb/>
ina's<lb/>
ECU'S John Hallo<lb/>
this weekend I t<lb/>
basebal Iropped<lb/>
i I N V<lb/>
!<lb/>
.id not<lb/>
allow run bin saw his<lb/>
as 1 ? I committed<lb/>
nun losing 6-3.<lb/>
On Sunda) the Hues simply could<lb/>
t was needed<lb/>
ts loaded with<lb/>
onl) one out oi ?cca<lb/>
sions, onl) to come awa) empty<lb/>
each time. ITie Seahawks won thai<lb/>
one 3 1<lb/>
rd fell to 18-9 with<lb/>
the losses while Wilmii . im-<lb/>
?ed to 24-11<lb/>
1 t i assistant i ver-<lb/>
ton said the losses were disappoin-<lb/>
ting but did not necessarily mean<lb/>
that the Pii :<lb/>
poo:<lb/>
"1 don't think we have an) real<lb/>
problems Overton said. "We only<lb/>
made a few mistakes. Thev jusl<lb/>
came at the wrong times. They were<lb/>
not bad mistakes but they certainly<lb/>
came in crucial situations<lb/>
1 he Buc aide added that things<lb/>
went exactly opposite over the<lb/>
weekend for the Seahawks.<lb/>
"Not taking anything away from<lb/>
Wilmington  because they played<lb/>
great ? but things seemed to fall<lb/>
right into place for them in both<lb/>
games he said.<lb/>
In the first game, the Seahawks<lb/>
used a big fourth inning to pave the<lb/>
way to victory. UNC-W scored five<lb/>
times in that stanza.<lb/>
John Milkovts led off the inning<lb/>
and reached first base on an error.<lb/>
He advanced to second on a passed<lb/>
ball and to third as Doc 1 awing<lb/>
reached first via yet another ECU<lb/>
mistake.<lb/>
Roger Hudson then singled in the<lb/>
inning's first run, Milkovits scoring<lb/>
to get things rolling. Kelly<lb/>
O'Donnell sacrified the remaining<lb/>
two base runners up one base. Paul<lb/>
Murr then tripled, scoring both<lb/>
I awing and Hudson.<lb/>
Second baseman Tim Whitehead<lb/>
contined the surge, singling to score<lb/>
Murr. Whitehead then stole second<lb/>
and rounded out the inning's scor-<lb/>
ing, crossing home plate thanks to a<lb/>
single by right fielder Tom Jones.<lb/>
The highlight of the day for the<lb/>
Bucs was first baseman Mike Sage's<lb/>
solo home run in the sixth. Todd<lb/>
Hendley was the top Pirate batter,<lb/>
going two for five with an RBI.<lb/>
Sunday's second game was, of<lb/>
course, the game of missed oppor-<lb/>
tunites for the Bucs and one of just<lb/>
enough for the Seahawks.<lb/>
Whitehead got things going for<lb/>
UNC-W in the first, leading off with<lb/>
a double and scoring on a doouble<lb/>
by Jones.<lb/>
The Pirates tied it at one in the<lb/>
top of the third when Kelly<lb/>
Robinette singled, stole second and<lb/>
eventually scored on a wild pitch.<lb/>
The Seahawks wasted little time<lb/>
reasserting themselves, scoring in<lb/>
the bottom of the third to go up 2-1.<lb/>
Kelly O'Donnell singled and scored<lb/>
on a sacricifice fly bv none other<lb/>
than Jones.<lb/>
Jones hit the Bucs hard in both<lb/>
games, finishing the weekend going<lb/>
four of six against Pirate pitching.<lb/>
All four hits were singles as the<lb/>
Seahawk rightfielder had four<lb/>
RBI's.<lb/>
Bill Wilder took the loss for the<lb/>
Pirates, falling to 5-4. This marked<lb/>
the second tough loss in a row for<lb/>
Wilder, the other coming in a heart-<lb/>
breaker to North Carolina last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Robinette was the top Pirate bat-<lb/>
ter in the Sunday game, going three<lb/>
of five.<lb/>
The Bucs now look ahead to a<lb/>
long stretch of 15 consecutive home<lb/>
games before their regular season<lb/>
draws to close on May 3 at North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
ECU has doubleheaders schedul-<lb/>
ed for this Thursday against V'MI<lb/>
and Friday against Baptist. The<lb/>
VMI opener begins at 6 p.m. while<lb/>
the Friday afternoon twin bill gets<lb/>
underway at 1:00.<lb/>
Fi<lb/>
IM<lb/>
i<lb/>
Race 11<lb/>
r<lb/>
f<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
?9<lb/>
?HSR3<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
T;<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Citiens ol I<lb/>
are free of ?<lb/>
Pirate pitcher Bill Wilder<lb/>
Buffel<lb/>
MonFn,<lb/>
MonTu<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Wednl<lb/>
Thui<lb/>
Buy<lb/>
?<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057336_0009"/><lb/>
I HI I AMAROl INIAN<lb/>
APkll 14, 1981<lb/>
n<lb/>
ble<lb/>
ininy, against<lb/>
Ilu- Pirates in<lb/>
White<lb/>
Wins<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Miler<lb/>
Controversey Envelopes Success Of Parker<lb/>
1M Sports 'N' Shorts<lb/>
By Dwayne Grooms<lb/>
? and?<lb/>
Gregg Mellon<lb/>
CROSS CAMPUS RUM<lb/>
Bill White, a 31-year-old school teacher<lb/>
from Washington and former ECU<lb/>
irackster, led throughout the Intramural-<lb/>
Recreation "Run for the Sun" Spring Cross<lb/>
Campus five-mile race Wed April 8.<lb/>
White set a new course record on his u<lb/>
to victory running the challenging five-mile<lb/>
course in 2T mins 12 seconds. Rusty<lb/>
Jenkins took the 2.5 mile race in 13 mins. 54<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
1 he two races were run under almost ideal<lb/>
racing conditions. The course was dry and<lb/>
the vMiid light on this beautiful spring day.<lb/>
Jenkins led the entire distance and uas never<lb/>
seriously challenged.<lb/>
1 amm Fletcher of the ECU Team Hand-<lb/>
ball Club was the first woman to cross the<lb/>
finish line with a time of 18:56. Fletcher was<lb/>
closely followed b Donna Eason, also of<lb/>
the team handball club.<lb/>
In the five-mile race White and freshman<lb/>
Jim I ippitl of I instead Dorm battled<lb/>
throughout the race until the 4' ; mile mark.<lb/>
at which point experience paid ofl tor<lb/>
W hue. Lippitt was not more than two strides<lb/>
behind at the 2 : mile mark when he fell.<lb/>
Almost in a continuous motion Lippitt<lb/>
rolled, came upright and kept running, los-<lb/>
ing only the two strides.<lb/>
The first woman to finish the five mile<lb/>
race was Mars Alison Smith in 42 minutes.<lb/>
2s seconds, followed b Michelle 1 yons.<lb/>
Although the number of runner was low<lb/>
Race Director Gregg Melton termed the race<lb/>
a access and expressed his hopes that main<lb/>
more runners would run in the fall C ross<lb/>
Campus Run during homecoming weekend.<lb/>
VKI.VKRTON<lb/>
vMvHnl Sport t dilur<lb/>
East Carolina's<lb/>
Russell Parker cap-<lb/>
tured first place in the<lb/>
high jump by tying his<lb/>
own record of seven<lb/>
feet, but the 1600 meter<lb/>
relay team finished a<lb/>
controversial second in<lb/>
action at the Carolina<lb/>
Relays Saturday in<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The 1600 meter relay<lb/>
team of Carlton Bell,<lb/>
Craig Rainey, Shawn<lb/>
Eaney and Tim Cephus<lb/>
was just nipped at the<lb/>
finish line, having run<lb/>
3:10.3. "We really won<lb/>
that relay- 1 couldn't<lb/>
believe they gave it to<lb/>
the other team Coach<lb/>
Bill C arson said. "Our<lb/>
times were the same,<lb/>
but Cephus crossed the<lb/>
line just ahead ot the<lb/>
other guy. He moved<lb/>
really well on the guy<lb/>
from Richmond (who<lb/>
finished third) and St.<lb/>
Augustine's (first).<lb/>
??We were about five<lb/>
yards behind when he<lb/>
started<lb/>
Bell ran a 47.6,<lb/>
Rainey a 47.5 and<lb/>
Laney added a leg of<lb/>
49.5. Cephus' 47.5 leg<lb/>
was the second fastest<lb/>
split ever run at ECU.<lb/>
Otis Melvin has run<lb/>
45.6.<lb/>
The Pirates also ran<lb/>
a "B" team in the 1600<lb/>
meter relay, finished<lb/>
with a time of 3:16.6.<lb/>
The team was made up<lb/>
of Keith Clarke, Ray<lb/>
Dickerson, Bill Miller<lb/>
and Russell Parker.<lb/>
Parker's jump was<lb/>
the second straight time<lb/>
he has tied his own<lb/>
school record. He<lb/>
previously tied his<lb/>
mark at the Colonial<lb/>
Relays in Williamsburg<lb/>
April 3-4.<lb/>
The only other run-<lb/>
ner from East Carolina<lb/>
to place in the competi-<lb/>
tion was Bell, who<lb/>
finished second in the<lb/>
400 meters in a time of<lb/>
47.1 seconds.<lb/>
Bill Miller captured<lb/>
seventh place in the 800<lb/>
meters for the Bucs,<lb/>
clocking in at 1:50.6.<lb/>
Carson said Miller was<lb/>
in good shape to finish<lb/>
second, but he just gave<lb/>
out at (he end of the<lb/>
race.<lb/>
"W'e went there this<lb/>
weekend to work our<lb/>
quarter milers out, and<lb/>
that's exactly what we<lb/>
did. They ran well in<lb/>
the open 400 meters. I<lb/>
think we'll have the<lb/>
45.0 splits pretty soon.<lb/>
At the Penn Relays<lb/>
(this weekend), no one<lb/>
should be able to get<lb/>
near us<lb/>
Golf Team Finishes Seventh In Tar Heel<lb/>
nRadio haekT"<lb/>
The last Carolina<lb/>
golt team fashioned a<lb/>
54hole total of 1154 to<lb/>
finish seventh in the<lb/>
tough ten-team far<lb/>
Heel Invitational this<lb/>
past weekend on<lb/>
Chapel Hill's 1-mlcy<lb/>
Golf Course.<lb/>
North Carolina won<lb/>
the event with a three<lb/>
das total of 1091.<lb/>
South Carolina finish-<lb/>
ed just behind at 1094<lb/>
while Southern Florida<lb/>
was third at 1099.<lb/>
The low individual<lb/>
scorer in the tourna-<lb/>
ment was Duke's<lb/>
Charlie Boiling, who<lb/>
lathed a 209 total.<lb/>
lhiee ECU golfers<lb/>
finished as the Pirates<lb/>
top finishers. Carl<lb/>
Beaman, Don Gafner<lb/>
and Don Sweeting all<lb/>
carded a 227.<lb/>
I he Pirates end their<lb/>
spring schedule this<lb/>
weekend, participating<lb/>
in the Old Dominion<lb/>
Invitational. The<lb/>
36-hole tournament<lb/>
will be held at the<lb/>
Seascape Golf Course<lb/>
in Nags Head, N.C.<lb/>
Jackson Gymnastic MVP<lb/>
Elizabeth Jackson<lb/>
was presented the Most<lb/>
Valuable Gymnast<lb/>
Award at East<lb/>
Carolina's women's<lb/>
gymnastics banquet,<lb/>
held Sunday at I he-<lb/>
Beef Barn.<lb/>
Awards were also<lb/>
presented for MVP's in<lb/>
each of the four events.<lb/>
I ouise Matthews was<lb/>
awarded MVP in the<lb/>
vault, Jennifer Bell was<lb/>
MT<lb/>
in<lb/>
the uneven<lb/>
M P in the beam, and<lb/>
Joanie Ford was MVP<lb/>
in the floor exercise.<lb/>
Ford also received an<lb/>
award for Most Im-<lb/>
proved Gymnast.<lb/>
In a final addiess.<lb/>
COPIES<lb/>
Copy Center<lb/>
Copies4.25<lb/>
100 OR MOPE<lb/>
coach Jon Rose en-<lb/>
couraged the team to<lb/>
continue their gym-<lb/>
nastic careers if possi-<lb/>
ble. Women's gym-<lb/>
nastics has been cut<lb/>
from the athletic pro-<lb/>
gram for next vear.<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOK<lb/>
RfcPAIR<lb/>
l 1 3 Ciandf Ave<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Quality Repair<lb/>
t(VHtv ?G?'I<lb/>
I ii'kt " ?? ?? ? ? ? .<lb/>
v Comb' B : '? <lb/>
bars, I isa Tamarru was<lb/>
BENNIES<lb/>
crrco<lb/>
WRECKER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Front fiM<lb/>
AHanmtwt<lb/>
All Typt of<lb/>
Auto Ropoir<lb/>
Ferejg A Domtttk<lb/>
ftoatonablo Koto<lb/>
2900 e. nmtstroot<lb/>
Phono 7M-4124<lb/>
r<lb/>
f<lb/>
BEST PRICES AND<lb/>
SELECTION IN AREA<lb/>
ON ALLIGATOR LACOSTE<lb/>
SHIRTS FOR MEN, WOMEN<lb/>
&amp;CHILDREN<lb/>
see GORDON FULP<lb/>
LOCATED AT<lb/>
GREENVILLE COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
OPEN: 8:00 A.M. UNTIL DARK<lb/>
756-0504<lb/>
i<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Arts Festival<lb/>
April 1-16,1981<lb/>
85 Events Including<lb/>
Dance Theatre Photography<lb/>
Music Art Exhibits Art Show &amp; Sale<lb/>
Otiens of Pitt Count are encouraged to participate. Man events<lb/>
are free of charge.<lb/>
For schedule information, call 757-1194.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
10 Discount to Students &amp; Focuolty<lb/>
OVER 1,000 FRAMES TO CHOOSE FROM<lb/>
Single Vision-White Glass LensesMt.4i<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses ? White Glass$30-50<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Lenses$26.50<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Extra$32.SO<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses Photo Gray438.50<lb/>
Soft Contoct Lenses $79.95<lb/>
CLEAR-VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
pVSJCIAIItOUAOAAai '$7.144 ?0? TV? THWU '?<lb/>
?u'tD.NO mco.?- ??t?T.<lb/>
!??1L<lb/>
C ?, t. -<lb/>
Buffet Specials All You Can Eat<lb/>
MonFri.<lb/>
MonTues.<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
11:30 - 2:00 Soup-Salad-Pizza<lb/>
6:00 - 8:30 Soup-Salad-Pizza<lb/>
12:00 - 2:00 SpagSalad Pizza<lb/>
OUT-OF-SIGHT<lb/>
SAVINGS<lb/>
ON EYEWEAR<lb/>
25? OFF<lb/>
!$<lb/>
 This coupon entitles you to $25 00 oH<lb/>
I the regular $99 price for soft contact<lb/>
lenses from Bausch &amp; L omb or American<lb/>
I Optical Price includes starter kit f yc<lb/>
 examination not included Present<lb/>
I coupon at time of order or not valid<lb/>
Offer expires April 30. 1981<lb/>
Bausch &amp; Lomb or<lb/>
American Optical<lb/>
Soft Contact<lb/>
Lenses Reg puce $99<lb/>
(PEi<lb/>
VvNMOr<lb/>
A Sf 4RLF COMPANY<lb/>
NT Bill Wilder<lb/>
Wednesday Spaghetti Day 11:00-11:00<lb/>
Spaghetti-Toast Coffee or Tea<lb/>
All You Can Eat $2.49<lb/>
Thursday Lasagna Day 11:00 -11:00<lb/>
Buy One Lasagna At Regular Price Get<lb/>
Second One For A Dollar<lb/>
10M OFF<lb/>
This c oupon entitles you to $10 00 off<lb/>
the regular price of any complete pair of<lb/>
glasses you select with glass lenses<lb/>
This includes bifocal lenses Present<lb/>
coupon at time of order or not valid<lb/>
Offer expires April 30. 1981<lb/>
Phone 758-6266<lb/>
1840 E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
; $1AQO<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
L<lb/>
P<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
Prescription<lb/>
Eyeglasses<lb/>
with Glass<lb/>
Lenses<lb/>
(PEi<lb/>
A SF4RLF COMPANY<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/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
$15" OFF<lb/>
This coupon entitles you to $15 00 off<lb/>
complete eyeglasses made with<lb/>
Halfweights brand lenses -the tough<lb/>
lenses that are ' i the weight of glass<lb/>
Present coupon at time of order or not<lb/>
valid Offer expires April 30. 1981<lb/>
Prescription<lb/>
Eyeglasses with<lb/>
Halfweights -<lb/>
Brand Lenses<lb/>
(PE<lb/>
Vvisio<lb/>
A SFARLF COMPANY<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
. -I<lb/>
GREENVILLE- Carolina E Mall<lb/>
(corner of Huv 264 &amp; 13) Tel 756-8834<lb/>
For other bcattoro callroB free 800-331 UHH)<lb/>
?Rie Iteming Center has been here for you sinoe 1974.<lb/>
providing private, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of all ages at a reasonable oost<lb/>
Saturday abortion hours<lb/>
Very ?arty paregxuuacy tet<lb/>
Bvoafog ttrtfe control hour<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when you need us.<lb/>
FLEMING CENTER<lb/>
SHE<lb/>
Taco Bell<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Special<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Monday Plus tax<lb/>
Enchirito, Bean Burrito - Small Drink<lb/>
Tuetday<lb/>
Burrito Surpreme, Tostada - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Beefy Tostada, Taco -Small Drink<lb/>
Thurtday<lb/>
Beef Burrito, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
J Friday<lb/>
J Combo Burrito, Taco - Small Drink<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Two Taco Surpremes - Small Drink<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Two Tacos, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Proudly Presents<lb/>
Doors Open 8:30<lb/>
Band Starts 9:00<lb/>
juSt a pinch between the<lb/>
Wed April 15<lb/>
6$)<lb/>
Ladies ?$1.00<lb/>
n<lb/>
CninoThurs-Gld P"S<lb/>
Ladies Free<lb/>
<pb facs="00057336_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
1 HI t S1 CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 14, 1981<lb/>
Two New Marks Set<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
ByCANDICE<lb/>
MATHKWS<lb/>
Staff Writn<lb/>
Last Carolina's<lb/>
women's track team<lb/>
traveled to Chapel Hill<lb/>
this weekend, setting<lb/>
two new varsity records<lb/>
at the Carolina Relays.<lb/>
Eve Brennan, runn-<lb/>
ing the 5000 meters for<lb/>
the first time, captured<lb/>
fifth place with a time<lb/>
of 18:18.1. This time<lb/>
Net a new ECU varsit)<lb/>
record, as well as being<lb/>
a personal best for<lb/>
Brennan. Brennan also<lb/>
took fifth in the 1500<lb/>
meter run with a time<lb/>
Ol 4:44.6.<lb/>
Lisa Gray set the<lb/>
other varsity record in<lb/>
the discus with a throw<lb/>
ol 139 ft 2 inches.<lb/>
1 Ins throw captured<lb/>
third place. Gray also<lb/>
took third in the shot<lb/>
with a throw of 42 ft<lb/>
5 ; 2 inches.<lb/>
Ro Major took<lb/>
third place in the long<lb/>
jump with a leap of 18<lb/>
ft 8! : inches.<lb/>
"I was overall pleas-<lb/>
ed with the team's per-<lb/>
formance this weekend.<lb/>
SJ<lb/>
Technical<lb/>
Electronics<lb/>
And<lb/>
Maintenance,<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
756-1387<lb/>
Audio,Video,<lb/>
&amp; 2 Waj<lb/>
C onimunicalions<lb/>
Maintenance<lb/>
(Preventive to<lb/>
Overhaul)<lb/>
Services direiled h a Isl<lb/>
(lass Hi licensed lei'hni-<lb/>
cian. A student of Applied<lb/>
l'hsii's at Lalarolina<lb/>
I niversilv<lb/>
( onvenielelv located<lb/>
1 . Btocfc Off Campus<lb/>
Piik-l p and Deliver)<lb/>
Available<lb/>
M0 l)a v arrant)<lb/>
Period<lb/>
especially with our con-<lb/>
sistency said coach<lb/>
Laurie Ar rants.<lb/>
"Setting two varsity<lb/>
records and several per-<lb/>
sonal bests, we couldn't<lb/>
come away feeling too<lb/>
bad<lb/>
The Lady tracksters<lb/>
travel to Appalachian<lb/>
State University this<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Lady Netters Take 2<lb/>
BvCANDICE<lb/>
MATHEWS<lb/>
Sl?ft Writer<lb/>
East Carolina's<lb/>
women's tennis team<lb/>
played at home this<lb/>
weekend, coming away<lb/>
with two wins. The<lb/>
Lady Netters met Pfeif-<lb/>
fer College on Satur-<lb/>
day, winning easily,<lb/>
7-2. Then on Sunday,<lb/>
ECU narrow lv defeated<lb/>
UNC Charlotte, 5-4.<lb/>
In Saturday's match,<lb/>
the Lady Netters won<lb/>
their second through<lb/>
sixth singles spots.<lb/>
Debbie Christine, in the<lb/>
no. 2 position, took her<lb/>
match 6-1, 6-3. Tracey<lb/>
Eubank won her match<lb/>
6-2, 3-6, 6-2. Karen Jef-<lb/>
freys won her match by<lb/>
forfeit. In the no. 5<lb/>
spot. Kellie Adair took<lb/>
her match 6-0, 6-0.<lb/>
Chris DeSantis claimed<lb/>
her match with a final<lb/>
score of 6-0, 6-1.<lb/>
In doubles, ECU<lb/>
won the no. 2 and no. 3<lb/>
positions. The no. 2<lb/>
spot of Laura Redford<lb/>
and DeSantis won by<lb/>
forfeit. Jeffreys and<lb/>
Adair easily won their<lb/>
match 6-1, 6-1.<lb/>
In Sunday's match<lb/>
with UNC-Charlotte,<lb/>
Jeffreys again won her<lb/>
match'2-6, 7-5, 6-0. In<lb/>
the no. 5 position,<lb/>
Adair took her match<lb/>
6-2, 6-2. Carmen<lb/>
Greene, playing the no.<lb/>
6 spot, claimed her<lb/>
match 6-4, 6-7, 6-4.<lb/>
The doubles team of<lb/>
Jeffreys and Adair,<lb/>
playing the no. 2 posi-<lb/>
tion, again won their<lb/>
match 6-2, 6-3.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMATES WANTED 1 male or<lb/>
temale roommates wanted to<lb/>
share spacious 3 bedroom house<lb/>
during summer and( orfall<lb/>
Convenient location to Carolina<lb/>
East Mall and Pitt Community<lb/>
College 180 month during sum<lb/>
mer, one third utilities and $?0<lb/>
month, one fourth utilities during<lb/>
the fall can 7S6 ?0)i after s pm<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED 2 bedroom apt. in<lb/>
Wilson Acres. 4 blocks from cam<lb/>
pus SMS mo. plus one half<lb/>
utilities Call 752 9194 after 4 .30.<lb/>
FOR RENT 3 bedroom<lb/>
townhouse apts , 1 and half baths,<lb/>
appliances. cable-TV hookups, 2<lb/>
locations. River Bluff and E. tlth.<lb/>
St. No pets. $280 and S300 units,<lb/>
lease and security deposit re<lb/>
quired. JL Harris and Sons, Inc<lb/>
REALTORS, 304 W. 10th St<lb/>
758 4711 <lb/>
APT. FOR LEASE 600<lb/>
Georgetown Runs from mid May<lb/>
to Mid August Call 7S8 0333<lb/>
ROOMMATES WANTED Nice<lb/>
house on 4th St near campus and<lb/>
downtown. From mid May to mid<lb/>
August Call 752 2659<lb/>
BEDROOM AVAILABLE Large<lb/>
air conditioned bedroom<lb/>
Available May 8th Across from<lb/>
college 7S8 2585<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: 2 bedroom apt in<lb/>
Eastbrook. S73 a month plus one<lb/>
third utilities Call 7S8 3344<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED For<lb/>
summer to share 3 bedroom Tar<lb/>
River Apt SI IS month plus one<lb/>
half utilities Call 7S8 8051<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: 3<lb/>
bedroom apt. Sublease May to<lb/>
Aug. 1 block from ECU. One half<lb/>
rent. For more info, call 758-4755.<lb/>
APT. FOR LEASE : Village Green<lb/>
Apts $195 per month Call<lb/>
758 9315 or 752 8763<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Furnish<lb/>
ed apt. One half rent and utilities.<lb/>
Summer. Call 7S7 1581.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: Only S77 per month<lb/>
plus one third utilities Private<lb/>
room, air condition Within walk<lb/>
ing distance of campus For sum<lb/>
mer only Call 752 -9151 or 752 6105<lb/>
ask tor Becky, Beth, or Susan<lb/>
PERSONS NEEDED 2 or 3 peo<lb/>
pie to sub lease apt tor summer<lb/>
Located on E 3rd. Street 3<lb/>
bedrooms, part furnished Water<lb/>
included in rent For more infor<lb/>
mation call 758 7755<lb/>
FOR RENT: Furnished 3 bedroom<lb/>
apt available for summer mon<lb/>
ths. On ECU bus route Call<lb/>
758 4438 <lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: N Summift St S83 SO<lb/>
plus one third utilities Washer<lb/>
and dryer Available May 1st.<lb/>
Call 758 56 "2<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom beginning<lb/>
May 7th. 2 mi from campus Very<lb/>
low utilities S335 month Call<lb/>
753 9537.<lb/>
SUBLEASE FURNISHED APT<lb/>
For summer 3 bedrooms Air,<lb/>
near campus and ECU bus Call<lb/>
752 4989<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT S75 month<lb/>
plus one sixth utilities Suave kit<lb/>
Chen and bath Call 758 3545<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED<lb/>
3 bedroom furnished apt 3 blocks<lb/>
from campus $100 month Call<lb/>
7S2 7190.<lb/>
APT FOR SUBLEASE 2<lb/>
bedroom Call 7S8 4640<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 3310<lb/>
ROADIES Where bands make it<lb/>
rock ROADIES makes it roll!<lb/>
300 W Walnut St Downtown<lb/>
Goldsboro. phone 734 4551.<lb/>
GUITAR PLAYER WANTED<lb/>
Money making Top 40. Beach<lb/>
band Vocal ability a must Call<lb/>
757 3210 <lb/>
YOUR CAREER What are you<lb/>
doing this summer to prepare for<lb/>
it? Find out why IBM, Xerox, Pro<lb/>
ctor and Gamble, Upiohn and hun<lb/>
dreds of others want students that<lb/>
have worked with us<lb/>
FULL OR PARTTIME HELP<lb/>
WANTED Report to HL Hodges<lb/>
752 4156<lb/>
NEED PROFESSINAL TYPIST?<lb/>
Will do term papers, thesis,<lb/>
manuscript, etc Call Susan Byers<lb/>
758 8241 or 758 5488<lb/>
NEED ENTERTAINMENT? Con<lb/>
tact Eastern Music Services And<lb/>
Production Agency. Large vane<lb/>
ty of bands available, all styles<lb/>
Call 758 5676.<lb/>
ELBO ROOM The best time in<lb/>
town! The great Wednesday Night<lb/>
HUMP NITE SPECIALS<lb/>
Thursdays are always SUPER!<lb/>
Friday afternoons are still ROCK<lb/>
ING and ROLLING Sunday is<lb/>
still LADIES NITE!<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT at the<lb/>
RATHSKELLER Thursday night<lb/>
at 9:43<lb/>
OK SPORT Fers it was a good<lb/>
weekend. The B's threw a good<lb/>
party and everyone had plenty of<lb/>
oysters for some better springtime<lb/>
WALK We all hope Cobb is feel<lb/>
mg better' And sorry Jaws had to<lb/>
miss out Saturday It'saVerner!<lb/>
Where's his date! Big John, how<lb/>
was the late nite sport surfing and<lb/>
are you going to tandem soon or<lb/>
will we all have to bust loose on the<lb/>
Wolf tickets? And don't forget<lb/>
good ole HEAD! YEA!<lb/>
AMANDA: Things lust didn't<lb/>
seem to work out the way it could<lb/>
have I guess tha's my fault.<lb/>
What we had was great and maybe<lb/>
the future holds something for us.<lb/>
But remember your kiss is still on<lb/>
my list. D.S.<lb/>
QUALITY WORKMANSHIP<lb/>
on<lb/>
HI FI and CAR STEREO<lb/>
<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
SO III<lb/>
? I 1<lb/>
OHM O I II<lb/>
See Jim or Cifeg<lb/>
JIM'S SERV-A-SET<lb/>
5 3103 South Memorial Drive<lb/>
$ (Beside Parker's Barbecue)<lb/>
SpoOoooooooooo8<lb/>
JltlAMMC<lb/>
LOOK GOOD ON PAPER<lb/>
Resumes, term papers, applica<lb/>
tions, etc professionally typed<lb/>
WRITE RIGHT 756 9946<lb/>
HE S MADE IT THROUGH<lb/>
MOSER'S FARM! HE'S CON<lb/>
QUERED THE BARS WITH LOW<lb/>
FUNDS! ROBERT S LOOSE<lb/>
FOR A NEW ESCAPADE<lb/>
LOST: A silver colored, diamond<lb/>
shaped, small ring It found<lb/>
PLEASE call 757 3155 Has sen<lb/>
timental value<lb/>
YOUR CAREER What are you<lb/>
doing this summer to prepare tor<lb/>
it? Find c t why IBM, Xerox. Pro<lb/>
ctor and Gamble, Upiohn and hun<lb/>
dreds of others want students that<lb/>
have worked with us For inter<lb/>
view call 758 4513<lb/>
HAS REAGAN'S BUDGET CUT<lb/>
CAUGHT YOU SHORT? Then<lb/>
get a high paying summer Ob with<lb/>
a good Ob recommendation For<lb/>
interview call 758 4513.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE Snare drum Pearl,<lb/>
top of the line Extra deep Ex<lb/>
cond Call 757 3210<lb/>
FOR SALE Scuba gear Tank,<lb/>
regulator with psi, weights, 2<lb/>
spearguns, depth guage with com<lb/>
pass. BC S2S0 Call 758 6946<lb/>
FOR SALE Siamese kittens<lb/>
seven weeks old. chocolate point<lb/>
Call 752 7218 after 5pm<lb/>
FOR SALE Labrador Retriever<lb/>
puppies, yellow, AKC, ready May<lb/>
llth Nice graduation present<lb/>
Chris Smith, 793 9205. keep trying'<lb/>
FOR SALE Yashica Mat 124 G<lb/>
twin lens reflex camera Great<lb/>
lor art student Asking S90 Only<lb/>
used twice Call Lmdi 758 4445<lb/>
FOR SALE 73 Yamaha l7Scc<lb/>
street trail bike S375 73 Yamaha<lb/>
250cc street bike S425 Call Chris<lb/>
at 753 1082<lb/>
FOR SALE 1971 Fiat 134, needs<lb/>
transmission, less than 3.000 miles<lb/>
on overhaul Call 752 4400 after<lb/>
6 0C p m $800 firm.<lb/>
FOR SALE Rotel 60 watts stereo<lb/>
receiver with 4 channel<lb/>
capability $125 Soundesign<lb/>
8 track player recorder $50 BIC<lb/>
beltdnve turntable $75 Maranti<lb/>
75 watt 3 way speakers, 3 years<lb/>
old, slight cabinet damage, ex<lb/>
cellent sound $200 for set Call<lb/>
Dave at 756 6455 or come by M 2<lb/>
Oakmont Square Apts after 5pm<lb/>
FOR SALE Jensen Tn Axial 6 by<lb/>
9 in speakers New. still in bo<lb/>
$80 Call 752 6136<lb/>
FOR SALE Black 1980 440 LTD<lb/>
Kawasaki negotiable price, good<lb/>
condition Call 753 9403 ask lor<lb/>
John G<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS CAN BE PUR<lb/>
CHASED FROM 2 00 3 00 M F<lb/>
ONLY AT THE EAST CAROL!<lb/>
NIAN OFFICE OR BY MAIL<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
$12.00 Value<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
Better Health Brings Better Grades<lb/>
Special Membership Offer<lb/>
Present This Coupon With $1.00 Cash<lb/>
WHOLESALE BUYING CLUB<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/>
Lj?<lb/>
CARNIVAL<lb/>
SIDEWALKSALE<lb/>
?$9<lb/>
-w-?vb??8gH<lb/>
B2&amp;A<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
U<lb/>
,kj<lb/>
?JED<lb/>
.?2M<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
fes?<lb/>
y<lb/>
,es <lb/>
Jfi<lb/>
j5j&amp;<lb/>
?vv<lb/>
yyy<lb/>
W c$P J<lb/>
<lb/>
Tk<lb/>
<lb/>
Located between<lb/>
Rawl and Wright buildings<lb/>
April 15, 1981<lb/>
8:00 am - 4:00 pm<lb/>
(Rain day April 169 1981)<lb/>
UMITITED QUANTITIES AND SELECTIONS OF THE FOLLOWING I<lb/>
Over 800 Records and Tapes $2.98 up. Art Supplies up to 70 dis-<lb/>
count. Shirts, Jackets, Jerseys, up to 50 discount. New Bargain<lb/>
Books up to 40 discount. Old editions and out of print books up to<lb/>
90 discount. Racks of Greeting Cards valued up to .80 on sale for<lb/>
15c<lb/>
?1J" NO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGES<lb/>
?tu(iert ?tpp<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
. 10c Pep sis<lb/>
CANDIED APPLES<lb/>
COTTON CANDY<lb/>
POPCORN<lb/>
SI<lb/>
?tcre<lb/>
Owned and Operated by<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057336_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>