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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057342_0001"/>
Bhe Saat (Earnltntan<lb/>
.<lb/>
iL.<lb/>
Serving (he Last Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. <lb/>
6 Pages<lb/>
Wednesday, May 20, 1981<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
New Theatre And Auditorium<lb/>
Completion Date Set For July<lb/>
B Ml K1MBERI Y<lb/>
Mat! Ytnlrr<lb/>
rhe sounds and dust o construc-<lb/>
tion on last Carolina's campus are<lb/>
destined to come to an end in the<lb/>
near future as the new McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre and auditorium nears com-<lb/>
pletion.<lb/>
(. onstruction of the new building,<lb/>
begun in fall 1979, should be finish-<lb/>
ed by July 10, according to Scott<lb/>
Parkei, the Business Manager o' the<lb/>
Drama Department. However, the<lb/>
new facilities will not be available<lb/>
tor production until spring 1982.<lb/>
due to the tact that the lightboard<lb/>
and stage draperies will not be<lb/>
delivered until then.<lb/>
rhe new wing, as well as total<lb/>
renovations in the other two sec-<lb/>
tions o! the Drama Building, is part<lb/>
ol a three million dollar project to<lb/>
update the Drama facilities. When<lb/>
finished, the new facility will be one<lb/>
ol the best in the state, and will have<lb/>
tour tii . ? ice ol the old one.<lb/>
rhe dai cc  id os have been com-<lb/>
plete! re-done. New floors, model-<lb/>
ed after those in 1 incoln Center.<lb/>
and the School of the Arts, meet the<lb/>
requirements for the American<lb/>
Ballet Theatres. They are composed<lb/>
o' a layer of concrete, topped by<lb/>
wooden struts, plywood, and a layer<lb/>
of plastic. The layers give the floor<lb/>
pliability, which "gives" for the<lb/>
dancers, helping to prevent injury to<lb/>
shins, ankles and knees.<lb/>
New metal bars, sturdier than the<lb/>
old wooden ones, have been install-<lb/>
ed, as well as new mirrors, heating,<lb/>
air conditioning, and sheetrock dry<lb/>
walls. The costume shop will be in<lb/>
the basement of the new wing; con-<lb/>
struction on the new scenery shop<lb/>
has not begun, but is now out for<lb/>
bids.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the dance and drama<lb/>
classes, as well as the administration<lb/>
and faculty of the Drama Depart-<lb/>
ment are using the old Wilkerson<lb/>
Funeral Home building, located on<lb/>
1 vans Street, across from Margaux<lb/>
Restaurant.<lb/>
Dissatisfaction with the tem-<lb/>
porary facility has been expressed<lb/>
loudly and frequently by students<lb/>
and staff alike. The building has<lb/>
been in use since the beginning of<lb/>
spring semester of this year, and<lb/>
costs the universitv $2916.67 per<lb/>
month.<lb/>
The building, however, is not<lb/>
large enough to hold the various<lb/>
dance, acting, costuming, and stage<lb/>
scenery design classes that are being<lb/>
taught in it. The hot, crowded<lb/>
building has no sound insulation, so<lb/>
the noise of the dance classes echoes<lb/>
throughout the structure. The two<lb/>
rooms being used for dance studios<lb/>
have hardwood floors, which can<lb/>
contribute to injuries to the dancers.<lb/>
The slickness of the wax floors,<lb/>
splinters, poor lighting, and<lb/>
makeshift bars and mirrors are<lb/>
other hazards dance students must<lb/>
contend with. There are no water<lb/>
fountains and no dressing rooms.<lb/>
The other classes are being taught<lb/>
in various other rooms of the old<lb/>
mausoleum, and siage scenery is be-<lb/>
ing built in the garage. The drama<lb/>
and dance staff crouds into the re-<lb/>
maining space<lb/>
Several students in the drama<lb/>
department were asked to comment<lb/>
on the facilities. Don Wagoner, a<lb/>
drama major, said, "the com-<lb/>
aradene at the old building nearly<lb/>
made up for the inadequacies, but it<lb/>
just got too crowded He added<lb/>
that he hoped the feelings of<lb/>
fellowship would not end with the<lb/>
coming of new facilities.<lb/>
Beth Whitfield, a dance minor,<lb/>
said of the temporary facilities: "If<lb/>
you have had previous injuries, dan-<lb/>
cing on a hardwood floor like that<lb/>
can just aggravate them. Also, it is<lb/>
inconvenient if you have a class im-<lb/>
mediately before or afterwards<lb/>
Shaun Holliday, another drama ma-<lb/>
jor, said, "It's better than nothing.<lb/>
1 feel that the quality of the instruc-<lb/>
tion is the same<lb/>
However, Paula Johnson, a<lb/>
dance instructor who shares a small<lb/>
office in the temporary building<lb/>
with two other staff members, sum-<lb/>
med up the feelings toward the new<lb/>
facilities, "After seeing the almost<lb/>
finished product, I think it has been<lb/>
worth the wait<lb/>
Pfloto by CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
Construction Continues<lb/>
students should he dancing in new studios by fall.<lb/>
Hopes To Avoid Student Loan Cuts Shattered<lb/>
B HII INORDES<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. (C PS) ?<lb/>
When the Senate j ined the House<lb/>
last week in approving the broad<lb/>
outlines ol President Ronald<lb/>
Reagan's budget, hopes for<lb/>
avoiding drastic cuts in student loan<lb/>
programs "went down easily with<lb/>
the rest of the ship mourns Alec<lb/>
Surkin, aide to education enthusiast<lb/>
Rep. Peter Peyser (D-NY).<lb/>
Although a joint Senate-House<lb/>
committee must still determine the<lb/>
sped ' the program cuts, most<lb/>
collegiate lobbyists are pressimistic<lb/>
that aid will be restored.<lb/>
"There is so much momentum<lb/>
from presidential lobbying for the<lb/>
so-called mandate tor change<lb/>
Surkin predicted, that cuts seem in-<lb/>
evitable.<lb/>
"There's a lot of sentiment in<lb/>
C ongress that 'students have had a<lb/>
free ride lone enough agrees<lb/>
Eduardo WoUe, lobbyist for the<lb/>
U.S. Student Association.<lb/>
lorn Asick, for one, looks at the<lb/>
sentiment as a victory. Asick, an<lb/>
author of the education report for<lb/>
the Heritage Foundation, the con-<lb/>
servative think tank that provided<lb/>
the guidelines for the administra-<lb/>
tion's college policies, exults that<lb/>
student "welfare programs"are to<lb/>
be cut. "They had just gotten out of<lb/>
hand<lb/>
Though the cuts themselves won't<lb/>
come up for a vote until late June,<lb/>
the consensus for paring down some<lb/>
of the major aid programs now in<lb/>
Congress goes like this:<lb/>
Pell Grants<lb/>
One factor that could exacerbate<lb/>
the impact of cuts in Pell Grants<lb/>
(formerly called Basic Educational<lb/>
Opportunity Grants) is the halving<lb/>
of what was to have been a $661<lb/>
million supplemental appropriation,<lb/>
says Joel Packer ol the National<lb/>
Association of State I niversities<lb/>
and Land-Grant Colleges. I he<lb/>
House appropriations committee,<lb/>
aiming at saving $13.5 billion, cut<lb/>
the supplemental appropriation,<lb/>
and lowered the maximum Pell<lb/>
Grant award to SI650 from SI"50.<lb/>
Others expect Congress will make<lb/>
students from families with annual<lb/>
incomes over $25,000 ineligible for<lb/>
Pell Grants.<lb/>
Congress may bypass the ad-<lb/>
ministration proposal to make<lb/>
students pay the first $750 ol their<lb/>
college bills in order to quality for a<lb/>
Pell Grant. Wolle expects Congress<lb/>
will approve the measure in 1982 in-<lb/>
stead.<lb/>
Guaranteed Student Loans<lb/>
Reagan administration proposals<lb/>
for GSLs would "destroy" the pro-<lb/>
gram, in Packer's judgement. Con-<lb/>
gress seems ready to approve<lb/>
Reagan's effort to raise the interest<lb/>
on GSLs from nine percent to 14<lb/>
percent, but may balk at the presi-<lb/>
dent's attempt to abolish the sub-<lb/>
sidy in which the government pays<lb/>
interest on the loan until gradua-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Banks have protested, Wolle says,<lb/>
because of "excessive paperwork"<lb/>
involved in collecting from students<lb/>
instead of collecting from the<lb/>
government.<lb/>
National Direct Student Loans<lb/>
The NDSL program, although<lb/>
marked for extinction bv the ad-<lb/>
ministration, is chartered to con-<lb/>
tinue next year, lobbyists say. But a<lb/>
$100 million appropriation that has<lb/>
not been restored since NDSI senti-<lb/>
ment shifted may cripple NDSI s in<lb/>
some states, Wolle warns.<lb/>
Social Security<lb/>
Wolle predicts strong opposition<lb/>
to the administration's proposal to<lb/>
end immediately Social Security<lb/>
payments to students who are<lb/>
children of retired, deceased or<lb/>
disabled beneficiaries. Education<lb/>
committee members instead seem to<lb/>
favor a gradual phase-out of In-<lb/>
payments.<lb/>
Wolle, Packer and other oppos-<lb/>
ing the cuts complain Congress has<lb/>
adopted, in Packer's words, a let<lb/>
them eat cake attitude. Senate<lb/>
Education-Labor Committee Chair-<lb/>
man Harrison Schmidt (R-NM)<lb/>
"mentioned that (Pell Grant) reduc-<lb/>
tions would only amount to about<lb/>
what students spend each week on a<lb/>
couple of packs of cigarettes<lb/>
Packer recalls.<lb/>
Packer adds, ?'What it would<lb/>
really amount to is several cartons a<lb/>
week<lb/>
Most college lobbyists estimate<lb/>
the toll would be higher. Surkin<lb/>
gloomily predicts as many as a<lb/>
million students will either have to<lb/>
alter their eduction plans or leave<lb/>
college altogether if the cuts are ap-<lb/>
proved. American Council on<lb/>
Education President Jack W.<lb/>
Peltason forecasted that as many as<lb/>
600,OCX) s'tudents from families earn-<lb/>
ing between S19,000 and S25.OO0<lb/>
per year will be affected by the Pell<lb/>
Grant changes alone.<lb/>
Increased Costs<lb/>
Carolina Telephone Raises Rates<lb/>
For Phone Hook-Up, Long Distance<lb/>
a <lb/>
Students Get Reacquainted<lb/>
 summer sessions bring on a glut of hookbuying and friendinding.<lb/>
Exit Exam Policy Changed<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
B DEBORAH HOTALING<lb/>
There's still hope for that<lb/>
freshman who flunked the grammar<lb/>
exit exam twice and was afraid he<lb/>
would have to repeat English 1100.<lb/>
According to Jim Kirkland,<lb/>
director ol freshman composition,<lb/>
freshmen who failed the exit exam<lb/>
twice have the option to write a<lb/>
300-word essay which is then graded<lb/>
h at least two English professors.<lb/>
The essay is graded on a pass-fail<lb/>
basis and is not averaged in with the<lb/>
student's class grade.<lb/>
The policy was initiated last fall<lb/>
but Kirkland said only a few<lb/>
students have taken advantage of<lb/>
the policy. "So far, people have<lb/>
been scared to death to do it. 1 guess<lb/>
they're just afraid to try it he said.<lb/>
At the beginning of each<lb/>
semester, freshmen receive informa-<lb/>
tion from the English Department<lb/>
explaining course objectives,<lb/>
departmental policies, and the op-<lb/>
tion to the exit exam. Each student<lb/>
is required to sign a form stating<lb/>
they'have read all of the informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Kirkland explained that a student<lb/>
making a D or F in the course<lb/>
should not depend on this option to<lb/>
pass them in the course. He advised<lb/>
that the student repeat the course in<lb/>
order to benefit from the material.<lb/>
Topics for this optional essay are<lb/>
chosen by the professors who are to<lb/>
grade the essay. The subject usually<lb/>
deals defending a hypothetical<lb/>
point in a "what to do" situation.<lb/>
Kirkland said that one of the<lb/>
main reasons the optional essay is<lb/>
being offered is to help those<lb/>
students who aren't able to cope<lb/>
with taking an exit exam. "Some<lb/>
students just get panicky and they're<lb/>
under so much pressure that even<lb/>
though they're doing O.K. in the<lb/>
course, they mess up on the exam.<lb/>
Maybe this option will help some of<lb/>
those students out<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
ssislanl Nr?s tdilnr<lb/>
Students were greeted with a<lb/>
surprise when they returned to cam-<lb/>
pus for summer school.<lb/>
Carolina Telephone and<lb/>
Telegraph has increased it's charges<lb/>
in three areas: the primary service<lb/>
charge, the standard monthly fee<lb/>
and the long distance rates.<lb/>
It will also take longer for service<lb/>
to begin than during the regular<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
According to Ty Hart, a represen-<lb/>
tative of Carolina Telephone, the in-<lb/>
creases were caused by inflation.<lb/>
Since the company only offers its<lb/>
mass-connect service in the fall, it<lb/>
will take longer for service to begin<lb/>
during the summer, Hart said.<lb/>
He added that the initial cost for<lb/>
on-campus service will be $30.40.<lb/>
This fee includes two listings in<lb/>
directory assistance.<lb/>
This cost is divided into three<lb/>
areas: local service in advance,<lb/>
central-office work charge and<lb/>
primary service order charges.<lb/>
The local service in advance<lb/>
charges are $11.40. This fee is<lb/>
broken down into several smaller<lb/>
charges, includin $9.40 for the stan-<lb/>
dard line charge.<lb/>
This charge keeps the phone<lb/>
operating and in connection with<lb/>
other phone svstems, according to<lb/>
Hart.<lb/>
The charge for leasing the phone<lb/>
is $1.25. These amounts are charged<lb/>
in advance each month.<lb/>
The central office work charge is<lb/>
$4 This charge is for the work re-<lb/>
quired in rewiring campus connec-<lb/>
tions. Hart e 'mated that rewiring<lb/>
take about fifteen minutes per<lb/>
phone.<lb/>
A Quick Cost<lb/>
Breakdown<lb/>
$ 9.40 Line Charge<lb/>
$ 1.25 Set Charge<lb/>
$ .75 Additional Listing<lb/>
$ 4.00 Local Service In<lb/>
Formerly CTT had charged a<lb/>
standard three minute charge for<lb/>
any calls that ran at or below that<lb/>
length.<lb/>
Due to the changes. Hart says<lb/>
that the company can now have a<lb/>
minimum call length of only one<lb/>
minute and now can charge a lower<lb/>
minimum rate.<lb/>
The rates have gone up, however.<lb/>
Hart was unable to give exact<lb/>
figures on the increase but gave the<lb/>
following example. Formerly an<lb/>
operater assisted call from Green-<lb/>
ville to New Bern that lasted three<lb/>
minutes or less cost the caller $1.20.<lb/>
With the new rates and smaller<lb/>
minimum charges, a one minute<lb/>
operator-assisted call will cost $1.04<lb/>
and a three-minute call will cost<lb/>
$1.50.<lb/>
Hart said that the increase is only<lb/>
the second ever received by CTT.<lb/>
Advance The first was in 197<lb/>
$15.00 Primary Service<lb/>
Order Charges<lb/>
The primary service order charge<lb/>
is $15 and covers the charges of ser-<lb/>
vice representatives writing out the<lb/>
orders, entering them into the com-<lb/>
puter, checking credit and writing<lb/>
receipts.<lb/>
Long distance rates also changed<lb/>
during the break.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Fditorials3<lb/>
Features4<lb/>
Sports5<lb/>
Classifieds6<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057342_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 20, 1981<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
Importance of Link In Slayings Doubted<lb/>
ATLANTA (UPI) ?<lb/>
Police in a suburban<lb/>
Atlanta county where<lb/>
five of the city's 27<lb/>
slain young blacks were<lb/>
found say although<lb/>
"trace evidence" was<lb/>
found on all but one of<lb/>
the five bodies, they<lb/>
now doubt the impor-<lb/>
tance of the link.<lb/>
DeKalb County<lb/>
Police spokesman<lb/>
Chuck Johnson said<lb/>
Monday the body of<lb/>
the fifth victim Aaron<lb/>
Wychc, 10, was never<lb/>
searched for fibers or<lb/>
similar evidence<lb/>
because his case was<lb/>
not originally believed<lb/>
to be linked to the<lb/>
others.<lb/>
?' "We at first thought<lb/>
it was a very good<lb/>
link Johnson aid.<lb/>
"Now the fact is that<lb/>
the fibers apparently<lb/>
were on so many vic-<lb/>
tims and that in itself<lb/>
could be a very good<lb/>
link, but we're beginn-<lb/>
ing to wonder ? since<lb/>
they're so common ?<lb/>
if it is a good link<lb/>
The four victims<lb/>
found in DeKalb Coun-<lb/>
ty and linked by the<lb/>
evidence were Patrick<lb/>
Baltazar,ll, Curtis<lb/>
Walker, 13, Joseph<lb/>
Bell, 15, and William<lb/>
Barrett, 17.<lb/>
Bodies have been<lb/>
dumped in at least six<lb/>
jurisdictions that help<lb/>
make up the<lb/>
metropolitan Atlanta<lb/>
area and some in-<lb/>
vestigators believe the<lb/>
killers were deliberately<lb/>
trying to confuse<lb/>
authorities.<lb/>
The series of unsolv-<lb/>
ed slayings is entering<lb/>
its 22nd month with no<lb/>
arrests. Atlanta<lb/>
authorities believe,<lb/>
however, the case will<lb/>
eventually be solved.<lb/>
"Right now, as<lb/>
frustrating as it is, I still<lb/>
lean to the fact we are<lb/>
going to solve it said<lb/>
Fulton County District<lb/>
Attorney Lewis Slaton.<lb/>
'T still think that with<lb/>
the work that's being<lb/>
done in the case, there<lb/>
will be a break<lb/>
But, Slaton added,<lb/>
he is not surprised that<lb/>
a break has not already<lb/>
come because of the<lb/>
frequency of the kill-<lb/>
ings in 1981 ? 11 so far<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
"We have come up<lb/>
with several potential<lb/>
suspects, but they've all<lb/>
been eliminated at this<lb/>
point said Johnson.<lb/>
"We have no suspects<lb/>
at this time<lb/>
Johnson identified<lb/>
one of the potential<lb/>
suspects being con-<lb/>
sidered as Felt on<lb/>
Talley, 25, who was<lb/>
killed May 12 in a<lb/>
shootout with Atlanta<lb/>
police. Talley and<lb/>
another man became<lb/>
involved in a confron-<lb/>
tation with police after<lb/>
Talley was accused of<lb/>
vandalizing a school<lb/>
bus.<lb/>
Johnson said Talley<lb/>
was eliminated as a<lb/>
suspect before the<lb/>
shooting because he ap-<lb/>
parently was in jail at<lb/>
the times when the<lb/>
murders of the young<lb/>
blacks found in DeKalb<lb/>
County took place.<lb/>
:UY<lb/>
TtM Iteming Oanter has been here for you sine 1974<lb/>
providing private, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of an agee. at a reasonable oost<lb/>
The Fkaning Center we're here when you need us.<lb/>
Oaf1<lb/>
TtlJlgOJpJtolejfe<lb/>
w:i<lb/>
FLEMING CENTER<lb/>
Ku Klux Klan<lb/>
Tries To Recruit<lb/>
School Children<lb/>
V ASH 1 NC. TON<lb/>
(UPI) ? The National<lb/>
Education Association<lb/>
is trying to combat<lb/>
what it says is a moun-<lb/>
ting recruiting drive by<lb/>
the Ku K!u Klan ?<lb/>
one aimed at drawing<lb/>
schoolchildren into the<lb/>
Klan's hooded ranks.<lb/>
MA President<lb/>
Willard H. McGuire<lb/>
said todaj the NEA is<lb/>
preparing to distribute<lb/>
new curricula to its 1.7<lb/>
million teachers to pro-<lb/>
mote classroom discus-<lb/>
sions about the white<lb/>
supremacist group.<lb/>
"We do not believe<lb/>
we are over reacting to<lb/>
the reports of KKK<lb/>
youth recruitment<lb/>
McGuire said. "A<lb/>
resurgent Klan<lb/>
represents a threat that<lb/>
can't be ignored<lb/>
" The Ku Klux Klan<lb/>
is back said the NE <lb/>
Reporter, the labor<lb/>
organization's<lb/>
magazine. "In nearl<lb/>
every part of the coun-<lb/>
try Klanmen are burn-<lb/>
ing crosses hidden<lb/>
under sheets ? and<lb/>
targeting oungsters as<lb/>
young as age in tor the<lb/>
new KKK 'Youth<lb/>
( orps<lb/>
"Your students<lb/>
could be among the<lb/>
next recruits<lb/>
The article said the<lb/>
Klan has attempted to<lb/>
exploit racial tensions<lb/>
in some schools to<lb/>
enlist youngsters with<lb/>
recruiting flyers such<lb/>
as;<lb/>
"Are you fed up with<lb/>
special privileges af-<lb/>
forded blacks by school<lb/>
administration simply<lb/>
on account of their<lb/>
race?"<lb/>
The NEA said<lb/>
students in the Klan's<lb/>
youth corps are taught<lb/>
to "hate non-whites,<lb/>
Jews, immigrants and<lb/>
homosexuals<lb/>
It cites a number of<lb/>
incidents during the<lb/>
past few years, in-<lb/>
cluding:<lb/>
? A group of high<lb/>
school students in<lb/>
Oklahoma City claim-<lb/>
ing membership in the<lb/>
Klan and wielding<lb/>
baseball bats attacked a<lb/>
gay bar.<lb/>
?Children in<lb/>
Decatur, Ala wearing<lb/>
Klan T-shirts set fire to<lb/>
a school bus during an<lb/>
anti-busing rally.<lb/>
? Youngsters are<lb/>
taught hand-to-hand<lb/>
combar and racist<lb/>
ideology at a KKK<lb/>
camp outside o f<lb/>
Houston.<lb/>
Gl Cimoullsfl'Xi Fouques And T-<lb/>
Shirts Sle?pt-9 Bags Baopacfcs<lb/>
Camping Equipment Steei Toeo<lb/>
Shoes Dishes Ann 0?er '00 Dit-<lb/>
teient New And Used items<lb/>
ATiTIC ATTIC I ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
South's No. 6<lb/>
Rock Nightclub<lb/>
WED.&amp;THURS.<lb/>
MAY 20 &amp; 21<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
12 PRICE WED.<lb/>
Souths No. 6<lb/>
Rock Nightclub<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
; MAY 22 4 23<lb/>
I JOEBAND<lb/>
<lb/>
j AFTERNOON<lb/>
1 DELIGHT ON FRI.<lb/>
: 25C Admission 4-7<lb/>
SUN. ? NO VACANCY<lb/>
TUES. ? THE X-RAVES<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
MARKETING &amp; TRADING<lb/>
WE BUY, SELL &amp; TRADE<lb/>
ANY and ALL Stereo Equip<lb/>
ment, Guitars, Cameras, Wat<lb/>
ches, Car Stereo Equipment,<lb/>
Portable Radios, Small<lb/>
Household Appliances,<lb/>
Sporting Goods, TV's,<lb/>
Furniture and much,<lb/>
much more.<lb/>
417 EVANS MALL<lb/>
OLD WACHOVIA BLDG<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
PHONE 757-1237<lb/>
MON. -SAT. ? 10-5:30<lb/>
Cowboy Boots 136 95<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
S 1S01 S fvans Street<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
RfcPAIR<lb/>
I 1 3 Grmdf AvA<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Quality Reptir<lb/>
???? ?<lb/>
-Hut<lb/>
Big Savings<lb/>
at your<lb/>
i Hometown<lb/>
! Pizza Hut<lb/>
$300<lb/>
$200<lb/>
$100<lb/>
OFF ANY LARGE<lb/>
WITH COUPON<lb/>
OFF ANY MEDIUM<lb/>
WITH COUPON<lb/>
OFF ANY SMALL<lb/>
WITH COUPON<lb/>
L<lb/>
Two Locations in<lb/>
2601 E.10th<lb/>
752-4445<lb/>
305 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-4320<lb/>
Offer Expires May 24,1981<lb/>
???<lb/>
Weekdays<lb/>
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After<lb/>
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Coach<lb/>
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What (<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057342_0003"/><lb/>
1974<lb/>
ilus.<lb/>
UNG<lb/>
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Roast<lb/>
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S-J58<lb/>
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Parts<lb/>
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HPST<lb/>
THE SEASON<lb/>
ielon<lb/>
Bkt Eaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins. Uuw,?Ch<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree. - r,r.gi<lb/>
Chuck Foster, am A(lverlls,nif Deborah Hotaling. sewsEd?or<lb/>
C hris Lichok, ???? Mmmm William Yelverton ?, ?,?<lb/>
Alison Bartel, Prllducuo'n S1anagfr Steve Bachner, rmmr<lb/>
May 20, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
ECU Textbooks<lb/>
Students Pay For Mistakes<lb/>
It happens every semester and<lb/>
summer school session and there's<lb/>
no reason to expect the new term to<lb/>
change the inevitable ? students<lb/>
buying books that they will only be<lb/>
able to sell for a fraction of their<lb/>
original cost once the course is com-<lb/>
pleted.<lb/>
The Student Supply Store and<lb/>
University Book Exchange use ap-<lb/>
proximately the same system for<lb/>
buying back used books at the end<lb/>
of the semester. Students receive<lb/>
one-half the original price of the<lb/>
book, and it is later resold for three-<lb/>
fourths the original list price. Book<lb/>
stores at many other universities<lb/>
employ this same system, so there<lb/>
can be little complaint with this<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
The main point of objection with<lb/>
the book system at ECU is that<lb/>
some instructors tend to be too has-<lb/>
ty in their choice of text for a<lb/>
course. Many times the instructor<lb/>
decides after a single semester that<lb/>
the text is ineffective and switches to<lb/>
a different book.<lb/>
The book stores cannot be ex-<lb/>
pected to pay premium prices for<lb/>
waste paper. So who gets stuck<lb/>
bearing the financial burden of<lb/>
change? The students, naturally.<lb/>
As if we do not already shell out<lb/>
enough money two (or more) times<lb/>
a year, we now have to face the<lb/>
possibility of being stuck with an ex-<lb/>
otic and out-dated text because of<lb/>
the whim of some professor.<lb/>
Let's not forget those visiting<lb/>
professors who always seem to<lb/>
prefer a rare book which no other<lb/>
instructor has used here before, and<lb/>
probably none will after heshe is<lb/>
gone. They have a particular knack<lb/>
for finding unusual material for<lb/>
their students to "enjoy<lb/>
Why not try to alleviate this pro-<lb/>
blem by making the department<lb/>
chairperson approve only texts<lb/>
which can be used by future instruc-<lb/>
tors?<lb/>
Last, but not least, to all the in-<lb/>
structors at ECU who insist on<lb/>
assigning several books, please do<lb/>
not make us buy something we will<lb/>
never use. There is nothing more<lb/>
frustrating than forking over $20<lb/>
and never cracking the spine of the<lb/>
book.<lb/>
Let's try to avoid situations such<lb/>
as one ECU junior who paid $75 for<lb/>
new books in January and sold<lb/>
them all back in May for a grand<lb/>
total of $18.<lb/>
Come on, that's ridiculous<lb/>
Women's Athletics Program<lb/>
Enjoys Most Productive Year<lb/>
In any review of the 1980-81<lb/>
school year of East Carolina the<lb/>
most obvious and outstanding<lb/>
highlight would easily be the success<lb/>
of the women's athletics program.<lb/>
In particular, the softball and<lb/>
basketball teams achieved a degree<lb/>
of success that is often lacking at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Last weekend the softball team<lb/>
captured third place in the national<lb/>
slow-pitch tournament while com-<lb/>
piling a 44-7 record.<lb/>
After being ranked number one in<lb/>
the nation for much of the season,<lb/>
Coach Alita Dillon's Lady Pirates<lb/>
may have been disappointed with<lb/>
their showing in the tournament but<lb/>
should not allow it to overshadow<lb/>
their season-long accomplishments.<lb/>
What other ECU team in recent<lb/>
memory has achieved such heady<lb/>
success?<lb/>
Well, only this year's women's<lb/>
basketball team. Cathy Andruzzi's<lb/>
women finished the year with more<lb/>
than 20 wins for the second straight<lb/>
year and earned a spot among the<lb/>
nation's top 20 teams.<lb/>
For providing sheer excitement,<lb/>
Andruzzi's team was unmatched.<lb/>
Its triple-overtime win against State<lb/>
in Raleigh is ample proof of that.<lb/>
One characteristic these teams<lb/>
have in common is outstanding<lb/>
coaching. Dillon and Andruzzi<lb/>
deserve no small measure of praise<lb/>
for their teams' successes during the<lb/>
past season.<lb/>
The players themselves seem to be<lb/>
the archetypes of a new brand of<lb/>
woman athlete: dedicated, hard-<lb/>
working and above all, well,<lb/>
athletic. As one observer put it, with<lb/>
no trace of sarcasm or sexism,<lb/>
"They sure don't play like girls<lb/>
ECU has long been the victim of a<lb/>
severe inferiority complex where<lb/>
academic and athletic pursuits are<lb/>
involved. The success of these two<lb/>
teams may indicate that the univer-<lb/>
sity is finally ready to shed this im-<lb/>
age.<lb/>
THE LEBANESE CHRISTIAN V " m &amp; M<lb/>
MIUTlA PRAYS Foft MACHINE GUNS; "THE JEWS WANT '<lb/>
PLANES AND TANKS; THE ISLAMIC REVOLUTION<lb/>
WANTS SPARE PARTS; THE IRISH CATHOLICS PEG<lb/>
FOR CONCEALABl? WEAPONS; THE BRITISH<lb/>
PROTESTANTS W?ULD L?KE RW CONTROL GEAR;<lb/>
THE AMERICAN FUNDAMENTALISTS) REMIND YOU To<lb/>
KEEP THEM AHEAD OF RUSSIA IN MILITARY<lb/>
SPENDING. THAT'S ALL THE PRAYERS FoR PEACE.<lb/>
ijh<lb/>
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PLtf-ir :  -<lb/>
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" Ziv? "<lb/>
Warheads Provide Newest Trend<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
The way I see it, there are two cutting-<lb/>
edge trends in American life. One is the<lb/>
push for bigger, costlier, more lethal<lb/>
nuclear weapons with which to "ream<lb/>
America The other is the mushrooming<lb/>
popularity of designer jeans, sales of which<lb/>
have reached $6 billion a year. To reveal<lb/>
the true nature of each trend, I suggest tak-<lb/>
ing both of them to their logical conclu-<lb/>
sion, producing a devastatingly chic new<lb/>
product: designer warheads.<lb/>
An unimpeachable source, who wishes<lb/>
to remain anonymous (you understand),<lb/>
told me that this eminently sensible move<lb/>
is, in fact, in the works. According to my<lb/>
source, Defense Secretary Caspar<lb/>
Weinberger is even now preparing an an-<lb/>
nouncement that the latest nuclear<lb/>
weapons, "each with its own unique<lb/>
capabilities will be named after<lb/>
celebrities and "deployed on the far-flung<lb/>
frontiers of freedom<lb/>
"This will accomplish two things con-<lb/>
fided my source. "One, it will give nuclear<lb/>
warheads clearly identifiable personalities,<lb/>
making it easier for President Reagan to<lb/>
sell the American people on a larger<lb/>
military budget in his next dramatic televi-<lb/>
sion appearance. "And two my source<lb/>
smirked, "it'll completely bamboozle the<lb/>
Russians. MX missiles in moving boxcars<lb/>
they can deal with, but compact tactical<lb/>
nukes in gift-wrapped boxes from<lb/>
Macy's?"<lb/>
I had to admit he had a point. My infor-<lb/>
mant showed me the addance text of<lb/>
Weinberger's announcement (sorry, I can't<lb/>
let you see it-just trust me), describing the<lb/>
warheads being readied by Research and<lb/>
Development. Her is an abridged version<lb/>
of the statement, carefullly edited to en-<lb/>
sure that this newspaper doesn't com-<lb/>
promise national security. The new<lb/>
designer warheads include:<lb/>
The Alexander, a.k.a. The Commander.<lb/>
This clever weapon is programmed to seek<lb/>
out enemy sources of power, such as<lb/>
hydroelectric projects, nuclear power<lb/>
plants and high-level executive suties.<lb/>
Planners are worried about the weapon's<lb/>
tendency to self-destruct under pressure,<lb/>
but are confident that kinks can be worked<lb/>
out by the next election. A versatile metal<lb/>
container, available as an accessory, is<lb/>
handy for storing precious bodily fluids<lb/>
when weapon is not in use.<lb/>
The Warhol. A combination radioac-<lb/>
tive hallucinogenic agent that causes op-<lb/>
ponents to drop in stupefaction shortly<lb/>
after exposure, the Warhol is deployed in<lb/>
cinemas and at parties of the enemy elite.<lb/>
For precision strikes only.<lb/>
The Jackie O. Developed as a stylish<lb/>
companion to the Warhol, the Jackie O. is<lb/>
programmed to attach enemy discos, din-<lb/>
ners, galleries and the embassys of foreign<lb/>
countries that abuse human rights. Since<lb/>
Pentagon planners have recently<lb/>
acknowledged that most such countries are<lb/>
U.S. allies, this weapon is expected to see<lb/>
only limited action. Not for use in South<lb/>
Africa or South America.<lb/>
The James Watt. Named after the reign-<lb/>
ing Secretary of the Interior, the Watt is a<lb/>
variation of the neutron bomb. Kills trees,<lb/>
birds, fish and animals, while leaving cor-<lb/>
porate executives unharmed.<lb/>
The Carter. Orignially prized for its<lb/>
ability to vacillate and shimmy past enemy<lb/>
defenses, scientists were forced to<lb/>
reevaluate the weapon when it failed, in<lb/>
repeated tests, to explode on impact.<lb/>
The Pundit. Suggested by political com-<lb/>
mentator George F. Will, this weapon im-<lb/>
pairs the reasoning powers of opponents,<lb/>
leaving its victims able to think only in the<lb/>
past tense. Effectively foils their diabolical<lb/>
plans for America's future.<lb/>
The Nancy. Inspired by the first hdy,<lb/>
the Nancy is a dainty little atomic device<lb/>
that exposes enemies to small but sustained<lb/>
bursts of radiation. Ruffles optional.<lb/>
The ChieJ. (as in "hail to) The most<lb/>
popular item of the new season. Slays by<lb/>
paralyzing opponents with a sense of well-<lb/>
being, then explodes when least expected,<lb/>
inflicting maximum damage. Should be the<lb/>
leading weapon in the nation's arsenal for<lb/>
four more years. With technical ad-<lb/>
justments, could be operational<lb/>
throughout the eighties.<lb/>
Leaders Warn Of Renewed Racism<lb/>
By RICHARD REEVES<lb/>
DETROIT?"The Klan is marching and<lb/>
black people are being murdered all over<lb/>
the country thundered Buddy Battle.<lb/>
"The country is not doing doggone<lb/>
thing to stop it he said, slamming a huge<lb/>
fist on his desk. "Racists are being ap-<lb/>
pointed to the highest offices in the land.<lb/>
We are sitting on a powder keg, with the<lb/>
permission of the White House<lb/>
Robert Battle III is black. He is a<lb/>
regional director of the United Auto<lb/>
Workers, the highest-ranking black in the<lb/>
union, a 300-pound giant who has spent<lb/>
more than 40 years as a major figure in the<lb/>
black political takeover of Detroit.<lb/>
Buddy Battle talks as big ? and as loud<lb/>
? as he is. But other blacks are voicing the<lb/>
same frustration and fear in quieter voices.<lb/>
In three days of interviews in Detroit,<lb/>
blacks, both leaders and the less-exalted,<lb/>
routinely talked about revivals of violent<lb/>
American racism.<lb/>
"They are talking about states' rights'in<lb/>
Washington said Roy Levy Williams,<lb/>
director of the Detroit Urban League and a<lb/>
former executive assistant to Michigan's<lb/>
Republican governor, William G.<lb/>
Milliken. "That has always been a code<lb/>
word to us ? the states' rights to<lb/>
discriminate against us.<lb/>
"The isolated incidents aren't so<lb/>
isolated anymore, are they?" Williams<lb/>
said after talking about the killings in<lb/>
Atlanta and Buffalo and incidents in In-<lb/>
dianapolis, Salt Lake City and Mobile,<lb/>
Ala. "Public officials' positions and<lb/>
statements set a public toneand we don't<lb/>
hear any roars of outrage coming from the<lb/>
national leadership<lb/>
What Williams has been hearing,<lb/>
though, is the voices of certain people.<lb/>
"We'll show you what real nigger-killers<lb/>
can do said one of the pieces of hate mail<lb/>
that Williams has received since the Detroit<lb/>
Urban League begain distributing green<lb/>
ribbons to remind people of the unsolved<lb/>
murders of black children in Atlanta.<lb/>
How strongly do blacks feel about that?<lb/>
More than 100,000 of the ribbons have<lb/>
been distributed in this city alone. While I<lb/>
was waiting to see Williams in his office on<lb/>
Mack Street, two Detroit policemen, both<lb/>
black, walked in and asked for ribbons.<lb/>
"How many?" a receptionist asked.<lb/>
"Could we have a hundred?" one of the<lb/>
officers asked. "The brothers in the<lb/>
precinct house want to wear them and peo-<lb/>
ple keep coming in from the street looking<lb/>
for them<lb/>
Look and see how many black men and<lb/>
women are wearing the ribbons in any city.<lb/>
They are a symbol of concern ? and of<lb/>
fear. "It would only take one heavy inci-<lb/>
dent for a lot of whites to turn on blacks<lb/>
said Battle. "The pattern of racism is there<lb/>
and no one is doing anything to stop<lb/>
itwhat they are doing is reversing policy<lb/>
on apartheid in South Africa. How do you<lb/>
think we react to things like that.?"<lb/>
Genuine fear seemed to be the reaction<lb/>
among blacks in Detroit ? and not just<lb/>
among leaders. On the streets of the East<lb/>
Side, people I talked with all equated the<lb/>
killings and President Reagan. That is cer-<lb/>
tainly unfair, but that doesn't change the<lb/>
fact that it is happening. This is a very bad<lb/>
time for American blacks ? recession and<lb/>
cuts in social programs probably hurt them<lb/>
more than whites ? and it is a very<lb/>
dangerous time for all of us, black and<lb/>
white.<lb/>
Detroit police Inspector Gilbert Hill, the<lb/>
black chief of the city's Homicide Division<lb/>
who went to Atlanta to help investigate the<lb/>
child killings, said: "If I had one wish it<lb/>
would be that the killers are not white. If<lb/>
they are, there could be real trouble in<lb/>
America<lb/>
-Campus Forum<lb/>
Stress Article Praised<lb/>
I 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. I thought I 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), my<lb/>
faith in people who sincerely care for the<lb/>
welfare of others has been confirmed. I<lb/>
began to wonder if The East Carolinian<lb/>
could ever be informative and iielpful 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 really care about the students on this<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
MARTI BABB<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing alt points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner tihrarv.<lb/>
-??? !??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057342_0004"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
MAY 20, 1981<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Movies, Concerts Highlight<lb/>
ECU Summer Entertainment<lb/>
Movies and concerts highlight a<lb/>
full schedule of programs planned<lb/>
for the summer by the ECU Student<lb/>
Union and Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
MSC Watermelon Feasts will be<lb/>
held on the lawn by the Mendenhall<lb/>
Snack Bar at 12 Noon on the follow-<lb/>
ing dates throughout the summer:<lb/>
June 15, June 22, July 13, and July<lb/>
20. All feasts will be held on Mon-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
MSC BingoIce Cream Parties<lb/>
will be held on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
the Multi-Purpose Room at<lb/>
Mendenhall on the following dates:<lb/>
June 9, June 30, July 7, and July 21.<lb/>
The Student Union Special Con-<lb/>
certs Committee will present two<lb/>
concerts this summer including Split<lb/>
Image on June 21 at 8 p.m. and Tim<lb/>
Henderson on July 16 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Both concerts will be held on the<lb/>
University Mall.<lb/>
The Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee has 20 movies scheduled for<lb/>
screenings on Monday and Wednes-<lb/>
day nights in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center's Hendrix Theatre. The films<lb/>
will be shown at 9 p.m. on both<lb/>
evenings and admission is by Stu-<lb/>
dent ID and Activity Card or MSC<lb/>
Membership Card for faculty and<lb/>
staff. Below is a list of the films and<lb/>
their respective dates:<lb/>
ROBIN AND MARIAN<lb/>
Wednesday. May 20. 1981<lb/>
The tranquility of majestic Sher-<lb/>
wood Forest turns to a high pitch of<lb/>
excitement when its legendary hero<lb/>
Robin Hood returns from 20 years<lb/>
of fighting in the crusades.<lb/>
THE NINE LIVES OF<lb/>
FRITZ THE CAT<lb/>
Monday. May 25, 1981<lb/>
CRITZ THE CAT goes tumbling<lb/>
into the seventies in this new Steve<lb/>
Krantz full-length animated feature.<lb/>
NO NUKES<lb/>
Wednesday. May 27, 1981<lb/>
A concert film that  "does the<lb/>
impossible! You honestly get the<lb/>
feeling you're sitting in the Garden<lb/>
and feeling the floor shake ? Joel<lb/>
Siegel, WABC-TV.<lb/>
THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY<lb/>
Monday, June 1, 1981<lb/>
This film biography traces the<lb/>
roots of the late Buddy Holly's star-<lb/>
dom from a small town in Texas to<lb/>
his international fame as he reached<lb/>
the top of the record charts.<lb/>
COOL HAND 1.1 HE<lb/>
Wednesday, June 3, 1981<lb/>
When the establishment tries to<lb/>
put the clamps on a fiercely in-<lb/>
dependent spirit, the result is ex-<lb/>
plosive.<lb/>
THE ATTACK OF<lb/>
THE KILLER TOMATOES<lb/>
Monday, June 8. 1981<lb/>
ATTACK OF THE KILLER<lb/>
TOMATOES can be called the<lb/>
world's first "musical-disaster com-<lb/>
edy<lb/>
LITTLE BIO MAN<lb/>
Wednesday, June 10, 1981<lb/>
Sole survivor of Custer's last<lb/>
stand at Little Big Horn, adopted<lb/>
Indian brave complete with braids<lb/>
and war paint, mule skinner, town<lb/>
drunk, and gunfighter (The Sodey<lb/>
Pop Kid)  these are just a few of<lb/>
the amazing characterizations of<lb/>
Jack Crabb portrayed so brilliantly<lb/>
by Dustin Hoffman in LITTLE BIG<lb/>
MAN.<lb/>
COAL MINER'S DAUGHTER<lb/>
Monday, June 15, 1981<lb/>
Singer Loretta Lynn is movingly<lb/>
portrayed by Sissy Spacek, who<lb/>
sings more than 30 country-western<lb/>
songs in this biographical film.<lb/>
BLLLITT<lb/>
Wednesday, June 17, 1981<lb/>
There aren't many cops like<lb/>
Builitt around; Italian shoes, turtle-<lb/>
neck pullovers, reports about per-<lb/>
sonal misconduct, and his<lb/>
"disruptive" influence.<lb/>
Gil DA LIVE<lb/>
Monday, June 22, 1981<lb/>
Gilda Radner's Broadway concert<lb/>
show "Gilda ? Live From New<lb/>
York" has been transformed into a<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
THE TWELVE CHAIRS<lb/>
Wednesday, June 24, 1981<lb/>
Mel Brooks is never better than in<lb/>
THE TWELVE CHAIRS.<lb/>
RICHARD PRYOR-<lb/>
LIVE IN CONCERT<lb/>
Monday, June 29, 1981<lb/>
One of the biggest boxoffice<lb/>
smash hit movies recounting the<lb/>
1978 concert tour of comedian<lb/>
Richard Pryor, one of Hollywood's<lb/>
most volatile, unpredictable and<lb/>
gifted performers. Cry, laugh and<lb/>
sit in awe at Pryor's outrageous<lb/>
brand of comedy as he lashes out a<lb/>
generous array of expletives to ac-<lb/>
centuate his social commentary.<lb/>
Filmed live  unedited  and<lb/>
uncensored.<lb/>
DIRTY HARRY<lb/>
Wednesday, July 1, 1981<lb/>
Harry Callahan (Clint Eastwood)<lb/>
is the kind of cop that is safer to<lb/>
have on the police force instead of<lb/>
on the streets.<lb/>
FLASH GORDON<lb/>
Wednesday, July 8, 1981<lb/>
Famous comic strip hero<lb/>
Flash Gordon (Sam Jones) pits his<lb/>
wits and the lives of Dale Arden<lb/>
(Melody Anderson) and Dr. Zarkov<lb/>
(Topol) against the evil minions of<lb/>
Ming the Merciless (Max Von<lb/>
Sydow), evil ruler of the planet<lb/>
Mongo, in this Dino De Laurentiis<lb/>
sophisticated sci-fi spoof<lb/>
guaranteed to spellbind you with its<lb/>
breakneck pace, cliffhanger<lb/>
finishes, pulsating music and<lb/>
sophisticated visual wit.<lb/>
ALL THAT JAZZ<lb/>
Monday, July 13, 1981<lb/>
From the man responsible for<lb/>
award-winners "Cabaret" and<lb/>
"Lenny" comes Bob Fosses' razzle-<lb/>
dazzle autobiographical film "ALL<lb/>
THAT JAZZ<lb/>
WOODSTOCk<lb/>
Wednesday. July 15. 1981<lb/>
Experience that incredible<lb/>
cultural happening, that unique<lb/>
celebration of peace, love and music<lb/>
which triumphantly culminated the<lb/>
Age of Aquarius.<lb/>
Roy Scheider as Joe Gideon in a fantasy variety show sequenee from Bob<lb/>
Fosse's "All That Jazz The film is one of twenty summer movies com-<lb/>
ing to Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
1941<lb/>
Monday, Jul 20, 1981<lb/>
There's absolutely no doubt that<lb/>
a lot of peopie are going to see<lb/>
"1941<lb/>
WAIT l NTH DARK<lb/>
Wednesday. JuK 22, 1981<lb/>
Adapted from the New York<lb/>
stage play and voted one of the ten<lb/>
best bv Film Daily's critics, WAIT<lb/>
UNTIL DARK is a suspenseful<lb/>
movie of an innocent couple who<lb/>
become involved with a narcotics<lb/>
gang.<lb/>
WARHOL'S DRACULA<lb/>
Monday, July 27, 1981<lb/>
Based on the famous Transylva-<lb/>
nian legend, Andy Warhol's<lb/>
DRACULA follows the giant suc-<lb/>
cess of his FRANKENSTEIN.<lb/>
Lending Can Be An Unprofitable Enterprise<lb/>
By DAVID .NORMS<lb/>
M?f f W rllrr<lb/>
At one time or another, all of us make the mistake of<lb/>
letting other people borrow one or more of our posses-<lb/>
sions. In "Hamlet Polonius advised, "Never a bor-<lb/>
rower or lender be (Of course, Polonius was killed in<lb/>
a rather silly sort of way during the play, so you might<lb/>
not want to pay too much attention to what he says.)<lb/>
Although borrowing has its drawbacks, it can be pro-<lb/>
fitable; at least, it has been to some of the people I've<lb/>
loaned stuff or money to. Lending, on the other hand, is<lb/>
often an unprofitable venture.<lb/>
Pencils and pens are some of the hardest things to<lb/>
keep up with when it comes to lending and borrowing. I<lb/>
usually try to remember to keep a pen with me, but it's<lb/>
not possible to be that efficient all the time. It's terribly<lb/>
easy to put a borrowed pen back in my pocket after us-<lb/>
ing it. I have a whole pile of odd pens and pencils at<lb/>
home that I must have borrowed from people.<lb/>
Sometimes, 1 loan out pencils or pens, which occa-<lb/>
sionally are returned. Often, the returned writing in-<lb/>
struments are in a pretty battered condition. I especially<lb/>
hate for people to bring back a pen with toothmarks all<lb/>
over it; if somebody wants something to chew on. 1<lb/>
could give him a dog biscuit instead of a pen.<lb/>
Pencils come back in even worse shape than borrowed<lb/>
pens. People chew on pencils, sharpen them until they<lb/>
are only a couple of inches long, and then use up the<lb/>
whole eraser.<lb/>
People often borrow cigarettes, but almost never<lb/>
return them. (Most people don't want them back,<lb/>
though.)<lb/>
Many people have an ironclad rule against letting<lb/>
anyone borrow any of their books. Loaning one book<lb/>
and getting back a cover and most of the pages in return<lb/>
is enough to discourage one from sharing books.<lb/>
Book borrowers come in several varieties. Some ap-<lb/>
parently read only while they are spilling messy Italian<lb/>
food.<lb/>
Others enjoy your book so much that they let so-<lb/>
meone else borrow it. (It gives me a sense of uneasiness<lb/>
to know that one of my twenty-dollar books is now in<lb/>
the hands of "this guy I know who used to live in my<lb/>
dorm instead of the original borrower.)<lb/>
Some people are rough with books ? you know, us-<lb/>
ing them for placemats, bending the backs, cutting out<lb/>
interesting pictures and other things that add twenty<lb/>
years to a book's age in a couple of days.<lb/>
On the other hand, 1 loaned a new copy of "Babbitt"<lb/>
or "The Grapes of Wrath" to a friend a couple of years<lb/>
back. He returned it a month or so later in perfectly<lb/>
good condition; in fact, the book looked a little better. I<lb/>
congratulated him on being a considerate borrower, and<lb/>
he then apologized for not having found time to read<lb/>
the book.<lb/>
Records are possessions that should be loaned<lb/>
carefully. Folks who let just anybody borrow their<lb/>
albums soon realize that most of their record collection<lb/>
is scattered halfway across the state, and the remaining<lb/>
disks sound like scratchy pizzas.<lb/>
One of the most scary things that people can do is to<lb/>
let somebody borrow some of their albums for a party,<lb/>
then go to the party. All night, a mob of crazed vandals<lb/>
will surge around the stero, tearing albums off the turn-<lb/>
table and tossing them in the general direction of the<lb/>
covers. Seeing one's own albums treated in such a bar-<lb/>
baric way can be a traumatic experience.<lb/>
'No Room'<lb/>
Raves For X-Raves<lb/>
New Wave artists The X-Raves will be performing at Greenville's Attic this Tuesday night. May 26.<lb/>
Proposed Tuition Increases<lb/>
Cause The Ultimate Protest<lb/>
MOSCOW, ID (CPS)-While tui-<lb/>
tion protests elsewhere have been as<lb/>
large as the tuition increases impos-<lb/>
ed for next year, at the University of<lb/>
Idaho some protestors threatened to<lb/>
blow up much of the campus if fees<lb/>
are raised.<lb/>
Members of a group alternately<lb/>
calling itself the Socialist Associa-<lb/>
tion phoned in bomb threats to area<lb/>
police and media in the early morn-<lb/>
ing hours of April 27th.<lb/>
The callers pledged to detonate<lb/>
five bombs on the campus unless the<lb/>
legislature and education officials<lb/>
agreed to maintain fees, academic<lb/>
programs, and student services at<lb/>
their current levels, to use funds ear-<lb/>
marked for expanding the football<lb/>
stadium for academic programs,<lb/>
and to make faculty salaries<lb/>
"competitive" with other schools.<lb/>
Though the calls and a letter<lb/>
which buildings would be destroyed,<lb/>
the student radio station said one<lb/>
bomb was in the Student Union<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
The building itself was closed for<lb/>
an hour while police searched it.<lb/>
They found no bombs.<lb/>
The threats came just a month<lb/>
after the Board imposed a $100 fee<lb/>
increase for next year, and as the<lb/>
legislature debated charging tuition<lb/>
for the first time.<lb/>
The state constitution prohibits<lb/>
tuition at state schools, but budget<lb/>
cutbacks in the wake of a Proposi-<lb/>
tion 13-type tax relief measure have<lb/>
led to drastic fee increases in the last<lb/>
two years, and to legislative con-<lb/>
sideration of charging tuition.<lb/>
Similar increases at schools across<lb/>
the country have sparked protests.<lb/>
The most violent have been at Cor-<lb/>
nell, where marches and a pur-<lb/>
lines climaxed with a three-hour sit-<lb/>
in at the president's office.<lb/>
Many on campus in Idaho now<lb/>
consider the threat there a hoax.<lb/>
"Homebrew -Homebrew Bleu Beaver Records (TBS-08)<lb/>
"The Taj Mahal Presents No Room to DanceBlue Wave Records<lb/>
(BW-1980)<lb/>
The Jollowing record reviews originally appeared in the<lb/>
March 12, 1981 edition oj The Virginian-Pilot and the<lb/>
Ledger Star. All rights reserved.<lb/>
By ERIC FEBER<lb/>
Virginian-Pilot Surf Wrilrr<lb/>
Most record stores stock compilation albums featur-<lb/>
ing various bands, usually from Los Angeles, New York<lb/>
or Chicago, where groups flourish like mushrooms after<lb/>
a summer rain.<lb/>
Not to be outdone, Tidewater now has two albums<lb/>
showcasing this rich motherlode of local rock talent.<lb/>
Radio stations ZAM llK-94 salute local talent on<lb/>
their new "Homebrew" album, recorded live in various<lb/>
area nightspots.<lb/>
With such groups as Snuff (who have signed with a<lb/>
major record company), the Super Grit Cowboy Band,<lb/>
the Home-grown Vigilante Band, Boothill Express and<lb/>
others, the disc has a definite urban cowboy flavor.<lb/>
A more ambitious and cohesive effort is the brand-<lb/>
new compilation album. "The Taj Mahal Presents No<lb/>
Room to Dance which should be available in record<lb/>
stores within the week. Featuring the cream of this<lb/>
area's alternative rock 'n' roll bands, the disc highlights<lb/>
the styles and approaches of such bands as Tango<lb/>
Storm, X-Raves, the Noise, the Naros, Citizen 23 and<lb/>
Rock Bottom.<lb/>
From the straight-ahead rock blitz of Tango Storm,<lb/>
one of Tidewater's finest and most underrated bands, to<lb/>
the frothy pop exuberance of the X-Raves, to the lean<lb/>
electronics of Rock Bottom, to the metallic Jamearly-<lb/>
Who sound of the Noise, this record features bands who<lb/>
regularly appear at the Taj Mahal, that showcase of<lb/>
modern rock and new talent.<lb/>
Unlike the "Homebrew" album, "The Tajtp<lb/>
Dance" record is a studio affair. Most high-energy rock<lb/>
needs a good "bottom" and dynamic lows to effectively<lb/>
make its point. Unfortunately this disc doesn't have it.<lb/>
There could be many reasons. Maybe the engineer<lb/>
had his own ideas. Whatever, a good boost on the bass<lb/>
drums end would have made this a perfect record.<lb/>
It's still a good exercise. Although sometimes rough-<lb/>
around-the-edges, the album is a fine example of<lb/>
Tidewater's adventurous, high-energy rock'n'roll.<lb/>
L?itiAisjD Acour Cou?c- Tne Wmv Iam<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MAY 20, 1981 page 5<lb/>
Lady Pirates Claim Third In Nation<lb/>
B WILLIAM YE1.YERTON<lb/>
Sporli t dilfir<lb/>
Whoever labeled softball as a<lb/>
came ot inches wasn't kidding. Just<lb/>
ask East Carolina's Lady Bucs and<lb/>
Coach Alita Dillon.<lb/>
Two inches was all that came bet-<lb/>
ween ihe Bucs and a trip to the<lb/>
championship game of the National<lb/>
Slow-Pitch Softball Championship<lb/>
at Carolina Pines last weekend,<lb/>
Dillon said. Trailing North<lb/>
Carolina 3-2 in the bottom of the<lb/>
seventh, Fran Hooks ripped a line<lb/>
shot up the middle, but pitcher<lb/>
Susan Speer leaped as high as she<lb/>
could to make the grab and end the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The victory sent the Tar Heels in-<lb/>
to the championship game against<lb/>
powerful Florida State, and a 4-1<lb/>
win by the Seminoles, 54-7, gave<lb/>
them the national title.<lb/>
The Pirates suffered their first<lb/>
defeat of the tournament Friday<lb/>
afternoon when Florida State, with<lb/>
the score tied 3-3, scored nine runs<lb/>
in the top of the eighth to win 12-3.<lb/>
A majority of the runs came when<lb/>
there were two outs.<lb/>
"We still had an outstanding<lb/>
season said a proud yet disap-<lb/>
pointed Dillon. " We didn't hit<lb/>
when we needed to, but that hap-<lb/>
pens sometimes. The times we did<lb/>
hit well they were going right to peo-<lb/>
ple The Bucs finished the season<lb/>
44-7.<lb/>
The Pirates opened the Raleigh-<lb/>
based event by defeating tough<lb/>
 :??.<lb/>
?-t?f i? si"<lb/>
?MMPtiK .??' i- ?AVWfc. r<lb/>
Lady Pirate First Baseman Shirley Brown stretches<lb/>
Florida 11-7 Thursday by scoring<lb/>
four runs in their half of the fourth<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
The Bucs, seeded second in the<lb/>
tournament, defeated nemesis<lb/>
Carolina in the opening game Fri-<lb/>
day. The Pirates scored single runs<lb/>
in the first and second innings to<lb/>
gain a 2-0 lead over the Tar Heels.<lb/>
They added a third run in the<lb/>
fourth, and both teams scored in the<lb/>
sixth for the final 4-1 margin.<lb/>
Mitzi Davis led the Lady Pirate<lb/>
hitting by going two-for-three, and<lb/>
Kathy Riley added a double. Short-<lb/>
stop Laurie Bailey led the Heels by<lb/>
banging out two nits in three tries.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates then faced top-<lb/>
seeded and number-one-ranked<lb/>
Florida State later that afternoon<lb/>
and found themselves in a defensive<lb/>
struggle for most of the contest. The<lb/>
Bucs took a 2-0 lead in the first, but<lb/>
the Seminoles came back to take a<lb/>
3-2 lead with three runs in the third.<lb/>
The Bucs tied the game with a run<lb/>
in the fourth and defense dominated<lb/>
until the FSU half of the eighth<lb/>
when Seminole shortstop Darby<lb/>
Cottle started the inning with a<lb/>
walk, eventually scoring.<lb/>
Florida State literally took the bat<lb/>
out of the hands of Pirate star<lb/>
Kathy Riley by intentionally walk-<lb/>
ing the left fielder three times, and<lb/>
the Seminole coach said they took<lb/>
Riley out of the game by walking<lb/>
her.<lb/>
"Our defense just broke down<lb/>
Dillon said of the nine-run outburst.<lb/>
"We weren't knocking down balls<lb/>
in the infield so we could make the<lb/>
play. Our defense was pretty good<lb/>
until the eighth<lb/>
The loss put the Lady Pirates into<lb/>
the consolation bracket of the tour-<lb/>
nament where they had to face<lb/>
Carolina once more. The Tar Heels<lb/>
made it to the consolation finals by<lb/>
whallopping N.C. State 14-4.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs were held<lb/>
scoreless until the sixth when Riley's<lb/>
run made it 3-1. Mary Powell led off<lb/>
the Pirate seventh with a jingle.<lb/>
First baseman Shirley Brown reach-<lb/>
ed on an error. Melody Ham, pinch<lb/>
running for Brown, was forced out<lb/>
at second when Ginger Rothermel<lb/>
grounded out.<lb/>
Tammy Parham followed with a<lb/>
single to score Lillion Barnes, runn-<lb/>
ing for Powell, and the Pirates trail-<lb/>
ed by one. That brought up catcher<lb/>
Fran Hooks, who ripped a line shot<lb/>
up the middle that pitcher Speer<lb/>
made a excellent play on.<lb/>
"I was very proud of the way our<lb/>
girls played Dillon noted. "I<lb/>
know they're disappointed that the<lb/>
team didn't win because they knew<lb/>
we should have beaten Carolina<lb/>
The victory moved the Tar Heels,<lb/>
who finished the season 48-22, into<lb/>
the finals against Florida State.<lb/>
The national champions placed<lb/>
five players on the all-tournament<lb/>
team, followed by Carolina with<lb/>
four. Riley, Rothermel and Shepard<lb/>
represented the Pirates on the all-<lb/>
star team.<lb/>
The tournament, sponsored bv<lb/>
the A1AW, was highlighted by three<lb/>
players being considered for the<lb/>
Broderick Award, given to the na-<lb/>
tion's best slow-pitch softball<lb/>
player. Riley is in the running for<lb/>
the award, as is FSU shortstop Cot-<lb/>
tel and Carolina shortstop Bailey.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates earned the right<lb/>
to vie for the national crown when<lb/>
they finished second in the Region II'<lb/>
tournament ? to the Tar Heels of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Andruzzi Announces Pirate Cage Signings<lb/>
B CHRIS HOLLOMAN<lb/>
tnistasl spun diior<lb/>
I  Pirate head basketball<lb/>
coach Cath) Andruzzi has announc-<lb/>
ed the signing of four outstanding<lb/>
players to national letters o' intent.<lb/>
1 he signees include two six-footers,<lb/>
a high school All-America point<lb/>
guard am<lb/>
ransfer from<lb/>
I ouisburg Junior College.<lb/>
The tour signees are 6-2 center<lb/>
Darlene Chaney of Jefferson-<lb/>
Juguenot-Wythe High School; 6-0<lb/>
-t'd I aura Regal of South<lb/>
Bend, IN; 5-7 point guard I oraine<lb/>
Foster ot Spartanburg, SC, and 5-8<lb/>
junior college transfer Loletha Har-<lb/>
ris ot 1 ouisburg.<lb/>
The 6-2 Chane) will be the tallest<lb/>
player on the Pirate team besides<lb/>
rising junior Darlene Hedges. While<lb/>
in high school Chaney led her team<lb/>
to a tour-year overall record of<lb/>
65-11. During her senior year her<lb/>
team went undefeated with a 21-0<lb/>
mark. Chaney was a three-time all-<lb/>
district selection and a Converse<lb/>
All-America nominee. She averaged<lb/>
16.3 points per game and 10.6 re-<lb/>
bounds during her high school<lb/>
career.<lb/>
"Shan Pickard spent a lot of time<lb/>
recruiting Darlene (Chaney) and we<lb/>
are very pleased to be signing her<lb/>
Coach Andruzzi said. "She selected<lb/>
Last Carolina over South Carolina,<lb/>
and we are excited about her playing<lb/>
for us.<lb/>
"She has just come back from<lb/>
trying out for the National Sports<lb/>
Festival basketball team against<lb/>
some of the top 1(K) players in her<lb/>
region Andruzzi continued. "She<lb/>
is an alternate center for the team<lb/>
playing behind a sophomore from<lb/>
Old Dominion and a sophomore<lb/>
from Syracuse University<lb/>
Foster was a three-sport standout<lb/>
at Spartanburg High School. While<lb/>
averaging 22.5 points and seven re-<lb/>
bounds per game, she led her team<lb/>
to a 20-7 record and a regional title<lb/>
her senior year.<lb/>
Foster was named all-state twice<lb/>
and area player of the year in 1981.<lb/>
She also holds the state record in the<lb/>
100-yard dash, winning it twice in<lb/>
state championships, the 220 title<lb/>
once and the triple jump crown<lb/>
three times. She was also on the all-<lb/>
state and all-region volleyball<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
"1 oraine (Foster) made the Con-<lb/>
verse All-America (earn and is also<lb/>
an alternate on the National Sports<lb/>
Festival basketball team from the<lb/>
Southern region Andruzzi said.<lb/>
"She is a strong, aggressie player<lb/>
and should contribute a lot to our<lb/>
program<lb/>
Regal played her high school ball<lb/>
at Clay High School in South Bend,<lb/>
IN. Her senior year she averaged<lb/>
15.2 points per game. She was nam-<lb/>
ed all-state honorable mention dur-<lb/>
ing her senior year.<lb/>
"Laura (Regal) has a great deal of<lb/>
quickness and should be a big help<lb/>
to us in the future Andruzzi ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
Harris, who played her high<lb/>
school ball for the Northern Nash<lb/>
Knights, averaged 10.4 points and<lb/>
9.4 rebounds a game for<lb/>
Louisburg's national championship<lb/>
team this past season. She was<lb/>
selected to the all-region team and<lb/>
was the team MVP.<lb/>
"Harris is really excited about<lb/>
coming to East Carolina and we are<lb/>
looking forward to working with<lb/>
her Andruzzi said.<lb/>
"Overall, this was one of our best<lb/>
recruiting years ever and we signed<lb/>
some top-notch athletes Andruzzi<lb/>
continued. "My assistant coach<lb/>
Shari Pickard did a real good job<lb/>
for us in seeking out these athletes<lb/>
and we look forward to working<lb/>
with them next vear<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will be trying to<lb/>
replace four graduating seniors who<lb/>
made the A11-NCA1AW team and<lb/>
led the Pirates to a national ranking<lb/>
and regional bid.<lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
Pirate Baseball, Softball Teams Successful<lb/>
Bill Wilder ran up a 7-6 record in 1981 against the likes of UNC-CH and<lb/>
N.C. State.<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Spun- Idiior<lb/>
When spring arrives, the umpire<lb/>
shouts "Play Ball And that is ex-<lb/>
actly what the hardball and softball<lb/>
Pirates of East Carolina did this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The record-setting Lady Pirates<lb/>
became the first team in the history<lb/>
of ECU to reach the 40-win plateau<lb/>
when they drubbed Louisville, 11-4,<lb/>
in the second round of the Region II<lb/>
tournament in Tennessee. The Lady<lb/>
Bucs went on to finish third in the<lb/>
national tournament at Carolina<lb/>
Pines last weekend.<lb/>
The baseball Pirates, in a<lb/>
rebuilding year, turned in a 28-15<lb/>
mark while playing the toughest<lb/>
schedule in their history. The major<lb/>
factor in the success was pitching.<lb/>
Hurlers Bill Wilder, Bob Patterson<lb/>
and Rick Ramey provided steady<lb/>
performances for the young team. A<lb/>
berth in the NCAA tournament was<lb/>
a possibility, but the Bucs lost their<lb/>
last four games to spoil the chance.<lb/>
The pitching staff's ERA of 2.78<lb/>
is among the five best in the nation.<lb/>
Patterson, 5-2, led the way with a<lb/>
fine mark of 1.97. Wilder, the junior<lb/>
from Tarboro, finished the year 7-6<lb/>
and had an ERA of 2.33. Ramey<lb/>
recorded seven wins against six<lb/>
losses and had a 2.99 ERA.<lb/>
Wilder set an ECU record for inn-<lb/>
ings pitched with 112 and moved to<lb/>
second in strikeouts with 118. He<lb/>
also pitched 10 complete games for<lb/>
the second year in a row. He and<lb/>
Ramey, a senior, moved into a se-<lb/>
cond place tie with Pete Conaty<lb/>
(1976-78) for career wins with 20.<lb/>
His 118 strikeouts moved him into<lb/>
first on the career list with 213.<lb/>
Patterson, a leftfhander from<lb/>
Greenville, S.C struck out 81 in<lb/>
just 64 innings. He improved his<lb/>
career mark to 17-6 over three<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
Ramey, a righthander from<lb/>
Ridgeway, Va fashioned the<lb/>
team's best record at 7-2 and moved<lb/>
to first on the career appearance list<lb/>
with 54 outings.<lb/>
The entire staff set new records<lb/>
for complete games with 22 and<lb/>
strikeouts with 285.<lb/>
The Bucs had two .300 hitters,<lb/>
junior third baseman Todd Hendley<lb/>
and junior rightfielder John<lb/>
Hallow. Hendley led the team with a<lb/>
.304 average and 13 doubles, one shy<lb/>
of the school record. Hallow hit .301<lb/>
with a team-leading five homers.<lb/>
The softball Pirates, ranked<lb/>
number one in the country for most<lb/>
of the year, broke the school record<lb/>
for wins in a season. For the last two<lb/>
seasons their combined record is<lb/>
81-12.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs set several school<lb/>
records. Jo Landa Clayton knocked<lb/>
in seven runs against North<lb/>
Carolina, and Mitzi Davis belted<lb/>
three triples in a game against<lb/>
Western Carolina.<lb/>
Mitzi Davis broke two of her own<lb/>
records by appearing in more than<lb/>
39 games and going to the plate<lb/>
more than 156 times. She also broke<lb/>
her own record for most hits in a<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates came away with<lb/>
the championship of the N.C. State<lb/>
Invitational, regarded as one of the<lb/>
most competitive slow-pitch tour-<lb/>
naments in the nation. To do so,<lb/>
they had to come back and defeat<lb/>
eventual national champion Florida<lb/>
State twice.<lb/>
They also vvon the NCAIAW<lb/>
Qualifying Tournament and cap-<lb/>
tured second place in the Region II<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
m ? <lb/>
. ?<lb/>
Another Lady Pirate scores against heated rival UNC-CIf ?<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057342_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
MAY 20, 1981<lb/>
Jones Captures Second Place<lb/>
In North-South Tournament<lb/>
By Chris Holloman<lb/>
Ami. spofiv Milur<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
University golfer Steve<lb/>
Jones was defeated in<lb/>
his bid to clench the<lb/>
North-South Amateur<lb/>
Golf Championship<lb/>
Saturday at the<lb/>
Pinehurst Country<lb/>
Club when he was<lb/>
defeated by UCI A<lb/>
senior Corey Pvin.<lb/>
Pavin. of Oxnard,<lb/>
Calif a former World<lb/>
Juniors champion, won<lb/>
eight of nine holds dur-<lb/>
ing one stretch of the<lb/>
morning round in the<lb/>
36-hold event. He<lb/>
finished with an 11 to<lb/>
12 victory over Jones.<lb/>
Jones was able to win<lb/>
onlv two holes during<lb/>
the match. He chipped<lb/>
in from 35 feet on the<lb/>
first hole of the match<lb/>
and took advantage o<lb/>
a double bogey bv<lb/>
Pavin on the second<lb/>
hole to win again. After<lb/>
that point, however, it<lb/>
was all Pavin.<lb/>
"All the bad shots 1<lb/>
aadn't hit all week 1 hit<lb/>
today Jones explain-<lb/>
ed after the match.<lb/>
Jones said that Pavin<lb/>
was a fine champion<lb/>
and a great golfer and<lb/>
also said he was pleased<lb/>
to get as far as he did in<lb/>
the tournament.<lb/>
To reach the final<lb/>
round the 12th-seeded<lb/>
Jones had to win six<lb/>
matches including a<lb/>
20 hold victory over<lb/>
Canadian Jon Lrvasti<lb/>
on Thursday and a 1-ri-<lb/>
da) victory over Ray<lb/>
freeman of<lb/>
Greensboro.<lb/>
AIN'T NO REASON TO GO<lb/>
ANYPLACE ELSE<lb/>
FOR A PENNEY<lb/>
??'<lb/>
( 1 IIM Ml I'OSI<lb/>
The h as! Carolinian<lb/>
Published pvc ? ruesdai<lb/>
Tfursoay 3ur rv<lb/>
year a"c ever ? ? ? Our<lb/>
ifa the summci<lb/>
TttG Eist Cere ma ?? <lb/>
t . ? tewsp ai<lb/>
Co ?? n<lb/>
ODe' f' ' : - for a<lb/>
by trie s'uOcn ? E  S <lb/>
Untvers <lb/>
Subsc 'ption Rates<lb/>
Business S3J<lb/>
rhers sis reai i<lb/>
? ' I ?<lb/>
Greenv . N<lb/>
E<lb/>
-<lb/>
Telephone '5' ?3?6 636' f30?<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
SHORT TERM LEASES<lb/>
Available 'or shatmcj house acrosM<lb/>
from campus Can '42 026' oi<lb/>
?it 4057<lb/>
THREE BEDROOM APART<lb/>
MENT Apartment to subleav tot<lb/>
summer ?8' 67 per month<lb/>
YOUR MOTHER<lb/>
WARNED US.<lb/>
So we knew this college ring sale had to be perfect for you.<lb/>
bhe told us you were difficult. "Never ate vegetables she said<lb/>
Never calls home Preparing for you was a tough assignment.<lb/>
But we're as tough as our toughest customer. Our rings are<lb/>
custom designed and backed by a lifetime warranty.<lb/>
- If you're undecided about a college ring, we can make your deci<lb/>
sion easy. Because you can get a terrific deal when you trade in<lb/>
your I OK gold high school ring.<lb/>
You can choose from dozens of styles. We've got something for<lb/>
the most demanding student. Even you.<lb/>
But don't thank us Thank your mother.<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
k<lb/>
 <lb/>
Buy one Single Hamburger ;<lb/>
at regular price, get airajher <lb/>
for<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
ANO<lb/>
TOMATO<lb/>
EXTRA<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES<lb/>
MAY 31, 1981<lb/>
in IIm .m<lb/>
( I IIoi PON<lb/>
ut'Miei<lb/>
phone Pool<lb/>
laundry, bus service A C gdi<lb/>
Oaqe disposa' a ,n washei<lb/>
IWfttture Al:c 'ook.nq tor ?v0 I<lb/>
female roommates to rent tor the<lb/>
tan 752 S3S2 637 2370<lb/>
63B 2422iNevy B<lb/>
FEVIALE ROOVMATE To share<lb/>
duplex apartment three miles<lb/>
from campus Rent jso per month<lb/>
plus utilities Can Sheila at<lb/>
752 5?18<lb/>
Buy one Single Hamburger<lb/>
at regular price, get another<lb/>
forK:<lb/>
CHEESE Wfm ?<lb/>
ANO f?<lb/>
TOMATO 'f??B PV"US<lb/>
EXTRA MpjjLTAJt<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES<lb/>
MAY 31, 1981<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
5<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
IKORVED<lb/>
May 20, 1981<lb/>
Lobby ot the Student Supply Store<lb/>
' ? 1981 ArtCarved Class Rings.<lb/>
501 E. 10th St.<lb/>
103GREENVILLE<lb/>
BLVD.<lb/>
An excitingly unique way to renew your body, mind and appearance!<lb/>
DANIEL CLIFTON<lb/>
HOST<lb/>
FAMILY HOT TUB SPA &amp; SAUNA<lb/>
1 Person  1 Hour. . $8.95<lb/>
3 People . . .1 Hour . . .$5.95 each<lb/>
? Family or Group (1 Hour) $19.95<lb/>
? Senior Citizens Group (1 hour) $14.95<lb/>
(?4-6 people)<lb/>
Sun Tanning<lb/>
Booth<lb/>
on3 visit (only) $1.99<lb/>
15 sessions $28.00<lb/>
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAYS<lb/>
OPEN DAILY 7 a.m. - 10 p.m<lb/>
1 - 5 p.m.<lb/>
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY<lb/>
VERY SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY MEMBERSHIP PRICES AVAILABLE<lb/>
JANET BOWERS<lb/>
HAIR DRESSER<lb/>
With this couponi<lb/>
FREE T-SHIRT<lb/>
To The 1st 100<lb/>
Customers<lb/>
? Energy Saving Coupon ?<lb/>
$2.00 Gas Coupon<lb/>
for each car with<lb/>
4 or more customers<lb/>
FREE FOOT MASSAGE<lb/>
Included with any service<lb/>
(with this coupon)<lb/>
FAMILY HAIR CARE SALON<lb/>
Style &amp; Shampoo $8.95<lb/>
Perm $24.00<lb/>
Facial $5.95<lb/>
Vitamins &amp; Minerals<lb/>
Food Supplements<lb/>
Personal Care<lb/>
Haircare<lb/>
Skincare<lb/>
Household Products<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
- ECU SEASON -<lb/>
FOOTBALL TICKETS<lb/>
 WITH 3 MONTH MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
? For More Information:<lb/>
Call 752-2076 or 752-5048<lb/>
Prices Above Represent Introductory Rates<lb/>
620<lb/>
NT<lb/>
THE<lb/>
LIFE-FORCE CENTER<lb/>
SOUTH PITT STREET, GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
(Located between 5th and Dickinson)<lb/>
jfffrflgjjl<lb/>
Independent<lb/>
Distributor<lb/>
BORED?<lb/>
Make Money, Make Friends<lb/>
Make a Future<lb/>
Shaklee is more than<lb/>
a living  if s a life-style.<lb/>
THE SHAKLEE WAY SLIM PLAN"<lb/>
What Have You Got To Lose?<lb/>
An Authorized<lb/>
California Cooperage Dealer<lb/>
??f Hot Tubs, Spas, &amp; Saunas<lb/>
(READ UP)<lb/>
s<lb/>
s<lb/>
E<lb/>
N<lb/>
S<lb/>
U<lb/>
o<lb/>
I<lb/>
c<lb/>
N<lb/>
O<lb/>
C<lb/>
R<lb/>
U<lb/>
O<lb/>
Y<lb/>
F<lb/>
O<lb/>
L<lb/>
E<lb/>
V<lb/>
E<lb/>
L<lb/>
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H<lb/>
T<lb/>
E<lb/>
S<lb/>
I<lb/>
A<lb/>
R<lb/>
t<lb/>
KATHY MOORE<lb/>
HOSTESS<lb/>
WAYNE HATHCOCK<lb/>
HAIR DRESSER<lb/>
RON NICHOLS<lb/>
BARBER<lb/>
Opening May 22<lb/>
LISA BUTTS<lb/>
HOSTESS<lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057342_0007"/>
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