<?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">
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<pb facs="00057337_0001"/>
ffc<lb/>
?o1"<lb/>
APR 16 198!<lb/>
?he Itaat Carolinian<lb/>
DICALS<lb/>
LASI CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 N S&amp; &amp;)<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Thursday, April 16, 1981<lb/>
Greenville, North C arolina<lb/>
Circulation Hl.lMM)<lb/>
Delta Sigs Lose Out<lb/>
Fraternity Robbed<lb/>
Bv KAREN WENDT<lb/>
WMant News tdilor<lb/>
The Doha Sigma Phi fraternity<lb/>
was the victim of a larceny Saturday<lb/>
night. n estimated tour thousand<lb/>
dollars worth of goods are missing.<lb/>
According to fraternity president<lb/>
Kvle Schick the larceny took place<lb/>
about i 1:30 p.m. on Saturday night,<lb/>
April II. At the time most of the<lb/>
brothers were attending a beach<lb/>
weekend and only a few brothers<lb/>
were in the house.<lb/>
According the Schick the remain-<lb/>
ing brothers had left the house for a<lb/>
few hours and when they returned<lb/>
the) discovered the theft.<lb/>
Schick said that during the<lb/>
previous week a caller, identifying<lb/>
himself as a reporter for the campus<lb/>
paper, called and questioned one o<lb/>
the brothers concerning the size of<lb/>
the house, how many people it hous-<lb/>
ed and other general information.<lb/>
However, no one at The Last<lb/>
Carolinian or The Buccaneer is con-<lb/>
ducting a housing survey. Schick<lb/>
said that he believes that the call and<lb/>
the larceny may have been con-<lb/>
nected.<lb/>
The case is being handled by the<lb/>
Greenville City Police rather then<lb/>
the campus police since the theft oc-<lb/>
cured off campus. A detective from<lb/>
the Greenville police department<lb/>
said that they have not yet com-<lb/>
pleted their investigation.<lb/>
Missing are a Yamaha 200 watt<lb/>
amplifier,various pieces of stereo<lb/>
equipment, electric typewriters,<lb/>
desk calculators and other things<lb/>
described by Schick as being easily<lb/>
pawned. No cash or jewelry were<lb/>
stolen.<lb/>
Schick felt that if the merchandise<lb/>
were pawned in Greenville they<lb/>
might have a chance of recovering it<lb/>
but said that if it were taken out of<lb/>
the area he had little hope of any<lb/>
recovery.<lb/>
"This was done for the monetary<lb/>
value said Schick. "This is the<lb/>
first time we've ever been burglariz-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Schick also said that he believes<lb/>
that the theft was perpetrated by<lb/>
"somebody that has been at our<lb/>
house before. Somebody who was<lb/>
aquainted with a brother He did<lb/>
not state why he had (his belief. He<lb/>
did say however that he felt certain<lb/>
that it was not a prank by another<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
One brother estimated that his<lb/>
loss alone came to $1700.<lb/>
The fraternity does not carry in-<lb/>
surance, due to the high cost, but it<lb/>
is believed that the parent's o the<lb/>
victims who have homeowner's in-<lb/>
surance will be able to regain their<lb/>
lossses.<lb/>
?<lb/>
PtiOto By J'LL ADA.V<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity House<lb/>
Run?Off Decision Stalled<lb/>
Pending Official Decision<lb/>
East To Hold Conference<lb/>
John last will give a short press conference at the Ramada Inn. Ban-<lb/>
quet Room A, at 12 noon today.<lb/>
Government Plan<lb/>
Called Illegal Act"<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. as yet unwilling to agree to all the<lb/>
(C PS)-In what some"called a com- cuts, has agreed to stiffen eligibility<lb/>
promise and others an approval of requirements for Pell Grants<lb/>
"an illegal act the critical logjam (lormerly called Basic Educational<lb/>
of some federal financial aid ap- Opportunity Grants). In response,<lb/>
phcations has been broken. the Education Department has<lb/>
In late March, U.S. Department agreed to start once again process-<lb/>
of Education Secretary Terrel Bell ng Pe" Grant applications,<lb/>
announced he was halting the pro- The Reagan administration<lb/>
cessing of aid applications for 45 ?a?ed to make students trom<lb/>
davs, or until Congress agreed to the families that earn more than<lb/>
Reagan Administration's plans to $25,000 per year or that don t con-<lb/>
cut student aid tribute much toward their children s<lb/>
The halt came at the time most education ineligible for Pell Grants.<lb/>
financial aid packages are normally The House subcommittee, while<lb/>
assembled for the next academic failing to fix a strict income cutoff,<lb/>
year Students who would usually did agree in principle to lower the<lb/>
discover if they had enough money amount a family can earn and in-<lb/>
in Mav or June wouldn't find out crease the amount it must contribute<lb/>
until August or early fall. in order to 9uallfy for Pdl Grants-<lb/>
The delay in awarding aid, many The Congressional Budget Office<lb/>
administrators warned, threatened estimates the moves will disqualify<lb/>
to throw everything from fall, 1981 100,000 - 154,000 college students<lb/>
enrollment to academic year from the Pell Grants program,<lb/>
budgets into chaos. The subcommittee, however,<lb/>
Now the House Subcommittee on refused to lower the maximum grant<lb/>
Postsecondary Education, though from $1750 to $1200, as the ad-<lb/>
????;??mm? ministration had requested.<lb/>
"2T" ??t I ?-?J'iffc The subcommittee went as far as<lb/>
OH HG inolUt: It did, says Rep. William Ford<lb/>
aaBHMHHHiMaMaMM (D-Mi), because it had "a cocked<lb/>
Announcements2 gun pointing at its head " Further<lb/>
Editorials 4 delav in processing the 1.5 million<lb/>
Classifieds?? aid applications already on file<lb/>
Features 5 w?"ld wreak havoc.<lb/>
SporT ' ' ? ? ? ? 7 See GOVERNMENT page 2<lb/>
Elmer Meyer, vice chancellor for<lb/>
student affairs, will decide either<lb/>
Friday or next Tuesday whether or<lb/>
not to grant Angela Pepe's appeal<lb/>
for a second run-off.<lb/>
The University Honor Board had<lb/>
decided earlier this week to grant<lb/>
Pepe's appeal for a run-off in the<lb/>
race for SGA treasurer. Kirk little,<lb/>
incumbent treasurer, appealed the<lb/>
decision to Mever.<lb/>
According to Pepe, Mever has<lb/>
asked that she submit a legal briel to<lb/>
him explaining why she should be<lb/>
granted a second run-off. Pepe lost<lb/>
in the first run-off by eight votes.<lb/>
Pepe said of the pending decision.<lb/>
"1 haven't the vaguest idea o!<lb/>
what's going to happen. 1 guess<lb/>
everyone is going to have to wait<lb/>
and see<lb/>
"All 1 can do is wait on his deci-<lb/>
sion little stated. "There's no<lb/>
need to rush him. I'm just Filing an<lb/>
appeal. There's reallv nothing else<lb/>
to say about it right now<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod, tormer SGA<lb/>
president, dropped slander charges<lb/>
against Kirk little vesterday. Sher-<lb/>
rod explained, "1 dropped m<lb/>
charges against Kirk little because<lb/>
the time of the trial conflicted with<lb/>
my political science honor society<lb/>
banquet. People urged me not to<lb/>
come down to his level<lb/>
Hazing Occurs Despite Laws<lb/>
By SUSAN CALHOUN<lb/>
(CPS)-When the Alpha Phi<lb/>
Alpha chapter membership at the<lb/>
University of Pittsburgh "severely<lb/>
paddled" one of its pledges, the<lb/>
pledge was hospitalized with kidney<lb/>
damage, and APA was ultimately<lb/>
kicked off campus.<lb/>
A month earlier, the University of<lb/>
Southern California also kicked one<lb/>
of its fraternities off campus, also<lb/>
for hazing.<lb/>
The expulsions are indicative of<lb/>
an increasingly tough stand by ad-<lb/>
ministrators against the sometimes-<lb/>
brutal initiation procedures of their<lb/>
fraternities and sororities. But<lb/>
against this background of tougher<lb/>
stands, proliferating policy<lb/>
statements, national sanctions, and<lb/>
even new criminal laws, most<lb/>
observers agree hazing is not only<lb/>
continuing, but increasing nation-<lb/>
wide.<lb/>
Written university prohibitions<lb/>
against hazing and even previous<lb/>
warnings did not prevent the Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh incident, for example.<lb/>
Similar prohibitions existed when:<lb/>
? The Alpha Phi Alpha chapter<lb/>
at Southern Illinois at Edwardsville<lb/>
was indefinitely suspended by the<lb/>
national APA when a pledge was in-<lb/>
jured during a December<lb/>
"fraternity activity" of undisclosed<lb/>
nature.<lb/>
? Delta Tau Delta members were<lb/>
expelled from USC-owned property<lb/>
after repeated warnings about initia-<lb/>
tion practices. A "series of rituals"<lb/>
during January Hell Week caused<lb/>
the expulsion, say fraternity<lb/>
members.<lb/>
?Three pledges of Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Psi a. Tennessee felt "fear for their<lb/>
lives" when three actives? one<lb/>
brandishing a gun? kidnapped<lb/>
them and paddled them. The case<lb/>
reached a grand jury.<lb/>
? Two pledges of a frat at the<lb/>
University of Oregon were hit by a<lb/>
car while returning to campus after<lb/>
members "dropped them off miles<lb/>
from town" seven weeks ago. One is<lb/>
still in the hospital.<lb/>
In the last two years, at least three<lb/>
students have died from smiliar in-<lb/>
itiation activities. Administrators<lb/>
and legislators fear hazing is not on-<lb/>
ly on the upswing, but becoming<lb/>
more secretive.<lb/>
"I've been hearing second-hand<lb/>
reports that fraternities are pushing<lb/>
for rougher and tougher initiation<lb/>
rites relates Roger Howard,<lb/>
associate dean at the Universitv of<lb/>
Wisconsin-Madison. "We haven't<lb/>
had any formal complaints in ten<lb/>
years, but that certainly doesn't<lb/>
mean it isn't going on. People are<lb/>
just pressured not to report it One<lb/>
reason may be that in Wisconsin,<lb/>
people convicted of hazing are sub-<lb/>
ject to a jail term.<lb/>
"Initiation rites aren't as brutal<lb/>
as they used to be argues the<lb/>
University of Oregon's Bill Boland.<lb/>
"But there is an increase of more<lb/>
mentally abusive hazing, like de-<lb/>
m'eaning skits and public humilia-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
The solution to it all has eluded<lb/>
most administrators, however.<lb/>
"I got the feeling hazing was<lb/>
coming back around 1977 recalls<lb/>
Fred Yoder o Sigma Chi's national<lb/>
headquarters. It wasn't a "big pro-<lb/>
blem" in the early seventies, he<lb/>
says, because "students were more<lb/>
of a mind to question things then<lb/>
"But when student activism calm-<lb/>
ed down, fraternity membership<lb/>
started rising, and students were<lb/>
more inclined to accept things" like<lb/>
"painful initiation rites Yoder<lb/>
says.<lb/>
In 1977, Sigma Chi sent an anti-<lb/>
hazing statement to all 177 chapters<lb/>
to emphasize its "commitment<lb/>
against hazing Similarly, the Na-<lb/>
tional Interfraternitv Council made<lb/>
its 60 member houses sign a state-<lb/>
ment, and send it to its chapters.<lb/>
Most schools also have anti-<lb/>
hazing regulations on the books.<lb/>
Many publish annual reminders<lb/>
about them, Pittsburgh's Smith<lb/>
adds.<lb/>
But many administrators com-<lb/>
plain other forces hamper their ef-<lb/>
forts to prevent hazing. A recent<lb/>
USC report blamed "active<lb/>
members and alumni" for<lb/>
perpetuating hazing traditions.<lb/>
Mike Wittern. former fraternity af-<lb/>
fairs director, wrote in the report<lb/>
that many pledges won't report haz-<lb/>
ing "because the active chapter<lb/>
holds the all-powerful promise of<lb/>
membership over their heads<lb/>
"The biggest problem is the in-<lb/>
credible group pressure not to<lb/>
report a violation agrees Wiscon-<lb/>
sin's Howard. Indeed, a pledge at<lb/>
the University of Alabama was<lb/>
dismissed from Sigma Alpha Ep-<lb/>
silon after telling his father than an<lb/>
SAE active had hit a pledge with an<lb/>
axe handle during initiation.<lb/>
Alumni tolerance of limited haz-<lb/>
ing further frustrates efforts to stop<lb/>
it. "There's an attitude of T did it,<lb/>
so they should, too Yoder says.<lb/>
Most anti-reformers, he adds.<lb/>
See HAZING, page 3<lb/>
Unpaid Parking Tickets<lb/>
Can Raise Towing Fees<lb/>
Towing Fees<lb/>
Pay your tickets or else.<lb/>
Pfiofc By JON JORDAN<lb/>
B KAREN WENDT<lb/>
There has been a change in the<lb/>
campus towing procedure from last<lb/>
semester according to the ECU cam-<lb/>
pus police.<lb/>
In the present policy the towing<lb/>
company can charge different rates<lb/>
dependent on whether or not the<lb/>
student has paid for their outstan-<lb/>
ding tickets.<lb/>
According to ECU police officer<lb/>
Jay Pennell if the student has been<lb/>
towed and has not paid their<lb/>
outstanding tickets it will be marked<lb/>
on the release form.The release<lb/>
form must be obtained from the<lb/>
campus police before the towing<lb/>
company will release the car.<lb/>
If on the release it is marked that<lb/>
the student has not paid for their<lb/>
outstanding tickets then the towing<lb/>
company can charge city rates. City<lb/>
rates are $25 while normal campus<lb/>
rates are only $20.<lb/>
According to Pennel the towing<lb/>
company keeps the difference.<lb/>
Pat Gertz, another ECU police<lb/>
officer, said that the change was<lb/>
authorized by police chief Joe<lb/>
Calder. She said that the change was<lb/>
made "in an effort to get students to<lb/>
come in and pay their tickets<lb/>
The difference in towing fees for<lb/>
campus and city vehicles was a re-<lb/>
cent innovation. But according to<lb/>
Pennel, with the towing companies<lb/>
"Whatever they charge they get<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057337_0002"/><lb/>
HI I M (. kil ll <lb/>
M'KIl 16, WM<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
DOG DAY<lb/>
POETRY<lb/>
CHESS<lb/>
Yes the<lb/>
Hess I<lb/>
I the basement ot the<lb/>
HILLEL<lb/>
Con<lb/>
Brun. I It<lb/>
? (ogue<lb/>
14201<lb/>
752 WJ,<lb/>
(6 at the<lb/>
M<lb/>
info<lb/>
PAGEANT<lb/>
SLIDES<lb/>
DISCOUNT DAYS<lb/>
?<lb/>
PASSOVER<lb/>
TWIG<lb/>
-<lb/>
v<lb/>
PHYS ED<lb/>
? -<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
?? Mrs<lb/>
PBL<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
k? ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
? - A ? ' '<lb/>
?<lb/>
HONOR COUNCIL<lb/>
H<lb/>
SCOTT HALL<lb/>
?  ?<lb/>
?  ? - ?<lb/>
ext yea<lb/>
'? and vot:<lb/>
. the meet 11<lb/>
? ? .????<lb/>
?<lb/>
CATHOLICS<lb/>
? . ? - ? ?<lb/>
??? ? East<lb/>
l Monday -?.<lb/>
om tor a pit-nn A. ? ? ? ? I<lb/>
SCHOLASTIC SEARCH<lb/>
?<lb/>
ICtiVI<lb/>
enter's<lb/>
in<lb/>
i , a k yoi<lb/>
isl ot bowl<lb/>
: ' table tennis at<lb/>
mall Bov ie third<lb/>
from 3 00 until<lb/>
5 30 b m and billiards an.i I<lb/>
? an<lb/>
- ?"? '? ' IV0 p.n untii<lb/>
ELDERHOSTEL<lb/>
.<lb/>
?  . . week on a<lb/>
? ? . md<lb/>
redil set ire ii<lb/>
v.teo ' ?<lb/>
? - I<lb/>
or July 5 II<lb/>
"ELderhosti<lb/>
?<lb/>
enroi<lb/>
i<lb/>
il approach to<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
phasis on r. .<lb/>
 ? ?? .<lb/>
. . - . - -<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
<lb/>
tionat a<lb/>
ft<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
MANAGER<lb/>
?<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? ?? totk<lb/>
? ? ? ? .<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
? . . . .<lb/>
ARTIST<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
Government Plan<lb/>
May Face Lawsuit<lb/>
( ontinued I mm Page i<lb/>
lise<lb/>
non<lb/>
move a : "<lb/>
Rep ?? l) sn<lb/>
. R<lb/>
gered by<lb/>
termed an illegal<lb/>
i suing the ad<lb/>
?. ?. if the sub-<lb/>
? -mise. 1 he I S<lb/>
ation (I SSA) and the<lb/>
Independent ollege<lb/>
and University Student- (cal<lb/>
c OPl Si assert the revised schedule<lb/>
how much money a family must<lb/>
? ribute I - liege educa-<lb/>
Hi :<lb/>
Reauthorization Act ol 1980, pa<lb/>
ei.<lb/>
anges in the<lb/>
edule had to be published bet ore<lb/>
July 1. 1980, to give Congress<lb/>
enough time ' t emplate them.<lb/>
Mexican merican Legal<lb/>
? i ducational Fund<lb/>
i l 1 )M tnsidering til -<lb/>
on the same grounds.<lb/>
Bui the three groups' resolve to<lb/>
a  mpered by their<lb/>
tear an injunction to stop the terms<lb/>
npromi.se might hah<lb/>
ing altogether.<lb/>
 dela -ing<lb/>
iosi cei tainh pose even<lb/>
e problem idents figuring<lb/>
ere they can afford to<lb/>
?ol in the fall.<lb/>
Nevertheless, COPUS' Steve<lb/>
1 iefman is determined to get a legal<lb/>
gmeni on the matter.<lb/>
"We warn to sei the precedent of<lb/>
not allowing the Dept. ol Education<lb/>
lo hat they've done he told<lb/>
Higher Education Daily.<lb/>
Students are equally upset over<lb/>
Senate approval ot drastic student<lb/>
aid cuts three weeks ago.<lb/>
Ihe Senate approved measures to<lb/>
make students with Pell Grants con-<lb/>
tribute $750 in "self-help" money<lb/>
to qualify for a grant, to drop in-<lb/>
iooI interest rate subsidies for<lb/>
Guaranteed Student 1 oans, and to<lb/>
raise the interest rates on parent<lb/>
loans.<lb/>
The Senate I abor and Human<lb/>
Resourses Committee, however, still<lb/>
must tit the programs into the target<lb/>
federal budget. That means the<lb/>
policies? though not the<lb/>
numbers?- ol the budget can be<lb/>
altered, according to Sen. Robert<lb/>
Stafford's office.<lb/>
Stattord hopes to introduce a bill<lb/>
to preserve the "critically important<lb/>
payment ol interest for students<lb/>
while in school<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
SCJ<lb/>
Then . lamzational<lb/>
meet ? " ? ? ety tor Cot<lb/>
IS at 7pm 1 yes<lb/>
day April 21 in Austin room 301<lb/>
All members an persons in<lb/>
embers<lb/>
are urged to attend Plans tor the<lb/>
coming school year will be<lb/>
ssed<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
?jut Johnson An Force<lb/>
Base, Goldsboro NC w.li have a<lb/>
Coop position in ? real on open<lb/>
tor f- an 81 in ludents<lb/>
should apply to the Co op I<lb/>
iwl Build.nu IV 697V : . I<lb/>
? end ot this <lb/>
I tepai tmenl I I .<lb/>
oppositions i. ? tor Fan 81<lb/>
tor the following ma<lb/>
( hemistry, i ? . , com<lb/>
bioioay. businev ? In<lb/>
and lournalism Contact thi<lb/>
??? . ? <lb/>
LIBRARY<lb/>
Due to the recem<lb/>
hours innot pro<lb/>
. . .<lb/>
week : v81<lb/>
. . .<lb/>
week ? I la Vpi I 2t. 6<lb/>
am 9pm. Saturo.i. ?'?.<lb/>
 p m Tui<lb/>
Thurs - . ' 8 am<lb/>
i- riday ?<lb/>
. ? m S<lb/>
pn "<lb/>
Way a<lb/>
PERFORMANCE<lb/>
? v<lb/>
-<lb/>
? . <lb/>
p n v . 20. thi<lb/>
? - ? . .<lb/>
. v<lb/>
Eight Pieces I<lb/>
C a r i e ?? ? ilioi<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
Ni <lb/>
it I<lb/>
. ? ? student l fa<lb/>
WORK<lb/>
Part t.me wort <lb/>
position is open tor a student to<lb/>
work on Sundays in a n<lb/>
church w.th a teen age group The<lb/>
salary is a minimum ot $100 per<lb/>
month The position begins im<lb/>
mediately and continues through<lb/>
the summer If interested contact<lb/>
Dan Earnhardt at the v<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
GAME ROOM<lb/>
The i ege ime Room.<lb/>
? n the Aycock bas<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
ball, pool, ping pong and!<lb/>
Hours aii' Mon rhurs 15 11<lb/>
p.m. Friday ind iun r<lb/>
11 p m All pro, eeds ai<lb/>
' " ? students through the Student<lb/>
Residence Asso<lb/>
support the game roi<lb/>
DISCOUNT DAYS<lb/>
<lb/>
discount ci<lb/>
and Fridays Evi<lb/>
? ' wling.<lb/>
biliiat<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
- -<lb/>
5 30 <lb/>
tenms a<lb/>
I 00 p.n<lb/>
Don ? i<lb/>
ART<lb/>
two il art won<lb/>
'? -<lb/>
will beond<lb/>
? ?? - Bap! ?<lb/>
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print<lb/>
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Met)<lb/>
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Mr: ?<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
: ? ? ? . I<lb/>
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: - ?<lb/>
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? ? ? . ???<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
' . ! ? ? rta Camei<lb/>
is sponsoring a<lb/>
?leld at the<lb/>
y.liis Bu'it: t First<lb/>
rtiu; u,? Street<lb/>
evening Apt i i6 at ? 30 i<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
and open to an individua<lb/>
nave slides and h sh '<lb/>
ticipati<lb/>
subje<lb/>
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encou' igeo<lb/>
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elected tor ?<lb/>
and otl<lb/>
A "<lb/>
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A critique pannei<lb/>
to oft? ?<lb/>
and or to ' ' ? ? ?<lb/>
Comments <lb/>
?<lb/>
luahty of<lb/>
the slidi " ? .<lb/>
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photou- aphs at tl<lb/>
?<lb/>
Witt<lb/>
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test<lb/>
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IVCF<lb/>
FACULTYSTAFF<lb/>
An i<lb/>
  . ,<lb/>
I . ? ? ,<lb/>
?<lb/>
100 pi taff v<lb/>
?<lb/>
forget A ?<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
the an<lb/>
it<lb/>
? .<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
MEDIA BOARD<lb/>
ATHLETIC<lb/>
AESTHETICS<lb/>
i  es of<lb/>
the Jem<lb/>
CAMELOT<lb/>
-?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
CAR WASH<lb/>
it<lb/>
I he Fast C jrolinian<lb/>
BINGO<lb/>
YARD SALE<lb/>
? -<lb/>
AD ITEM POUC<lb/>
Each of these advertised items<lb/>
is required to be readily available for<lb/>
sale m each Kroger Say-on except as specih<lb/>
ly noted m this ad if we do 'un out of an item we wl<lb/>
fer you your choice of a comparable item when available refecting<lb/>
the same savings or a raincheck which will entitle you to purchase the adver<lb/>
ftsed Item at the advertised price within 30 days<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thurs , April 16<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057337_0003"/><lb/>
?r<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
?FTAlL<lb/>
I Ml I S!AKOI IMAN<lb/>
AFRII 16, 1981<lb/>
Students' Reactions Questioned<lb/>
Carnival Sidewalk Sale<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
gives Wanda Westbrook and Linda Harkand a chance to clown around. Both<lb/>
are employees of the Student Supply Store who was sponsoring the sale.<lb/>
Hazing Dangerous Practice<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
no 11 I'm older<lb/>
pters d from<lb/>
nni. We feel we<lb/>
make a little progress<lb/>
ith the cur-<lb/>
students,<lb/>
here's a<lb/>
tss sha! we need<lb/>
. woid uk It's<lb/>
like talking to a<lb/>
W ith the relative in-<lb/>
veness ol univei -<lb/>
nal gi oup<lb/>
sanctions, more states<lb/>
i resorting to legisla-<lb/>
te stop the annual<lb/>
. imidations. I ight<lb/>
ites now have passed<lb/>
anti-hazing laws. Haz-<lb/>
ing is a misdemeanor<lb/>
carrying a 30-da jail<lb/>
sentence in Wisconsin.<lb/>
. the Othei extreme.<lb/>
New Jersey makes ii a<lb/>
1on. ?it h a<lb/>
18-month prison term<lb/>
and $700<lb/>
ier ot the<lb/>
( alifornia State Stu-<lb/>
dent Association hopes<lb/>
lo persuade legislators<lb/>
in his stale to up the<lb/>
irrent hazing penults<lb/>
from a six-month<lb/>
ten a one-yeai<lb/>
lorn sentence with a<lb/>
I tine. Glazei<lb/>
les the cur rent law<lb/>
"wasn't effective in<lb/>
tnting hazing<lb/>
People are unwill-<lb/>
ing to prosecute under<lb/>
the present penal code<lb/>
because people call haz-<lb/>
ing 'accidents and<lb/>
therefore the) have no<lb/>
criminal responsibili-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
Under the new law.<lb/>
"there will be no way<lb/>
to sa hazing was an ac-<lb/>
cident<lb/>
"Fraternity member-<lb/>
ship is steadily increas-<lb/>
ing, and these non-<lb/>
accidental accidents<lb/>
must not be con-<lb/>
tinued argued bill<lb/>
sponsor Jim Cramer at<lb/>
a March press con-<lb/>
ference. "Students<lb/>
have the right to be tree<lb/>
of this outrageous in-<lb/>
dignity <lb/>
New Jersey enacted a<lb/>
ar law January 12<lb/>
after intense lobbying<lb/>
by the Committee to<lb/>
Halt I fseless college<lb/>
Killings (CHUCK).<lb/>
CHUCK, organized<lb/>
by Eileen Steens o<lb/>
Sayville, N.Y. alter her<lb/>
son died in a 1978 haz-<lb/>
ing incident, is also<lb/>
credited with getting<lb/>
stilt penalties approed<lb/>
in New York, where an<lb/>
Ithaca College student<lb/>
was killed during initia-<lb/>
tion last spring.<lb/>
But the usual protest<lb/>
of campus ad-<lb/>
ministrators against<lb/>
any kind of govern-<lb/>
mental interference in<lb/>
regulating, stud e n t<lb/>
behavior hasn't been<lb/>
heard in hazing cases.<lb/>
Indeed, one New<lb/>
York administrator<lb/>
calls the law "a great<lb/>
relic because it<lb/>
disciplines hazing<lb/>
without putting the<lb/>
onus on ad-<lb/>
ministrators, who<lb/>
generally don't like to<lb/>
offend alumni in an<lb/>
way.<lb/>
"Insofar as the law<lb/>
seres as a deterrent,<lb/>
the Wisconsin lavs is<lb/>
probably effective<lb/>
sas Howard. He<lb/>
thinks the law works<lb/>
"probably because it<lb/>
calls such 'pranks' as<lb/>
kidnapping and assault<lb/>
what they are? kid-<lb/>
napping and assault-<lb/>
instead o' hazing<lb/>
"1 think anything is<lb/>
helpful Yoder com-<lb/>
ments, "laws add<lb/>
more reinforcement to<lb/>
university and national<lb/>
fraternity positions thai<lb/>
really need it<lb/>
Most opposition to<lb/>
the new laws come<lb/>
from local fraternity<lb/>
chapters. But. says<lb/>
Cilazer, "The courts<lb/>
will decide guilt or in-<lb/>
nocence, regardless of<lb/>
whether fraternities<lb/>
support the decision<lb/>
(CPS)High schol<lb/>
students at different<lb/>
locales around the<lb/>
country drew<lb/>
widespread attention<lb/>
for their questionably<lb/>
cheerful reaction to the<lb/>
March 30 attempted<lb/>
assassination of Presi-<lb/>
dent Ronald Reagan,<lb/>
but a few college<lb/>
students are also fin-<lb/>
ding themselves in trou-<lb/>
ble because of similar<lb/>
responses to the news.<lb/>
At the University of<lb/>
Pennsylvania, a student<lb/>
newspaper columnist<lb/>
wrote "I hope he<lb/>
dies"two days after the<lb/>
shooting. Senior<lb/>
Dominic Manno, ex-<lb/>
pressing what he calls<lb/>
liis "frustration with<lb/>
the political system<lb/>
wrote in his Daily Pen-<lb/>
nsylvaman column,<lb/>
'My first reaction to the<lb/>
assassination attempt<lb/>
was 'too bad he (the<lb/>
gunman) missed<lb/>
In the column, Man-<lb/>
no suggested that peo-<lb/>
ple as frustrated as he<lb/>
might have sufficient<lb/>
motive to use "a bullet<lb/>
to cancel out the<lb/>
ballot<lb/>
Hundreds of angr<lb/>
readers telephoned the<lb/>
paper to protest the<lb/>
comments, according<lb/>
to Executive Editor An-<lb/>
drew Kirtzman.<lb/>
Manno wouldn't<lb/>
change his mind about<lb/>
his sentiments in the<lb/>
column, but confessed<lb/>
he was "suprised by the<lb/>
magnitude and the<lb/>
vehemence of (the pro-<lb/>
mts)<lb/>
The column also<lb/>
caught the attention of<lb/>
the Philadelphia office<lb/>
o the Secret Service,<lb/>
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where special agent<lb/>
Kevin Tucker announc-<lb/>
ed an investigation was<lb/>
underway.<lb/>
Tucker says he want<lb/>
to determine "whether<lb/>
Manno has a propensi-<lb/>
ty to carry them (his<lb/>
sentiments) out, or<lb/>
whether he has a pro-<lb/>
pensity for violence<lb/>
University President<lb/>
Sheldon Hackney says<lb/>
he was "appalled" by<lb/>
the column, but sas<lb/>
the university plans no<lb/>
disciplinary action.<lb/>
"He has a right in<lb/>
our s o e i e t y - -a nd<lb/>
especially on a universi-<lb/>
ty eampusto speak his<lb/>
mind, no matter how<lb/>
abhorrent his ideas<lb/>
Hackney said in a state-<lb/>
ment to the press.<lb/>
University ot<lb/>
California-Berkeley.<lb/>
political science<lb/>
students also spoke<lb/>
their minds although<lb/>
more spontaneously.<lb/>
Some clapped and<lb/>
cheered when news of<lb/>
the shootings was an-<lb/>
nounced in class, accor-<lb/>
ding to junior David<lb/>
Hartman, one of the<lb/>
student sin the class.<lb/>
Hartman says he also<lb/>
overheard cheering<lb/>
from other locations on<lb/>
campus through an<lb/>
open window. But one<lb/>
woman in the room<lb/>
who laughed at the an-<lb/>
nouncement was hissed<lb/>
at by other classmates.<lb/>
At the I niversity ot<lb/>
Denver. students<lb/>
crowded in a basement<lb/>
io drop and add classes<lb/>
reacted to the news<lb/>
"unsv mpathetically<lb/>
according to campus<lb/>
newspaper reports. One<lb/>
woman commented.<lb/>
"The shock hadn't<lb/>
sunk inI'm too busv<lb/>
just hoping that he<lb/>
dies.<lb/>
Denver student<lb/>
Janice Thomas at-<lb/>
tributed the lack of<lb/>
sympathy to anger over<lb/>
Reagan's proposed<lb/>
budget cutbacks in stu-<lb/>
dent aidWith so<lb/>
much violence in this<lb/>
country added Mar<lb/>
na Regehr ot the<lb/>
University of Illinois,<lb/>
"the attempted<lb/>
assassination was not<lb/>
really shocking<lb/>
In Palo Alto,<lb/>
California, reaction<lb/>
from the editors o!<lb/>
Stanford University's<lb/>
humor magazine, the<lb/>
Chapparral, was less<lb/>
calculated. An issue<lb/>
featuring a mythical<lb/>
storv about a "Reagan<lb/>
assassination" hit the<lb/>
newstands just two<lb/>
hours before Reagan<lb/>
was in fact shot in<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
I he storv, called<lb/>
?'Who Shot R.R?" was<lb/>
written three months<lb/>
ago, but appeared in<lb/>
the March 30 issue by<lb/>
"sheer coincidence<lb/>
says business manager<lb/>
lames Gable.<lb/>
The magazine's<lb/>
parodv describes a tiv.<lb/>
tional shooting o the<lb/>
president during a<lb/>
"White House<lb/>
Rodeo Suspects in<lb/>
the case were various<lb/>
"welfare recipients<lb/>
"poor people and<lb/>
Tarrv Hagman and<lb/>
Nancv Reagan<lb/>
Ciable savs he has no<lb/>
plans to take the issue<lb/>
off the stands. "We<lb/>
recieved no flak about<lb/>
the article he says. "I<lb/>
think everyone realized<lb/>
tht it was just a really<lb/>
strange coincidene, and<lb/>
there was nothing at all<lb/>
malicious involved<lb/>
Can You Write<lb/>
Then we have a job for<lb/>
you.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
needs writers in all areas. No<lb/>
experience necesary.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Souths No. 6<lb/>
Rock Nightclub<lb/>
DOLPHIN REC. ARTISTS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057337_0004"/><lb/>
tttije lEaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Pai i C ui : ins.<lb/>
Jimmy Dupju i .<lb/>
Paui LlNlKl , ,?<lb/>
Dave Severin, ???,?? ??,?,<lb/>
Al ISON BARTH , Produaw, Mi<lb/>
1)1 BORAH HolAl INC. ??<lb/>
CHARI is CHAND1 IK v,? e<lb/>
Dv in Norris.  <lb/>
April 16. 19SI<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Round Three<lb/>
SGA Treasurer Run-Off Appearant<lb/>
Following Monday's decision by<lb/>
the Review Board to grant Angela<lb/>
Pepe a second run-off in the race<lb/>
for SGA treasurer, the final deci-<lb/>
sion on the matter has fallen upon<lb/>
the shoulders of Chancellor Thomas<lb/>
Brewer and Vice Chancellor Elmer<lb/>
Meyer. The decision they will make<lb/>
is an important one, to sa the least.<lb/>
and could affect student govern-<lb/>
ment at East Carolina University<lb/>
for years to come.<lb/>
The situation surronding thd<lb/>
treasurer's race is so twisted that it<lb/>
defies understanding. Pepe won the<lb/>
general election by 49 votes. But in-<lb/>
cumbent Kirk Little was within two<lb/>
percent, a margin that qualified him<lb/>
for a run-off. So he filed for the se-<lb/>
cond election, and the fur began to<lb/>
fly.<lb/>
In quick succession Little filed<lb/>
charges against Pepe, and she filed<lb/>
countercharges. He claimed she had<lb/>
violated elections rules bv not sub-<lb/>
mitting a list oi nei campaign<lb/>
workers on time. Angela claimed<lb/>
Kirk had slandered her reputation<lb/>
I ; 11!<lb/>
he charged that one oi her campaign<lb/>
workers, SGA President Charlie<lb/>
Sherrod, was responsible for alter-<lb/>
ing his campaign advertisement that<lb/>
appeared in this newspaper.<lb/>
Already heads were spinning, but ?<lb/>
as the saving goes ? the best was<lb/>
yet to come.<lb/>
Both candidates dropped their<lb/>
charges against each other. But Lit-<lb/>
tle decided to press his claim against<lb/>
Sherrod, who filed charges that Lit-<lb/>
tle had slandered his reputation.<lb/>
Amid all this furor the SGA<lb/>
managed to hold the run-off; Little<lb/>
won by eight votes. It was finally<lb/>
over, everyone thought. But that<lb/>
would have been too simple. The<lb/>
elections rules did not clearly<lb/>
specify what would happen if the<lb/>
candidates in a run-off were within<lb/>
two percent of each other. Run off a<lb/>
run-off? At first it seemed absurd,<lb/>
but the election rules were am-<lb/>
biguous enough to permit such an<lb/>
interpretation. Our soap opera<lb/>
takes another turn.<lb/>
Sherrod was cleared of the<lb/>
charges against him and later drop-<lb/>
ped those against Little. All that<lb/>
was left to determine is whether or<lb/>
not to grant a second run-off. Both<lb/>
sides can find reasonable arguments<lb/>
for their points o view. Tho situa-<lb/>
tion lias diagged Oil o n. 11v <lb/>
thai many bitter feelings have<lb/>
developed,<lb/>
the aii and erase these bitter feelings<lb/>
is to hold another run-off. In effect<lb/>
both candidates could start from<lb/>
scratch, run a clean campaign and,<lb/>
win oi lose, know that they had<lb/>
done their best.<lb/>
No decision can satisfy everyone,<lb/>
but holding a second run-off is the<lb/>
most equitable solution available.<lb/>
DOfr FEEL 6AP.3 OOfT THINK THEY KNOW WHCT5 GOING OM EITHER<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
'Petty Polities' Causes Problems<lb/>
Many people who are in SCiA,<lb/>
whether it is the judicial or legislative<lb/>
branch, are mostly first termers. The<lb/>
problem is that now we have that ex-<lb/>
perience that is needed to effectively run<lb/>
the SGA the students involved are leav-<lb/>
;ng. Some of you may be wondering<lb/>
'HV 1 he ANSWER: Petty Politics,<lb/>
ivfudslinging, abuse of POWER and<lb/>
playing games that bring back memories<lb/>
of my childhood. Some people change<lb/>
when they get into power and forget who<lb/>
elected them to office, but not everyone.<lb/>
The vast majority of the students in<lb/>
SCiA care for the population that they<lb/>
represent, but for the FEW who don't, I<lb/>
wonder how they can live with<lb/>
themselves. It the shoe fits an) of your<lb/>
feet then 1 suggest you wear it and watch<lb/>
where you step.<lb/>
For those of you who are wondering if<lb/>
I am going to be back along with the rest<lb/>
of the rebels, you BETTER believe it.<lb/>
We will not hide our heads or stop talk-<lb/>
ing until the petty bickering done in the<lb/>
name of helping the students is stopped.<lb/>
1 hope that with the ushering in of<lb/>
1 ester Nail and his Cabinet the trash<lb/>
that has been building up will be burnt<lb/>
down.<lb/>
MARINA P. ZIGOVSKY<lb/>
Junior, Corrections<lb/>
Article Praised<lb/>
l just wanted to thank you greatly for<lb/>
the article on stress and anxiety that you<lb/>
printed in The East Carolinian last<lb/>
Thursday ("Classroom Phobias Can<lb/>
Cause Crippling Effects on Students").<lb/>
Your article proved to me that there are<lb/>
others besides myself plagued by stress<lb/>
and the horrible symptoms that come<lb/>
with it. 1 thought 1 was the only<lb/>
"weirdo" walking around campus simp-<lb/>
ly because I have the normal anxiety-<lb/>
produced feelings. I am now suffering<lb/>
from depression (mostly caused by anx-<lb/>
ieties). Other than the professional help<lb/>
and the support from my family and<lb/>
friends, your article was my only other<lb/>
consolation.<lb/>
The article did a great deal to relieve<lb/>
me of the misery of stress by helping me<lb/>
to understand what my anxiety and<lb/>
depression is and what the inevitable<lb/>
symptoms are that come with it. Because<lb/>
of your concern for students under so<lb/>
much pressure (those like myself)i my<lb/>
faith in people who sincerely caie for the<lb/>
welfare of others has been confirmed. I<lb/>
began to wonder if The has! Carolinian<lb/>
could ever be informative and helpful in<lb/>
the interest of students. I have been con-<lb/>
vinced that your newspaper staff cares<lb/>
about more than just Student Govern-<lb/>
ment meetings, elections, and the other<lb/>
usual events that were never of much in-<lb/>
terest to me. Your article proves that<lb/>
you real!) care about the students on this<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
MARTI BABB<lb/>
Humanitarian Venture<lb/>
1 wish to compliment you on the<lb/>
feature article by Katharine Kimberly in<lb/>
the April 2 edition of your paper. The<lb/>
need for organ transplants is all too<lb/>
comomon. 1 heartily endorse the organ<lb/>
donor drive on April 8. This is a<lb/>
humanitarian venture which I would en-<lb/>
courage all to participate in. I would<lb/>
also remind people that as they re-<lb/>
register for their driver's license that<lb/>
they will have the opportunity to in-<lb/>
dicate on their driver's license that they<lb/>
are a potential organ donor.<lb/>
CARL R. MORGAN, Ph.D.<lb/>
Professor and Chairman<lb/>
Department of Anatomy<lb/>
Banner Complaints<lb/>
I would like to formally complain<lb/>
about the campaign banners that so<lb/>
wonderfully adorn our campus. Now<lb/>
that the election is long gone, do the can-<lb/>
didates who so ardently claim to care<lb/>
about the university agree that it is time<lb/>
to remove these atrocities? Not to<lb/>
SINGLE any one out, but there are a<lb/>
TON of the things hanging OVER this<lb/>
MAN'S campus.<lb/>
SPENCER K. STEPHENS<lb/>
Senior, Psychology<lb/>
Clarification<lb/>
When 1 was sworn in as a member oi<lb/>
the Appeal Board, it was with the<lb/>
understanding that it 1 felt 1 could not<lb/>
act as a fair and neutral parts on any<lb/>
case 1 would withdraw from that case. !<lb/>
have lived up to that expectation. Tins is<lb/>
wh) 1 feel i! is necessary to del<lb/>
tinsel I concerning printed statements in<lb/>
the Tuesday, April 14. WSl edition ol<lb/>
the East Carolinian The article ap-<lb/>
peared on page 1 oi the paper and was<lb/>
entitled "Second Runfl I ooms; 1<lb/>
to File Appeal<lb/>
In the article I was quoted as saving.<lb/>
"I saw Charlie before the meeting but he<lb/>
did not try to tell me how to vote He I<lb/>
didn't mention ngela or Kirk's names,<lb/>
but we did discuss the ambiguit) ol the<lb/>
rules. Dodd latei denied having spoken<lb/>
with Sherrod. 1 did not converse with<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod Whal I did sa)<lb/>
"1 saw Charlie before the meeting b i<lb/>
did not try to tell me how to vote. He<lb/>
didn't mention Angela or Kirk's names.<lb/>
1 did discuss the ambiguit) ol the rules<lb/>
with another person who appeared on<lb/>
the scene at the same tune. I did not con-<lb/>
verse with Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
Charlie and 1 exchanged greetings but<lb/>
if this can be warranted a conversation. 1<lb/>
stand corrected.<lb/>
It il becomes necessary to provide a<lb/>
witness to the truthfulness of mv<lb/>
statements, I can do so. My roommate<lb/>
was awake and attentive during this mid-<lb/>
night phone conversation. She can<lb/>
testif) that b) the omission of a period<lb/>
and some not so insignificant words, the<lb/>
paper added a touch of sensationalism<lb/>
to its siorv.<lb/>
In closing. I can say that 1 acted on<lb/>
this case by examining the rules in Arti-<lb/>
cle of the SCiA Handbook. This was<lb/>
mv onl) consideration. 1 must question<lb/>
the impartiality o Miss Briggs and Miss<lb/>
Williams considering that they cannot<lb/>
channel their negative feelings toward<lb/>
certain parties into the appropriate ac-<lb/>
tions. If the internal discussion of the<lb/>
Appeal Board is going to be made public<lb/>
then why does it take place in private<lb/>
behind securely closed doors'<lb/>
CATHY I. DODD<lb/>
'Reconciliation Resolution' Causes Lengthy Debate In Senate<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? On the day that<lb/>
President Reagan was shot, the Senate was<lb/>
deeply involved in its consideration of<lb/>
what is called the "budget resolution" for<lb/>
the fiscal year beginning October 1. Ac-<lb/>
tually, its proper name is "reconciliation<lb/>
resolution" ? but, by whatever name it is<lb/>
a fairly complicated procedure in terms of<lb/>
rules for debate, time limitations, etc.<lb/>
I suppose all of us remember precisely<lb/>
where we were and what we were doing at<lb/>
the time of momentous events that have<lb/>
occurred during our lifetimes.<lb/>
If you are old enough to remember Pearl<lb/>
Harbor, chances are you vividly recall your<lb/>
reaction when you learned that the<lb/>
Japanese had attacked. The same is true,<lb/>
I'm sure, concerning the assassination of<lb/>
President Kennedy in 1963, and other<lb/>
events.<lb/>
REAGAN ? 1 had just walked off the<lb/>
Senate Floor into a cloakroom when the<lb/>
message came that there had been a<lb/>
shooting involving President Reagan at the<lb/>
Washington Hilton Hotel. A Senate<lb/>
employee hastily turned on a television set;<lb/>
Jesse<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
one of the television reporters was on the<lb/>
screen saying that the President had<lb/>
escaped with no more than a "bump on the<lb/>
head" after having been pushed into the<lb/>
presidential limousine by a security officer.<lb/>
From that point, the whole confusing<lb/>
episode began to unroll. Perhaps an hour<lb/>
elapsed before it became certain that the<lb/>
President had not escaped the gunman's<lb/>
fire, and that Jim Brady, the President's<lb/>
press secretary, was near death. (In fact,<lb/>
one network reporter stated that Jim<lb/>
Brady had died.)<lb/>
FACES ? I shall never forget the ashen<lb/>
faces of Senators as they crowded into the<lb/>
cloakroom to listen to the latest news<lb/>
reports. There was great fear, which I<lb/>
shared, that the President's condition may<lb/>
have been worse than reported. The news<lb/>
reports were so confused that it was dif-<lb/>
ficult to place great confidence in the bab-<lb/>
ble of news reports being filed by the<lb/>
various news people.<lb/>
The Senate stopped its work on the<lb/>
budget resolution and went into recess for<lb/>
most of the remainder of the day. Not until<lb/>
the following day. when it was apparent<lb/>
that the President was out of danger, did<lb/>
we resume work on the budget.<lb/>
GUN CONTROL ? Immediately there<lb/>
came a deluge of telegrams and telephone<lb/>
calls to our office, some demanding that<lb/>
Congress not be stampeded into ill-<lb/>
considered action.<lb/>
Interestingly enough, the attempt to<lb/>
assassinate President Reagan occurred in a<lb/>
city with perhaps the toughest gun control<lb/>
law in the country. The debate between<lb/>
those who favor gun control and those<lb/>
who oppose it became increasingly shrill ?<lb/>
as it always does. By the end of the week,<lb/>
however, it began to taper off. It is not at<lb/>
all likely that a federal gun control law will<lb/>
be enacted by Congress. It is not likely that<lb/>
even President Reagan will change his<lb/>
stand in opposition to gun control.<lb/>
FORD ? Former President Jerry Ford<lb/>
was among those who contended that the<lb/>
solution to the rising violence in America<lb/>
lies with the courts, and with laws that per-<lb/>
mit violent people to commit crimes, often<lb/>
with very little risk of stern punishment.<lb/>
Jerry Ford perhaps shocked some when<lb/>
he voiced the opinion that it should be a<lb/>
capital crime to attempt to assasinate a<lb/>
President or other prominent figures. One<lb/>
report, in fact, indicated that the former<lb/>
President included all violent crimes in-<lb/>
volving the use of guns. <lb/>
1 do not have at hand precisely what Mr.<lb/>
Ford said, but many believe he is on the<lb/>
right track. If it is ever made clear that<lb/>
quick and stern punishment is in store for<lb/>
anybody engaging in criminal violence, I<lb/>
am confident that there would be a<lb/>
decrease in such crime.<lb/>
Too many excuses have been used to<lb/>
avoid throwing the book at criminals. As a<lb/>
result, the streets of W ashington and other<lb/>
cities are no longer safe. What is needed, in<lb/>
my judgment, is criminal control ? not<lb/>
gun control.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The Last Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points oj view. Mail or<lb/>
drop (hem by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across Jrom Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes oj verification, all tetters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature oj tie author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
davs.<lb/>
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I HI t AM l A KOI INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
AI'KIl lh. ls?Kl<lb/>
Page<lb/>
Patti Smith's Guitarist Steps Out<lb/>
By LORENA ALEXANDER<lb/>
l?8l National Nt? Hurrau<lb/>
While rock poet Patti Smith con-<lb/>
tinues to enjoj her current hiatus<lb/>
from the rigors of the music<lb/>
business, her sidemen (collectively,<lb/>
the Patti Smith Group) are all keep-<lb/>
ing bus developing projects of their<lb/>
own. In particular. Patti's No. 1<lb/>
Glimmer Twin, 1 ennv Kaye, has<lb/>
begun an ambitious venture that has<lb/>
paid off in the form o hot music<lb/>
and hot gigs.<lb/>
I he I enny Kay Connection plays<lb/>
rock V roll, and they're catching<lb/>
on. No great surprise, considering<lb/>
Kaye's renown both as lead guitarist<lb/>
with the Patti Smith Group, and as<lb/>
longtime collaborator with the punk<lb/>
poetess.<lb/>
Bv December. 1979, Smith<lb/>
followers had grown restless over<lb/>
her inactivity. I hen. with the start<lb/>
o a new decade, word spread that<lb/>
the Patti Smith Group was taking<lb/>
off the entire year, and that an-<lb/>
nouncement has met with continued<lb/>
speculation. In our recent conversa-<lb/>
tion, Kay set the record straight, ex-<lb/>
plaining, "Patti decided to take this<lb/>
year off and get her personal life<lb/>
together and find some new direc-<lb/>
tions because she felt in a large part<lb/>
that she'd done what she'd set out to<lb/>
do when we first began, and she<lb/>
doesn't like to repeat herself and<lb/>
didn't want to scale down her ideals.<lb/>
She wanted to keep a forward-<lb/>
looking posture.<lb/>
"In 1971 when we did our first<lb/>
reading (initially Kaye was the music<lb/>
part o Smith's early poetry recita-<lb/>
tions), we had no conception of<lb/>
what we wanted to do or where we<lb/>
wanted to go. We just got it started<lb/>
and built it up, and when it ended in<lb/>
1979, it was like our '70s movie he<lb/>
said. "Now 1 think she wants to br-<lb/>
ing it back to that beginning and<lb/>
start it all over again, build it up<lb/>
again and see exactly where it takes<lb/>
us, say over the course of the next<lb/>
ten years. She's not really in any<lb/>
hurrv. Rock 'n' roll is the kind of<lb/>
field where people feel if you're not<lb/>
touring or you don't have a record<lb/>
coming out in a month, nobody<lb/>
remembers you. Patti's an artist.<lb/>
She feels she has her whole life to<lb/>
make art and it doesn't have to hap-<lb/>
pen according to some artificial<lb/>
timetable. I'm a little more oriented<lb/>
towards rock 'n' roll and its whole<lb/>
biological time clock, so I get a little<lb/>
restless myself<lb/>
With the now-married Smith in<lb/>
no apparent rush to return to the<lb/>
stage, Kaye filled his time with a<lb/>
new band o' his own. "I love what<lb/>
Patti does he commented. "I'll<lb/>
always play with her and the group<lb/>
is still together abstractly while Patti<lb/>
undertakes her new directions. But<lb/>
until she decides what her next move<lb/>
is, I'm kind of enjoying discovering<lb/>
things about myself that 1 didn't<lb/>
know before. (This band) forces me<lb/>
No bin Lane At The Attic<lb/>
Warner Brothers recording artists Robin I unc and the (harthiisfers<lb/>
will perform at dreenviUe's Attic this Naturdas night tor one shov on-<lb/>
ly . The band plas a combination of new wave and traditional rock<lb/>
numbers and has recorded three albums to dale including their latest<lb/>
I P entitled Imitation Life.<lb/>
Symphony To Perform<lb/>
1 he North i Sv mphony<lb/>
will perform in East Carolina<lb/>
I niversity's Minges Coliseum April<lb/>
23 at 8 p.m. 1 he performance will<lb/>
feature the lull orchestra, conducted<lb/>
by James Ogle.<lb/>
1 he event is co-sponsored by<lb/>
WITN-TV, the Greenville Arts<lb/>
c ouncil, and ?( I<lb/>
Advance tickets may be purchas-<lb/>
ed at Belk-Tyler, the Book Barn, the<lb/>
Pitt Plaa Record Bar and ECU's<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center in<lb/>
Greenville, and from the Farmville<lb/>
and Washington Arts Councils.<lb/>
Advance tickets are $5.50 for<lb/>
adults, S3.50 for students and senior<lb/>
citizens, and S2 for children aged 15<lb/>
and under. At-the-door tickets are<lb/>
S6, S4 and $2.<lb/>
I ickets may also be purchased by<lb/>
mail from Cheryl Taft, 303<lb/>
Kenilworth Road, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834. Checks should be made<lb/>
payable to the N.C. Symphony.<lb/>
Carolina Opry House<lb/>
Presents The Coulters<lb/>
B DOUG QUEEN<lb/>
siaft W nr<lb/>
I his Friday and Saturday night,<lb/>
April 17th and 18th, at the Carolina<lb/>
Opry House, the fabulous Coulters<lb/>
will play in concert. The Coulters,<lb/>
an fcpic Recording group, are<lb/>
among the fastest rising artists in the<lb/>
Carolina area. When Raleigh's<lb/>
Music City opened last fall, the<lb/>
Coulters were the first-night act.<lb/>
Since that auspicious beginning,<lb/>
they have become the veritable<lb/>
"House Band And each time thev<lb/>
play a crowd ot devoted followers<lb/>
turn out en masse for the best in<lb/>
original and contemporary music.<lb/>
in the last couple of months the<lb/>
Coulters have fronted some of the<lb/>
hottest acts in modern music. These<lb/>
include Joe Sun, Alabama, the<lb/>
Amaing Rhythm Aces, and an up-<lb/>
coming four city tour in the<lb/>
Carolinas with Emmy Lou Harris.<lb/>
I saw them in Raleigh fronting the<lb/>
Amazing Rhythm Aces. Although<lb/>
thev performed first, they un-<lb/>
doubtedlv blanketed the Aces. It<lb/>
must have been disconcerting for<lb/>
the Aces when the crowd chanted<lb/>
"Colters, Coulters. Coulters<lb/>
after the Aces' concluding set.<lb/>
Well, who are the Coulters? The<lb/>
Coulters are John Colclough, who<lb/>
plays banjo, guitar, and fiddle, San-<lb/>
dy Colclough on keyboards and<lb/>
guitar, and Sandy's sister Nancy<lb/>
Lowe on various percussion in-<lb/>
into areas which I ordinarily would<lb/>
let Patti deal with. For instance,<lb/>
writing lyrics, something 1 never<lb/>
would do for this music I write for<lb/>
her, but on my own I find that it<lb/>
helps my own sense of words. So it<lb/>
just makes me 'work a little harder<lb/>
and learn about what my own<lb/>
possibilities are<lb/>
Along with bassman Patrick<lb/>
O'Connor and David Donen on<lb/>
drums. Kaye serves as lead<lb/>
guitaristvocalist with his quartet.<lb/>
Up until a few weeks ago, Richard<lb/>
Sohl from Smith's band was a<lb/>
fourth member, but as Kaye ex-<lb/>
plained, "Richard doesn't want to<lb/>
play live anymore. He'll help me out<lb/>
in the studio, but I'll have a new<lb/>
keyboard player for when we play<lb/>
gigs. I'm not exactly sure what his<lb/>
name is yet. It'll be interesting<lb/>
Describing just what kind of<lb/>
music the band makes, Kaye ex-<lb/>
plained, "We mostly play a lot of<lb/>
my original things, plus a few<lb/>
selected golden nuggets of rock 'n'<lb/>
roll historical lore. We're going to<lb/>
be releasing a single on our own Mer<lb/>
label called Child Bride, backed<lb/>
with live version of Tracks oj My<lb/>
Tears from CBGB's. It'll be my first<lb/>
recorded product under this new<lb/>
identity (Anyone who wants to<lb/>
obtain the single can send $2 plus 50<lb/>
cents postage to: Radio Fthiopia,<lb/>
P.O. Box 407, Murray Hill Station,<lb/>
N.Y NY. 10016.)<lb/>
The band has appeared live at<lb/>
most of New York's prime rock<lb/>
spots, but beyond that, said Kaye,<lb/>
have done "nothing formal,<lb/>
because I want the time to tinker<lb/>
with the engine of this thing on a<lb/>
gradual basis. 1 think over the past<lb/>
month or two, I've been starting to<lb/>
forge my own identity with a lot of<lb/>
Patti-fans who come to see what I'm<lb/>
doin' on my own. 1 get the feeling<lb/>
that they're starting to accept me as<lb/>
a frontman. I myself am opening up<lb/>
and getting more relaxed on stage,<lb/>
seeing what 1 am like up there in a<lb/>
position of leadership<lb/>
Kaye expressed much enthusiasm<lb/>
over being rediscovered by fans who<lb/>
have followed his career in the Pat-<lb/>
tie Smith Group. I'm anxious to<lb/>
show them what exactly this new<lb/>
stuff is like. I have a long reputation<lb/>
in rock 'n' roll and when I came out<lb/>
on my own I tried to make this thing<lb/>
grow with a sense of quality and in-<lb/>
tegrity. I'm pretty happy with the<lb/>
way things are evolving<lb/>
And how does Patti Smith feel<lb/>
about Kaye's independent evolu-<lb/>
tion? "She likes this he revealed.<lb/>
"She approves of it. She likes the<lb/>
fact that the Mer label has been<lb/>
reactivated to put out my first<lb/>
record. She likes the fact that I'm<lb/>
busy, because that's one of the<lb/>
reasons why we took off this time,<lb/>
not just so she could find a new<lb/>
direction, but so we could all find<lb/>
See GUITARIST, page 6. col. 7<lb/>
struments. The interesting feature<lb/>
ot this talented trio is the incredible<lb/>
harmony. Sandy and Nancy, being<lb/>
sisters, have genetically blended<lb/>
voices which adds a dimension like<lb/>
stereo did to mono. To this fine<lb/>
mixture comes John's clear basso<lb/>
profundo rounding out this tight<lb/>
harmony from the lower registers.<lb/>
You may think from this article<lb/>
that singing makes the Coulters.<lb/>
Not so. A fine vocal performance is<lb/>
equally complemented with their in-<lb/>
strumental expertise plus the ex-<lb/>
cellent backup from their band.<lb/>
I he Coulters, hailing from the<lb/>
Triangle area, blend a nice selection<lb/>
of music from original material and<lb/>
standard classics. On the night that I<lb/>
saw them at Music City, they played<lb/>
Eddie Rabbin's Driving My Life<lb/>
Away; Say You'll Be Mine and Ride<lb/>
like the Wind, both by Christopher<lb/>
Cross; On The Road Again by Willy<lb/>
Nelson, and Blue Bayou by Linda<lb/>
Ronstadt, which blew me away. I'm<lb/>
a strong Ronstadt fan and love Blue<lb/>
Bayou greatly, but Sandy sang it so<lb/>
purely that she made it hers,<lb/>
Ronstadt notwithstanding.<lb/>
The Coulters, produced by Larry<lb/>
Gatlin, have released two singles,<lb/>
Tor Me You're All There Is and<lb/>
Crazy Old World which reached the<lb/>
Top Ten in Austin, Texas. They also<lb/>
have recorded an album for Epic<lb/>
although it is not yet available in<lb/>
this area.<lb/>
A Sure Sign Of Spring<lb/>
Bugs Are All Over The Place<lb/>
Bv DAVID NORRIS<lb/>
I futures ditnr<lb/>
It became obvious that spring had<lb/>
arrived the other night. I hat<lb/>
wonderful revelation vas not the<lb/>
result ot the warm temperatures,<lb/>
fragrant breezes or blooming trees,<lb/>
but the fact that a bug had drowned<lb/>
in my drink.<lb/>
Bugs are a major feature of life<lb/>
during the spring and summer mon-<lb/>
ths. 1 suppose thev are around to<lb/>
keep the warm, sunn) times of the<lb/>
year from being too perfect.<lb/>
I here is just no figuring out bugs.<lb/>
The little varmints constantly zero<lb/>
in on my glasses o ice tea and then<lb/>
make their death plunge. On the<lb/>
other hand, it there is one you really<lb/>
want to swat, thev tlv around like<lb/>
crazy to get away .<lb/>
Many bugs don't do anything ex-<lb/>
cept flutter around. Moths are the<lb/>
best example o this. Every night,<lb/>
they congregate around the lamp<lb/>
and television, fluttering and soak-<lb/>
ing up light. When this gets<lb/>
tiresome, thev just sit on a wall foi a<lb/>
couple of hours. A nice thing about<lb/>
moths is that thev are easy to swat<lb/>
when thev sil still.<lb/>
Sometimes, large, wierd and<lb/>
unidentifiable bugs hover around in<lb/>
the house. I he like to look at and<lb/>
startle people, I guess.<lb/>
Dragon flies are pretty neat bugs.<lb/>
Their double wings make them<lb/>
resemble World War I airplanes. I<lb/>
could watch them for hours.<lb/>
Of all the flying bugs. I think the<lb/>
wasps are the most sinister and<lb/>
dangerous. Alter getting stung<lb/>
once. I've developed a terrible<lb/>
paranoia about these entirely un-<lb/>
necessarv homicidal maniacs o the<lb/>
n<lb/>
Vw<lb/>
-t?G( VJieRQ 606S frOVCfc AdOVO The H0US6<lb/>
insect world. From a distance, they<lb/>
sort of resemble starships from<lb/>
some evil space empire. Close up.<lb/>
they resemble wasps, which is even<lb/>
more terrifying.<lb/>
What 1 really hate is having wasps<lb/>
trapped inside. (An.) bug stupid<lb/>
enough to gel stuck inside a house<lb/>
shouldn't be allowed to have<lb/>
stingers.) They keep buzing<lb/>
furiously against the windows and<lb/>
screens so that you can't take aim<lb/>
and smash them with a newspaper.<lb/>
Of course, there are many bugs<lb/>
that can only crawl around, missing<lb/>
out on the glory o' flight. (They can<lb/>
walk on the ceilings, though, which<lb/>
must be kind of fun.)<lb/>
Caravans of ants begin ransack-<lb/>
ing our food supplies around this<lb/>
time of year. Thev make a colorful<lb/>
sight, patiently plodding along to<lb/>
their anthills with grains of sugar in<lb/>
their mouths.<lb/>
Ants are amaing for their ability<lb/>
to live almost anywhere, such as<lb/>
dorm closets, the ground, bags of<lb/>
sugar, boxes of saltines and pancake<lb/>
mix and nearly anywhere else that<lb/>
they are not wanted.<lb/>
Cockroaches are a year-round<lb/>
resident o' many rooms around<lb/>
here. 1 hey are chiefly known for<lb/>
their ability to pick up and run of!<lb/>
with food items that are too heaw<lb/>
tor ants to carry.<lb/>
Although not biologically<lb/>
classified as insects, spiders do sort<lb/>
of fall into the general category of<lb/>
"bags They appear in huge<lb/>
numbers during the warm months<lb/>
of the year, spinning sticky, yucky<lb/>
webs just about everywhere people<lb/>
have to walk. Tew things are as<lb/>
unpleasant as a faceful of spider<lb/>
web.<lb/>
Spiders also are good at lurking in<lb/>
quiet corners of a room, until they<lb/>
are discovered by a shrieking per-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Anyway, while you are enjoying<lb/>
your summer and worrying about its<lb/>
inevitable end, you can at least con-<lb/>
sole yourself with the thought that<lb/>
winter will at least wipe out most of<lb/>
the bug population, giving us a little<lb/>
rest from them.<lb/>
Lecture On Haiti<lb/>
Planned Next Week<lb/>
The Department of Foreign<lb/>
languages and Literatures is spon-<lb/>
soring a lecture entitled<lb/>
"Educational Reform in a Bilingual<lb/>
Situation: The Case o Haiti ' by<lb/>
Dr. Albert Valdman of Indiana<lb/>
University.<lb/>
The lecture will be held Wednes-<lb/>
day, April 22 at 3:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Nursing Building Auditorium,<lb/>
Room 101.<lb/>
Haiti, the poorest nation in the<lb/>
Western hemisphere, is embarking<lb/>
on a reform of its primary education<lb/>
system featuring the use of the ver-<lb/>
nacular, Creole, as primary<lb/>
classroom language instead of the<lb/>
official language, French. The lec-<lb/>
ture will review the complex rela-<lb/>
tionship of French and Creole in<lb/>
Haiti and present the arguments pro<lb/>
and con on the educational reform,<lb/>
touching on some of the underlying<lb/>
socio-political issues.<lb/>
Albert Valdman is professor of<lb/>
French and Italian and of<lb/>
Linguistics at Indiana University. A<lb/>
graduate of the University of Penn-<lb/>
svlvania (A.B. 1953) and of Cornell<lb/>
(M.S Ph.D. 1960), he has written<lb/>
extensively on problems of second<lb/>
language acquisition, French<lb/>
linguistics, and Creole languages. He<lb/>
is currently conducting a socio-<lb/>
linguistic survey in Haiti aimed at<lb/>
describing the linguistic environ-<lb/>
ment of rural Haitian children.<lb/>
Today's Trivia Quiz<lb/>
Tests Knowledge<lb/>
Of Famous Sidekicks<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Dunn Chosen For '8182Squad<lb/>
Susan Dunn has been chosen as one of the eight new ECU<lb/>
cheerleaders who will serve during the '8182 schoolyear. She has had<lb/>
two years of formal training in dance and attended the C Summer<lb/>
( heerleading (amp in 1978 at UNC Charlotte.<lb/>
B DAY ID NORRIS<lb/>
and<lb/>
WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Sidekicks. You know, the other<lb/>
guy. The one who always had to do<lb/>
the dirty work but never received<lb/>
much credit. Batman had Robin,<lb/>
Sherlock Holmes had the faithful<lb/>
Dr. Watson. These are the only<lb/>
freebies you'll get because from now<lb/>
on you'll be on your own. Twenty-<lb/>
five names will be listed below and<lb/>
your job will be to name the<lb/>
sidekick. If you name all 20, you'll<lb/>
be deserving of your own sidekick.<lb/>
1. Matt Dillon's old partner<lb/>
(before Festus)<lb/>
2. Don Quixote<lb/>
3. Cisco Kid<lb/>
4. Napolean Solo<lb/>
5. Jim West<lb/>
6. Green Hornet<lb/>
7. Ralph Kramden<lb/>
8. Sgt. Joe Fridav<lb/>
9. Shari Lewis<lb/>
10. Yogi Bear<lb/>
11. Peabody<lb/>
12. Rocket J. Squirrel<lb/>
13. Avery Shriver<lb/>
14. Dan Rowan<lb/>
15. Rosencrantz<lb/>
16. Capt. Binghamton<lb/>
17. Edgar Bergen<lb/>
18. Col. Wilhelm Klink<lb/>
20. Lucy Ricardo<lb/>
21. Quick Draw McCiraw<lb/>
22. Oliver Hardy<lb/>
23. Barney Google<lb/>
24. Laverne DeFazio<lb/>
25. Bud Abbott<lb/>
01PIS03<lb/>
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P3 'L ?iEM "9 uopaoQ snuiauv $<lb/>
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<lb/>
! ' '<lb/>
<pb facs="00057337_0006"/><lb/>
IHtfcAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 16, 1981<lb/>
LfMOMGfiour Cocct6TMt NK0 (AJty<lb/>
51 OtoiO Mi$<lb/>
IT S 60ie)G"K FCc OUT<lb/>
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Guitarist Steps Out<lb/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
V,<lb/>
( ontinued from page 5<lb/>
new ways ot expressing ourselves.<lb/>
Then in the final analysis when we<lb/>
come together as a group we're only<lb/>
more solid. We've never been the<lb/>
type of band that says 'well, it's all<lb/>
for one and one for all and nobody<lb/>
can do anything else because that's<lb/>
the easiest way to create a sense of<lb/>
frustration<lb/>
Yet, once Smith is ready to<lb/>
reunite her group, what will become<lb/>
of the Kaye Connection? "1 don't<lb/>
want to put any carts before the<lb/>
horse he answered. "1 think that<lb/>
both bands will co-exist. If the<lb/>
don't, my first loyalty of course is to<lb/>
Patti. She knows that and I know<lb/>
that. But I suspect, given Patti's<lb/>
current profile, that it will be possi-<lb/>
ble to have both of them. Maybe my<lb/>
band could open up for Patti and<lb/>
solve the problem we've always had<lb/>
with opening acts<lb/>
That would be a lot of work for<lb/>
Kaye, but a treat for Kaye's fans<lb/>
While the followers of the Patu<lb/>
Smith group anxiously await a reu-<lb/>
nion, there is the Lenny Kaye Con-<lb/>
nection for them to explore and ex-<lb/>
perience.<lb/>
Happenings<lb/>
Campus Events:<lb/>
Thursday 16<lb/>
? 1:00 p.m. Men's Baseball: VM1 (2) Harr-<lb/>
ington Field<lb/>
? 7:00 p.m. Gamma Beta Phi Student Center<lb/>
Aud. 244<lb/>
Friday 17<lb/>
? Good Friday<lb/>
? 5:00 p.m. Deadline: Intramural Horseshoes,<lb/>
(Singles &amp; Doubles)<lb/>
? 7:00 p.m. Men's Baseball: Baptist College,<lb/>
Harrington Field<lb/>
? April 17-18 Women's Softball: Appalachian<lb/>
State Invitational, Boone, N.C.<lb/>
? April 17-20 Student Union Sponsored Myrtle<lb/>
Beach Trip<lb/>
Saturday 18<lb/>
? 7:00 p.m. Men's Baseball: Baptist College,<lb/>
Harrington Field<lb/>
Sunday 19<lb/>
? EASTER<lb/>
? April 19-20 Library Closed<lb/>
? April 19-26 Passover<lb/>
Monday 20<lb/>
? State Holiday<lb/>
? 1:00 p.m. Men's Baseball: Campbell, Harr-<lb/>
ington Field<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
? 8:00 a.m. Classes Resume<lb/>
? April 21-23 Intramural Horseshoes (Singles &amp;<lb/>
Doubles) College Hill Courts<lb/>
? 2-10:00 p.m. Faculty Senate Meeting, Student<lb/>
Center 221<lb/>
? 4:30 p.m. Intramural Council Meeting.<lb/>
Memorial Gym 104<lb/>
? 5:00 p.m. Young Home Designers League,<lb/>
Van Landingham Room<lb/>
? 7:00 p.m. Student Nurses Association, Nurs-<lb/>
ing 101<lb/>
? April 21-23 Intramural Horseshoes (Singles &amp;<lb/>
Doubles) College Hill Courts<lb/>
Wednesday 22<lb/>
? 2-10:00 p.m. Faculty Senate Organizational<lb/>
Meeting, Student Ctr. 221<lb/>
? 3:00 p.m. Women's Softball: N.C. Wesleyan<lb/>
College, Home<lb/>
? 6:00 p.m. Men's Baseball: Atlantic Christian,<lb/>
Harrington Field<lb/>
? 9:00 p.m. Small Ensemble Concert, A.J. Flet-<lb/>
cher Rec. Hall<lb/>
? 9:00 p.m. Peppermint Soda, Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
? 7:00 p.m. Grand Illusion, Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
School of Art<lb/>
April 19-April 29<lb/>
? Annual Undergraduate Show ? The very best<lb/>
undergraduate student work of the year from the<lb/>
School of Art.<lb/>
? April 16, 8:15 p.m. Young Artists Honors<lb/>
Recital, Fletcher<lb/>
School of Music<lb/>
? April 20 Percussion Ensemble Concert, 9:(K)<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
? April 21 Young Artist Winner's Recital, Ken-<lb/>
neth Hubbard, saxophone<lb/>
? April 22 Small Ensemble Concert, 9:(X) p.m.<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
Buccaneer<lb/>
? "Scanners" (R) Shows at 1:10, 3:10. 5:10,<lb/>
7:10, &amp; 9:10 p.m.<lb/>
? "Hardlv Workin" (PC.) Shows at 1, 3. 5, 7, &amp;<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
? "Ordinary People" (R) Shows at 2:00, 4:30,<lb/>
7.00, &amp; 9:20 p.m.<lb/>
? Starting Friday: "Inside Moves"<lb/>
Plaza<lb/>
? "Going Ape" (PC.) Shows at 3:30. 5:20, 7:10,<lb/>
&amp; 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
? "Nighthawks" (R) Shows at 3:20, 5:15. 7:10,<lb/>
Upsilon Zeta Week Planned<lb/>
&amp; 9:05 p.m.<lb/>
? "The Postman Always Rings Twice" (R)<lb/>
Shows at 2:30 , 4:45, 7:00, &amp; 9:15 p.m.<lb/>
Nightlife<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Thursday BR1CE STREET wRecord Bar<lb/>
Break Out<lb/>
Friday LARRY RASPBERRY &amp; THE<lb/>
H1GHSTEPPERS<lb/>
Saturday ROBIN LANE &amp; THE CHART-<lb/>
BUSTERS<lb/>
Sundav CTRKUS wEaster Special<lb/>
Tuesday BONNIE BRAMLETT &amp; JOE<lb/>
ENGLISH w3 PM BAND<lb/>
Wednesday GOOD HUMOR (Mug Night)<lb/>
Carolina ()pr House<lb/>
Thursday GOLD DUST<lb/>
Fridav COULTERS<lb/>
Saturday COULTERS<lb/>
Tuesday JIMMY GYLES &amp; FIDDLE<lb/>
MAGIC<lb/>
Wednesday JIMMY GYLES &amp; FIDDLE<lb/>
MAGIC<lb/>
Chapter X<lb/>
Thursday Pi Kappa Phi "Lucky Ladies Nite"<lb/>
-10 p.m.<lb/>
Friday Alpha Delta Pi "End of Week Party"<lb/>
-7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday Best in Beach Music<lb/>
Sunday Kappa Alpha "Nickel Nite"<lb/>
Tuesday Pi Kappa Phi "Lucky Ladies Nite"<lb/>
adics Lockout 8-10 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday Sigma Nu "50.50 Beach Nite"<lb/>
I I bo Room<lb/>
1 hursday 1 he Original College Nite yy Lamb-<lb/>
da Chi Fund Raiser 7:00-9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Friday End o Week Party<lb/>
Saturday Dance Music At Its Best<lb/>
Sunday Ladies Nite<lb/>
Tuesday Crazy Tuesday<lb/>
Wednesday Hump Nite!<lb/>
f you have anything you would like put in<lb/>
Happenings, please send it to Nancy Morns. The<lb/>
Fast Carolinian, Fast Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
The Upsilon Zeta Week from Tuesday,<lb/>
chapter of the Omega April 21 til Saturday,<lb/>
Psi Phi fraternity is April 25.<lb/>
presenting its first an- On Tuesday, there<lb/>
nual Upsilon Zeta will be a basketball<lb/>
Senior Show Held<lb/>
Two-dimensional art<lb/>
works by Allen Jones<lb/>
McDavid of Sanford<lb/>
are on display April<lb/>
12-19 in the gallery of<lb/>
the Baptist Student<lb/>
Center on Tenth St.<lb/>
The exhibition will<lb/>
include woodcut and<lb/>
intaglio prints,<lb/>
photographs, illustra-<lb/>
tions and mixed media<lb/>
items.<lb/>
McDavid is a can-<lb/>
didate for the BA<lb/>
degree in communica-<lb/>
tion arts at ECU and<lb/>
the son of Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. Philip H.<lb/>
McDavid of Route 1,<lb/>
Sanford.<lb/>
game in Memorial Gym<lb/>
to benefit the Heart<lb/>
Fund.<lb/>
A slave auction will<lb/>
be held on the Mall<lb/>
Wednesday. There will<lb/>
also be a D.J. and<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Thursday, a<lb/>
brotherhood cerepiony<lb/>
will be held on the cam-<lb/>
pus of N.C. Central<lb/>
University.<lb/>
A step show and<lb/>
special ceremonies will<lb/>
be held Friday at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
On Saturday, the<lb/>
fraternity will hold a<lb/>
car wash. There yvill<lb/>
later be a party at the<lb/>
L e d o n i a Wright<lb/>
Cultural Center to top<lb/>
off the week's eyents.<lb/>
"W<lb/>
BENNIES<lb/>
crrco<lb/>
WRECKER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Prwllnd<lb/>
AHanmwit<lb/>
All Typ?s of<lb/>
Auto Rapatr<lb/>
?K<lb/>
mSSBm Emm<lb/>
I7M-4SM<lb/>
s<lb/>
Technical<lb/>
Electronics<lb/>
And<lb/>
Maintenance,<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
r<lb/>
COPIES<lb/>
Copy Center<lb/>
Copies<lb/>
 4.25c<lb/>
100 OR MORE<lb/>
ic 1T0 99<lb/>
cn?f Caw ??<lb/>
cm ??? I ?"?<lb/>
Wtwi?ui? t Ktlill lei SiKt SO U Bag<lb/>
Keg of ice Delivery-24 Hrs<lb/>
756-1387<lb/>
Audio,Video,<lb/>
&amp; 2 Wiv<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
Maintenance<lb/>
(Preventive to<lb/>
Overhaul)<lb/>
Str?kei directed b a 1st<lb/>
Umn Kl licensed lechni-<lb/>
cian. A Mudenl of Applied<lb/>
Phsic at Fast Carolina<lb/>
I niversil.<lb/>
C'onvenielelv Located<lb/>
S 2 Block Off Campus<lb/>
Pick-Lp and Delivery<lb/>
Available<lb/>
90 Da Warranl<lb/>
Period<lb/>
THE<lb/>
EXPERIENCE<lb/>
OF A<lb/>
LIFETIME.<lb/>
Now that you"ve got it, put<lb/>
it to work. Share it with<lb/>
poor people in Peace<lb/>
Corps nations who need<lb/>
your experience in teach-<lb/>
ing, electronics, farming,<lb/>
family skills and many<lb/>
other areas. Help make a<lb/>
difference Call Peace<lb/>
Corps<lb/>
Recruiters On Campus Apnl 2) 22 (9 am 4 pm )<lb/>
Sign Up Now For Your Interview At The Career<lb/>
Planning ana Placement Source Office<lb/>
ftell<lb/>
want<lb/>
Your ArtCarved representative will be on campus soon to show you the<lb/>
latest in class ring designs. With dozens of styles to choose from, you'll be proud to select<lb/>
your one-of-a-kind design. Just tell us what you want. And be on the<lb/>
lookout for posters on campus to get you where you want.<lb/>
April 22, 23, 24<lb/>
ECU Student Store Lobby<lb/>
.ABORTION<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here for you Blnoe 1974 providing private, understanding health oare to women of all ages at a reasonable oost Saturday abortion hours Ft? prananoy taste Vary wurlv praf&amp;anqy taste Bw suing birth control hour The Fleming Center we're here when you need us. Oafl781-MeOtoFj0elghanytW<lb/>
lw:i:t:jri,MiOieIwiOHM?;l <lb/>
- <lb/>
? ? I<lb/>
Taco Bell<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Special<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Monday PS tax<lb/>
Enchirito, Bean Burrito - Small Drink<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Burrito Surpreme, Tostada - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Beefy Tostada, Taco -Small Drink<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Beef Burrito, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Combo Burrito, Taco - Small Drink<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Two Taco Surpremes - Small Drink<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Two Tacos, Pintos n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
MARK YOUR CALENDARS!<lb/>
3rd Annual<lb/>
SENIOR SOCIAL<lb/>
?<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/>
I mU<lb/>
Prepar<lb/>
HsH VR<lb/>
a e<lb/>
star<lb/>
<lb/>
Jan .<lb/>
Feltl<lb/>
Joi<lb/>
B l H KI<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I s<lb/>
I<lb/>
B01 I<lb/>
High S I<lb/>
N <lb/>
gradu.t<lb/>
Both als<lb/>
lege ball<lb/>
under Fj<lb/>
Cremins<lb/>
assistant<lb/>
junior and<lb/>
When C<lb/>
coaching<lb/>
palachian<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057337_0007"/><lb/>
lit<lb/>
HI i M I K( ?1 l <lb/>
Sports<lb/>
 I' k 11<lb/>
Top-Ranked Lady Bucs<lb/>
Score Sweep Of Heels<lb/>
i ad Pirate Cynthia Shepherd fakes suino<lb/>
B WI1 1 I AM H. YE1 l RION<lb/>
sMslnnt SpOtlS (HlOt<lb/>
After her top tanked 1 ad)<lb/>
Pirates captured the championship<lb/>
of the prestigious N. . State Invita<lb/>
tional last Saturday, coach. Ahta<lb/>
Dillon hoped hei team would<lb/>
"come down out ol the clouds" so<lb/>
the) wouldn't be overconfideni in<lb/>
playing arch-rival North Carolina<lb/>
I uesdav afternoon.<lb/>
1 he onl thing thai came out ot<lb/>
the clouds, though, was the Space<lb/>
Shuttle, because the Lad) Pirates<lb/>
are still up there, especiall) after<lb/>
sweeping the Heels 6-1 and 16<lb/>
" I hese games were easiet than we<lb/>
expected Dillon said. "Carolina<lb/>
had a bad day, but oui defense had<lb/>
a lot to do with thai We knew these<lb/>
games wouldn't be pushovers<lb/>
1 verybodv on the team got to play,<lb/>
and we wound up scoring more runs<lb/>
in the second game<lb/>
1 he I ad) Bius pushed ovei -<lb/>
i uns in the fit si two innin<lb/>
ded two more in th hen<lb/>
Kath) Rile) belted a two i un<lb/>
homer I he Pii ? itfieldei<lb/>
had tw o hits i ii a a . in<lb/>
lentionalh walked I the<lb/>
at let no<lb/>
Kilos's homei a extra<lb/>
base lut the 1 ad) I the<lb/>
tus! game -<lb/>
the cau , at<lb/>
the plate in th 6 .<lb/>
la: I leeh' me m<lb/>
the bottom ol ! he<lb/>
tough Buc del<lb/>
ly fou hile<lb/>
the far Ht<lb/>
to non . an<lb/>
outstan - on.<lb/>
1 !u Bu<lb/>
in tl<lb/>
the erupf 1 i<lb/>
c ai olina ad<lb/>
to up the k<lb/>
"he I ai <lb/>
the bot<lb/>
! hen the game was called bet I<lb/>
the Pirates' huge lead<lb/>
Pitchei Jeanette koth. who also<lb/>
bulled the first game, was the offen<lb/>
sive star tor the Bucs in the second<lb/>
ie b) going tw I ? three <lb/>
chet 1 eslie Bunn added a triple, and<lb/>
Mai v Powell chipped in w it<lb/>
ble tot the Pirates.<lb/>
koth had an<lb/>
-<lb/>
six Hies in the two games.<lb/>
I he two losses dropped I<lb/>
ranked lar He - i 16<lb/>
m said hei team tiled<lb/>
death" ov<lb/>
number one "It wast<lb/>
iurpi i -<lb/>
there ma be a in not<lb/>
:ful. I'm gl<lb/>
I he regu ;<lb/>
will enable us<lb/>
. L'ommui<lb/>
in the state<lb/>
I he Pii ate<lb/>
looking foi wai d to Frida<lb/>
Prepares For Fall<lb/>
Nelson Gets O.K.<lb/>
11 RI ' M) II R<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
1 las<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? more<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
-N -<lb/>
<lb/>
i ?1<lb/>
ill OUIrehabilitation pro-<lb/>
am on<lb/>
;<lb/>
"Ik is<lb/>
'<lb/>
Hlittle<lb/>
Vmhs<lb/>
' him<lb/>
<lb/>
ween<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
Nel - coui se. be 11;<lb/>
ting to<lb/>
volved ? port. I<lb/>
that this . lcm<lb/>
? ? ' ? a<lb/>
 t ?; "motivated"<lb/>
Mea<lb/>
hores fo<lb/>
t w o . <lb/>
I<lb/>
It a hough,<lb/>
 ednesda) N<lb/>
mage, Hn he Buc<lb/>
: thwai<lb/>
the hopes ol the iI ofl<lb/>
crew .<lb/>
I speciall) impressive on defense<lb/>
vtere cornerbacks I reddie Jones<lb/>
Gerald Sykes fime aftet time the)<lb/>
mac ic k les ol both i un<lb/>
nei s and em tcks.<lb/>
1 oda  I hut sda i the 1<lb/>
vs ere l vis,<lb/>
coache ?? foi : ht <lb/>
25 Purpli ? ime<lb/>
will be divided u<lb/>
: w , ? gi? ip i ? .nips w ill : I<lb/>
drafi the remaining personnel.<lb/>
 arlton NtUon Is On fhe Move Again<lb/>
finale against the fourth ranked<lb/>
 i ilfpa 1 ol N.C. State in (ireen<lb/>
ville "They will be good games<lb/>
she noted "We need to beat then.<lb/>
to carr) our confidence over into the<lb/>
playoffs<lb/>
Dillon said that the top lour<lb/>
teams in the league advance to the<lb/>
 to see who represents the<lb/>
the regional. She said there<lb/>
a possibilit) ol two teams from<lb/>
North arolina going to the<lb/>
regionals.<lb/>
I he National rournament will be<lb/>
held in Raleigh the weekend ol May<lb/>
I5-I6. 1 he field will include the top<lb/>
teams from each region and five<lb/>
et at large team- "I he tourna-<lb/>
ment, being in Raleigh, is very im-<lb/>
rtant tor area fans Dillon said.<lb/>
' iametime foi the double-header<lb/>
with State is 3 p m. Seniors Kathy<lb/>
kile. Lillion Barnes. Mar) Powell<lb/>
1 ydia Rountree make their last<lb/>
appear I i ! ad) Pii<lb/>
uniforn<lb/>
Big Easter<lb/>
Lies Ahead<lb/>
For Pirates<lb/>
i baseball i<lb/>
mebacl? aftet I<lb/>
U N C - W i 1 n<lb/>
-<lb/>
i jays<lb/>
I ht<lb/>
it Ja<lb/>
!it (Thursday) as a<lb/>
 Ml gel - und<lb/>
w.tv at lb  6:00.<lb/>
bill wiil follow<lb/>
ting<lb/>
Baptiit Collej  ns at<lb/>
pin n<lb/>
Bapt sf tali Han<lb/>
with a single<lb/>
;e wet to - 'p.m.<lb/>
1 C I ha- 1 aitei Sunda) oft<lb/>
?re coming back to Harringl<lb/>
anothei doubleheader on Mon<lb/>
fternoon. Campbell is the foe<lb/>
ginning at 1:00.<lb/>
I he seven-game swing is the<lb/>
a 15-game hon<lb/>
Pirates have before wrapping up<lb/>
r regular season on Slav 3 with a<lb/>
p to North C arolina.<lb/>
A Pirate Arrives, Another Departs<lb/>
Felton Accepts Tech Post,<lb/>
Joins Old Friend Cremins<lb/>
Byn ri imii m IK<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
pas!<lb/>
<lb/>
(B ?? - B r e 11 theii olina lire. iamecot k<lb/>
assis1 e 11 o n' s<lb/>
an 'tsons.<lb/>
Wlns gothe head<lb/>
posi?p<lb/>
Pilatnanin 1976, 1 elton<lb/>
? tduate assis-<lb/>
I ie sta)<lb/>
ill time assistant's<lb/>
N . &amp; 1 Next came<lb/>
ob.<lb/>
a well-respected<lb/>
primaril)<lb/>
team's<lb/>
. 'liege All-<lb/>
ies Green this<lb/>
I yet<lb/>
"la ited to accept<lb/>
aid. " I his op-<lb/>
enls a step foi<lb/>
.? m profes<lb/>
11 careei (ieorgia 1 ech is<lb/>
u4 institution<lb/>
ition involv -<lb/>
ademic arid athletic<lb/>
- ns.<lb/>
" I his oppoi tunit) ol fers an<lb/>
illenge and associa<lb/>
tion with the tlantit oast<lb/>
 inference<lb/>
I elton added that he had<lb/>
lied man fond memories<lb/>
! i I<lb/>
"I feel the tune I have spent<lb/>
at 1 t I and especiall) m<lb/>
association with (. oach Odom<lb/>
had a tremendous affect<lb/>
upon mv professional ad-<lb/>
vancement. Coach Odom ex-<lb/>
emplifies a strong conviction<lb/>
to the program and undet his<lb/>
s' . e. leadership and<lb/>
tion 1 feel the I l<lb/>
al program will con-<lb/>
tinue to flourish and grow to<lb/>
the optimum<lb/>
(dom was obiously in<lb/>
dispair over Felton's depar-<lb/>
ture, but wished the formei<lb/>
6-10 Reichenecker Signs,<lb/>
Becomes 3rd ECU Recruit<lb/>
New (ieorgia Tech Assistant Coach George Felton<lb/>
Pit ate assistant the best ol<lb/>
luck in Atlanta.<lb/>
"Surelv Georgia lech has<lb/>
taken the right step in naming<lb/>
a qualit) pet son like George to<lb/>
help build its voting pro-<lb/>
gram (dom said.<lb/>
Building a program is just<lb/>
whatremins and 1 elton have<lb/>
ahead of them, the Yellow<lb/>
Jackets going 4-23 this past<lb/>
season<lb/>
"1 know this is one heck ol<lb/>
a challenge Felton said. "It<lb/>
will be a lot ol hard work but 1<lb/>
don't mind working. 1 just<lb/>
hope the people and players in<lb/>
Atlanta will be as cooperative<lb/>
as they have been here in<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Felton added that he fell<lb/>
t ieorgia 1 ech had much to ol<lb/>
fei a young athlete, naming<lb/>
several "selling points" Mutt<lb/>
he would use m all impoitant<lb/>
reci uiting el foi is<lb/>
" big selling point is the ci-<lb/>
ty ol Atlanta 1 elton claim<lb/>
ed "It is widely acknowledged<lb/>
as one ol the most progressive<lb/>
cities m the country.<lb/>
'I also think Coach<lb/>
t remins himsell ?ill be a big<lb/>
selling point. He will be the<lb/>
youngest head coach in the<lb/>
ACC and 1 think that will be<lb/>
appealing<lb/>
With 1 elton's depai mi e.<lb/>
( kioin has two remaining aides<lb/>
full-time assistant 1 ddie<lb/>
Payne and graduate assistant<lb/>
Dav id Pendei ei<lb/>
1 asi L'arolin<lb/>
- h )aedom annout<lb/>
last night the sigi<lb/>
seas<lb/>
David fc. Rt ker, a<lb/>
! 220-pound .<lb/>
 k e ille, I la , si<lb/>
.tl letter with the I'<lb/>
ght at his home.<lb/>
17<lb/>
Reichenecket averaged 13.2<lb/>
points and 9.2 rebounds<lb/>
Niceville High, School this past<lb/>
season i<lb/>
several honors tot his<lb/>
He was named all-conference,<lb/>
all county and honorable men<lb/>
tion all siate.<lb/>
I he Pirates b a<lb/>
othei schools in then effoi ts to<lb/>
sign the youngster. Others<lb/>
Reichenecket was considering<lb/>
were Stetson. Jacksom ille and<lb/>
thwest 1 ouisiana<lb/>
odom had high praise foi<lb/>
his reciuit.<lb/>
"ydid is the epitomy ol an<lb/>
interscholastic student-athlete<lb/>
whose best playing days are<lb/>
ahead ol him said the third-<lb/>
yeai Pirate coach.<lb/>
"He has a wealth ol untap-<lb/>
ped talent. I )av id is a very con<lb/>
sciencious young man who<lb/>
craves hard work. It's a good<lb/>
situation in that David is eager<lb/>
to learn and we are eagei to<lb/>
teach<lb/>
"I agei to learn" would<lb/>
perfectly d e s c r i b e<lb/>
Reichenecker, who savs thai is<lb/>
his mam objective.<lb/>
"I've been playing basket-<lb/>
ball since about the fifth<lb/>
grade he said, "but 1 really<lb/>
haven't had anybody to teach<lb/>
me a lot about the game except<lb/>
; summer camps<lb/>
I dom noted that his recruit<lb/>
was blessed with "good<lb/>
Stands" and added that with<lb/>
Aork he could become a "real<lb/>
factor<lb/>
Reichenecker, who grew in<lb/>
heighth from 6-1 to 6-8 bet-<lb/>
ween his ninth and tenth grade<lb/>
years, said he chose to come<lb/>
north for a number ol reasons.<lb/>
" hen I visited 1 left feel-<lb/>
ing like it was really a nice<lb/>
school he said. " 1 hey've<lb/>
got a good business school M,d<lb/>
1 think 1 might like to get into<lb/>
business<lb/>
Reichenecket had reported<lb/>
lv also been considering atten-<lb/>
ding Jacksonville but said that<lb/>
political problems there ? two<lb/>
coaches have been tired for<lb/>
unknown reasons ruled that<lb/>
school out ol his considera-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
i wo other recruits have<lb/>
been signed b the Pirates this<lb/>
season, a pair ol junioi college<lb/>
 Americans 6 9 -l Mack<lb/>
ol New York and 6-7 Charles<lb/>
Green ol ashington.<lb/>
I he signmg ot Reichenecker<lb/>
ironically came on the same<lb/>
dav that ECU assistant coach<lb/>
George Felton announced that<lb/>
he was leaving the school to<lb/>
become an aide under newly-<lb/>
hited head coach Bobb<lb/>
t remins of Georgia Tech.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057337_0008"/><lb/>
I Ml I SI t A KOI I MAN AI'RIl 16. 1WI<lb/>
Defender Club<lb/>
Gains Berth<lb/>
Due to Loss<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
North Carolina Soccer<lb/>
League<lb/>
The American<lb/>
Defender Soccer Club<lb/>
has gained a berth in<lb/>
the state playoffs even<lb/>
though they lost Sun-<lb/>
day to Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian, 1-0. This was<lb/>
made possible because<lb/>
their only challenger<lb/>
for the final playoff<lb/>
spot, the Wilson, Soccer<lb/>
Club, also losi.<lb/>
1 he match between<lb/>
the two rivals was very<lb/>
physical and some fine<lb/>
defensive play b both<lb/>
seams thwarted some<lb/>
excellent scoring op-<lb/>
portunities. 1 here was<lb/>
no score until five<lb/>
minutes left when Cobc<lb/>
of Columbia passed to<lb/>
Eli as Jacobo of<lb/>
Paraguay six yards<lb/>
from the net for the<lb/>
goal that gave Atlantic<lb/>
Christian the victory.<lb/>
The top two teams in<lb/>
each division of the<lb/>
North Carolina Soccer<lb/>
League made it to the<lb/>
playoffs, and the<lb/>
American Defenders<lb/>
finished in second place<lb/>
behind Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian with a 5-3 record.<lb/>
The Stroh's Aliens<lb/>
also tost their final<lb/>
game of the season to<lb/>
the Kick Soccer Club of<lb/>
Wilson b y a 3-2<lb/>
margin. The Aliens<lb/>
tallied once in each half<lb/>
with Robbie Einger<lb/>
scoring after his penal-<lb/>
t kick was blocked b<lb/>
the Kick goalie, but the<lb/>
rebound came straight<lb/>
back to him and he put<lb/>
the ball in the opposite<lb/>
corner.<lb/>
Club Sport<lb/>
Review<lb/>
BY TIM WILLIAMS<lb/>
In the second<lb/>
half the Aliens tallied<lb/>
again when J 0 h n<lb/>
Carlson threw the ball<lb/>
from the touch line into<lb/>
the penalty area to Tim<lb/>
Williams who fired in a<lb/>
left-footed shot.<lb/>
Women's Soccer<lb/>
The Women's Soccer<lb/>
Club played their best<lb/>
game of the season<lb/>
against UNC, their<lb/>
toughest opponent yet,<lb/>
and lost by a score of<lb/>
1-0. ECU had a number<lb/>
of fine scoring oppor-<lb/>
tunities including a 40<lb/>
yard shot by Kim<lb/>
Milner which hit the<lb/>
crossbar but failed to<lb/>
go in. ECU's goalie<lb/>
Margaret Hartley was<lb/>
the star of the game as<lb/>
she made ma n <lb/>
numerous fine saves<lb/>
and limited the high<lb/>
scoring Tar Heels to<lb/>
just one goal although<lb/>
they took almost 40<lb/>
shots. ECU closes out<lb/>
their spring season with<lb/>
a match against the<lb/>
Fayetteville Soccer<lb/>
Club at the ECU soccer<lb/>
field at 2 p.m. on April<lb/>
2s<lb/>
Men's Rugby<lb/>
The Men's Rugby<lb/>
Club lost to the<lb/>
Winston-Salem Rugby<lb/>
Club b a 12-0 margin.<lb/>
Their final match of the<lb/>
season is against Dan<lb/>
River Rugb Club of<lb/>
Virginia on the Allied<lb/>
Health field at 2 p.m.<lb/>
on April 25.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE Snare drum. Pearl,<lb/>
lop of the line Extra deep Ex<lb/>
cond Call 757 3210<lb/>
FOR SALE Jensen Tri Axial 6 by<lb/>
9 in. speakers New. still m box<lb/>
180 Call 757 6136<lb/>
FOR SALE Black 1980 440 LTD<lb/>
Kawasaki, negotiable price, good<lb/>
condition Call 752 9403 ask for<lb/>
John G<lb/>
FOR SALE 1971 Fiat 124, needs<lb/>
transmission, less than 3.000 miles<lb/>
on overhaul Call 752 4400 after<lb/>
6 00 p m 5800 firm<lb/>
FOR SALE Rotel 60 watts stereo<lb/>
receiver with 4 channel<lb/>
capability SI 2s Soundesign<lb/>
8 track player recorder 550 BIC<lb/>
beltdrive turntable $75. Marantz<lb/>
75 watt 3 way speakers 2 years<lb/>
old, slight cabinet damage, ex<lb/>
cellent sound S200 tor set. Call<lb/>
Dave at 756 6455 or come by M 2<lb/>
Oakmont Square Apts after 5pm<lb/>
FOR SALE Scuba gear Tank,<lb/>
regulator with psi, weights, 2<lb/>
spearguns, depth guage with com<lb/>
pass, BC 5250 Call 758 6946<lb/>
FOR SALE Siamese kittens,<lb/>
seven weeks old. chocolate point<lb/>
Call 752 7218 after 5pm<lb/>
FOR SALE Yashica Mat 124 G<lb/>
twin lens reflex camera Great<lb/>
for art student Asking 590 Only<lb/>
used twice Call Lmdi 758 6445<lb/>
FOR SALE Stereo, Optomca<lb/>
tuner. Optonica integrated amp.<lb/>
Also, BIC 960 turntable and BIC<lb/>
type 4 speakers 5350 or best offer<lb/>
Call 758 4259 and ask for Kelvin<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMATES WANTED 2 male or<lb/>
female roommates wanted to<lb/>
share spacious 3 bedroom house<lb/>
during summer and! or 1 fall<lb/>
Convenient location to Carolina<lb/>
East Mall and Pitt Community<lb/>
College 580 month during sum<lb/>
mer, one third utilities and 560<lb/>
month, one fourth utilities during<lb/>
the fall. Call 756 9011 after 5 pm<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED 2 bedroom apt. in<lb/>
Wilson Acres. 4 blocks from cam<lb/>
pus 8145 mo. plus one half<lb/>
utilities Call 752 9194 after 4:30.<lb/>
APT FOR LEASE 600<lb/>
Georgetown Runs from mid May<lb/>
to Mid August Call 758 0323.<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 758 2585<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED 2 bedroom apt in<lb/>
Eastbrook 572 a month plus one<lb/>
third utilities Call 758 2344<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED Only 577 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 for Becky, Beth, or Susan<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED Furnish<lb/>
ed apt One half rent and utilities<lb/>
Summer Call 757 1581<lb/>
PERSONS NEEDED 7 or 3 peo<lb/>
pie lo sub lease apt. for summer<lb/>
Located on E. 3rd Street 2<lb/>
bedrooms, part furnished Watei<lb/>
included in rent For more infor<lb/>
mation call 758 7755<lb/>
FOR RENT Furnished 2 bedroom<lb/>
apt available for summer mon<lb/>
ths On ECU bus route Call<lb/>
758 4438<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED: N Summitt St 582 50<lb/>
plus one third utilities Washer<lb/>
and dryer Available May 1st.<lb/>
Call 758 $692<lb/>
APT FOR SUBLEASE During<lb/>
summer from May lo September<lb/>
River Bluff Apts Call 758 6728<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE Wanted<lb/>
for 2 bedroom duplex on 1809 E<lb/>
6th , 3 blocks from campus. Call<lb/>
758 6599.<lb/>
WANT TO SUB LEASE 3 respon<lb/>
sible UNC CM students wish to<lb/>
sublet spacious nice apt or house<lb/>
while working at Pitt Co Hospital<lb/>
this summer Preferred furnish<lb/>
ed Call 967 2059 or 942 7785<lb/>
LARGE BEDROOM: For rent, air<lb/>
conditioned Utilities included<lb/>
Acres from campus Call<lb/>
758 2585<lb/>
FOR RENT 2 bedroom beginning<lb/>
May 7th 2 mi. from campus. Very<lb/>
low utilities $735 month Call<lb/>
752 9527<lb/>
SUBLEASE FURNISHED APT<lb/>
For summer. 2 bedrooms Air,<lb/>
near campus and ECU bus Call<lb/>
752 4989<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT $75 month<lb/>
plus one sixth utilities Suave kit<lb/>
Chen and bath Call 758 3545.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED<lb/>
2 bedroom furnished apt 3 blocks<lb/>
from campus $100 month Call<lb/>
752 7190<lb/>
APT FOR SUBLEASE 2<lb/>
bedroom Call 758 4640<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED To share<lb/>
j bedroom house on Chestnut St<lb/>
$7S plus one third utilities Musi<lb/>
have bedroom furniture Call<lb/>
758 4259<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED I or 2<lb/>
roommates to start fall '81 Non<lb/>
smoker $99 month, one third<lb/>
utilities 757 1738<lb/>
FREE HALF MONTH RENT In<lb/>
new townhouse apt on River Bluff<lb/>
Rd 1 bedrooms, one and half<lb/>
baths, appliances, washer dryer<lb/>
hookups, cable TV hookups,<lb/>
secluded area Regular monthly<lb/>
rent is $280 Call for details, offer<lb/>
limited J.L Harris and Sons,<lb/>
Inc , Realtors, 204 W 10th. St<lb/>
758 4711<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT May to Aug<lb/>
$75 month Call 758 4140<lb/>
NEED TO MOVE IN WITH<lb/>
established female roommate<lb/>
beginning August IS. Will share<lb/>
halt expenses. CaH 637 5521<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED For summer 3<lb/>
bedroom duplex, 5 blocks from<lb/>
campus $58 00 per month plus one<lb/>
half utilities 758 0267<lb/>
FOR RENT 2 bedroom<lb/>
townhouse apts One and halt<lb/>
baths, appliances, cable TV<lb/>
hookups, washer dryer hookups,<lb/>
very near ECU $300 per month,<lb/>
lease and security deposit re<lb/>
quired J L Harris and Sons, Inc<lb/>
Realtors. 204 W 10th 758 4711<lb/>
SUBLEASE I bedroom untur<lb/>
rushed Village Green Apt on 10th<lb/>
St Leaving school with 7 months<lb/>
left on lease Asking $145 for<lb/>
deposit Rent is $190 month Call<lb/>
nights 758 6784<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 $?<lb/>
ty Let the Pros at BANDS<lb/>
UNLIMITED get the right band<lb/>
for your next party Call 757 3210<lb/>
ROADIES Where bands make it<lb/>
rock ROADIES makes it roll!<lb/>
200 W Walnut S' . Downtown<lb/>
Gcldsboro. 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/>
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/>
EL BO 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/>
a! 9 43<lb/>
LOST A silver colored, diamond<lb/>
shaped, small ring It found<lb/>
PLEASE call 7573155. Has sen<lb/>
timental value<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 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 0b recommendation For<lb/>
interview call 758 4513<lb/>
BEWARE' The Java Beast will<lb/>
stalk Myrtle Beach this weekend!<lb/>
It only big Sue knew You and Bud<lb/>
nek have a good time without us<lb/>
307<lb/>
ATTENTION SPORT F ERS<lb/>
Little Benny says you re not a man<lb/>
til ou split a dark oak Cobbicay<lb/>
is learning to be a matf-ess Bevry<lb/>
finally found a girl that could<lb/>
stand him for 24 hrs YEA' Big Al<lb/>
??hat was the promise you made<lb/>
last weekendft D D is back on the<lb/>
loose! GEEP good tongue lashing<lb/>
you gave the hosebag Sat nite<lb/>
Doogie are you impersonating<lb/>
CASANOVA&amp;<lb/>
NOTICE To all ECBs tor good<lb/>
fun and fellowship call the<lb/>
JCB s at 759151<lb/>
WE SPEAK TURABIAN, Little<lb/>
Brown APA, PRC. etc Proles<lb/>
sional typing, editing pro<lb/>
dreading WRITE RIGHT<lb/>
756 9946.<lb/>
M BEAR You make everyday a<lb/>
golden day! I love you with all my<lb/>
heart L<lb/>
ARE YOU MOVING soon and<lb/>
need help with a truck and labors.<lb/>
We specialize m college moves lor<lb/>
students on a budget! Call 758 3684<lb/>
tor more information<lb/>
CAR WASH IS AT EXXON AT<lb/>
CORNER OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
BLVD &amp; ARLINGTON BLVD<lb/>
FROM 12 5<lb/>
SEEKING EMPLOYMENTS Our<lb/>
computer can match your skills<lb/>
and interests with local 0bs<lb/>
Thomas and Thomas Vocational<lb/>
Assessment 753 4995<lb/>
TO THE PERSON who took the<lb/>
empty keg and tap from the party<lb/>
Saturday night on Elm Street, you<lb/>
have a choice A) Return it and no<lb/>
questions will be asked Bi Call<lb/>
758 3684 and I wilt pick it up C) Do<lb/>
nothing and I will turn your name<lb/>
over to the police and press<lb/>
charges' Try me and see' Bubba<lb/>
Classified Ad Form<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS CAN BE PUR<lb/>
CHASED FROM 2 00 3 00 M F<lb/>
ONLY AT THE EAST CAROLI<lb/>
NIAN OFFICE OR BY MAIL<lb/>
ADS MUST BE IN BY 2 00 THE<lb/>
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION<lb/>
TO GET IN THE NEXT ISSUE<lb/>
LADY PIRATE<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
First Annual<lb/>
Awards Banquet<lb/>
Help Say Goodbye<lb/>
To The 17th Ranked<lb/>
1980-81 Squad<lb/>
7 p.m. Tuesday April 28<lb/>
At Western Sizzlin'<lb/>
For Reservations, Call 757-6384<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i.<lb/>
WASH HOUSE<lb/>
(Across from Krispy Krei )<lb/>
and<lb/>
KORE-O-MAT<lb/>
(Across horn University Car Wash)<lb/>
Use one Washer ? Get One<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Limit one Free Wash per visit<lb/>
Offer expires April 22, 1981 - Valid w Coupon Only<lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
f<lb/>
f<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/>
i<lb/>
4<lb/>
PURDYS<lb/>
The Premier<lb/>
Nite Spot<lb/>
On The Beach<lb/>
This Summer<lb/>
Join Us For Our<lb/>
GRAND OPENING<lb/>
EASTER WEEKEND<lb/>
April 17th,18th,19th<lb/>
? General Nutrition Centers<lb/>
America's Best Nutrition Values are at GNC?Over 800 Stores from Coast to Coast<lb/>
CSTO? COUKW i ?TOC COUPON STOftC COU?OW E ApsfS I 1 I<lb/>
? ?? : rw?t? : BROWN :400 'u<lb/>
BRAN j Morons i MCE j VITAMIN<lb/>
99! 29<lb/>
EXPIRES S-S41 ! EXPIRtS S-S-il<lb/>
EXPIRES 5 1 II<lb/>
$-99<lb/>
100<lb/>
GNC OUAUTY AT LfSS THAN CHEAPEST CUT RATE MAIL ORDER PRICES1<lb/>
mi ALFALFA, jfigniin , TSfflfc L!fnll ZINC<lb/>
89rl?49 Is.2? I 69 i sv? l?39<lb/>
EXPIRES ii4l 1 EXPIRES 5 &amp; tl EXPIRES S j-?1<lb/>
LOSE FAT<lb/>
Um<lb/>
STYLEX<lb/>
Contains btnncHm<lb/>
?Mch Mi appwwd<lb/>
byOl Got t<lb/>
panaf Of ?prtt<lb/>
tor appatMt control<lb/>
Vi SAC<lb/>
SENSATIONAL<lb/>
IRON<lb/>
TASXf T aiOi<lb/>
irriROuiaiuCONii 1QD-I'I<lb/>
PENNY SALE<lb/>
UNDER<lb/>
A&amp;D<lb/>
? KZ2<lb/>
nmiu io? i u '00 C V<lb/>
2fTtfi-miEiiiu.Y. 2470<lb/>
430<lb/>
2'5E(HH.<lb/>
2<lb/>
.<lb/>
T?siitiM natts<lb/>
&amp;uhl.Qa.? 2290 RELAX ?'?' 2796<lb/>
?u.?r-u ?ui-ic?tNt MM i0Ot.il j ??jiml ??om'l??.o? 0U?<lb/>
Stress?<lb/>
? Conbl Slrvts<lb/>
? Maintain En?rgy<lb/>
B-COMPLEX<lb/>
B 50 Balanced<lb/>
Formula<lb/>
SR49<lb/>
CLIP THESE COUPONS FOR OLD-FASHIONED FAVORITES<lb/>
?'?? t <lb/>
 . LECITHIN.<lb/>
VSMEE.AR 1-6<lb/>
DIET PLAN<lb/>
?,? CQc<lb/>
90c<lb/>
, STORE COUPON<lb/>
iCRACKERS<lb/>
EXPIRES 5 5-8'<lb/>
STORE COUPON<lb/>
WHOi-E WHEAT<lb/>
FLOUR<lb/>
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EXPIRES 5 HI<lb/>
SI ORE COUPON<lb/>
BULGUR<lb/>
WHEAT<lb/>
ttwiHES 5 5 Si<lb/>
STORE COUPON<lb/>
STORE COUPON<lb/>
YELI.OVY<lb/>
? ????????????????????????????????????????<lb/>
STORE COUPON ? STORE COUPON<lb/>
LOWFAT<lb/>
PURDYS At The Beach. Corner<lb/>
Of Fort AAacon Road and<lb/>
Beaufort Blvd. Atlantic Beach<lb/>
N.C Call 919-726-0296 For<lb/>
Details.<lb/>
YOGURT<lb/>
15<lb/>
r: FRUIT<lb/>
u: JUICES<lb/>
15<lb/>
EXPIRES 5-511<lb/>
f<lb/>
EXPIRES 55-11<lb/>
??????????????????????????!<lb/>
? ?????????????????MttWI<lb/>
J COUPON S STORE COUPON i STORE COUPON STORE COUPON<lb/>
0LLED S HoJClfWant 1<lb/>
&amp;SL Soy Deans<lb/>
3? 89 j 39<lb/>
EXPIRES - 5-11 I EXPIRES 5 5 61<lb/>
? ??????????????????????'<lb/>
STORE COUPON<lb/>
POTATO YOGUR<lb/>
OB CORN<lb/>
CHIPS<lb/>
SAVE 19c<lb/>
15<lb/>
EXPIRES S 5 S1<lb/>
9"vr 1<lb/>
SKI 1 u I ?<lb/>
IPIRES 5 5-11 11 E<lb/>
XPIRES 5 5-31<lb/>
60?<lb/>
STORE COUPON<lb/>
WHOLE WHEAT<lb/>
STKtSS THIS " SEMTtOL?<lb/>
800? I o" " ou.a<lb/>
SJ79J 59c<lb/>
vel-o-cel' unTcen<lb/>
MINT JULEP 4 VARIETIES f kftO A<lb/>
0?nt j HONEY I SP?<lb/>
"S109 J SAVE<lb/>
. 5205<lb/>
I EXPIRES 5-51<lb/>
?IHHMHHH<lb/>
. STORE COUPON<lb/>
j BANANA<lb/>
GRAHAMS I CHIPS<lb/>
fin<lb/>
PIRES 5 541 S<lb/>
HMHHUI<lb/>
General<lb/>
id<lb/>
!?<lb/>
B EXPIRES 5 5 ?1<lb/>
!??????????????????????<lb/>
? ?? .?.? an. ???????????<lb/>
J STORE COUPON ? STORE COUPON<lb/>
WHOLE WHEAT<lb/>
- WH<lb/>
OLE WHEAT<lb/>
: Macaroni &amp; fQ BARS<lb/>
?Cheese Dinner I<lb/>
295 r 39 ?99<lb/>
5 ?oc<lb/>
1. J<lb/>
EXPIRES 5-5-41<lb/>
EXPIRES 5511<lb/>
High Blood Pressure.<lb/>
M! DliCI S Al I IN ! AKf<lb/>
s?vi<lb/>
m<lb/>
EXPIRE<lb/>
Fosdick's Seafood Savers<lb/>
Nightly 5:00-9:OOpm<lb/>
Tue. Fish Fry- All l"he Fish You Can 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 Famous Fiushpuppie?$3.99<lb/>
Thur. Family Might A Seafood Sampler With Caiabaih<lb/>
Shrimp, Fried Fish, Ov?ter? and Deviled Crab$4.99<lb/>
Tue,Wed,Thur(Oytter Bar Only) 1 Doz Hatfshrll<lb/>
Oysters (Steamed or Raw) And A Mug Of Your Favorite Beverage<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
? WfQ It!<lb/>
Ph. 756-2011<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
PRICES ARE UP!<lb/>
It you nssd mpnsy for fall clothss or football tlcktts, now la a<lb/>
good tlma lo Mfi your gold and atlvar valuables. And hsra's a<lb/>
good way to got EXTRA CA8HI<lb/>
SILL YOUR<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
TO COIN 4 RING MAN!<lb/>
$<lb/>
Almost iviryoni his i bigti sxkooi or coiligt class ring<lb/>
they don t wssr inynort. Chock your drossir draws<lb/>
sod Bring yoor diss ring Into Coin &amp; Ring Mm. Ko'ro<lb/>
your orafissioiil buying sorvici ind wo guinntoo you<lb/>
loir pricts ind good sorvlco.<lb/>
?t1 AY CASK OM-TMUSaOT<lb/>
m jflnurv, vaiAi4isummK<lb/>
?Aim Ml-Ml-MR.<lb/>
$ COLD $<lb/>
. inks ? axiom ? mraas ? auaoaat<lb/>
? cuss hks ? wnaass aaats ? earm<lb/>
cats ? uauuts ? RMS? ? looun<lb/>
? outai ? Ljorrm ? caw uaat ? mtiati<lb/>
PAYaMoa-TNiaaT<lb/>
c ash taa rrtaii m mn<lb/>
STERLING SILVER<lb/>
t COPFEI tIRVICES ? GOBLETS<lb/>
? KINGS ? SPOON! ? TWAYS ? KMtV?S<lb/>
? FOMKt ? NiCKLACtt ? SlUCELltl<lb/>
? PfUNKLIN AND HAMILTON MINT<lb/>
MEWCHANPISt<lb/>
C?????? ???? C?? t ?-? ? Mip c.<lb/>
&amp; RING<lb/>
oF KCV SAtES CO tNc<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. "PIN,J,b? ?'<lb/>
.nAi'voNviiiHisf sou.h, PHONE 752-3861<lb/>
r YOUR PROFESSIONAL PtRMANINT DEALtR<lb/>
PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057337_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>