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<pb facs="00057458_0001"/>
She<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
i<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58 No. 41<lb/>
Tuesday. February 16, 1982<lb/>
Greenville, V(<lb/>
10 Panes<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Reagan Proposes More A id Cuts<lb/>
classic<lb/>
111 film<lb/>
King of<lb/>
Hearts is playing<lb/>
Wednesdav at Mendenhall's<lb/>
Hendrix Theater. Starring Alan<lb/>
res and Genevieve Buiold, the<lb/>
967 -novie combines comedy,<lb/>
e and satire See The East<lb/>
Miman review on page 5<lb/>
Inside Index<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
lions4<lb/>
Campus Forum4<lb/>
?'tainment5<lb/>
ts8<lb/>
- eds9<lb/>
B MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
niitl?1 Nr?? rdinr<lb/>
"Deep cuts hae already been<lb/>
made in appropriations for student<lb/>
financial aid according to Ed<lb/>
Hanley, lobbyist for the U.S. Stu-<lb/>
dent Association. "Further cuts are<lb/>
going to keep thousands of students<lb/>
from returning this fall, and others<lb/>
will neer get to attend college at<lb/>
all<lb/>
Though the recent budget cuts by<lb/>
the Reagan administration have not<lb/>
yet actually taken full impact on col-<lb/>
lege students, campus life has<lb/>
changed in several areas this year.<lb/>
A "migration" of students from<lb/>
private schools to public institutions<lb/>
has already started. Many students<lb/>
who had travelled out of state for<lb/>
school are staving in their home<lb/>
states this year; fewer services are<lb/>
being offered on campuses nation-<lb/>
wide; new ideas for tuition rates<lb/>
have sprung up at various institu-<lb/>
tions, and minority students con-<lb/>
tinue to withdraw from schools in<lb/>
record numbers.<lb/>
The usual trend dictates that<lb/>
students eventually become ac-<lb/>
customed to changes in the college<lb/>
routine such as these.<lb/>
However. President Reagan's<lb/>
financial aid cuts are not vet a thing<lb/>
of the past. He has recent I v propos-<lb/>
ed even deeper cuts for 1983. The<lb/>
proposed cuts would affect all<lb/>
federal student aid programs, accor-<lb/>
ding to government spokespersons.<lb/>
Pell Grants, for example, would<lb/>
be cut from a maximum of SI,670<lb/>
per year to $1,400. Also, students<lb/>
from families earning more than<lb/>
SI4,(XX) annually would not qualify<lb/>
for the grant in 198?. After this<lb/>
year's cuts, the ceiling was placed at<lb/>
$27,000 for combined family in-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Supplemental Educational Op-<lb/>
portunity Grants, which provide aid<lb/>
for approximately 61 5.(MX) students,<lb/>
would be eliminated by Reagan's<lb/>
1983 proposal.<lb/>
An estimated 250,000 students<lb/>
would lose their college jobs if<lb/>
Reagan's 27 percent work-study<lb/>
program cut is passed.<lb/>
I he State Student Incentive<lb/>
Grants, which give aid to about<lb/>
300,000 students this year, would be<lb/>
totally eliminated.<lb/>
I he Reagan administration will<lb/>
also ask Congress to discontinue all<lb/>
funding for the National Direct Stu-<lb/>
dent 1 oan program, under which<lb/>
approximately 250,000 students<lb/>
receive low-interest loans yearly.<lb/>
finally, the administration wants<lb/>
to make drastic cuts m the number<lb/>
oi students eligible tor Guaranteed<lb/>
Student 1 oans, by raising the in-<lb/>
terest rates and the loan origination<lb/>
tees. Under this plan, graduate<lb/>
students and professional school<lb/>
students would be eliminated from<lb/>
qualifying foi the program<lb/>
Earlier this month, represen<lb/>
tatives of the largest and most in-<lb/>
fluential college groups in the coun-<lb/>
try met in Washington, D.C warn-<lb/>
ing the President and his ad-<lb/>
ministration that as many as two<lb/>
million students will be hurl In the<lb/>
cuts<lb/>
John Phillips ol the National<lb/>
Association ol Independentol<lb/>
leges and Universities predicted thai<lb/>
the proposed cuts would cause more<lb/>
than 300,000 independent college<lb/>
students to drop out of school.<lb/>
Others expressed then concern<lb/>
that the cuts might cause ma<lb/>
financial problems foi the 839,000<lb/>
public college students who now<lb/>
receive aid.<lb/>
Under the Reagan proposal, each<lb/>
state would suffer approximately a<lb/>
50-percent loss ol its financial aid<lb/>
funding. Thus, bv 1983, 61,300<lb/>
North Carolina college students<lb/>
would lose federal aid, including all<lb/>
forms of federal grants.<lb/>
In an effort to express their<lb/>
dissatisfaction with the current cuts<lb/>
and those proposed, at least 14 ma-<lb/>
JOI college lobbying groups are<lb/>
planning a national campaign, in-<lb/>
cluding a nationwide D.iv ol Protest<lb/>
scheduled lor March 1<lb/>
I obbyists hope that students and<lb/>
others concerned will travel to<lb/>
Washington on March 1 to pur-<lb/>
le lawmakers to vote against the<lb/>
Reagan cuts.<lb/>
According to Roberi aron,<lb/>
spokesman tor the largest a<lb/>
lion ol I .S colleges and univer-<lb/>
sities, the merican ouncil<lb/>
Education, the campaign is intended<lb/>
to demonstrate that "thi is I<lb/>
the country as a whole<lb/>
"We'll be pointing out that all ol<lb/>
e rtumbi rs are people Aaron<lb/>
I ??v hen we push people iul I<lb/>
college, we're eating our own seed-<lb/>
n I mean, e anl to mal e<lb/>
economy more productive, so we<lb/>
cul the graduate students, who do<lb/>
the studies thai make it more pro<lb/>
ductive. rhey want ?ngei<lb/>
military? Well, who the hell do thev<lb/>
think is going to design all tl<lb/>
weapons systems for them it thev<lb/>
closedown university research?"<lb/>
Rehabilitation<lb/>
CA DP Helping Students<lb/>
Bv PVrRKkO'NKIll<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
I was on Qualuudes and scotch<lb/>
about three months said<lb/>
Doug, and ECU social work major.<lb/>
"I called here . . . and they came<lb/>
and got me<lb/>
Doug spent five days in the infir-<lb/>
. savs he got control of his life<lb/>
and is now doing volunteer work tot<lb/>
?he Campus Alcohoi and Drug Pro-<lb/>
gram (C ADY'i ? the organization<lb/>
ihav helped him<lb/>
c A DP. in rooms 301 and 303 of<lb/>
the Lrwm Building, is run and<lb/>
operated by 2 student volunteers<lb/>
who do peer group education, sup-<lb/>
and counseling. Its basic<lb/>
philosophy is "promoting responsi-<lb/>
ble decisions for the consumption of<lb/>
rmicals according to Jerry I ot-<lb/>
the group's faculter adviser.<lb/>
"Our first goal is education; our<lb/>
t is toward assistance<lb/>
Research shows that a large ma-<lb/>
ity ? approximated 87 percent<lb/>
? of the student- at I asl C arolma<lb/>
consume alcohol, according to<lb/>
l.ianita Bolton, a nursing major and<lb/>
t'ADP member. She said a signifi-<lb/>
cant number of alcohoi consumers<lb/>
will inevitablv have a drinking pro-<lb/>
blem.<lb/>
A Drinking Problem?<lb/>
According to CADP's informa<lb/>
tion brochure. Your Decision, "a<lb/>
drinking problem exists it we need<lb/>
alcohol in order to function, or if we<lb/>
need alcohol in such a way that it<lb/>
impairs our functioning<lb/>
I he majority of alcohol users do<lb/>
not have such a problem, Bolton<lb/>
said, "which means that they drink<lb/>
responsibly<lb/>
However, if a student senses a<lb/>
problem or wants information.<lb/>
C-DP volunteers can help with ser<lb/>
vices including books, films,<lb/>
references, research and general in-<lb/>
formation on alcohol and drugs.<lb/>
Workshops for ECU students and<lb/>
faculty members are also held on<lb/>
many aspects of the consumption of<lb/>
chemicals.<lb/>
The organization also will send<lb/>
speakers to any campus group that<lb/>
wants to learn more about drinking<lb/>
or drug problems as well as the work<lb/>
of CADP.<lb/>
CADP members stress that they<lb/>
are an organization of students ?<lb/>
you must be a student to be a<lb/>
volunteer member ? who do sup<lb/>
port work for other students. Lot<lb/>
terhos said CADP is strictly a stu<lb/>
dent service directed by students.<lb/>
Interested students are invited to<lb/>
join the group. Internships for<lb/>
volunteers are available for students<lb/>
desiring to become trained peer<lb/>
counselors.<lb/>
1 otterhos is also director of the<lb/>
Mcohol Training Program offered<lb/>
through the School of Allied Health<lb/>
and Social Professions This profes-<lb/>
sional program is designed to tram<lb/>
students to work in the field of<lb/>
alcohol abuse and alcoholism.<lb/>
c ADP notes that LCL has a<lb/>
freshman dropout rate of 33 per-<lb/>
cent. Ot these '4s percent cue<lb/>
drinking and drugging as the major<lb/>
reason" tor leaving school, accor-<lb/>
ding to c DP member Bob Horst,<lb/>
a social work maior. "Too much<lb/>
partying added Lauren Crist, also<lb/>
a member and in social work.<lb/>
Typically, main individuals with<lb/>
drinking or drug-related problems<lb/>
cause additional anxiety for the peo-<lb/>
ple around them, be thev loved ones<lb/>
or other college students living in<lb/>
the dorms.<lb/>
(ADP works with Last<lb/>
Carolina's residence hall advirs to<lb/>
help them deal with problen  that<lb/>
mav arise from a student's abuse of<lb/>
alcohol or drugs. "We help them in<lb/>
identifying a problem in a dorm<lb/>
situation Horst said.<lb/>
Resident advisers are trained to<lb/>
deal with a crisis and to know their<lb/>
options, assording to Horst. These<lb/>
options mav be referral to CADP, a<lb/>
report to Associate Dean of Orien-<lb/>
tation and Judiciary James Mallory.<lb/>
or even calling the campus police if<lb/>
a situation is out ol control.<lb/>
(ADP tries to dispel the myths<lb/>
associated with drinking and<lb/>
drunkenness such as "drinking<lb/>
black coffee or taking cold<lb/>
showers Horst said. "Only time<lb/>
will sober up a drunk<lb/>
The group also conducts<lb/>
breathalizer demonstrations in<lb/>
cooperation with the N.C. Highway<lb/>
Patrol. The student volunteers<lb/>
themselves are the subjects; various<lb/>
tests are conducted on participants<lb/>
who have consumed certain quan-<lb/>
tities ot beer on a full or empty<lb/>
stomach.<lb/>
'Responsible Drinking'<lb/>
Nuclear War<lb/>
Is Pitt County Ready?<lb/>
The Shadows Know "?" ?? ?? ??"<lb/>
whether it's earl morning or lute afternoon as these students pass the<lb/>
Brewster Building.<lb/>
Ha PAIKICKO'M ILL<lb/>
staff M mi, p<lb/>
Here the title: uclear Civil<lb/>
Protection, In Place andrisi.s<lb/>
Relocation to Pit; ounty ivil<lb/>
Preparedness Emergency Opera<lb/>
lions Plan tor U ar.<lb/>
According to Bettv Whitfield, the<lb/>
secretary of the Pitt County<lb/>
Emergency Management, "you're<lb/>
talking about a pretty thick book<lb/>
So thick, m Fact, thai Whitfield<lb/>
claims it would take her a tew hours<lb/>
to dig up the answers to any ques<lb/>
tions a concerned citizen may have<lb/>
on the subject ol nuclear war.<lb/>
One problem arise- as a result<lb/>
Whitfield's complex dilemma: V hat<lb/>
would happen it a nuclear attack<lb/>
took place today? Would we have<lb/>
time to wait for her "to look it up"<lb/>
in "the thick book Where would<lb/>
we go?<lb/>
Questions of this nature seem<lb/>
vital, but would Whitfield and her<lb/>
superior Bobby Joy net. both part-<lb/>
time workers for All Natural And<lb/>
Man-Made Disaster Emergency<lb/>
Situations Management, possibly be<lb/>
able to do the iob in the event ol an<lb/>
attack?<lb/>
Whitfield see- no problems<lb/>
"Everything is readv to go it we<lb/>
have a nuclear attack she said.<lb/>
"Pitt County does have a nu<lb/>
program on file and updated, and<lb/>
ready to go<lb/>
She referred calls tor furthei in-<lb/>
formation to a Centralommunica-<lb/>
tions Center or The National Alert<lb/>
Warning System (NAWS).<lb/>
According to W el don<lb/>
McLawhorn, an employee with the<lb/>
Pitt County Sheriff's Department.<lb/>
they have "a direct phone hook-up<lb/>
with Washington, D.C for com-<lb/>
munications in the event oi a na-<lb/>
tional defense emergency.<lb/>
McLawhorn also had a limned<lb/>
amount of information and was on<lb/>
ly answering the phone as part ol his<lb/>
job u1 the Communications Ofl<lb/>
In the event of a nuclear attack,<lb/>
Mel aw horn woul e citizens<lb/>
to head tor the fallout shelters<lb/>
knew ?it only two shelters for all<lb/>
Greenville's 35,000 residents. "1!<lb/>
I'm nor mistaken I think it's just the<lb/>
post offices right now he said<lb/>
Mel awhorn also advised people to<lb/>
listen to radio stations.<lb/>
 third call was placed to a toll-<lb/>
free number in Raleiuh. hvii an of-<lb/>
ficial spokesman was unavailable<lb/>
tor comment.<lb/>
According to the General Statut<lb/>
ol North Carolina, under the funi<lb/>
tion- tit State 1 mergency Man<lb/>
ment, Section 166A-5(3)D,<lb/>
"Development and presentation ol<lb/>
traunng programs and public ini<lb/>
mation programs  insure the I<lb/>
nishing ol adequately trained .<lb/>
sonnel and an informed publit<lb/>
time ol need Need indue,<lb/>
nuclear emergency.<lb/>
"The citizens are not informed<lb/>
about the plan said a person ?<lb/>
dying civil defense who chooses to<lb/>
remain anonymous, "and 1 believe<lb/>
that tins information would cr.<lb/>
additional panic and make the<lb/>
working ol the plan impossible<lb/>
He equated civil defense<lb/>
preparedness to a 'ire raging in a<lb/>
school and the panic that would en-<lb/>
sue it a tire drill had never been<lb/>
practiced.<lb/>
"Basically the option would be to<lb/>
leave said Arthur Colclough, the<lb/>
ECl safety officer with the Occupa-<lb/>
tional Safety and Health Ad-<lb/>
ministration (OSHA) "We don't<lb/>
have anv plans whatsoever. I can tell<lb/>
you that. That's a fact<lb/>
Whitfield recommended calling<lb/>
tour people working on ECl 's cam-<lb/>
pus, m cooperation with her office,<lb/>
an a Disaster Control Plan.<lb/>
One ol the committee members is<lb/>
ee WOULD, Page 3<lb/>
Test results are often surprising<lb/>
and are designed to teach<lb/>
"responsible drinking" levels,<lb/>
CADP members said. Alcohol-<lb/>
related automobile accidents are the<lb/>
single largest cause of death in the<lb/>
college-age bracket.<lb/>
Mallory's office requires students<lb/>
with a recurring abuse problem to<lb/>
participate in the (ADP bimonthly<lb/>
"rap session Any student directed<lb/>
to the program may be subjected to<lb/>
disciplinary action for failing to par-<lb/>
ticipate.<lb/>
Horst stated that CADP hopes<lb/>
the "rap session" will be an<lb/>
"awareness development process"<lb/>
for the students involved. "We're<lb/>
here non-judgementally Bolton<lb/>
added.<lb/>
The sessions last from two to two<lb/>
and one-half hours, and include<lb/>
films and discussions led by CADP<lb/>
members. The group believes many<lb/>
obvious signs may indicate a<lb/>
possibly progressive abuse problem.<lb/>
If the problem is identified early, a<lb/>
student may decide to start a<lb/>
"pattern change" to bring the abuse<lb/>
under control. CADP members said<lb/>
thev hope the sessions will help<lb/>
students recognize potential pro-<lb/>
blems and seek solutions.<lb/>
"What goes on here stays in this<lb/>
building Horst said, stressing the<lb/>
confidentiality of the program. "No<lb/>
information leaves this building. We<lb/>
have no connection with the (ECU)<lb/>
administration in this area he ad-<lb/>
ded.<lb/>
See REHAB, Page 3<lb/>
Attorney General<lb/>
To Speak At ECU<lb/>
Save The Lighthouse' Funds Deliberated<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
Staff V filer<lb/>
There is a possibility that the SGA<lb/>
will not be sending any funds to the<lb/>
Save the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse<lb/>
Committee for the preservation of<lb/>
that historic landmark, although<lb/>
they approved a bill last week ap-<lb/>
propriating $500 to the program.<lb/>
It was attempted at the meeting<lb/>
Monday to bring the bill up again<lb/>
for reconsideration, but the motion<lb/>
was defeated. Vice President Mar-<lb/>
vin Braxton, who last week stated<lb/>
that he would suggest to President<lb/>
Lester Nail that the bill be vetoed,<lb/>
was denied the opportunity to speak<lb/>
on behalf of the reconsideration<lb/>
because of objections by a few<lb/>
members of the legislature.<lb/>
Nail has until this Thursday to<lb/>
veto the bill.<lb/>
In other business, an appropria-<lb/>
tion for $206 was approved for the<lb/>
Graduate Business Association,<lb/>
covering such expenses as a filing<lb/>
cabinet, postage, and a subscription<lb/>
to the Wall Street Journal.<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of Speech,<lb/>
I anguage and Auditory Pathology<lb/>
was given $200 to help with advertis-<lb/>
ing costs for their coming sym-<lb/>
posium.<lb/>
Mr. Dick Welch spoke on behalf<lb/>
of the Ground Zero program to<lb/>
enlighten and encourage the SGA to<lb/>
take an interest in the threat of<lb/>
nuclear war.<lb/>
N.C. Attorney General Rut us Ed-<lb/>
misten will lecture on the Last<lb/>
Carolina campus Wednesday night<lb/>
The lecture is sponsored bv the<lb/>
ECU Law Society and will be held in<lb/>
Brewster C-103 at 7 p.m. Dr. John<lb/>
Howell. interim chancellor of the<lb/>
university, is scheduled to deliver<lb/>
the introduction to Edmiston's lec-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
Edmiston was Deputy Chief<lb/>
Counsel to Sen. Sam 1 rvin's<lb/>
Watergate Committee, and was<lb/>
elected state attorney general in<lb/>
1974. He has been re-elected twice.<lb/>
The lecture is open to the general<lb/>
public, according to Diane Jones,<lb/>
the president of the law society.<lb/>
Jones said the society is open to<lb/>
anyone interested in the law as well<lb/>
as students planning to enter law<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Edmisten<lb/>
K<lb/>
<pb facs="00057458_0002"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
r<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 16, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
It you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
In the announcements column<lb/>
please send the announcement (as<lb/>
brief as possible) typed and<lb/>
double-spaced to The East Caroii<lb/>
man in care of the production<lb/>
manager<lb/>
For better service, we are now<lb/>
asking that you pick up several<lb/>
copies of our new announcement<lb/>
application tor your upcoming<lb/>
events.<lb/>
There is no charge tor an-<lb/>
nouncements, but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
merit will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest that you do not rely<lb/>
solely on this column for publicity<lb/>
The deadline for announcements<lb/>
is 5 p.m Friday for the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 5 p.m Tuesday for the<lb/>
Thursday paper<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
meots.<lb/>
INTERVARSITY<lb/>
Sorry about the mix up last<lb/>
week lor the Intervarsity Chris<lb/>
tian Fellowship Meeting. We will<lb/>
meet Wednesday at 7 30 pm in<lb/>
Mendenhali. room 210 Bob Clyde<lb/>
will speak on "Love and Sexual'<lb/>
ty"<lb/>
INTERVIEWERS<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
The institute tor Coastal and<lb/>
Marine Resources is currently<lb/>
seeking six to eight prospective<lb/>
student interviewers for a<lb/>
research protect on the recrea<lb/>
tional fisheries in the upper sounds<lb/>
of eastern North Carolina Pro<lb/>
spective interviewers must be<lb/>
students at East Carolina and be<lb/>
able to furnish own transportation<lb/>
The work will start m mid to late<lb/>
April and will continue through the<lb/>
summer months and into the fall.<lb/>
Training will take place in March<lb/>
Interested students are asked to<lb/>
contact Cindy Stack for an inter<lb/>
view at 7S7 6779<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP DRIVE<lb/>
The Student Council lor Excep<lb/>
tional Children (SCEC) is having<lb/>
their membership drive the week<lb/>
of Feb. 15 Students from all ma<lb/>
iors are invited to join Please stop<lb/>
by the SCEC office m Speight,<lb/>
now. and see what we're all about<lb/>
or come by the membership booth<lb/>
during the week of Feb 15 and talk<lb/>
to a representative for some first<lb/>
hand experiences. Don't pass us<lb/>
up<lb/>
SNEA<lb/>
The Student National Education<lb/>
Association will meet Wednesday,<lb/>
Fob. 17. in Sp-129 at 4 p.m Or<lb/>
Thomas Chambiiss. Director of<lb/>
Student Teaching, will be our<lb/>
speaker<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
BAKE SALE<lb/>
GBP will have a bake sale<lb/>
Wednesday. Feb 17 at the Student<lb/>
Store, it will begin at lam. and go<lb/>
until. All members remember to<lb/>
bring bake goods<lb/>
LAW VS LOVE<lb/>
Christianity is NOT a restrictive<lb/>
set of laws applied to work your<lb/>
way ro heaven. (Ephesians 2 1,9)<lb/>
It is a growing process where you<lb/>
learn to walk in love with God. It is<lb/>
a change to the best attitudes and<lb/>
values in life (Romans 12 1.2 &amp;<lb/>
Colossians 3:1 17) Come to our<lb/>
fellowship and learn more about<lb/>
this and other truths in the Bible<lb/>
Thursday at 8 p.m . rm 242.<lb/>
Mendenhali. Feb It<lb/>
BAKE SALE<lb/>
The ECU Biology Club is soon<lb/>
soring a bake sale on Feb 17<lb/>
(Wednesday), m the lobby of the<lb/>
Biology building The sale starts<lb/>
at 9 a.m. Please come by1 Your<lb/>
support is appreciated.<lb/>
AD HOC<lb/>
U.S. Military Aid is being sent to<lb/>
El Salvador's corrupt govern<lb/>
ment We tram their troops at Fort<lb/>
Bragg if you're opposed to these<lb/>
practices we invite ?ou to join the<lb/>
ECU AD HOC Comm. ee opposed<lb/>
to El Salvadoran Military Aid. We<lb/>
will be organizing an ECU Cam<lb/>
pus Protest For more information<lb/>
call 7S 4906<lb/>
WALK FOR<lb/>
HUMANITY<lb/>
ECU-Greenville Walk For<lb/>
Humanity is having an important<lb/>
meeting tor anyone wanting to<lb/>
help with this years "Walk " We<lb/>
need lots of help We want to have<lb/>
total campus exposure plus sup<lb/>
port tor our biqgesf "Walk" ever<lb/>
Please come on Feb 25 at 7:30<lb/>
p m to the Newman House (9S3 E<lb/>
10th Stor call 752 47)6<lb/>
CONTINUING<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
Personal Development Pro<lb/>
grams begin: Feb 25 ? Yoga. In-<lb/>
vesting in the 80' Speed Reading.<lb/>
Prescription &amp; Non-prescription<lb/>
Drugs; Feb. 27 ? The Small Com-<lb/>
puter Revolution; March 1 ?<lb/>
Assertiveness as a Way of Life;<lb/>
March 22 ? Child Behavior<lb/>
Management. Also, Feb. 23 ?<lb/>
Roberts Rules of Order. Camera I,<lb/>
Calligraphy. Beginning Ballet.<lb/>
Jazz Exercise, Intermediate<lb/>
Bridge, Banjo. Guitar. Feb. 24 ?<lb/>
Algebra Review, Clogging I.<lb/>
Aerobic MovementExercise. Call<lb/>
757 6143 or visit Division of Conn<lb/>
nuing Education.<lb/>
EPT<lb/>
Epsilon Pi Teu. the honorary<lb/>
technology fraternity, will hold a<lb/>
business meeting on Tuesday.<lb/>
Feb. 16 at 5 p.m. in room FI04. We<lb/>
will vote on prospective members<lb/>
and plan the annual spring ban<lb/>
quet<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
A student Episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated on Tuesday. Feb. 16. in<lb/>
the chapel of St Pauls Episcopal<lb/>
Church. 406 4th Street (one block<lb/>
from Garrett Dorm). The service<lb/>
will be at 530 p.m with the<lb/>
Episcopal Chaplain, the Rev. Bill<lb/>
Hadden. celebrating<lb/>
LATTER DAY SAINT<lb/>
The Latter Day Saint Student<lb/>
association is sponsoring a free<lb/>
film and refreshments every Tues<lb/>
day evening at 7:00 in the cof<lb/>
feehouse at Mendenhali. All<lb/>
welcome to come and join us each<lb/>
week!<lb/>
TEAM HANDBALL<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
ECU Team Handball Club in<lb/>
vites all interested persons, both<lb/>
male and female, to join us. Hand<lb/>
ball is a new and exciting sport<lb/>
that is easy to learn and fun to<lb/>
play The Handball Club is cur<lb/>
rently scheduled to make two trips<lb/>
to the New York city art tor tour<lb/>
naments. For more information<lb/>
?nd practice times call Tom Cody<lb/>
i756 4933)<lb/>
PHILOSOPHY<lb/>
The Philosophy Club will meet<lb/>
on Tuesday Feb. U at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster D-313. Dr. James Smith<lb/>
of the Philosophy Department will<lb/>
speak on "Thoughts on<lb/>
Metaphor All interested persons<lb/>
are welcome.<lb/>
DRAWING COURSE<lb/>
The School of Art would like to<lb/>
make all University students<lb/>
aware that Art 1020 (Drawing) is<lb/>
available both first and second<lb/>
sessions of summer school. This<lb/>
drawing course is geared to non<lb/>
art ma iors and can be used as part<lb/>
of the Humanities and Fine Arts<lb/>
requirement. The course is being<lb/>
taught First Session everyday<lb/>
from 1120 1250. and Second Ses<lb/>
sion it is being taught everyday<lb/>
from ? 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
HOUSING DISPLAY<lb/>
The school of Home Economics,<lb/>
is having a Residential Housing<lb/>
Display from Feb. 14 21 at<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
Students i-om the Housing<lb/>
Department will be displaying<lb/>
works of all aspects of residential<lb/>
houseing There will be a recep<lb/>
tion on Saturday, feb 20 from 1 00<lb/>
to 4:00 pm The public is invited to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
The Pitt County Juvenile Ser<lb/>
vices Restitution Program is<lb/>
urgently in need of volunteers to<lb/>
serve as on site supervisors for<lb/>
juveniles as they perform various<lb/>
community service tasks<lb/>
You ma volunteer any number<lb/>
of hurs per week or per month.<lb/>
Monday through Saturday, and<lb/>
you can be reimbursed for any<lb/>
program related travel<lb/>
For further information, please<lb/>
call Cookie Rodgers at 7SS 4223 or<lb/>
come by the Juvenile Court<lb/>
Counselors office on the fourth<lb/>
floor of the Pitt County Cour<lb/>
thouse.<lb/>
KYF<lb/>
The King's Youth Fellowship<lb/>
will hold its next meeting on<lb/>
February II at 8 p.m in<lb/>
Mendenhali (Room 247) Visitors<lb/>
?rt welcome and refreshments<lb/>
will be served at the conclusion of<lb/>
the meeting.<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Will meet Wednesday, Feb 17 at<lb/>
7 p.m in Room C 103, Brewster<lb/>
Guest lecturer will be North<lb/>
Carolina Attorney General. Rufus<lb/>
Edmisten. For further informa<lb/>
lion, please contact Diane Jones,<lb/>
756 6556<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
There will be a CORSO meeting<lb/>
Thursday, Feb 18 at 5 30 p m at<lb/>
Mendenhali Check Information<lb/>
Desk for room number All people<lb/>
interested in Corrections and<lb/>
Social Work are invited to attend<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Chapter of the National Student<lb/>
Speech. Language and Hearing<lb/>
Association is sponsoring the<lb/>
Twelth Annual Speech, Language<lb/>
and Hearing Symposium on<lb/>
February 25 and 26. 1982 Guest<lb/>
Speakers include Kathleen<lb/>
Holmes and Or Howard Shane<lb/>
Topics include. 'The Use of a Nor<lb/>
mal Language Model tor Deal<lb/>
Children' and Assessment and In<lb/>
tervention tor the Non Speaking'<lb/>
For further information contact<lb/>
Margo Mulligan at 757 6961<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
Will have its regular meeting<lb/>
Wednesday. Feb 17 at 6 pm m<lb/>
Room 248. Mendenhali All<lb/>
members please attend<lb/>
BLACK HISTORY<lb/>
In honor ol Black History<lb/>
Month, Reverend Arlee Griffin<lb/>
will be speaking on the Black<lb/>
Church, Thursday. Feb 18. at 7<lb/>
p.m m the Multi Purpose Room,<lb/>
Mendenhali Also the ECU Gospel<lb/>
Ensemble will be featured Admis<lb/>
sion i 50. Tickets are available<lb/>
from NAACP members or at the<lb/>
AED<lb/>
A ED pre med society will<lb/>
meet on Tuesday. Feb. 16 at 7 30<lb/>
p m in Flanagan 307 Or John C<lb/>
Moskop, Dept of Pediatrics. ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine and Frank<lb/>
Birinyi. an ECU 3rd year med stu<lb/>
dent will be the guest spakers<lb/>
They will discuss Ethics and the<lb/>
Physician Drug Company Rela<lb/>
tionship All interested persons<lb/>
are invited to attend<lb/>
CO-OP EDUCATION<lb/>
The Cooperative Education Of<lb/>
fice, located in 313 Rawl Building,<lb/>
currently has iob openings tor<lb/>
Summer and Fall 1982 with the<lb/>
foiling agencies Social Security<lb/>
Administration Baltimore MD<lb/>
Morth Carolina Internship Office<lb/>
Raleigh. NC. Camp Day. NC In<lb/>
stitute of Government Raleigh<lb/>
NC<lb/>
For more information, contact<lb/>
the Coop office m 313 Rawl<lb/>
Building<lb/>
GEOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Geology Club will hold<lb/>
a meeting Wednesday. Feb 17 at<lb/>
6 30 p m. in Graham 301 Dr Jean<lb/>
Lowry will be the guest speaker<lb/>
presenting a slide show entitled ?<lb/>
"Geology m Our National Parks"<lb/>
An informal discussion of upcom<lb/>
mg Geology Club happenings will<lb/>
follow Everyone is invited to at<lb/>
tend! P S T shirt orders will be<lb/>
taken at this time A new design is<lb/>
forthcoming<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
To Al! Organizations The Stu<lb/>
dent Government Association<lb/>
recently instituted an annual<lb/>
budget Requests for tunds for the<lb/>
1982 83 school year are now being<lb/>
accepted at the Student Govern<lb/>
ment offices m Mendenhali The<lb/>
dead line for consideration of re<lb/>
quests during the present<lb/>
semester .s March 22. 1982<lb/>
SGA POSITION<lb/>
Persons interested in applying<lb/>
for the SGA Attorney General<lb/>
position may do so m Room 228 of<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center bet<lb/>
ween the hours of 8 a m and 5<lb/>
p m , Monday through Friday<lb/>
HEALTHCARE<lb/>
FOR OLDER CITIZENS<lb/>
The public is invited to a discus<lb/>
sion of today's problems and<lb/>
trends in health care for older<lb/>
citizens. Tuesday. Feb 16 at ?<lb/>
pm at the First Presbyterian<lb/>
Church of Greenville on the corner<lb/>
of Elm and 14th streets The<lb/>
meeting is jointly sponsored by the<lb/>
League of Women Voters ana the<lb/>
Pitt County Council On Aging The<lb/>
keynote speaker will be Ernest B<lb/>
Messer. Assistant Secretary of the<lb/>
Division of Aging and Former<lb/>
Chairman of the North Carolina<lb/>
House of Representatives Com<lb/>
miftee on Aging, who will discvss<lb/>
national and state trends in health<lb/>
care tor the elderly A panel will<lb/>
then present what they see locally<lb/>
as problems and the needs of our<lb/>
older citizens tor health care<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
PROGRAMS<lb/>
Will begin March 30 ? Basic<lb/>
NAUI or PADI SCUBA Certitica<lb/>
tion April 8 ? Basic Sailing Call<lb/>
or visit Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education ? telephone number.<lb/>
757 6143<lb/>
AMA<lb/>
The American Marketing<lb/>
Association will meet on Feb 17 at<lb/>
5 p m in Room 721 m Mendenhali<lb/>
The guest speaker will be Terne<lb/>
Treylor. director of marketing<lb/>
and vales promotion at Carolina<lb/>
East Man All members are en<lb/>
coureged to attend We invite<lb/>
anyone interested in ioining. and<lb/>
participating in our marketing<lb/>
organization to attend this<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
FAITH &amp; VICTORY<lb/>
l ve got a serious question for all<lb/>
of you reading this announcement<lb/>
Do you have any real assurance<lb/>
tnat you'll go to Heaven if you died<lb/>
tomorrow II not, then you should<lb/>
really consider findinq out how to<lb/>
get that gift Jesus has already<lb/>
paid the price tor you ? lust<lb/>
receive him as lord of your life<lb/>
Faith &amp; Victory Fellowship meets<lb/>
every Friday night at 7 p m m the<lb/>
Jenkins Art Building m the<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
The spring smoker will be held<lb/>
tonight in the Mendenhali Multi<lb/>
Purpose Room at 7 p.m Ail<lb/>
brothers should attend this very<lb/>
important meeting The follow up<lb/>
meeting will be held Wednesday at<lb/>
5 p.m. in 132 Austin, with the<lb/>
regular business meeting follow<lb/>
mg Be there Aloha<lb/>
CHURCH OF<lb/>
NAZARENE<lb/>
The Church of Naiarene (a<lb/>
mainline Protestant denom.na<lb/>
tion) has decided to plant a church<lb/>
m Greenville under the direection<lb/>
Of Rev Winston Huff Any Chris<lb/>
tian interested m finding a place of<lb/>
service and a chance to mature in<lb/>
your spiritual growth is urged to<lb/>
help No matter what your talents<lb/>
are. you are important Alter help<lb/>
ing build a church, you may move<lb/>
on. but your work will remain ana<lb/>
grow Call Pastor Huff at 757 3606<lb/>
anytime<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
The Omicron chapter of Phi<lb/>
Beta Lambda will meet Feb 17 at<lb/>
4 00 p m in Rawl 130 Alt<lb/>
members are urged to attend<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
Personal Development Pro<lb/>
grams begin!<lb/>
Feb 16 Conversational French,<lb/>
Conversational German n Out<lb/>
door and inrjoor Plants Feb IV<lb/>
Beginning Ballroom, In<lb/>
termediate Ballroom Dance Feb<lb/>
22 How to make a Good Marriage<lb/>
Better. Softballaseball Officiating<lb/>
Call 757 6143 or visit Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education<lb/>
SIGMA TAU DELTA<lb/>
Would i'ke to inform all current<lb/>
and new members of its first<lb/>
meeting of the spring semester on<lb/>
Tuesday February. 16 at t 30<lb/>
p m in the Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center s Coffeehouse A orie'<lb/>
ousmess meeting wil' be followed<lb/>
by guest speaker W'Hiem<lb/>
HaMberg, who has published snort<lb/>
stories -n nuthrrm ffrfr?<lb/>
riiHifhihum and other noted lOur<lb/>
nals Hallberg will read humorous<lb/>
and appealing passages ftrom<lb/>
some of his published works<lb/>
Anyone interested it welcome to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
PREREGISTRATION<lb/>
CHANGES<lb/>
General College students should<lb/>
contact their advisers pr.or to<lb/>
February 22 t0 arrange lor<lb/>
preregistratio"<lb/>
? (<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
fi<lb/>
I<lb/>
The haI Carolinian<lb/>
mii r -<lb/>
Published every Tuesoar and<lb/>
Thursday during 'he academ.c<lb/>
Yea' ana every Aiednesoar our<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian 4 'he o<lb/>
fioal new.pape' ot Fas'<lb/>
Carolina University owned<lb/>
operated ana publ'Shed lor ano<lb/>
by the students of Eas' Carol "a<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate 17C yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Sena address<lb/>
changes to The East Carol nan<lb/>
Old Soutn Building :CU Green<lb/>
ville, NC 77834<lb/>
Telephone TV IM8.8MT.eJW<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
Ctatt postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville North Carolina<lb/>
febraflftrbwaa<lb/>
:?<lb/>
S<lb/>
 Trash Party ' A ngers Blacks<lb/>
CINCINNATI, Ohio<lb/>
(CPS) ? While many<lb/>
colleges were<lb/>
celebrating the Rev.<lb/>
Martin Luther King<lb/>
Jrs birthday with<lb/>
memorials and special<lb/>
events to honor the<lb/>
slain civil rights leader,<lb/>
a fraternity at the<lb/>
University of Cincin-<lb/>
nati threw a "Second<lb/>
Annual Martin Luther<lb/>
King Trash Party" ?<lb/>
an event that has cam-<lb/>
pus blacks in an<lb/>
uproar.<lb/>
"We look at it as<lb/>
much more than a<lb/>
fraternity prank says<lb/>
Chris Mack, president<lb/>
of the United Black<lb/>
Association (UBA) on<lb/>
campus. "It was ex-<lb/>
tremely racist and<lb/>
degrading for black<lb/>
people in general.<lb/>
We're asking for per-<lb/>
manent suspension of<lb/>
the fraternity<lb/>
Sigma Alpha Ep-<lb/>
silon, the fraternity<lb/>
which hosted the party,<lb/>
has been suspended in-<lb/>
definitely from the<lb/>
university pending a<lb/>
full review of the event<lb/>
by the Inter-Fraternity<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Members of SAE,<lb/>
reportedly the largest<lb/>
and most sociality ac-<lb/>
tive fraternity on the<lb/>
40,000-student campus,<lb/>
are refusing to com-<lb/>
ment about the party.<lb/>
The fraternity pro-<lb/>
moted the January 17<lb/>
event through flyers<lb/>
that were secretly<lb/>
distributed to selected<lb/>
students, fraternities,<lb/>
sororities, and<lb/>
members of the student<lb/>
government.<lb/>
"To gain entrance to<lb/>
this wonderful event<lb/>
you must bring one or<lb/>
more of the follow-<lb/>
ing the flyer told<lb/>
students, going on to<lb/>
list such things as "a<lb/>
bucket of Kentucky<lb/>
Fried Chicken "a<lb/>
radio bigger than your<lb/>
head "a cancelled<lb/>
welfare check or "a<lb/>
bottle of Afro-Sheen<lb/>
Since the promotion<lb/>
was secret, the universi-<lb/>
ty is still investigating<lb/>
the extent that other<lb/>
fraternities and<lb/>
sororities were involved<lb/>
in the party. Ad-<lb/>
ministrators suspect a<lb/>
similar party was held<lb/>
last year without com-<lb/>
ing to the attention of<lb/>
the general student<lb/>
population, as this<lb/>
year's party did.<lb/>
"I was appalled by<lb/>
the whole thing says<lb/>
a member of the stu-<lb/>
dent government who<lb/>
declined an invitation<lb/>
to the party. "I'm<lb/>
white, but I'm also<lb/>
Jewish, and 1 know<lb/>
that what happened<lb/>
could just as easily be<lb/>
done to me<lb/>
According to reports<lb/>
by students who attend-<lb/>
ed the party. "It wsone<lb/>
big evening of<lb/>
humiliating and mock-<lb/>
ing blacks Many of<lb/>
the people attending<lb/>
the party had black<lb/>
paint on their faces and<lb/>
were "mimicking out-<lb/>
dated, stereotyped im-<lb/>
ages of blacks<lb/>
sources say. Members<lb/>
of a local sorority<lb/>
reportedly attended the<lb/>
event dressed as<lb/>
members of the Ku<lb/>
Klux Klan.<lb/>
"We regret that the<lb/>
whole thing took<lb/>
place comments Ken<lb/>
Service, spokesman for<lb/>
the university. "Those<lb/>
kinds of actions do not<lb/>
meet the standards we<lb/>
expect as a university.<lb/>
The fraternity has been<lb/>
officially suspended as<lb/>
a result of their actions.<lb/>
We felt that because of<lb/>
the nature of the of-<lb/>
fenses something had<lb/>
to be done right away<lb/>
Black students are<lb/>
still infuriated over the<lb/>
event, and are worried<lb/>
that racist behavior on<lb/>
the campus is on the in-<lb/>
crease.<lb/>
"We've been having<lb/>
quite a few problems<lb/>
lately remarks UBA<lb/>
President Mack. For<lb/>
instance, he says, films<lb/>
such as "Birth Of A<lb/>
Nation" have become<lb/>
popular on campus.<lb/>
Mack also says that<lb/>
blacks are not receiving<lb/>
enough cooperation<lb/>
from the administra-<lb/>
tion or the student<lb/>
government. "Both<lb/>
groups are basically<lb/>
covering each other's<lb/>
behinds Mack<lb/>
assserts.<lb/>
"I don't know what<lb/>
he expects Service<lb/>
responds. "The event is<lb/>
not typical of our<lb/>
school. Our homecom-<lb/>
ing king and queen this<lb/>
year were both black.<lb/>
We are one of the three<lb/>
top universities in the<lb/>
country as far as retain-<lb/>
ing minority graduate<lb/>
students. We're doing<lb/>
all we can to let people<lb/>
know that we deplore<lb/>
what happened. I'm<lb/>
confident that the<lb/>
fraternity's suspension<lb/>
is going to stick, and at<lb/>
a sufficient level to<lb/>
make it clear that we<lb/>
will not tolerate that<lb/>
kind of activity<lb/>
Although the UC<lb/>
Student Senate con-<lb/>
demned the "racist ac-<lb/>
tivities" and "acts of<lb/>
ignorance" regarding<lb/>
the party, top members<lb/>
of the student govern-<lb/>
ment are remaining<lb/>
silent on the issue.<lb/>
"I just do not feel<lb/>
that it is our place to<lb/>
make a statement<lb/>
says Guy Glaser, vice<lb/>
president of the student<lb/>
government. "What<lb/>
did happen was wrong<lb/>
and shouldn't have oc-<lb/>
curred. But the more<lb/>
you get involved in<lb/>
these types of things,<lb/>
the more trouble you<lb/>
cause. We represent a<lb/>
lot of people on this<lb/>
campus. A lot of peo-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
Black students<lb/>
suspect the fraternity's<lb/>
"power and influence<lb/>
on campus" may result<lb/>
in lenient punishment<lb/>
against the group, an<lb/>
action which they say<lb/>
would throw the cam-<lb/>
pus into turmoil.<lb/>
"At this point, the<lb/>
situation is very tense<lb/>
Mack says. "The 3000<lb/>
black students on this<lb/>
campus are very united.<lb/>
Should permanent<lb/>
suspension not be taken<lb/>
(against Sigma Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon), there will be<lb/>
some awful big pro-<lb/>
tests. We are prepared<lb/>
to do whatever is<lb/>
necessary<lb/>
; SHMTSWOmffi<lb/>
104 Red Bonks Rd (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/>
1<lb/>
x<lb/>
x<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
?teKSXSWWXWX-X-XvXv<lb/>
-me quesT op THe<lb/>
here's a city in Europe- C0My mvel faefree.<lb/>
So unravel these riddles, and uncover its key.<lb/>
KW.U'JItCi:<lb/>
IIJW.4TH STREET PHONE 7WJ fW04<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
2 DOORS FROM COX FLORIST<lb/>
We repair Shoes, Boots, Hand-<lb/>
bags, Belts and some suitcases.<lb/>
We now have Leather and<lb/>
Leather Goods for sell.<lb/>
Lara urtectton of learner looted be??.<lb/>
Come by. Rick out on of our Oesioni Let<lb/>
us make you one.<lb/>
With Hie price of NEW SHOES, we can<lb/>
save you money by having your oW one<lb/>
a?l<lb/>
repaired.<lb/>
?.?<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
aammows mom im<lb/>
WCIKS<lb/>
ATFURTME? ?<lb/>
tt? ? Pmmmm Teat,<lb/>
Ceatraf. ?m hilMP<lb/>
e s f<lb/>
 2 3 4r S 6 I 8 9 ? tt 13 15 M-<lb/>
TO PLAY THE GAME:<lb/>
Answer each of the riddles that will appear here each<lb/>
week in February. Write your answer in the blanks betow<lb/>
each riddle. The letters with numbers betow them corres-<lb/>
pond to the numbered spaces in the master key. As you<lb/>
fill in the letters of the master key, you will be spelling the<lb/>
name and location of a secret city in Europe. Send us<lb/>
the solution, and you and a friend could win a trip there, free.<lb/>
TO ENTER SWEEPSTAKES<lb/>
t. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY<lb/>
2. Grand Prize consists of two regular round-trip economy airfares<lb/>
to the secret city, 30-day Eurail passes. American Mouth Hostel<lb/>
passes, two backpacks and $1000 in cash<lb/>
3. Cut out master key for use as official entry blank or use 3' x 5"<lb/>
card Print your answer along with your name and address Mail<lb/>
to Secret City Sweepstakes. PO Box 6018. Norwatk, CT 06852.<lb/>
4. The first 1,000 correct respondents will receive a poster as an<lb/>
entry prize<lb/>
5. All entries must be received by 31582 Enter as often as you<lb/>
wish, but each entry must be mailed separately<lb/>
6. A random drawing of all correct entries wit! be held 32282 by<lb/>
the Highland Group, an independent judging organization whose<lb/>
decision is final<lb/>
7. Sweepstakes vend where prohibited, taxed or otherwise restricted<lb/>
8. All potential winners may be required to sign an affidavit of e?-<lb/>
gibility to verify compliance with the rules within 30 days of receipt<lb/>
of same. For a list of pnze winners, send serf-addressed, stamped<lb/>
envelope to Secret City Sweepstakes co Highland Group. 18<lb/>
Knight St, NorwaJk, CT 06851<lb/>
WHAT AM I?<lb/>
My arsenal is patience,<lb/>
My sword is chalk;<lb/>
My discipline is conscience,<lb/>
My medium is talk;<lb/>
My reservoir is history,<lb/>
My greatest love is truth;<lb/>
My highest art is alchemy,<lb/>
Where lead to gold is youth.<lb/>
1 IT <lb/>
(Answer to Wfeek 2 RidVfle. CLFf)<lb/>
? ?? BB<lb/>
O General Foods Corporation 1982<lb/>
TODS'INTeRN ATONAL COFFeCS<lb/>
MAKe QOOD CDMDANY.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057458_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 16, 1982<lb/>
it i<lb/>
'O<lb/>
IN<lb/>
University Gets Praise, Accreditation Problems<lb/>
AUSTIN, Texas (CPS) ? It was<lb/>
recognition most academics dream<lb/>
about. But at the same time a na-<lb/>
tional survey of business school<lb/>
deans and business leaders named<lb/>
the University of Texas'<lb/>
undergraduate business school the<lb/>
fifth best in the nation, Texa ad-<lb/>
ministrators received a grim<lb/>
message:<lb/>
Fix up the school, or lose ac-<lb/>
creditation.<lb/>
Enrollment in Texas' College of<lb/>
Business Administration, it seems,<lb/>
had grown so fast and s much that<lb/>
there weren't enough instructors to<lb/>
teach the 10,325 students in the col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
The American Assembly of Col-<lb/>
legiate Schools of Business<lb/>
(AACSB), which regularly reviews<lb/>
and accredits campus business ad-<lb/>
ministration programs around the<lb/>
nation, told Texas it had two years<lb/>
to improve its teacher-to-studesnt<lb/>
ratio, or lose its accreditation.<lb/>
The accrediting group requires<lb/>
one faculty member for every 400<lb/>
undergraduate student hours taken.<lb/>
But Texas ? which, unable to<lb/>
find more qualified faculty<lb/>
merflbers, ultimately decided to<lb/>
limit enrollment starting next fall ?<lb/>
is far from the only business college<lb/>
suffering from its own popularity.<lb/>
During the last year Arizona,<lb/>
Penn State, Michigan, Ohio State,<lb/>
Tennessee, Michigan State, and ihe<lb/>
State University of New York-<lb/>
Albany, among other large schools,<lb/>
have complained of overcrowded<lb/>
business enrollments and<lb/>
dangerously-high teacher-student<lb/>
ratios. Smaller schools like Bowline<lb/>
Green and West Chester State have<lb/>
similar problems.<lb/>
"Almost every school's resources<lb/>
are taxed, and many are barely<lb/>
managing observes Charles<lb/>
Hickman, the AACSB's associate<lb/>
director. "You would have to look<lb/>
hard to find a dean who is not hav-<lb/>
ing enrollment pressures<lb/>
Ronald Slone, the AACSB's<lb/>
director of accreditation, adds that<lb/>
only one college is currently on pro-<lb/>
bation and "not many" are in im-<lb/>
mediate danger of losing accredita-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
But of the schools regularly com-<lb/>
ing up for review, "many are ha ing<lb/>
difficulty bescause of enrollment.<lb/>
But we will give them a reasonable<lb/>
amount of time (to compensate)<lb/>
The overcrowding is well-<lb/>
documented. Undergraduate<lb/>
business course enrollment increas-<lb/>
ed by 120 percent from 1966 to<lb/>
1978, according to a recent U.S.<lb/>
Census Bureau report.<lb/>
Enrollment has risen another 12<lb/>
percent since 1978, from 1.5 million<lb/>
Would Greenville Be Ready?<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
ECU Police Department director<lb/>
Joe Calder, who claims he never met<lb/>
with the committee, but had receiv-<lb/>
ed a letter about it "a year or two<lb/>
ago and that's the last I ever heard<lb/>
of it He added that "there ain't a<lb/>
hell of a lot of planning you can do<lb/>
for it (a nuclear war). I'm being<lb/>
facetious, but that's what it boils<lb/>
down to  Anyway, I wouldn't<lb/>
worry about it he concluded.<lb/>
President Reagan and the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Defense are worried about<lb/>
it, as is demonstrated by the<lb/>
89-percent increase being given to<lb/>
the Federal Emergency Manage-<lb/>
ment Agency (FEMA) for the 1983<lb/>
fiscal-year budget. Funding that<lb/>
totals $252.3 million has been ap-<lb/>
propriated for research, study, and<lb/>
planning for various aspects of civil<lb/>
defense as well as for identifying<lb/>
and marking fallout bomb shelters.<lb/>
The agency claims its civil defense<lb/>
operations would protect the public<lb/>
in the event of a "military attack<lb/>
tive medicine. They believe that ex-<lb/>
posure to radiation is incurable, but<lb/>
can be prevented ? if you prevent a<lb/>
nuclear war. So they work actively<lb/>
with public education projects and<lb/>
political lobbying to avert nuclear<lb/>
war. Mattern states that many Rus-<lb/>
sian and American scientists have<lb/>
been working together on the sub-<lb/>
ject of nuclear war and have come<lb/>
to the same conclusions as those of<lb/>
the Physicians for Social Respon-<lb/>
sibility.<lb/>
"I'll be honest with you. I don't<lb/>
spend a lot of time paying attention<lb/>
to civil preparedness Mattern<lb/>
said, "because I think that in the<lb/>
event of a nuclear war any efforts at<lb/>
civil prepardedness that we might<lb/>
make are laughable Other citizens<lb/>
of civil defense say that in the event<lb/>
of a nuclear war the living will envy<lb/>
the dead because of the horror that<lb/>
wil follow.<lb/>
to evacuate to Pitt County.<lb/>
Research indicates that a<lb/>
lOO-megaton nuclear bomb explod-<lb/>
ed in Goldsboro would cause third<lb/>
degree burns on people up to 54<lb/>
miles away.<lb/>
Under these circumstances, Sister<lb/>
Mattern said that "budget increases<lb/>
to civil preparedness are an illu-<lb/>
sion She added that she would<lb/>
have to refuse to participate in any<lb/>
civil defense drills in the event that<lb/>
President Reagan resumes them.<lb/>
"They will never get me into an air<lb/>
raid shelter<lb/>
Sister Mattern said she feels that<lb/>
civil defense preparation for nuclear<lb/>
war is a way of saying "We see this<lb/>
(nuclear war) as a real possibility<lb/>
"It goes along with other<lb/>
strategies for a limited nuclear war<lb/>
that have been more evident" Mat-<lb/>
tern added, and said she thinks that<lb/>
a lot of indications coming from<lb/>
U.S. officials are making the accep-<lb/>
tability of nuclear war more ob-<lb/>
vious.<lb/>
"I think a lot of it might back<lb/>
fire Mattern said. "Some of the<lb/>
news media have collaborated with<lb/>
civil defense people  trying to<lb/>
show the public that there is no civil<lb/>
defense<lb/>
"The average person feels this<lb/>
tremendous psychic numbness in<lb/>
looking at what nuclear war might<lb/>
mean she said. "What parent<lb/>
wants to think that their child is go-<lb/>
ing to be the victim of something<lb/>
like the children at Hiroshima and<lb/>
Nagasaki?"<lb/>
students to almost 1.7 million in<lb/>
1980, a National Center for Educa-<lb/>
tional Statistics survey found.<lb/>
"Business school enrollments<lb/>
traditionally rise when the econoni)<lb/>
is in bad shape Hickman explains.<lb/>
"Beople perceive a business degree<lb/>
as a better union card<lb/>
Hickman also cites the growth t<lb/>
continuing education programs thai<lb/>
have swollen the ranks of business<lb/>
schools, and of a migration if<lb/>
women students into business<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
A June 1980 Census Bureau<lb/>
raport found "a slow but sure shiti<lb/>
of women" away from "traditional<lb/>
women's fields" like education<lb/>
toward business.<lb/>
"Students summarizes loin<lb/>
Snyder of the National Center lor<lb/>
Educational Statistics, "are looking<lb/>
for a more marketable field of<lb/>
study<lb/>
Moreover, Snyder adds, "we ex-<lb/>
pect an increase in business students<lb/>
over the next few years<lb/>
The trouble is that colleges can't<lb/>
recruit enough teachers to ae-<lb/>
comodate those students even if<lb/>
they could afford to. Noi enough<lb/>
students are going on for their doc-<lb/>
torates and opting for leaching<lb/>
careers.<lb/>
"From our perspective, the most<lb/>
important task is to attract more<lb/>
students into Ph.d. programs<lb/>
observes Dr. Kenneth Smith, dean<lb/>
of Arizona's business school.<lb/>
Smiih says "the difference bet<lb/>
ween academic and business salaries<lb/>
is not as great as most people seem<lb/>
to think. For instance, at the better<lb/>
schools it is not unusual for a bright<lb/>
Ph.d. to be recruited (by colleges) at<lb/>
a salary that ranges between $28,(KH)<lb/>
lo $3u,(XK) for a nine-month posi-<lb/>
tion. But students don't know about<lb/>
it. In order to increase supplv t<lb/>
Ph.d.s, we need to step up oui<lb/>
recruitment efforts<lb/>
A new AACSB report says new<lb/>
business college teachers averaged<lb/>
siartmg salaries of $22.K(X) last year,<lb/>
ihough new accounting and finance<lb/>
teachers are getting $25,100 and<lb/>
$24,300, respectivesly.<lb/>
While escalating recruiting, ihe<lb/>
business schools have few choices<lb/>
tor immediate!) ending the crisis.<lb/>
"Ilus Smith warns, "is a bad<lb/>
movement because only maybe one-<lb/>
half the students who wish to can<lb/>
get into Hie business program<lb/>
rhere ate also those who, when<lb/>
tailing short ot accreditation stan<lb/>
dat ds. would rather change I lie stan<lb/>
J a i d s.<lb/>
J<lb/>
disagree with FEMA's<lb/>
Scientists are uncertain what the<lb/>
long range effects of radiation will<lb/>
Many organizations and individuals have on our planet, said Mattern.<lb/>
She added, "Civilization as we<lb/>
know it would pretty much come to<lb/>
an end  in any countrv that had<lb/>
the bomb fall<lb/>
Goldsboro, 40 miles from Green-<lb/>
ville, is designated as a Level I area<lb/>
in the event of a nuclear attack.<lb/>
Level I means the area is probably<lb/>
designated for a first-round nuclear<lb/>
hit from a Soviet weapon.<lb/>
In the event of such an attack, the<lb/>
citizens of Goldsboro are supposed<lb/>
Social Respon-<lb/>
trying to make<lb/>
civil defense is<lb/>
strongly<lb/>
position.<lb/>
"Physicians for<lb/>
sibility have been<lb/>
(the) point" that<lb/>
useless in a nuclear attack, stated<lb/>
Sister Evelyn Mattern, a spokesper-<lb/>
son with the N. C. Council of Chur-<lb/>
ches.<lb/>
Physicians for Social Respon-<lb/>
sibility is a group of doctors work-<lb/>
ing from the standDoint of preven-<lb/>
Rehab Program Working<lb/>
I<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
If you are interested<lb/>
in Advertising Layout &amp;<lb/>
Design Contact<lb/>
The East Carolinian Advertising Dept.<lb/>
at<lb/>
757-6366 or 757-3210 &amp; leave a message<lb/>
Interested in<lb/>
Helping<lb/>
Exceptional Children<lb/>
Join the Student<lb/>
Council for Exceptional<lb/>
Children<lb/>
February 15-19<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Speight Building<lb/>
IlfTTIIIIIIillltltlllllllllllll'lIl1<lb/>
Every Day<lb/>
11:00-11:00<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
At times students are referred for<lb/>
further treatment to the ECU<lb/>
Counseling Center, Alcoholics<lb/>
Anonymous, the Greenville Alcohol<lb/>
Rehabilitation Center, Real House<lb/>
Crisis Intervention Center or the<lb/>
Student Health Center.<lb/>
Although only one year old, the<lb/>
ECU Campus Alcohol and Drug<lb/>
Program has already become a<lb/>
model program, according to its<lb/>
volunteer workers. Lotterhos often<lb/>
speaks to outside groups about the<lb/>
program's successes.<lb/>
Summing up the work of CADP,<lb/>
Lotterhos called it an "educational<lb/>
exercise" to get people to think<lb/>
about alcohof and drug abuse. "The<lb/>
whole concept here is one of com-<lb/>
munication. The program is in-<lb/>
dependent and not punitive<lb/>
"This is the place to come for in-<lb/>
formation, advice, assistance, sup-<lb/>
port, or if you just want to stop<lb/>
by Crist added.<lb/>
The trwin Building is near<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center on the<lb/>
side facing Greene dormitory.<lb/>
CADP's telephone number is<lb/>
757-6793.<lb/>
300 E. 10th St.<lb/>
758121<lb/>
FAST SERVICE<lb/>
Gome<lb/>
Machines<lb/>
Big Screen<lb/>
TV<lb/>
Drive-Up<lb/>
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FREE DELIVERY to Dorms<lb/>
and Campus area sororities<lb/>
and fraternities.<lb/>
Located 1 mile past<lb/>
Hastings Ford on<lb/>
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POPCORN<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
2,95<lb/>
A PLATE<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
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TEZZER<lb/>
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BRICE ST.<lb/>
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SNOW<lb/>
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1 SUNDAY j?<lb/>
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ATTICL<lb/>
SOUTH S "6 1 ROCK NIGHTCLUB <lb/>
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TUES. - PIZZA SPECIAL -<lb/>
LADIES' NITE - MIKE ED-<lb/>
WARDS<lb/>
WED. - SALAD BAR<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
THURS. - SPAGHETTI<lb/>
SPEC.<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT. - HAPPY<lb/>
HOUR 4-7 - KENNY SHORE<lb/>
SUN. - LASAGNA SPECIAL<lb/>
MON. - COUNTRY COOK-<lb/>
ING<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Grinderswitch<lb/>
in Concert<lb/>
FRIDAY MATINEE<lb/>
wHarvey Dalton<lb/>
Arnold ? Happy Hour<lb/>
4-7<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
Happy Hour 6-8:30<lb/>
FRI &amp; SAT. NITE<lb/>
Harvey Dalton<lb/>
 Arnold<lb/>
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EAST CAROLINA'S<lb/>
PARTY CENTER<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
ARM WRESTLING<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
HUMP NITE<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
END OF WK. PARTY<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
BEST IN DANCE MUSIC<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
LADIES' NITE<lb/>
zazzzsy<lb/>
 It takes 12 inches<lb/>
to make a hero . .<lb/>
Mi $ondwkt?.? - Solodi -<lb/>
Vafitorion SondwicHct<lb/>
Homemodr Soups - H?o? on freshly bofcad ro4H<lb/>
Live Music<lb/>
Is Back!<lb/>
Feb. 18<lb/>
Harry &amp; Scrappy<lb/>
9:00 p.ml a.m.<lb/>
Good Food ? Good Times<lb/>
VIDEOGAMES<lb/>
Attitude Adiustment Daily ? 4 p.m7 p.m<lb/>
(OjapfrrX<lb/>
v<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
Zoo Nite ? 25C ponies<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Ladies' Night<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Happ) Hour ? Free<lb/>
Admission til 10 ?<lb/>
25C ponies til II<lb/>
FRIDAY AFTERNOON<lb/>
END OF THE WEEK<lb/>
BUCKET PARTY-<lb/>
saturday<lb/>
JOHN MOORE<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
Nickel Nite<lb/>
Call ?si ?7?s tor mtrt into.<lb/>
109 E. 5th St. 752-1341<lb/>
GOOD TIMES<lb/>
Mon. (3-4 p.m.) FREE Pinball<lb/>
(8 p.m.) Dart Tournament<lb/>
HARRY &amp; SCRAPPY<lb/>
SAT FEB. 20<lb/>
FREE PINBALL 3-4<lb/>
MON FEB. 22<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR from 4-7<lb/>
every day with the<lb/>
coldest beverage in town.<lb/>
NtwopM 7?ayia wNt - Jpm i p.m.<lb/>
"t EAST $th STREET<lb/>
7S2 ?7I!<lb/>
Cartoon Contest<lb/>
Call for details-752-8711<lb/>
NOW OPEN FOR<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
DAILY AT 4:30<lb/>
Not open to the general public.<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057458_0004"/><lb/>
@Ur East (Earnlintan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree, eo, ? cw<lb/>
Ric Browning, Mm? ,4dwwii Tom Hall, NewsEduor<lb/>
Fielding Miller, flu wa?t??fr Charles Chandler, ?,?, ??,???<lb/>
Alison Bartel, nwiwi Mau(rf Steve Bachner, bmmmmmm 4'<lb/>
Steve Moore. com Mm William Yelverton, hw<lb/>
February 16, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Drinking Age<lb/>
4 Icohol Still A vailable To A nyone<lb/>
Governor James Hunt's Crime<lb/>
Commission recently recommended<lb/>
to him that the state's legal drinking<lb/>
age be raised from 18 to 21 for all<lb/>
types of alcohol. In theory, this pro-<lb/>
posed increase is aimed at lessening<lb/>
the number of alcohol-induced traf-<lb/>
fic accidents in the state.<lb/>
Obviously, the governor's com-<lb/>
mittee feels that raising the drinking<lb/>
age three years will drastically<lb/>
reduce the annual figures. And<lb/>
perhaps this change will look good<lb/>
on paper, but the adverse effects of<lb/>
such an increase outweigh by far the<lb/>
theoretical improvements.<lb/>
In the first place, raising North<lb/>
Carolina's legal drinking age would<lb/>
be a sham. How can the governor<lb/>
expect a decrease in drunk-driving<lb/>
fatalities, when current laws aren't<lb/>
even being enforced? Recent<lb/>
statistics have shown that the state's<lb/>
conviction rate for drunken-driving<lb/>
arrests is a mere 50 percent. Thus,<lb/>
lessening traffic fatalities requires,<lb/>
first and foremost, proper im-<lb/>
plementation of any legislation,<lb/>
whether that concern 18-year-olds<lb/>
or 21-year-olds.<lb/>
Secondly, it is difficult, even<lb/>
foolish, to believe that changing a<lb/>
law on paper will actually prevent<lb/>
persons aged 18 to 21 from continu-<lb/>
ing to consume alcohol. Rather, an<lb/>
increase in the drinking age would<lb/>
provoke secrecy. Those who wish to<lb/>
drink will continue to do so, and if<lb/>
they cannot purchase alcohol in<lb/>
public, they'll drink in private,<lb/>
behind closed doors, even closed car<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
I&amp;ADNEMB.S HEPKMrt twzrr<lb/>
? - :J<lb/>
' X<lb/>
jf<lb/>
XZ- j3(j7-?<lb/>
doors. In reality, a law aimed at<lb/>
lessening alcohol-induced accidents<lb/>
could be an encouragement for the<lb/>
exact opposite.<lb/>
Furthermore, in the United<lb/>
States, there seems to be some con-<lb/>
flict of Gpinion as to the age at<lb/>
which a person becomes an adult.<lb/>
Since the resurgence of draft<lb/>
registration in 1979, all 18-year-old<lb/>
males are required to file with the<lb/>
Selective Service. Isn't it<lb/>
hypocritical that a person con-<lb/>
sidered old enough to serve his<lb/>
country cannot enjoy a glass of beer<lb/>
with friends? Critics will complain<lb/>
that this argument is overused, and<lb/>
perhaps they're right, but sound<lb/>
logic is sound logic.<lb/>
Finally, and perhaps of somewhat<lb/>
lesser importance, is the monetary<lb/>
consideration. An increase in the<lb/>
legal drinking age from 18 to 21<lb/>
would not only decrease a valuable<lb/>
revenue to the state, but would also<lb/>
pose financial difficulties for hun-<lb/>
dreds of businesses statewide,<lb/>
especiallv those in college towns.<lb/>
With more than half of ECU's<lb/>
students under 21, it is conceivable<lb/>
that a new drinking law could<lb/>
necessitate the closing of many<lb/>
Greenville "night spots Rather<lb/>
than going downtown to dance and<lb/>
socialize, students would have to<lb/>
revert back to gathering at "Mary<lb/>
Lou's to play records Of course,<lb/>
the night clubs could always convert<lb/>
from seling beer to pouring Kool-<lb/>
Ade.<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
MAKE<lb/>
rrr<lb/>
i<lb/>
WHONSE &amp;IUASPOW<lb/>
UPwnecoASfam;<lb/>
amd sent a&amp;. tithe<lb/>
KXOME AVEHJE PETEM-<lb/>
TVN CEMBt KK HEf-<lb/>
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ummoKJisrcAiwvASKiF-<lb/>
m oju srwsat m. mmmx<lb/>
V k&amp;p fxo eerrno pgkktw,<lb/>
AtfHOKSE TOW 94BH rOVUAEUS<lb/>
CMHmrr.sorw.<lb/>
1 !<lb/>
TMmwvw<lb/>
UK0H6AS SXAimCCK-<lb/>
USUAL CALL PASSKMlEmt<lb/>
VGHIAC UaXVHAMESfMT<lb/>
and. tmmcnm<lb/>
?mF<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Conservative Views Draw Criticism<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
This column is addressed to the two in-<lb/>
dividuals who co-authored a New Right<lb/>
manifesto of sorts, in response to the alleg-<lb/>
ed liberal bias of The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Mr. Jones and Mr. Kilcoyne, you raise<lb/>
three good questions: how much of a<lb/>
responsibility do we as citizens have to<lb/>
alleviate the suffering of those who are less<lb/>
fortunate (in other words, should charity<lb/>
be compulsory?); is ther really a significant<lb/>
number of people who simply cannot help<lb/>
themselves? and how efficiacious can large<lb/>
federal agencies be in the war on poverty?<lb/>
As for the question of compulsive chari-<lb/>
ty, it seems evident from an examination<lb/>
of history that people will attempt to<lb/>
secure their own survival by any means<lb/>
available to them. Either you give people a<lb/>
means of obtaining food, shelter and<lb/>
clothing or they will rip you off and<lb/>
possibly kill you. An irrevocable dilemma<lb/>
of class antagonism arises between the<lb/>
haves and the have-nots, possibly even<lb/>
leading to violent revolution.<lb/>
It is far less expensive to practice com-<lb/>
pulsive charity than it is to maintain a<lb/>
police state. The spiritual ramifications of<lb/>
this issue are almost infinite. They can,<lb/>
perhaps, best be summarized by saying<lb/>
that the progress of society as a whole can<lb/>
only burgeon as rapidly as the progress of<lb/>
the least evolved or fully realized in-<lb/>
dividual in it. Or, a chain is only as strong<lb/>
as its weakest link. An organism is only as<lb/>
healthy as its sickest cell. Besides, feeding<lb/>
someone is an investment, not a burden.<lb/>
Now, you may wonder if the assertion<lb/>
that there are really people who will starve<lb/>
to death without financial assistance is a<lb/>
valid claim. The unemployment rate is cur-<lb/>
rently 8.5 percent nationwide. Keep in<lb/>
mind that this figure is only representative<lb/>
of the number of people who have any in-<lb/>
come. Anyone who has ever done any<lb/>
work with a charity organization or has<lb/>
talked with anyone who has is keenly<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
aware that there is certainly a substantial<lb/>
number of people who simply cannot sur-<lb/>
vive without some form of financial<lb/>
assistance. Yes, there are cases of welfare<lb/>
fraud, but from my experience, I am<lb/>
satisfied that the majority of the people<lb/>
who receive financial assistance from the<lb/>
government are proud, independent people<lb/>
who are embarassed to be receiving charity<lb/>
and would support themselves and their<lb/>
families if it were at all possible. I must<lb/>
question whether or not those who have<lb/>
never been poor or done any work with the<lb/>
poor have any right to question the<lb/>
legitimacy of programs designed to benefit<lb/>
the poor. Why should the burden of proof<lb/>
be on social workers and political activists<lb/>
who are willing to sacrifice for other<lb/>
human beings? Why shouldn't those who<lb/>
cry "welfare cadillac" at the mere mention<lb/>
of food stamps or school lunch programs<lb/>
have to prove that the recipients of finan-<lb/>
cial aid are really shiftless and lazy?<lb/>
Although Reagan claims to be sparing<lb/>
the "truly needy they will bear the brunt<lb/>
of the new social cruelty. The working<lb/>
poor, much beloved in conservative<lb/>
Republican mythology, will also be<lb/>
punished.<lb/>
Some 25 million Americans are living on<lb/>
incomes below the federally established<lb/>
poverty level of $3,790 a year, and signs in-<lb/>
dicate their numbers are increasing. Many<lb/>
of these people are attempting to support<lb/>
families on their meager incomes. Some of<lb/>
them are deserted mothers left to care for<lb/>
their children alone.<lb/>
WZMB Praised By 'Alternative9 Listeners<lb/>
It is my desire to respond to the article<lb/>
in the February 9th issue of The East<lb/>
Carolinian concerning the questioned<lb/>
format of WZMB in relation to its<lb/>
minority representation (or lack<lb/>
thereof)- I see no grounds on which the<lb/>
Society of United Liberal Students<lb/>
(SOULS) can firmly base us argument.<lb/>
"Representation in the course of<lb/>
this argument, is the key word. In addi-<lb/>
tion to station manager Sam Barawick's<lb/>
fine defense of the format in the article,<lb/>
I would like to add what 1 believe are the<lb/>
impractical aspects of true representa-<lb/>
tion in this particular case.<lb/>
To begin with, we mustn't forget (as<lb/>
we often do) that a minority group (as<lb/>
SOULS describes itself") is not necessari-<lb/>
ly solely a black interest group, but a<lb/>
group that must also represent the in-<lb/>
terests of other minority racial and<lb/>
ethnic groups as well. It follows, then<lb/>
that SOULS' demands for representa-<lb/>
tion must include music appealing to<lb/>
both blacks and the many various ohter<lb/>
minorities.<lb/>
Therefore, to represent SOULS and<lb/>
all minorities in WZMB's format would<lb/>
mean not only including "funk" and<lb/>
soul as is generally the preference of<lb/>
blacks, but also those preferences of<lb/>
other minorities representative of their<lb/>
respective tastes. Obviously, this is im-<lb/>
practical. Another consideration must<lb/>
be made also.<lb/>
What about the representation of the<lb/>
whites who have tastes other than that<lb/>
which is played on WZMB? What about<lb/>
those who like classical, gospel, beach,<lb/>
Top-40, and country music? Do they not<lb/>
pay student fees also? Is this not<lb/>
analogous with the complaints of<lb/>
SOULS? Of course it is. The point be-<lb/>
ing! The whole idea of true representa-<lb/>
tion of those to be represented in the for-<lb/>
mat of WZMB is highly impractical.<lb/>
It would also be contradictory to the<lb/>
purpose of creating WZMB. There are<lb/>
many commercial radio stations in the<lb/>
area which provide the music to meet<lb/>
most any individual's tastes, with the ex-<lb/>
ception of what is played on WZMB.<lb/>
The station was created to provide an<lb/>
alternative to those stations.<lb/>
I do not doubt the legitimacy and the<lb/>
contributing potential of SOULS in<lb/>
campus activities. In the future,<lb/>
however, I would prefer to see SOULS<lb/>
be more careful and realistic in choosing<lb/>
its battlegrounds.<lb/>
KEN BARNES<lb/>
Soph Pre-med.<lb/>
Special Consideration<lb/>
In response to SOULS President<lb/>
Russell Parker, what exactly is special<lb/>
consideration for minority listeners?<lb/>
Until WZMB went on the air, I con-<lb/>
sidered myself a minority listener<lb/>
because there was not one single AOR<lb/>
(album oriented rock) station in the<lb/>
listening area. I do not classify music in<lb/>
categories dealing with racel I classify it<lb/>
in categories dealing with preference to<lb/>
tempo, vocals, rhythm, etcpreferred<lb/>
by the individual. Stevie Wonder word-<lb/>
ed this philosophy perfectly in "Sir<lb/>
Duke" by singing "Music is a world<lb/>
within itself, with a language we all<lb/>
understand, with an equal opportunity<lb/>
for all to sing, dance, and clap their<lb/>
hands<lb/>
Obviously those who say Z-91 is not<lb/>
providing for the black "minority" do<lb/>
not look beyond and take note of some<lb/>
of the artist that fit into 91.3's format.<lb/>
Artists like, the Doobie Brothers, Jimi<lb/>
Hendrix, Joan Armatrading, Mothers<lb/>
Finest, Tina Turner, The Bus Boys, Bob<lb/>
Marley, Clarence Clements, and Gary<lb/>
U.S. Bonds, just to name a few that fit<lb/>
into AOR. Other artists like George<lb/>
Benson, Earth, Wind and Fire, Diana<lb/>
Ross, The Commadors, plus all time<lb/>
famous jazz masters are featureed in the<lb/>
jazz segment of the format.<lb/>
WZMB also provides for the classical<lb/>
listening minority that has been ignored<lb/>
in the airwaves available to Greenville.<lb/>
But for people that prefer other types of<lb/>
music, whether it be Top 40, soul,<lb/>
religious, country; in Greenville it is now<lb/>
just a flick of the dial.<lb/>
The area and ECU should be thankful<lb/>
to Sam Barwick, John Jeter, Elton<lb/>
Boney and staff for providing an<lb/>
"alternative" station. Now no matter<lb/>
what mood you are in or music you ears<lb/>
are seeking to hear you FM receiver will<lb/>
find it loud and clear. And also, please<lb/>
remember, WZMB is an Educational<lb/>
Station providing experience and on<lb/>
hand training to students interested in<lb/>
communications. I find ECU fortunate<lb/>
to have this station.<lb/>
So to both Parker and Hunter: "You<lb/>
can please some of the people all of the<lb/>
time<lb/>
SUSIE MAGHAN<lb/>
Freshman, Communications<lb/>
'Bland And Insipid'<lb/>
"I'd like to buy an argument" so says<lb/>
Monte Python's Other Album, and so<lb/>
say I. It seems there has been no little<lb/>
discrepency over WZMB's format.<lb/>
Well, you can't please everyone I<lb/>
generally don't dig on classical music,<lb/>
either! But I also know that if I want to<lb/>
hear any "reggae" music, all's I have to<lb/>
do is go up and down the dial from 88 to<lb/>
108 MHZ and I got it! They're a dime a<lb/>
dozen.<lb/>
Having lived in this area for<lb/>
something like 13 odd years, I know<lb/>
what's around and 1 must confess, it's<lb/>
not much. I decrie the railing accusa-<lb/>
tions against WZMB. It's only 1 little<lb/>
spot on a bland and insipid scale where<lb/>
there's a new wind blowing. I support<lb/>
your format, and anxiously observe<lb/>
your potential. I enjoy your Stevie<lb/>
Wonder, Miles Davis, Maynard<lb/>
Ferguson, and Al Dineola.<lb/>
Could I make a request for some more<lb/>
Frank Marino!? And finally to quote a<lb/>
friendI love Rock-N-Roll, so put<lb/>
another dime in the juke box baby<lb/>
SCOTT ELLIS<lb/>
Sophomore, Pre-Pharmacy<lb/>
Overall, the cuts in the feeding programs<lb/>
? including food stamps, WIC, school<lb/>
breakfasts and summer lunches ? total<lb/>
about $3 billion, so far. More than half of<lb/>
the cuts come in the food stamp program,<lb/>
which will lose up to $1.8 billion. Approx-<lb/>
imately 900,000 people will stop receiving<lb/>
benefits. But the reductions are aimed<lb/>
primarily at those who remain on the food<lb/>
stamp rolls ? those who even Reagan<lb/>
thinks are deserving of aid. These people,<lb/>
whose benefits will be slashed by 10-15 per-<lb/>
cent, will simply have less to eat.<lb/>
"The Reagan Administraiion claims it is<lb/>
eliminating abuse says Jeff Kitsch of the<lb/>
Food Research and Action Center in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. "But no one in the<lb/>
White House has yet explained why those<lb/>
people who are still on the rolls should<lb/>
have less milk to give their children. What<lb/>
it means is that these people will be haid<lb/>
pressed to feed themselves properly<lb/>
It also seems somewhat paradoxical that<lb/>
Reagan's whittling down of federal<lb/>
bureaucracies will, in fact, result in a<lb/>
reduction in the ranks of the very people<lb/>
who have a responsibility to investigate<lb/>
cases of welfare fraud. When people are<lb/>
angered by the cost of crime they seldom<lb/>
fire half the police force and then pat<lb/>
themselves on the back for saving money<lb/>
Reagan and his allies argue that their<lb/>
programs will eventually help the poor.<lb/>
With lowered taxes and reduced govern-<lb/>
ment spending, inflation will ease, invest-<lb/>
ment will increase and the economy will<lb/>
boom. But, Reagan is not reducing govern-<lb/>
ment spending; he's shifting money from<lb/>
social programs to the Pentagon and his<lb/>
tax rebate program will primarily benefit<lb/>
those people who make in excess of<lb/>
$60,000 per year.<lb/>
According to Reagan economic theory,<lb/>
businessmen will use the excess capital<lb/>
from his cuts for investments which will<lb/>
eventually create more jobs for the work-<lb/>
ing class and the poor. This theory of<lb/>
economics, however, does not take into ac-<lb/>
count the fact that the primary<lb/>
beneficiaries of the tax cuts, multi-national<lb/>
corporations, often spend part of their<lb/>
revenue in underdeveloped countries or on<lb/>
corporate mergers.<lb/>
In underdeveloped countries they can<lb/>
build factories inexpensively, hire labor for<lb/>
$2 a day and manufacture their goods tax-<lb/>
free. This sort of investment creates no<lb/>
jobs for the American unemployed and<lb/>
does not benefit the poor either.<lb/>
Also, the Federal Reserve, which con-<lb/>
trols the growth of money, has not let<lb/>
credit grow faster to pay for the federal<lb/>
deficits, so the government's borrowing<lb/>
demands are pushing up interest rates.<lb/>
The result is the current staggering<lb/>
levels, which threaten to choke off the<lb/>
private investment boom that the tax cut is<lb/>
supposed to bring about. Because the<lb/>
defense expenditure is finar mg the pro-<lb/>
duction of non-consumable goods and<lb/>
because the unemployment rate has a high<lb/>
correlation with the inflation rate,<lb/>
Reaganomics will not work.<lb/>
In conclusion, allow me to say that<lb/>
liberals benve in government bureaucracies<lb/>
and their ability to deal with social<lb/>
pathology. They believe that only a few<lb/>
minor cosmetic changes in government are<lb/>
needed to correct our contemporary social<lb/>
malaise. 1 do not.<lb/>
I believe that far-reaching fundamental<lb/>
changes are needed in the very tenets that<lb/>
our social order has been founded upon.<lb/>
While it is evident the average citizen<lb/>
does not have time (or the inclination) to<lb/>
do the work that HEW does, it is also evi-<lb/>
dent that large federal agencies are<lb/>
cumbersome, expensive and inefficient.<lb/>
Our social reality has changed. We no<lb/>
longer live in a simple entrepreneuial free-<lb/>
enterprise economy. We live in a<lb/>
militaristic corporate state economy. Until<lb/>
this very basic flaw is corrected, more and<lb/>
more people will continue to be brutalized<lb/>
by a rapidly constricting marketplace. Old<lb/>
solutions to our problems no longer work.<lb/>
?<lb/>
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I ML EAS1 CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
FLBRUARY 16, 1982 Page 5<lb/>
Alan Bates Is<lb/>
Back In Cult<lb/>
Film Hearts'<lb/>
BvJOHNWFYIFR<lb/>
S1?H W filer<lb/>
'The Nada Gang'Invades MendenhalVs Hendrix Theatre Sunday<lb/>
Claude Chabrols Hitchcockian thriller The ada Gang is the Cinema<lb/>
Societ of Greenville's second offering this season. The film will be<lb/>
shown this Sunday, February 2t. at 7 p.m. in MSC s Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served at 6:30 p.m. Subscriptions for the remain-<lb/>
ing five films will be sold at the door for $9 and can also be obtained b<lb/>
contacting Glen Brewster or Karen Blansfield at 757-6041.<lb/>
Phillippe De Broca's King of<lb/>
Hearts is a classic cult film. Releas-<lb/>
ed in 1967 to popular and critical ac-<lb/>
claim, it has gone on to become a<lb/>
much-loved favorite of college au-<lb/>
diences and art movie patrons. They<lb/>
adore King of Hearts for its com-<lb/>
bination of comedy, stylish satire,<lb/>
superb performances and direction,<lb/>
and thought-provoking moral<lb/>
theme.<lb/>
The film will be shown tomorrow<lb/>
evening at 8 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
There will be no admission charge.<lb/>
Alan Bates stars as Private<lb/>
Charles Plumpick, one of a troop of<lb/>
Scottish soldiers stationed in France<lb/>
during World War I. He is given a<lb/>
special mission when his troop en<lb/>
counters a group of people fleeing<lb/>
from their small village, which faces<lb/>
destruction due to a booby-trap<lb/>
bomb left behind by the Germans.<lb/>
Plumpick is sent to dismantle the<lb/>
bomb, which is set to explode when<lb/>
an armored knight on the church<lb/>
steeple clock strikes midnight with<lb/>
his mace. Instead of a deserted,<lb/>
terror-stricken town, the young<lb/>
soldier finds the village filled with<lb/>
happy, joyous life.<lb/>
Barber, bordello madame,<lb/>
bishop, general, duke and duchess.<lb/>
and more, a strange race of charm-<lb/>
ing, care free people have<lb/>
repopulated the village. Plumpick<lb/>
finally realizes that they are escapees<lb/>
from the nearby insane asylum.<lb/>
They name him the King of Hearts,<lb/>
and announce that pretty young Co-<lb/>
quelicot (Genevieve Bujold) will be<lb/>
his Queen.<lb/>
He defuses the bomb, but still the<lb/>
war rages while the lovely lunatics<lb/>
engage in merry revels. While they<lb/>
play, the soldiers fight ? the Scot-<lb/>
tish and German regiments savagely<lb/>
slaughter each other. For the<lb/>
townspeople, insanity is preferable<lb/>
to the evils "sane" people<lb/>
perpetrate on each other.<lb/>
The theme of lunacy versus<lb/>
"normalcy tomfoolery versus the<lb/>
carnage of war, is best symbolized<lb/>
by the image of Private Plumpick,<lb/>
naked, carrying a bird cage, seeking<lb/>
admittance to the asylum, willing to<lb/>
be a crazyman i at her than a killer.<lb/>
"The image said Vincent Canby<lb/>
in The Sen York Times) like all the<lb/>
others in this beautifully<lb/>
photographed film, is funny. The<lb/>
scene, however funny, is also dark<lb/>
and sad, which pretty much<lb/>
describes the mood of this ex-<lb/>
travagant and highly comic morality<lb/>
playa moral fable that is not only<lb/>
funny but also wise and touching in<lb/>
a very gentle way<lb/>
Horror Of Party Beach' Just Another Horror<lb/>
Bv JOHN WFYI.KR<lb/>
ni?H Wnlrt<lb/>
()h everybody do (he zombie stomp!<lb/>
Ooo-doo-doo-doop.<lb/>
lust land your foot down<lb/>
with an a tui hump' . <lb/>
Ook doo-doop,<lb/>
Babv, baby, don't you care<lb/>
Something here looking kinda weird.<lb/>
Honey, I'm no Frankestein.<lb/>
Oh euh baby, really I feel fine.<lb/>
? "The Zombie Stomp' .<lb/>
sung by the Del-Aires in<lb/>
The Horror of Party Beach<lb/>
Billed as "The First Horror Monster Musical The<lb/>
Horror of Party Beach was an insane attempt to com-<lb/>
bine the popular 60's phenomenon known as beach<lb/>
movies with the standard monster sci-fi genre. The<lb/>
advertising used upon its initial release tells it all:<lb/>
"Fantastic The big-beat sound of the Del-Aires sw-<lb/>
ingin' out with six rockin' hits! Horrifying Teen-age<lb/>
slumber party ravaged by demons from the dead!<lb/>
Wierd Ghoulish atomic beasts who live off warm,<lb/>
human blood<lb/>
Or, as the editors of TV Movies describe it:<lb/>
"Monsters from the ocean floor go on rampage<lb/>
against harmless teenagers ? or is it the other way<lb/>
around? Oh. never mind<lb/>
The movie may be seen in some respects as an<lb/>
environmental-consciousness film warning against the<lb/>
dangers of radioactive waste dumping. The thoroughly-<lb/>
researched scientific hypothesis of the film is that<lb/>
radioactive waste carelessly dumped into the ocean<lb/>
causes microscopic sea parasites to invade the bodies of<lb/>
sunken sailors.<lb/>
n-roll revel, dancing to the delerious beat of the rightful-<lb/>
ly unremembered Del Aires, blissfully unaware of the<lb/>
danger surrounding them. The unattractive and<lb/>
atrocious-acting teens are among the worst ever seen on<lb/>
screen: even Annette and Frankie wouldn't be caught<lb/>
????<lb/>
idwwyiffi<lb/>
Bad Sci Fi<lb/>
Over the old bones, a new form of life is created,<lb/>
categorized by Dr. Gavin, the deadly, dull but brilliant<lb/>
scientist examining them, as a giant protozoa, both<lb/>
plant and animal.<lb/>
The doctor's diagnosis seems correct, as the creatures<lb/>
look like human bodies covered with artichoke leaves,<lb/>
topped by a huge fish-like head, the always-open mouth<lb/>
of which appears to be stuffed with several large<lb/>
sausages. For some reason these bizarre beings need<lb/>
blood for sustenance, though it's a pity people can't eat<lb/>
them instead as the monsters have the makings of an ap-<lb/>
petizing, if unusual seafood salad.<lb/>
It is not necessary here to fully recount the plodding<lb/>
plot of The Horror of Party Beach. Suffice it to say that<lb/>
the sea-beasts attack the innocent, empty-minded<lb/>
habituees of Party Beach. These dark sunglassed and<lb/>
bikini-clad teenagers spend their days in continual rock-<lb/>
l t any pcat,n.<lb/>
. Gavin fjJjcU a soluffoh'tb the' surreal siege when<lb/>
Eulabelle, his Aunt Jemima-like, black-stereotype ser-<lb/>
vant, accidentally knocks a container of sodium on a<lb/>
severed sea monster's arm that the doctor was studying,<lb/>
causing the arm to go up in smoke.<lb/>
In The Fifty Wont Films Of All Time, an elite group<lb/>
to which The Horror Of Party Beach belongs by natural<lb/>
birthright, the extremely unexciting climax of the film is<lb/>
described:<lb/>
"Dr. Gavin and the police arrive just in time to save<lb/>
his daughter from the ubiquitous weirdos. Gavin and<lb/>
the police throw tons of sodium onto the creatures as<lb/>
they turn into walking forest fires and slowly disappear.<lb/>
These actors throw the sodium with so little elan that the<lb/>
scene looks like some sort of a monster multiple wed<lb/>
ding in which Dr. Gavin and the police are the<lb/>
bridesmaids throwing rice at the happy couples<lb/>
This movie is so bad that it become very entertaining<lb/>
and has gone on to become a cult classic. It's director.<lb/>
Del Tennev, has deservedly been long forgotten. His on-<lb/>
ly other claim to fame is Theurse of The I iving Corp-<lb/>
se, which often shared a drive-in double bill with The<lb/>
Horror of Party Beach.<lb/>
History Lessons<lb/>
RedsV'Ragtime' Battle Norms<lb/>
ByJOHNWEYLER<lb/>
?Maff ?nlrf<lb/>
Reds and Ragtime, this season's biggest-budgeted,<lb/>
boldest and possibly best films, have finally reached<lb/>
Greenville. It will be interesting to see how this city, a<lb/>
typical, small, closed-class system American town,<lb/>
reacts to these two daring, intelligent movies about class<lb/>
struggles in early 20th century America.<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
Reds playing at the Buccaneer, is starscreen-<lb/>
writerdirector Warren Beatty's epic about radical jour-<lb/>
nalist John Reed. Ragtime, at the Plttt, is director Milos<lb/>
Forman's adaptation of E.L. Doctorow s bestselling<lb/>
kaleidoscope of turn-of-the-century celebrities, sin and<lb/>
assassination. The two films are parallel political and<lb/>
period pieces, and share a number of other similarities<lb/>
Both Reds and Ragtime are lenghty (Reds the longer,<lb/>
at 1 minutes plus intermission), lovingly and carefully<lb/>
crafted films. Both are freewheeling mixtures of fact<lb/>
(especially Reds) and fiction (especially Ragtime). Both<lb/>
are hugely budgeted, with much expense and expertise<lb/>
lavished on sets and costuming.<lb/>
Both have large and unusual cast lists ? Reds not on-<lb/>
ly has Beattv but Diane Keaton, Jack Nicholson and bit<lb/>
parts by Gene Hackman and Jerzy Kozinski. Ragtime<lb/>
stars James Cagney, Mary Steenburgen, and several ex-<lb/>
cellent newcomers including Howard E. Rollins and<lb/>
Elizabeth McGovern. (Both films also feature what<lb/>
must be this season's cinematicliterary fad: using<lb/>
famous writers as actors. Reds has Kozinski. Ragtime<lb/>
enlists great American novelist Norman Mailer).<lb/>
Both films are awe-inspiring artistic and financial<lb/>
gambles. While Ragtime is a popular book, coming to<lb/>
the screen with a bulletin audience, Doctorow's novel is<lb/>
quite complicated and eccentric, difficult to film. War-<lb/>
ren Beatty took an even bigger chance, risking whether<lb/>
or not the tight-fisted, close-minded American 80's<lb/>
would support a multi-million dollar, more-than-three-<lb/>
hour epic about anything, especially heroic Com-<lb/>
munists.<lb/>
Any Hollywood enterprise is shaky ? what seems to<lb/>
be a sure bet often bombs at the box office. Film pro-<lb/>
ducers might as well dish out the cash blindfolded, with<lb/>
as little assurance as they have of ever getting it back<lb/>
again. But to knowingly stand on the brink of financial<lb/>
oblivion by bankrolling a politically unpopular film is<lb/>
breathtaking. Can Hollywood make heroes out of anar-<lb/>
chists, American Communists (Reds) and black ter-<lb/>
rorists (Ragtime) What ever happened to Knute<lb/>
Rockne, A11-American!<lb/>
It is precisely on taking these unpopular political and<lb/>
economic stands that Beatty and Forman and crew<lb/>
should be applauded. It doesn't matter whether you<lb/>
agree with their viewpoints, or even enjoy their films.<lb/>
What matters is that the filmmakers tried to produce in-<lb/>
telligent, artistically risky entertainment during the ad-<lb/>
ministration of Indiana Jones and Luke Skywalker.<lb/>
Though Reds and Ragtime both have their faults,<lb/>
they triumph because the people who made them and<lb/>
the studios that backed them dared to care.<lb/>
Diane Keaton and Warren Beatty embrace in a scene from the climax of kis highly<lb/>
film Reds.<lb/>
f<lb/>
?<lb/>
'yumxwMjwtM<lb/>
I<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057458_0006"/><lb/>
THfc EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 16, 1982<lb/>
Road Manager Carder<lb/>
Steps Into The Limelight<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI)<lb/>
Joe Carder is no<lb/>
stranger to show<lb/>
business. It's just not<lb/>
often that a road<lb/>
manager gets to step<lb/>
out and face the<lb/>
cameras usually reserv-<lb/>
ed for his clients.<lb/>
That's why, for all<lb/>
the failings of big-time<lb/>
television and the in-<lb/>
herent snobbishness of<lb/>
Hollywood, he's<lb/>
grateful to CBS and its<lb/>
upcoming mini-series,<lb/>
"The Blue and the<lb/>
Gray<lb/>
For one brief mo-<lb/>
ment, Carder, whose<lb/>
regular job is to make<lb/>
the concert tour path<lb/>
smooth for Art Fer-<lb/>
rante and Lou<lb/>
Teischer, got to take a<lb/>
path of his own back<lb/>
in time to Robert E.<lb/>
Lee's surrender of the<lb/>
Confederacy at Ap-<lb/>
pomatox.<lb/>
Carder, a writer and<lb/>
talent agent who has<lb/>
both acted and taught<lb/>
the craft for 20 years, is<lb/>
one of a growing bat-<lb/>
talion of Americans<lb/>
who, steeped in film<lb/>
and television, occa-<lb/>
sionally find a chance<lb/>
to live for a moment as<lb/>
part of the dream.<lb/>
He was one of<lb/>
several thousand<lb/>
"extras" hired for the<lb/>
CBS movie and,<lb/>
because of his profes-<lb/>
sional credentials, one<lb/>
of only 40 or 50 who<lb/>
were given coveted<lb/>
speaking parts when it<lb/>
was filmed last<lb/>
Christmas on location<lb/>
in Fayetteville, Ark.<lb/>
Only the terminally<lb/>
jaded would fail to<lb/>
savor the thrill.<lb/>
"The 'Blue and the<lb/>
Gray' was magnifi-<lb/>
See CARDER, Page 7<lb/>
With the temperature down and the<lb/>
chance of snow, we at Western Sizzlin<lb/>
want you to know that we've got it hot<lb/>
and fresh Steaks that are cut fresh daily<lb/>
from USDA Choice western beef. Never<lb/>
frozen And we serve 'em up piping hot<lb/>
to take care of that winter chill So if<lb/>
you've got it cold, we've got it hot at<lb/>
Western Sizzlm.<lb/>
JR. SIZZLIN1 SIRLOIN<lb/>
w Baked Potato or French Fries &amp; Texas Toast<lb/>
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II a.m2 p.m. Monda-Sunday<lb/>
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MonSun. 11:30-2:00 $2.69<lb/>
Mon.&amp;Tues. 6:00-8:30 $2.89<lb/>
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LARGE PORTION<lb/>
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BONUS TRIP TO SALAD BAR .4?<lb/>
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WINTER<lb/>
CLEARANCE<lb/>
SPECIAUZES IN:<lb/>
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DUPLICATION<lb/>
Located Across From Campus<lb/>
I n The .Ge"Sr)jBtn Shjjsf I j  j J<lb/>
? Copies Cost 60 to 30copy<lb/>
? Phototypesetting<lb/>
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OPEN 9-7 m-f 9-2 sat.<lb/>
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All Paperbacks, Hardbacks<lb/>
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Open 9 To 6 Seven Days A Week g<lb/>
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Apply with Media Board<lb/>
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DISCOVER<lb/>
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W rtvN -<lb/>
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IN RECENT MONTHS, THE ARRESTS OF COLLEGE STUDENTS<lb/>
INVOLVED IN DRUG RELATED INCIDENTS HAS INCREASED<lb/>
DRAMATICALLY. Because of our concern and in our quest for<lb/>
RESPONSIBILITY, we would like it known to all the students the new<lb/>
drug laws now in effect. These are the laws and hence will be enforced!<lb/>
1. Possession of SO lbs. and less than 100 lbs. of marijuana ? minimum<lb/>
prison sentence of 5 years.<lb/>
2. Possession of 100 lbs. and less than 2,000 lbs. of marijuana ? minimum prison sentence of 7<lb/>
years.<lb/>
3. Possession of 2,000 lbs. and less than 10,000 lbs. of marijuana ? minimum prison sentence of 14<lb/>
years.<lb/>
4. Possession of 10,000 or more lbs. of marijuana ? minimum prison sentence of 35 years along<lb/>
with fines.<lb/>
5. Possession with, or intention to sell 28 grams or less of cocaine ? presumptive sentence of 3-10<lb/>
years along with fines.<lb/>
6. Possession with or intention to sell 28 grams or more, but less than 200 grams of cocaine ?<lb/>
presumptive sentence of 7 years along with fines.<lb/>
7. Possession of 1,000, but less than 5,000 dosage units of methaqualone (qualudes) ? 7 year prison<lb/>
sentence along with a $25,000 dollar fine.<lb/>
8. Possession of 5,000, but less than 10,000 dosage units of methaqualone (qualudes) ? 14 year<lb/>
prison sentence along with a $50,000 dollar fine.<lb/>
9. Possession of 4 grams, but less than 14 grams of opium ? 14 year prison sentence, along with a<lb/>
$50,000 dollar fine.<lb/>
508 W. 5th St. 758-7441<lb/>
RUSH PARTY<lb/>
WED. NIGHT ? 9 UNTIL<lb/>
CALL FOR INFO ANDOR RIDE<lb/>
J<lb/>
f<lb/>
m ? I0MMNMM<lb/>
<lb/>
 . ? ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057458_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 16, 182<lb/>
Carder Makes Move To Television<lb/>
Continued From P. <lb/>
cent he said in a<lb/>
telephone interview just<lb/>
before leaving on a<lb/>
60-city concert tour<lb/>
with his famous clients.<lb/>
"It was a lot of fun.<lb/>
My scene probably will<lb/>
wind up on the cutting<lb/>
room floor, but I doubt<lb/>
it. It really is a very im-<lb/>
portant scene in the<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
"But it's most<lb/>
portant of all to<lb/>
13-year-old son.<lb/>
lm-<lb/>
my<lb/>
He<lb/>
really wants to see me<lb/>
in a movie<lb/>
<lb/>
Since Carder runs<lb/>
Talent Inc in Little<lb/>
Rock, Ark and is<lb/>
known in show<lb/>
business, landing his<lb/>
role as a Union staff<lb/>
colonel to Rip Tom's<lb/>
Gen. Ulysses S. Grant,<lb/>
was fairly easy. What<lb/>
came next was not.<lb/>
??They said, 'of<lb/>
course you can ride<lb/>
Well, I wasn't about to<lb/>
say anything else, so I<lb/>
said 'of course Now I<lb/>
did ride when I was a<lb/>
kid, but my God, it's<lb/>
been years!<lb/>
"So I went out <lb/>
and I rented a horse.<lb/>
An old horse. It could<lb/>
barely move. It thought<lb/>
it was a turtle. The next<lb/>
day, I rented a more<lb/>
spirited one and that<lb/>
way started working<lb/>
my way up.<lb/>
"I found 1 hadn't<lb/>
forgotten, but then I<lb/>
got the script and right<lb/>
off the bat it said,<lb/>
?colonel spurs horse<lb/>
The one I had was no<lb/>
nag. It was a cutting<lb/>
horse and I didn't<lb/>
know how it would<lb/>
take to spurring. But it<lb/>
worked out. The horse<lb/>
was just wonderful<lb/>
Carder spurred his<lb/>
horse on cue,<lb/>
thundered up behind<lb/>
Grant as he rode from<lb/>
Appomotox and<lb/>
reminded him that it<lb/>
might be well to let the<lb/>
folks in Washington<lb/>
know that the war was<lb/>
over.<lb/>
Then it was back to<lb/>
the business of the road<lb/>
and of pursuing the<lb/>
theater he loves at the<lb/>
grassroots level.<lb/>
Carder will miss his<lb/>
segment in "The Blue<lb/>
and the Gray" when<lb/>
CBS first airs it next<lb/>
fall. He'll be on the<lb/>
road again with Fer-<lb/>
rante and Teischer, but<lb/>
when he isn't out lining<lb/>
up stands and television<lb/>
talk shows for the<lb/>
piano duo that has been<lb/>
packing houses for<lb/>
nearly 30 years, he pro-<lb/>
duces and directs his<lb/>
own brand of show<lb/>
business plays and<lb/>
musicals for communi-<lb/>
ty theater where most<lb/>
of today's stars got<lb/>
their start.<lb/>
They arc productions<lb/>
he thinks someone<lb/>
from Hollywood<lb/>
should be watching<lb/>
with an eye for talent as<lb/>
yet untapped by a big<lb/>
time that could use it.<lb/>
"They really don't<lb/>
trust anyone outside of<lb/>
Hollywood he said.<lb/>
"There were 40 or 50<lb/>
small speaking parts<lb/>
one-liners and the like<lb/>
(in the CBS Him) but<lb/>
the rest were all<lb/>
Hollywood actors.<lb/>
"They even wanted<lb/>
to bring in their own<lb/>
horses! They were fair-<lb/>
ly amazed to learn that<lb/>
Arkansas horses could<lb/>
act<lb/>
Still, there was a mo-<lb/>
ment in the network<lb/>
sun for Joe Carder, and<lb/>
he won't really miss its<lb/>
airing.<lb/>
He can count on his<lb/>
son to videotape the<lb/>
show. When you're on<lb/>
the tube with the likes<lb/>
of Gregory Peck, Stacy<lb/>
Keach and Rip Torn,<lb/>
the event belongs in the<lb/>
family archives.<lb/>
'Barefoot' Opening<lb/>
ECU graduate Dwight Eastwood is playing the<lb/>
role of Victor Velasdo in Greenville Little<lb/>
Theatre's production of Barefoot In The Park,<lb/>
opening February 22 at the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center. For information or reservations, contact<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall or the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center.<lb/>
C.I C.????u!?.???? ! F.i'iMui .I'M<lb/>
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ALAN BATES<lb/>
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PIERRE BRASSEUR<lb/>
JEAN-CLAUDE BRIALY<lb/>
GENEVIEVE BUJOLD<lb/>
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FRANCOISE CHRISTOPHE<lb/>
 JULIEN GUIOMAR<lb/>
MICHELINE PRESLE<lb/>
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Screenplay ?nd Dialogue by Music by<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057458_0008"/><lb/>
Sports?<lb/>
ECU Blows<lb/>
By Panthers<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
ECU forward Charles Green (34) rolls one into the basket-<lb/>
ballor two of his game-high 20 points during the Pirates'<lb/>
win over Eastern Illinois Monday night.<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Kdllor<lb/>
East Carolina broke open a close<lb/>
game by outscoring Eastern Illinois<lb/>
20-0 during an eight-minute span in<lb/>
the second half and cruised to an big<lb/>
78-54 win Monday night.<lb/>
Forward Charles Green<lb/>
spearheaded the Pirate burst offen-<lb/>
sively, scoring eight points during<lb/>
the span. He finished with a game-<lb/>
high 20 points.<lb/>
The rally began after Pirate coach<lb/>
Dave Odom was signalled for a<lb/>
technical foul. Panther forward Jim<lb/>
Williams connected on both of the<lb/>
ensuing free throws to put his team<lb/>
ahead 44-43 with 13:31 remaining in<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Williams' pair of points from the<lb/>
charity stripe were the last points<lb/>
Eastern got until Leigh Hankins<lb/>
made a field goal at the 5:46 mark,<lb/>
which cut ECU's fast-growing lead<lb/>
to 63-46.<lb/>
A tough Pirate zone defense<lb/>
keyed the 20-0 burs ECU had pro-<lb/>
blems early in the contest with a<lb/>
sharp Panther offense and altered<lb/>
their defense plan, Odom said.<lb/>
"We were prepared for their of-<lb/>
fense but they were so crisp early on<lb/>
with their patterns that they lulled<lb/>
us to sleep at times and got some<lb/>
cheap backdoor shots. We decided<lb/>
to adjust our defenses back and<lb/>
forth and it seemed to unnerve<lb/>
them<lb/>
Eastern Illinois coach Rick<lb/>
Samuels felt his team's poor<lb/>
shooting may have been the key to<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
"ECU certainly confused us for a<lb/>
while with their defense but we ad-<lb/>
justed to that Samuels said. "We<lb/>
just simply could not get the shots to<lb/>
fall. We had plenty of open shots<lb/>
The Panthers kept the game close<lb/>
during the first half, and trailed by<lb/>
just four, 3-31, at the half.<lb/>
The lead exchanged hands six<lb/>
times during the first seven minutes<lb/>
of the second half before ECU made<lb/>
its move. It was in the middle of that<lb/>
move, Odom said, that the Pirates<lb/>
won the game. Instead of squander-<lb/>
ing a lead, like the club has done<lb/>
twice over the last two weeks in<lb/>
close losses, ECU increased its<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
"We were up 53-44 and they took<lb/>
a timeout Odom explained. "I<lb/>
told the team to look at the<lb/>
scoreboard. The, were up by nine<lb/>
just like with Long Island, Rich-<lb/>
mond and Old Dominion. We had<lb/>
blown those leads before, but I told<lb/>
them that was not going to happen<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
The Pirate win, the club's tenth in<lb/>
21 games, was highlighted by a<lb/>
number of spectacular plays. Both<lb/>
forward Bill McNair and guard<lb/>
Charles Watkins had a pair of<lb/>
dunks, while Green had a lone slam.<lb/>
ECU will look to reach the .500<lb/>
mark this Wednesday against James<lb/>
Madison. Tip-off time in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum for the big ECAC-South<lb/>
encounter is 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
The Dukes are 18-4 overall and<lb/>
atop the conference standings with a<lb/>
7-1 mark. ECU is fifth in the league,<lb/>
at 2-3.<lb/>
E. ILLINOIS (541<lb/>
RoMuoi 7 2-2 16. Williams I 2-2 4. HmMm 6 0-1 12.<lb/>
lorrawa I 1-2 3. Startler 4 (Ml.rook 0 2 -2 2. TirorrOS-4)<lb/>
0. Pattoa 1 1-2 V Bvksin 1 0-0 I Hopkins 0 0-0 0<lb/>
TOTAI-S 23 1-12 54<lb/>
ECl 8<lb/>
H?rjri?r 4 0- ft (,m? 10 0-1 20. Mack I 2-2 4. Watkim<lb/>
4 0-0 1. Prartm 5 1-1 II. t.tkrhmi 0-0 6. rot 0 0-4) 0.<lb/>
McLaurin 2 v-0 4. Bl? 2 13V McNair 3 0-4)6. Brova 10-0<lb/>
2. I?l I 0-0 2. (.ibv.n 0 0-10 Rricbrarkrr I (M) 2<lb/>
TOT MA 37 14-22 M<lb/>
Photo By Chap Gurley<lb/>
Hal'tiia<lb/>
Teraafc-ah<lb/>
- 1(1 35. rW.<lb/>
ECl hraca A -<lb/>
31. ronkd mil<lb/>
1.750.<lb/>
Soar.<lb/>
ECU guard Bruce Peartree proved he can get up in the air<lb/>
with this pin of an Eastern Illinois layup. Peartree scored 11<lb/>
points in ECU's 78-64 win.<lb/>
Pirates Host League-Leading JMU Wednesday<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
sptM. I dtinr<lb/>
"1 he thing we must understand is<lb/>
that we are playing a team that will<lb/>
not beat themselves<lb/>
last Carolina head basketball<lb/>
coach Dave Odom obviously is<lb/>
aware of the challenge his team is<lb/>
facing tomorrow (Wednesday) night<lb/>
when it hosts ECAC-South leader<lb/>
James Madison. Tip-off time in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum is 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
"They play percentage basket-<lb/>
ball. They've got good talent, great<lb/>
coaching and they make their<lb/>
system work. They're sound in<lb/>
every phase ot the game. They're<lb/>
like no team that's been in this col-<lb/>
iseum in years. If we beat 'em we've<lb/>
got to do exactly that, beat 'em ?<lb/>
and for 40 minutes<lb/>
Indeed. The Dukes are 7-1 in the<lb/>
ECAC-South, two full games ahead<lb/>
of second place Old Dominion (4-2).<lb/>
JMU is 18-4 overall, with two of<lb/>
those defeats coming to number-one<lb/>
ranked Virginia.<lb/>
The Pirates will be looking to<lb/>
reach the .500 mark for the first<lb/>
time in quite a while. The Bucs are<lb/>
10-11 after an impressive, 78-54,<lb/>
win over Eastern Illinois Monday<lb/>
night. ECU is in fifth place in the<lb/>
conference at 2-3.<lb/>
James Madison not only leads the<lb/>
conference in wins, but also in<lb/>
several statistical categories, par-<lb/>
ticularily in team defense, allowing<lb/>
just 53 points per game while scor-<lb/>
ing 63.7.<lb/>
The Dukes are led by linton<lb/>
Townes, a sure all-conference selec-<lb/>
tion. Townes, who is best known for<lb/>
his outstanding outside shooting, is<lb/>
Doubleheader Scheduled<lb/>
It's doubleheader time<lb/>
on Wednesday night, as<lb/>
the ECAC-South con-<lb/>
ference matchup between<lb/>
East Carolina and James<lb/>
Madison will be preceded<lb/>
by a jayvee contest.<lb/>
The Pirate JV's host<lb/>
Mt. Olive at 5 p.m. The<lb/>
ECU-JMU game<lb/>
follow at 7:30.<lb/>
will<lb/>
ECU's junior varsity<lb/>
has won two in a row and<lb/>
now stands 2-2 following<lb/>
a 75-61 win over<lb/>
Louisburg Monday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
the league's third-leading scorer (17<lb/>
ppg) and sixth-leading reboundr<lb/>
(6.1 rpg).<lb/>
Center Dan Ruland averages 11.9<lb/>
points, 12th best in the league, and<lb/>
6.6 rebounds, putting him at fifth in<lb/>
the ECAC-South in that category.<lb/>
JMU coach Lou Campanelli says<lb/>
despite the impressive stats of<lb/>
Townes and Ruland, there are no<lb/>
stars on his team.<lb/>
"We play a team concept he<lb/>
said. "There's nothing tricky about<lb/>
what we do. We're just a lot of blue<lb/>
collar guys that work hard and plav<lb/>
hard<lb/>
The results have been superb. The<lb/>
Dukes tied Old Dominion for the<lb/>
regular season championship a year<lb/>
ago, then went on to win the post-<lb/>
season tournament to win a trip to<lb/>
the NCAA Championships. There,<lb/>
the Dukes pulled off a major upset<lb/>
by defeating highly-rated<lb/>
Georgetown.<lb/>
The team was the pre-season pick<lb/>
to rule the conference again this<lb/>
year and has been no disappoint-<lb/>
ment. JMU has beaten every team in<lb/>
the conference at least once, in-<lb/>
cluding an earlier 72-50 win over<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"Right now we're just striving for<lb/>
consistency Campanelli said. "In<lb/>
the position we're in (first place) a<lb/>
lot of teams are shooting for us.<lb/>
That's something we're learning to<lb/>
deal with. We just can't have a let-<lb/>
down, especially this late in the<lb/>
season<lb/>
The Dukes came on strong last<lb/>
year, peaking by tournament time.<lb/>
Campanelli said the club is playing<lb/>
just as well now but has a tougher<lb/>
road ahead.<lb/>
"We had more lightweights on<lb/>
our late schedule last year he said.<lb/>
"That's not the case this season.<lb/>
Anv team we plav can knock us<lb/>
off<lb/>
Campanelli included East<lb/>
Carolina in that group.<lb/>
"We know we have a very tough<lb/>
road game ahead against ECU.<lb/>
They're a very good team and are<lb/>
very well-coached<lb/>
Byles May Miss<lb/>
Rest Of This Season<lb/>
ECU point guard Tony Byles may<lb/>
have played his last game as a<lb/>
Pirate.<lb/>
The 6-foot-4 senior injured the lit-<lb/>
tle finger on his right hand in last<lb/>
Saturday's win over UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington. It was not known until<lb/>
Monday afternoon, though, that<lb/>
Byles' injury was anything but<lb/>
minor.<lb/>
It is now believed that the finger<lb/>
has torn ligaments. Byles was to<lb/>
have had X-rays taken of the finger<lb/>
this (Tuesday) afternoon. After the<lb/>
results of the X-rays are studied a<lb/>
decision will be made on Byles'<lb/>
availability to the team for the re-<lb/>
mainder of the season.<lb/>
"The doctors will get no pressure<lb/>
from me ECU coach Dave Odom<lb/>
said Monday. "This is a decision<lb/>
between them, Sports Medicine and<lb/>
Tony. I want what's best for Tony's<lb/>
health. Whatever they tell me is<lb/>
gospel<lb/>
Byles, who sat out two weeks with<lb/>
an injury to his left hand, is leading<lb/>
the Pirates in assists<lb/>
and averages just over 10 points per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The Brooklyn, N.Y. native played<lb/>
in the team's 78-54 win over Eastern<lb/>
Illinois, contributing five points and<lb/>
five assists.<lb/>
Peartree Honored Again<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
ECU freshman guard Bruce Pear-<lb/>
tree has been named the ECAC-<lb/>
South rookie of the week for the se-<lb/>
cond time in three weeks.<lb/>
The Pantego native scored 33<lb/>
points in ECU's two games last<lb/>
week, against Old Dominion and<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
Peartree earned the same honor<lb/>
two weeks ago. During the past six<lb/>
games he has averaged 13.7 points.<lb/>
For the year, Peartree is now<lb/>
averaging 7.3 points per contest.<lb/>
A Whamming, Slamming Affair!<lb/>
East Carolina's 78-54 win over<lb/>
Eastern Illinois Monday night was<lb/>
filled with spectacular plays. As a<lb/>
matter of fact, one could almost<lb/>
nickname most of the crowd-<lb/>
pleasers.<lb/>
Take the game's first dunk for ex-<lb/>
ample. ECU's Charles Green is on<lb/>
the end of a wide-open fast break.<lb/>
He goes flying through the air and<lb/>
comes up with a pull-behind-the-<lb/>
No. 3 Old Dominion<lb/>
A voids Lady Pirates<lb/>
ECU Plays Duke Tonight<lb/>
?Haa By DAV WILLIAMS<lb/>
One Of Two Watkins Jams Monday Night<lb/>
head-then-dunk-straight-ahead<lb/>
slam. A-?h, the crowd loved it.<lb/>
Late n the game Charles<lb/>
Watki received a length-of-the-<lb/>
court s and fancied a left-hand-<lb/>
to-bea -the-band-grand-slam.<lb/>
In the second half it was Bill<lb/>
McNair's turn. The Dunn native put<lb/>
two in the faces of Eastern Illinois<lb/>
defenders.<lb/>
On the first he took off from the<lb/>
top of tne key and soared to the<lb/>
basket and slammed home a gorilla<lb/>
dunkenstein.<lb/>
Just before the end of the game<lb/>
McNair came downcourt on a<lb/>
fastbreak and hit teammate Mike<lb/>
Fox, who quickly touch-passed the<lb/>
ball back to McNair. Whew!<lb/>
A-return-to-sender-alley-oop-in-yo-<lb/>
face. Minges Coliseum rocked.<lb/>
However trite all this may seem,<lb/>
the point is the Pirates played a ex-<lb/>
citing brand of basketball Monday<lb/>
night. It's just a shame that only<lb/>
1,750 people were on hand to watch.<lb/>
When a team such as the Lady<lb/>
Pirates of East Carolina takes a<lb/>
nine-game winning streak on the<lb/>
homecourt of Old Dominion<lb/>
University's nationally third-ranked<lb/>
basketball team, something has to<lb/>
give.<lb/>
And it surely did. About 13 feet<lb/>
worth.<lb/>
The Lady Monarchs, behind the<lb/>
play of 6' 8" Anne Donovan (11<lb/>
points, 21 rebounds, seven assists<lb/>
and seven blocked shots) and 6' 5"<lb/>
Janet Davis (28 points and seven re-<lb/>
bounds), stopped East Carolina's<lb/>
streak, 72-63, in a game closer than<lb/>
the final score indicated.<lb/>
East Carolina coach Cathy An-<lb/>
druzzi was not pleased with the of-<lb/>
ficiating, saying she didn't want to<lb/>
take anything away from ODU but<lb/>
could not believe the number of<lb/>
three and five-second situations not<lb/>
called.<lb/>
East Carolina trailed by as many<lb/>
as 11 points in the first half, but<lb/>
rallied behind Mary Denkler (28<lb/>
points, 15 rebounds) and Sam Jones<lb/>
(16 points, six assists) to take a four-<lb/>
point advantage at 35-31 at inter-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
In the final half, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
twice had a seven-point lead ? the<lb/>
last coming at 46-39 with 14:30 re-<lb/>
maining ? but Old Dominion<lb/>
worked the ball inside to Donovan<lb/>
and Davis, and the Monarchs led,<lb/>
57-50.<lb/>
However, East Carolina rallied,<lb/>
cutting the lead to 58-57 with four<lb/>
minutes to play. But again, Old<lb/>
Dominon worked the ball inside,<lb/>
building a six-point lead that grew<lb/>
to as much as 11, after taking ad-<lb/>
vantage of two Lady Pirate tur-<lb/>
novers.<lb/>
In the first 20 minutes, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates played good defense,<lb/>
limiting Donovan to only two<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Hellen Malone added 15 points<lb/>
for Old Dominion, while Jones and<lb/>
Denkler were the only two Lady<lb/>
Pirates in double-figures. East<lb/>
Carolina outrebounded the taller<lb/>
Lady Monarhs by one in the first<lb/>
half, but lost that contest by 11 by<lb/>
game's end.<lb/>
Old Dominion is now 19-4 after a<lb/>
loss to Tennessee Sunday night<lb/>
while East Carolina is now 13-8 with<lb/>
five games ? all at home ? remain-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Duke travels to Greenville<lb/>
tonight. Gametime is 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
9<lb/>
TI<lb/>
men"<lb/>
the<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057458_0009"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 16. 1982<lb/>
" <lb/>
'?y<lb/>
a<lb/>
in the<lb/>
mg<lb/>
.jher<lb/>
aid.<lb/>
on.<lb/>
us<lb/>
ough<lb/>
ECl .<lb/>
d are<lb/>
on<lb/>
es<lb/>
d ? the<lb/>
4:30 re-<lb/>
ominion<lb/>
I Donovan<lb/>
irehs led,<lb/>
a rallied,<lb/>
ith four<lb/>
tain. Old<lb/>
inside,<lb/>
that grev<lb/>
tkmg ad-<lb/>
lirate tur-<lb/>
thc Lady<lb/>
defense,<lb/>
inly two<lb/>
15 points<lb/>
ones and<lb/>
vo Lady<lb/>
res. East<lb/>
It he taller<lb/>
the first<lb/>
by 11 by<lb/>
4 after a<lb/>
lav night<lb/>
13-8 with<lb/>
- remain-<lb/>
ireenville<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Mile Relay Is<lb/>
9th In Millrose<lb/>
By CYNTHIA<lb/>
PLEASANTS<lb/>
Ai. s?.m Wttm<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
men's track team ran in<lb/>
the prestigious<lb/>
Millrose Wanamaker<lb/>
invitational this past<lb/>
Friday, placing ninth in<lb/>
the mile relay, which<lb/>
had 52 entries.<lb/>
The invitational,<lb/>
which is considered the<lb/>
number one indoor<lb/>
meet in the country,<lb/>
featured the top com-<lb/>
petitors in the nation<lb/>
and was held in New<lb/>
York's Madison Square<lb/>
Garden.<lb/>
The foursome of<lb/>
Carlton Frazier, Keith<lb/>
Clarke, Terry Ford,<lb/>
and Tim Cephus com-<lb/>
bined for an impressive<lb/>
time of 3:20.26 in the<lb/>
mile relay.<lb/>
Head coach Bill Car-<lb/>
son said the experience<lb/>
of the indoor meet pro-<lb/>
ves to be valuable.<lb/>
"Everytime you go<lb/>
to an indoor meet and<lb/>
expose them to the<lb/>
track, they're going to<lb/>
do a little bit better next<lb/>
time<lb/>
The Pirates also ran<lb/>
in The Delaware Invita-<lb/>
tional in Newark, Del.<lb/>
this past Sunday, but<lb/>
did not place in any<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Frazier, Clarke, Ford<lb/>
and Cephus all ran in<lb/>
the quarter-mile event,<lb/>
but did not place.<lb/>
The team had plann-<lb/>
ed to run in the mile<lb/>
relay, but were unable<lb/>
to after Frazier pulled a<lb/>
hamstring.<lb/>
According to Car-<lb/>
son, the injury is not<lb/>
serious.<lb/>
"It's not a season-<lb/>
ending pull he said,<lb/>
"He should be able to<lb/>
run by the Domino's<lb/>
pizza meet (to be held<lb/>
in Tallahassee, Fla. on<lb/>
March 19-20)<lb/>
That meet will be the<lb/>
Pirates' first outdoor<lb/>
meet of the season, and<lb/>
Carson is looking for-<lb/>
ward to taking his team<lb/>
outdoors after a long<lb/>
indoor campaign.<lb/>
"We're running a<lb/>
lot, but we're not get-<lb/>
ting any better he<lb/>
said, "We'll just have<lb/>
to get ready for the out-<lb/>
door season<lb/>
The Pirates' next<lb/>
meet is at UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill on February 20.<lb/>
Six teams will be com-<lb/>
peting, including Ap-<lb/>
palachian State and<lb/>
Campbell.<lb/>
Jayvees Win Second<lb/>
Sophomore forward<lb/>
Bill McNair scored 25<lb/>
points and pulled down<lb/>
11 rebounds to pace<lb/>
East Carolina's junior<lb/>
varsity basketball team<lb/>
to a 75-61 win over<lb/>
Louisburg Junior Col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
The win, the team's<lb/>
second in a row, evened<lb/>
the Pirates' record at<lb/>
2-2.<lb/>
ECU led at the half<lb/>
by just four, at 29-25,<lb/>
but broke the game<lb/>
open in the second half.<lb/>
Three other Pirates<lb/>
besides McNair scored<lb/>
in double figures.<lb/>
Center Jeff Best finish-<lb/>
ed with 15 points, 17 re-<lb/>
bounds and a blocked<lb/>
shot.<lb/>
Six-foot-eleven<lb/>
freshman David<lb/>
Reicheneker added 12<lb/>
points and seven re-<lb/>
bounds, while guard<lb/>
Mike Fox tallied 12<lb/>
points and dished out<lb/>
three assists.<lb/>
Marcus Keith and<lb/>
James Cooke were the<lb/>
pace-setters for<lb/>
Louisburg, totalling 19<lb/>
and 12 points, respec-<lb/>
tively.<lb/>
The Buc JV's are<lb/>
back in action this<lb/>
Wednesday night,<lb/>
hosting Mt. Olive at 5<lb/>
p.m. in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum. The game will<lb/>
precede the ECU-<lb/>
James Madison varsity<lb/>
game, which will begin<lb/>
at 7:30.<lb/>
Golf Season Nearing<lb/>
ECAC-South<lb/>
Action<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
vs.<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
Wednesday, 7:30<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
ECU forward Bill McNair (40) taps in<lb/>
for two of his 25 points in the Pirate JV's<lb/>
win Monday night. Also pictured is<lb/>
ECU'S J.C. Plott (52).<lb/>
ifieds<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
REWARD: Lost Mon. Feb ?h<lb/>
Brown Cordoroy Ladies Pocket<lb/>
Book witti Bamboo Handles Lost<lb/>
in Food Town and Fosdick's Area<lb/>
Please Call 754313 Home and<lb/>
7S Ml) Business Ask tor Danny<lb/>
or Ginnv<lb/>
LOST T?n umbrella in Old<lb/>
joyner Library If found please<lb/>
call Tom at 7S7 3 and leave<lb/>
message.<lb/>
LOST Time watcn 1st or Jed<lb/>
floor "stacks' Joyner Library.<lb/>
Call Trudy 752 -?l<lb/>
FOUND Pink ond White reversi-<lb/>
on raincoat Called number m ad,<lb/>
but disconnected. Must identify.<lb/>
Call 757 ?237<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
Classified ads will be taken ONLY<lb/>
during the following hours:<lb/>
Monday ? 115-3 00<lb/>
Tuesday ? 300-300<lb/>
Wednesday ? I IS 3 00<lb/>
Thursday ? 3:00-3.00<lb/>
Friday ? 115 300<lb/>
You must place the ads m person<lb/>
and pay tor them in advance<lb/>
Rates are 51 tor the first 15 words<lb/>
nd t.05 per words after the first<lb/>
fifteen.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
WATERBEDS: DON'T pay retail<lb/>
for your heated waterbed buy<lb/>
direct from mgf and save. Buy a<lb/>
complete 1st quality pine wood<lb/>
heated waterbed with 15 yr war<lb/>
ranty tor as low as ?18t (Queen)<lb/>
1199 (King) Layaway avail. Call<lb/>
David for appomtment: 7SI-14M<lb/>
BUGGED UP '71 Chevy Wagon,<lb/>
want to sell fast. $350 or best offer<lb/>
Dean 750 2173<lb/>
8UNDY II Tenor Sax Good Condi-<lb/>
tion Asking 5270 also Crate IR<lb/>
Amplifier. 25 watts, with reverb<lb/>
and pre ? post gams. Good Condi<lb/>
tion Asking 5150 75H073 Brian.<lb/>
DORM SIZE refrigerator. Good<lb/>
condition Call 'So<lb/>
ROLLING STONES IMI tour<lb/>
posters, still in wrappers, serious<lb/>
offers only. 75 33U<lb/>
7 TRIUMPH TR 7. 4cyl. ? speed.<lb/>
Air, AM FM Cassette, stereo,<lb/>
sunroof, Mag wheels. Beautiful<lb/>
sports car SMOO 757 MM <lb/>
JVC PORTABLE AMFM<lb/>
Cassette Player. RC .54 JW.<lb/>
Dolby. Normal Cr02.<lb/>
ManualAuto Recording. Sep<lb/>
Bass and Treble Controls. 4<lb/>
speakers. Automobile plug. Ex-<lb/>
cellent Cond Must Sell $225<lb/>
75?-?4<lb/>
USED YAMAHA guitar owned 2<lb/>
years m good condition $120<lb/>
negotiable Call 757 3107 ask for<lb/>
lOhnllO East Tenth Street.<lb/>
TOYOTA in good condition. $770or<lb/>
best ?erCaii JSTMOt<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
RTOMMATEliEEDED to l?re<lb/>
one-bedroom apartment. $75 plus<lb/>
one-half utilities. Call Scott at<lb/>
7S2-4S47<lb/>
TWO PEOPLE wanted to share<lb/>
large house with young couple in<lb/>
Lake Ellsworth, Greenville. Con-<lb/>
venient to hospital and university.<lb/>
$120 per month plus 14 utilities<lb/>
Deposit required. Call 754 4300<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM townhouse apt.<lb/>
fully furnished, available tor sum<lb/>
mer. Georgetown apts. Great<lb/>
Location! CAII 750 4095<lb/>
WANTED: FEMALE roommate.<lb/>
Kings Row Apts 2 bedroom. AC<lb/>
Furnished, Pool HBO $12Smonth<lb/>
plus 12 electric. Call after 7 p.m.<lb/>
7S2-7752<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE wanted.<lb/>
Forest Acres Apts $117.50 is 12<lb/>
rent and 12 utilities - Heat Pump.<lb/>
Carpeted. Pool Call 754 5577 or<lb/>
757 4024<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share 3 bedroom apt at<lb/>
Eastbrook $90 plus 13 utilities<lb/>
Call 75 2504<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
$80 per month, furbished, cable<lb/>
TV. 13 utilities. Call after 4 30<lb/>
p m 752 4509<lb/>
THREE BEDROOM House tor<lb/>
rent March 1st. Located in nice<lb/>
development 2714 Shawnee Place,<lb/>
across from Pi Kappa House, off<lb/>
Hooker and Millbrook. all electric<lb/>
wret. and deadbotts. $240, Mrs.<lb/>
Richardson 7S4-2S70 or 754-S0M.<lb/>
WANTED HOUSEMATES 3<lb/>
rooms available in 4 bedroom<lb/>
house six blocks from campus.<lb/>
Rent $40 and utilities. Call 752 5047<lb/>
TWO ROOMATES needed Large<lb/>
three bedroom house located ap<lb/>
prox. three miles wesi of campus.<lb/>
House is fully carpeted with<lb/>
fireplace. $04 monthly rent per<lb/>
person, plus utilities. Please call<lb/>
3S5-3ao9 between hours of 9:30 pm<lb/>
and II pm. Deposits required.<lb/>
SERVICES v,<lb/>
CARICATURES BY WEYLER<lb/>
Greenville's original personalized<lb/>
art service. Have Cartoon done of<lb/>
yourself or a loved one a unique<lb/>
gift idea. $10 tor I x 10. black and<lb/>
white or color. Call 752-5775<lb/>
TYPING: TERM, Thesis,<lb/>
Resumes, Dissertations, etc. Pro<lb/>
tessional quality at lowest rates<lb/>
Call Kempie Dunn anytime<lb/>
752 4733<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Call Amy at<lb/>
757 3734<lb/>
Want to know HOW TO IMPROVE<lb/>
YOUR GRADES Booklet<lb/>
available at ECU Bookstore.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST: Term,<lb/>
Research. 0,??ertation?. Thesis,<lb/>
etc Fast and Efficient. Low<lb/>
Rates Call 757 1370<lb/>
SIX PRINTED T shirts $12 Free<lb/>
Shipping Satisfaction guarenteed.<lb/>
New quality production over runs<lb/>
at below mill cost. Different<lb/>
designs Specify Size desired<lb/>
Papillon, PO Box 133. Rocky<lb/>
Mount, N C 27001 <lb/>
RIDERS<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Nashville TN<lb/>
Spring Break or any weekend.<lb/>
Willing 1o help with expenses. Call<lb/>
757 0710<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Winston Salem<lb/>
area. Can leave anytime after 10<lb/>
am Friday Call 752 3449.<lb/>
ARE YOU student teaching in<lb/>
Pinetops or Washington? Car Pool<lb/>
ride needed Call Tee 752 2410<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Virginia<lb/>
Beach or surrounding area any<lb/>
weekend<lb/>
C<lb/>
Will<lb/>
with gas<lb/>
help<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
COUNSELORS FOR western<lb/>
North CArolina coed summer<lb/>
camp. Room, meals laundry,<lb/>
salary and travel allowance. Ex<lb/>
penence not necesary, but must<lb/>
enpoy living and working with<lb/>
children Only clean cut non-<lb/>
smoking college students need ap<lb/>
ply For applicationbrochure<lb/>
write: Camp Pinewood, 1801<lb/>
Cleveland Rd Miami Beach, Fla.<lb/>
33141<lb/>
WANTED PART TIME help<lb/>
now, Fulltime during the sum<lb/>
mer Must be neat, have pleasant<lb/>
voice, and willing to work the<lb/>
hours you are needed May involve<lb/>
some shift work during the sum<lb/>
mer. Apply in person at Overton's<lb/>
Competition Skis between 3 and 5<lb/>
weekdays.<lb/>
NEED MONEY: You won't 9et<lb/>
rich, but the East Carolinian has<lb/>
openings for writers at the present<lb/>
time. There is also a possibility of<lb/>
training tor editor positions and<lb/>
training on computer terminals.<lb/>
Apply at the East Caolmian office,<lb/>
Old South Building.<lb/>
ECU SUNBATHERS: We still<lb/>
have space on your Spnngbreak<lb/>
Trip to Ft Lauderdale $129 - 7<lb/>
nights. 8 days tennis parties<lb/>
and much more. For more infor<lb/>
mation (800) 348 3004 TOLL<lb/>
FREE. Space is Limited.<lb/>
NEEDED: I or 2 girls to share ex-<lb/>
penses with 2 other girls tor I wk.<lb/>
in Ft. Lauderdale. March 7-14.<lb/>
Ocean Front MofeL Call W-M?<lb/>
TOTHOSE WHO WERE THERE :<lb/>
Well, well, the storm is over and<lb/>
the huricane died. Oh my God, we<lb/>
were all so fried. The dogs barked<lb/>
and the corks flew, formal was the<lb/>
occasion, but it was shouts tor a<lb/>
few. And if you weren't there you<lb/>
surely missed a sight because<lb/>
later that afternoon. Boot Boot out<lb/>
go the lights. <lb/>
Pi Kapp's I heard that OC and<lb/>
Stiggs have asked ST Hicks to help<lb/>
with National Lampoon's Annual<lb/>
Gaslt report. Dan Ray comments:<lb/>
"Sammy could write his own after<lb/>
that bash, we called Founder's<lb/>
day. " Hope everybody had 12 as<lb/>
much tunas: - Sfjt. Yukon Debbs<lb/>
BROTHER OOUGThanks a lot<lb/>
tor th you know what Friday. C.<lb/>
and I appreciate iT T.<lb/>
Wanna meet people? Check out<lb/>
CORSO. We're having fun. For all<lb/>
the intimate details, see the an<lb/>
nouncements.<lb/>
JO So sorry I missed V Day edi<lb/>
tion Anyway, it's the thought that<lb/>
counts! Amy<lb/>
SECOND ANNUAL B3 Party Bui<lb/>
don't be square. You know where<lb/>
See ya there Saturday. Feb 20,<lb/>
8:30. From Ann, Connie, Donna.<lb/>
Eileen. All "SAM V welcome<lb/>
PJ- Thanks tor the date, you were<lb/>
a little late, and all the while I<lb/>
could not wait Bui things went on,<lb/>
almost til three, and after that, it<lb/>
was ail you and me. You said I was<lb/>
your Valentine, as you are mine,<lb/>
amd all day Sunday I felt so fine<lb/>
So babs, let me m, I want to be<lb/>
your dreams and visions Cause<lb/>
baby we were born to run.<lb/>
CANYOU ZOOM? Would you know<lb/>
what to do if you were lorched'<lb/>
Yes. you to can become a proles<lb/>
sional loom lorch player Pay<lb/>
careful attention to this exclusive<lb/>
offer of the OFFICIAL ZOOM<lb/>
ZORCH Players Rule Book This<lb/>
special edition is easy to read and<lb/>
is disposable because it is made ol<lb/>
biodegradable recycled 2 ply toilet<lb/>
paper This book is one ol Green<lb/>
ville's hoteest items, mainly<lb/>
because they were stolen from the<lb/>
Student Store. Purchase your copy<lb/>
fro any SFer on campus Who can<lb/>
be found in front of Rawl between<lb/>
classes. Be there<lb/>
CAT. remember no remember<lb/>
mg' (Ask Drinky) Did they think<lb/>
you queer in Bogart's and Belk s?<lb/>
Please don't sleep m the Attic and<lb/>
let's buy a port a 0hn (Are we<lb/>
here for school?) As for truth or<lb/>
dare, we all took truths and found<lb/>
that one want it with two, one<lb/>
wants it doggie style, one does it<lb/>
behind the haunted house, and I<lb/>
love it on the beach (no sandspurs,<lb/>
thank you) How about 14 yr old at<lb/>
the beach? Did he consent or was<lb/>
it statutory rape? Don't forget<lb/>
nights when the head was<lb/>
speeding and the body moving<lb/>
But it's your B day so go ALL THE<lb/>
WAY Put it into OVERDRIVE on<lb/>
244 cos I know I can RIDE WITH<lb/>
YOU. Road trip crews lake<lb/>
chances and build snow whores<lb/>
(and bad reps??) I'll listen to<lb/>
country if you'll listen to new wave<lb/>
and we'll bolt down to pig sty<lb/>
palace and get radical with ole<lb/>
John Boy and Billy Bob DON T<lb/>
MISUNDERSTANO ME but no<lb/>
more for the road becos there is<lb/>
NO VACANCY in my heart for it.<lb/>
No more infamous nights in Lon<lb/>
den - you could too that night but<lb/>
nooo - cos you're so RESPEC<lb/>
TABLE (DID HE WANT TO KISS<lb/>
YOUR PINEAPPLE??) Well be<lb/>
RIDERS ON THE STORM but<lb/>
first you'll have to START ME UP<lb/>
becos SHE'S SO COLD. Can You<lb/>
handle the STROBELIGHT? If<lb/>
you can. I'LL GIVE YOU FISH,<lb/>
I'LL GIVE YOU CANDY but<lb/>
one last thing, turn your RADAR<lb/>
LOVE on cos THE WAIT is over,<lb/>
so take him tonight (BUFU) and<lb/>
PROVE IT ALL NIGHT. Happy<lb/>
10th and sorry I won't be there.<lb/>
WIN A weekend for two at the<lb/>
beach, including hotel accomoda<lb/>
tions. meals, lots of spending<lb/>
money, passes to clubs. 2 hours of<lb/>
Jet skiing and more. Come to<lb/>
Reaction Times Grand Opening<lb/>
Week Starting Feb. 14 Behind Sub<lb/>
way Sandwich Shop.<lb/>
Anl. Sports Editor<lb/>
The spring season is<lb/>
drawing near for the<lb/>
ECU golf team. An<lb/>
eight-tournament spr-<lb/>
ing schedule is set to<lb/>
begin February 26-28 at<lb/>
Florida State.<lb/>
Tryouts have been<lb/>
held and all 12 spots on<lb/>
the team are set. ECU<lb/>
Head Coach Bob<lb/>
Helmick calls the team,<lb/>
"the strongest at ECU<lb/>
since I have been here"<lb/>
The top five<lb/>
members include Don<lb/>
Sweeting, Don Gafner,<lb/>
Jerry Lee, Mike Moye<lb/>
and Chris Czaja.<lb/>
"1 expect them to<lb/>
carry the bulk of the<lb/>
season said Coach<lb/>
Helmick. "They are<lb/>
capable and strong<lb/>
golfers<lb/>
Helmick expects<lb/>
Dave Wagoner, Steve<lb/>
Larogue and Czaja to<lb/>
provide extra help.<lb/>
"We've got the<lb/>
horses now; its just a<lb/>
matter of getting the<lb/>
job done said<lb/>
Helmick. "We're hit-<lb/>
ting the ball very well<lb/>
now<lb/>
Helmick says if the<lb/>
Pirates beat 90 teams<lb/>
this spring, the season<lb/>
will be a success. The<lb/>
squad will compete<lb/>
against 149 teams in its<lb/>
eight-tournament<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Once the season<lb/>
begins, ECU has six<lb/>
straight matches in a<lb/>
32-day span.<lb/>
The Pirates look to<lb/>
begin the season on a<lb/>
good note in the<lb/>
Florida State tourna-<lb/>
ment. "I think we can<lb/>
get off to a good start<lb/>
and this will help our<lb/>
momentum going into<lb/>
the meat of our<lb/>
season Helmick add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
J.A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes,<lb/>
shoes, and hose. Also ? used ECU<lb/>
nurses uniforms. Trade ins allowed.<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive.<lb/>
Near HolloweM's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
xutilus<lb/>
THE<lb/>
FITNESS<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
for men and women<lb/>
Are vou the<lb/>
Sole Survivor?<lb/>
Come by or call TODAY and sd<lb/>
up an appointment for a free workout<lb/>
1001 EVANS STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NX,<lb/>
OLYMPIC BARBELLS<lb/>
?COED HOURS<lb/>
? FEMALE HOURS<lb/>
AND DUMBELLS<lb/>
?SAUNA, SHOWERS &amp;<lb/>
LOCKERS ?WHIRLPOOL<lb/>
? DIET PLANS<lb/>
NO<lb/>
Then send our<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/>
PRICE<lb/>
$14.50<lb/>
Stretching Exercise Classes<lb/>
M-W-F 10:00 &amp; 11:00 T Th. 5:00 &amp; 6:00<lb/>
Aerobics and Dancercize Classes<lb/>
M-T 3:30-4:30<lb/>
Features Included: Male &amp; Female Instructors<lb/>
? Nautilus Machines<lb/>
(12 of the most sophisticated exercise mochines mode).<lb/>
process of REPLACING<lb/>
11 Ihe ouler rubber sole<lb/>
2) the worn mid-sole material<lb/>
3 ihe innerMtle wilh mil Of I I r<lb/>
Mill DM) innersolt<lb/>
41 I he hoe laei -<lb/>
W.c JW. 11 h, Kl 11 KMH.? I ??? J-l<lb/>
11 h, MM l.x H.4.I. i.? ???' ? ? -??'??<lb/>
Special Student Rates<lb/>
Gioup rates for 5 or more students.<lb/>
$67.50 per student.<lb/>
ATNA UTIL US FITNESS IS OUR SPEC I A L TY<lb/>
Planning a spring break fHng in<lb/>
Florida? Then make plans to Hve it up<lb/>
inside the Watt Disney World Magic<lb/>
Kingdom! There, you'll find more than 40<lb/>
exciting attractions  and, we're in<lb/>
easy reach of the surf and sand of your<lb/>
favorite Florida beaches!<lb/>
This spring is an especially good time<lb/>
to "break down" to Disney, during<lb/>
Tencennial -the Walt Disney World 10th<lb/>
birthday celebration  highlighted by<lb/>
the sensational Tencennial Parade, and<lb/>
all-new musical extravaganzas.<lb/>
So, give yourself a break  a spring<lb/>
break to remember - inside the Magic<lb/>
Kingdom of Walt Disney World!<lb/>
$13 ? ADMISSION AND UNLIMITED USE OF ALL<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS (Except ShoorltV Gallery)<lb/>
SPECIAL EXTENDED SPRING HOURS<lb/>
March 7-12: 9 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
March 13 - April 1: 9 ?.m10 p.m.<lb/>
USED <lb/>
TIRES<lb/>
10.00<lb/>
inquire at<lb/>
Evons Seafood<lb/>
Co ?<lb/>
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APARTMENTS 2308 e. 10th si.<lb/>
CANNON<lb/>
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APARTMENTS<lb/>
Luci Drive<lb/>
Two bedroom apartments easily accessible to cam-<lb/>
pus. Low electric bills. Cable TV provided. Call us or<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057458_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 16, 1982<lb/>
West, Dukes Lead Stats<lb/>
Madison Leads In<lb/>
Two Categories<lb/>
ECAC-SOUTH LEADERS<lb/>
SCORING<lb/>
hCAC-South leader<lb/>
James Madison ob-<lb/>
viously has had a fine<lb/>
season thus far, stan-<lb/>
ding at 7-1 in the league<lb/>
and 8-4 overall. The<lb/>
Dukes, not surprising-<lb/>
ly arc also doing well<lb/>
statistically.<lb/>
IMU is leading the<lb/>
league in team defense<lb/>
and points differential,<lb/>
and is second in free<lb/>
throw percentage and<lb/>
field uoal percentage.<lb/>
The Dukes are<lb/>
holding opponents to<lb/>
but S3 points per con-<lb/>
test, while scoring 63.7,<lb/>
for a plus-10.7 points<lb/>
per game points advan-<lb/>
tage.<lb/>
Old Dominion, se-<lb/>
cond place in the<lb/>
ECAC, is the con-<lb/>
ference's top-scoring<lb/>
team with a 71.3 points<lb/>
per game average.<lb/>
George Mason is just<lb/>
behind at 70.9.<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
leads the team in field<lb/>
goal accuracy, shooting<lb/>
at a 51.9 percent clip.<lb/>
JMU is next at 50.6.<lb/>
George Mason tops<lb/>
the loop in free throw<lb/>
shooting, hitting on<lb/>
73.1 percent from the<lb/>
charity stripe. Madison<lb/>
is second at 73.0.<lb/>
East Carolina, 2-3 in<lb/>
the league, is third in<lb/>
two categories ? field<lb/>
goal percentage and<lb/>
team offense. The Bucs<lb/>
are making 49.6 per-<lb/>
cent of their shots and<lb/>
scoring 65.4 points per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The Pirates are not<lb/>
fairing so well, however<lb/>
in the other three team<lb/>
statistical categories.<lb/>
The club is sixth in<lb/>
scoring defense, allow-<lb/>
ing 67.3 points. ECU is<lb/>
seventh in both free<lb/>
throw percentage (62.4<lb/>
percent) and point dif-<lb/>
ferential (minus-1.9<lb/>
points per game).<lb/>
Player, Team<lb/>
Mark West. ODU<lb/>
John Schweitz, Richmond<lb/>
Linton Townes, J.Madison<lb/>
Andy Bolden, G.Mason<lb/>
Carlos Yates, G.Mason<lb/>
Andre Gaddy, G.Mason<lb/>
Ronnie McAdoo, ODU<lb/>
Rob Romaine, Navy<lb/>
Keith Cieplicki. W&amp;M<lb/>
Mike Strayhorn, W&amp;M<lb/>
Billy Mann, ODU<lb/>
Dan Ruland, J.Madison<lb/>
Charles Green, F.Cl<lb/>
Morris Hargrove. EC I<lb/>
Dave Brooks, Navy<lb/>
REBOUNDING<lb/>
Player, Team<lb/>
Mark West, ODU<lb/>
Ronnie McAdoo, ODU<lb/>
Andre Gaddy, G.Mason<lb/>
Mike Shannon, G.Mason<lb/>
Dan Ruland, J.Madison<lb/>
Morris Hargrove<lb/>
Linton Townes, J.Madison<lb/>
Jeff Pehl, Richmond<lb/>
Gary Price. Navy<lb/>
Brant Weidncr. W&amp;M<lb/>
ASSISTS<lb/>
ECAC-SOITH TEAM LEADERS<lb/>
Field Goal Perc.<lb/>
learn<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
 aslarolina<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
Old Dominion<lb/>
George Mason<lb/>
Player, Team<lb/>
Grant Robinson, ODU<lb/>
Billy Barnes, W&amp;M<lb/>
Rob Romaine, Navy<lb/>
Tom Bethea, Richmond<lb/>
Billy Mann. ODU<lb/>
Player, Team<lb/>
Mark West, ODU<lb/>
Dan Ruland, J.Madison<lb/>
Andre Gaddy, G.Mason<lb/>
Mike Strayhorn, W&amp;M<lb/>
Jeff Pehl, Richmond<lb/>
G-Pts.Avg.<lb/>
22-38517.5<lb/>
23-39317.1<lb/>
22-37417.0<lb/>
22-35216.0<lb/>
22-35015.9<lb/>
22-34615.7<lb/>
22-33615.3<lb/>
19-25813.6<lb/>
21-26812.8<lb/>
17-21112.4<lb/>
22-26412.0<lb/>
22-26111.9<lb/>
20-23611.8<lb/>
20-22611.3<lb/>
19-20710.9<lb/>
ING G ? Reb.Avg.<lb/>
22-23310.6<lb/>
22-1888.4<lb/>
22-1757.9<lb/>
22-1506.8<lb/>
22-1466.6<lb/>
20-1226.1<lb/>
22-1356.1<lb/>
23-1365.9<lb/>
20-1115.6<lb/>
21-1125.4<lb/>
G ? AAvg<lb/>
22-1074.8<lb/>
21-934.4<lb/>
19-804.2<lb/>
23-753.3<lb/>
22-703.2<lb/>
fAGEPere<lb/>
64.9<lb/>
60.7<lb/>
56.5<lb/>
55.0<lb/>
54.3<lb/>
FREE THROW PERC<lb/>
Team<lb/>
George Mason<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
Navj<lb/>
W ilham &amp; Mary<lb/>
Oid Dominion<lb/>
East (. arolina<lb/>
SCORING OFFENSE<lb/>
learn<lb/>
Old Dominion<lb/>
George Mason<lb/>
EaM Carolina<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
William &amp; Mar<lb/>
SCORING DEFENSE<lb/>
learn<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Old Dominion<lb/>
Eastarolina<lb/>
George Mason<lb/>
POINT DIFFERENTIAL<lb/>
learn<lb/>
lames Madison<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
Old Dominion<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
Cieorge Mason<lb/>
East I arolina<lb/>
Off. - Def.Diff<lb/>
63.7 ? 53.010.7<lb/>
63.3 - 54.78.6<lb/>
71.3 ? 64.46.9<lb/>
65.4 ? 61.73.7<lb/>
63.2 ? 63.6-0.4<lb/>
70.9 ? 71 5-1.4<lb/>
65.4 - 67.3-1.9<lb/>
Souths No. 6<lb/>
Reck Nightclub<lb/>
RS.<lb/>
REDUCE<lb/>
POR ECU SI<lb/>
ISSION<lb/>
SON WEDNESDAY<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
4 BEDROOM HOUSE<lb/>
614 Maple St.<lb/>
2 full baths ? 2 half baihs<lb/>
800 sq. ft. family room<lb/>
Will finance 75 long term.<lb/>
See Jimmy Brewer or call Hooker &amp;<lb/>
Buchanan ? 752-6186 or 752-4433<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 Gomes<lb/>
Across from Highway Patrol<lb/>
Station on 1 Oth St.<lb/>
Hours: 8 a.m10 p.m.<lb/>
7 days a week<lb/>
Center<lb/>
Leads 4<lb/>
Old Dominion center<lb/>
Mark West continues<lb/>
to dominate nearly<lb/>
every individual<lb/>
statistical category<lb/>
among ECAC-South<lb/>
players.<lb/>
The 6-foot-10 junior<lb/>
leads the conference in<lb/>
scoring, rebounding,<lb/>
field goal percentage<lb/>
and blocked shots. He<lb/>
also tops the nation in<lb/>
the latter category.<lb/>
West is averaging<lb/>
17.5 points and 10.6 re-<lb/>
bounds per game. He is<lb/>
also making 64.9 per-<lb/>
cent of his shots from<lb/>
the floor.<lb/>
Just behind West in<lb/>
the scoring race is Rich-<lb/>
mond guard John<lb/>
Schweitz, who is<lb/>
averaging 17.1. James<lb/>
Madison's Linton<lb/>
Townes is next at 17.0.<lb/>
Two George Mason<lb/>
players, Andy Bolden<lb/>
and Carlos Yates,<lb/>
round out the top five<lb/>
with averages of 16.0<lb/>
and 15.9, respectively.<lb/>
Ronnie McAdoo, a<lb/>
teammate of West's at<lb/>
ODU, is second among<lb/>
the rebounding leaders.<lb/>
He is averaging 8.4<lb/>
pulls per game.<lb/>
East Carolina's Mor-<lb/>
ris Hargrove is the<lb/>
league's 14th leading<lb/>
scorer (11.3) and sixth<lb/>
leading rebounder<lb/>
(6.1). Pirate Charles<lb/>
Green is 13th in scoring<lb/>
at 11.8.<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-MeGuire Brouse Abouts<lb/>
201 W. Washington St. Within walking distance of campus.<lb/>
m@8x?m<lb/>
TiK.FB.lt<lb/>
FINALS<lb/>
BS.f&amp;ff<lb/>
?g0PBDSC<lb/>
ft<lb/>
EACUWQGUT CUSS<lb/>
M&amp;VY 2DO0?<lb/>
199 iMJfcf?<lb/>
175? 0NDGK<lb/>
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lUIWKtR OF 6ACM CLASS<lb/>
win Compete r$33<lb/>
or oUeJuiP TO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNtvQ&amp;rTY<lb/>
m 0)&amp; SEMfcCTER<lb/>
22PgUTBVFfcC<lb/>
ft&amp;JSTtf? AT &amp;30<lb/>
FfcftloTVRUW.<lb/>
i<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
e advertised items is required to be readily available for<lb/>
 below the advertised price in each AAP Store ecept as specifically<lb/>
in this ad <lb/>
sale at o?<lb/>
noted j<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT FEB. 20, 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/>
NOW SAVE MORE WITH A&amp;P's<lb/>
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AND THE NEW<lb/>
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A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
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3 lb. pkg.<lb/>
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Freshly<lb/>
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EXTRA LEAN SPECIAL TRIM COUNTRY FARM<lb/>
Boston<lb/>
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1U.S.D.A. INSPECTED<lb/>
Pork Roast Whole Fryer Leg!<lb/>
29 18ec QQ0<lb/>
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TROPIC ANA GOLD N PURE<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
98<lb/>
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12 gallon<lb/>
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FROZEN<lb/>
Ann Page Pizzas<lb/>
89<lb/>
? Hamburger<lb/>
?Sausage<lb/>
?Pepperonl 10oz<lb/>
? Vsfieese dKq<lb/>
GOLDEN QUARTERS<lb/>
Mrs. Filbert's<lb/>
Margarine<lb/>
Save 54c<lb/>
On 2 Pkgs.<lb/>
211b. I<lb/>
pkgs. ?<lb/>
ANN PAGE BUTTERMILK OR<lb/>
Homestyle Biscuits<lb/>
Save 20<lb/>
4 690<lb/>
cans m0<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER 621<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT FEB. 20, AT AAP IN GREENVILLE, N.C<lb/>
Pjj) SUPER SAVER COUPON )?'<lb/>
? YELLOW-Bl <lb/>
Cottonelle<lb/>
Bath Tissue a.<lb/>
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Mayonnaise<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
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69<lb/>
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UMIT ONE Wrr COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT FEB. 20, AT AAP IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
622<lb/>
TAYLOR<lb/>
Lake Country Wine<lb/>
359<lb/>
? Gold<lb/>
?Pink<lb/>
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DR. PEPPER<lb/>
DIET DR. PEPPER<lb/>
7-UP DIET7-UP<lb/>
1.5 liter<lb/>
btl.<lb/>
2<lb/>
Liter<lb/>
Plastic Bottle<lb/>
89 <lb/>
GOOD ONLY IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
" FRESHWTTH QUALITY '<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW RIPE<lb/>
Dole<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
CAUFORNIA RED RIPE<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
JANE<lb/>
PARKER<lb/>
tcakes<lb/>
?69<lb/>
First Of<lb/>
The Season!<lb/>
qt.<lb/>
basket<lb/>
188<lb/>
it I<lb/>
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ft JUICY A<lb/>
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Q"38?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057458_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>