<?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="00057454_0001"/>
,<lb/>
Hepburn, Fondas Shine<lb/>
With 'On Golden Pond'<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Basketball:<lb/>
?Spiders' Comeback Downs Pirates<lb/>
?Peartree: Up-And-Coming Freshman<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Si<lb/>
She<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
?<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58 No36<lb/>
Tuesday, February 2, 1982<lb/>
Greenville,N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
WZMBTo<lb/>
Broadcast<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
si-ianl Nes r dilnr<lb/>
"We're shooting for next week,<lb/>
and barring new developments, we<lb/>
should be able to begin broadcasting<lb/>
then<lb/>
No, don't crumble" up the<lb/>
newspaper in utter disgust. That was<lb/>
Sam Barwick's goal of last week.<lb/>
So. here it is "next week and<lb/>
for the first time in nearly six years,<lb/>
LCI's radio station is ready to roll,<lb/>
or rather rock 'n' roll.<lb/>
However, Barwick, WZMB's<lb/>
general manager, advises against<lb/>
premature expectations. "If nothing<lb/>
else goes wrong, we hope to be on<lb/>
(he air by 6 p.m. Tuesday<lb/>
According to Barwick, all that re-<lb/>
mains to be done is a final calibra-<lb/>
tion of the transmitter to the<lb/>
studio's remote-control meter<lb/>
readings. When that tuning is com-<lb/>
pleted, the station will transmit on<lb/>
91.3 FM.<lb/>
"We're going up there tonight<lb/>
(Monday) at 7 to make the final<lb/>
changes Barwick said. "If our<lb/>
telephone line at the transmitter site<lb/>
is hooked up, the whole thing<lb/>
should only take an hour or so.<lb/>
"The only thing that can hold us<lb/>
up now is some problem with the<lb/>
equipment. Everything else is ready<lb/>
10 go<lb/>
Barwick explained that a majority<lb/>
of the delays experienced by WZMB<lb/>
in the past have been due to the fact<lb/>
that the station must depend on the<lb/>
actions of other sources. "Some<lb/>
things, like FCC licensing, just can't<lb/>
be sped up<lb/>
However, licensing problems are,<lb/>
at least for now, a thing of the past<lb/>
for WZMB.<lb/>
"When we get on the air Bar-<lb/>
wick explained, "there are going to<lb/>
be a lot of announcers who've never<lb/>
had any air time. People are going<lb/>
to hear mistakes, but it's not fair to<lb/>
criticize the quality of the an-<lb/>
nouncers. So I hope the listeners<lb/>
won't expect them to be perfect<lb/>
Still, Barwick is confident in the<lb/>
abilities of his announcers and staff.<lb/>
Campuswide<lb/>
Energy Bill<lb/>
57,3 74,000<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Slaff Wrilrr<lb/>
First of Two Parts<lb/>
One-million-three-hundred-<lb/>
seventy-four-thousand, or<lb/>
$1,374,000, that's what the utility<lb/>
bill is expected to be for the 15<lb/>
residence halls on East Carolina's<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
This figure represents 31 percent<lb/>
of the dorm fee for the approx-<lb/>
imately 5,580 students living on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
According to John Gardner,<lb/>
assistant to the vice-chancellor for<lb/>
student life, the electricity usage in<lb/>
the dorms has risen at a rate of five<lb/>
percent annually for the last eight<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Much of this rise in electricity<lb/>
usage is attributed to the increased<lb/>
use of heat-generating appliances in<lb/>
the rooms, such as hair dryers and<lb/>
toaster ovens. Stereos and TV's<lb/>
don't require as much electricity, ac-<lb/>
cording to Gardner. However, these<lb/>
are also being used in greater<lb/>
numbers.<lb/>
The utility bill includes the cost of<lb/>
hot water, electricity, heat and cold<lb/>
water. The cost of cold water was<lb/>
$78,936 during the 1979-1980 school<lb/>
year. Two dormitories used more<lb/>
Ptwto ?v OAVB WILLIAMS .<lb/>
The Student Legislature, at a meeting Monday, voted by an overwhelming majority to override SGA President Lester Nail's veto of the Emergency Medical Loan Lund.<lb/>
SGA Overrides President's Fund Veto<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
M?ff ?ni?c<lb/>
By an overwhelming majority, the<lb/>
student legislature Monday over-<lb/>
rode SGA President Lester Nail's<lb/>
veto of a bill to reinstate the Medical<lb/>
Emergency Loan Fund approved by<lb/>
the body in the,session two weeks<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
Speaker of the Legislature Gary<lb/>
Williams stepped down from his<lb/>
chair to express his reason for tak-<lb/>
ing offense to the veto, in view of<lb/>
the fact that the bill was approved to<lb/>
be reinstated by the legislature two<lb/>
weeks earlier with only three votes<lb/>
against it.<lb/>
The Medical Emergency Loan<lb/>
Fund was suspended by the summer<lb/>
legislature with the stipulation that<lb/>
some studies be done to determine<lb/>
the necessitv and financial stability<lb/>
of the loan. As of this dale, no such<lb/>
study has been conducted.<lb/>
"I am totally convinced that the<lb/>
majority of the student population<lb/>
out here doesn't want their money<lb/>
spent in this way stated Nail in his<lb/>
comments to the representatives. "I<lb/>
think you're making a serious<lb/>
mistake if you don't study this situa-<lb/>
tion more<lb/>
Nail later said he thought the<lb/>
issue was not abortion but whether<lb/>
students want a medical loan pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
"I wasn't surprised the least little<lb/>
bit Nail said. "1 was disap-<lb/>
pointed, (houteh, about them over-<lb/>
riding the cto<lb/>
Nail also expressed his disap-<lb/>
pointment that no study was made<lb/>
on how the program would be used,<lb/>
citing this as the main reason for his<lb/>
veto.<lb/>
The veto was not a "total loss<lb/>
Nail said, because students are now<lb/>
more aware about the program and<lb/>
for what it is used.<lb/>
Dr. James McCallum, director of<lb/>
the Student Health Services, ad-<lb/>
dressed the question of the loans be-<lb/>
ing used for abortion. "During the<lb/>
year that 1 have been here I have<lb/>
signed or helped obtain more money<lb/>
for non-abortions than abortions. I<lb/>
think it is sorely needed by the stu-<lb/>
dent body he said.<lb/>
McCallum stated that the money<lb/>
has been used to replace broken<lb/>
ulasseN, lor emergency appendec-<lb/>
tomies and fractured noses. "There<lb/>
are just limitless possibilities he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Although the loan has been<lb/>
reinstated, the legislature has not<lb/>
specified when the money will be<lb/>
come available to students.<lb/>
In other business, the SGA ap-<lb/>
proved a revised set of election<lb/>
rules, which included several<lb/>
amendments. In future elections, an<lb/>
absolute majority will be required<lb/>
for a candidate to be declared a win-<lb/>
ner in an SGA election. In a three-<lb/>
person race, if none of the can-<lb/>
didates receive an absolute majori-<lb/>
ty, then a run-off will be held 'wo<lb/>
weeks after the election between the<lb/>
two leading candidates.<lb/>
The Air Force ROTC was fund<lb/>
ed S610 for expenses including a five<lb/>
day trip to an n Force Academy.<lb/>
The Department of Environmen-<lb/>
tal Health and Chemist rs. Depart-<lb/>
ment received S974.H to help with<lb/>
the cost of a seminar on hazardous<lb/>
waste.<lb/>
The Alcohol and Drug Abuse<lb/>
program was appropriated $775 to<lb/>
pay for educational materials regar-<lb/>
ding such things as the mandatory<lb/>
penalties and other serious conse-<lb/>
quences of alcohol related situa-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
There was also a $500 appropria-<lb/>
tion to the Save Cape Hatteras<lb/>
lighthouse Committee, formed by<lb/>
Senator Jesse Helms and Governor<lb/>
James Hunt to investigate and solve<lb/>
the problem of the deterioration ami<lb/>
possible destruction of this historic<lb/>
landmark.<lb/>
The following individuals were<lb/>
sworn in as new legislators; Becky<lb/>
Crulchly for Garreit dorm; Ashley<lb/>
DeLappe tor Jarviv; Jackie Rowe<lb/>
tor Clement; and Marshall Heath,<lb/>
knk Shelley and Robin forbes as<lb/>
da student representatives.<lb/>
Naval Officer Speaks On Nuclear War<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Sl?n Whirr<lb/>
"The lesson of history is 'when a<lb/>
war starts, every nation will<lb/>
ultimately use whatever weapon has<lb/>
been available ' said retiring Ad-<lb/>
miral Hyman Rickover in his last<lb/>
address to a Congressional Joint<lb/>
Economic Committee Thursday.<lb/>
Rickover, 82, also called for the<lb/>
abolition of the Department of<lb/>
Defense and said "we'll probably<lb/>
destroy ourselves" in a nuclear war.<lb/>
Rickover has been called "the<lb/>
father of the nuclear navy" and<lb/>
w. frw<lb/>
"the father o the atomic sub<lb/>
marine" in recognition of his<lb/>
30-plus years as director of the<lb/>
Navy's nuclear power program.<lb/>
"I'm proud of the part I played<lb/>
Rickover said. His responsibilities<lb/>
included overseeing the develop-<lb/>
ment and operation of all nuclear<lb/>
propulsion plants as well as heavy<lb/>
involvement in designing, testing<lb/>
and operating submarines and<lb/>
nuclear-powered warships.<lb/>
While Rickover commanded<lb/>
respect on Capitol Hill, he drew op-<lb/>
position from many builders in the<lb/>
defense industry for his outspoken<lb/>
criticism for their operations.<lb/>
According to Ensign Patrick<lb/>
Nickens, action officer at the Pen-<lb/>
tagon's Navy news desk, Rickover's<lb/>
words "were all his own comments.<lb/>
Admiral Rickover was not a<lb/>
spokesman for the Navy<lb/>
When questioned about<lb/>
Rickover's reasoning behind his<lb/>
statements, Nickens replied, "Do<lb/>
you know anything about Rickover?<lb/>
This is in his nature. They don't<lb/>
reflect the Department of the Navy<lb/>
policy<lb/>
President Reagan and Navy<lb/>
Secretary John Lehman announced<lb/>
Rickover's retirement last<lb/>
November, saying that an "orderly<lb/>
transition" was needed'for the post.<lb/>
It was stressed that Rickover was<lb/>
not being fired, despite his vocal<lb/>
dissatisfaction with the decision.<lb/>
Rickover's predictions of a<lb/>
nuclear war seemed to contrast<lb/>
dramatically with the current<lb/>
military deterrant strategy of MAD<lb/>
(Mutually Assured Destruction),<lb/>
which states no country will strike<lb/>
first with nuclear weapons when<lb/>
P??oto By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
With the heat still on in the dorms, students all over campus are enjoying the unseasonable weather in Greenville.<lb/>
than $10,000 in cold water alone last<lb/>
year, while some smaller residence<lb/>
halls used under $2,000.<lb/>
The cost of heat was between<lb/>
$15,000 and $20,000 for the high-<lb/>
rise dorms during that same period.<lb/>
Electricity for the larger dorms was<lb/>
also in the $20,000 range, with three<lb/>
halls using more than $25,000.<lb/>
However, the highest bill for the<lb/>
residence halls was the hot water<lb/>
tab, which reached $30,000 in<lb/>
several dorms.<lb/>
Carolyn A. Fulghum, associate<lb/>
dean and director for residence life,<lb/>
said that the costs eventually come<lb/>
out of the students' fees. "The<lb/>
largest part of the housing fee<lb/>
(excluding salaries for workers) is<lb/>
the utility budget she said.<lb/>
"We are facing increases in fuel<lb/>
cost bills and in consumption said<lb/>
Barry Seay, chairman of the energy<lb/>
committee of the Student Resident<lb/>
Association (SRA). Seay also noted<lb/>
that student fees will probably in-<lb/>
crease as much as $60 per semester<lb/>
next year, primarily because of ris-<lb/>
ing energy costs.<lb/>
Seay oversees a committee of<lb/>
energy representatives for each<lb/>
residence hall. The group of 15<lb/>
students (one representative from<lb/>
each dorm) come together for bi-<lb/>
monthly meetings to discuss new<lb/>
ideas and proposals for saving<lb/>
energy. "We come to them witn<lb/>
questions and ideas he said<lb/>
Fulghum and Gardner are both<lb/>
advisers to the SRA Energy Com-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
Gardner announced that the first<lb/>
week's results of the campus-wide<lb/>
"Electricity Conservation Const"<lb/>
were positive, with 10 of the dorms<lb/>
saving in excess of Five percent Of<lb/>
their normal usage. Any dorm keep-<lb/>
ing an average of five-percent sav-<lb/>
ings or better over a 10-week period<lb/>
will win $100. "Everybody can<lb/>
win he said.<lb/>
The dorm with the best percent-<lb/>
saved rate, based on expected usage<lb/>
from previous years, will win $300,<lb/>
with $200 going to the second-place<lb/>
finisher.<lb/>
Another recent energy contest<lb/>
didn't fare with as much success. A<lb/>
competition to design a lighting<lb/>
switchplate sticker drew only six en-<lb/>
tries.<lb/>
Though disappointed with the<lb/>
low number of entries, Fulghum,<lb/>
Gardner and Seay expressed their<lb/>
pleasure with the quality of the art-<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Lori Moore of White dorm won<lb/>
the first-place prize. Second place<lb/>
went to Terry Griffin of Tyler, and<lb/>
Gwendolyn Martin of Fletcher took<lb/>
third.<lb/>
knowing another nation will cause<lb/>
equal destruction in a retaliatory<lb/>
nuclear attack.<lb/>
Dr. H. A. 1. Sugg, a retired ECU<lb/>
political science professor and a<lb/>
former commander in the Navy,<lb/>
agreed with many o Rickover's<lb/>
positions and praised the admiral's<lb/>
distinctive career.<lb/>
" The perils of nuclear weapons is<lb/>
one thing we have to be afraid of<lb/>
Sugg said. "I'm not sure we have<lb/>
the knowledge or the ability to use<lb/>
See ADMIRAL, Page 2<lb/>
UNC System<lb/>
To Step Up<lb/>
Integration<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
Xtstini rv r dtii?f<lb/>
The U.S. District Court in<lb/>
Raleigh recently handed down a<lb/>
decree which calls for further racial<lb/>
integration in the 16 schools in the<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Under that decree, the system<lb/>
must recruit blacks to attend the<lb/>
state's 11 predominantly-white<lb/>
schools and recruit whites to attend<lb/>
the state's five primarily-black in-<lb/>
stitutions.<lb/>
Between the fall of 1980 and<lb/>
August 1981, the system's<lb/>
predominantly-white schools in-<lb/>
creased their black enrollment from<lb/>
7.4 percent to 7.53 percent.<lb/>
Likewise, the percentage of white<lb/>
students enrolled in the five<lb/>
predominantly-black schools rose<lb/>
during the same period from 10.88<lb/>
to 11.78 percent.<lb/>
However, according to the<lb/>
decree, the UNC system must in-<lb/>
crease black enrollment at the white<lb/>
universities to 10.6 percent, and<lb/>
white enrollment at the five black<lb/>
schools must increase to 15 percent.<lb/>
Also in the decree is a require-<lb/>
See UNC, Page 3<lb/>
f<lb/>
?RMAteJftsi. <lb/>
<pb facs="00057454_0002"/><lb/>
THF EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2, I9?.<lb/>
??<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would likf fo have an i?em printed<lb/>
n 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/>
louncements, but space is often<lb/>
limited<lb/>
The deadline tor announcement<lb/>
are 5pm Friday for the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 5pm Tuesday tor the<lb/>
Thursday paper<lb/>
The space is available to all<lb/>
campus organi?aiions and depart<lb/>
men ts<lb/>
CO OP EDUCATION<lb/>
The Cooperative Education Of<lb/>
tice loi aled m 313 Rawl Budding<lb/>
currenlly has job openings lor<lb/>
Summer and Fall 1982 with the<lb/>
'oiling agencies Social Security<lb/>
Administration Baltimore. MD<lb/>
Morth Carolina Internship Office<lb/>
Raleigh NC Camp Day. NC In<lb/>
siitute of Government Raleiari<lb/>
NC.<lb/>
For mori' information, comae t<lb/>
Hie Co op otficr in J13 Rawl<lb/>
Building<lb/>
NUTRITION AND<lb/>
WEIGHT<lb/>
There will be oeneral nutrition<lb/>
and weight reduction classes of<lb/>
tereci at the Student Health Center<lb/>
?or next five weeks (Jan 26. Feb<lb/>
2.9.16.23) Call 757 6841 to enroll<lb/>
free Of charge in the 9 10 a m or<lb/>
'Oil am classi lasses Individual<lb/>
? I'unselling for special diet pro<lb/>
blems are available on Ihese dales<lb/>
from 8 9 am by referral of a<lb/>
physician For moie information,<lb/>
contact the Student Health Center<lb/>
BUDDISM<lb/>
A group is forming to encourage<lb/>
the discussion, study, and practice<lb/>
of Tibetan Buddism A meeting<lb/>
will beheld Wednesday. Feb 3at 4<lb/>
p.m. at 1113 S Evans Street All in<lb/>
terested persons are invited to at<lb/>
tend For information call Jim<lb/>
Boone at 758 8238. or John<lb/>
Spagnolo at 758 4255<lb/>
CLOTHING &amp;<lb/>
TEXTILES<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
Will be holding their monthly<lb/>
meeting at 5 in the Varandinghem<lb/>
Room in the Home Ec Budding<lb/>
We invite all clothing and textiles<lb/>
maiors and minors to become<lb/>
members or iust come and sit in<lb/>
with us We also welcome our<lb/>
tormer and present members A<lb/>
fashion field trip is being planned<lb/>
tor spring II couldn't be a better<lb/>
time to 0m!<lb/>
NEW YORK<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Union Travel Committee<lb/>
is offering a fantastic spring break<lb/>
alternative at an unbeatable price<lb/>
Six days in New York City The<lb/>
trip will run from March 5 mm<lb/>
March 12 The cos' of the trip is as<lb/>
follows Single occupancy<lb/>
J289 00. Double occupancy<lb/>
S185.00, Triple occupancy<lb/>
SIS9 00. Quad ocupancy - JUS 00<lb/>
Included in the price are the<lb/>
following roundtrip transporta<lb/>
lion via forty six passenger buses<lb/>
and hotel accommodations at the<lb/>
Hotel Edison The registration<lb/>
deadline is February 22 and reser<lb/>
vations can be made at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office located in<lb/>
Mendf ntiall Student Center<lb/>
SECOND UNITED<lb/>
Nations<lb/>
The Campaign for the Second<lb/>
United Nations Special Session on<lb/>
Disarmament is encouraging par<lb/>
ticipation in its activities schedul<lb/>
ed tor June 12th in New York City.<lb/>
A local group is planning to travel<lb/>
to the UN at that time to add their<lb/>
voices lo the already great<lb/>
number of peole calling for Global<lb/>
disarmament Enough nue'ear<lb/>
weapons now exist lo destroy (he<lb/>
world many times over Our<lb/>
response to this escalation is<lb/>
critical A local task force for the<lb/>
UN Campaign is now forming to<lb/>
discuss various ideas and plans of<lb/>
action Anyone interested par<lb/>
ticipale by calling 758 4906 or a'<lb/>
tending our local task force<lb/>
meeting on Friday evenings at<lb/>
6 30 p m at 610 S Elm Street.<lb/>
ACTING CLASS<lb/>
FAITH &amp; VICTORY<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Meets every Friday night at 7<lb/>
p m m Jenkins Auditorium, Art<lb/>
Budding Everyone invited Free<lb/>
concert February' 5. Starts at 7<lb/>
p.m Be there!<lb/>
PHYE MAJORS<lb/>
All students who plan to declare<lb/>
physical education as a maior dur<lb/>
mg change of maior week for the<lb/>
fall Semester should report to<lb/>
Minges Coliseum from 1 00 3 00<lb/>
p.m on Wednesday, Feb 10 for a<lb/>
motor and physical fitness test.<lb/>
Satisfactory performance on this<lb/>
test is required as a prerequisite<lb/>
for official admittance to the<lb/>
physical education maior pro<lb/>
gram More detailed information<lb/>
concerning the teshs available by<lb/>
calling 757 6441 or 6442<lb/>
Stephen B Fmnon, artistic<lb/>
director of the newly formed<lb/>
Greenville Little Theatre<lb/>
(sponsored by the Wesley Founda<lb/>
tion of Greenville) is inviting par<lb/>
ticipants to join a beginning acting<lb/>
class The class will begin on<lb/>
Saturday, Feb 6, and meet from<lb/>
11 00 a m to 1:00 p.m. for eight<lb/>
successive Saturdays. The cost<lb/>
will be $8 00 r participant Fin<lb/>
non, formerly of ECU'S Drama '<lb/>
Speech Department, stresses that<lb/>
the class is an introduction to<lb/>
various basic techniques concen<lb/>
tration, sense memory, relaxa<lb/>
tion. improvisation For additional<lb/>
information, call Nancy Owens at<lb/>
the Methodist Student Center<lb/>
(758 2030) or Stephen Fmnon<lb/>
(7S7 3546)<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
The psychology honor society,<lb/>
will meet Tuesday. Feb 2 at 7 p m<lb/>
m Speight 129 Interns in the<lb/>
clinical, school and industrial<lb/>
graduate programs in the<lb/>
psychology department will speak<lb/>
on their experiences Members<lb/>
and interested others are welcome<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
SOCIOLOGIST<lb/>
POSITION<lb/>
The Department of Sociology<lb/>
and Anthropology is conducting an<lb/>
internal search to fill our instruc<lb/>
tor's position in Sociology At<lb/>
least, ABD in sociology required,<lb/>
along with teaching experience in<lb/>
deviance, criminology, social pro<lb/>
blems, methods and statistics.<lb/>
Salary is competitive Research<lb/>
experience is required Apply to<lb/>
John Maiolo. ?hair, BA 415. Ap<lb/>
plications will be received until<lb/>
February 15<lb/>
WALK FOR HUMANITY<lb/>
The llth annual Greenville<lb/>
"Walk for Humanity" conducted<lb/>
by the ECU Hunger Coalition, is<lb/>
our biggest event of the year The<lb/>
"Walk" will wind through the<lb/>
streets of Greenville and everyone<lb/>
is invited<lb/>
Each year the money that is<lb/>
raised has been divided between a<lb/>
local hunger need and for a na-<lb/>
tional or international relief pro<lb/>
lect In the past ECU students<lb/>
have been the major contrivufers<lb/>
to the success of the "Walk<lb/>
We have 12 weeks left until the<lb/>
"Walk" and many things to be<lb/>
done, we need help from<lb/>
everyone: You can walk, donate,<lb/>
organize, speak to groups, invite<lb/>
us to speak to your group, dome to<lb/>
our meetings, do art work, help us<lb/>
plan the route, put us in contact<lb/>
with other enthusiastic people,<lb/>
make suggestions, prepare the<lb/>
alter the "Walk" lunch, eel<lb/>
Peole don't have to suffer from a<lb/>
lack of food We can make a dif<lb/>
ference! Make the Walk" your<lb/>
groups social project for the spr<lb/>
mg semester Come on ? "Put a<lb/>
little heart in your Soul<lb/>
We invite you to come to our<lb/>
meetinqs on Thursday's at 7 30<lb/>
p m at the Newman House (953 E<lb/>
10th St.) or call us to find out<lb/>
more 752 4216<lb/>
HANDICAPPED<lb/>
STUDENT SERVICES<lb/>
The Office of Handicapped Stu<lb/>
dent Services needs reserve<lb/>
drivers tor the handicapped van<lb/>
Anyone interested who has the<lb/>
afternoons free from 12 00 noon<lb/>
until 6 00 p.m. should contact the<lb/>
Office of Handicapped Student<lb/>
Services at 757 6799 or come by<lb/>
Whichard 212<lb/>
KYF<lb/>
The King's Youth Fellowship<lb/>
will hold it's next meeting on<lb/>
February 4 in Room 247 at I p.m.<lb/>
at the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Topics discussed will include the<lb/>
coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.<lb/>
Visitors are welcome and<lb/>
refreshments will be served at the<lb/>
conclusion of the meeting<lb/>
HANDICAPPED<lb/>
AWARENESS WEEK<lb/>
Plans are being made for the<lb/>
1982 Handicapped Awareness<lb/>
Week on the ECU campus Anyone<lb/>
who has suggestions or would like<lb/>
to participate in any way. please<lb/>
contact either Sharon McClung,<lb/>
756 9913. Jim Warren, 756 8156. or<lb/>
Ramona Lopez. 7587381. Any in<lb/>
put suggestions or participation<lb/>
will be welcomed.<lb/>
ART SHOW<lb/>
The Seventh Annual Art Show<lb/>
will be from Jan 26 to Feb 5, 1982<lb/>
m the Greenville Museum of Art<lb/>
All ECU artists are encouraged to<lb/>
prepare their best work to submit<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 22. 1982 to the con<lb/>
ference room in the office of<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center, ECU<lb/>
Cash prizes, provided bv the Attic<lb/>
and Jeffries Beer ano Wine, Co<lb/>
will fange from $10 for Honorable<lb/>
Mentions to JlOO for Best m Show<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
The Campus Alcohol and Drug<lb/>
Program will hold its bi monthly<lb/>
meeting on Feb 1 at 3 30 p m in<lb/>
the second floor conference room<lb/>
of irwin Hall Students interested<lb/>
in furthering responsible attitudes<lb/>
toward the use of chemical<lb/>
substances are encouraged to at<lb/>
tend For more information call<lb/>
7S7 6793 or 757 6649<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
Freshman Honor Srciety will<lb/>
hold a general meeting in room 212<lb/>
Mendenhall StuC:nt Center on<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb 2 at 5 p m. Fund<lb/>
raising and social activities will be<lb/>
discussed All members are urged<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
TAU KAPPA EPSILON<lb/>
Little Sister Program ? All girls<lb/>
interested in becoming TKE little<lb/>
sisters should attend rush tonight.<lb/>
Tuesday. Feb 3 Rush will be at<lb/>
the TKE house from 9 to 12 pm on<lb/>
Tuesday only<lb/>
SAB<lb/>
Student Athletic Board will have<lb/>
a meeting Tuesday. Feb 9 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Room 248 at 5 p m<lb/>
Final plans for the Lady Pirate<lb/>
Classic will be made We wiH also<lb/>
talk about baseball and track<lb/>
Anyone interested in these sports<lb/>
is asked to come and Oin us<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
International Language Organize<lb/>
tion on February 3 at 2 p m The<lb/>
meeting will be held in Brewster<lb/>
C 305. All members are encourag<lb/>
ed to attend and all interested peo<lb/>
pie are welcome to come<lb/>
COLLEGIATE 4 H<lb/>
On February 4. Thursday, the<lb/>
ECU Collegiate 4 H Club will meet<lb/>
at 7 p m at the club advisor's ad<lb/>
dress For more information and<lb/>
location call Carrol Anne at<lb/>
756 4287 or Ivey at 758 9535 All<lb/>
members and interested persons<lb/>
are urged to attend<lb/>
RESIDENCE HALL<lb/>
CHORUS<lb/>
The Residence Hall Chorus has<lb/>
grown during its first semester to<lb/>
a mixed chorus of sixty members<lb/>
The group, open to any student<lb/>
who enjoys singing, has set a goal<lb/>
of eighty members for this year<lb/>
The Chorus, which meets each<lb/>
Monday from 7 to 8 p m in Biology<lb/>
103. has already presented its first<lb/>
concert under direcor Charles F<lb/>
Schwartz. Dean of the School of<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Newly elected officers of the<lb/>
group are s'udents Daphne<lb/>
Duns'on. President. Jayne<lb/>
Nichols. Vice President, and Ted<lb/>
Pehowir. SecretaryTreasurer<lb/>
They mvile any interested<lb/>
students to come next Monday<lb/>
night<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
Everyone Is welcome to Inte.<lb/>
Varsity Christian Fellowship's<lb/>
meetings Wednesday nights at<lb/>
7 30, in Mendenhall Room 221<lb/>
This week Mark Acuff a North<lb/>
Carolina I V staff leader from<lb/>
Duke will be leading the discus<lb/>
sion on "How to Survive Failure "<lb/>
NATURE<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY<lb/>
The public is invi'eo to the<lb/>
February meeting of the Sierra<lb/>
Club. Cypress Group The pro<lb/>
gram this month will feature Dr<lb/>
Floyd Read givmq pointers on im<lb/>
proving your outdoor photos The<lb/>
meeting will be in the basement of<lb/>
the First Presbyterian Church,<lb/>
corner of Elm Street and 14th<lb/>
Street (across from Rose High) at<lb/>
8pm, Monday. Feb 8 The Sierra<lb/>
Club is a national canoeinghik<lb/>
ing conservation organization<lb/>
POETRY FORUM<lb/>
Will meet February 4 at 8 p m<lb/>
m Mendenhall, room 248 Anyone<lb/>
interested in poetry, please come<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
There will be a NAACP meeting.<lb/>
Wednesday. Feb 3 at 6 p m in<lb/>
room 221 Mendenhall AH<lb/>
members please attend<lb/>
The (last Carolinian<lb/>
V ' I tifa ifir , wnfitn i "tnttuitit i<lb/>
?im I92i<lb/>
Published every Tuesday anc<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
mg the summf<lb/>
The Eas' Carolinian s the of<lb/>
ficiai newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned<lb/>
operated, and published for ana<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate S20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located m the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU,<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Sena address<lb/>
changes to The East Carolinian<lb/>
Old South Building. ECU Green<lb/>
ville. NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 757 4344. 4347, 6JW<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Phi Beta Lamtxia will hoia its<lb/>
next meeting Wed Feb 3 in Ra<lb/>
130 at 4 00 in,wp 'rerested in<lb/>
lOinmg Ph Beta Lambda is urged<lb/>
to attend this meeting<lb/>
Admiral Criticizes Nuclear Buildup<lb/>
Continued From Hajje I<lb/>
our knowledge<lb/>
ultimately in our own<lb/>
best interest<lb/>
Sugg admitted his<lb/>
tendency to be<lb/>
pessimistic about<lb/>
humanity successfully<lb/>
dealing with the nuclear<lb/>
weapons question.<lb/>
"I'm afraid that the<lb/>
fact thai they're<lb/>
(nuclear weapons)<lb/>
around and available<lb/>
makes their use almost<lb/>
inevitable. I completely<lb/>
agree with Rickover on<lb/>
that<lb/>
Sugg, who has met<lb/>
Rickover, recalled that<lb/>
the crossbow was once<lb/>
outlawed for its deadly<lb/>
accuracy, and ultimate-<lb/>
ly it was still used.<lb/>
I n his address,<lb/>
Rickover told the com-<lb/>
Gl C.imoult.iq. n F.igu. : ,md<lb/>
I 5liu t Sli . p.nq B.iqs<lb/>
BiWLkjpafM C.impmq EquiU<lb/>
tin "t St. . i . ford iftoi<lb/>
Pi .hi in O?? yu Dili. i. '<lb/>
. .Hci u ? u Hi-Hi Ctnvbuy<lb/>
i .  ii<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
mittee, "in general, 1<lb/>
think we're overarming<lb/>
altogether. Today's<lb/>
more advanced<lb/>
nuclear-level weapons<lb/>
are said to represent<lb/>
enough explosive and<lb/>
radioactive power to<lb/>
destroy life on the earth<lb/>
many times over.<lb/>
His criticism of<lb/>
nuclear proliferation<lb/>
was also directed at the<lb/>
commercial use of<lb/>
nuclear power. It<lb/>
"shows itself lo be<lb/>
more economic, but<lb/>
that's a fal - line of<lb/>
reasoning because we<lb/>
do not take into ac-<lb/>
count the release of<lb/>
radiation may do to<lb/>
future generations<lb/>
Rickover said.<lb/>
He added that<lb/>
"nuclear energy in<lb/>
some form" can be ex-<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
1 24 week terminations<lb/>
App't's. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1 800 321-0575<lb/>
$<lb/>
USED<lb/>
TIRES<lb/>
10.00<lb/>
inquire at<lb/>
Evans Seafood<lb/>
Current undergraduate pre-<lb/>
md?cot itudents moy now com<lb/>
pete for several hundred An<lb/>
Force icholorftttips. Tfceie<lb/>
scKokmkipt ore to be awarded<lb/>
to student occepted into<lb/>
medical schools as freshmen or<lb/>
at the beginning of their<lb/>
sophomore year. The scholar<lb/>
?ship provides for tuition, boots,<lb/>
lob fees and equipment, plus o<lb/>
$530 moatfily allowance In-<lb/>
vestigate this financial alter-<lb/>
native to the "igh cost of<lb/>
medical education.<lb/>
Contoct:<lb/>
I .Wf IIr l IH<lb/>
PROrrSMONs<lb/>
KM Kl IIIM.<lb/>
Suite GL 1 H 00 Novaho Or<lb/>
Roieto.NC. 27689<lb/>
Phone Collect 919)755-4134<lb/>
 WE SEW<lb/>
LEATHER COATS<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM IM?<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
HIS f RratMncy Ttl, Srt?<lb/>
Central, and ProUlam<lb/>
f?r?t?n(Ky Counsel Fr tor<lb/>
leer information call tn-aSJS<lb/>
(Tall Fraa Nvaibtr<lb/>
mtWIMW aalwaaa f a.m<lb/>
? S pm. WaaMaya.<lb/>
RALSIOM WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
n? w??f mmtm si.<lb/>
RaMflk, N.C.<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
DENS<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S NEWEST BANQUET<lb/>
AND PARTY FACILITY<lb/>
(FORMERLY BALLENTINS'S SUFFET<lb/>
PITT PLAZA. GREENVILLE I<lb/>
Winter &amp; Spring<lb/>
? FORMALS<lb/>
?? MEETINGS<lb/>
? BANQUETS<lb/>
COMPLETE FOOD SERVICE AVAILABLE<lb/>
SPECIAl.I7.INf; IN OUTSIDE CATERING<lb/>
fcfe<lb/>
tall BOB SAUTER<lb/>
355-2361 OR 756-0842<lb/>
CONVENIENT LOCATION. AMPLE PAIRING-<lb/>
CflP<lb/>
pectcd to be used if a<lb/>
serious war breaks out.<lb/>
Rickover proposed a<lb/>
disarmament con-<lb/>
ference similar lo one<lb/>
called for by the United<lb/>
Stales in 1921 to discuss<lb/>
arms reduction. "I<lb/>
think it would be the<lb/>
finest thing in the world<lb/>
for the president of the<lb/>
United States lo initiate<lb/>
immediately he said.<lb/>
Plans are being made<lb/>
tor an arms conference<lb/>
ai the United Nations<lb/>
this spring called ihe<lb/>
Second United Nations<lb/>
Special Session on<lb/>
Disarmameni.<lb/>
A local campaign has<lb/>
been initiated in Green-<lb/>
ville b Dr. Carroll<lb/>
Webber, rehred ECU<lb/>
math professor, to<lb/>
stud) Ihe plans and<lb/>
hopes of the conference<lb/>
as well as inspire more<lb/>
citizen participation in<lb/>
the U.N. program.<lb/>
Webber also agreed<lb/>
with many of<lb/>
Rickover's positions,<lb/>
saying he was pleased<lb/>
that someone in<lb/>
Rickover's position was<lb/>
speaking out "because<lb/>
he will get new people<lb/>
to listen<lb/>
"It seems to be un-<lb/>
questionable that the<lb/>
arms race is out of con-<lb/>
trol Webber said.<lb/>
On the question of<lb/>
Reagan's participation<lb/>
at the U.N. Special Ses-<lb/>
sion, Webber said he<lb/>
thought it would be<lb/>
"symbolically signifi-<lb/>
cant and helpful" if<lb/>
Reagan attended. Web-<lb/>
ber added that Reagan<lb/>
"needs more education<lb/>
in the complexity of in-<lb/>
ternational affairs" lo<lb/>
have any real impact.<lb/>
"I'm not overly op-<lb/>
timistic that Reagan<lb/>
had a balanced world<lb/>
view Webber ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
During the First<lb/>
Special Session on<lb/>
Disarmament held at<lb/>
the U.N. in 1978, then-<lb/>
President Carter and<lb/>
Soviet premier Leonid<lb/>
Brezhnev did not par-<lb/>
ticipate.<lb/>
In his address,<lb/>
Rickover noted the<lb/>
military industrial com-<lb/>
plex was a major<lb/>
roadblock to achieving<lb/>
nuclear disarmament.<lb/>
He also noted the waste<lb/>
in the Department of<lb/>
Defense, calling<lb/>
Defense Secretary<lb/>
Caspar Weinberger "a<lb/>
businessman<lb/>
WOLVERINE<lb/>
TOUGH OUTSIDE PURE<lb/>
COMFORT INSIDE<lb/>
I lie pirn ol the bcasi lurks in csers pan of. Wolverine' Book And<lb/>
sure-loon J ihranr vies lake ou where ihe action is in luwied com<lb/>
fon Oui own srxviallv lanncd piivkm is stronger, more sciiff-rcsisiani<lb/>
Ihu cowhide fcjso, pigskin ??breaihes" as voii walk - k-innn in tresh<lb/>
air And ihe deep cushion insok- Kill surround sour tool in vointon<lb/>
everv sicp<lb/>
J.P. Davenport<lb/>
&amp; Sons, Inc.<lb/>
Phone 752-6930 WOUfBHIr1'<lb/>
Hwy. 264 E.<lb/>
?<lb/>
k<lb/>
Are you the <lb/>
Sole<lb/>
Survivor?<lb/>
INO? Then send your<lb/>
RUNNING SHOES to:<lb/>
Carolina Resolers Inc.<lb/>
P. O. Box 7211<lb/>
Wilson, N. C. 27893<lb/>
FOR our complete LIFE SAVING<lb/>
process of REPLACING:<lb/>
1) the nuler rubber sole<lb/>
2) Ihe worn mid-sole material<lb/>
3i Ihe innersote with out DELUXE<lb/>
MOLDED innersole<lb/>
4) the shoe laces<lb/>
,mi sh.s -ill he Kilt MM It ?? I Vttfk and ??<lb/>
?i(l ttr billed lor ihem upon tour insprt-ilim and<lb/>
satKlaclHia.<lb/>
PRICE ? $14.50<lb/>
He also charged<lb/>
David Stockman, direc-<lb/>
tor of the Office of<lb/>
Budget and Manage-<lb/>
ment, with ignoring<lb/>
Rickover's list of sug-<lb/>
gestions to trim waste<lb/>
and inefficiency in the<lb/>
Defense Department.<lb/>
Rickover claimed<lb/>
profits were the only<lb/>
factor that motivated<lb/>
business executives in<lb/>
the defense industry.<lb/>
He further stated that<lb/>
this abandonment of<lb/>
"traditional values"<lb/>
was destroying the free<lb/>
enterprise system.<lb/>
"With their ability to<lb/>
dispense money, of-<lb/>
ficials of large corpora-<lb/>
tions may often exer-<lb/>
cise greater power tc'in-<lb/>
fluence society than<lb/>
elected or appointed<lb/>
government officials ?<lb/>
but without assuming<lb/>
any of the respon-<lb/>
sibilities and without<lb/>
being subject to public<lb/>
scrutiny Rickover<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Rickover, large cor-<lb/>
porations are virtually<lb/>
another branch of<lb/>
government because of<lb/>
their vast resources.<lb/>
Rickover called con-<lb/>
tracts between the<lb/>
military and corpora-<lb/>
tions "meaningless.<lb/>
Today, defense con-<lb/>
tractors can do<lb/>
anything they want<lb/>
with nothing to hinder<lb/>
them<lb/>
Rickover said this is<lb/>
"a very preposterous<lb/>
time when military ex-<lb/>
penses are eating up so<lb/>
See NUCLEAR, Page 3<lb/>
,s? -? S4 ?y y<lb/>
oN<lb/>
<lb/>
??W sC VVs<lb/>
s6<lb/>
er- r ,o<lb/>
 ?V<lb/>
"me ouegr wTjje seCReT city<lb/>
TO PLAY THE GAME.<lb/>
Answer each of the ndd.es that will appear here each<lb/>
week in February. Write your answer in the Wanks below<lb/>
each riddle. The letters with numbers below them corres-<lb/>
pond to the numbered spaces in the master key. As you<lb/>
till in the letters of the master key, you wiH be spelling the<lb/>
name and location of a secret cfty in Europe. Send us<lb/>
the solution, and you and a friend could win a trip there, free<lb/>
TO ENTER SWEEPSTAKES:<lb/>
1. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.<lb/>
2. Grand Prize consists of two regular routxMrip economy airfares<lb/>
to the secret city. 30-day Easel passes, American buth Hostel<lb/>
passes, two backpacks and $1000 in cash.<lb/>
3. Cut out master Key tor use as official entry blank or use 3" x 5"<lb/>
card. Pnm your answer along with your name and address. Mail<lb/>
to Secret City Sweepstakes, PO Box 6018, NorweJk. CT 06852.<lb/>
4. Trfirstl.OOOaxrectrTSsrxxHntswarecerveapceterasan<lb/>
errtrv prize.<lb/>
5. All entries must be received by 31S82. Enter as often as you<lb/>
wish, but each entry must be mailed separately.<lb/>
6.Arsdomdrawirfgoallccfrectertjie8wi?beheW32282by<lb/>
the HkjNand Group, an frKtependemjudcorrjanUattonwrioee<lb/>
decision is final<lb/>
7. Sweepstakes void where prohibited, taxed or otnerwise restricted.<lb/>
8. All potential winners may be required to sign an affidavit of eii-<lb/>
gibttty to verify compliance with the rules within 30 days of receipt<lb/>
of same. For a list of prize winners, send self-addressed, stami<lb/>
envelope to Secret City Sweepstakes co Hkjhkand Group. 18<lb/>
Knight St Norwalk, CT 06861.<lb/>
teSsiSsfe com<lb/>
So unravel these riddles, and<lb/>
So small and yet so strong<lb/>
Life is never lielter skelter,<lb/>
When I travel, the pace seems long<lb/>
Yet I never lack a shelter.<lb/>
pp<lb/>
qeNCRAL foods'iNTeRNATioNAL coffees<lb/>
MAKe QOOD OOMpAW<lb/>
O General Foods Corporator. 1982<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
EostCorolino University<lb/>
(<lb/>
ni<lb/>
M<lb/>
b<lb/>
(<lb/>
VII<lb/>
 I<lb/>
HI<lb/>
Gi<lb/>
b<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
in<lb/>
m<lb/>
( o<lb/>
huj<lb/>
i<lb/>
A<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057454_0003"/><lb/>
THfcJ ASJ C AROI.IN1AN<lb/>
MBRUARY2. IV82<lb/>
lpm<lb/>
? yooe<lb/>
iome<lb/>
lian<lb/>
and<lb/>
(DA<lb/>
L<lb/>
A<lb/>
Love Seats Provided<lb/>
Infants in the Pitt<lb/>
County area will be<lb/>
much safer because of a<lb/>
new law and a major<lb/>
project being launched<lb/>
by the Tar River<lb/>
Civitan Club of Green-<lb/>
ville, in conjunction<lb/>
with the Pitt County<lb/>
Health Department.<lb/>
Enacted by the N.C.<lb/>
General Assembly to<lb/>
become effective July<lb/>
1, the law requires<lb/>
parents to protect<lb/>
children up to two<lb/>
years of age by<lb/>
restraints in motor<lb/>
vehicles.<lb/>
The project is a safe-<lb/>
ty seat loaner program.<lb/>
Tar River Civitans will<lb/>
offer Infant Love Seats<lb/>
primarily to low-<lb/>
income families for a<lb/>
small rental fee and a<lb/>
deposit. The seats will<lb/>
be available next<lb/>
month, according to<lb/>
Raye Troutman, Save-<lb/>
A-Babe publicity and<lb/>
advertising chairper-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
In addition to pro-<lb/>
viding some financial<lb/>
relief to parents com-<lb/>
plying with the law, the<lb/>
organization will at-<lb/>
tempt to educate<lb/>
parents on the proper<lb/>
use of the seats and on<lb/>
other aspects of car<lb/>
safety. Club members<lb/>
will receive training<lb/>
through the N.C.<lb/>
Highway Safety<lb/>
Research Center in<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The Research Center<lb/>
will study the results of<lb/>
the law's first two years<lb/>
of existence to deter-<lb/>
mine its effectiveness in<lb/>
reducing death and in-<lb/>
jury to babies.<lb/>
"The law is designed<lb/>
to be educational rather<lb/>
than punitive said a<lb/>
Research Center staf-<lb/>
fer. "During the first<lb/>
two years of enact-<lb/>
ment, violators will be<lb/>
given warning tickets;<lb/>
$10 fines will be levied<lb/>
the third year. No<lb/>
driver's license points<lb/>
will be assessed.<lb/>
Whether to continue<lb/>
the law will be decided<lb/>
by legislators in 1985,<lb/>
based on the findings<lb/>
of the researchers<lb/>
Car accidents are the<lb/>
leading cause of death<lb/>
to children, according<lb/>
to statistics. North<lb/>
Carolina ranks only<lb/>
below Texas and<lb/>
California in the<lb/>
number of car-related<lb/>
deaths. However,<lb/>
crash-tested restraint<lb/>
devices can reduce the<lb/>
probability of deaths<lb/>
by about 90 percent<lb/>
and of injuries by<lb/>
about 70 percent.<lb/>
"Helping to prevent<lb/>
infant mortality and in-<lb/>
juries is our goal em-<lb/>
phasized Patrice Alex-<lb/>
ander, Civitan projects<lb/>
chairperson.<lb/>
The club is soliciting<lb/>
seat donations with a<lb/>
goal of 150 seats. To<lb/>
help expand the pro-<lb/>
ject, the Highway Safe-<lb/>
ty Research Center will<lb/>
match on a one-to-one<lb/>
basis the seats donated<lb/>
to or purchased by the<lb/>
club. "Public support<lb/>
is vital Alexander<lb/>
said. Many concerned<lb/>
citizens already have<lb/>
made contributions, ac-<lb/>
cording to Troutman.<lb/>
For making con-<lb/>
tributions or obtaining<lb/>
more information on<lb/>
car seats and safety,<lb/>
call Diane Hankins,<lb/>
758-4552 or Raye<lb/>
Troutman, 756-3871.<lb/>
UNC System<lb/>
To Integrate<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
ment that the UNC system file a<lb/>
yearly report with the District Court<lb/>
showing the percentages of integra-<lb/>
tion at all 16 campuses.<lb/>
In the period between August<lb/>
1980 and August 1981, black enroll-<lb/>
ment in the system increased from<lb/>
21,741 to 21,980. During the same<lb/>
period, white enrollment rose from<lb/>
91.882 to 92.509.<lb/>
The UNC system is also required,<lb/>
by the decree, to provide funds for<lb/>
operation and maintenance to the<lb/>
predominantIv-black schools, in an<lb/>
amount to be in relation to the<lb/>
number of full-time students at the<lb/>
university. This funding must at<lb/>
least equal the financial support<lb/>
given to predominantly-white in-<lb/>
stitutions with the same types of in-<lb/>
struction.<lb/>
The goals of the UNC system for<lb/>
annual integration increases, or in-<lb/>
creasing the "minority presence<lb/>
are .53 percent for blacks in<lb/>
primarily-white institutions and .63<lb/>
for whites in predominantly-black<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
F.mma Wilkinson, a Civitan member, and her<lb/>
four-month-old daughter Arm I.ynn demonstrate<lb/>
the proper use of the Infant I.ove Seal ? facing<lb/>
the rear of the car.<lb/>
Nuclear Proliferation Discussed<lb/>
Continued From Page 2<lb/>
much money. It's com-<lb/>
pletely, unproductive<lb/>
and using so much of<lb/>
people's taxes<lb/>
President Reagan is<lb/>
proposing a SI.6<lb/>
trillion defense budget<lb/>
? $300 billion per sear<lb/>
? for the next five<lb/>
vears. The defense<lb/>
budget is now less than<lb/>
$200 billion per year.<lb/>
W ebber also agreed<lb/>
with Rickover about<lb/>
the problem of waste<lb/>
caused by arms expen-<lb/>
ditures. "I would refer<lb/>
particularly to the<lb/>
September 1980 isue of<lb/>
Scientific American to<lb/>
an article by Wassily<lb/>
Leontief, Nobel Prize-<lb/>
winning Harvard<lb/>
economist Webber<lb/>
said. "You will note his<lb/>
conclusion that only<lb/>
drastic cuts in arms ex-<lb/>
penditures offers major<lb/>
promise of world<lb/>
economic develop-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Dr. Webber also<lb/>
pointed out that<lb/>
nuclear war "is occas-<lb/>
sionally spoken of as<lb/>
winnable He noted<lb/>
such comments from<lb/>
Vice President George<lb/>
Bush and said he sees<lb/>
danger in the move-<lb/>
ment of some leaders<lb/>
toward making nuclear<lb/>
war a thinkable op-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
During his address<lb/>
Rickover was recom-<lb/>
mended for his second<lb/>
Congressional Gold<lb/>
Medal for his vears of<lb/>
service to his country.<lb/>
"Frankly I believe the<lb/>
government is making a<lb/>
terrible mistake in let-<lb/>
ting you go" said Sen.<lb/>
William Proxmirc (D-<lb/>
Wis.) during his ques-<lb/>
tioning of Rickover.<lb/>
Other senators praised<lb/>
Rickover for his ac-<lb/>
complishments and ser-<lb/>
vice.<lb/>
Webber and Sugg ex-<lb/>
pressed hope that ECU<lb/>
students would begin to<lb/>
take a more active role<lb/>
in the questions and<lb/>
problems raised bv<lb/>
Rickov er.<lb/>
"First ot all I'd like<lb/>
to see more of them<lb/>
(students)<lb/>
knowledgeable about<lb/>
world issues ? that's a<lb/>
first essential stated<lb/>
Dr. Sugg. He added<lb/>
that most students pro-<lb/>
bably don't pay much<lb/>
attention to crucial<lb/>
world issues.<lb/>
J.A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
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prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes,<lb/>
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Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
mtilus<lb/>
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V<lb/>
ZUe ?Ea0t (Earaltmati<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, e? ?c.?-<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE, ifcwmri?n<lb/>
Ric Browning, bmw  ????? Charles Chandler, sp.?-? ??<lb/>
Fielding Miller, ??,?.? mmm ToM Hall, mm ?.??<lb/>
Alison Bartel. ruwtiufumrtsmv Steve Bachner, tummmmmi aam<lb/>
Steve Moore, a William Yelverton. so ?d,?r<lb/>
February 2, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
Patience Finally Pays Off<lb/>
So, we're finally getting a radio<lb/>
station. It's about time; isn't it?<lb/>
About time, indeed.<lb/>
WZMB: for four years, the root<lb/>
of hopeful expectations and, most<lb/>
of all, controversy. Since its initial<lb/>
approval in 1978, WZMB (then<lb/>
WECU-AM) has met opposition in<lb/>
one form or another from a handful<lb/>
of administrators and Media Board<lb/>
members.<lb/>
But the most painful opposition<lb/>
to the radio station hasn't come<lb/>
from deans or chancellors. It hasn't<lb/>
come from petitions or ad-<lb/>
ministrative actions. The most pain-<lb/>
ful opposition has come from the<lb/>
students themselves.<lb/>
No, not through any legislative<lb/>
action, SGA or otherwise, but<lb/>
through unfounded criticism, and<lb/>
worse yet, through apathy.<lb/>
Sure, we've all read about the<lb/>
delays, and we've all heard the ex-<lb/>
cuses. Our skeptic minds have<lb/>
wandered and wondered if, in fact,<lb/>
the station would ever get on the air.<lb/>
But, despite the constant com-<lb/>
plaints of us skeptics, the staff at<lb/>
WZMB worked, waited and work-<lb/>
ed, and today, thanks to their long<lb/>
hours, we have a radio station to<lb/>
show for it.<lb/>
As college students, it is often<lb/>
easier to make blind criticisms than<lb/>
to participate. Participation certain-<lb/>
ly takes more of our precious free<lb/>
time. But why can't we just put<lb/>
aside our petty complaints for a<lb/>
while and show some appreciation<lb/>
for a job well done?<lb/>
Obviously, Sam Barwick and the<lb/>
rest of the WZMB staff have had<lb/>
their problems. No major undertak-<lb/>
ing ? and this is a major undertak-<lb/>
ing ? is ever without problems. But<lb/>
thanks to the dedication of a few<lb/>
ECU students, present and past, the<lb/>
airwaves will soon be filled with<lb/>
programs by and for the campus<lb/>
community.<lb/>
W;e have had to wait a long time<lb/>
for this radio station, and there's no<lb/>
guarantee that it will go on the air<lb/>
today, but maybe it's time we tried a<lb/>
little patience.<lb/>
Granted, patience is a virtue, and,<lb/>
at times, it's definitely a difficult art<lb/>
to master. Maybe it's a virtue we all<lb/>
need to work on.<lb/>
Legislature Overturns Veto;<lb/>
Presidential Powers Suffer<lb/>
The veto power of the SGA presi-<lb/>
dent suffered an unnecessary em-<lb/>
barassment Monday, as the<lb/>
legislature overwhelmingly voted to<lb/>
reinstitute the Medical Emergency<lb/>
Loan Fund.<lb/>
Two weeks ago the legislature<lb/>
voted to return the program to<lb/>
operation. SGA President Lester<lb/>
Nail addressed the group that day in<lb/>
opposition to the reinstatement.<lb/>
Many knew then he would veto the<lb/>
bill if it were approved.<lb/>
It was; he did.<lb/>
With many legislatures of the<lb/>
past, this veto may have been<lb/>
upheld. But the 1981-82 legislature<lb/>
has shown a certain degree of in-<lb/>
dependence of the executive branch.<lb/>
Perhaps the sour taste of power<lb/>
gone awry left by recent presidents<lb/>
has charted this course?<lb/>
Speaker Gary Williams tem-<lb/>
porarily stepped down from the<lb/>
chair in order to address the<lb/>
legislature. He convincingly spoke<lb/>
of the virtues of "representative<lb/>
democracy" and the lack of wisdom<lb/>
involved in one person impeding<lb/>
progress.<lb/>
When the summer legislature, i.e,<lb/>
Nail and Marvin Braxton, voted to<lb/>
suspend the program, the need for<lb/>
research to determine financial<lb/>
feasibility was cited. No such study<lb/>
began in the summer and the<lb/>
legislators felt the loans are needed<lb/>
by their constituents.<lb/>
The cause of the confusion was<lb/>
the issue of abortion. Opponents of<lb/>
abortion used the Emergency<lb/>
Medical Loan Fund as a tool to<lb/>
have their opinions heard ? Lester<lb/>
Nail included.<lb/>
Abortion is a moral issue; no<lb/>
deliberative body can legislate<lb/>
morality.<lb/>
Williams wisely attempted to<lb/>
avoid debate of the narrow issue of<lb/>
abortion in favor of appropriate<lb/>
discussion of the broad topic of<lb/>
medical loans. But some people just<lb/>
can't let sleeping dogs lie.<lb/>
Nail's opposition of the Emergen-<lb/>
cy Medical Loan Fund on the basis<lb/>
of his abortion beliefs is understan-<lb/>
dable, even admirable. But his lack<lb/>
of foresight as to the fate of his veto<lb/>
is inexcusable. The integrity of the<lb/>
office must stand above the integri-<lb/>
ty of the individual.<lb/>
The power of veto is exclusive to<lb/>
the chief executive. Wise manipula-<lb/>
tion of that power is a true art.<lb/>
Nail's attempt to intimidate the<lb/>
legislature by making it known he<lb/>
would veto the loan bill was a com-<lb/>
mendable political ploy. His failure<lb/>
to recognize the inevitable after they<lb/>
passed the mandate is unfortunate.<lb/>
Gary Williams accurately describ-<lb/>
ed Nail's view as the "wolf in<lb/>
sheep's clothing It's fortunate the<lb/>
legislature saw through the disguise.<lb/>
Landis Perseveres Despite Law Suits<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Please understand, I'm not one of those<lb/>
people who sees a CIA agent under every<lb/>
bush and behind every keyhole. The Com-<lb/>
pany is out there, however, and its agents<lb/>
do some of the things they are accused of<lb/>
doing ? illegal, immoral things, like dos-<lb/>
ing unsuspecting Americans with drugs<lb/>
just to see what happens, spending $6<lb/>
million to manipulate the Italian elections<lb/>
and orchestrating the overthrow of the<lb/>
Aliende government in Chile.<lb/>
Comes not Fred Landis, a Los Angeles<lb/>
journalist and critic of the Central In-<lb/>
telligence Agency, who has some thought-<lb/>
provoking theories about just how the CIA<lb/>
does its dirty work. Landis is being sued<lb/>
for $210 million by the Association of<lb/>
Retired Intelligence Officers for his trou-<lb/>
ble, and he's fighting another suit by one<lb/>
David Atlee Phillips, editor of a rightwing<lb/>
magazine called Eagle, to boot. Still, he<lb/>
perseveres, determined to expose the con-<lb/>
spiracy within.<lb/>
According to the outspoken Landis, the<lb/>
CIA has a media strategy for destabilizing<lb/>
what it considers to be unfriendly foreign<lb/>
governments. This involves infiltrating the<lb/>
leading daily newspaper of a targeted<lb/>
country and working the paper like a pup-<lb/>
peteer works Punch and Judy, to knock<lb/>
out the regime in question. The strategy<lb/>
relies on disinformation and psychological<lb/>
warfare, and has bseen used successfully in<lb/>
Chile with El Mercrio and Jamaica with<lb/>
the Daily Gleaner. Landis thinks<lb/>
Nicaragua's La Prensa may be next.<lb/>
Landis was working in Chile as a cor-<lb/>
respondent for the Chicago Sun-Times in<lb/>
September of 1973, when the military stag-<lb/>
ed a coup d etat. El Mercurio, Chile's<lb/>
dominant newspaper for over a century,<lb/>
was, Landis arues, taken over by<lb/>
"advisors" from the Inter American Press<lb/>
Association prior to the coup. The visiting<lb/>
journalists were secretly working for the<lb/>
CIA. Their aim: to undermine public con-<lb/>
fidence in Salvador AUende's<lb/>
democratically elected socialist govern-<lb/>
ment as a prelude to smashing it.<lb/>
The first thing they did, Landis says,<lb/>
was change the paper's staid, Wall Street<lb/>
Journal-type format. "Suddenly, you have<lb/>
color, where before it was only black and<lb/>
white. You have headlines across the entire<lb/>
page. You have large photographs, or<lb/>
maybe just one large photograph. Before,<lb/>
there was no propaganda there, you just<lb/>
had a newspaper. Suddenly, everything in<lb/>
the paper goes to push a few very simple<lb/>
themes.<lb/>
"The propaganda campaign he con-<lb/>
tinues, "is authorized by the National<lb/>
Security Council or the Presidenit of the<lb/>
United States, and usually costs about half<lb/>
a million dollars and lasts three months.<lb/>
The first theme is economic chaos. After<lb/>
economic chaos, you shift to social chaos.<lb/>
After social chaos, you see character<lb/>
assassination of government leaders. For<lb/>
being president of the country, Aliende<lb/>
almost never appeared in the newspaper.<lb/>
When he did appear, he was always<lb/>
associated with a word such as<lb/>
'Communism 'Soviet 'Plagues<lb/>
'Death' <lb/>
In the months preceding the coup, El<lb/>
Mercurio was awash in news of chaos and<lb/>
crimes ? many of which never happened<lb/>
? and repeated predictions of imminent<lb/>
civil war. The result, for readers of thai<lb/>
opinion-making paper, was unbroken ten-<lb/>
sion and gloom. This, Landis argues,<lb/>
prepared Chileans psychologically for the<lb/>
coup.<lb/>
El Mercurio's propaganda was aimed a:<lb/>
the middle and upper classes ? no friend<lb/>
of the socialist government, usually ? and<lb/>
Chile's militarv, which had a long tradition<lb/>
of respecting democratic institutions. In<lb/>
order to get the generals to violate the con-<lb/>
stitution, they had to be convinced that tfie<lb/>
"subversive" Aliende was ruining the<lb/>
country. They were.<lb/>
After the coup, the ruling mihtar junta<lb/>
outlawed trade unions andstrikes and<lb/>
adopted the supply-side policies of<lb/>
American economist Milton Friedman.<lb/>
Hundreds of thousands of Chileans were<lb/>
thrown out of work. If they had the<lb/>
temerity to criticize the junta or organize<lb/>
against it, they were arrested and often tor-<lb/>
tured and killed. Chile continues to be<lb/>
cited by human rights organizations such<lb/>
as Amnesty International as one of the<lb/>
most repressive countries in the world.<lb/>
Did this runaway train of events be<lb/>
with fabricated stories in El Mercurio.<lb/>
courtesy of the blazing typewriters of the<lb/>
CIA? Is this just another paranoid con-<lb/>
spiracy theory? I don't know. It's<lb/>
something to think about, however, as the<lb/>
Reagan administration pushes to liberate<lb/>
the intelligence agencies, including the<lb/>
CIA, from the mild restraints of the Carter<lb/>
years.<lb/>
-Campus Forum<lb/>
Minority Rule On Abortion?<lb/>
??SrjLffRRrWW6rTJRWf<lb/>
WTunwioernifeTftRfiNriii<lb/>
fmx<lb/>
I would like to reply to Mr. Agate,<lb/>
whose letter in the January 26 "Campus<lb/>
Forum" indicates that student govern-<lb/>
ment emergency medical loan funds<lb/>
should not be used for abortions.<lb/>
So you feel that the government<lb/>
'should not come between a taxpayer<lb/>
and his or her conscience and force him<lb/>
or her to pay for a procedure about<lb/>
which he or she has moral misgivings"?<lb/>
As a taxpayer, I have serious moral<lb/>
misgivings about this nation's<lb/>
"defense" spending. I detest and abhor<lb/>
the fact that a goodly portion of my tax<lb/>
dollars go for bigger and better bombs.<lb/>
What would you suggest I do about my<lb/>
moral misgivings?<lb/>
I could stop paying taxes, but I also<lb/>
have serious reservations about being<lb/>
prosecuted for tax evasion.<lb/>
It is unfortunate that everyone cannot<lb/>
be pleased about how tax dollars or stu-<lb/>
dent fees are spent. If the SGA discon-<lb/>
tinues the fund because a certain number<lb/>
of students disapprove of abortion, it<lb/>
should be pointed out that other<lb/>
minorities will want their chance to veto<lb/>
programs they don't like: the huge<lb/>
athletic budget, student publications,<lb/>
the concert and lecture series, certain<lb/>
controversial fine arts exhibitions and<lb/>
performances, etc.<lb/>
Surely all these recipients of student<lb/>
funds do not always produce satisfac-<lb/>
tion, moral or otherwise, for those<lb/>
whose fees support them!<lb/>
FRANCEINE REES<lb/>
ECU Alumna<lb/>
Male Responsibility<lb/>
Al Agate, in his former article,<lb/>
January 26, mentions "insensitivity" in<lb/>
the issue of abortion. I hope he includes<lb/>
his own insensitivity as well as ignorance<lb/>
for writing: "Abortion is a private deci-<lb/>
sion and should be funded by private<lb/>
means: either out of a woman's own<lb/>
resources or by 'charitable' organiza-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Where, Mr. Agate, are the resources<lb/>
of a woman's partner; the male respon-<lb/>
sible for one-half of the problem.<lb/>
Perhaps the male is responsible for more<lb/>
than a half of the problem as it is<lb/>
generally the male who presses for sex-<lb/>
ual relations.<lb/>
Not too many women go around<lb/>
pressuring men foj sex but many men<lb/>
seem to think it is their due to win sex<lb/>
from the women they are with. As a<lb/>
mature woman, I speak from years of<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
When, oh when, will men ever wake<lb/>
up and realize women are full human be-<lb/>
ings, capable of decision making with<lb/>
full rights to their own bodies? When<lb/>
will men quit speaking of us as ihough<lb/>
we were many cattle that they can select<lb/>
from, the best meat.<lb/>
A woman does not conceive alone, ex-<lb/>
cept in mythoiogy; nor should she have<lb/>
to bear the burden, either financially or<lb/>
emotionally, of that conception.<lb/>
If the male ducks out of his portion of<lb/>
the responsibility of conception (which<lb/>
many do), is the female then left to her<lb/>
own resources as Mr. Agate proposes?<lb/>
No more than if Mr. Agate accidentally<lb/>
got hit by a truck while crossing the<lb/>
highway and had to pay for his own<lb/>
broken body out of his own resources.<lb/>
Perhaps he might appeal to "charity"<lb/>
for his hospital expenses as he suggests<lb/>
women do for abortions.<lb/>
History attests that man in all his<lb/>
glory is the most irresponsible species<lb/>
ever to emerge on this planet. Women<lb/>
don't war nor do they hunt for pleasure.<lb/>
Neither do they mess up the planet for<lb/>
future generations. Women give life and<lb/>
by nature are preservers of life.<lb/>
When will the male population come<lb/>
to terms with its irresponsibility and join<lb/>
women in a peaceful co-existence?<lb/>
SANDRA THOMAS<lb/>
Senior, psychology<lb/>
Shires Story<lb/>
1 hope that East Carolina University<lb/>
manages to get its communications pro-<lb/>
gram off the ground. Hopefully, such a<lb/>
program would give newspaper and<lb/>
television reporters an added incentive<lb/>
to learn their craft.<lb/>
I also hope that the next time anyone<lb/>
interviews my friend Bill Shires, they<lb/>
will at least let him tell his own story.<lb/>
Such a story would hae lots of direct<lb/>
quotations and an understandable lead<lb/>
paragraph.<lb/>
I only wish 1 was there when Shires<lb/>
read the article about him. He probably<lb/>
rolled back in his chair, looked heaven-<lb/>
ward and let out with one of his patented<lb/>
sighs that says to the world, "There they<lb/>
go again, murdering the English<lb/>
language<lb/>
MARC BARNES<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authorfs). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
days.<lb/>
m<lb/>
nx<lb/>
(<lb/>
I<lb/>
aH<lb/>
(<lb/>
H<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
(<lb/>
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A<lb/>
al<lb/>
t<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057454_0005"/><lb/>
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ts.<lb/>
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W<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2, IV82 Page 5<lb/>
Congresswoman<lb/>
Chisholm Here<lb/>
This Thursday<lb/>
1 he fighting Shirk) Chisholm has<lb/>
more than earned hei name as one<lb/>
of the most independent minded<lb/>
members ol the I nited Slates Con-<lb/>
gress and the Congressional Black<lb/>
Caucus Now, under the sponsor-<lb/>
ship ot the MSC I ecture Series<lb/>
Committee, Shirley Chisholm will<lb/>
appeal in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center's Hendrix rheatre this<lb/>
Thursday night<lb/>
Mrs. Chisholm, an articulate,<lb/>
light forward champion ot the<lb/>
nehis of tht downtrodden, says she<lb/>
derives hei powei "from the peo<lb/>
pie' rather than from the regulai<lb/>
part organizaiton I lie topic ot hei<lb/>
lecture, scheduled to begin at S<lb/>
p.m will be "America's Im-<lb/>
P?v Spirit with a question<lb/>
and answei period immediately<lb/>
following.<lb/>
Elected to the 91 si t ongress, Mrs.<lb/>
Chisholm ts New York's<lb/>
1 weifth v ongressional District,<lb/>
which comprises Bed tor d-<lb/>
Stuyvesant, perhaps the nation's<lb/>
largest black ghetto. She is the first<lb/>
black C ongresswoman in the history<lb/>
of the I nited States and the first<lb/>
woman and the first Black to seek<lb/>
the nominal ion ot a major political<lb/>
party for the presidency of the<lb/>
I filled States.<lb/>
A membei of the powerful House<lb/>
Education and Labor Committee,<lb/>
Mrs. Chisholm played a major role<lb/>
in the passage of the minimum wage<lb/>
bill in the House. She serves on the<lb/>
Select Education, General Educa-<lb/>
tion, and Agricultural Labor Sub-<lb/>
committees.<lb/>
She is a recipient of more than<lb/>
eleven honorary degrees, and was<lb/>
also selected to be the first recipient<lb/>
of Clairol's "Woman of the Year"<lb/>
award for outstanding achievement<lb/>
in public affairs.<lb/>
For the last three years she has re-<lb/>
mained on the Gallup Poll's list of<lb/>
the ten most admired women in the<lb/>
world. She is the author of an<lb/>
autobiography Lnbought and In-<lb/>
bossed, as well as The Good Fight,<lb/>
which told the full story of her cam-<lb/>
paign for the presidency.<lb/>
Tickets are on sale at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
Student tickets are $2.50 and<lb/>
faculty and staff tickets are S3.50.<lb/>
Public tickets are priced at $5. All<lb/>
tickets sold at the door will be $5.<lb/>
On Friday of this week, "An<lb/>
Ebony Revue" will be performed by<lb/>
the University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Greensboro Neo-Black Society<lb/>
drama group. The performance will<lb/>
be held in auditorium 244 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
?<lb/>
'1TTH<lb/>
United States Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm will appear on the<lb/>
ECU Campus this Thursday at 8 p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
Hendrix. Chisholm will lecture on "America's Impoverished Spirit"<lb/>
and a question and answer period will follow. She is the first black Con-<lb/>
gresswoman in U.S. histor.<lb/>
Birnbach Giving 'Prep Talk'<lb/>
Lisa Birnbach's "The Official Prepp Handbook" comes to Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre on Tuesday, February 9. at 8 p.m. Tickets for her foray into<lb/>
"ultra-prep" are on sale at $2 for ECU students.<lb/>
On Golden Pond' Not A Dramatic Quagmire<lb/>
I dro<lb/>
Saturda<lb/>
1 was<lb/>
and three I<lb/>
if the film<lb/>
B Wll I I AM YELVERTOIM<lb/>
i i ii.i. i<lb/>
niles to Raleigh in order to see a film<lb/>
But when 1 arrived 1 began to wonder whether<lb/>
? place or not. There were people two<lb/>
: waiting in line, and 1 wondered<lb/>
was supposed to have reviewed had been<lb/>
replaced h the Lawrence ll elk Show.<lb/>
But the entertainment began, and I could see why I<lb/>
was the youngest there. These people grew up with<lb/>
Katharine Hepburn and Henrv Fonda, and the event<lb/>
they (wei were witnessing wasn't any ordinary film. It<lb/>
was a special event; something that only comes along<lb/>
once every 20 years.<lb/>
On Golden fond was MAGIC. And there were no<lb/>
tricks involved.<lb/>
1 saw a beautiful, moving and mature film. It was a<lb/>
tale of learning to love life and left the viewer with a<lb/>
warm feeling inside about the pain of age. 1 here was no<lb/>
gore, no sex, no violence. It was a picture thai has<lb/>
restored my faith in film-makers.<lb/>
Bill Morrison, entertainment editor of the Raleigh<lb/>
News and Observer, seemed to think the film was a<lb/>
dramatic quagmire. Well, Mr. Morrison wouldn't know<lb/>
a good film if he was hit with the canister. I his picture<lb/>
was anything but a dramatic quagmire. This adaptation<lb/>
of Ernest Thompson's play was sensitively directed bv<lb/>
Mark Rydell, who could have turned the picture into a<lb/>
tear-jerker but chose otherwise, preventing a senseless<lb/>
and meaningless Harlequin Romance.<lb/>
We saw two of the great performers of our time in<lb/>
two of their greatest roles. Fonda plays Norman<lb/>
Thayer, an honnery old sonuvabitch who turns 80, retir-<lb/>
ing from his job as a university professor. He is sure this<lb/>
will be his last summer at their cabin on Golden Pond.<lb/>
And we see Kate Hepburn as his wife, Ethel, a lover of<lb/>
life and nature to the fullest, ? she picks strawberries<lb/>
and chops wood ? and does her best to convince her<lb/>
husband of 46 years that turning old isn't so bad<lb/>
because they have each other. Together, they babble<lb/>
playfully. He tries to become angry, but she refuses to<lb/>
let him.<lb/>
She does fail in trying to convince her husband that<lb/>
his life isn't quite over. That task is left to Billy (Doug<lb/>
McKeon) a street-smart, 13-year-old who becomes his<lb/>
friend ? a bond that becomes stronger as the story pro-<lb/>
gresses. Norman learns about "cruising chicks" and<lb/>
"sucking face" (kissing) from this adolescent.<lb/>
Fonda's real daughter, Jane, plays Chelsey, the<lb/>
Thayers' only child, a fortyish woman who is bitter<lb/>
toward Norman, divorced and has yet to accomplish<lb/>
anvthing in life.<lb/>
And when she, boyfriend Bill Ray (Billy's father,<lb/>
well-plaved by Dabney Coleman) and Billy venture up<lb/>
to Golden Pond to celebrate her father's 80th birthday,<lb/>
the bitterness erupts. "Not again Ethel says. "Your<lb/>
father loves you To which Chelsey says, "I've never<lb/>
known him<lb/>
The reconciliation scene has been much-talked about,<lb/>
which it should. It is not overplayed as it could have<lb/>
been. We have the daughter who calls her father by his<lb/>
first name and the father who has never shown any out-<lb/>
ward love toward his "fat, little girl Together, they<lb/>
create a scene of beauty and emotion that penetrates far<lb/>
beneath the surface of acting 1 he scene is so realistic -<lb/>
everyone knows of Jane's conflicts with her father. Bui<lb/>
it does not leave the audience crying. Because if it had. ii<lb/>
would have taken awav the film's dignity and turned it<lb/>
into a meaningless rebirth with a soap opera effect.<lb/>
We see a Henrv Fonda, who may have mined in his<lb/>
best performance, reaching both ends of the emotional<lb/>
spectrum. He is a man of humor. ("What's the use ol<lb/>
having a dwarf if he won't work?" he savs to Ethel<lb/>
when she makes Billy stop cleaning Fish.) nd he is emo-<lb/>
tional. (Once, when Ethel sends him out to pick<lb/>
strawberries, he becomes confused and loses his wa in<lb/>
the woods and we see him stumbling back to the cabin in<lb/>
agony. "1 got lost on a path we've been down 1000<lb/>
times he says, tears rolling down his face. But Ethel<lb/>
rescues her "knight in shining armour saving they ?<lb/>
walk down that path together tomorrow.<lb/>
Even though Fonda should receive the Academy<lb/>
Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of Norman<lb/>
Mayer, the most remarkable performance comes from<lb/>
McKeon, who is having conflicts with his divorced<lb/>
father and mother. And when Chelsey and Bill R.o<lb/>
leave him with Norman and Ethel for a month so they<lb/>
can vacation in Europe, he tells the Thayers he knows<lb/>
he's been dumped. He receives sympathy from Ethel but<lb/>
none from Norman -? and grows up in the process.<lb/>
The cinematography is excellent, from the opening<lb/>
scene when Ethel and Norman get out of their cat and<lb/>
walk to the lake to see the looms ? "a husband and<lb/>
wife says Ethel ? to the end when waves slowly make<lb/>
their way to the shore while the sky turns a dark shade<lb/>
of orange, the film gives a glowing portrayal of life On<lb/>
Golden Pond.<lb/>
The same way Fonda and Hepburn give shining ?<lb/>
and memorable ? performances in a beautiful film.<lb/>
Police-A-Go-Go<lb/>
Pop Giants United In Concert<lb/>
Police vocalist Sting plucks away at custom stand-up model bass during last Tuesday's concert.<lb/>
Ktwnr?p ? kfis r? arri<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
and CHARLES SUNE<lb/>
Fans at Greensboro Coliseum last Tuesday evening<lb/>
had a Police man's ball.<lb/>
Beach Club Promotions' pairing of headliners The<lb/>
Police with cutesy all-girl nostalgia act the Go-Go's<lb/>
brought in a mixed bag of over 17,000 progressive music<lb/>
followers and puerile, top-forty teens for a three-and-<lb/>
one-half hour pajama party that delivered a sharply-felt<lb/>
punch.<lb/>
At 8 p.m. the Go-Go's, possibly the most successful<lb/>
all-girl instrumental artists ever, took the stage and car-<lb/>
ried on, as anticipated, with a set of music drawn almost<lb/>
exclusively from their top-ten album, Beauty and The<lb/>
Beat. After responding to overwhelming acceptance by<lb/>
promising a return visit this summer, the arrestingly in-<lb/>
nocent little dance band finished their 45-minute set in a<lb/>
style no better or worse than than that displayed on their<lb/>
album (which is very good indeed).<lb/>
But as teasingly enjoyable as this time spent might<lb/>
have been, it served as mere foreplay. After a brief in-<lb/>
termission, a taped "Voices Inside My Head" summon-<lb/>
ed The Police into their characteristically no-frills stage<lb/>
environment.<lb/>
The band's first complete number, "Message in a<lb/>
Bottle opened hungry ears to drummer Stewart<lb/>
Copeland's thundering, complex backbeat; Andy Sum-<lb/>
mers expertly honed guitar licks, and cocky front-man<lb/>
Sting's siren-like vocals and schooled bass lines.<lb/>
They then went quickly from this into a song that<lb/>
many bands might have reserved for an encore, "Every<lb/>
Little Thing She Does is Magic destined to become a<lb/>
staple of The Police on top-forty radio. After a quick<lb/>
run through "Spirits in the Material World it ap-<lb/>
peared that the concert might slip into a song foi song<lb/>
rehash of latest techno-pop endeavor Ghost in the<lb/>
Machine. By the grace of God, the band raced through<lb/>
only five songs from this debacle.<lb/>
Perhaps earlier than some might have expected, horns<lb/>
were introduced in order to fully reproduce the studio<lb/>
arrangement of "Hungry For You Dcpressingly, the<lb/>
three-piece horn section, that lingered throughout the<lb/>
rest of the concert, was as out of place here as it is on<lb/>
Ghost.<lb/>
The album is a bitter dissappointmcnt tor those<lb/>
Police fundamentalists who still savor the raw, tight,<lb/>
pared-down arrangements and simple production values<lb/>
of songs like "Roxanne "So Lonely "Bring on the<lb/>
Night and "Walking on the Moon" from their<lb/>
groundbreaking first two LPs. (The band did perform<lb/>
fine up-tempo versions of these songs during the even-<lb/>
ing and gave everybody a dose of the ferocious stage<lb/>
presence that is barely hinted at on their records.)<lb/>
Encore number "Can't Stand I osing You" slid neat-<lb/>
ly into a mealey of "Be My Girl ? Sally" and the chan-<lb/>
ting of title cut "Reggatia de Blanc" and back to<lb/>
"Can't Stand Losing You<lb/>
Even a casual fan of The Police, one who occasional-<lb/>
ly raps knuckles on his steering wheel when he hears<lb/>
"De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da" on his car radio, would<lb/>
have to admit that the performance of this band rivals<lb/>
anything done in what has been a sparse season for<lb/>
supcrconcerts ? Rolling Stones tour not excluded.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057454_0006"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
I HI EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2, 1982<lb/>
Non-Credit Mini-Courses Being Offered<lb/>
By Student Center For Spring Semester<lb/>
Several non-credit mini-courses are now being<lb/>
offered by Mendenhall Student Center. In-<lb/>
dividuals who would like to participate in a mini-<lb/>
course must register in person at the Mendenhall<lb/>
Central Ticket Office between the hours of 10<lb/>
a.m. and 4 p.m Monday-Friday. Registration<lb/>
fees will be accepted through the day prior to the<lb/>
first class meeting.<lb/>
Each mini-course has a maximum and<lb/>
minimum enrollment. No refunds of course fees<lb/>
wil be made after the registration deadline unless<lb/>
the course is cancelled due to lack ot enrollment.<lb/>
Each registrant must show his her ID or<lb/>
driver's license and activity card or Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Membrship. with the exception<lb/>
of a spouse or a guest who must be registered by<lb/>
the participating card holder. Following is a list<lb/>
of mini-courses:<lb/>
YOGA, FLEXIBILITY, and MUSCLE CONDI-<lb/>
TIONING ? 6:30 PM - 7:30 PM<lb/>
Mondays (March 15, 22. 29, April 5, and Tues-<lb/>
day, April 13)<lb/>
Instructor: Luc) Mauger ? MSC Room 244 ?<lb/>
Fee SI0.00<lb/>
This course offers the beginning student a<lb/>
Hatha (physical) approach to inner serenity.<lb/>
Controlled posture and breathing exercises will<lb/>
be introduced as a way of relieving anxiety and<lb/>
tension, stimulating circulation, improving<lb/>
stamina, and increasing muscle tone and body<lb/>
suppleness. Without becoming a contortionist,<lb/>
the student can improve his health, vigor, and<lb/>
piece of mind. (NOTE: The first class will be held<lb/>
in MSC Multi-Purpose Room)<lb/>
CALLIGRAPHY ? Tuesdays (Februarv 2, 9.<lb/>
16. 23 and March 2) ? 7 pm - 9 pm<lb/>
Instructor: Karen Podeszwa ? MSC Room 247<lb/>
? Fee: $10:00<lb/>
Students can be expected to come away from<lb/>
this course with a working know ledge of the<lb/>
Chancery Italic, the most popular style of<lb/>
writing. Its appeal is based on its ususable style<lb/>
that is graceful, personable, and contemporary.<lb/>
Chancery, once mastered will be the basis on<lb/>
which to learn the other stvles.<lb/>
POPl'LAR DANCE ? Wednesdays (Februarv<lb/>
3, 10, 17, 24. and March 3) ? 8 pm - 9 pm<lb/>
Instructor: Dolly Mitchum - MSC Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room ? Fee: S10.00<lb/>
Have fun, exercise, and learn the latest dances<lb/>
in this one tl) hour 5-week class. Beginners will<lb/>
be instructed how to perform today's popular<lb/>
dance steps as well as meet people and have a<lb/>
good time.<lb/>
CLOGGING ? Wednesdsays(March 17, 24. 31.<lb/>
April 7 and 21) ? 6 pm - 7 pin<lb/>
Instructor: Nancy Spain hour ? MSC Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room ? Pee: $10.00<lb/>
I cam basic clogging steps to music that makes<lb/>
you uant to move. It's jusl plain hard to nii still<lb/>
once you've learned a tew steps. I reestyle as well<lb/>
.i- couple dancing vull be laughl C logging is a<lb/>
wonderful aerobic exercise and a tension release<lb/>
mechanism.<lb/>
? variety ot crafts workshops have been<lb/>
scheduled for Spring Semester I9S2 and and will<lb/>
be available for enrollment immediately. The<lb/>
workshops ate tree to all members ot the C rails<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
rWOMKMHFltOM<lb/>
COXFLOUST<lb/>
Ml?.?hM.<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
VERY BEST<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
HARBIN HIGHLANDER CENTER, INC.<lb/>
Coin-Operated<lb/>
Laundry<lb/>
and Dry Cleaners<lb/>
Cleanest laundry in town!<lb/>
Color T.V. and Video Games<lb/>
Across from Highway Patrol<lb/>
Station on 10th St.<lb/>
Hours: 8 a.m10 p.m.<lb/>
7 days a week<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY<lb/>
offers for<lb/>
your enjoyment<lb/>
ADVENTURES IN BRITISH THEATRE<lb/>
July 4-17. 1982<lb/>
Two Weeks In London<lb/>
7 British<lb/>
Theatre Performances<lb/>
Tours Of Historic London<lb/>
Covent Gardens Theatre Area<lb/>
Stratford - On - Avon<lb/>
$660<lb/>
Includes Room and<lb/>
2 Meals Daily<lb/>
at the Univ. of London.<lb/>
Does not include trans-<lb/>
atlantic Transportation<lb/>
For more information contact<lb/>
Charles Martin Thompson Theatre,<lb/>
Box 5746, NCSU, Raleigh, N. C. Zip<lb/>
27650. Phone (919) 737-2405.<lb/>
Center. Each member may enroll in one (1)<lb/>
workshop. The cost of a Crafts Center Member-<lb/>
ship is $10.00 per semester which includes the use<lb/>
of the facilities, tool check-out, use of librarv<lb/>
materials, and aid of experienced supervisors.<lb/>
All ECU students, faculty and staff, their<lb/>
spouses and dependents who are Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center members may join the Crafts<lb/>
Center. Dependents must be eighteen (18) years<lb/>
of age or older to be eligible to join.<lb/>
Crafts Center memberships are available dur-<lb/>
ing regular operating hours, 3 pm until 10 pm,<lb/>
Monday through Friday, and 12 Noon until 5 pm<lb/>
Saturday. The workshops are included in the<lb/>
semester fee, but personal supplies must be pur-<lb/>
chased by the participant. Should the Crafts<lb/>
Center furnish supplies for a workshop, a<lb/>
materials fee will be charged. Additional infor-<lb/>
mation about specific materials will be available<lb/>
on the sign-up sheets in the Crafts Center. No<lb/>
refunds will be made after the workshop registra-<lb/>
tion deadline unless a workshop is cancelled due<lb/>
10 low enrollment. All persons interested in tak-<lb/>
ing advantage of these workshops must register<lb/>
at the Crafts Center by the Saturday prior to the<lb/>
first meeting of a workshop. Class space is<lb/>
limited. If you have any questions about class<lb/>
curriculum, materials, or fees please call<lb/>
757-6611. et. 260<lb/>
Following is a list ot available workshops:<lb/>
FLOOR LOOM WEAVING I ? (5 sessions)<lb/>
Thursdays (Februarv 4, II, 18, 25, and March 4)<lb/>
? 6 pm - 9 pm<lb/>
Instructor: Terri Holtzclaw<lb/>
This course, designed for a beginner, will in-<lb/>
clude the basic techniques of weaving. The pro-<lb/>
ject for this five week class will consist of a two<lb/>
color pattern sampler. The student will be in-<lb/>
structed how to warp and dress a four harness<lb/>
counter balance floor loom. All the basic fun-<lb/>
damentals will be covered including warp and<lb/>
yardage calculation, pattern drafting, problem<lb/>
solving, and finishing techniques.<lb/>
FLOOR LOOM WEAVING II ? (6 sessions)<lb/>
Thursdays (March 18, 25. April I, 8, 15. 22) ? 6<lb/>
pm ? 9 pm<lb/>
Instructor: fern Holtzclaw<lb/>
In tins m week class, the student will begin to<lb/>
explore the uses of color, texture, and pattern in<lb/>
the woven item. Emphasis will he made on con-<lb/>
struction ot a garment or other functional item.<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHY ? (5 sessions)<lb/>
Tuesdays (Februarv 2, 9. 16. 23. and March 2) ?<lb/>
7 pm - 10 pm<lb/>
Instructor: Peter Podeszwa<lb/>
This course is an introduction foi beginners to<lb/>
the operation of a 35mm single-lens reflex<lb/>
camci a and to some basic photographic techni-<lb/>
ques. Metsering, depth ot field, shutter speed,<lb/>
aperture control, filters, electronic flash, and<lb/>
types ?! film will be discussed.<lb/>
See NON-CREDIT, Page 7<lb/>
??<lb/>
Conic, terrifying and<lb/>
erotic<lb/>
- TIME MAGAZINE<lb/>
??<lb/>
A STEP BEYOND SCIENCE FICTION.<lb/>
HEAVY METAL is<lb/>
impressiveoff on its<lb/>
own track, combining<lb/>
science fiction,<lb/>
mysticism, sex,<lb/>
violence and rock<lb/>
music<lb/>
? Janet Maslin. NY. TIMES<lb/>
"HEAVY METAL is<lb/>
first-class<lb/>
entertainment<lb/>
- Jay Scott. GLOBE &amp; MAIL<lb/>
"An enormous amount<lb/>
of funfull of grand<lb/>
adventures, including<lb/>
space flights, sword<lb/>
battles, sex scenes and<lb/>
shootouts<lb/>
? Gene Sis' el. CHICAGO TRIBUNL<lb/>
?<lb/>
Wild, uninhibited zany<lb/>
entertainment for the<lb/>
eyes and the ears<lb/>
? Norma McLain Stoop. AFTER DARi<lb/>
"HEAVY METAL is the<lb/>
animated film<lb/>
equivalent of 'Star<lb/>
Wars The film is a<lb/>
visual feast. It has<lb/>
something for<lb/>
everyone<lb/>
? Frank Sanello. LA. DAILY NEWS<lb/>
WEEKEND LATE SHOW FEBRUARY 5th &amp; 6th - 11:00 ? HENDRIX THEATRE -<lb/>
Pre-Registration Issue ?<lb/>
Wednesday, February 17<lb/>
Place your ad early<lb/>
I THE VILLAGER!<lb/>
A ROFFLER FRANCHISE<lb/>
BA RBER A M) S TV I F SHOP<lb/>
LOCATED 10th ST.<lb/>
NEXT TO VILLA ROMA<lb/>
NOU<lb/>
Call 758 3768 or come bv ? Hrs. 8 5:30 Wed Sat<lb/>
SFCAl HAIRCUTS REG. $5.00 g<lb/>
 ()U $4.00 WITH THIS AD<lb/>
v Call<lb/>
IsMrr<lb/>
Un?v<lb/>
Summer Job<lb/>
Opportunities<lb/>
In Camping at<lb/>
FOR:<lb/>
Counselors<lb/>
Lifeguards<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
Sailing &amp; Canoeing<lb/>
Camp Don-Lee<lb/>
Camp Chestnut Ridge<lb/>
Camp Rock fish<lb/>
Nurses<lb/>
Salary<lb/>
Room &amp; Board<lb/>
Benefits<lb/>
N.C. United Methodist Camps<lb/>
Interviews and Information February 8, 1982<lb/>
at ANNUAL CAMP DAY<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-McGuire Brouse Abouts<lb/>
201 W. Washington St. Within walking distance of campus.<lb/>
Dine<lb/>
With Us<lb/>
Marathon<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
The Best in<lb/>
Greek food, Pizzas, and Subs.<lb/>
Try our delicious Souvlakia<lb/>
Special only $2.55<lb/>
Now delivering<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Phone 752-0326<lb/>
Conveniently<lb/>
Located Across From ECU<lb/>
at 506 Evans St.<lb/>
YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER<lb/>
OFF OUR.<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
INVENTORY<lb/>
FEB. 5,6 j(<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
<lb/>
The Medical Store<lb/>
2205 W. 5th St P.O. Box 59<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Phone 756-8371<lb/>
?Diagnostic Sets ? Gloves<lb/>
?Liftman ?Drs. Bags ?Dissecting Kits<lb/>
Stethoscopes ? Blood Pressure<lb/>
?Tuning Forks Equipment<lb/>
Any Type of Product for<lb/>
The Health Care Professional<lb/>
WHY BUY RETAIL - WHEN YOU<lb/>
CAN BUY FROM THE DISTRIBUTER<lb/>
ALL CAMERAS LENSES<lb/>
! ALL PROJECTORS !<lb/>
. ALL PHOTO SUPPLY<lb/>
ALL ART SUPPLIES<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
i?<lb/>
East Carolina Medical Supply Co.<lb/>
ha<lb/>
All<lb/>
D<lb/>
M<lb/>
In<lb/>
di<lb/>
drf<lb/>
v<lb/>
J)<lb/>
lnl<lb/>
i<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057454_0007"/><lb/>
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i<lb/>
Non-Credit Mini-Courses<lb/>
Being Offered By MSC<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2, 1982<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
Participants will be required to shoot film and<lb/>
have it processed for reviewing during class time.<lb/>
Also, participants must have a 35mm SLR or a<lb/>
twin-lens reflex camera to use during the course.<lb/>
DARKROOM TECHNIQUES ? (4 sessions)<lb/>
Mondays (March 15, 22, 29, April 5) ? 6:30 PM<lb/>
- 9:30 PM<lb/>
Instructor: Greg Moll<lb/>
This workshop will provide instruction in<lb/>
developing black and white film, contact prin-<lb/>
ting, enlarging techniques, use of filters, types of<lb/>
paper, and some basic photographic techniques.<lb/>
Participants must have a 35mm or double lens<lb/>
120 camera to use during the duration of the<lb/>
workshop.<lb/>
DRAWING ? (5 sessions)<lb/>
Tuesdays (February 2, 9, 16, 23, March 2) ? 6<lb/>
pm - 9 pm<lb/>
Instructor: Greg Moll<lb/>
The goal for this workshop is to help each in-<lb/>
dividual find hisher own unique approach to in-<lb/>
terpreting objects visually as they draw. Basic<lb/>
techniques of drawing will be explored but in-<lb/>
dividualized methods will be stressed so that the<lb/>
student feels comfortable with his own style o'<lb/>
drawing.<lb/>
WOODWORKING ? (5 sessions)<lb/>
Wednesdays (February 3, 10, 17, 24 and March<lb/>
3) 6:30 PM - 9:30 PM<lb/>
Instructor: Pat McDermott<lb/>
This workshop will offer the basic instruction<lb/>
in simple jointery, construction techniques, and<lb/>
finishing processes of woodworking. Hand tools<lb/>
construction will be stressed for those who do not<lb/>
have elaborate power tools.<lb/>
BASKETRY ? (5 sessions)<lb/>
Wednesdays (February 3, 10, 17, 24 and March<lb/>
3) ? 6 pm - 9 pm<lb/>
Instructor: Terri Holtclaw<lb/>
In this beginner's workshop, the student will<lb/>
be shown how to construct baskets using two dif-<lb/>
ferent methods ? weaving and twining. Cover-<lb/>
ing handles, manipulating shapes, and develop-<lb/>
ing a personal approach to basketry will be ex-<lb/>
plored.<lb/>
POTTERY ? (5 sessions)<lb/>
Section 1 - Tuesdays (February 2, 9, 16, 23, and<lb/>
March 2)<lb/>
Section II - Tuesdays (March 16, 23, 30, April 6<lb/>
and 13)<lb/>
6 pm - 9 pm ? Instructor: Cindy Spivey<lb/>
This workshop will provide basic instruction in<lb/>
clay by teaching wheel-throwing, as well as hand-<lb/>
building techniques. Using a potter's wheel, par-<lb/>
ticipants will learn the fundamentals of wheel<lb/>
throwing with instruction including types of clay,<lb/>
clay preparation, centering, opening, forming a<lb/>
cylinder, and lifting from the wheel. Also, glaz-<lb/>
ing and firing processes will be covered.<lb/>
Participants can expect to have some com-<lb/>
pleted ceramic pieces by the end of the<lb/>
workshop.<lb/>
Glazes will be provided for the workshop. A<lb/>
materials fee of $2.00 will be charged.<lb/>
WATERCOLOR ? (5 sessions)<lb/>
Tuesdays (March 16, 23, 30, April 6 and 13) ? 6<lb/>
pm - 9 pm<lb/>
Instructor: Greg Moll<lb/>
Basic instructions in watercolor painting will<lb/>
be explored in this workshop. Mixing colors,<lb/>
stroke techniques, stretching paper, and com-<lb/>
position are some of the areas that will be<lb/>
covered in this five (5) week course.<lb/>
JEWELRY METALS ? (5 sessions)<lb/>
Mondays (March J5, 22, 29, April 5 and Wednes-<lb/>
day, April 14) ? 6 pm - 9 pm<lb/>
Instructor: Margo Manning<lb/>
In. this five (5) week course, basic fabrication<lb/>
and metal techniques will be introduced. The stu-<lb/>
dent will work on low fire metals such as coppet<lb/>
and brass and cost will be kept minimal.<lb/>
MIXED-DOUBLES BOWLING LEAGUES<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Mixed-Doubles<lb/>
Bowling leagues will begin February 1st and<lb/>
2nd. Each team is required to have two (2) male<lb/>
and two (2) female members all with validated<lb/>
ECU ID cards. The Monday night league will<lb/>
have an organizational meeting on Monday,<lb/>
Februarv 1st at 5:30 PM in the MSC Bowling<lb/>
Center. The Tuesday night league will meet on<lb/>
Tuesday, February 2nd at 5:30 PM. League play<lb/>
will begin directly following each organizational<lb/>
meet inc.<lb/>
?mm<lb/>
doing<lb/>
Whaft a true nature lover<lb/>
with an animal like this?<lb/>
JOHN BLAIR<lb/>
BELUSHI BROWN<lb/>
Continental<lb/>
Divide<lb/>
THURS FRI &amp; SAT. - 5, 7, 9 P.M. - HENDRIX THEATRE - FREE<lb/>
tttttttttttttttttttttftfftftt<lb/>
fttittitlft<lb/>
traffic light<lb/>
Going Out of<lb/>
Business Sale<lb/>
100 to 500 Sale Rack<lb/>
50 to 75<lb/>
Reduction on<lb/>
All Winter<lb/>
Merchandise and<lb/>
30 to 50 OFF<lb/>
All Spring &amp;<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
Merchandise<lb/>
The best fashions in town<lb/>
are now the best value<lb/>
in town.<lb/>
traffic<lb/>
pitt plaza<lb/>
mwwwwwnrwwwvwwwwwwwwwwwwwn<lb/>
Ml Applications AW<lb/>
mm mm<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
UST UMOUNA UMtVHKrrt<lb/>
STUDBfT UNION<lb/>
Chair People<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Committee Members<lb/>
Student Union is now taking ap-<lb/>
plications for chcir people and<lb/>
committee members. Sign up at<lb/>
Mendenhall information desk<lb/>
before February 12.<lb/>
HAVING PROBLEMS<lb/>
with<lb/>
DRUGS? ALCOHOL?<lb/>
<lb/>
k3S<lb/>
We Can Help<lb/>
Students helping Students<lb/>
CAMPUS ALCOHOL &amp; DRUG PROGRAM<lb/>
501-303 Erwin Bldg.<lb/>
757-6793<lb/>
In a Boston hospital<lb/>
a love affair ends,<lb/>
a new one begins,<lb/>
a Doctor battles<lb/>
his patient,<lb/>
and a man learns<lb/>
the true meaning<lb/>
of courage.<lb/>
Whose life is it anyway?<lb/>
Metro-GoWwyn-Mayer Presents A COONEY-SCHUTE PRODUCTION<lb/>
RICHARD DREYFUSS ? JOHN CASSAVETES<lb/>
A John Badham Rim<lb/>
"WHOSE LIFE IS IT ANYWAY?"<lb/>
?i iniiriiMii umwi wwww fwnanWiiiuwiHMinia?OMun?wwwfQoqNPf9mmimimmmmMiMMm<lb/>
Doctor Photography MAFTO<lb/>
Based on the Stage Play WHOSE UFE IS IT ANYWAY?" by BP4AN CLARK Produced by LAWRErJCE P BAOIMANN Dir<lb/>
MetrocotoT c.t?irmcaouwv?wAYCTF?.MCo ??i slm ?tehta?mb?t ut MGMMG??United Artists<lb/>
i? OnMiubon and M?tatin<lb/>
MSTfttCTSO<lb/>
MM! 17 mm I MXMMRYMS<lb/>
MMIT It tttKT jMjfjjj<lb/>
NOW PLAYING AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU<lb/>
i<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057454_0008"/><lb/>
THE FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
982 Ii. '<lb/>
Pear tree Shining As A Starter<lb/>
Peartree slips a pass to a teammate in an earlier iame<lb/>
?? ' C State. Guardim foi the Wolfpack at left is<lb/>
Derrick H hittenhurg. Peartree says the State name ave<lb/>
him some much-needed confidence. (Photo Bv ken<lb/>
Man in)<lb/>
B HAR1 KS( HAND1 KK<lb/>
Sp??fl, I til tut<lb/>
The nine-year-old sal on the<lb/>
iteps oi his house; he was crying<lb/>
He mauled to go play basketball<lb/>
with his oldei brothers, who were<lb/>
six oi seven years his elders. I he<lb/>
would not allow him, at least not<lb/>
until one I eon Whitney stepped<lb/>
in.<lb/>
Whitney made a point to hr m<lb/>
the youngster along. I hough his<lb/>
brothers would not select him to<lb/>
plav on their team during a pick<lb/>
up game, young Bruce Peartree<lb/>
was always selected b the cordial<lb/>
Whitney<lb/>
"Yeah Peartree says, "I'll<lb/>
nevei forget Mr. Whitney. He'd<lb/>
always make sure 1 got a fail<lb/>
shot<lb/>
The scene was PantegO, N C<lb/>
and (hose were the days when the<lb/>
young Peartree was just learning<lb/>
about the game ol basketball.<lb/>
1 ater on Peartree got the last<lb/>
laugh, lust last year college<lb/>
recruiters were hot after the<lb/>
guard who had led Pantego High<lb/>
School to two consecutive state<lb/>
I-A titles. Among them was las!<lb/>
 ai olina's Dave Odom. The<lb/>
others included 1 ouisville's Den<lb/>
ny t mm and North Carolina's<lb/>
Dean Smith.<lb/>
Smith look himsell<lb/>
picture aftet he signed i s Wilni<lb/>
ington 1 aney standout Mil<lb/>
Jordan. Odom then outdu<lb/>
the rest ol the crowd, agning<lb/>
Peai tree eai ly last spi ing<lb/>
I he inking ol the 6 I all<lb/>
point guard hai turned in<lb/>
crucial move foi (dom v<lb/>
ECl 's startei ai the point, I'ony<lb/>
Hles, went down with a brol<lb/>
hand two weeks ago, I<lb/>
stepped in and has not shitted in<lb/>
to a lower geai since.<lb/>
In the tour games thai B<lb/>
has Keen out Peat<lb/>
50 points. 11i.i: avera<lb/>
12.5 points pei gamt. set. i<lb/>
on the learn during the 1<lb/>
span H;s seas m; a ei i<lb/>
been boosted to 5 9 ,<lb/>
the recent sui.<lb/>
"We knew that Hi u<lb/>
a fine playei said I <lb/>
lain coach David Pend<lb/>
"but he has come kei<lb/>
I han any ol us imagined<lb/>
Pendei<lb/>
tree's quick adjustment<lb/>
i A high st hool to a<lb/>
lege to simple hard wi <lb/>
"Bruce is a fierce<lb/>
He likes compeiitii m ai<lb/>
atraid ol a challenge <lb/>
ol a fact, he welcon<lb/>
Spider FT's<lb/>
Defeat Pirates<lb/>
BvHVR1 1 s IIWDI I R<lb/>
i<lb/>
11 (<lb/>
Mid hall bui ha<lb/>
?n 12th eann ?<lb/>
R<lb/>
the wax<lb/>
M A<lb/>
dav<lb/>
Sou ?<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
I he Ri<lb/>
 ? 2-1<lb/>
possess<lb/>
"I<lb/>
m<lb/>
conference ' I hey pla<lb/>
?' pe ol<lb/>
game hat playing hard was noi<lb/>
N i mi must play smai R<lb/>
Ml' HMMSII ?<lb/>
II ire a<lb/>
( d 'in said k i<lb/>
? ? ? .<lb/>
? ?. nsiv e b ai d<lb/>
"Id<lb/>
: ' I . e I V<lb/>
dt tense we trie . iem<lb/>
It's to<lb/>
?<lb/>
? '<lb/>
?evasions,<lb/>
k a 36-34 - ? oom ai<lb/>
lunnt<lb/>
hall Ricl I 10-2 to<lb/>
i ady hv h n. 4' ???<lb/>
( harles Gi een lay up.<lb/>
. aindei I anu<lb/>
belonged so lev to R<lb/>
 as the Spid.<lb/>
ECU duard Bruce Peartree Beats Richmond's Press<lb/>
lohnson was one ol six Spiders K .<lb/>
anu who scored in double figures He advantagi<lb/>
nd. finished w ith 14. w hile lohi<lb/>
ored Schweitz tallied 16, I"om Bethea 13, 45 6 pei r I (. I<lb/>
be I final 17 Bill Five 12, and Jeff Pehl and And<lb/>
minutes to steal lv Heher 10 apiece<lb/>
Richi I's I ing Freshman guard Bruce Peartree 14.<lb/>
late in the same a perfect, led the way foi ECl with a game- I (. I bad<lb/>
'4 ? h and career-high of 20 points. Junioi day, hostinu Ba<lb/>
tnd 12 in centei AI Mack added 16 and 7:30 p.m. M<lb/>
ist 2:(K) Ml of the sophomore forward Mori's jseu<lb/>
tinal 12 came me op Hargrove scored 14. atu<lb/>
portunit j em were cann Hargrove also pulled down a when Old l<lb/>
. Keh  I hnson game-high ten rebounds. Greenville<lb/>
James Madison Wins Pair, Raises Lead<lb/>
sv Scoreboard on page 9 for stan-<lb/>
dings, schedule and results.<lb/>
JAMI S MADlSt took a firm<lb/>
grip on the ! I A South lead last<lb/>
week with wins over Navy and<lb/>
 ie i ge Masm.<lb/>
I he I hikes, last season's con<lb/>
representatives in<lb/>
N AA tournament, are now 6-1 in<lb/>
nee play and. 15-3 overall.<lb/>
William and Mary is two games<lb/>
back in the league standings with a<lb/>
3 2 mark Anothei halt game bad<lb/>
are 1 as!arolina and Richmond,<lb/>
both standing al 2 2.<lb/>
1 ast Wednesday the Dukes got 19<lb/>
points and nine rebounds from<lb/>
senior lorward Linton rownes to<lb/>
dispose of Navy. 59-49. Guard Rob<lb/>
Romaine paced the Midshipmen<lb/>
with 20 points<lb/>
I Ml came hack on Saturday lo<lb/>
dump ieorge Mason, s stenter<lb/>
I )an Ruland had a big night, tally ing<lb/>
24 points, fhe ever-dependable<lb/>
rownes added 16 points and 10 re-<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
1 HI GAME ol the week was pro-<lb/>
bably Saturday's William and<lb/>
Mary Navy game, which went into<lb/>
overtime before the Indians canu<lb/>
away with a 4"? 46 victory.<lb/>
Guard Billv Barnes made both<lb/>
ends ol a one-and-one with 14<lb/>
seconds remaining to put V illiam<lb/>
and Mary up by one. A lai second<lb/>
shot by Rob Romaine failed tor<lb/>
Navy as ihe Midshippmen dropped<lb/>
to 1-3 in the league and K-9 overall.<lb/>
ECAC<lb/>
South<lb/>
Report<lb/>
father in the week the Indians<lb/>
had played tlantic v a Con-<lb/>
ference membei Maryland a close<lb/>
game bet ore falling 50-43. I he con<lb/>
test was closer than the final score<lb/>
indicates, as the two clubs were tied<lb/>
with at 43 with just 16 seconds re-<lb/>
maining<lb/>
Nil BIGGES1 of the week's<lb/>
games was perhaps Saturday'<lb/>
Richmond-EC I matchup<lb/>
I he Spiders overcame a nine<lb/>
point deficit to win by ten, 81-71.<lb/>
Richmond made 14 ol its last u free<lb/>
i hr iw s to sec ure the v ictory.<lb/>
Bothclubs ate now tied for third<lb/>
place with identical 2 2 marks. An<lb/>
1( I win would have left the Pirates<lb/>
at J-l and in sole possession of se-<lb/>
v ond place<lb/>
I he Puaics had earliei pulled ofl<lb/>
a 71-M upset of I N( Charlotte on<lb/>
Wednesday I he 49ers came into the<lb/>
fame with a 13 3 mark<lb/>
Ol D DOMINION got its first<lb/>
league win ol the yeai last week,<lb/>
defeating George Mason 71-63 lo<lb/>
break a three-game losing streak<lb/>
Senioi forward Ronnie McAdoo<lb/>
scored 22 points and pulled down 13<lb/>
rebounds to pace the Monarch win.<lb/>
Centei Mark West and guard Billy<lb/>
Mann both added 17 points.<lb/>
I he Monarchs also defeated<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth during the<lb/>
week. ODU's 61-58 win ended<lb/>
VCl 's four-game winning streak<lb/>
over the Monarchs.<lb/>
IH1 COMING WEEK has three<lb/>
conference games on tap. On<lb/>
Wednesday, Richmond travels lo<lb/>
Old Dominion. William and Mary is<lb/>
ai George Mason on Ihursdav and<lb/>
at Richmond on Satuidav.<lb/>
I he Indians also hav i <lb/>
conference fame dun:nei<lb/>
seven days, hosting Mi<lb/>
teience powei ii ginia<lb/>
Monday night.<lb/>
(ld Dominion a?<lb/>
outside opponent, travi<lb/>
thward on Saturdav to lacSi<lb/>
Joseph's, an Ni tout nevSUl -<lb/>
pi ise las! veai and ow nei16 )<lb/>
record tins season<lb/>
Easi C arolina's only fame it the<lb/>
week is on Ihutsdav, when H.<lb/>
College will invade Mil(<lb/>
iseum<lb/>
chall<lb/>
?<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
?<lb/>
e A . ?<lb/>
I v<lb/>
??<lb/>
i<lb/>
i . ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
H<lb/>
i<lb/>
pi kiri?<lb/>
Football Schedule<lb/>
Features Pair Of<lb/>
1981 Bowl Champs<lb/>
i w<lb/>
. I<lb/>
K ka i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ml( lib <lb/>
:<lb/>
l-A (ID1<lb/>
<lb/>
lEDl ?-<lb/>
i<lb/>
ep foi ai d femplt<lb/>
The I ad Pirates Have Come fopether Of I ate<lb/>
Red-Hot Lady Bucs Now Face E. Tennessee St.<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPKKK<lb/>
Managing f dtior<lb/>
After trouncing Appalachian<lb/>
State 76-45 Friday and riding a<lb/>
seven game winning streak, last<lb/>
Carolina's 1 adv Pirates must now<lb/>
prepare to host highly touted Easi<lb/>
Tennessee State University Wednes-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Sam Jones provided 24 points and<lb/>
seven rebounds against Sl with<lb/>
foul teammates also hitting in dou<lb/>
ble digi'ts. Darlene Chaney added<lb/>
13, 1 illion Barnes 11 and Mary<lb/>
Denkler and 1 oletha Harrison 10<lb/>
each as the Pirates notched then<lb/>
11th win against seven losses.<lb/>
"That was our third away win in<lb/>
a row said ECU coach Cathy An<lb/>
druzzi. "We kept them to just 4s<lb/>
points - our defense was a real<lb/>
"Might spot<lb/>
"We preach and prcav h am<lb/>
preach and when (the defense<lb/>
works, u creates foi othei areas ol<lb/>
out game<lb/>
?ndi ui praised loiH s and<lb/>
Barnes foi earning "Rai ol the<lb/>
Game" honors foi theii defensive<lb/>
efforts. Each, she noted, held theii<lb/>
opposing plavei to iiist two points.<lb/>
Easi fennessee will be looking to<lb/>
avenge an 83 "4 the I ady Pirates<lb/>
handed them a yeai ago I he I ady<lb/>
Bucs ol 1 I SI will have the advan<lb/>
tage of experience this nine, as<lb/>
senioi Marsha Cowan combines<lb/>
w ith freshman Lori I lines in i he<lb/>
backcouri for a combined J5<lb/>
points an outing<lb/>
At h 3. sophomore centei I eigh<lb/>
Jaffke is strong inside with 8 5<lb/>
pomis and 6.1 i ebounds pv i can<lb/>
"i Maisha c owart) had H) againsi<lb/>
us lasi yeai At. she avi .? 24<lb/>
this ear iivli u. ? ? : I ? ?<lb/>
this fame we can't It I 24<lb/>
points.<lb/>
"W e're coming a, i oss a b<lb/>
Wednesday Ihev'ie big inside, so<lb/>
we're goillj I ? e lo b ' out bet<lb/>
ici than we have W can' afl rd a<lb/>
sloppy fame we can'i afford<lb/>
stupid mistakes<lb/>
"We're pleased with oui girls not<lb/>
because ol the wins, bin because ol<lb/>
I he vv av w e v o)<lb/>
"We are not doing anything spec<lb/>
taculai We an playing fundamen-<lb/>
tal basketball We'vt averaged only<lb/>
n turnovers a fame in the last three<lb/>
fames while forcing out opponents<lb/>
into 2S tin trovers a game We don't<lb/>
gamble much on steals, bui we are<lb/>
?<lb/>
Denkler's I9.?<lb/>
bounds ?<lb/>
16 4<lb/>
6 rebounds.<lb/>
"Ofl<lb/>
looking foi<lb/>
burden off Sa<lb/>
ndin. "Denk<lb/>
blem vv<lb/>
king to b<lb/>
"Overall, I'm please ?<lb/>
mce between inside <lb/>
gettinj<lb/>
players complimen<lb/>
"In each of our as<lb/>
e ve had rive pla<lb/>
figures - thai says some<lb/>
om k"am P?ay and<lb/>
gotten ofl the bench "<lb/>
<pb facs="00057454_0009"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
M-BRUARY 2. 1VK2<lb/>
: k !<lb/>
<lb/>
re-<lb/>
s are<lb/>
g ihe<lb/>
-end<lb/>
a Ik Me<lb/>
i she's<lb/>
ihe<lb/>
side<lb/>
v Our<lb/>
lher.<lb/>
games<lb/>
uible<lb/>
about<lb/>
we've<lb/>
Pirate Swimmers<lb/>
Sweep Appalachian<lb/>
 - ?a  -?tftr -Ji 71<lb/>
By THOMAS BRAME<lb/>
Awl Sports r diiir<lb/>
The ECU swimming learns weni<lb/>
to Boone last weekend and came<lb/>
home with two impressive wins over<lb/>
Appalachian State.<lb/>
The ECU men won 56-14 while<lb/>
the women prevailed 76-52.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates took 11 first<lb/>
place finishes in their quest to vic-<lb/>
tory. The 200 medley relay team<lb/>
continued its success by eclipsing its<lb/>
own varsitv record with a time of<lb/>
1:53.9.<lb/>
Sally Collins took individual fusts<lb/>
in the 400 individual medley and the<lb/>
500 freestyle. Nan George was a<lb/>
double winner in the 50 and 100<lb/>
freestyle events.<lb/>
Solo winners included Jennifer<lb/>
Jayse in the 100 backstroke. Dordi<lb/>
Henrikson in the 200 butterfly,<lb/>
ancy James in the 2(X freestyle,<lb/>
and Lori McQueston in the 100 but-<lb/>
terfiy event.<lb/>
Kim Lowe took firsts in both the<lb/>
one and three meter diing events.<lb/>
"This was a low-key meet fot<lb/>
us said Assistant Moll) Delozier.<lb/>
"We did not swim our best times to<lb/>
win this meet<lb/>
The ECU men had an easy time of<lb/>
it also as they took eight firsts en<lb/>
route to victory.<lb/>
Double winners were Stan<lb/>
Williams in the 50 and 100 free style<lb/>
events and Scott Eagle in the one<lb/>
and three meter diving events.<lb/>
Ciregor Wray continued his suc-<lb/>
cess by winning the 1650 freestyle<lb/>
with a time of 17:19.75.<lb/>
Joe Nelson won the 200 freestyle<lb/>
and Doug MacMillan took the 100<lb/>
butterfly to round out the Pirate<lb/>
firsts in indiidual events.<lb/>
The 400 medley relay team came<lb/>
away with a win with a time of<lb/>
3:38.55.<lb/>
1 he Pirates must continue to<lb/>
swim good because Duke is next on<lb/>
the agenda, last year, Duke swept<lb/>
both the ECU men and women. The<lb/>
1 ady Pirates have never beaten the<lb/>
Blue Devils.<lb/>
The Pirates end their regular<lb/>
season this Saturday at Duke. The<lb/>
swimming gets underway at 1 p.m.<lb/>
Ihe men then go to the Eastern<lb/>
Regionats in Pittsburgh on March<lb/>
3-6. Ihe women will travel to Idaho<lb/>
for the Nationals March 10-13.<lb/>
SCOREBOARD<lb/>
M M -MM IHSUMHM.S<lb/>
( .ml Kri'ifil<lb/>
i.HUCN Mddl'll<lb/>
WiUiaai arnJ Mjh<lb/>
tatl anilma<lb/>
Ku tun -ltd<lb/>
OIJ I).?num.n<lb/>
KlL'l MUM'II<lb/>
hi<lb/>
i :<lb/>
i <lb/>
14<lb/>
Or.ll<lb/>
15-3<lb/>
I-<lb/>
-? IQ<lb/>
12-<lb/>
?<lb/>
I Y<lb/>
Hjpn- .i I .i- ai iiiu<lb/>
???l . Jrh ft<lb/>
I K"tt Mi a I<lb/>
 )ld IJ'lun Ji Si I<lb/>
l.iin S.i. ji Na )<lb/>
 irjiitiu t uiiitwitiwtalil t '<lb/>
 U llllHltl Mr . H<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
ECU Swimmers Compete In Earlier Meet Against UNC<lb/>
Frosh Pace Lady Bucs<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
Classified ads mull be taken ONLY<lb/>
during the following hours<lb/>
?Monday - I IS J 00<lb/>
I .sdav - 3 00 3 00<lb/>
Wcdnesdav ? I IS 3 00<lb/>
Thu' sdav - 2 00 3 00<lb/>
Frida - I IS I 00<lb/>
You musi place the ads m person<lb/>
and pay lor them in adva'Ki<lb/>
Rates are Ji for the first IS words<lb/>
and i OS pir words alter the lirst<lb/>
fifteen<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
WATERBEDS DOS T pay retail<lb/>
tor you' heated w.aterbed ouy<lb/>
direct from mql ana save Buy a<lb/>
complete 1st quality P'n wood<lb/>
heated waterbed with is yi war<lb/>
ranty tor as low as S18s (Queen)<lb/>
S!?' iKmq Lavaway av.nl Call<lb/>
David tor appointment 7Sb 2406<lb/>
KEROSENE AND quarti maters<lb/>
lor sale can and pump included<lb/>
Call 7S7 1920<lb/>
ZENITH PHOTO Enlarqer lenv<lb/>
carrying case Portable like new<lb/>
i0 Call 'S3 SS8I After S<lb/>
4 PORSCHE vYv Rims and<lb/>
Mounted SB Sears Radats -<lb/>
Some Tread SS0 Can 7S3 SS8I<lb/>
After S<lb/>
OFFICIAL JOVAN pos'ers of the<lb/>
Boiimq Stones i?8t American<lb/>
Tour. Limited Quantity Call Bill<lb/>
'S8 8602<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ISO PER MONTH, : blocks Irom<lb/>
campus Room ate Needed iSO<lb/>
deposit and one third utilities<lb/>
t$1 3038<lb/>
WAN'ED FEMALE<lb/>
?oomateiiSO S160 uncl rent ?<lb/>
jtihtiesi 2 blocks Irom campus<lb/>
Need Bedroom Furniture 7SB S36I<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE FEMALE<lb/>
wanted to share 2 bedroom<lb/>
townhouse rent is 1112.SO plus ?<lb/>
utilities Non smoker pielered<lb/>
C?N 7S2 4494<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE Private<lb/>
bedroom S83 monthly plus ? e?<lb/>
penses, 7 lOths of a mile Irom<lb/>
campus 7S8 S24S Pets allowed<lb/>
TWO PEOPLE wanted to share<lb/>
larqe house with younq couple in<lb/>
Lake Ellsworth. Greenville Con<lb/>
venient to hospital and university<lb/>
S120 per month plus I 4 utilities<lb/>
Deposit required Can 7S6 630e<lb/>
after s p m<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
COUNSELORS FOR western<lb/>
North CArolina co ed summer<lb/>
camp Room, meals, laundry,<lb/>
salary and travel allowance E?<lb/>
pertence not necesaty but must<lb/>
enjoy livinq and workmq with<lb/>
children Only clean cut non<lb/>
smokmq college students need ap<lb/>
pi, Foi application brochure<lb/>
write Camp Pmewood 180'<lb/>
Cleveland Rd . Miami Beach Fla<lb/>
33141<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
CARICATURES BY WEYLER<lb/>
Greenville s onqinal personalued<lb/>
art service Have a cartoon donw<lb/>
os yoursel1 or a loved one a uni<lb/>
que qitt icea' $10 for 8I0, b'w or<lb/>
color Call 7S2 577S<lb/>
TYPING TERM thesis.<lb/>
resumes dissertation etc Pro<lb/>
tessional quality at Lowest rates<lb/>
Call Kerrpie Dunn anytime<lb/>
7S2 6733<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Call Amy at<lb/>
757 3734<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST lor<lb/>
term research, thesis papers, ar<lb/>
ticles tor publication, dissrlations,<lb/>
etc Reasonable Rates. Call<lb/>
7S7 1378 atler 4<lb/>
WANT TO learn about drawing<lb/>
without going to Art school<lb/>
MendenhaU Crafts Center otters<lb/>
drawing, starting Feb. 2 Contact<lb/>
Linda Barkand at CraM Cenler or<lb/>
Greq Moll 752 26?7<lb/>
Want to know HOW TO MAKE<lb/>
BETTER USE OF YOUR TIME<lb/>
Booklet at ECU Bookstore<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
ATTENTION Do you have an in<lb/>
teresting or unique dorm room?<lb/>
The Buccaneer is searching for<lb/>
those special rooms on campus for<lb/>
a lew photographs All interested<lb/>
persons contact The Buccaneer at<lb/>
7S7 650!<lb/>
PATSY Dallas" and 'Falcons<lb/>
Crest' never were so interesting<lb/>
Maybe we can try agam - soon, I<lb/>
hope See you around the ofticels)<lb/>
JD<lb/>
WANTED SAN FRANCISCO<lb/>
4?'ers Pepsi Cap Neqotiabie<lb/>
7S7 6IS3 work and 355 2362 home.<lb/>
CHRIS MERCI tor those "well<lb/>
done steaks Frenchly Yours<lb/>
7 11 l?59<lb/>
TO THE quy on the caboose I<lb/>
remember another episode on the<lb/>
M Tram Little Washington will<lb/>
never be the same I must admil.<lb/>
it was another typical "Joe Job"?<lb/>
But don t worry my triend lor this<lb/>
isn 1 the end, there's always<lb/>
Driver's Ed m the tall Signed,<lb/>
another innocent rider on the<lb/>
M Train<lb/>
BY CYNTHIA<lb/>
PLEASANTS<lb/>
ford. Np?rl? Irtiler<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
Track team placed in<lb/>
several events this past<lb/>
Saturday at the Moving<lb/>
Comfort Invitational in<lb/>
Blacksburg,Virginia.<lb/>
The invitational,<lb/>
which is fast becoming<lb/>
one of the major in-<lb/>
door meets for women<lb/>
in the United States, in-<lb/>
cluded such top schools<lb/>
as Tennessee, North<lb/>
Carolina State, Penn<lb/>
Slate, Virginia and<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
Arnette Kelly and Li<lb/>
Fraham, both freshmen<lb/>
here at ECU, placed<lb/>
third in the 300-meter<lb/>
RIDERS<lb/>
RIDE TO CHARLOTTESVILLE<lb/>
Virginia Weekend ol February 12,<lb/>
Leave anytime Will Pay for Gas<lb/>
Call Debbie 752 7247<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
South's<lb/>
No. 6<lb/>
Tues Feb. 2<lb/>
Video Rock<lb/>
on 7 Ft. TV<lb/>
??? ?<lb/>
Rock ;<lb/>
ightclub ?<lb/>
j Wed Feb. 3<lb/>
CHRTSftUS fttCOROtftG IRTISH<lb/>
ili!jlli7jJiJLjIi4i:JJiii<lb/>
L<lb/>
9 9<lb/>
with Fabulous Knobs<lb/>
'Wsufis pizza ? Hem's- run? pis -hippv sn<lb/>
events. Kelly, a top<lb/>
recruit, had a time of<lb/>
:45.4, while Graham<lb/>
had a slightly slower<lb/>
time of 46.5.<lb/>
Kelly placed fourth<lb/>
in the 60-yard , dash<lb/>
with a lime of 7.3.<lb/>
Freshman Davene<lb/>
Cherry, who specializes<lb/>
in sprinting, also placed<lb/>
sixth in the 60-yard<lb/>
dash with a time of<lb/>
7.64.<lb/>
Eva Brennan, who<lb/>
holds the ECU record<lb/>
in the 1500-meter<lb/>
event, placed sixth in<lb/>
the same event with at<lb/>
time of 5:08.65.<lb/>
Freshman Lisa<lb/>
Whitley placed sixth in<lb/>
the 1000-meter race<lb/>
with a time of 3:16.1.<lb/>
Carolyn Moore, did<lb/>
not qualify in the<lb/>
400-meter event, but<lb/>
still had a good time of<lb/>
:62.<lb/>
The foursome of Kel-<lb/>
ly, Cherry, Graham,<lb/>
and Moore placed<lb/>
fourth in the 450-relay<lb/>
race combining for a<lb/>
lime of 1:23.4.<lb/>
Head coach Pat<lb/>
McGuigan said she was<lb/>
pleased with the team's<lb/>
performance. "We're<lb/>
gaining more indoor<lb/>
meet e x pe r i e n c c -<lb/>
something these girls<lb/>
have never hadshe<lb/>
said, "We look more<lb/>
experienced and that's<lb/>
important<lb/>
I HIS WH.K SN HUM I I<lb/>
l.rv trb 2<lb/>
AiiKiu.ui .i) V.ilh.111! and Mjt<lb/>
i.i.Ht! tkoxhinylH Viv <lb/>
,ntMiii Siju .ii lui'ii Mjsn<lb/>
Maivtumj al W ilium anil M.m<lb/>
Viid Irh 1<lb/>
 KulnlWitil .11 OIJ l)"HMhl.<lb/>
I.ink- Madtvm at t .m'rKli<lb/>
Ihun. trh 4<lb/>
 William and Man .n ticxpt Mas<lb/>
Mi.? I Hi ?<lb/>
Viiyiiiu Uvl a 'tl<lb/>
- lhlr iinhrrnn l.nmr<lb/>
I M WIlksHIMIlN<lb/>
 l i l . .<lb/>
 I.U1H M.l.l: ?'( N ?<lb/>
M . ,1 liul 'ii Will  J M.<lb/>
I  I .11 i  l l i i i<lb/>
? ill !)? ii mi hi 61. Va <lb/>
 I.hi M.i.i.<lb/>
X H - i I , i ,?<lb/>
 W iRu ' ! 17. J ii 11 ,<lb/>
Sigma Nu<lb/>
Little Sister Rush<lb/>
i i i i x i i i i r i i r i i i t r<lb/>
Every Day<lb/>
11:00-11:00<lb/>
300 E. 10th St.<lb/>
758-6121<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town ? Honest<lb/>
Wednesday, February 3<lb/>
Thursday, February 4<lb/>
Parties start at 9:00<lb/>
1301 Cotanche Street<lb/>
for Rides Call 758-7640<lb/>
Game<lb/>
Machines<lb/>
Big Screen<lb/>
TV<lb/>
Drive-Up<lb/>
Window for<lb/>
To Go Orders<lb/>
Every Day - Buffet 11:00-2:00$2.79<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues. - Buffet 500-8:002.89<lb/>
Wed. - -Ail You Con tot Sfjuyhelti so-8:002.25<lb/>
Thurs. ? Lasagna 5:00-8:00Two for 3.60<lb/>
k<lb/>
smmmmmmiiiini<lb/>
ima<lb/>
SP0RTSW0RU)<lb/>
WS<lb/>
756-6000;<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
PIZZA, SALAD, SPAGHETTI, SOUP<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
Mon-Sun. 11:30-2:00 $2.69<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues. 6:00-8:30 $2.89<lb/>
?<lb/>
104 Red Banks R4. (Behind Shoney's)<lb/>
 Tuesday Night ?<lb/>
ECU NIGHT<lb/>
JUST $1.00 with ID includes Skate Rental<lb/>
7:00-10:00<lb/>
Every Friday &amp; Saturday Night<lb/>
ECU Students are admitted for<lb/>
JUST $2.00 including Skate Rental<lb/>
jfe??:<lb/>
.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DAY<lb/>
ARGE PORTION<lb/>
OF SPAGHETTI,<lb/>
GARLIC BREAD $1.88<lb/>
BONUS TRIP TO SALAD BAR $.49<lb/>
Hwy. 264 Bypass, Greenville<lb/>
Selection of Ladies1 Tennis<lb/>
Clothing. Excellent for<lb/>
Racquetball &amp; Tennis<lb/>
75 OFF<lb/>
All Ski Clothing<lb/>
By Aspen, Pacific Trail<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
MIRiPSfiiE<lb/>
Thursday, Friday, Saturday<lb/>
Selection of Men's<lb/>
and Ladies' Warm-l ps<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
Robert Bruce Sweaters<lb/>
b Arnold Palmer<lb/>
Reg. S35.00<lb/>
NOW! 1995<lb/>
Available in -Neck<lb/>
&amp;( tew Neck<lb/>
Tennis Ball by Wilson &amp; Penn<lb/>
Yes. Buy 2 cans for $5.00 and SAVE<lb/>
Regularly $2.98 per can<lb/>
Bu 1 pr.<lb/>
of SOCKS<lb/>
at reg. price and<lb/>
1 get the 2nd pr.<lb/>
HAVE A DOLLAR! 11 off equal<lb/>
LIKE TO SAVE A DOLLAR? A j or less value<lb/>
USE THIS COUPON ON ANY for only $1.00<lb/>
 PURCHASE OF NON-SALE ITEMS. -1<lb/>
EXPIRES 2?2<lb/>
f!J<lb/>
RACQUETBALL SPECIAL<lb/>
BUY A WILSON RACQUETBALL RACKET<lb/>
AND RECEIVE A WILSON TOTE BAG<lb/>
VALUE OF $19 FREE<lb/>
SEE US FOR FURTHER DETAILS<lb/>
H.L. HODGESDOWNTOWN<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
ARLINGTON BLVD.<lb/>
HBffiHB<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057454_0010"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 2. 1982<lb/>
West Is Double Leader<lb/>
Though Old Domi-<lb/>
nion is off to a slow 9-8<lb/>
start, the Monarchs<lb/>
have the ECAC-<lb/>
South's scoring, re-<lb/>
bounding and assist<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
ODU center Mark<lb/>
West leads the con-<lb/>
ference in both scoring<lb/>
and rebounding. The<lb/>
6-10 junior is averaging<lb/>
17.2 points per game<lb/>
and 10.2 rebounds.<lb/>
West also is the<lb/>
league leader in block-<lb/>
ed shots with 77<lb/>
tlirough 17 games. He<lb/>
leads the entire nation<lb/>
in that category.<lb/>
Richmond forward<lb/>
John Scweitz follows<lb/>
West in the scoring<lb/>
race, tallying 16.9<lb/>
points per contest.<lb/>
Freshman guard Carlos<lb/>
Yates of George Mason<lb/>
is next with a 16.7<lb/>
average.<lb/>
James Madison for-<lb/>
ward Linton Townes,<lb/>
at 16.2, and George<lb/>
Mason guard Andy<lb/>
Bolden, at 151, round<lb/>
out the top five.<lb/>
Ronnie McAdoo,<lb/>
like West an ODU<lb/>
Monarch, is second on<lb/>
the rebounding stat list<lb/>
with an average of 8.6<lb/>
pulls.<lb/>
Another ODU<lb/>
player, guard Grant<lb/>
Robinson, is the<lb/>
league's assist leader.<lb/>
He is averaging 4.9 per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
East Carolina's<lb/>
representatives among<lb/>
the league lists are<lb/>
Charles Green and<lb/>
Morris Hargrove.<lb/>
Green is 13th in the<lb/>
league with a 11.1 scor-<lb/>
ing average, while<lb/>
Hargrove is 15th at<lb/>
10.8.<lb/>
Hargrove stands<lb/>
ninth in rebounding,<lb/>
pulling down 5.6<lb/>
boards a game.<lb/>
m<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
iTf M POLICY<lb/>
Each ot these advertised items is required lo be readily available lor<lb/>
I below the advertised price in each AP Store, except ? specifically<lb/>
in this ad<lb/>
sale at or<lb/>
noted )<lb/>
Peartree Popular Back Home<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT FEB. 4, AT AAP IN GREENVILLE N. C.<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
EC AC-SOUTH LEADERS<lb/>
SCORING<lb/>
?Muter, learn<lb/>
Mark West, ODU<lb/>
John Scweitz, Richmond<lb/>
(. ,iiIon Yates, Li.Mason<lb/>
1 inton rowncs, J.Madison<lb/>
nd Bolden, G.Mason<lb/>
Andre Gaddy, G.Mason<lb/>
Ronnie McAdoo, ODU<lb/>
Ron Romaine. Navy<lb/>
)jn Ruland, J.Madison<lb/>
Keith Ciepiicki. W&amp;M<lb/>
Bill Mann. ODU<lb/>
Bill live. Richmond<lb/>
Charles Green. ECt1<lb/>
Mike Sirayhorn. W&amp;M<lb/>
Morris Hargrove, ECU<lb/>
G - Pts.<lb/>
17-292<lb/>
18-304<lb/>
17-214<lb/>
18-291<lb/>
17-274<lb/>
17-249<lb/>
17-246<lb/>
16-224<lb/>
18-225<lb/>
16-195<lb/>
17-205<lb/>
18-215<lb/>
17-188<lb/>
12-133<lb/>
17-183<lb/>
REBOUNDING<lb/>
IMuter. learn<lb/>
Mark Wesl, OIl<lb/>
Ronnie McAdoo, ODU<lb/>
Andre Gadd. G.Mason<lb/>
Dan Ruland. J.Madison<lb/>
Mike Shannon. Ci.Mason<lb/>
1 inion rowncs, J.Madison<lb/>
Jefl Pehl, Richmond<lb/>
Bill Rye, Richmond<lb/>
MnrrK Hargrove. ECU<lb/>
Garv Price. Naw<lb/>
ASSISTS<lb/>
Plater, I earn<lb/>
(iranl Robinson, ODU<lb/>
Rob Romaine. Naw<lb/>
H.lly Barnes, W&amp;M<lb/>
lorn Bethea, Richmond<lb/>
BilK Mann, ODU<lb/>
G ? -<lb/>
11-84<lb/>
16-71<lb/>
18-57<lb/>
17-M<lb/>
Avr.<lb/>
17.2<lb/>
16.9<lb/>
16.7<lb/>
16.2<lb/>
15.1<lb/>
14.6<lb/>
14.5<lb/>
14.0<lb/>
12.5<lb/>
12.2<lb/>
12.1<lb/>
11.9<lb/>
11.1<lb/>
111<lb/>
10.8<lb/>
Avg.<lb/>
10.2<lb/>
8.6<lb/>
7.5<lb/>
7.0<lb/>
6.8<lb/>
6.1<lb/>
6.0<lb/>
5.7<lb/>
5.6<lb/>
5.4<lb/>
Avg.<lb/>
49<lb/>
4.4<lb/>
4.3<lb/>
3.2<lb/>
i.i<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
man rather than take the shot<lb/>
himself<lb/>
Peartree was and is a very<lb/>
popular figure in Beaufort Coun-<lb/>
ty. In fact, Baker says the<lb/>
18-year-old is almost a local<lb/>
celebrity.<lb/>
"1 guess you could say he is the<lb/>
hero in this area Baker said.<lb/>
"He is a very exciting player to<lb/>
watch and the fans here just lov-<lb/>
ed him<lb/>
Peartree was so well thought of<lb/>
that Pantego fans named him<lb/>
after Los Angeles Laker great<lb/>
Earvin "Magic" Johnson.<lb/>
"Everybody used to call me<lb/>
'Magic Two Peartree said.<lb/>
"Thai was neat because he was<lb/>
my idol and I'd already decided I<lb/>
wanted to pattern myself after<lb/>
him<lb/>
Ali ihe playing time, com-<lb/>
pliments and winning lessened a<lb/>
great deal for Peartree once he<lb/>
began his collegiate career. The<lb/>
Pirates have struggled to a 7-10<lb/>
start and he only began playing a<lb/>
great deal after Byles was in-<lb/>
jured.<lb/>
"For a while ii was really<lb/>
tough Peartree admitted. "To<lb/>
be honest, I wondered for a while<lb/>
why 1 came here. 1 was sitting on<lb/>
the bench and could see places<lb/>
where I thought 1 could help. 1<lb/>
think Coach Odom realized that<lb/>
because he'd talk to me and make<lb/>
me feel better<lb/>
Peariree's dislike of bench-<lb/>
warming, which coaches slay<lb/>
stems from his love of the game<lb/>
and will to win, almost cost the<lb/>
Pirates a chance at signing the all-<lb/>
state recruit.<lb/>
The ECU staff suggested that<lb/>
Peartree attend a prep school for<lb/>
a year before enrolling at ECU.<lb/>
They suggested this because of<lb/>
the return of Byles and<lb/>
sophomore point man Herbert<lb/>
Gilchrist. Peartree and his high<lb/>
school coach both disliked the<lb/>
idea, so Odom and Co. offered<lb/>
the scholarship anyway.<lb/>
"We wanted him very badly<lb/>
Pendergraft said. "He said he<lb/>
was willing to go to a junior col-<lb/>
lege for a year, but not to a prep<lb/>
school. We weren't about to take<lb/>
a chance on him going to junior<lb/>
college and then change his mind.<lb/>
It's worked out for the best<lb/>
anyway<lb/>
Indeed it has. Over the last two<lb/>
weeks the accolades have come<lb/>
pouring in. Minges Coliseum<lb/>
fans have been very vocal in com-<lb/>
plimenting his aggressive defense<lb/>
and fast-paced offense, while<lb/>
both his current and former<lb/>
coaches have looked to the future<lb/>
with optimism.<lb/>
"I think Bruce is going to be an<lb/>
exceptional guard for us some-<lb/>
day Odom told a press gather-<lb/>
ing following ECU's win over<lb/>
UNC Charlotte last week. "The<lb/>
thing 1 like about him most is that<lb/>
he is so very coachable. 1 can say<lb/>
whatever I want to him and not<lb/>
worry about his pouting. Wilh<lb/>
that attitude he can only im-<lb/>
prove<lb/>
Baker did not see the Charlotte<lb/>
game but was on hand for Pear-<lb/>
tree's 20-point performance<lb/>
Saturday against Richmond.<lb/>
"1 think we all got a sample of<lb/>
what he's going to be like<lb/>
Baker said. "Before he's finish-<lb/>
ed, he will fill a lot of seats in that<lb/>
coliseum<lb/>
NEW OS?) BRAND<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
WHOLE BONELESS (20-26 LB. AVG. WT.)<lb/>
Bottom &amp; Eye<lb/>
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Round<lb/>
Bottom Round Roast, Bottom<lb/>
Round Steaks, Eye Round<lb/>
Roast and Steaks, Ground Round<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
T68<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH GRADE "A<lb/>
Young Hen<lb/>
Turkeys<lb/>
12-14 lb.<lb/>
6vg.<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY PURE<lb/>
Poric Sausage<lb/>
Hot<lb/>
or<lb/>
Mild<lb/>
1-lb.<lb/>
P9<lb/>
88<lb/>
MARKET SYTLE<lb/>
Sliced Bacon<lb/>
?118<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Pre-Registration Issue ?<lb/>
Wednesday, February 17<lb/>
An advertising bargain<lb/>
WHAT'S IT LIKE TO BE<lb/>
A SINGLE PARENT?<lb/>
Lots of teenagers tell us it's tough. If<lb/>
you're a pregnant teen, we'd like to<lb/>
heip.<lb/>
An experienced counselor can help<lb/>
you think about your options and make<lb/>
a plan for yourself and your baby.<lb/>
We'll support your decisions.<lb/>
If adoption is your choice we can<lb/>
help with that, too.<lb/>
Our services are free and confiden<lb/>
tial.<lb/>
Don't face parenthood alone. We<lb/>
care and we can help.<lb/>
The Chidren's Home 52 5847<lb/>
Society of N. C Au???"<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVELS, INC.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK IN<lb/>
FT. LAUDERDALE<lb/>
March 8-15 ? 5 nights<lb/>
Holiday Inn Oceanside$95 tax<lb/>
per nite<lb/>
THE NEW<lb/>
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PRICE AND QUALITY BRAND<lb/>
P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
?<lb/>
We got the rooms ?<lb/>
don 7 miss your fun in the sun<lb/>
Call now:<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVELS, INC.<lb/>
319 Cotanche St.<lb/>
Greenville, N. C. 27834<lb/>
Phone: 758-3456<lb/>
Saltine Crackers<lb/>
590<lb/>
16 oz.<lb/>
P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
Poric and Beans<lb/>
With<lb/>
Tomato<lb/>
Sauce<lb/>
3 ss- 8Sr<lb/>
P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
mm roi?s<lb/>
P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
Dry Dog<lb/>
25339<lb/>
A TTENTION:<lb/>
All undergraduates and graduates<lb/>
having a cumulative GPA of<lb/>
3.0 or better.<lb/>
You are cordially invited to attend the RUSH<lb/>
meeting of the Lambda Chapter of Gamma Beta<lb/>
Phi, East Carolina University.<lb/>
At: 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
In: 244Mendenhall<lb/>
On: Feb. 2 or Feb. 3, 1982<lb/>
We hope to see you there!<lb/>
? ?????(PJA SUPER SAVER COUPON)<lb/>
PLAIN? SELF-RISING ? OQ<lb/>
Red Band 'c<lb/>
Flour 3<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
59<lb/>
I<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WTTH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT FEB. 6, AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
613<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
( P J) SUPER SAVER COUPON)' ???? ?<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND, RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
Eight O'Clock<lb/>
Bean Coffee<lb/>
Save 60C<lb/>
1-lb.<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WiTH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER 12<lb/>
 GOOD THRU SAT FEB 6. AT A&amp;P IN GRENJ ? mm ? ? ?J<lb/>
? BW ' ? m ?w tm ? ! W ? P g m . ff ? ,<lb/>
CHILLED<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON j<lb/>
Donald Duck save60<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT FEB. , AT AAP IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
611<lb/>
ssukke<lb/>
j<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057454_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>