<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057449_0001"/>
Mt<lb/>
(Earclinta<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58 No. 32<lb/>
Thursday, January 14,1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Transmitter License Delayed<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
M?ff WrMrr<lb/>
Just in case you've worked your<lb/>
fingers to the bone spinning the<lb/>
knob on your radio tuner from one<lb/>
end to the other in search of<lb/>
WZMB, you've been wasting your<lb/>
time.<lb/>
As has been the fortune of the sta-<lb/>
tion for several months, further pro-<lb/>
blems have hampered WZMB from<lb/>
airing on schedule.<lb/>
Transmitters, licenses, paperwork<lb/>
 so what is it this time?<lb/>
According to Sam Barwick,<lb/>
WZMB's general manager, the sta-<lb/>
tion now lacks the studio-to-<lb/>
transmitter-link license (STL)<lb/>
necessary to air.<lb/>
The STL license permits the sta-<lb/>
tion to transmit a microwave signal<lb/>
A ir Florida Plane Crashes<lb/>
Into Frozen Potomac River<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) ? An Air<lb/>
Florida jet, carrying 73 people into a<lb/>
snow-filled sky, slammed into a<lb/>
bridge packed to rush-hour capacity<lb/>
Wednesday and plunged into the icy<lb/>
Potomac River. Police said at least<lb/>
63 people were missing and presum-<lb/>
ed dead.<lb/>
Officials called off the search for<lb/>
bodies in the frigid water five hours<lb/>
after the crash with most of the<lb/>
bodies trapped underwater in the<lb/>
mangled wreckage of the blue and<lb/>
white aircraft.<lb/>
District of Columbia Police<lb/>
Spokesman G.W. Hankins said<lb/>
although a handful of passengers<lb/>
survived, it was assumed most were<lb/>
trapped in the submerged plane.<lb/>
Hankins said at least three ? and<lb/>
perhaps as many as 10 ? people<lb/>
aboard Air Florida flight 90 oound<lb/>
for Tampa and Fort Lauderdale liv-<lb/>
ed through the crash.<lb/>
Asked if the rest were presumed<lb/>
dead, Hankins said, "I'm afraid so.<lb/>
That's the assumption ? that most<lb/>
of the people were still in their seat<lb/>
belts from take-off procedure and<lb/>
are still in the plane<lb/>
The U.S. Park Police said there<lb/>
were at least 16 known survivors '<lb/>
both passengers and those in cars on<lb/>
the busy 14th Street Bridge. The<lb/>
capital's first major snowstorm of<lb/>
the year sent thousands of govern-<lb/>
ment workers home early.<lb/>
Federal safety officials had no im-<lb/>
mediate idea of what caused the<lb/>
crash ? first fatal crash at National<lb/>
Airport in 31 years and the first<lb/>
commercial crash in the nation since<lb/>
1979 ? but said air traffic control<lb/>
was not part of he problem. More<lb/>
than 1,200 controllers went on strike<lb/>
last summer and were fired.<lb/>
Air Florida said the plane, a Boe-<lb/>
ing 737, was carrying 68 passengers<lb/>
and a crew of five on a flight<lb/>
originating in Washington. The<lb/>
airline said 13 passengers were going<lb/>
to Fort Laudcrdale and the rest to<lb/>
Tampa. It had not released a<lb/>
passenger list.<lb/>
Joe Stiley, who was a passenger<lb/>
on the plane, said late Wednesday<lb/>
night in an interview at a Virginia<lb/>
hospital that he knew from the mo-<lb/>
ment the plane lifted off it was not<lb/>
going to clear the bridge.<lb/>
Stiley, 42, of Alexandria, Va a<lb/>
professional pilot, said, "I had a<lb/>
pretty good indication that things<lb/>
weren't going right when we started<lb/>
down ihe runway<lb/>
"I turned to (my seatmate) and<lb/>
said 'We're not going to make it;<lb/>
we're going in he said. "We were<lb/>
See AT LEAST, Page 5<lb/>
from the studio in Joyner Library to<lb/>
the transmitter link atop Tyler<lb/>
Residence Hall.<lb/>
Though Barwick applied for the<lb/>
license at least two months ago, he is<lb/>
not certain when it will be granted.<lb/>
"We hope to be on the air by the<lb/>
end of this month or the beginning<lb/>
of next month Barwick said, "but<lb/>
that all depends on the STL<lb/>
license<lb/>
Last month, when a faulty<lb/>
transmitter delayed the station from<lb/>
airing, Barwick explained that the<lb/>
equipment had been sent back to the<lb/>
company for repairs.<lb/>
The transmitter, which was pro-<lb/>
ducing only about 100 watts, has<lb/>
since been returned, and according<lb/>
to Barwick, it looks "pretty good<lb/>
All problems aside, Barwick<lb/>
seems confident in WZMB's staff.<lb/>
"We just took on six or seven new<lb/>
people, and we're going to start<lb/>
training them now he said.<lb/>
"Everyone on the staff is ready to<lb/>
go<lb/>
Programs scheduled for the sta-<lb/>
tion, when it finally gets on the air,<lb/>
will include religious shows, jazz<lb/>
and classical music shows and<lb/>
"off-the-wall" news reports.<lb/>
Barwick also feels that guest<lb/>
speakers will probably become a<lb/>
part of the show.<lb/>
So, when will students be able to<lb/>
tune in to WZMB for campus news,<lb/>
blues and views?<lb/>
"Well Barwick says, "the only<lb/>
thing I can say for sure is that we<lb/>
will be on this semester<lb/>
SnOW Job Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
A student braves the weather to make her early morning class. Greenville<lb/>
police responded to "eight to 10" accidents caused by the snow and ice on<lb/>
the roads. One student slipped and fell down ic steps on campus and was<lb/>
treated by the Student Health C enter.<lb/>
Protestors March On Base<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
siaff Wrilrr<lb/>
Concern over United States<lb/>
militarv involvement in the Central<lb/>
American nation of El Salvador<lb/>
became a North Carolina issue this<lb/>
week, as 200 people from all over<lb/>
the East Coast converged on Fort<lb/>
Bragg, the U.S. military base in<lb/>
Fayetteville, to protest the U.S.<lb/>
decision to train 1,000 El<lb/>
Salvadoran soldiers there.<lb/>
"We've been told to train those<lb/>
people, and we will train them<lb/>
said Captain Maddox, a spokesman<lb/>
for the base. "They're being trained<lb/>
here at their requestin basic com-<lb/>
bat training<lb/>
The U.S. also plans to train 600<lb/>
officer candidates at Fort Benning,<lb/>
Georgia, starting later this month.<lb/>
The demonstrators shouting<lb/>
"He. hey. Uncle Sam, we<lb/>
remember Vietnam" marched in<lb/>
orderly fashion onto the base to pre-<lb/>
sent a letter to the base commander,<lb/>
It. Gen. Jack Mackmull, protesting<lb/>
the training of the troops. A<lb/>
representative of base command.<lb/>
Col. Eric Erickson Jr. was on hand<lb/>
to receive the letter.<lb/>
"We believe that if the present<lb/>
government is engaged in such<lb/>
violence and atrocities against its<lb/>
own people that it's immoral to con-<lb/>
tinue to support that kind of<lb/>
regime stated the Rev. Henry At-<lb/>
tkins, coordinator of Triad Citizens<lb/>
Concerned for Central America, a<lb/>
Greensboro-based organization.<lb/>
"Bringing the Salvadoran troops<lb/>
here to be trained is an escalation of<lb/>
the violence on the part of this coun-<lb/>
try and this administration against<lb/>
the El Salvadoran people<lb/>
Rev. Attkins spent a week living<lb/>
with El Salvadoran refugees and<lb/>
claimed he spoke with women "who<lb/>
had seen their pregnant daughters'<lb/>
stomachs torn open and their<lb/>
fetuses fed to pigs These acts, At-<lb/>
tkins claimed, were committed by<lb/>
government troops.<lb/>
According to Maryknoll Catholic<lb/>
priest Roy Bourgeous, who has<lb/>
spent time in El Salvador, there are<lb/>
14 families representing two percent<lb/>
of the population who control 60<lb/>
percent of the land and resources.<lb/>
This two percent, Bourgeous claims,<lb/>
"live in luxury, while the rest of the<lb/>
people struggle for survival<lb/>
"The U.S. government is siding<lb/>
with the rich two percent, who are<lb/>
backed up by the military<lb/>
Bourgeous continued.<lb/>
"The military are killing anyone<lb/>
they believe opposes them added<lb/>
Attkins. "The violence is directed,<lb/>
by and large, against church people,<lb/>
because they are organized<lb/>
Attkins . Is that U.S. fear of<lb/>
communism has played a large role<lb/>
in our support of the military in El<lb/>
Salvador. He feels that our military<lb/>
support was strengthening, as op-<lb/>
posed to weakening, communist in-<lb/>
fluence in El Salvador.<lb/>
"If you want to drive people into<lb/>
the Soviet Camp, you couldn't<lb/>
develop a better practice than the<lb/>
one that the U.S. has now in its pre-<lb/>
sent foreign policy in El Salvador<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Attkins also claimed that this<lb/>
position is "propping up an op-<lb/>
pressive military regime<lb/>
Perhaps moss notable of ihe kill<lb/>
ings in El Salvador took place in<lb/>
1980, when Archbishop Oscar<lb/>
Romero was assassinated, while<lb/>
celebrating Mass, for speaking out<lb/>
against violence and government<lb/>
tactics.<lb/>
Later in 1980, four Catholic mis-<lb/>
sionaries were also killed. Two of<lb/>
the slain women were Maryknoll<lb/>
Catholic nuns.<lb/>
According to Maryknoll<lb/>
spokesperson Sisier Helene<lb/>
O'Sullivan, there are no longer any<lb/>
Maryknoll missionaries in El<lb/>
Salvador.<lb/>
"We had to pull them out"<lb/>
because of the situation there, she<lb/>
said. "Our giving of arms to the<lb/>
military government just prolongs<lb/>
the fighting and prolongs the death.<lb/>
The U.S. should be pushing for a<lb/>
negotiated settlement as called for<lb/>
by the bishops<lb/>
According to Defense Depart-<lb/>
ment officials, the cost to the U.S.<lb/>
taxpayers will be $15 million for the<lb/>
training of the El Salvadoran<lb/>
troops.<lb/>
Back in Fayetteville, close con-<lb/>
nections were drawn by the<lb/>
demonstrators between U.S. in-<lb/>
volvement in El Salvador and this<lb/>
country's past experiences in Viet-<lb/>
nam.<lb/>
"We're treading this path again<lb/>
noted Dave Dellinger, a peace ac-<lb/>
tivist with the War Resisters' League<lb/>
and former defendant in the<lb/>
Chicago Seen trial.<lb/>
Dellinger made his statements<lb/>
during a press conference<lb/>
See PROTESTORS, Page 2<lb/>
Inside<lb/>
A star is born? Well, not quite,<lb/>
but a hefty number of starry-eyed<lb/>
students gathered at Fletcher<lb/>
Music Center for the annual<lb/>
Busch Gardens auditions See<lb/>
William Yelverton's story on<lb/>
poge 6<lb/>
Engineers To Be In Demand<lb/>
(CPS) ? The employment<lb/>
outlook for 1982 graduates, depen-<lb/>
ding on field of study and<lb/>
geographic location, will either be<lb/>
"very good, or very, very bad ac-<lb/>
cording to preliminary findings<lb/>
from a Michigan State University<lb/>
study on recruitment trends.<lb/>
The annual study foresees that<lb/>
chemical engineers will command<lb/>
the highest salaries among graduates<lb/>
this spring, while education majors<lb/>
will probably draw the lowest<lb/>
salaries and experience the hardest<lb/>
time finding jobs.<lb/>
"This will be a very unique year,<lb/>
unlike we've ever had before<lb/>
reports John D. Shingleton, director<lb/>
of MSU's placement service, which<lb/>
conducts the study. "There is a very<lb/>
high demand for jobs in some<lb/>
disciplines and locations. We're see-<lb/>
ing vast extremes in hiring practices.<lb/>
Everything either went up or went<lb/>
down<lb/>
On the up side are such disciplines<lb/>
as computer science, engineering,<lb/>
accounting, marketing, and<lb/>
transportation-related majors. Job<lb/>
seekers in those areas can expect to<lb/>
find good jobs at competitive salary<lb/>
levels, Shingleton says.<lb/>
"The market will be high on<lb/>
anything relating to high<lb/>
technology, and low on disciplines<lb/>
such as natural resources, fisheries<lb/>
and wildlife, and arts and letters<lb/>
Shingleton explains.<lb/>
Chemical engineers with four-<lb/>
year degrees will earn around<lb/>
$26,000 their first year out of<lb/>
school, Shingleton predicts, while<lb/>
lowly education majors will scum<lb/>
after jobs offering yearlv salaries of<lb/>
around Si3.(XX).<lb/>
Other studies, however, claim the<lb/>
teaching job market will improve by<lb/>
the mid-eighties.<lb/>
Location will make a big dif-<lb/>
fesrence in whether or not grads<lb/>
find employment this spring,<lb/>
Shingleton points out.<lb/>
"The market in the midwest is<lb/>
drying up according to<lb/>
Shingleton, "while the southwest<lb/>
and sunbelt areas look very good<lb/>
Although the job prospects for<lb/>
liberal arts majors in general will be<lb/>
less than rosy, Shingleton believes<lb/>
that good planning and preparation<lb/>
will net most graduates a job this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
"The market is tightening up a lit-<lb/>
tle, but there are jobs out there<lb/>
People are just going to have to<lb/>
work a little harder to get work<lb/>
It's Not Phoney: AH Rings Lead To Rolm<lb/>
By TOM HALL<lb/>
Ne? tdttor<lb/>
Rrriiinnnggg.<lb/>
"East Carolinian. Mav I<lb/>
help<lb/>
Click.<lb/>
Rrriiinnnggg.<lb/>
"East Carolinian?"<lb/>
Beep. Boo p. Beep. Boo p.<lb/>
Click.<lb/>
Rrriimnnggg.<lb/>
"East?"<lb/>
We 're sorry. The number you<lb/>
have dialed is not in service. If<lb/>
you need assistance?<lb/>
Click.<lb/>
Scenes similar to the one above<lb/>
have been taking place across<lb/>
campus with the installation of<lb/>
the new Rolm CBX telephone<lb/>
system.<lb/>
The new system, originally in-<lb/>
tended to be installed on Dec. 28,<lb/>
was "not actually cut over until<lb/>
Jan. 8 according to Brenda<lb/>
Herring of the Business Affairs<lb/>
office.<lb/>
"It's not even a week Herr-<lb/>
ing said. "There are going to be<lb/>
a few bugs in it<lb/>
One of the features of the new<lb/>
system is the "U-Touch"<lb/>
pushbutton telephone. The<lb/>
system will also facilitate the in-<lb/>
stallation of telephones in faculty<lb/>
members offices. In classroom<lb/>
buildings such as Austin and<lb/>
Rawl, some faculty members had<lb/>
to go to department offices to<lb/>
place a call or unlock a "black<lb/>
box" telephone in some<lb/>
hallways.<lb/>
The East Carolina business<lb/>
manager, Julian R. Vainwright,<lb/>
is heading the system cutover, but<lb/>
he was in a meeting Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon and could not be<lb/>
reached for comment. Herring<lb/>
said the new system was still be-<lb/>
ing wired.<lb/>
In a "VERY IMPORTANT"<lb/>
memorandum issued Dec. 11,<lb/>
Vainwright explained that<lb/>
although the Rolm system is<lb/>
"modern" and "computerized<lb/>
with many nice features, it must<lb/>
be understood and used properly<lb/>
for optimum results<lb/>
"Each telephone user (faculty<lb/>
and staff) is urged to attend one<lb/>
two-hour training session<lb/>
Vainwright's memo read. These<lb/>
"hands-on" sessions, using<lb/>
"live" phones, are required in<lb/>
the contract with Carolina<lb/>
Telephone and Telegraph, and<lb/>
will be conducted through Feb. 5.<lb/>
However, problems seem to be<lb/>
persisting until the switchover is<lb/>
complete.<lb/>
One worker at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center said several peo-<lb/>
ple there had been "cut off" dur-<lb/>
ing their telephone conversations.<lb/>
Another employee in the<lb/>
building, which houses the stu-<lb/>
dent government and student<lb/>
union offices, said a number of<lb/>
people have had trouble calling<lb/>
out of Mendenhall. This worker,<lb/>
who asked not to be identified,<lb/>
recalled that "the phone would<lb/>
ring and we would get a recorded<lb/>
message even when we hadn't<lb/>
called out" at the information<lb/>
desk at the student center.<lb/>
At the Student Health Center,<lb/>
"the phone is acting crazy said<lb/>
Susan Reynolds of the infirmary<lb/>
staff. "The phone'll ring and<lb/>
there's no one there. We just<lb/>
hang up<lb/>
However, such problems seem<lb/>
to have spared Joyner Library.<lb/>
Director Eugene Brunelle sug-<lb/>
gested that any difficulties with<lb/>
campus telephones during the<lb/>
switchover were due to a lack of<lb/>
training in how to use the phones.<lb/>
"Some of the numbers have<lb/>
been changed from what's in the<lb/>
book Brunelle noted. Callers<lb/>
dialing one of these numbers are<lb/>
likely to hear the phone ringing in<lb/>
the receiver although it may not<lb/>
be ringing at the other end of the<lb/>
line, according to the library<lb/>
director.<lb/>
In the Department of English<lb/>
office, "it's a little bit hairy<lb/>
said secretary Kay Mills.<lb/>
"There've been so many calls<lb/>
coming in<lb/>
Mills explained that to connect<lb/>
a call to a faculty member's of-<lb/>
fice, she has to "flash" ? hit the<lb/>
button on top of the phone, or<lb/>
plunger in telephone company<lb/>
lingo ? then push the star button<lb/>
and the seven button, and then<lb/>
the extension number. This pro-<lb/>
cess is repeated ? except the one<lb/>
button is pushed instead of the<lb/>
seven ? if there is no answer,<lb/>
Mills said.<lb/>
"Oh, it's lots of fun she add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Those who still have rotary-<lb/>
dial telephones must now dial 27<lb/>
instead of pushing the seven but-<lb/>
ton to transfer a call.<lb/>
Until then?<lb/>
Rrriiinnnggg.<lb/>
Rrriiinnnggg.<lb/>
Rrriiinnnggg.<lb/>
"Hello?"<lb/>
Click.<lb/>
- m ?? MmuipiiUpQi<lb/>
I<lb/>
M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057449_0002"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcements column<lb/>
please send the announcement (as<lb/>
brief as possible) typed and<lb/>
double spaced to The East Caroli<lb/>
man in care of the news editor.<lb/>
There is no charge for an<lb/>
nouncements, but space is often<lb/>
limited<lb/>
The deadline for announcement<lb/>
are 5pm Friday for the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 5 p m Tuesday for the<lb/>
Tnursday paper<lb/>
The space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
m?nf?<lb/>
SPORTS CLUB<lb/>
The first meeting of 198? tor the<lb/>
Sports Club Council will be held<lb/>
Vied Jan Mat 4p m in Memorial<lb/>
Gym. Room 105 Each sports club<lb/>
recognized by the Department tor<lb/>
intramural Recreational Services<lb/>
Hi required to have a represen<lb/>
tative in attendance This meeting<lb/>
is ot utmost importance to each<lb/>
club Agenda items include:<lb/>
facility, fields usage allocation,<lb/>
spring schedules approval disap<lb/>
ptoval. budget problems for cer<lb/>
tain clubs and club updates.<lb/>
GYMNASTICS ROOM<lb/>
UTILIZATION<lb/>
The gymnastics room located in<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium is open to<lb/>
s'udents, faculty and staff each<lb/>
Mon ?Thur from 6 30 p m. to 8<lb/>
p m Members of the university<lb/>
community are invited to utilize<lb/>
the gymnastics equipment and ex<lb/>
erase area under the guidance of<lb/>
qualified instructors during these<lb/>
time periods<lb/>
HANDBALLRACQUET<lb/>
BALL<lb/>
A challenge court system will be in<lb/>
effect on court no 2 from I 15 p m<lb/>
to midnight on Tues , Thurs and<lb/>
Sat. nights. A blackboard has been<lb/>
provided on the observation deck<lb/>
level to establish challenge posi<lb/>
t i o n s .<lb/>
SKI SNOWSHOE<lb/>
Ski Snowshoe. W VA , Spring<lb/>
Break- PHYE 1150- PHYE 1151<lb/>
or go non credit Contact Ms Jo<lb/>
Saunders, ?05 Memorial Gym<lb/>
757 6000 for information Deposits<lb/>
will be accepted on January 26 at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Memorial Gym 108 Call<lb/>
before this date to reserve your<lb/>
room Limited space is available<lb/>
SIGMA BIG BROTHERS<lb/>
There will be a meeting of all<lb/>
Sigma Big Brothers on Thursday<lb/>
Jan U at 6 30 at the house All<lb/>
brothers must attend<lb/>
PIE THROW<lb/>
The Tri Sigswill be having their<lb/>
annual pie throw at Chapter Ten<lb/>
on Friday, January 15 from 4 7<lb/>
Reduced prices on brewski's.<lb/>
chillys, and other alcoholic<lb/>
beverages. So come on down ano<lb/>
throw a pie at the Sigma of your<lb/>
choice<lb/>
REBEL<lb/>
The Rebel will be a ceptinq sub<lb/>
missions of Prose, Poetry and Art<lb/>
work until the 22 of January Work<lb/>
may be left m the Rebel or Media<lb/>
Boaro offices.<lb/>
SLC<lb/>
The ECU Sign Language Club<lb/>
will hold its regular bimonthly<lb/>
covered dish supper and meeting<lb/>
on Sunday. Jan. 17 at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Multi<lb/>
Purpose Room The supper will<lb/>
begin at 6:00 p m. with a short<lb/>
business meting and captioned<lb/>
film to follow<lb/>
The meal and meeting are open<lb/>
to any interested student, faculty<lb/>
member, or a member of the com<lb/>
munity You do not need to know<lb/>
Sign Language to attend, but<lb/>
students who are taking sign<lb/>
language classes or who have<lb/>
taken them in the past are en<lb/>
couraged to attend The purpose of<lb/>
the SLC is to allow sign language<lb/>
students and hearing impaired<lb/>
students and community<lb/>
members to socialize and develop<lb/>
communication skills<lb/>
We hope to see you there!<lb/>
AHEA<lb/>
The American Home Economics<lb/>
Association will meet on Monday,<lb/>
Jan. 18 at 500 p.m , in the Van<lb/>
Landingham Room of the Home<lb/>
Ec Building Mrs Tula Safterfield<lb/>
will speak on Home Economists in<lb/>
Human Service. All members and<lb/>
others interested in Home<lb/>
Economics in Human Service All<lb/>
members and others interested In<lb/>
Home Economics are encouraged<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
SCIENCE MAJORS<lb/>
On Monday. Jan 18. American<lb/>
Chemical Society Student Affiliate<lb/>
will meet at 7 p.m. in Flanagan<lb/>
202 All members and interested<lb/>
persons are uroed tn attend<lb/>
ADVERTISING<lb/>
COMPETITION<lb/>
Students from East Carolina<lb/>
University. Greenville. North<lb/>
Carolina, have been invited to take<lb/>
part in a prestigious creative<lb/>
advertising competition, in which<lb/>
they will vie tor top prizes of Si ,000<lb/>
cash and an eight week paid sum<lb/>
mer internship at McCaffrey and<lb/>
McCall. INC the New York adver<lb/>
tising agency which sponsors the<lb/>
program<lb/>
the competition, called<lb/>
Creative Advertising Challenge, is<lb/>
being conducted by McCaffrey<lb/>
and McCall for the second year<lb/>
Students who participate must<lb/>
create an advertising campaign to<lb/>
promote a course or department<lb/>
at tneir school They can compete<lb/>
in either a creative writing or art<lb/>
direction category They are re<lb/>
quired to submit a concept state<lb/>
ment of what they intend tocomm<lb/>
municate in their campaign, as<lb/>
well as the copy or art for two<lb/>
elements of the campaign a<lb/>
television commercial and<lb/>
magazine advertisement Each<lb/>
entry will be judged against all<lb/>
others in its category<lb/>
Deadline tor entry is Marcn i,<lb/>
1982. with announcement of win<lb/>
ners scheduled for April In addi<lb/>
tion to the top prizes, awards of<lb/>
$750 for Second Place. $500 for<lb/>
Third Place, and up to fen $100<lb/>
Honorable Mentions will be made<lb/>
m each category A total of up to 26<lb/>
orizes are available<lb/>
Entry forms ano all intormanon<lb/>
needed to enter Creative Advertis<lb/>
mg Challenge are available a'<lb/>
East Carolina University, from<lb/>
Dorothy Safterfield, Communica<lb/>
tion Arts Department<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
The National Teacher Examina<lb/>
tions will be ottered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday.<lb/>
February JO, 1W2 Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to the Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, Box 966 R. Princeton, NJ<lb/>
08540, to arrive by January 18,<lb/>
1982 Application blanks arc also<lb/>
available at the Testing Center,<lb/>
Speight Building. Room 105. East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
DR. MARTIN LUTHER<lb/>
KING, JR.<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of NAACr is<lb/>
sponsoring a program saluting<lb/>
this great individual's birthday<lb/>
and recognition of this day as a na<lb/>
tional holiday The program is to<lb/>
be held January 15. 198? beginning<lb/>
at 12 noon in front ot the Student<lb/>
Supply Store Play a role in mak<lb/>
ing this day a success) After all he<lb/>
did it for the cause and paid the<lb/>
price! For further details, call<lb/>
757 6942<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
fhe NAACP will have its<lb/>
regular meeting, Wednesday. Oc<lb/>
tober 20th at 6 00 in Room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall All members please<lb/>
attend<lb/>
All excutive officers and com<lb/>
mittee chairpersons will meet<lb/>
Monday, October 18th at 600 in<lb/>
Room 242 Mna?tnha.ll.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will hold an<lb/>
important meeting on Jan 14 at<lb/>
6 00 p m m Mendenhall 221 elec<lb/>
t.ons will be held, so please attend<lb/>
this meeting.<lb/>
INTERNSHIP<lb/>
Sophomores, juniors and seniors<lb/>
currently enrolled in a North<lb/>
Carolina college or North Carolina<lb/>
residents attending an out of state<lb/>
college have until February 12 to<lb/>
apply for the institute of Govern-<lb/>
ment Summer internship Pro<lb/>
gram in state government<lb/>
Twenty four students w " be<lb/>
selected by an advisory commit<lb/>
tee to participate in a living<lb/>
learning internship in North<lb/>
Carolina state government<lb/>
directed by the Institute of Govrn<lb/>
ment The Institute of Govern<lb/>
ment Interns will work from May<lb/>
20 through July 30.<lb/>
Students will work 40 hours each<lb/>
week in a responsible position in a<lb/>
state department, participate in<lb/>
evening eductional seminars and<lb/>
be paid approximately $150 per<lb/>
week<lb/>
Students interested in the pro<lb/>
gram should secure a brochure an<lb/>
nouncing the program and a State<lb/>
of North Carolina application from<lb/>
their college or university place<lb/>
ment office or local Job Service of<lb/>
fice A brief description of possible<lb/>
internships are available in col<lb/>
lege placement offices.<lb/>
Students interested in the in<lb/>
stitute of Government program<lb/>
should mail an application to the<lb/>
institute ot Government, Knapp<lb/>
Building 059A, The University of<lb/>
North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North<lb/>
Carolina, 27514 by February 12,<lb/>
1982<lb/>
Applicants will be accepted<lb/>
without respect to race, sex, color,<lb/>
national origin, religion, or han<lb/>
Qicap<lb/>
Dorothy Cherry, a student of<lb/>
East Carolina University, served<lb/>
as an Institute of Government in<lb/>
tern m state government during<lb/>
the summer of 1981<lb/>
ARTISTS<lb/>
Artists! The Seventh Annual<lb/>
Rebel Art Show, sponsored by me<lb/>
Attic and Jeffreys Beer and Win<lb/>
Co is coming up to give you an op<lb/>
portunity for recognition as will as<lb/>
prize money. All registered ECU<lb/>
students may enter a maximum ot<lb/>
two pieces in any of the following<lb/>
categories Painting. Sculpture.<lb/>
Ceramics. Drawing, Photography,<lb/>
Design (metal, fiber, or wook).<lb/>
Graphic Art and Illustration Plan<lb/>
to bring your best work on Friday,<lb/>
Jan. 27, 1W2 to the conference<lb/>
Room in Jenkins Fine Art Center.<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
PARKING<lb/>
The Greenville Parking Author ?<lb/>
ty will matt at the City Council<lb/>
Chamber third floor at 9 15 a m at<lb/>
City Hall on Wednesday. Jan 13<lb/>
LIKE TO SING?<lb/>
If you are a student and enjoy<lb/>
singing, come join the fun this<lb/>
Monday night All interested men<lb/>
and women students can join the<lb/>
Residence Hall Chorus without the<lb/>
usual audition simply by attending<lb/>
Monday's special open rehearsal<lb/>
from 7 8 p m in Jones Cafeteria<lb/>
The Residence Hall Chorus<lb/>
formed last fall, now numbers<lb/>
about fifty The choir, under the<lb/>
direction of Dr Charles Schwartz,<lb/>
Dean of the School of Music,<lb/>
presenmted its first concert<lb/>
December 8<lb/>
The group offers an opportunity<lb/>
to perform showtunes, seasonal<lb/>
music, and other challenging<lb/>
works both on and off campus<lb/>
Give yourself a one hour break<lb/>
from studying Come Monday<lb/>
night. Jan 18, and join the fun!<lb/>
ICE CREAM EATING<lb/>
All campus organizations during<lb/>
the halt time of our Pirate and<lb/>
Lady Pirate basketball games on<lb/>
January 14, 15. and 16th. Hearts<lb/>
Delight, Subway, Sportsworid and<lb/>
Pantana Bob's in coordination<lb/>
with the ECU Athletic Dept will<lb/>
sponsor an ice cream eating con<lb/>
test with numerous 1st, 2nd, and<lb/>
3rd place group prizes Call Pam<lb/>
Hoi! at 757 6417 for more informa<lb/>
tion<lb/>
LSAT<lb/>
The Law School Admission Test<lb/>
will be offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday, February<lb/>
20. 1982 Application blanks are to<lb/>
be completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Service Box<lb/>
966 R, Princeton. NJ 08540<lb/>
Registration deadline is January<lb/>
21. 1982 Registration postmarked<lb/>
after this date must be accom<lb/>
panied by a $15 non refundable<lb/>
late registration fee<lb/>
P,AGEANT<lb/>
North Carolina Southern Beau<lb/>
ty The search is on tor contestants<lb/>
ages 4 22 years old, each age divi<lb/>
sion limited, deadline March I<lb/>
1982 Pageant will be held April 16<lb/>
and 17 For information send a<lb/>
stamped address envelope to N C<lb/>
SOUTHERN BEAUTY<lb/>
PAGEANT, P O Box 5432,<lb/>
Greensboro, N C 27403<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
On Wednesday. Jan 20 at 5 30<lb/>
p m the Screens and Appoint<lb/>
ments Committee of the SGA will<lb/>
met to screen candidates tor va<lb/>
cant positions in the legislature<lb/>
Five day representatives are<lb/>
needed as are dorm represen<lb/>
tatives from Garrett, Jarvis, Cle<lb/>
ment. Fletcher, and Tyler Please<lb/>
register m room 228. SGA office at<lb/>
Mendenhall before 4pm jan 19<lb/>
NEW YORK<lb/>
The East Carolina Universit,<lb/>
Student union Travel Committee<lb/>
is offering a fantastic spring breaa<lb/>
alternative at an unbeatable price<lb/>
six days in New York City The<lb/>
trip will run from March 5 thru<lb/>
March 12 The cost of the trip is as<lb/>
follows Single occupancy<lb/>
$289 00. Double occupant<lb/>
$185 00. Triple occupancy<lb/>
$159 00. Quad ocupancy $U5 00<lb/>
Included in the price are the<lb/>
following roundtrip transport<lb/>
tion via forty six passenger buse?,<lb/>
ano hotel accommodations at the<lb/>
Hotel Edison The registration<lb/>
deadline is February 72 ano reser<lb/>
vations can be made at the Centra<lb/>
Ticket Office loca'ed m<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
ART SHOW<lb/>
The Seventh Annual Art Show<lb/>
will be from Jan 26 to Feb 5 198<lb/>
in the Greenville Museum ot Ar-<lb/>
All ECU artists are encouraged to<lb/>
prepare their best work 10 subm <lb/>
Friday Jan 22. 1982 to the con<lb/>
ference room in the office ot<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center<lb/>
Cash pr,zes, provided by the A"<lb/>
and Jeffries Beer and Wine Co<lb/>
will fange from $10 for Honorau ?<lb/>
Mentions to $100 for Best in Shov.<lb/>
ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Application are needed fron-<lb/>
studenls who are interested<lb/>
becoming PERSONAL CARE AT<lb/>
TENDANTS to wheel cha.r<lb/>
students We will employ thos?-<lb/>
who have a desire to ass i?l<lb/>
dividuais with their act.v<lb/>
daily living<lb/>
For details concerning<lb/>
and compensation contact c C<lb/>
Rowe Coordinator. Office of Ma-<lb/>
dicapped Student Serv.ces 215<lb/>
Wh,chard Building, Phon '<lb/>
Data Bank Provided For Job Hunters<lb/>
answer noi only lo ihe<lb/>
inefficient<lb/>
in I cain<lb/>
NEW YORK (UP1) such a system as<lb/>
? Job hunters now can<lb/>
submil rjyen resumes to<lb/>
prospective employers policies ol employers, Will<lb/>
ICv.1 llil IIK'lll<lb/>
president<lb/>
CareerSvsiem, Inc<lb/>
fir<lb/>
ot<lb/>
Li<lb/>
anywhere in<lb/>
ry ia<lb/>
ata hank,<lb/>
. the coun-<lb/>
a new national<lb/>
ank. brainchild<lb/>
ol three former IBM<lb/>
execu'h es.<lb/>
"We saw a need for<lb/>
policies ii employers,<lb/>
which haven't chanced<lb/>
much in 50 years, but<lb/>
as a way to help<lb/>
itindcd with<lb/>
W '<lb/>
Phi<lb/>
111 hi. toi<lb/>
ilium E. Bern and<lb/>
alle iaie<lb/>
uncmpl<lb/>
hleni<lb/>
help<lb/>
our national<lb/>
n ment pro-<lb/>
said Dale H.<lb/>
11 it' 1 I l L . I ?V. I I<lb/>
ilip I Morgan<lb/>
c arecrSy si cm has<lb/>
launched a $2 million<lb/>
national advertising<lb/>
campaign to attract<lb/>
companies as potential<lb/>
Protestors March<lb/>
Continued From Page One<lb/>
preceeding the march. At a rally<lb/>
held after the march. Rev. W.W.<lb/>
Finlator oastor of He Pullen<lb/>
Memorial Baptist Church in<lb/>
Raleigh, said, "We have made an<lb/>
impact. We have come together,<lb/>
and we intend to stay together<lb/>
Finlator and other demonstrators<lb/>
vowed to keep returning if<lb/>
"injustice" continued.<lb/>
The U.S. Committee in Solidarity<lb/>
with the People of El Salvador<lb/>
(C1SPES), organizers of the Fort<lb/>
Bragg action, claimed that over 100<lb/>
similar demonstrations took place<lb/>
around the country, all of which<lb/>
protested the U.S. Dartionation in<lb/>
El Salvador.<lb/>
Security around the Fort Bragg<lb/>
demonstration was extremely tight.<lb/>
Roads were blocked off, and<lb/>
civilian and military police patrolled<lb/>
closely.<lb/>
A helicopter circled above the<lb/>
march, keeping constant watch, and<lb/>
a number of photographers, some in<lb/>
military uniforms, took close-up<lb/>
pictures of the demonstration.<lb/>
Maddox called the gathering<lb/>
peaceful. "It was handled very well,<lb/>
both on the demonstrators' part and<lb/>
all the law enforcement agencies<lb/>
that were involved he said.<lb/>
employers and in-<lb/>
dividual job seekers<lb/>
who ean file theii ap-<lb/>
plications in a nation-<lb/>
wide software system to<lb/>
be accessed b com<lb/>
panics seeking specilk<lb/>
abilities and lalcnts.<lb/>
The market is large.<lb/>
1 earn said appi ox -<lb/>
mutely S2.5 billion is<lb/>
spent in personnel<lb/>
recruit ment every yeai<lb/>
b companies, ex<lb/>
ecuiivc recruiters, a)<lb/>
private and iu?vci ninciii<lb/>
empli ivnii m ag?. ncies<lb/>
"he current 9.X million<lb/>
uncmplny men! Iigur?<lb/>
enipl as! f s 1 lie lit v.d lot<lb/>
such a nati mal system.<lb/>
he sa,<lb/>
C'y;  Sy stem has tile<lb/>
capabd: .it listing<lb/>
937.0011 n'b set, kers and<lb/>
can k expanded lo<lb/>
hold ' ? uglily the en-<lb/>
lire population o the<lb/>
United States As<lb/>
main as 4 tO.ttoo com-<lb/>
panies can use the<lb/>
system simultaneously,<lb/>
I earn said<lb/>
The turn currently<lb/>
has about two dozen .t<lb/>
the country's largest<lb/>
firms in banking, retail<lb/>
me and manufacturing<lb/>
signed up to inaugurate<lb/>
the system and several<lb/>
hundred charier<lb/>
subscribe! s t hat it ob-<lb/>
lained by selective<lb/>
advertising.<lb/>
It costs a company<lb/>
SHK) a month plus<lb/>
SI .50 pei minute lo use<lb/>
i he s si em . u Inch<lb/>
features a compute!<lb/>
display terminal, and<lb/>
about a ceni and a halt<lb/>
per 'hit' or applicant H<lb/>
selects, 1 earn said.<lb/>
" I his is a significant<lb/>
saving over what most<lb/>
firms now . ,sfknd ' on<lb/>
recruitment. '<lb/>
A s eaich takes<lb/>
seconds. It ean be<lb/>
broad " all mechanical<lb/>
engineers for example;<lb/>
oi ean he narrowed<lb/>
down io a specific<lb/>
locality, salary level, or<lb/>
even a degree from a<lb/>
specific college.<lb/>
I lie ob seeker fills<lb/>
"in a standard form,<lb/>
with room foi px i sonal<lb/>
comment, w hich is pro-<lb/>
grammed into ihe com-<lb/>
puter. I In prisrvi live<lb/>
em ploy ci dies in i nave<lb/>
access to a iob sec kcr's<lb/>
name unless Mu ni-<lb/>
di v iduaI wishes.<lb/>
Specific companies ean<lb/>
be excluded.<lb/>
Ihe job seeker, v ho<lb/>
will be solicited in<lb/>
advertisements in ma-<lb/>
jor newspapers<lb/>
throughout the coun-<lb/>
try, is being charged<lb/>
$49.50 for one year's<lb/>
listing. The charge will<lb/>
be $89.50 once the<lb/>
svstem is expanded.<lb/>
Dr. Martin L<lb/>
King, Jr.<lb/>
Birthday Celebration<lb/>
Friday, January 15, 1982<lb/>
beginning at 12:00 noon<lb/>
I. Sit-In ? Student Supply Store<lb/>
II. March to Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
III. Services ? Mendenhall Rm. 221<lb/>
IV. Reception ? Mendenhall Rm. 221<lb/>
SPONSORED BY NAACP<lb/>
EVERYONEPLEASE WEAR<lb/>
BLACK ARM BANDS"<lb/>
January Clearance<lb/>
All Timber!and Boots<lb/>
&amp; Casual Shoes<lb/>
112 PRICE<lb/>
All Insulated Jackets<lb/>
&amp; Vests by<lb/>
Browning &amp; Duxbak<lb/>
13 OFF<lb/>
Lg. selection of Men's<lb/>
&amp; Ladies' Warm-Ups<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
All Ski Clothing by<lb/>
Aspen it<lb/>
Pacific Trail<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
Out of Season? Yes<lb/>
and Reduced<lb/>
75<lb/>
Off<lb/>
Ladies' tennis shorts &amp; tops<lb/>
by Court Casual, Adidas and More<lb/>
ALL SALES FINAL!<lb/>
H. L HODGES<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
BOND'S SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
ARLINGTON BLVD.<lb/>
i<lb/>
P<lb/>
(i i'h<lb/>
mil<lb/>
Pr<lb/>
El<lb/>
 I<lb/>
Sn<lb/>
Atl<lb/>
(<lb/>
21<lb/>
ONE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057449_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 14. 1982<lb/>
Polish Rulers See Possible End To Martial Law<lb/>
? -n.<lb/>
WARSAW, Poland .Moscow visit 1 ta-sdav Deputy Prime<lb/>
l 'll Poland's with praise few the Minister Jerzy ()-<lb/>
military rulers said they Soviet Union's "full doski I old a news con-<lb/>
want to end martial law understanding" and ef- ference 1 uesday mar-<lb/>
a soon .in possible but Ions "to give us all lial law "is a sharp,<lb/>
President Henryk possible aid  until the painful period which<lb/>
Jabloiiski warned the crisis si-nation is final!) should be as short as<lb/>
liming depends on the removed possible<lb/>
"favorable iransforma Me charged the Jablonski later told a<lb/>
lion" of economic and I lined States was seek- gathering o' foreign<lb/>
soei i, inereave inierna diplomats martial law<lb/>
 i ureig i liona icnsion b ex- "ls our internal af<lb/>
the Polish fair Warsaw televi-<lb/>
isis sion said.<lb/>
V ! C k<lb/>
.1<lb/>
"Further decisions<lb/>
by the Polish<lb/>
authorities in this area<lb/>
depend solely on the<lb/>
tempo of the favorable<lb/>
transformation of the<lb/>
country's economy and<lb/>
social life Poland's<lb/>
head Ol state said.<lb/>
A semoi Communist<lb/>
Party official, Jerzy<lb/>
I rbanski, said in a<lb/>
speech released I ues-<lb/>
day . future Polish trade<lb/>
unions mus! be party-<lb/>
controlled and purged<lb/>
ol enemies of the<lb/>
political structure.<lb/>
Mai Hal law officials<lb/>
dodged guest ions on<lb/>
Solidarity union chief<lb/>
I eel) alesa. held<lb/>
undet house arrest<lb/>
somewhere in the Wat<lb/>
saw area.<lb/>
Deputy Health<lb/>
Minisiei Stanislaw<lb/>
Mlekodoj said at least<lb/>
10 people had died<lb/>
one more than the<lb/>
previous official toll ?<lb/>
in protests alter the<lb/>
declaration of martial<lb/>
law Dee. 13. rwo<lb/>
security men were near<lb/>
death, he said.<lb/>
 a i saw Radio<lb/>
tepoi led more sum-<lb/>
mary inals n Poles<lb/>
charged ' ol lenses<lb/>
undet martial law and<lb/>
civil cimus h said $94<lb/>
Egyptian Government Calls For Peace<lb/>
eases had been brought<lb/>
against 618 defendants.<lb/>
Sentences included a<lb/>
ihree-yeai tail term tor<lb/>
an actiist comicted of<lb/>
organizing and leading<lb/>
a two (.lav strike at<lb/>
Wroclaw immediately<lb/>
aftei martial law was<lb/>
imposed.<lb/>
Anolhei Mian was<lb/>
jailed lot lout years<lb/>
.?nd lined loi livinj <lb/>
break in'o an ex-<lb/>
pli'so.es w igmi in a<lb/>
null! ai convoy in<lb/>
Kielce province, it'1'<lb/>
radio said<lb/>
Warsaw television<lb/>
listed seven foi met high<lb/>
provincial party and<lb/>
government officials<lb/>
indicted foi corruption<lb/>
and dereliction ?t uutv<lb/>
But the govci iiiuenl's<lb/>
attention centered on<lb/>
Hoods sweeping over b2<lb/>
square miles ol<lb/>
farmland, threatening<lb/>
Warsaw itself. Warsaw<lb/>
Radio said the army<lb/>
was helping flood vic-<lb/>
tims with supplies ol<lb/>
food, e U ?I h i n li and<lb/>
medical items and had<lb/>
set up 10 field kitchens.<lb/>
Giving more lime to<lb/>
the floods than lo<lb/>
politics, the radio said<lb/>
the rampaging Vistula<lb/>
River slill was blocked<lb/>
bv a "mountain ol<lb/>
broken ice even<lb/>
though "work is going<lb/>
on night and day" bv<lb/>
thousands ol<lb/>
volunteers<lb/>
?i least live othet<lb/>
i ivers were flooded, the<lb/>
radio said.<lb/>
CAIRO, I gypt (CPU<lb/>
Secretary ol State Mexandet Han<lb/>
? cpoi ledly blaming lack n<lb/>
 ? . al will" bv Israel lot the stal<lb/>
ed Palestinian autonomv talk<lb/>
tian President Hosni Mubarak.<lb/>
Haic and his chief Middle La<lb/>
"Egypt will spare no effort to<lb/>
keep the talks going until iIkv bnnu<lb/>
brought new options in the dispute meeting that dealt exclusively will<lb/>
to a meeting Wednesday with I gyp- Palestinian autonomy.<lb/>
Snowstorm Interrupts<lb/>
Atlanta Murder Trial<lb/>
advisers met Tuesday with foreign about their desired results Ali told<lb/>
Minisiei kamal Hassan li and Ins Haig on his anna! in Cairo I ues-<lb/>
adviscrs foi nearly two hours in a J.iv. Palestinian autonomy is tailed foi a shuttle like the ones flown in<lb/>
lor in the I97J Hgyptian-lsraeli the Middle East by former secretary<lb/>
gave up the posi when loimei Presi-<lb/>
dent Jimmy Carter left office.<lb/>
Haig does not exclude joining t Ik<lb/>
talks himself but there are no plans<lb/>
peace treaty.<lb/>
Ihc underlying problem, accoi<lb/>
dmg to .in assessment just com-<lb/>
pleted bv ihe Slate Department, is<lb/>
"the lack of political will" on the<lb/>
ol State Memv Kissinger, to bridge<lb/>
the gap separating Egypt and Israel.<lb/>
Haig's scheduled session with<lb/>
Mubarak was ihcil hist encounter<lb/>
since the funeral ol Anwat Sadat in<lb/>
Ml I .1 I'll<lb/>
<lb/>
make I he iransition to i eal<lb/>
uui onomy foi the 1.2 million<lb/>
whites the most park bench, prosecutoi Palestinians in the occupied Wesi<lb/>
dramatic testimony the Jack Mallard asked hci Bank and Gaa Sirin<lb/>
? iscculion has it she had seen . senioi I .S. official lold<lb/>
presented in the live Williams before he reporters, "The problem is how to<lb/>
days u has been setting began appearing on generate that political will<lb/>
television news films. rhe siatc-coniroled Middle las'<lb/>
Ma ii i arter. a "Yes, sir she said News gency reported Haig said he<lb/>
stiuii. ii iddle-aged sottly. van s io "plav a role, peionallv<lb/>
black vvi?man nervously "Where did you see and directly, in giving a push to the<lb/>
dentures, him before you saw ne-oiiaUons and Mi wtUomcd<lb/>
I atei and him on I V " tins.<lb/>
: in a i I ng bi ought the i cmiI ? : hat<lb/>
housing "Sitting on that park Middle las' assessmcii il<lb/>
iitinent ihc bench with Nathaniel p ions but "? ' raiuli m i <lb/>
Catet C atcr she said, idi is I S. oil cial ?anl<lb/>
Several iniois exchang V ough Han I  ? reservations,<lb/>
wney ed startled glances. om possibilnv a- naming a i<lb/>
table to Bindei asked Mrs. I .S. hiuh-level icpi<lb/>
part ol the Israeli government lo October, rhe Secretary of Stale wa?<lb/>
to leave rhursday for a 24-houi v isit<lb/>
to Israel.<lb/>
1 he Cairo newspapei l Ahrani<lb/>
s.ud Egypt wants autonomy to lead<lb/>
io sell-detenuination for the Palesti-<lb/>
nians a code-word foi an in-<lb/>
dependent slate - and favors<lb/>
"mutual recognition" between<lb/>
Israel and the Palestinians.<lb/>
The<lb/>
Ebony Herald<lb/>
needs an<lb/>
advertising<lb/>
s i u tI 11 u h e i<lb/>
she saw<lb/>
- IK.<lb/>
disappeai ed<lb/>
Defetisi ;<lb/>
nut il)<lb/>
ke het Cat let vv hen ('alei had<lb/>
I n ad- quit dating het mei i.<lb/>
Aag??n She said that rtmance<lb/>
may ended ill 1M"1). n, S1C<lb/>
continued to see him<lb/>
frequently<lb/>
'ie<lb/>
Sol I<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
UST CJUKXJH UMVHKrn<lb/>
salesperson.<lb/>
Base salary and commission.<lb/>
Experience helpful, but not necessary.<lb/>
Apply with Media Board Secretary.<lb/>
mail sll<lb/>
!umho<lb/>
. . lamei<lb/>
In one<lb/>
icn dnv -<lb/>
ed the<lb/>
icrd she<lb/>
ai ? Mind<lb/>
"He come to the<lb/>
house lo plav cards. I le<lb/>
didn't slop vision' nisi<lb/>
- a In same because ht broke up<lb/>
ippcai ed to be with my nicv e<lb/>
" Fliai's niet  sigh<lb/>
ed Bindei.<lb/>
the 1 a:hei lestimony on<lb/>
.i dav I hat seemed to eo<lb/>
not an acme<lb/>
Zb vouiig;<lb/>
i in beast like<lb/>
-pan be I n g i n g<lb/>
v ams family.<lb/>
; et establishing<lb/>
eav ilv in I he prosecu-<lb/>
? and I'oui la-<lb/>
Mrs. Carter had known lion's favoi showed<lb/>
c atei lot years, beginn- alei was a heavy<lb/>
'? ' ? lie tune he was drinkei who was seen<lb/>
het niece, and alive as late as 3 p.m.<lb/>
i him sittmu on a on lav 21.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
??? No. 6 o Rock Nightclub<lb/>
Thursday, January 14<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
Seaboard<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
X-RAVES<lb/>
Buccaneero<lb/>
a  MOVIESO<lb/>
STARTS<lb/>
TOMORROW!<lb/>
12.45 2:50-4:55-7:00 9:05<lb/>
From a place you never heard of <lb/>
a story you'll never forget.<lb/>
EflLLlPOLI<lb/>
A Peler Weir Film iPGl<lb/>
ONE OF THE BEST MOVIES THIS YEAR!<lb/>
2:00 4 30 7:00 9:30<lb/>
This school is<lb/>
our home.<lb/>
GEORGE C SCOTT<lb/>
TWOTHYHCTTON<lb/>
TAPS<lb/>
FINAL WEEK!<lb/>
1-3-5-7 9<lb/>
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ITS BACK<lb/>
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COMING SOON -<lb/>
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IT'S WAR!<lb/>
BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!<lb/>
To introduce you to our mouth watering styie of pizza, we re mak<lb/>
ing two incredible otters With this coupon save $1 00 on a<lb/>
medium or $2 00 on ? large Godfather's Pizza<lb/>
vVhat's holdin' ya9 The doors are open now!<lb/>
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Parties,<lb/>
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j Get rid<lb/>
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the Greenville<lb/>
Athletic Club.<lb/>
And all the pies, cakes, cookies and one-too-<lb/>
many beers you had over the holidays, too.<lb/>
College students now can afford to take oft extra<lb/>
weight at the Athletic Club. Or, just come out to<lb/>
have fun. Because, right now, we have a special<lb/>
offer that can help you join the Athletic Club<lb/>
without going broke.<lb/>
No initiation fees at all for students.<lb/>
If you join right now,there's no initiation fee as<lb/>
long as you maintain your membership. What's<lb/>
more, we'll pro-rate the $30 monthly dues<lb/>
(at $1 per day) from the day you join. All that<lb/>
means that here's an inexpensive way to find<lb/>
out about our facility.<lb/>
And with racquetball courts, Nautilus equipment.<lb/>
aerobics classes and much more, there's bound<lb/>
to be something for you.<lb/>
So come on out to the Greenville Athletic Club.<lb/>
And get rid of the turkey.<lb/>
This ad entitles you to one free visit to the Club<lb/>
as long as you bring the ad and come before<lb/>
Jan. 31. (Call for racquetball reservations).<lb/>
GREENVILLE ATHLETIC CLUB<lb/>
140 Oakmont Drive (Right off Hy 43 S) 756-9175<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057449_0004"/><lb/>
$i?e ?aat (Earolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, ?j?w?r?.<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree, .?????? ldm?<lb/>
Ric Browning. ,wo,rfw,umf Charles Chandler. W(J&amp;ttw<lb/>
Chris L.chok. tows MoMm Tom Hall. ?,?,Edltor<lb/>
Alison Bartel. Steve Bachner. ??Bmr<lb/>
Steve Moore. (?? m William Yelverton. so ?,?,<lb/>
January 14, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
EPA<lb/>
Reagan's Cuts Hamper Effectiveness<lb/>
Oh beautiful for spacious skies,<lb/>
For amber waves of grain,<lb/>
For purple mountains majesties,<lb/>
A bove the fruited plain.<lb/>
?from ' 'A merica the Beautiful<lb/>
Or so it used to be. With the onset<lb/>
of the industrial revolution and<lb/>
modern techonology, however, the<lb/>
United States has become better<lb/>
known for its smoggy skies, its in-<lb/>
secticide laced grain, its strip-mined<lb/>
mountains and its asphalt plains.<lb/>
Because of the deteriorating state<lb/>
of the environment, the federal<lb/>
government created the En-<lb/>
vironmental Protection Agency.<lb/>
And the EPA's success in the past<lb/>
decade has been impressive. For ex-<lb/>
ample particulates of soot and dust<lb/>
emitted into the air were reduced<lb/>
from 29,000 tons in 1972 to just 790<lb/>
tons in 1979 in Massachusetts and<lb/>
from 139,000 to 82,000 in once hazy<lb/>
Detroit.<lb/>
Also, under pressure from the<lb/>
EPA, corporate dumping of toxic<lb/>
waste into the Gulf of Mexico has<lb/>
dropped from 1.4 million tons in<lb/>
1973 to none today. The EPA had<lb/>
made significant strides toward con-<lb/>
trolling pollution. Until Ronald<lb/>
Reagan became president that is.<lb/>
Last February Reagan appointed<lb/>
39-year-old Anne Gorsuch to head<lb/>
the agency. As a state legislator in<lb/>
Colorado she had led a successful<lb/>
battle to block the state's participa-<lb/>
tion in the EPA's hazardous-wastes<lb/>
program and fought for less str-<lb/>
ingent automobile emission stan-<lb/>
dards in Colorado's clean-air law.<lb/>
So environmentalists were<lb/>
understandably shocked when the<lb/>
president appointed her as the na-<lb/>
tion's chief enforcer against pollu-<lb/>
tion, and their worst fears have been<lb/>
realized in her eight months in of-<lb/>
fice.<lb/>
Her critics say that the "Ice<lb/>
Queen as she is called, has begun<lb/>
to dismantle the agency and may<lb/>
already have done irreparable harm.<lb/>
Though she gives lip service to the<lb/>
EPA's programs, she also argues<lb/>
that the agency can do its job<lb/>
'better and more efficiently<lb/>
without the same commitment of<lb/>
resources Consequently she has<lb/>
volunteered reductions in EPA<lb/>
spending from $1.36 billion a year<lb/>
to less than $950 millin by 1983.<lb/>
Furthermore, a ranking EPA of-<lb/>
ficial said last week that Gorsuch is<lb/>
preparing to fire at least 750 of the<lb/>
agency's 4,200 Washington staff<lb/>
and probably a similar percentage<lb/>
of the 5,800 field workers. This<lb/>
comes on top of the nearly 1,000<lb/>
resignations received since Gorsuch<lb/>
has taken over.<lb/>
She has also cut spending on<lb/>
every vital EPA program and urged<lb/>
major retrenchment in the Clean<lb/>
Air Act. Agency research scientists<lb/>
now cannot release their findings<lb/>
until they have been approved as<lb/>
"appropriate" by four levels of the<lb/>
bureaucracy; public information<lb/>
programs require seven levels of ap-<lb/>
proval.<lb/>
But Gorsuch is only following<lb/>
orders. As she says, "I work for the<lb/>
president, and will continue to give<lb/>
him my best appraisal of how his<lb/>
environmental program can be car-<lb/>
ried out<lb/>
Therein lies the problem.<lb/>
Reagan's environmental program is<lb/>
geared more toward what is good<lb/>
for industry than what is good for<lb/>
this little blue planet of ours. The<lb/>
record of Gorsuch and Secretary of<lb/>
the Interior James Watt over the<lb/>
last year is evidence of the ad-<lb/>
ministration's insensitivity toward<lb/>
environmental issues.<lb/>
In an effort to get the economy<lb/>
back on its feet, Reagan fails to<lb/>
realize that we are in the process of<lb/>
polluting ourselves right out of ex-<lb/>
istence.<lb/>
We can fill the sky with soot and<lb/>
car exhaust. We can fill the oceans<lb/>
with garbage and nuclear waste. We<lb/>
can level the forests and pave the<lb/>
great plains. But once we've done<lb/>
all this it is likely that we will have<lb/>
irreparably destroyed the planet.<lb/>
This can be avoided by increas-<lb/>
ing, not decreasing, funding and<lb/>
support for the EPA and its pur-<lb/>
pose. The administration should not<lb/>
only increase the agency's budget<lb/>
but support stricter anti-pollution<lb/>
legislation.<lb/>
We've got to take care of the<lb/>
planet Earth, after all it's the only<lb/>
home we've got.<lb/>
Campus Forum ?<lb/>
j?? P<lb/>
THE EA$T CAROLINIAN<lb/>
-$,fcA(V<lb/>
x?t-ftND<lb/>
QUbttb<lb/>
Education<lb/>
By KIM ALBIN<lb/>
I woke up this morning and found<lb/>
myself in the hangover stage of a longtime<lb/>
addiction. I was in Greenville, North<lb/>
Carolina, the town in which 1 had built my<lb/>
entire life around my habit ? going to col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
It has taken me a long time to admit to<lb/>
myself that my stay here has been an addic-<lb/>
tion. I forced myself to admit it today<lb/>
because I realized that another semester<lb/>
was just what I needed to cure the pain of<lb/>
last semester's hangover.<lb/>
1 was starting a new semester ? on an<lb/>
empty stomach.<lb/>
Experts tell us that one warning sign of<lb/>
an addiction is the tendency to indulge<lb/>
oneself without a conscious decision to do<lb/>
so. This morning I realized that I could not<lb/>
recall making a decision to return to ECU<lb/>
this semester; my return was automatic.<lb/>
That's scary.<lb/>
And I feel kind of ashamed. Look at<lb/>
what all this college has done to me: I do<lb/>
not sleep or eat right, I am nervous most of<lb/>
A Nasty Addiction<lb/>
the time, my family worries about me, and<lb/>
I have not been able to work for years. But<lb/>
I just cannot stop.<lb/>
It may be time to kick the habit, but I do<lb/>
not think that I can quit. This is not just a<lb/>
physical addiction to campus food that I<lb/>
am fighting ? it is also an intense<lb/>
psychological need for little pink<lb/>
schedules, Cepacol lozenges, lots of<lb/>
sidewalks, the sight and sounds of ongoing<lb/>
construction, Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
and parking tickets.<lb/>
Besides, I cannot remember what the<lb/>
real world is like. A friend of mine who<lb/>
just came back to school tells me that in<lb/>
the real world the year begins in January<lb/>
and is not divided up into semesters like<lb/>
our years are. (I wonder how the people<lb/>
know when to celebrate holidays?) Instead<lb/>
of getting checks in the mail, people get<lb/>
jobs. They buy books only when they feel<lb/>
like it ? if they have enough money.<lb/>
And so, after all this time, I finally<lb/>
uneanii this wierd predisposition for life<lb/>
on this campus. Had I only discovered it<lb/>
earlier, the last several years would have<lb/>
been much more pleasant.<lb/>
I guess the hangover will go away in a<lb/>
week or so. It must have resulted from the<lb/>
withdrawal that I went through during the<lb/>
Christmas break. That was unbelievable ?<lb/>
cold chills, waking up in the middle of the<lb/>
night craving a textbook, a sub sandwich<lb/>
from Famous Pizza and a walk around<lb/>
Wright Circle.<lb/>
What really terrifies me, though, is not<lb/>
knowing where to go to get help, or how<lb/>
long this will last, or if this compulsive<lb/>
"studenting" will be my demise. I wonder<lb/>
what my life would have been like had I<lb/>
not become addicted to college. I wonder<lb/>
Whew, it's okay. Someone just inform-<lb/>
ed me that they have found a cure for this<lb/>
nasty addiction ? it is a miraculous ai<lb/>
proven phenomenon called graduation I<lb/>
will certainly need a dose. Otherwise 1 maj<lb/>
have to face the people who keep sending<lb/>
those checks in the mail and leU them vvA <lb/>
cannot find a job in the real world.<lb/>
For Some People, No Free Lunch<lb/>
By ART BUCHWALD<lb/>
"Lunchtime, everyone. Class dismiss-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
"Elizabeth, what are you doing with<lb/>
that tray?"<lb/>
"Getting some lunch<lb/>
"Your name isn't on the list. You are<lb/>
not entitled to lunch<lb/>
"How come my name is not on the<lb/>
list?"<lb/>
"Your parents did not fill out the cor-<lb/>
rect forms. Under new government<lb/>
guidelines, only those children whose<lb/>
fathers and mothers make less than a cer-<lb/>
tain salary each year are eligible for a free<lb/>
lunch. You can't eat until your parents<lb/>
prove you are entitled to the food<lb/>
"Yes, ma'am. What should I do while<lb/>
the other children are eating lunch?"<lb/>
"You can read something?"<lb/>
"What do you want me to read?"<lb/>
"You can read the new government<lb/>
regulations concerning free lunches. Then<lb/>
you can explain it to your parents<lb/>
"Yes, ma'am. Where should I sit while<lb/>
I'm reading the thing that says I can't have<lb/>
lunch<lb/>
"You can sit with the children eating<lb/>
their lunch, but you're not to touch their<lb/>
food<lb/>
"Watching other kids eating makes me<lb/>
hungry. Could I go over to the corner by<lb/>
myself and read this paper?"<lb/>
"No, that would make you special, and<lb/>
you can not have extra privileges just<lb/>
because you're not eligible for the hot<lb/>
lunch program<lb/>
Original Yearbook Cover Not That Bad?<lb/>
1 am writing about the 1981 Buccaneer<lb/>
cover dispute I have seen the original<lb/>
co,er, and I am one of quite a few peo-<lb/>
ple who do not wholeheartedly agree<lb/>
with the decision not to use it. 1 happen<lb/>
to know the artist who did the original,<lb/>
and not only is he a competent graphic<lb/>
designer, but he also put in a substantial<lb/>
amount of time for which he has been<lb/>
rewarded with nothing but ridicule. He<lb/>
certainly did nothing to deserve the<lb/>
editorial comment in the Buccanneer<lb/>
pertaining to the "Year That Almost<lb/>
Wasn't To start with, the title was not<lb/>
pink, it was lavender, which was intend-<lb/>
ed to bring out the sophisticated colors<lb/>
of the mannequin's dress. The manne-<lb/>
quin was not "propped up" against the<lb/>
'57 Chevy, it appeared to be standing in<lb/>
front of it. The overall effect was<lb/>
tasteful, with a New Wave undertone,<lb/>
and it was certainly the more fitting<lb/>
cover considering the theme of this<lb/>
year's Buccaneer: "A new wave. Or<lb/>
rather, new waves. In a world bustling<lb/>
with tension and change, East Carolina<lb/>
was not immune Certainly, it seems<lb/>
that the Buccaneer staff was not only<lb/>
immune, it was passed by. To Amy<lb/>
Pickett and?Lisa Coleman 1 can only say<lb/>
that I do not understand how anyone<lb/>
could purposefully be so cruel as to rub<lb/>
in a disappointment such as this in-<lb/>
dividual was faced with. Mention was<lb/>
also made that the original cover was<lb/>
"inappropriate to the student body and<lb/>
our work I suppose, then, that a year-<lb/>
book designed almost totally in Carolina<lb/>
Blue is appropriate? I rest my case.<lb/>
To the Buccaneer staff I can only say,<lb/>
get your act together, and by the way,<lb/>
what about those 5,000 original covers<lb/>
that you must have used student funds<lb/>
to have printed and then never used?<lb/>
Terry Smith<lb/>
Junior, Graphic Design<lb/>
Marvelous Music<lb/>
In the fall of 1980 while on campus<lb/>
with my daughter, I attended a trom-<lb/>
bone concert (plus guitar, piano, and<lb/>
bass ? I think) in the Student Center.<lb/>
The musicians were marvelous, their at-<lb/>
titudes enthusiastic, and the whole at-<lb/>
mosphere was nothing short of magic.<lb/>
I will never forget what pleasure that<lb/>
group gave me during those two hours.<lb/>
(Maybe I am being dictatorial, but what<lb/>
a shame the whole student body wasn't<lb/>
required to witness this excellence!)<lb/>
LIBBY GREENE<lb/>
Prison Letters<lb/>
My name's Joseph Beaman. I'm in<lb/>
prison for possession of marijuana with<lb/>
intent to sell. 1 was born in Greenville<lb/>
and need someone to keep me informed<lb/>
on what's going on at the Attic, Elbo<lb/>
Room, Carolina Opry House, etc. After<lb/>
my release, I plan to transfer credits to<lb/>
ECU from another school. Please put<lb/>
this letter in The East Carolinian so that<lb/>
a pretty female Pirate may see it and<lb/>
write.<lb/>
JOSEPH E. BEAMAN<lb/>
P.O. Box 58<lb/>
McCain, N.C. 28361<lb/>
My name is Larry Vaughn. I'm a<lb/>
Federal Prisoner at Talladega,<lb/>
Alabama. I been in Prison since 197L<lb/>
I've lost contact with all friends and<lb/>
family and it's very lonely in one of<lb/>
these places. I started out with a four to<lb/>
six year sentence, but in 1976 1 only had<lb/>
a few months until I got out, and I was<lb/>
put in a spot of either killing a man or<lb/>
being killed. So I got a murder charge<lb/>
and got a life sentence for it.<lb/>
I am right now locked down in<lb/>
segregation unit and being constantly<lb/>
harassed by officers. For a charge of<lb/>
posscsion of narcotics. Which I'm not<lb/>
guilty of. They didn't get me with any<lb/>
narcotics, it's just a beef to get my back<lb/>
in a maximum security lock-down unit.<lb/>
I am 29 years old. blond hair, blue<lb/>
eyes, white, 5-11, 170 lbs. I'm very lone-<lb/>
ly, and locked in a world of darkness,<lb/>
with such unbelievable hatred all around<lb/>
me. I'm lonely, and I'm reaching out to<lb/>
touch someone in the free world. 1 want<lb/>
to change my life, and I want friends<lb/>
who will let me care about them and who<lb/>
will care about me in return.<lb/>
If you're interested in becoming a<lb/>
friend and sharing a few minutes of your<lb/>
time with me, I'll gladly answer any and<lb/>
all letters and questions. I'm very open-<lb/>
minded on all subjects and life. My ad-<lb/>
dress js:<lb/>
Larry Vaughn<lb/>
Box P.M.B.<lb/>
Talladega, Alabama 35160<lb/>
Hi. I'm presently in prison here in<lb/>
N.C. and have been for almost seven<lb/>
years. I'm white, single, 26 years old and<lb/>
lonely!<lb/>
Only nine more months stand between<lb/>
me and freedom, and I would very much<lb/>
like to correspond with one of you lovely<lb/>
young ladies.<lb/>
Help me make my last nine months in<lb/>
this cage a little more pleasant. 1 need a<lb/>
friend!<lb/>
RICHARD H.HITE<lb/>
P.O. Box 58<lb/>
McCain, N.C. 28361<lb/>
"Teacher, I'm trying to read this thin<lb/>
but I don't understand one word<lb/>
"That's because you're not concen-<lb/>
trating Elizabeth. You're daydreaming<lb/>
aren't you?"<lb/>
"Yes, ma'am<lb/>
"What were you daydreaming about"?"<lb/>
"Lunch. I was thinking how nice it<lb/>
would be to have one<lb/>
"Elizabeth, I know it's difficult for so-<lb/>
meone in the sixth grade to understand<lb/>
what is going on in the country. But Presi<lb/>
dent Reagan doesn't have enough monev<lb/>
to give everyone a school lunch. He can<lb/>
only give it to poor children<lb/>
"My father says we're poor<lb/>
"Yes, but you're not poor enough. You<lb/>
have to be very, very poor to get a free<lb/>
lunch<lb/>
"Does the President get a free lunch<lb/>
"He gets an allowance, and his lunch<lb/>
comes out of his allowance<lb/>
"I don't get an allowance<lb/>
"Perhaps someday when you grow up<lb/>
and become President you will<lb/>
"How am I going to grow up and be<lb/>
President if I don't eat lunch?"<lb/>
"There is no reason to get sassy,<lb/>
Elizabeth. There are people in Washington<lb/>
working day and night trying to cut the fat<lb/>
out of the budget, and one of the areas<lb/>
where they decided there was too much<lb/>
waste wao in free school meals. Thev hope<lb/>
to save $50 million In this program alone<lb/>
"What are they going to do with the $M)<lb/>
million?"<lb/>
"They're going to give everyone a tax<lb/>
cut so people will have more money to bu<lb/>
lunches<lb/>
"Will I get a tax cut so I can buv<lb/>
lunch?"<lb/>
"Of course not. You have to work to get<lb/>
a tax cut. But your Daddy and Mommv<lb/>
will<lb/>
"My Daddy said he doesn't make<lb/>
enough money to get a tax cut<lb/>
"He may not get one directlv, but the<lb/>
tax cuts other people get will trickle down<lb/>
to him in time<lb/>
"How?"<lb/>
"It's all in the regulations, if vou would<lb/>
just stop wasting your lunch hour, and<lb/>
read them<lb/>
"Who wrote this thing?"<lb/>
"David Stockman. He's the man the<lb/>
President has made responsible for seeing<lb/>
that the wrong children don't get free lun-<lb/>
ches<lb/>
"He got any kids?"<lb/>
"No, he happens to be a bachelor. Why<lb/>
do you ask?"<lb/>
"No reason I can think of<lb/>
(O 12. Lo. Antrin Turn SyndK.it<lb/>
(O<lb/>
runninl<lb/>
have i<lb/>
I ye<lb/>
wa<lb/>
crashed<lb/>
in the<lb/>
tered al<lb/>
ResJ<lb/>
sub-frt<lb/>
bone-ci<lb/>
harsh<lb/>
helicot<lb/>
ernerge<lb/>
bndg<lb/>
The<lb/>
after<lb/>
main<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
handle;<lb/>
during<lb/>
the bnc<lb/>
Jets<lb/>
heavu<lb/>
about<lb/>
tie the<lb/>
The<lb/>
cars r<lb/>
Z<lb/>
Z<lb/>
P<lb/>
l<lb/>
.<lb/>
i<lb/>
7:<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057449_0005"/><lb/>
THEEASTCAROMNIAN JANUARY 14, 1982 5<lb/>
 I INI AN<lb/>
l have<lb/>
v in a<lb/>
?m the<lb/>
ng ihe<lb/>
ible ?<lb/>
of the<lb/>
dwich<lb/>
?<lb/>
had 1<lb/>
. and<lb/>
ition 1<lb/>
 I may<lb/>
??ending<lb/>
?m I hai I<lb/>
XI-<lb/>
:an<lb/>
 OU<lb/>
his lunch<lb/>
h up<lb/>
ip and be<lb/>
I the fat<lb/>
f the areas<lb/>
much<lb/>
lis. The hope<lb/>
teram alone<lb/>
:th the $50<lb/>
ii? a tax<lb/>
dn buy<lb/>
rk to get<lb/>
Mommy<lb/>
doesn't make<lb/>
y, hut the<lb/>
I! trickle down<lb/>
if you would<lb/>
h hour, and<lb/>
he man the<lb/>
le for seeing<lb/>
net free lun-<lb/>
achelor. Why<lb/>
Presumed Dead<lb/>
Continued From Page One<lb/>
running out of runway. We didn't<lb/>
have the speed<lb/>
Eyewitness Arthur Coleman, who<lb/>
was on the bridge when the plane<lb/>
crashed into it, said, "1 looked over<lb/>
in the water and I saw people scat-<lb/>
tered all in the water<lb/>
Rescue workers struggled with<lb/>
sub-freezing temperatures in the<lb/>
bone-chilling water, bathed in the<lb/>
harsh light from lamps carried by<lb/>
helicopters, a large white yacht and<lb/>
emergency vehicles parked on the<lb/>
bridge deck.<lb/>
The plane crashed only seconds<lb/>
after leaving the north end of the<lb/>
main National Airport runway at 4<lb/>
p.m. EST. The runway, which<lb/>
handles one flight every 90 seconds<lb/>
during peak hours, aims directly at<lb/>
the bridge about a mile away.<lb/>
Jets customarily roar over the<lb/>
heavily used bridge at an altitude of<lb/>
about 500 feet ? low enough to rat-<lb/>
tle the windows o passing cars.<lb/>
The plane sheared the tops off<lb/>
cars of commuters trving to get<lb/>
home during the snowstorm.<lb/>
Government employees had been<lb/>
sent home early because of the<lb/>
weather and the bridge was packed<lb/>
when the plane hit.<lb/>
Heroism and deep tragedy mark-<lb/>
ed the minutes and hours after the<lb/>
crash.<lb/>
Salvation Army Major Harold<lb/>
Anderson, who visited the crash<lb/>
scene, said one man was seen under<lb/>
the ice trying frantically to get out,<lb/>
but by the time the ice was broken<lb/>
he was dead.<lb/>
A stewardess from the plane was<lb/>
pulled from the water by a man who<lb/>
shed his heavy coat and plunged in-<lb/>
to the Potomac.<lb/>
"She was hanging on to a rope<lb/>
hanging down from a helicopter<lb/>
said Lenny Skutnik, who was on the<lb/>
bridge when the plane crashed.<lb/>
"She grabbed ahold of it and then<lb/>
she just gave out. I jerked my coat<lb/>
off and dove in<lb/>
"You couldn't last in that water<lb/>
for more than 20 minutes said Dr.<lb/>
William Fouty at Washington<lb/>
Hospital Center, where one survivor<lb/>
was taken.<lb/>
Hundreds of onlookers gathered<lb/>
along the river shore, standing in six<lb/>
inches of snow. Temperatures<lb/>
hovered in the mid-20s.<lb/>
Families of possible victims of the<lb/>
crash gathered at the suburban<lb/>
Cystal City Marriott hotel near the<lb/>
airport to learn the fate of loved<lb/>
ones. Less than a year ago, other<lb/>
families met at the same hotel to<lb/>
welcome home the 52 Americans<lb/>
who had been held hostage in Iran.<lb/>
Two Catholic priests who talked<lb/>
with family members said one man<lb/>
had put his wife on the plane to visit<lb/>
her grandmother who was suffering<lb/>
from cancer. Another man ap<lb/>
parently lost his elderly mother.<lb/>
Two parents had a son on the<lb/>
plane, another man had placed his<lb/>
20-year-old wife aboard ? and one<lb/>
young woman had said goodbye to<lb/>
her fiance at the boarding gate for<lb/>
Flight 90.<lb/>
A second tragedy struck tin- na<lb/>
tion's capital within an hour of the<lb/>
air crash. At least three people were<lb/>
killed and several injured in the<lb/>
derailment of a subway train near<lb/>
the Smithsonian Institution station.<lb/>
The D.C. fire department was bear-<lb/>
ing the brunt of both rescue efforts.<lb/>
Police spokesman Hankins said<lb/>
officials hoped to resumed the<lb/>
search for bodies in the air disaster<lb/>
"at some point" Thursday.<lb/>
"We're waiting for additional<lb/>
equipment he said, especially<lb/>
heated diving suits.<lb/>
On the bridge, eerily illuminated<lb/>
by flashing lights playing off the<lb/>
swirling snow, officials tried to clear<lb/>
the wreckage of a half-dozen<lb/>
vehicles mangled by the plane as it<lb/>
scraped across the road.<lb/>
At Tampa, people waiting for<lb/>
Flighl 90 were taken into a room<lb/>
near the Air Florida office. A guard<lb/>
was posted outside.<lb/>
The National Transportation<lb/>
Safety Board immediately launched<lb/>
an investigation, including looking<lb/>
for the crucial flight data recorder<lb/>
which will give a picture of the final<lb/>
seconds of the flight and the cockpit<lb/>
voice recorded.<lb/>
Immediate speculation focus on<lb/>
the weather, but Frank Taylor, chief<lb/>
of the NTSB accident investigation<lb/>
division, said the board had no early<lb/>
indication that icing was a problem<lb/>
and had no idea now what caused<lb/>
the crash.<lb/>
However, he said investigators<lb/>
had impounded the glycol solution<lb/>
used to de-ice the aircraft as a<lb/>
routine measure.<lb/>
Ted Maher, a spokesman for the<lb/>
Federal Aviation Administration,<lb/>
said there was no indication that any<lb/>
air traffic control error was involved<lb/>
in Wednesday's crash.<lb/>
"By all that it looks like, right<lb/>
now, it had absolutely nothing to do<lb/>
with the air traffic control. It was a<lb/>
departure accident he said.<lb/>
"The airplane looked like it lost<lb/>
its sense of direction said<lb/>
eyewitness Jerome Lancaster. "Its<lb/>
nose was up. It was the bottom that<lb/>
hit" the bridge.<lb/>
"It happened instantly, just like a<lb/>
movie or something said Lan<lb/>
caster, an Air Force sergeant.<lb/>
The injured were taken to several<lb/>
hospitals in Washington and nearby<lb/>
Virginia Health officials renewed<lb/>
an urgent plea for Type O blood ?<lb/>
first issued Monday to replace<lb/>
stocks used over the holiday ? and<lb/>
got an immediate, overwhelming<lb/>
response.<lb/>
Doctors and nurses were airlifted<lb/>
to the crash site within minutes,<lb/>
where they treated the few survivors<lb/>
pulled to shore. A convoy of Aii<lb/>
Force medical units arrived a few<lb/>
hours later.<lb/>
The multi-lane, twin-span, 14th<lb/>
Street Bridge is a major artery bet<lb/>
ween downtown Washington and<lb/>
the Virginia suburbs.<lb/>
Rescue vehicles had difficulty get<lb/>
ting through the traffic-clogged<lb/>
streets to the crash site. Fire engines,<lb/>
sirens screaming, raced into a near-<lb/>
gridlock traffic snarl on 14th Street<lb/>
and Pennsylvania Avenue, two<lb/>
blocks from the White House.<lb/>
Zztandottie,<lb/>
Zverblis End<lb/>
Phone Book<lb/>
M YORK (UPI)<lb/>
? Mans people go<lb/>
through life wishing<lb/>
thcii names were dif-<lb/>
ma be Fair-<lb/>
? ks, Cab t, Lowell<lb/>
or cv en 1 Scow Fit<lb/>
zgerald.<lb/>
Well,<lb/>
? a v c<lb/>
 mudoi<lb/>
the<lb/>
'tie<lb/>
es,<lb/>
iii-<lb/>
a<lb/>
tie<lb/>
 ii1 he<lb/>
'<lb/>
en-??.?ned<lb/>
reamtng. ? e n i dif-<lb/>
in<lb/>
IS Is<lb/>
Houston and Ralph<lb/>
Zytk ends the book in<lb/>
Philadelphia. And a<lb/>
double-Z person - Zap<lb/>
vne ?has the distinc-<lb/>
tion of being last in the<lb/>
San I rancisco diret<lb/>
lory.<lb/>
And :t you think<lb/>
y ur name isn't distinc-<lb/>
tive enough, how<lb/>
 mid you like to ru<lb/>
listed with the 505 pe ??<lb/>
pie in Manhattan nam<lb/>
ed Ng? Vnone the Ng's<lb/>
alone, there are 1 2 pe i<lb/>
pie named kvvok Ng<lb/>
d nine named Chun<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
Or how about being<lb/>
ol the approx<lb/>
imatelv 3,240 people.<lb/>
named Smith listed in<lb/>
Manhattan? Hi a:<lb/>
would be a bit humbl-<lb/>
ing to be sure.<lb/>
Even presidential<lb/>
names do not insure ex-<lb/>
clusive listings. In<lb/>
Manhattan, there arc<lb/>
10 Reagans, more than<lb/>
160 Cai lets, about 500<lb/>
I ords, more than s<lb/>
Nixons, and about ?90<lb/>
Kennedys. But take<lb/>
hope, even though<lb/>
there are tour George<lb/>
V ash met ons listed,<lb/>
;here is onl one<lb/>
1 isenhowei.<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
I J"eei' termination<lb/>
App't's. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1 800 321 0575<lb/>
THE SHOE OUTLET<lb/>
(Located beside Evans Seafood)<lb/>
Featuring name brand shoes at bargain prices.<lb/>
Up To 75 OFF regular prices<lb/>
Bass Steward-McCiuire Brouse Abouts<lb/>
201 W. Washington St. Within walking distance of campus.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
AtVOBTlOMS FROM l?-H<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
?1IS 00 PrtVMMcy T?l Mrf<lb/>
Control, ii Prttltm<lb/>
Pr?nonv Counted?f Far fur<lb/>
?tier information coil U1-0US<lb/>
(Toll Fria Nvmbor<lb/>
000 331 IMt! botWMH f A.M<lb/>
? no J p M WHtlifl<lb/>
RALEIOM WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
? It Wnt Moran St.<lb/>
Roioiffk. N.C.<lb/>
?<lb/>
GREAT FOOD<lb/>
?SUB<lb/>
Famous Foot Long Sandwich?<lb/>
&amp;PET<lb/>
VILLAGE<lb/>
511 S. Evans St.<lb/>
B.M.T.<lb/>
(Ham- Pepperoni-Genoa- Bologna)<lb/>
SUBWAY SPECIAL<lb/>
Ham-Genoa-Bologna)<lb/>
SPICY ITALIAN<lb/>
(Genoa &amp; Pepperoni)<lb/>
ROAST BEEF<lb/>
HAM<lb/>
TURKEY BREAST<lb/>
PASTRAMI<lb/>
PEPPERONI<lb/>
GENOA SALAMI<lb/>
BOLOGNA<lb/>
ALASKAN KING CRAB<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
TUNA<lb/>
ITALIAN EXPRESS<lb/>
(Sausaqe &amp; Meatballs)<lb/>
SAUSAGE<lb/>
MEATBALLS<lb/>
CHEESE<lb/>
VEGETARIAN<lb/>
SALAD PLATE<lb/>
t<lb/>
(Across from Taff Furniture)<lb/>
MonSat. 10a.m6p.m<lb/>
ALL FRESH &amp;<lb/>
SALTWATER<lb/>
FISH<lb/>
12<lb/>
OFF!<lb/>
(Jan. 15-16)<lb/>
Watch for the arrival of a large shipment of Fin<lb/>
ches, Parrots, &amp; other biros.<lb/>
DISCOVER<lb/>
"BROTHERHOOD<lb/>
OF VALUE"<lb/>
F<lb/>
!<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
Srr4 with ?' chalet of ?Atrtt?? (Iwx<lb/>
?Omoin ?lnw? "rWI Pkfck ?Tomsloc<lb/>
?.r?? Hrppcr ?BUrt OU?? ?? 'Pepper mm! OU<lb/>
COMING THIS FRIDAY<lb/>
EARLY BIRD SPECIAL<lb/>
AT 1:00<lb/>
AND LADIES' NITE<lb/>
ON TUESDAY<lb/>
STARTING AT 6<lb/>
208 E. 5th St 758-7979<lb/>
M e've got more tasie!<lb/>
PRESBYTERIAN<lb/>
CAMPUS MINISTRY<lb/>
MEETING PLACES<lb/>
International House, 306 East Ninth Si<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Stewart LaNeave, Campus Minister tor Presbyterians<lb/>
752 7240 and 758 0145<lb/>
TUESDAYS, 5:30 P.M International House<lb/>
Planned program with give and take conversation.<lb/>
Afterward we go nut to a local restaurant for dinner.<lb/>
Students pay $2 00 and PCM pays the rest.<lb/>
Programs, dates and meal locations are listed below<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS, Noon, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Faculty and staff lunch time together m Mendenhall staff lunch<lb/>
area.<lb/>
THURSDAYS, Noon, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Students get their own lunch at Mendenhall snack bar and come<lb/>
together for discussion at one of the round tables<lb/>
PROGRAMS FOR THE SPRING TERM R SSTftV ftrNTS<lb/>
Judiasm Szechuan Garden<lb/>
Christianity Margaux's<lb/>
Islam<lb/>
Hinduism<lb/>
Buddhism<lb/>
Taoism, Confucianism and Shinto<lb/>
Other Religious Sects<lb/>
The Nature and Value of Human Life 1<lb/>
The Nature and Value of Human Life 2<lb/>
The Nature and Value of Human Life 3<lb/>
The Nature and Value of Human Life 4<lb/>
The Nature and Value of Human Life 5<lb/>
DOF-5- God The Holy Spirit<lb/>
DOF-6 The Word of God<lb/>
DOF 7 The Christian Church<lb/>
Parker's<lb/>
Famous Pizza<lb/>
Sweet Caroline's<lb/>
Szechuan Garden<lb/>
Margaux's<lb/>
Parker's<lb/>
Famous Pizza<lb/>
Sweet Caroline's<lb/>
Szechuan Garden<lb/>
Margaux's<lb/>
Parker's<lb/>
Famous Pizza<lb/>
Sweet Caroline's<lb/>
COME<lb/>
JOIN WITH US<lb/>
FOR FOOD ? FELLOWSHIP ? DISCUSSION<lb/>
AN OPPORTUNITY FOR COMMUNITY<lb/>
IN THE UNIVERSITY<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
p???WC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
DtXOC<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
508 W. 5th St. 758-7441<lb/>
RUSH PARTY<lb/>
Mon Tues Wed. Nights<lb/>
9 until<lb/>
Call for info andor ride<lb/>
<pb facs="00057449_0006"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14. 1982<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
N<lb/>
' Hey Kid,<lb/>
Wanna Be In<lb/>
Show Biz?<lb/>
(For A Day)<lb/>
i??tr<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
MW Kditor<lb/>
"We are auditioning the ad<lb/>
read, "for over 200 singers,<lb/>
dancers, musicians, variety artists<lb/>
and technicians for The Old Coun-<lb/>
try, Busch Gardens, 1982 Entertain-<lb/>
ment SeasonAudition date:<lb/>
Greenville, N.C Wednesday Jan.<lb/>
13, 2-6 p.m. East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty, A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
Carnegie Hall, it isn't. But then<lb/>
again, on a wintery day in January,<lb/>
it was.<lb/>
Busch Gardens held auditions.<lb/>
There was a touch of class on the<lb/>
stage: a large, black grand piano,<lb/>
complete with an accompanist.<lb/>
Taped to the stage structure was a<lb/>
large poster showing the pay rates<lb/>
for the 1982 season: area supervisor.<lb/>
S6.15; stage manager, $6.05; Per-<lb/>
former I (Country, Italv,<lb/>
Kaleidoscope), $5.80; Performer "ll<lb/>
(Globe, Festhaus), $5.20; Musician,<lb/>
$5.80; technician, $4.90; dresser,<lb/>
$4.10; costume character, $3.65.<lb/>
The accompanist played some<lb/>
soft music, possibly to calm the con-<lb/>
testants. And then the pav rate sign<lb/>
fell.<lb/>
Showtime, folks.<lb/>
Situated behind the large piano<lb/>
were the judges ? three of them ?<lb/>
waiting for the first hopeful.<lb/>
And at 2:20 p.m she appeared<lb/>
? a lovely young lady, a dancer.<lb/>
"Iftheycouldsee me now,<lb/>
that little gang of mine she sang,<lb/>
smiling always, with her hands on<lb/>
her hips. The judges sat smiling,<lb/>
nodding and tapping their toes.<lb/>
"That's enough one of them said.<lb/>
"Thank you she said politely.<lb/>
"Thank you they added.<lb/>
A young man ? contestant<lb/>
number two ? very articulate and<lb/>
polite, appeared on stage. A singer.<lb/>
And did he sing. A song from<lb/>
Cabaret.<lb/>
"It's got to happenIt's got to<lb/>
happenSometime. Mavbe this time<lb/>
I'll win<lb/>
A few will. But a lot more will be<lb/>
disappointed.<lb/>
Nervous?<lb/>
"Well, I have been" the young<lb/>
contestant said. ' 'But I 'm just going<lb/>
to get up there and do it. A nd ij they<lb/>
like me, they like me. If they don 7,<lb/>
they don't She was dressed in a<lb/>
western shirt and hat, holding a<lb/>
record and a cassette tape.<lb/>
She practiced her dance routine<lb/>
while she sat, moving her feet con-<lb/>
tinually. She also practiced her stret-<lb/>
ching. Got down on the carpi'red<lb/>
floor, and waited. And waited.<lb/>
Then she was called.<lb/>
"Hi, " she said, seeming very cer-<lb/>
ium as to whether she would succeed<lb/>
or not. She says she's a dancer, hut<lb/>
she can sing, too. You have to he<lb/>
versatile in this business.<lb/>
"And all that jazz!<lb/>
A nd. all that Jazz she sang.<lb/>
And she always smiled, looking<lb/>
right at the judges who relumed the<lb/>
favor.<lb/>
'Thank you they said.<lb/>
' 'Okay she replied. ' 7 hope you<lb/>
enjoyed it<lb/>
Showtime, Folks<lb/>
Last Carolina University played host to All That Jaz"(a scene from the motion picture is above! vednesda afternoon<lb/>
as Busch Gardens held auditions for the 1982 Entertainment Season. There was plentv of dance, music, singing, all sorts<lb/>
of entertainment ranging from juggling to fiddle plaing. There were man contestants, but onl a few were selected.<lb/>
I hat s not to sa thai all weren't "stars for a dav<lb/>
There was a five-minute wait<lb/>
before the next contestant appeared.<lb/>
He was an actor, clear and ar-<lb/>
ticulate, and he recited Shakespeare.<lb/>
"Do 1 dare? And do ! dare?"<lb/>
A young man, a trumpet player<lb/>
was next. The "head" judge, a<lb/>
clean-cut, somewhat thirtiesh man,<lb/>
seemed to favor musicians.<lb/>
"Durwood he said, sounding as if<lb/>
he wanted to make the young man<lb/>
feel at home, "Please feel free to<lb/>
blow a feu notes, play a scale.<lb/>
Whatever Then Durwood walked<lb/>
across the stage, his confidence<lb/>
restored, and he grabbed a stand,<lb/>
placing his sheet music on it. And<lb/>
then he played some soft, swaying<lb/>
music. Concert music. He had a<lb/>
handkerchief wrapped around the<lb/>
valve casing of his horn. Just like ol'<lb/>
Satchmo. The lights flickered off his<lb/>
silver horn as he moved to the beat<lb/>
of the music<lb/>
Something a little different,<lb/>
almost refreshing, awaited the au-<lb/>
dience next. A young man, wearing<lb/>
a suit, complete with a top hat and<lb/>
white gloves, appeared in blackface.<lb/>
He did mime, something he called<lb/>
"The Phases of Life He por-<lb/>
trayed a baseball player as he slid<lb/>
across the stage. And a bronco<lb/>
rider, as he slapped his hat against<lb/>
the back of his leg, jumping up and<lb/>
down. He portrayed a young father<lb/>
whose wife had jut given birth to a<lb/>
boy. He gave the judges cigars<lb/>
which seemed to relieve the tension<lb/>
in the building.<lb/>
i he young man was also a jug-<lb/>
gler. He threw black and while balls<lb/>
up in the air as he joked with the<lb/>
judges.<lb/>
This young man was special He<lb/>
was clearly the best up until now.<lb/>
And the audience knew it.<lb/>
A dancer was next, dressed in<lb/>
black, and she performed to 1 ia<lb/>
Mmelli singing "City I ights Then<lb/>
came anolher young dancer, and she<lb/>
whirled and twirled to music from<lb/>
"All That Jaz She even snapped<lb/>
her fingers right on time. "Meet our<lb/>
friendly, eager group the record<lb/>
sang. "We onlv need to service<lb/>
you<lb/>
Then there was a change of pace.<lb/>
A young lady, dressed ver neatly in<lb/>
slacks and a white sweater, ap-<lb/>
peared. Apparent 1 she had I<lb/>
ten to put her age on the appl<lb/>
lion. "Are you IK one ol<lb/>
judges asked. "Yes she answt<lb/>
quickly. She sang "Second H<lb/>
Rose and seemed to add<lb/>
of Broadway to the "show<lb/>
then sang "Climb Every Mou<lb/>
from The Sound qj fusic<lb/>
Later on m the afternoon i<lb/>
something surprisingly, un<lb/>
different. A young lad) d<lb/>
Pepsi commercial.<lb/>
"Do you believe on<lb/>
judges said, "that you're the '<lb/>
one we've ever had to dan<lb/>
Pepsi Cola commercial'1"<lb/>
You have to be a little different in<lb/>
this business. If you wan;<lb/>
ceed.<lb/>
Consider The Pet's<lb/>
Size Before Choice<lb/>
Roy Sch eider in "All That Jazz.<lb/>
By TOM HALL<lb/>
Nr?s tditor<lb/>
Any dog is a major investment<lb/>
but few investments become<lb/>
members of the family. If chosen<lb/>
carefully, your pet will reward you<lb/>
many times over the initial cost in<lb/>
terms of affection and happiness.<lb/>
However, your dog can become an<lb/>
endless source of heartbreak if you<lb/>
buy it without considering its even<lb/>
tual size, temperament and health<lb/>
costs.<lb/>
Your friends will be eager to offer<lb/>
advice on the type of dog you<lb/>
should buy, but ultimately the deci-<lb/>
sion is yours. With purebreds, you<lb/>
can choose a pet that conforms to<lb/>
your tastes. You can predict a<lb/>
pedigreed puppy's size, weight and<lb/>
even its temperament when it is full-<lb/>
grown. Mongrel admirers may tell<lb/>
you that purebreds are inbred, but<lb/>
at least with purebreds it is possible<lb/>
to trace inherited diseases.<lb/>
However, if you're buying a par-<lb/>
ticular breed because it is in fashion<lb/>
or you see it as a status symbol,<lb/>
perhaps you'd rather have a teddy<lb/>
bear in an Izod shirt.<lb/>
Before you're set on buying a<lb/>
purebred, think about the cost.<lb/>
Prices often start around $75 and<lb/>
average between $125 and $150.<lb/>
This may sound like a great amount<lb/>
of money, but added costs can be<lb/>
kept to a minimum with little cau-<lb/>
tion in selection and good health,<lb/>
care of your purebred.<lb/>
Most people buy a dog because<lb/>
they like the way it looks. You<lb/>
should also consider your lifestyle.<lb/>
Some breeds don't get along well<lb/>
with small children. A large dog<lb/>
may adapt to city life, but can you<lb/>
keep it from dragging you down the<lb/>
sidewalk by its leash? Reading the<lb/>
American Kennel Club's illustrated<lb/>
Complete Dog Book is a good way<lb/>
to learn about breeds and their<lb/>
characteristics. Your local<lb/>
veterinarian may also be willing to<lb/>
suggest what kind of dog is right for<lb/>
you.<lb/>
When vou find the breed you<lb/>
want, try to see an adult o that<lb/>
breed. Your friends or veterinarian<lb/>
may know someone who has one, or<lb/>
you could visit a dog show. Watch<lb/>
the dog closely. How does it<lb/>
behave? How does it act toward<lb/>
you? Every owner is certain to sav<lb/>
that his breed is best, but if he says<lb/>
his dog is having a bad day. check<lb/>
and see if a bad temperament is<lb/>
common in other dogs of that<lb/>
breed.<lb/>
Once you're convinced that a cer-<lb/>
tain breed is for you, look for a<lb/>
reputable breeder. Those sad-eyed<lb/>
puppies in the pet store may pull at<lb/>
your heart-strings, but they're more<lb/>
likely to put a dent in your pocket-<lb/>
book. Yu don't want a dog that's<lb/>
already sick, and pet store pups<lb/>
almost always cost more than those<lb/>
from a breeder. Many buyers of<lb/>
commercially sold puppies are sad<lb/>
died with extra veterinary bills.<lb/>
These puppies are expecially prone<lb/>
to respiratory diseases as a result of<lb/>
air conditioning and cramped, un-<lb/>
sanitary cages, not to mention the<lb/>
psychological problems that may<lb/>
come from hours in harsh floures-<lb/>
cent lights with many other howling<lb/>
pups.<lb/>
Breeders can be found through<lb/>
classified ads, dog shows, and<lb/>
veterinarians. The best way to judge<lb/>
a breeder is by the number of ques-<lb/>
tions he asks you. A good breeder<lb/>
won't sell a puppy to someone who<lb/>
won't give it proper care. If he asks<lb/>
you about the time you spend at<lb/>
home, your children, your ex-<lb/>
perience with pets, your familia<lb/>
with the breed and exact 1) who u<lb/>
take care of the puppv, you<lb/>
usually rest assured that he's a good<lb/>
breeder.<lb/>
Purebred breeders should present<lb/>
certification of the puppv paren-<lb/>
tage from the outset, rhis docun<lb/>
tat ion is needed to register your pel<lb/>
with the AKC. If the breeder<lb/>
doesn't have certification papers.<lb/>
leave. People are often shocked<lb/>
?hen their uncertified "purebred"<lb/>
grows to three times its expected<lb/>
sie.<lb/>
After you have the certification in<lb/>
hand, ask to see the puppy's<lb/>
ancestry charts before seeing the<lb/>
puppy. It's hard to turn down that<lb/>
adorable bit of fiuff in your hand<lb/>
The charts may be confusing at<lb/>
first, but take your time and ask<lb/>
questions. It's your money and vour<lb/>
sorrow if problems show up after<lb/>
you buy a puppy. Check to see if the<lb/>
same names appear more than once<lb/>
on the chart. Just as in humans, if<lb/>
the puppy is the product of close<lb/>
relatives, genetic defects are much<lb/>
more likely to emerge. Don't be im-<lb/>
pressed by the number of cham-<lb/>
pions on the pedigree. Champions<lb/>
are otten bred for their looks alone,<lb/>
and if the puppy has a champion as<lb/>
a close ancestor, it mav have in-<lb/>
herited problems in health or<lb/>
temperament. Puppies with cham-<lb/>
pion potential cost more, too, and<lb/>
that's a needless exoense if vou're<lb/>
not planning to show your dog<lb/>
Some breeds are especially<lb/>
susceptible to inherited health pro-<lb/>
blems, but with careful breeding<lb/>
these defects can be eliminated. If<lb/>
the breed you want has high in-<lb/>
See SOME, Page 8<lb/>
Kv MK<lb/>
vou<lb/>
fold<lb/>
NE<lb/>
'TOT"<lb/>
1 ml<lb/>
3<lb/>
EXE<lb/>
AER<lb/>
<lb/>
SltiSH<lb/>
s?<lb/>
GLI<lb/>
G<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
B<lb/>
Ll<lb/>
BE<lb/>
ELI<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
ommi n<lb/>
<pb facs="00057449_0007"/><lb/>
neleentli Century Baseball Was l)ii<lb/>
RUSH PHI KAP<lb/>
@<lb/>
SELECTED TITLES B<lb/>
BlUM JOEL ? EARTH, WIND &amp; FIRE BEACH BONS ? BE)<lb/>
LINDA RONSTADT ? ElO ? DAN FOGELBERG ? WILLIE NELSON ? M0QPV8LU<lb/>
J1MMX BuFFETT ? CRUSADERS ? NEIL DIAMOND ?ELTON JOHN ?OLIVIANEWT<lb/>
STEELNDAN ? WHO ROD STEWART AR$ LITTLE FE<lb/>
ACDC jgr-TOM PETTV m GENESIS ? SBS ? LVWCD S<lb/>
?fflBff's X Mffi'<lb/>
-3x a?-<lb/>
RIDAY<lb/>
AT I Q<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
IMMY<lb/>
ACKERY<lb/>
NIGHTHAWKS<lb/>
THE KEYSTONE<lb/>
RHYTHM BAND<lb/>
TURDAY ATJJ'S<lb/>
GLENN<lb/>
Lb Lb I I ?<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
Gre?nville,N.C.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057449_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAS1 t -ROl INIAN JANUARY 14. 1982<lb/>
LCMMIG A60VTColuZG TH? H??) ia)w<lb/>
W?LLO, P4vf HO0O'rf?-<lb/>
YOU TOpiy<lb/>
BY Ptv;ip0oieni5<lb/>
tac, meat's wo hctt<lb/>
sta.tt?is <lb/>
v.<lb/>
xur ccr wo po that-<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
Offers Many<lb/>
Popular Items<lb/>
Early Teams Very 'Original'<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
reason ? players<lb/>
greed. Certain<lb/>
b a s c b a 11 e r s were<lb/>
disatisfted with their<lb/>
salaries in the A A or<lb/>
National 1 eague and<lb/>
sought to secure higher<lb/>
compensation for their<lb/>
efforts. A top-notch<lb/>
player could expect a<lb/>
contract for as much as<lb/>
$2,500 a yeai in the<lb/>
Players' 1 eague. But<lb/>
the benefits, again,<lb/>
were short-lived. The<lb/>
league's lifespan was<lb/>
also onlv one year, iust<lb/>
as the Union Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
But if nothing else,<lb/>
the Players' Associa-<lb/>
tion boastea some of<lb/>
the most original names<lb/>
for their teams. Just<lb/>
imagine a contest bet-<lb/>
ween the Buffalo<lb/>
Bisons and the Boston<lb/>
Beaneaters. Or how<lb/>
about the Brooklyn<lb/>
Wonders against the<lb/>
Pittsburgh Burghers0<lb/>
Perhaps the reason for<lb/>
the league's short<lb/>
history is apparent.<lb/>
Who in his right mind<lb/>
would pay money to see<lb/>
a Boston Beaneater?<lb/>
The next organiza-<lb/>
tion to appear on the<lb/>
scene came in 1912.<lb/>
The U .S. league,<lb/>
founded b W illiam<lb/>
Abbott Wit man of<lb/>
Reading, Pennsylvania,<lb/>
became the fourth such<lb/>
league attempting to<lb/>
move into baseball's<lb/>
big tune. Beginning in<lb/>
Ma 1912, The league<lb/>
got into severe trouble<lb/>
right from the start. In<lb/>
the first game between<lb/>
New York and<lb/>
Reading, pitchers for<lb/>
both teams had a few<lb/>
"arm control" pro-<lb/>
blems. s the dav pro-<lb/>
gressed, nine baiters<lb/>
were hit by wild pit-<lb/>
ches; two suffered in-<lb/>
juries which successful-<lb/>
ly removed them from<lb/>
the gameon stret-<lb/>
chers. By 1913, the<lb/>
league was abandoned.<lb/>
But in that same<lb/>
vear, another league<lb/>
w as formed. The<lb/>
Federal League, which<lb/>
lasted until 1915, turn-<lb/>
ed out to be another<lb/>
terrific money loser,<lb/>
dropping over $176,000<lb/>
of investors' funds in<lb/>
just two seasons.<lb/>
Critics of the league<lb/>
could not pinpoint the<lb/>
Some Dogs Have<lb/>
Genetic Diseases<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
Some breeds are<lb/>
especially susceptible to<lb/>
inherited health pro-<lb/>
blems, but with careful<lb/>
breeding these defects<lb/>
can be eliminated. If<lb/>
the breed ou want has<lb/>
high instances of<lb/>
genetic diseases, be sure<lb/>
to ask the breeder<lb/>
specific questions.<lb/>
Although the defective<lb/>
puppy is to be pitied,<lb/>
the buyer is the one<lb/>
who must bear the<lb/>
weight of the breeder's<lb/>
mistakes. A good<lb/>
breeder will keep pro-<lb/>
geny records to note<lb/>
how offspring turn out<lb/>
and to improve his<lb/>
breeding program.<lb/>
Ask about hip<lb/>
dvsplasia if you're<lb/>
looking for a large<lb/>
breed puppy. This is a<lb/>
disease of the hip joints<lb/>
that eventually causes<lb/>
dislocation of the hip<lb/>
socket. If you want a<lb/>
miniature or toy breed,<lb/>
ask about patellar luxa-<lb/>
tion. That's the scien-<lb/>
tific name for disloca-<lb/>
tion of the kneecap that<lb/>
may cripple a dog.<lb/>
Epilepsy is found more<lb/>
often in the dog than in<lb/>
any other domestic<lb/>
animal; be on the<lb/>
lookout if you're buy-<lb/>
ing a setter, retriever,<lb/>
spaniel, dachshund oi<lb/>
beagle. Progressive<lb/>
blindness is also found<lb/>
in main breeds, so be<lb/>
sure to inquire aobul it.<lb/>
Now ask the breeder<lb/>
about a health<lb/>
guarantee. Reputable<lb/>
breeders shuld be will-<lb/>
ing to exchange a dog<lb/>
or give full refund it<lb/>
problems crop up<lb/>
within a year. 1 he best<lb/>
guarantee is one in<lb/>
which your money is<lb/>
refunded and you gel to<lb/>
keep the dog. You<lb/>
won't want to give up<lb/>
the pet you've grown to<lb/>
love, and the refund<lb/>
will help pa the<lb/>
veterinarian bills.<lb/>
If all these points<lb/>
check out fine, you're<lb/>
ready to see the litter.<lb/>
Alwavs see one or both<lb/>
parents; you'll see the<lb/>
temperament you can<lb/>
expect the puppies to<lb/>
have when grown. Ag-<lb/>
gressiveness in<lb/>
shepherds, trembling in<lb/>
Dobermans, and<lb/>
hyperactiv itv in<lb/>
poodles, setters and<lb/>
schnauzers are just<lb/>
samples of what you<lb/>
can avoid by watching<lb/>
a litter's parents close-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
Let the puppies roam<lb/>
around. Are t h e v<lb/>
playful and active, or<lb/>
do thev shrink back? A<lb/>
good test for alertness<lb/>
is to shake your car<lb/>
keys while moving<lb/>
them slowly from left<lb/>
to right. A six- to eight-<lb/>
week-old puppy should<lb/>
be able to follow the<lb/>
kevs with its eyes. A<lb/>
puppv may seem long-<lb/>
legged and awkward,<lb/>
but make sure it's not<lb/>
having trouble walking.<lb/>
When the puppy isn't<lb/>
looking, call it or clap<lb/>
your hands; see if it<lb/>
notices. Bright, atten-<lb/>
tive eyes are usually a<lb/>
sign of good health.<lb/>
If a breeder of a litter<lb/>
does not measure up to<lb/>
vour standards, don't<lb/>
buv. Main puppies are<lb/>
bought from the first<lb/>
bteeder visited. Don't<lb/>
feel guilty if you want<lb/>
to shop around. If it<lb/>
makes you feel better,<lb/>
tell the unsatisfactory<lb/>
breeder that you'd like<lb/>
to see some other<lb/>
breeders before coming<lb/>
back. Then don't come<lb/>
back.<lb/>
If you've found a<lb/>
good breeder and a<lb/>
healthy puppy, con-<lb/>
gratulations! This can<lb/>
be the start of a long<lb/>
and happy friendship<lb/>
with your pet.<lb/>
THURSDAY - Jan. 14 (tonight)<lb/>
We resume our weekly Thursday night<lb/>
MIDNIGHT PARTY. Begins at midnight.<lb/>
Mon Tues Wed. - Jan. 18, 19, 20 - RUSH<lb/>
exact reason for the<lb/>
organization's collapse.<lb/>
But once again, the<lb/>
question arises, who<lb/>
would pay good money<lb/>
to support a team call-<lb/>
ed the Brooklyn Tip-<lb/>
Tops (named after the<lb/>
owner's bread com-<lb/>
pany)? The Chicago<lb/>
Whales? The Newark<lb/>
Peppers? Needless to<lb/>
say, even an admission<lb/>
price drop to a dime<lb/>
couldn't salvage this<lb/>
league.<lb/>
But these leagues<lb/>
were not without their<lb/>
great names and their<lb/>
influence on modern<lb/>
baseball. On a typical<lb/>
Sunday near the turn of<lb/>
the century, a fan could<lb/>
sit at the ball park and<lb/>
watch as such famed<lb/>
players as Harrv<lb/>
Wright, Charlie Com-<lb/>
isky and Tony Mullane<lb/>
battled it out on the<lb/>
mound and at the plate.<lb/>
But the players'<lb/>
nicknames were pro-<lb/>
bably the only aspect of<lb/>
the league which was<lb/>
worse than the team<lb/>
nicknames.<lb/>
QU<lb/>
PfrxOePrkie<lb/>
ByCHADBl'FFKIN<lb/>
Situated among the numerous<lb/>
fast-food restaurants on East 10th<lb/>
Street is the Sechuan Garden<lb/>
Chinese restaurant. When you go<lb/>
in, no time is wasted in getting you<lb/>
seated and taking your order.<lb/>
Because of the smallness of the<lb/>
place, the tables are situated close<lb/>
together, making the noise level<lb/>
rather high.<lb/>
The menu offers almost 100 items<lb/>
ranging in price from 65 cents for<lb/>
egg drop soup to $15 for Peking<lb/>
duck. The most popular item on the<lb/>
menu, according to one waitress, is<lb/>
the dinner combination platter<lb/>
which offers a selection of main<lb/>
dishes such as sweet and sour pork,<lb/>
chicken chow mein, roast pork, egg<lb/>
foo young or shrimp with lobster<lb/>
sauce and includes hot tea, soup,<lb/>
tried rice and egg roll. The prices of<lb/>
the combinations are from S4.55 to<lb/>
S5.95.<lb/>
I was served a generous amount<lb/>
ot sweet and sour pork which was<lb/>
delicious. The soup was tasty also,<lb/>
but the egg roll tasted like the froen<lb/>
kind you get at the grocery.<lb/>
The beverage menu listed a vane<lb/>
l otahfornia and imported wines<lb/>
and also several popular brands ol<lb/>
beer ? American and Oriental.<lb/>
I he decor ot the Szechuan<lb/>
Garden is "fast-Chinese The<lb/>
Oriental lights and paintings are ex-<lb/>
pected in Chinese restaurants, but<lb/>
the red, white and blue wail paper<lb/>
made me think ol the h?t dogs thai<lb/>
used to be served there bv the<lb/>
prev ious tenants.<lb/>
I! you're planning an enchanting<lb/>
evening with a friend and looking<lb/>
for a quaint, romantic oriental<lb/>
restaurant, this isn't the place lo go.<lb/>
It you're just hungry for Chinese<lb/>
food, however, th? vchuan<lb/>
Garden offers good f J - .cepl<lb/>
for the egg roll ? fast servici and<lb/>
reasonable prices<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S NEWEST BANQUET<lb/>
AND PARTY FACILITY<lb/>
iFO?ME?CV SALLENTINE SeuFfE'<lb/>
PITTPLAZACREENVILLEi<lb/>
Winter &amp; Spring <lb/>
FORMALSC <lb/>
MEETINGS<lb/>
? BANQUETS<lb/>
COMPLETE FOOD SERVICE AVAILABLE<lb/>
SPECIALIZING IN OUTSIDE CATERING<lb/>
Call BOB SAUTER<lb/>
355-2361 OR 7560842<lb/>
VWMIMlm VI HIV Win I I'WMV<lb/>
J<lb/>
WESTERN SIZZLIN'<lb/>
 The Family Steak House<lb/>
MONDAY ?<lb/>
CHOPPED STEAK$1"<lb/>
TUESDAY ?<lb/>
BEEF TIPSM"<lb/>
WEDNESDAY ?<lb/>
CUBED STEAKS18V<lb/>
THURSDAY ?<lb/>
STEAK SANDWICHM69<lb/>
FRIDAY ?<lb/>
U.S.D.A. RIB EVE379<lb/>
SATURDAY ?<lb/>
BARBECUE RIBS$2"<lb/>
SUNDAY ?<lb/>
STEAK ON A STICK$19Q<lb/>
Famous Salad Bar Free Tea with ECU 1.0.<lb/>
All meals are complete including baked potato or Pten.t<lb/>
tries &amp; Texas toast jj U. X llf<lb/>
Take Out Service - 2?03 E 10th St ? 7SJI17J Ajl I t?<lb/>
74 Bypass ? 7S 0040<lb/>
Hours Ham :0pm Mon Thurs 10am -Hp.m Fn Sun<lb/>
&amp;&amp;m$H$&amp;&amp;m&amp;$5&amp;fii<lb/>
Beautiful Fantastic UN BELIE VA BLE<lb/>
Completely Remodeled<lb/>
AND STILL MORE TO COME<lb/>
1<lb/>
S<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
a<lb/>
8<lb/>
8<lb/>
1<lb/>
s<lb/>
WHERE;<lb/>
University Dining Services<lb/>
 JONES CAFETERIA<lb/>
? GALLEY SNACK BAR<lb/>
!<lb/>
(Located on ground floor ? Jones Dormitory)<lb/>
Come by and see us .<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
MEAL PLANS NOW<lb/>
ON SALE.<lb/>
A<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
Wiln <lb/>
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pla ?<lb/>
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Hon<lb/>
hav<lb/>
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thaw<lb/>
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ho: <lb/>
sideredl<lb/>
Forme<lb/>
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&amp;Si?S!?;S8i?0SSSm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057449_0009"/><lb/>
1S<lb/>
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?x<lb/>
?<lb/>
t!<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANUARY U, IW2<lb/>
A Rivalry Revisited<lb/>
Bucs vs. Seahawks<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Spi-rl, t tin1<lb/>
The voting basketball rivalry bet<lb/>
ween last Carolina and UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington has blossomed in recent<lb/>
years to the point that players on<lb/>
both squads admit it is legitimate.<lb/>
That young rivalry will be renewed<lb/>
tonight (Thursday) in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum<lb/>
Tip-off tune is 7:30 p.m. for the<lb/>
game that will feature a pair of clubs<lb/>
playing their best ball oi the year.<lb/>
Both the Pirates and Seahawks have<lb/>
won four of their last five.<lb/>
If this year's game at Mmges is<lb/>
anything like last year's, fans are in<lb/>
foi a real show. A last-second<lb/>
bucket last season b Edwin lim-<lb/>
mons gave the Seahawks a 57-55 vic-<lb/>
tory. ECl returned the favor at<lb/>
Wilmington later m the year, winn-<lb/>
ing 72-64.<lb/>
rhe Seahawks, 7 - 6, ha e<lb/>
historical!) brought a sizeable fan<lb/>
gathering with them to Mmges. The<lb/>
team itself always seem to be full of<lb/>
enthusiasm, fins, said ECU head<lb/>
coach Dave Odom, is something his<lb/>
team must offset.<lb/>
??We must counteract then emo-<lb/>
tion early in the game he said.<lb/>
" There's no doubt that they'll come<lb/>
in here and be really ready for us.<lb/>
Ihcy always are<lb/>
Wilmington's enthusiasm. Odom<lb/>
said, stems from the growing rivalry<lb/>
between the two schools. That<lb/>
rivalry, he soon added, is not one<lb/>
filled with bad blood.<lb/>
"We do have a neighborhood<lb/>
rivalry, and I think that's good. But<lb/>
it is not a heated rivalry, just very<lb/>
competitive. I remember when we<lb/>
went down there last year their fans<lb/>
were really fired up for us. 1 hope<lb/>
our fans will return the favor this<lb/>
year<lb/>
Odom agreed that the teams' re-<lb/>
cent winning ways was evidence that<lb/>
both clubs may be coming of age at<lb/>
the same time.<lb/>
"1 think the game is a very impor-<lb/>
tant one for us he said.<lb/>
"Certainly it is for them too. Our<lb/>
immediate goal is to improve and<lb/>
continue winning<lb/>
Odom described the Seahawks'<lb/>
zone defense a "traditionally one<lb/>
of the best we face He said<lb/>
penetrating inside that zone and hit-<lb/>
ting from the outside will both be<lb/>
objectives of the Pirates, who are<lb/>
6-6.<lb/>
ECU is enjoying one of its best<lb/>
years ever from the floor, connec-<lb/>
ting on 50.4 percent of its field goal<lb/>
attempts. That figure is well above<lb/>
last season's final 45.7 percentage.<lb/>
The current average is also above<lb/>
the school record of 49.6 percent,<lb/>
set in 1979.<lb/>
Balanced scoring has been the by-<lb/>
word thus far for the Pirates. For-<lb/>
ward Charles Green leads the way<lb/>
with an 11.8 average. Point guard<lb/>
Tony Byles is fractions behind,<lb/>
tallying 11.7 points per game. For-<lb/>
ward Morris Hargrove is also in<lb/>
double figures at 10.8.<lb/>
Shawn Williams, a 6-5 forward, is<lb/>
the only Seahawk scoring in double<lb/>
digits. He is averaging 17.4 points<lb/>
and 5.7 rebounds per game. Point<lb/>
guard Frankie Dickens is next,<lb/>
averaging an even nine points.<lb/>
ECU's Odom is impressed by<lb/>
both of UNC-W's top scorers.<lb/>
"Williams is a fine player. He has<lb/>
traditionally been a thorn in my<lb/>
side. And Dickens provides quality<lb/>
at the point. I have great respect for<lb/>
his abilities<lb/>
ECU's Leading Scorer, Charles Creen (34), Puts Shot Cp<lb/>
Jones Paces Lady Pirate Upset Of Tar Heels<lb/>
ECU coach Cathy Andruzzi talks with Lady Pirates during a<lb/>
timeout. The team upset arch-rival North Carolina Tuesday<lb/>
night in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Wilmington's Williams<lb/>
Returns 'Home' To<lb/>
Face Pirates Tonight<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sport, I iliiuf<lb/>
Homecomings. Basketball players<lb/>
have a special liking for them.<lb/>
Tonight's East Carolina - UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington will be one o sorts for<lb/>
Seahawk forward Shawn Williams.<lb/>
Williams hails from nearby<lb/>
Washington and will be playing as<lb/>
close to home as is possible, ECL<lb/>
being the nearest university to his<lb/>
hometwon. Washington is, of<lb/>
course, the town that once raved<lb/>
over their beloved "Pam Pack<lb/>
which marched to two consecutive<lb/>
state 3-A championships while<lb/>
Williams was in high school.<lb/>
1 hose W ashington teams are con-<lb/>
sidered among the best ever in<lb/>
Former Washington High star<lb/>
Shawn Williams<lb/>
North Carolina prep basketball<lb/>
history. In addition to Williams, the<lb/>
Pam Pack featured current college<lb/>
stars Alvis Rogers of Wake Forest,<lb/>
and AU-American Dominique<lb/>
W ilk ins oi Georgia.<lb/>
W illiams played in the shadow of<lb/>
those two prep phenoms. That, he<lb/>
now says, did not bother him.<lb/>
"It wasn't frustrating for me at<lb/>
all he said. "Everybody asks me<lb/>
that. But I'd even catch myself wat-<lb/>
ching them in practice or in the<lb/>
games. It was like watching a<lb/>
human highlights film<lb/>
Many observers felt during<lb/>
Williams' senior season at<lb/>
Washington that he would surely<lb/>
opt to go to East Carolina. His<lb/>
mother was, and still is, an<lb/>
employee Ol the university. A<lb/>
scholarship offer from the Pirates<lb/>
did not come, though, and he ended<lb/>
up at UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
"I thought about East Carolina<lb/>
some Williams admitted Wednes-<lb/>
day via telephone. "But when 1<lb/>
came to Wilmington I knew that it<lb/>
was the place for me. I felt that I<lb/>
could fit in here. I was probably<lb/>
looking to get further from home<lb/>
than Greenville anyway<lb/>
The Seahawks traditionally play<lb/>
ECU a tough game in Greenville.<lb/>
Williams certainly is no exception.<lb/>
He was a real demon on the boards<lb/>
in last season's 57-55 win over the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
"We all look forward to playing<lb/>
East Carolina he said. "It has a<lb/>
special effect on us. Only a few<lb/>
other teams compare. When I first<lb/>
got here I was told ECU was one of<lb/>
our rivals. I know now that is true<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL ? East<lb/>
Carolina's Sam Jones pumped in 19<lb/>
points and Loletha Harrison held<lb/>
North Carolina's Kathy Crawford<lb/>
scoreless for the first time in her col-<lb/>
lege career Tuesday night as the<lb/>
Lady Pirates pulled off their second<lb/>
straight upset of an Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference team, dumping the Tar<lb/>
Heels, 71-66.<lb/>
Crawford, a 5-11 junior forward,<lb/>
played only 15 frustrating minutes<lb/>
in the game, and failed to score<lb/>
from the floor. It was the first time<lb/>
she had ever been scoreless during<lb/>
her three-year career at North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
North Carolina's Tresa Brown<lb/>
tried to take up the slack, firing in<lb/>
30 points on 14 of 20 field goal at-<lb/>
tempts and two of two from the<lb/>
line, but it wasn't enough to over-<lb/>
come the pesky Pirates, now 6-7 on<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
North Carolina drops to 7-6 on<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
Early in the second half. East<lb/>
Carolina, down 37-36 at intermis-<lb/>
sion, ran off a string to take com-<lb/>
mand. The Lady Pirates scored the<lb/>
first six points on a pair of jumpers<lb/>
by Jones sandwiched around a<lb/>
basket by Mary Denkler. The Lady<lb/>
Pirates never lost the lead again<lb/>
UNC-W forward Shawn<lb/>
Williams scores against ECU<lb/>
during his freshman season.<lb/>
The Seahawks stand 7-6 on the<lb/>
season. That winning record is<lb/>
largely thanks to increased output<lb/>
and leadership from Williams.<lb/>
The 6-5 junior forward is averag-<lb/>
ing 17.4 points and 5.7 rebounds per<lb/>
game. Williams says he came into<lb/>
the season looking to improve his<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"This year it was a matter of me<lb/>
saying, '1 can do and I am going to<lb/>
do it 1 think I had a lot more deter-<lb/>
mination coming into this year, and<lb/>
I have developed a lot more con-<lb/>
fidence than ever as the season has<lb/>
progressed<lb/>
When making his remarks about<lb/>
the Seahawks this week, ECU coach<lb/>
Dave Odom let it be known that he<lb/>
had a great deal of respect for the<lb/>
Washington native.<lb/>
"Williams seems traditionally to<lb/>
be a thorn in my side Odom said.<lb/>
"He has always played extremely<lb/>
well against us. We are going to<lb/>
have to try to do something about<lb/>
him Thursday night<lb/>
No doubt Williams will be ready<lb/>
for the Pirates' greeting. After all,<lb/>
homecomings do not come along<lb/>
everyday.<lb/>
after that.<lb/>
Jones, who scored 14 of her 19<lb/>
points in the second half, paced the<lb/>
way, while point guard Lorainne<lb/>
Foster and Lillion Barnes helped<lb/>
push the Lady Pirates out to as<lb/>
much as a six-point lead, but<lb/>
couldn't break away from ftorth<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
With 2:54 left and time running<lb/>
out on the 30-second clock, Fran<lb/>
Hooks hit a jumper from the key for<lb/>
a 64-58 lead. From that point, the<lb/>
Tar Heels had to resort to the foul,<lb/>
and in the final minutes. East<lb/>
Carolina connected on five of six<lb/>
free throw tries to put the game<lb/>
away.<lb/>
In the first half. Brown scored 18<lb/>
oi the first 20 Tar Heel points as the<lb/>
Heels moved out front by as much<lb/>
as four points, 32-28, in the late<lb/>
stages of the period. Brown hit a<lb/>
pair of free throws to set that<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
A Hooks jumper with seven<lb/>
seconds left in the half pulled the<lb/>
Pirates within one, 37-36, and set<lb/>
the stage for the second half<lb/>
takeover by East Carolina.<lb/>
ECU's game plan, with Denkler<lb/>
getting double-teamed, was to get<lb/>
the ball to the off-side for the short<lb/>
jumper, and it worked quite well ac-<lb/>
cording to Coach Cathy Andruzzi,<lb/>
as Jones, Barnes, Hooks and Foster<lb/>
got 10-foot jumpers near the basket.<lb/>
In the meantime. East Carolina's<lb/>
defense made it tough on the Heels<lb/>
to score inside. After shooting 56.7<lb/>
percent in the first half, the Tar<lb/>
Heels shot only 40 percent in the se-<lb/>
cond. Crawford, Henrietta Walls<lb/>
and Meredith W hite, who each have<lb/>
seasonal averages in double figures,<lb/>
contributed a total of eight points in<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Turnovers also were a key factor,<lb/>
as the Pirates forced 23 by the Tar<lb/>
Heels while committing only 15 of<lb/>
their own.<lb/>
Despite a wide Tar Heel reboun-<lb/>
ding edge. 48-31, Harrison ended<lb/>
the game as the overall leader with<lb/>
11. Carolina was paced by Ranti<lb/>
Killian with 10 and Brown with<lb/>
nine.<lb/>
In addition to Jones' 19, Denkler<lb/>
finished with 13. while Barnes had<lb/>
12. No one besides Brown scored in<lb/>
double figures for the Lady Heels.<lb/>
"Our kids played an excellent, ex-<lb/>
cellent basketball game Andrui<lb/>
said. "The difference in the game<lb/>
was that our kids played solid, fun-<lb/>
damental basketball.<lb/>
"Usually, when you are out-<lb/>
rebounded like we were and<lb/>
outscored from the floor, you lose,<lb/>
but the kev was that our kids have<lb/>
matured and took the hall ti<lb/>
them. We had only 15 turnovers to<lb/>
their 23 and we had II steals VV<lb/>
had full control ol the game<lb/>
Andruzzi said thai the P<lb/>
defense keyed the win, maki<lb/>
outstanding plavs hi keep Carol<lb/>
from making a comeback after E '<lb/>
had taken the lead. "Harrison<lb/>
an outstanding job on Crawford in<lb/>
the first half, and after they, tool<lb/>
her out, we put her on Brown in<lb/>
second half, and she did a good job<lb/>
there too Andruzzi also noted<lb/>
that Jones had eight rebounds and<lb/>
five steals in leading the Pirates.<lb/>
"Hooks plaved an excellent del<lb/>
sive game, too she added.<lb/>
? Iliis was the type oi game where<lb/>
we had to be on the bali head-wise<lb/>
because thev were making so ni<lb/>
changes in the lineup. We had to<lb/>
make a lot oi adjustments, and<lb/>
Rosie (Thompson ? now assisting<lb/>
in coaching) did a great job oi gel<lb/>
ting us on the right people<lb/>
The 1 adv Pirates return to action<lb/>
on Friday, hosting nationally rank-<lb/>
ed Division II Campbell m tin S<lb/>
p.m. game oi the Duke-Fast<lb/>
Carolina doubleheadet in Mmges<lb/>
Coliseum. Duke takes on lames<lb/>
Madison at 6 p.m and the two host<lb/>
teams switch opponents foi Samr-<lb/>
dav nieht's action.<lb/>
Denkler, Relay Team<lb/>
Make National Lists<lb/>
Noting the Pirates:<lb/>
LADY PIRATE forward Mary<lb/>
Denkler is the state's leading<lb/>
women's scorer, averaging 21.7<lb/>
points per game.<lb/>
That figure also ranks Denkler<lb/>
17th in the nation among Division I<lb/>
players.<lb/>
Her best performances of the<lb/>
season came against Northwestern<lb/>
and Miami (Ohio). She poured in 29<lb/>
points in both contests.<lb/>
FIVE OTHER Lady Pirates are<lb/>
among the national leaders as well.<lb/>
They are featured on the women's<lb/>
track team.<lb/>
The ECU women's 200-yard<lb/>
freestyle relay team is ranked fourth<lb/>
in the nation among Division I<lb/>
schools by Swimming World<lb/>
Publications. Making the honor<lb/>
even more impressive is the fact that<lb/>
the Lady Pirates are a Division II<lb/>
team.<lb/>
ECU's time of 1:40.59, recorded<lb/>
in the Penn State Relays, stands as<lb/>
the fourth best in the nation this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The fivesome of Carol Shacklett,<lb/>
Moria McHugh, Nancy James, Lori<lb/>
McQueston and Nan George com-<lb/>
bined for the time.<lb/>
North Carolina's time of 1:37.29<lb/>
tops the list. The remainder of the<lb/>
top ten is, in order, West Virginia,<lb/>
Pittsburgh, ECU, Houston,<lb/>
Alabama, Michigan State, James<lb/>
Madison, Virginia Tech and<lb/>
Michigan.<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
TONIGHT'S ECU HOME MAT-<lb/>
CHUP with UNC-Wilmington br-<lb/>
ings two players to Greenville that<lb/>
could have been Pirates.<lb/>
Forward Shawn Williams, the<lb/>
Seahawks' leading scorer, hails<lb/>
from nearby Washington and is said<lb/>
to have been atfacted to ECU dur-<lb/>
ing his high school days. He was<lb/>
never offered a scholarship from the<lb/>
Pirates, though.<lb/>
The same can be said for UNC-W<lb/>
point guard Frankie Dickens, the<lb/>
team's second-leading scorer.<lb/>
A Roxboro native, Dickens also<lb/>
was interested in East Carolina but<lb/>
later decided on Wilmington. The<lb/>
Pirates ceased recruiting Dickens<lb/>
when guard Herbert Gilchrist signed<lb/>
on as a Buc.<lb/>
Though the information may be<lb/>
just picky, don't be surprised to see<lb/>
good performances from both<lb/>
Williams and Dickens.<lb/>
IT WAS EVIDENT Wednesday<lb/>
night what such feelings can do for<lb/>
college players. UNC's Michael Jor-<lb/>
dan scored 20 points to lead the top-<lb/>
ranked Tar Heels to a 61-41 win<lb/>
over N.C. State. Jordan says he<lb/>
grew up a State fan but opted to go<lb/>
to Chapel Hill because of the en-<lb/>
vironment. He stated earlier in the<lb/>
week that he was looking forward to<lb/>
playing in the coliseum thai he once<lb/>
thought would be his college basket-<lb/>
ball home.<lb/>
CHUCK BLSHBLCK. the E I<lb/>
placekicker who battled Hodgkin's<lb/>
disease to play for the Pirates this<lb/>
past fall, has returned home to<lb/>
Philadelphia.<lb/>
Bushbeck has transferred back to<lb/>
Villanova, his college home for<lb/>
three years before the school drop-<lb/>
ped its football program. Bushbeck<lb/>
moved back and will graduate this<lb/>
spring. If he had remained at ECU<lb/>
he would have had to have forfeited<lb/>
many of the academic hours he had<lb/>
earned at Villanova.<lb/>
His disease, by the wav. is in<lb/>
remission and his chances for<lb/>
recovery look bright.<lb/>
ECU GUARD CHARLES<lb/>
W ATKINS will rejoin his Pirate<lb/>
teammates for tonight's game with<lb/>
UNC-W. He had been on a volun-<lb/>
tary leave of absence before return-<lb/>
ing to practice Tuesday.<lb/>
Wat kins missed four games dur-<lb/>
ing the absence and, says Pirate<lb/>
coach Dave Odom, will have to<lb/>
work himself back into the ECU<lb/>
lineup. He had been a regular before<lb/>
taking the leave.<lb/>
Mark McLaurin and Bill McNair<lb/>
have shared time at the position<lb/>
while Watkins has been out.<lb/>
McLaurin will get the starting call<lb/>
tonight.<lb/>
?:?:?:<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057449_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EASTCAROl INIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, I9K2<lb/>
IM Sign- Up Is Set<lb/>
The ECU Intramural Department would like to<lb/>
welcome back all students, faculty and staff<lb/>
members from the holidays. Again, ue will offer<lb/>
activities suited for every participant, no matter<lb/>
his or her particular desire. So come out and en-<lb/>
joy the fun. REMEMBhR. PARTICIPATE<lb/>
RATHER THAN SPECTATE!<lb/>
For all those who want to rid themselves of that<lb/>
extra "Holiday Weight" or just get in shape, the<lb/>
IM Department is offering "Aerobic "Belly<lb/>
Dancing and "Self-Defense" classes. Registra-<lb/>
tion is in Memorial Gym, Room 204 between the<lb/>
hours of 8-12 and 1-5. Fees for the classes are $5<lb/>
for 1 night per week or $10 for 2 nights per week.<lb/>
Also $15 per couple will be charged for couples<lb/>
classes held on Tuesday and Thursday from 5.15 -<lb/>
6:15. Further information can be obtained at the<lb/>
Intramural Office or by calling Sue Stanley at<lb/>
757-6064. Remember these classes start the week<lb/>
IMSports-N-Shorts<lb/>
By GREGG MELTON<lb/>
of Feb. 1st.<lb/>
Finally. Bob Fox, assistant director of in-<lb/>
tramurals at ECU would like to encourage any<lb/>
students interested in officiating IM sports to<lb/>
please come by his office at Memorial Gym, room<lb/>
105-A. Officials aie needed in such sportas as<lb/>
basketball, roller hocke) and Softball. Bob has all<lb/>
the information concerning the various re-<lb/>
quirements, experience, etc. Remember to get in<lb/>
quickIv for training clinics are scheduled starting<lb/>
next week.<lb/>
Have a good semester from all of us at the IM<lb/>
(ffice!<lb/>
The drinks are on us!<lb/>
Free Fountain Pepsi!<lb/>
Order any 12" pizza<lb/>
and get up to 2 free<lb/>
cups of Pepsi' If you<lb/>
order a 16" pizza<lb/>
you can get up to 4<lb/>
free cups of Pepsi1<lb/>
No coupon necessary.<lb/>
Fast, Free Delivery<lb/>
1201 Charles Blvd<lb/>
Telephone 758-6660<lb/>
Our drivers carry less<lb/>
than $10 00<lb/>
Limited de?very area<lb/>
? 980 Dom.no s P.za in<lb/>
Just<lb/>
Ask!<lb/>
758-6660<lb/>
1201 Charles Blvd.<lb/>
nr<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
$1.00 off any 16" pizza<lb/>
One coupon per pizza.<lb/>
Expires. 21582<lb/>
Fast, Free Delivery<lb/>
1201 Charles Blvd<lb/>
Telephone: 758-6660<lb/>
ir<lb/>
Free<lb/>
ham!<lb/>
On any 16" pizza<lb/>
One coupon per pizza.<lb/>
Expires: 21582<lb/>
Fast, free delivery<lb/>
1201 Charles Blvd<lb/>
Telephone 758-6660<lb/>
?M 6 5?<lb/>
DOM PIZZ<lb/>
JL<lb/>
$.50<lb/>
$ 50 off any size pizza<lb/>
One coupon per pizza<lb/>
Expires. 21582<lb/>
Fast. Free Delivery<lb/>
1201 Charles Blvd<lb/>
Telephone 758-6660<lb/>
. j i<lb/>
W<lb/>
Ray<lb/>
l I<lb/>
I li<lb/>
To,<lb/>
Ti<lb/>
Home of Greenville's Best Meats'<lb/>
1<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON-5 DISCOUNT ON<lb/>
Any Food Order Regardless of Size<lb/>
Present this coupon and show<lb/>
your ECU ID to cashier.<lb/>
Coupon expires Jan 31, 1982<lb/>
HEAVY WESTERN<lb/>
SIRLOIN<lb/>
STEAKS<lb/>
$199<lb/>
Lb. 1<lb/>
HEAVY WESTERN<lb/>
T-BONE<lb/>
STEAKS<lb/>
$009<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
2 Liter<lb/>
Bottle<lb/>
TROPICANA<lb/>
ORANGE<lb/>
JUICE<lb/>
$"28<lb/>
V2 Gallon<lb/>
Jug<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
2<lb/>
Heinz<lb/>
Ketchup<lb/>
98 C<lb/>
32 Oz.<lb/>
10-Oz.<lb/>
DULANY FROZ.<lb/>
BROCCOLI<lb/>
SPEARS<lb/>
2$ oo<lb/>
GWALTNEY<lb/>
HI-DRI<lb/>
FRANKS<lb/>
99?<lb/>
Cold Power<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
PAPER<lb/>
TOWELS<lb/>
48 $<lb/>
z<lb/>
'HI-DRI<lb/>
Gt. Rol<lb/>
Kraft<lb/>
Limit one with $10.00 food order.<lb/>
Golden<lb/>
4 lbs.<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
7$00<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
$128<lb/>
Lo-<lb/>
ot. Jar<lb/>
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE FROZEN<lb/>
PIZZAS<lb/>
iUj<lb/>
BoyarcM<lb/>
Assorted Varieties<lb/>
99<lb/>
CUP THIS COUPON<lb/>
I<lb/>
PRICES GOOD FROM JAN. 14-JAN. 16 (THURSSAT.)<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
WHITE STAR<lb/>
SUGAR<lb/>
5-Lb. Bag<lb/>
$100<lb/>
1<lb/>
with this coupon and $10 00 food order excluding specials<lb/>
Without coupon Si.51. Limit one per customer. Expires 1 16 82<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057449_0011"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 14, 1982<lb/>
11<lb/>
Men Swimmers Need<lb/>
Win Badly ? Scharf<lb/>
B THOMAS BKAMI<lb/>
Mall Wnur<lb/>
"The ECU men swimmers have<lb/>
got to beat Navv to have a winning<lb/>
season proclaimed Pirate Coach<lb/>
Ray Scharf after a disappointing<lb/>
loss to Maine.<lb/>
The loss to Maine put the Pirate's<lb/>
record to 3-2. The loss was due part-<lb/>
!v to the absence of the ducts. " The<lb/>
loss of the divers hurt our team both<lb/>
psychologically and physically ex-<lb/>
plained Pirate mentor Scharf, "we<lb/>
lost 14 points due to then absence.<lb/>
that hurts<lb/>
Navy is a Formidable opponent<lb/>
lot the Pirates with a record o 1-1.<lb/>
1 hen only loss was a close one to a<lb/>
g ixl Harvard team fhe meet with<lb/>
the Pitates is set for 1 p.m. on<lb/>
Saturday here at the Minges<lb/>
Natatonum.<lb/>
I he lads Pirate swimmers will<lb/>
also meet Navy on Saturday. The<lb/>
women are coming off a big win<lb/>
against James Madison, lour na-<lb/>
tional qualifying times were achiev-<lb/>
ed in that victory. I he women are<lb/>
doing well, ihen record standing at<lb/>
2 I<lb/>
I he women o' the Naval Academy<lb/>
have a record of - thus far this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
This meet against Navy is the<lb/>
toughest dual meet foi our swim-<lb/>
mers thus tat in oui year said<lb/>
I v I coach Scharf. " I his is also<lb/>
the binges) for us thus far<lb/>
Sports Writer<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Person must<lb/>
have avid interest<lb/>
&amp; experience in<lb/>
Sports Journalism<lb/>
Call 757-6366<lb/>
or come by<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
office.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
Tourney Tickets Available<lb/>
lick ets to the<lb/>
I CAC-South tourna-<lb/>
ment, to be held March<lb/>
4-6 at the Norfolk<lb/>
Scope, will be given<lb/>
awa at each remaining<lb/>
ECU home came. Also,<lb/>
tickets are available for<lb/>
purchase at the Minges<lb/>
ticket office.<lb/>
Fen books of tickets<lb/>
to the tourney will be<lb/>
give to students for al!<lb/>
of ECU's remaining<lb/>
home dates. Students<lb/>
can also buv as main<lb/>
books of tickets as thev<lb/>
want for $9 each. The<lb/>
regular price is SI2.<lb/>
The book ol tickets<lb/>
will admit students to<lb/>
each oi the tourney's<lb/>
six games. Three first-<lb/>
round games will be<lb/>
played on rhursday,<lb/>
March. 4; two semi-<lb/>
final matchups on Fri-<lb/>
day, Match 5; and the<lb/>
championship game on<lb/>
Saturday. March 6.<lb/>
The tournament win-<lb/>
ner will go on to play in<lb/>
the NCAA Tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
<lb/>
ADVERTISING<lb/>
PAYS OFF<lb/>
WALKMAN MINI cJSifIW player.<lb/>
Excellent stereo sound. Excellent<lb/>
price. Call 757 3110<lb/>
SUPERSCOPE C 10 por<lb/>
tablecassette playerrecorder.t<lb/>
single roll away bed. S cu It.<lb/>
retng. Call 7S2 140<lb/>
WATERBEOS! DON'T pay retail<lb/>
tor your heated waterbed. buy<lb/>
direct from mtg. and save. Buy a<lb/>
complete 1st quality pine wood<lb/>
heated waterbed with IS yr. war<lb/>
ranty tor as low as ?1OT (Queen)<lb/>
tit (King). Lawaway available<lb/>
Call Oavid for appointment<lb/>
FW1BM,<lb/>
DAN POST bullh.de boots I0D.<lb/>
General Lee hat 7' silver. Must sell<lb/>
HOC or best offer (New) Call<lb/>
751 HOI or 757 MJ4 I<lb/>
INDOOR YARD sale-Fn<lb/>
through Sun All day. furniture<lb/>
clothing, etc 1103 Glen Arthur<lb/>
Ave . 757 80t<lb/>
STEREO EQUIPMENT for<lb/>
sale? 30 watt Fisher FM Stereo<lb/>
with Quadrophonic<lb/>
capability?its, Toshiba Cassette<lb/>
deck (3 months old) with Dolby<lb/>
NR?$100. Radio Shack's best<lb/>
headphones by Koss? S30, must<lb/>
sell (graduating this semester) so<lb/>
all prices are negotiable. Ask for<lb/>
David at 757 3107 or come by 110<lb/>
E Tenth St. (two blocks from the<lb/>
bottom of the Hill next to Beverly<lb/>
Manor Apts.)<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROMMATE WANTED: Available<lb/>
immediately. One-half mile from<lb/>
campus MO per month plus one<lb/>
third utilities. Pool, tennis courts,<lb/>
if interested call 714 Mt or<lb/>
7 57 30? <lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to<lb/>
share Georgetolwn apt. (one block<lb/>
from campus). Phone 750 171<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to<lb/>
share 1 bedroom trailer 50 per<lb/>
month ptus one half utilities.<lb/>
Prefer working student. Call<lb/>
7S ?0l after 4 p.m<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
SlOOmonth plus share utilities. 3<lb/>
blocks from campus, ww carpel,<lb/>
full house privileges, some very<lb/>
nice extras. 7JI S04<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted<lb/>
140 per month plus one half<lb/>
utilities. Private bedroom. Call<lb/>
Laura at 7S1-M9S.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
171.00 rent, one third utilities.<lb/>
Phone 355 415. )00A Juniper Lane<lb/>
on the corner of 14th and Red<lb/>
banks.<lb/>
TWO ROOMMATES needed to<lb/>
share large 4 bedroom houuse 1<lb/>
blocks trom the Attic. Have own<lb/>
bedroom. S7S plus ' utilities per<lb/>
person Call 7SI 70<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
EARN EXTRA cash CLommis<lb/>
sion agents lor ECU dor<lb/>
mitories Shiver Shoe Repair 472<lb/>
Dickinson Ave. 7St 42 (day)<lb/>
752 472 (night)<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
TYPING<lb/>
TERM.<lb/>
thesis.<lb/>
resumes, desserlations. etc. Pro<lb/>
fessionel quality at lowest rates<lb/>
Call Kempie Dunn anytime,<lb/>
752733<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST wants<lb/>
typing to do at home. Reasonable<lb/>
rates Call 754 30<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST-lor<lb/>
term, research, thesis papers, ar<lb/>
tides tor publication, disserta<lb/>
tions, etc Reasonable rates Call<lb/>
757 I37t<lb/>
ATTN WILSON commuters r.de<lb/>
needed daily to and from ECU<lb/>
Will share expenses Call im<lb/>
mediately Sherry 243 30<lb/>
(Wilson) Ride sharing option<lb/>
NEED COMMUTERS from<lb/>
Goldsboro to ECU daily 77t 3727<lb/>
MIKE. JUNE 3 sounds great' I<lb/>
can't think ol anything better tnn<lb/>
to spend the rest o( my life with<lb/>
you (and cheering the Baltimore<lb/>
Colts to victory??) Beth<lb/>
Ticket Pick-Up Set<lb/>
In an attempt to<lb/>
a oid congestion in<lb/>
front of Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum on game nights.<lb/>
the ECU athletic<lb/>
department is making<lb/>
tickets to men's basket-<lb/>
It was incorrectly<lb/>
stated in Tuesday's edi-<lb/>
tion of The Fast Caroli-<lb/>
nian that pre-game<lb/>
pick-up for women's<lb/>
basketball games would<lb/>
also be available. In-<lb/>
USED<lb/>
TIRES<lb/>
$10.00<lb/>
inquire at<lb/>
Evans Seafood<lb/>
Current undergraduate pre<lb/>
medical student? moy now com<lb/>
pete tor several hundred Air<lb/>
Force scholarships These<lb/>
icholorship are to be o-orded<lb/>
to student accepted into<lb/>
medical schools as freshmen or<lb/>
at the beginning o their<lb/>
sophomore year The scholar<lb/>
ship provides (or tuition books<lb/>
lab tees and equipment plus a<lb/>
SS30 monthly ollowance In<lb/>
vestigote this financial alter<lb/>
native to the high cost of<lb/>
medical education<lb/>
Contact<lb/>
I S VI III l 111<lb/>
I'm it ssn?<lb/>
KM Kl HIM.<lb/>
Suite GL 1 1 lOONovoho Df<lb/>
Raleigh M C 27689<lb/>
Phone Collect 91 9)755-41 34<lb/>
BOYD'S<lb/>
BARBER &amp;<lb/>
HAIR<lb/>
STYLING<lb/>
By Appointments<lb/>
1008 S. Evans<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Phone 758 4056<lb/>
ball games available to stead, students will be<lb/>
students prior to each up ticket stubs for Lad)<lb/>
home contest. Pirate games just prior<lb/>
to gametime.<lb/>
lit<lb/>
Shampoo,<lb/>
Cut &amp; Style<lb/>
with conditioner<lb/>
(reg. $14.50)<lb/>
i<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
Spring RUSH<lb/>
"efHTyCer<lb/>
Carolina east mall Sgreenviile<lb/>
EASTERN CAROLINA'S MOST<lb/>
COMPLETE COSMETIC AND<lb/>
FRAGRANCE STORE<lb/>
A BIG OFFER<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
ESTEE LAUDER<lb/>
s<lb/>
803<lb/>
Hooker<lb/>
Rd.<lb/>
For Rides call:<lb/>
756-3540<lb/>
Starts Monday, Jan. 18 - 8:30<lb/>
Carolina East Mall 756 8694<lb/>
THE QUILTFLOWER<lb/>
BEAUTY BAG<lb/>
FULL OF<lb/>
PRETTY SECRETS<lb/>
<lb/>
come join us<lb/>
every Sunday<lb/>
SURDKY<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
The<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Fraternity<lb/>
invites you to<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
700th East 10th St.<lb/>
Beside Darryl's 1907<lb/>
Monday ? Go Greek<lb/>
Kappa Sig Style<lb/>
Tuesday ? Kappa Sig's<lb/>
Famous Playboy<lb/>
Bunny Nite<lb/>
Starts at 8:30<lb/>
for more info. caS<lb/>
752-5543<lb/>
A 28.00 value<lb/>
and it<lb/>
can be yours for<lb/>
8.50 with any<lb/>
Estee Lauder purchase<lb/>
of 6.50 or more.<lb/>
Zip open Estee Lauder's beauty bag and<lb/>
you'll find: a Basic Cleaning Bar, Max-<lb/>
imum Care Body Lotion, Azuree Sham-<lb/>
poo, RE-NUTRIV Rich Rich Lipstick,<lb/>
European Performing Creme and a<lb/>
special hair comb. For your travel and<lb/>
beauty life, a pretty, portable beauty bag<lb/>
of makeup magic. All so you can look<lb/>
your best always.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057449_0012"/><lb/>
r?w<lb/>
Welcomes<lb/>
Copyright 1981<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold to Dealers<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective thru Sat<lb/>
Jan 16 1982<lb/>
Back to the Books<lb/>
<lb/>
V?<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
Each of ihese advertised<lb/>
items is required to be<lb/>
readwy available for sale<lb/>
in each Kroger Savon<lb/>
except as specifically<lb/>
noted in this ad It we do<lb/>
run out of an item we will<lb/>
offer you your choice of<lb/>
a comparable item when<lb/>
available reflecting the<lb/>
samsavmgs or a ram<lb/>
check which will entitle<lb/>
you to purchase the<lb/>
advertised item at the<lb/>
advertised price within<lb/>
30 days<lb/>
-? s<lb/>
-vyiYM<lb/>
<lb/>
Stroh<lb/>
STROH'S OR<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
12 Oz<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
PREMIUM<lb/>
Michelob Beer<lb/>
1202<lb/>
N R<lb/>
Btls<lb/>
n<lb/>
 .<lb/>
16-Oz.<lb/>
N R<lb/>
Btls<lb/>
REFRESHING<lb/>
f?a<lb/>
C<lb/>
-<lb/>
T M.<lb/>
W&amp;<lb/>
HI<lb/>
CHABLIS. BURGUND<lb/>
RHINE OR<lb/>
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vft<lb/>
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Jm V rr-r Ji<lb/>
Carlo Rossi<lb/>
$<lb/>
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?M<lb/>
m<lb/>
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t ft<lb/>
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ill<lb/>
ZK<lb/>
y? C Bgftggpr K ROG E R<lb/>
White Bread<lb/>
U S GOVT INSPECTED<lb/>
3 LB CHUB PACK<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
PAPER<lb/>
 ?.<lb/>
Brawny Towels<lb/>
Jumbo<lb/>
Roll<lb/>
NORTHERN<lb/>
Bathroom Tissue<lb/>
Roll<lb/>
Pkq<lb/>
"A<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
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ULTRA RICH OR CONDITIONER<lb/>
Make L'Oreal Shampo<lb/>
Kroger Sav-on . j<lb/>
Your ONE Stffl 7 7i<lb/>
STOP ? ? " '<lb/>
SHOPPING<lb/>
Headquarters<lb/>
all through<lb/>
the year!<lb/>
16-Oz<lb/>
Btl<lb/>
Q<lb/>
TJ<lb/>
m<lb/>
P<lb/>
1 5-<lb/>
Ltr.<lb/>
24-Oz<lb/>
Loaves<lb/>
COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
Ice Milk<lb/>
Gal<lb/>
Ctn<lb/>
YUBI OLD WORLD<lb/>
ESPRIT OR<lb/>
Kroger Yogurt<lb/>
,0<lb/>
V&amp;L<lb/>
6-8 Oz<lb/>
Cups<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Nimpo<lb/>
Mushrooms<lb/>
-v<lb/>
to<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
<lb/>
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Size<lb/>
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OPEN Mon. thru Sat. 8 AM TO MIDNIGHT?Sun. 9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
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Start Saving Wrangler Stamps Today!<lb/>
Just come into a participating Hardee's rest-<lb/>
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you buy any Best Eatin'sandwich or breakfest<lb/>
biscuit Collect five stamps on your Wrangler<lb/>
,?? 1 CTr?3AlTVit fTn Ik W jf: 1 iTTiiT I STJ if :T<lb/>
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MEN'S WRANGLER JEANS<lb/>
KIDS' WRANGLER JEANS<lb/>
(Plus ?52 shipping &amp; handling jut pain<lb/>
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Gtxxi at all participating Hardee's restaurants. Please present this<lb/>
coupon tefore ordering. One coupon per customer please. Cus-<lb/>
t nier must pay any sales tax due on the purchase price. This<lb/>
coupon not gixxi in comhination with any other offers.<lb/>
Good after 10:30 A.M. thru January 20,1982<lb/>
2 Reg RB. 2 Less. Reg R B<lb/>
Ho'Oees'ooaSrtierns .nc '98'<lb/>
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Good at all participating Hardee's restaurants. Please present this<lb/>
coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer please. Cus-<lb/>
U mer must pay any sales tax due on the purchase price This<lb/>
coupon not good in combinati( n with any ther (ffers.<lb/>
Good January 21 - 27,1982<lb/>
2HHNC.2 Less H H N C<lb/>
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El Two Sausage and Egg Biscuits<lb/>
(iood at all partiapatinK Haniee's restaurants. Please present this ctxspt n<lb/>
stumer picas Customer must pay am<lb/>
This(?mp.in n t ??? in ombinatin<lb/>
liefore ordering, i me coupon percustomer please. Customer must paj any<lb/>
sales tax due on the purchase price. ?"<lb/>
with an 'ther offers<lb/>
Good during the hours breakfast is served<lb/>
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2 Sausage E B 2 Less Egg Biscuit<lb/>
Mordees'oocryV. ??<lb/>
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Good after 10:30 A.M.<lb/>
January 28 - February 3,1982<lb/>
1.79<lb/>
2 Reg R B 2 Less Reg R B<lb/>
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'wmmmmmm<lb/>
3 TWo Hot Ham 'N' Cheese Sandwiches<lb/>
Ckxxi at all participating Hardee's restaurants. Please present this<lb/>
coupon before ordering. (ne a upon per cusfc mer please. Cus-<lb/>
umer must pay any sales tax due (n the purchase price. This<lb/>
coupon not gixni in combination with any other offers<lb/>
Good February 4 10,1982<lb/>
2NHNC.2 Less HHNC<lb/>
5 MXX3 SvV?" " ' - : '<lb/>
3 TWo Sausage and Egg Biscuits<lb/>
(rtXKiatallpartieiaUnMHanlet'sivstaunuu Plea- pnnt thisupon<lb/>
beforeonlering.(ne-ouponperiustonerpUas?- i usiomer must pay an <lb/>
sales tax due on the pun-haM-pnee This coupon not iod in combination <lb/>
with any other offers tf<lb/>
Good during the hours breakfast is ser ed<lb/>
January 28 - February 10,1982<lb/>
2 Sausage E B 2 Less Egg Biscuit<lb/>
Hoioeesoodbvs'es -v <lb/>
20<lb/>
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