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<pb facs="00057463_0001"/>
She itast (Eatrnltntan<lb/>
?<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58 No.if<lb/>
Tuesday, March 2, 1982<lb/>
Greenville,N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
rOn The y&amp;ktei<lb/>
The latest<lb/>
foreign film to<lb/>
win an Academy<lb/>
Award appears<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Mendenhall bee<lb/>
page 5<lb/>
Weather Watch<lb/>
Mostly sunny today with highs near 60<lb/>
Lows tonight m the 40s Far Wednesday<lb/>
with highs m the 60s<lb/>
Inside Index<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Opinions<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Learning About College<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
-sifieds<lb/>
Plan Proposes Censuring' Braxton<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
u?tani n?s I.dilor<lb/>
A resolution went before the SGA<lb/>
Monday that, among other things,<lb/>
will require a lot of explanation.<lb/>
In what Vice President Marvin<lb/>
Braxton termed a "surprise move<lb/>
the SGA heard a resolution which<lb/>
calls for the "censuring and ad-<lb/>
monishment of the vice president of<lb/>
the Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
John Greer, who was the princi-<lb/>
ple author and promotor of the<lb/>
resolution, said that the action was<lb/>
not aimed at being a "personal at-<lb/>
tack on Marvin. We just felt that the<lb/>
actions he presented were unap-<lb/>
propriate for an SGA meeting<lb/>
So just what did Braxton do to<lb/>
provoke such an action?<lb/>
It all took place after the Feb. 22<lb/>
meeting of the SGA. Following<lb/>
what was termed a "routine<lb/>
meeting the attention of the the<lb/>
few remaining members of the<lb/>
legislature turned from verbal<lb/>
debate to a physical action in the<lb/>
seats.<lb/>
Braxton, who claims he was pro-<lb/>
voked to physical action by a note<lb/>
containing an "ethnic slur had to<lb/>
be pulled off Tim Mertz, another<lb/>
student at the meeting.<lb/>
The note referred to a social rela-<lb/>
tionship Braxton has with Diane<lb/>
Anderson, a member of the staff at<lb/>
The East Carolinian.<lb/>
After the gist 01 the note was<lb/>
relayed to him through Anderson,<lb/>
Braxton claims he made a motion to<lb/>
Mertz to exit the meeting room and<lb/>
discuss the note outside.<lb/>
Following Mertz's refusal, Brax-<lb/>
ton attempted to use physical coer-<lb/>
sion to force Mertz to talk about the<lb/>
note.<lb/>
Editor in chief of The East<lb/>
Carolinian, Jimmy DuPree, who<lb/>
also remained after the meeting,<lb/>
says he attempted to keep some<lb/>
distance between Braxton and<lb/>
Mertz.<lb/>
According to several persons at<lb/>
the scene, there was very little<lb/>
physical action between the two.<lb/>
"1 don't mind in politics if people<lb/>
take verbal stabs at me Braxton<lb/>
said, commenting on his action in<lb/>
the Feb. 22 meeting. "But when it<lb/>
comes to my friends, that's another<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
"I'm just saying that my actions<lb/>
are just Braxton told the SGA<lb/>
Monday. "I think enough of this<lb/>
legislature that I won't tell you what<lb/>
was done last week<lb/>
In addition to censuring and ad-<lb/>
monishing Braxton from the SGA,<lb/>
the resolution called for the vice<lb/>
president to issue a formal apology<lb/>
to all parties involved.<lb/>
"Be it further resolved the<lb/>
resolution continued, "that if Mr.<lb/>
Braxton is involved in any further<lb/>
disruptions of the Legislature, he<lb/>
will be held in contempt of the<lb/>
Legislature and barred from any<lb/>
and all meetings of the SGA<lb/>
B axton would not comment on<lb/>
why he feels Mertz gave him the<lb/>
note, and Mertz could not be reach-<lb/>
ed for comment on the incident.<lb/>
"In the past Braxton added,<lb/>
"there have been a lot of different<lb/>
campaign tricks or political so-<lb/>
called ploys done on this campus.<lb/>
But it has brought disgrace to the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"I have had a great year here, and<lb/>
1 have enjoyed working with you a<lb/>
lot. I sort of look at the SGA as a<lb/>
learning process. Sometime or<lb/>
another, I don't think I would mind<lb/>
becoming a career politician, but 1<lb/>
don't think college is the place<lb/>
Commenting further on the<lb/>
legislature, Braxton added, "The<lb/>
SGA has a lot of potential, but peo-<lb/>
ple have to grow up and realize that<lb/>
there is life after ECU. This is just<lb/>
the beginning<lb/>
Braxton did say that Mertz may<lb/>
See BRAXTON'S. Page 3<lb/>
Chancellor Search Narrowed<lb/>
By TOM HALL<lb/>
The East Carolina Board of<lb/>
Trustees closed its meeting to the<lb/>
public Sunday afternoon to discuss<lb/>
what board chairman Ashley B.<lb/>
Futrell called "personnel<lb/>
While some sources claimed that<lb/>
the Chancellor Selection Committee<lb/>
had narrowed the field of 148 ap-<lb/>
plicants for the post to "less than<lb/>
10 Futrell, the committee chair-<lb/>
man, refused Monday to reveal the<lb/>
number of applicants remaining.<lb/>
"It's been cut down con-<lb/>
siderably Futrell said. "We're on<lb/>
schedule. We hope that we can be<lb/>
ready some time in April to present<lb/>
the two people to Dr. (William) Fri-<lb/>
day and the Board of Governors<lb/>
The committee met at 10 a.m.<lb/>
Sunday in the Willis Building. Only<lb/>
two finalists will be submitted to<lb/>
University of North Carolina presi-<lb/>
dent, Futrell said.<lb/>
In the open session, the board ap-<lb/>
proved the construction of a bus<lb/>
shelter north of the Speight<lb/>
Students Given Opportunity<lb/>
To Search For Sunken Ships<lb/>
By GREGORY SLGGS<lb/>
SUN ?nm<lb/>
College seniors and graduate<lb/>
students throughout the United<lb/>
States will have the opportunity this<lb/>
summer to participate in an under-<lb/>
water search for sunken ships off<lb/>
North Carolina's Cape Lookout<lb/>
coast.<lb/>
This is the fourth annual Field<lb/>
School in Maritime History and<lb/>
Underwater Archaelogy co-<lb/>
sponsored by East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity and the North Carolina Division<lb/>
of Archives and History.<lb/>
A two-week classroom introduc-<lb/>
tion to maritime history, Under-<lb/>
water Archaeology and Nautical<lb/>
Science will start the specially<lb/>
selected students on their ar-<lb/>
chaeological project. From the ECU<lb/>
classrooms the students will travel<lb/>
to the Cape Lookout project site.<lb/>
There they will combine forces with<lb/>
personnel from the North Carolina<lb/>
Division of Archives and History.<lb/>
Aboard the Research Vessel Mur-<lb/>
phy Base, the junior archaeologists<lb/>
See STUDENTS, Page 2<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Trustee Katie O. Morgan was<lb/>
named the seventh member of the<lb/>
ECU Endowment Board. James H.<lb/>
Maynard, whose term expired, was<lb/>
re-elected to the endowment board.<lb/>
A first edition of the Federalist<lb/>
papers of 1788 and letters written by<lb/>
Jonathan Swift were donated to<lb/>
Joyner Library, according to Dr.<lb/>
Susan McDaniel. Speaking for Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Academic Affairs<lb/>
Robert H. Maier, McDaniel said<lb/>
Elizabeth Ross of Washington<lb/>
donated the manuscripts.<lb/>
Dr. William E. Laupus, dean of<lb/>
the School of Medicine, said the<lb/>
Brody Medical Sciences Building<lb/>
should be completed by mid-May.<lb/>
"We're moving at a rapid pace to<lb/>
complete the building Laupus<lb/>
said, adding that a formal dedica-<lb/>
tion was scheduled for Oct. 29.<lb/>
Financial aid programs for<lb/>
students may change in the next<lb/>
academic year, according to Elmer<lb/>
E. Meyer Jr the vice chancellor for<lb/>
Student Life. "Most students will be<lb/>
taken care of for 1982-83 Elmer<lb/>
told the board.<lb/>
Meyer also said WZMB-FM was<lb/>
"doing quite well from the students<lb/>
point of view" but "not so well<lb/>
from the faculty point of view<lb/>
Some faculty members have com-<lb/>
plained that ECU's revived radio<lb/>
station blocks the signal from the<lb/>
UNC station in Chapel Hill, Meyer<lb/>
said. Futrell later asked the board to<lb/>
let him know "if you know of any<lb/>
other way to block them out<lb/>
A recent survey shows that fewer<lb/>
ECU freshmen choose a major<lb/>
because they like learning about it,<lb/>
Meyer said. Forty-five percent of<lb/>
the freshmen last year chose majors<lb/>
in subjects they enjoyed, compared<lb/>
to 38 percent this year. The number<lb/>
of freshmen whose mothers attend-<lb/>
ed ECU has risen from 8 percent to<lb/>
15 percent, while freshmen with<lb/>
fathers who studied at the university<lb/>
increased from 4.8 percent to 5.3<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
F. Douglas Moore of the Institu-<lb/>
tional Advancement and Planning<lb/>
office told the board that 10 area<lb/>
newspapers had planned special edi-<lb/>
tions in March commemorating<lb/>
ECU's 75th anniversary.<lb/>
Acting Chancellor Dr. Robert<lb/>
Howell said representatives of the<lb/>
Southern Association of Schools<lb/>
and Colleges will visit ECU on<lb/>
March 14-17.<lb/>
The board's next meeting is ten-<lb/>
tatively scheduled for April 3.<lb/>
Students Hold Vigil<lb/>
For El Salvadorans<lb/>
Bv PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
SUff Wrilrr<lb/>
Approximately 30 concerned<lb/>
students and Greenville citizens<lb/>
took part in a 90-minute "Silent<lb/>
Vigil for the People jof El<lb/>
Salvador"in front of the ECU Stu-<lb/>
dent Supply Store Monday.<lb/>
Rev. Bob Clyde, the ECU Baptist<lb/>
campus minister, ed a brief opening<lb/>
prayer, "For Justice Where There's<lb/>
Injustice, For Healing Where<lb/>
There's Bloodshed" at 12:40 p.m.<lb/>
"The "Silent Vigil" was organiz-<lb/>
ed "in recognition of the tremen-<lb/>
dous suffering and loss of life<lb/>
among the people of El Salvador<lb/>
according to a leaflet distributed by<lb/>
some of the participants.<lb/>
"I wanted to draw attention to<lb/>
our government's involvement in<lb/>
another country's affairs said<lb/>
Harry Warren, an ECU graduate<lb/>
student in history. "If we're to be<lb/>
involved in another country's inter-<lb/>
nal affairs, let it be in a humanistic<lb/>
manner instead of a militaristic<lb/>
manner<lb/>
"I feel the student body needs to<lb/>
be more aware of our country's<lb/>
position in El Salvador added<lb/>
Glenn Maughan, an ECU education<lb/>
major. "Our nation's strong<lb/>
military commitment there can lead<lb/>
to a possible confrontation with the<lb/>
Soviet Union, Cuba, and other Cen-<lb/>
tral American countries<lb/>
Warren said he did not "believe<lb/>
in the basic argument that we should<lb/>
be there because the Russians or<lb/>
Cubans are there. Two wrongs<lb/>
don't make a right<lb/>
According to ECU student Randy<lb/>
Alley, a spokesperson for the group,<lb/>
the coverage from local television<lb/>
stations was "excellent" but "we<lb/>
haven't really reached the student<lb/>
body well enough yet He said he<lb/>
felt that with "time and effort" this<lb/>
would improve.<lb/>
Students at the scene stopped to<lb/>
take leaflets and a few joined the<lb/>
vigil after asking the participants<lb/>
some questions. "I've had a student<lb/>
come up to me and ask me more<lb/>
questions, so I think the interest is<lb/>
there Warren said.<lb/>
"If this is supposed to be a<lb/>
democracy, where the hell is the<lb/>
people's voice?" Maughan said.<lb/>
Warren said he thought interest in<lb/>
the El Salvadoran question would<lb/>
increase "when the students realize<lb/>
that they have a personal stake in<lb/>
the international situation<lb/>
Promotion of a military solution<lb/>
in El Salvador is "real dangerous<lb/>
Maughan said. He added that<lb/>
students may find themselves the<lb/>
"unlucky recipients of "draft<lb/>
notices" if the situation didn't<lb/>
cease. "Somehow I don't feel this<lb/>
situation only applies to men<lb/>
Maughan said he thought the<lb/>
situation could easily escalate "to a<lb/>
point where we're alienating the<lb/>
Soviet Union and Cuba" by military<lb/>
sanctions, blockades or a naval-<lb/>
force build-up.<lb/>
According to the group's leaflet,<lb/>
they hoped "to help bring these<lb/>
issues into the forefront of current<lb/>
debate. Congress is now in the pro-<lb/>
cess of making crucial decisions on<lb/>
these matters, so public input is<lb/>
vital<lb/>
The group urged students and<lb/>
others to write or call President<lb/>
Reagan and their representatives to<lb/>
express their opinion.<lb/>
In the leaflet it was printed that<lb/>
there is "not enough adherence to<lb/>
basic human rights" in El Salvador<lb/>
and that "as U.S. citizens we are all<lb/>
responsible for our government's<lb/>
policies and actions<lb/>
Maughan said he hoped "the stu-<lb/>
dent body realizes that their and<lb/>
their parent's tax dollars are being<lb/>
used to train El Salvadoran soldiers<lb/>
at Fort Bragg He added that these<lb/>
soldiers would soon return to El<lb/>
Salvador "to kill their own people<lb/>
Opposition to the training of<lb/>
these El Salvadoran soldiers was ex-<lb/>
hibited Saturday at Fort Bragg when<lb/>
approximately 1,000 people<lb/>
demonstrated the presence and<lb/>
training of the El Salvadoran<lb/>
soldiers there.<lb/>
The group presented letters of<lb/>
???oto Bv GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Clink ! C lank ! a wn! C rash!<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority members overcame their late-night jitters to win<lb/>
the can-stacking contest at a campus "all-nighter" Friday and Saturday.<lb/>
Many Say Haitian<lb/>
Refugees Mistreated<lb/>
Monday's silent vigil on the ECU campus (top); protestors at Fayetteville's<lb/>
Pope Park Saturday: "a personal stake in the international situation<lb/>
(Photos by Gary Patterson and Dave Williams)<lb/>
protest to military officials at the<lb/>
base, calling for an end to the end to<lb/>
this training.<lb/>
Recent press reports have charged<lb/>
that the El Salvadoran soldiers are<lb/>
murdering unarmed civilians and<lb/>
peasants. The Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion denies these reports, but the re-<lb/>
cent visits by some congressmen to<lb/>
El Salvador confirm some of the<lb/>
reports.<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff VI nIrr<lb/>
"The United States does not treat<lb/>
the Haitian people as human be-<lb/>
ings said J.B. Obas, a manpower<lb/>
counselor at the Haitian American<lb/>
Community Association of Dade<lb/>
County (HACAD).<lb/>
"They're like in a prison. They<lb/>
treat them more or less like animals<lb/>
 Feed them, find them shelter and<lb/>
that's it added Father Marcel<lb/>
Peloquin of the Catholic Haitian<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
News Analysis<lb/>
Obas and Peloquin were referring<lb/>
to the plight of more than 2500 Hai-<lb/>
tian refugees being held in detention<lb/>
centers in the continental United<lb/>
States and Puerto Rico.<lb/>
Like many critics, Obas and Pelo-<lb/>
quin say the detention camps are<lb/>
more like concentration camps<lb/>
where detainees are poorly clothed<lb/>
and fed, kept in isolation from<lb/>
family members, and subjected to<lb/>
the psychological torture of conti-<lb/>
nuing loneliness and boredom.<lb/>
Obas, formerly from Haiti, has<lb/>
lived in the United States for 17<lb/>
years. He works in Miami with<lb/>
HACAD to provide support to the<lb/>
families of refugees being kept in<lb/>
the Krome Avenue Detention<lb/>
Center. HACAD is also lobbying<lb/>
for the release of the refugees.<lb/>
"We have even sent telegrams to<lb/>
Reagan  spoken to senators and<lb/>
our own congressmen Peloquin<lb/>
said. He visits the Krome Ave.<lb/>
center to say Mass and provide<lb/>
counseling services once a week for<lb/>
the refugees. Peloquin has asked the<lb/>
political leaders to intercede for the<lb/>
release of the refugees, but "so far<lb/>
we haven't touched first base he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The policy of retaining refugees<lb/>
was begun by the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration to discourage the hun-<lb/>
dreds of Haitians illegally entering<lb/>
the United States by way of boats,<lb/>
many of which are in poor condition<lb/>
and overloaded.<lb/>
Criticism and charges of racism<lb/>
have been endless since the start of<lb/>
the policy. "1 know it's racially<lb/>
motivated stated Congresswoman<lb/>
Shirley Chisholm (D-N.Y.) at a re-<lb/>
cent lecture at East Carolina.<lb/>
Chisholm said that "never before,<lb/>
in the history of this land, have we<lb/>
ever used such a policy with<lb/>
anybody coming to this country<lb/>
Rev. Gerard Jean-Juste, the first<lb/>
Roman Catholic priest from Haiti<lb/>
ordained in the United States and<lb/>
director of the Miami Haitian<lb/>
Refugee Center, said the United<lb/>
States is resettling 500 Indochina<lb/>
refugees daily while the Haitians are<lb/>
still detained. He questioned why<lb/>
the United States also treats Polish<lb/>
and Cuban refugees differently<lb/>
from the Haitians.<lb/>
See HAITIAN, Page 3<lb/>
Ameling<lb/>
Appearance<lb/>
Cancelled<lb/>
The appearance of internationally<lb/>
known soprano Elly Ameling,<lb/>
rescheduled from last Tuesday even-<lb/>
ing, has been cancelled.<lb/>
Ms. Ameling had been slated to<lb/>
sing this evening in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
but was forced to cancel a second<lb/>
time due to a prolonged illness.<lb/>
No indication has been given that<lb/>
Ameling might reschedule for a date<lb/>
later this spring.<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
? -?<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057463_0002"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 2, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcements column<lb/>
please send the announcement (as<lb/>
oriel as possible) typed and<lb/>
double spaced to the East Caroli<lb/>
n.an in care ot the production<lb/>
manager<lb/>
For better service, we are now<lb/>
asking that you pick up several<lb/>
copies ot our new announcement<lb/>
application tor your upcoming<lb/>
events<lb/>
There is no cnarge tor an<lb/>
nouncements. but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment 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 tor announcements<lb/>
is 5 p.m Friday for the Tuesday<lb/>
papesr and S p m Tuesday for the<lb/>
Thursday paper<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
ments<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
AND CORRECTIONS<lb/>
The Department of Social Work<lb/>
fc Correctional Services at East<lb/>
Carolina university will offer a<lb/>
coursse of particular interest to<lb/>
staff members and administrators<lb/>
in human service organizations<lb/>
such as mental retardation<lb/>
centers, psychiatric hospitals,<lb/>
mental health centers, home<lb/>
health agencies, departments ot<lb/>
social services, correctional<lb/>
facilities and programs and to<lb/>
selected undergraduate and<lb/>
graduate students The course<lb/>
SOCW 5000: Organization and<lb/>
Management of Social Service<lb/>
Agenices will be taught by Dr<lb/>
Walter F Lamendola<lb/>
For additional information<lb/>
about admission to the course and<lb/>
registration procedures please<lb/>
contact the Department of Social<lb/>
Work &amp; Correctional Services, 314<lb/>
Allied Health Building The coures<lb/>
has tentatively been scheduled to<lb/>
meet from 2 3 15 on Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday but this may be changed<lb/>
uoon sufficient oemand<lb/>
BASKETRY<lb/>
In this beginner's workshop, the<lb/>
student will be shown how to con<lb/>
struct baskets using two different<lb/>
methods ? weaving and twinning<lb/>
Covering handles, manipulating<lb/>
shapes, and developing a personal<lb/>
approach to basketry will be ex<lb/>
plored Baskery. a non credit<lb/>
workshop offered by Mendenhall,<lb/>
will be taught on Wednesdays,<lb/>
March 15. 22. April 5. 12, 19 and 29<lb/>
from 4 9 pm Class space is<lb/>
limited so register now at the MSC<lb/>
Crafts Center<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
Souls will have its annual Miss<lb/>
Souls Pageant on Sunday. March<lb/>
28 at 7 p m AM interested ladies<lb/>
are asked to submit applications<lb/>
by Friday. Feb 26 to any Soul's of<lb/>
ficer For further information con<lb/>
tact Barbara Battle at 758 9550<lb/>
VARSITY<lb/>
CHEERLEADER<lb/>
TRYOUTS<lb/>
Will be held at 7 p m on Tues<lb/>
day, March 30 on the mam floor of<lb/>
Memorial Gym The first practice<lb/>
session will be held a' 5 p m on<lb/>
Wednesday, March 17 at the east<lb/>
end of Mmges Coliseum All guys<lb/>
and girls interested in trying out<lb/>
for the 1982 83 squad should be pre<lb/>
sent at this first practice session<lb/>
AED<lb/>
Alpha Epsiion Delta premedical<lb/>
honor society will meet Tuesday<lb/>
March 2, 7 30 p m in Flanagan<lb/>
307 Dr Simmons of the Dapt ot<lb/>
Psychiatry will be the guest<lb/>
speaker This meeting is man<lb/>
datory for all people planning to<lb/>
attend the convention m New<lb/>
Orleans All interested people art<lb/>
nvited to attend<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter o Ph. Sigma Pi Na<lb/>
t.onal Fraternity will have its<lb/>
monthly dinner meeting at 6 P m<lb/>
Wednesday at Parker s<lb/>
Restaurant on Memorial Dr.ve<lb/>
The all you can eat dinner is S5<lb/>
MUSIC MAN<lb/>
Wanted Singers. Dancers,<lb/>
Musicians for the Broadway<lb/>
Musical "Music Man" Tryouts<lb/>
March 1. 2. 3 at 7:30 p m til done<lb/>
at Martin Community Auditorium<lb/>
near Holiday Inn. Williamston.<lb/>
N.C To be presented May U. 15 at<lb/>
8 p m by Martin Community<lb/>
Players Call 792 6144 for more m<lb/>
formation<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
Come and defend the world'<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center has<lb/>
two now video type games to add<lb/>
to their recreational area Try<lb/>
your skill at "Solarquest" and<lb/>
Vanguard Be prepared to tight<lb/>
aga'nst evil invaders with<lb/>
Mendenhails "Defender video<lb/>
game<lb/>
RECREATION<lb/>
"Spring" into action with<lb/>
recreation at Mendenhall<lb/>
Specials scheduled throughout the<lb/>
Spring Semester offer something<lb/>
for everyone For complete mfor<lb/>
mation visit the recreational area<lb/>
at Mendenhall or call 757 Mil,<lb/>
Ext 260<lb/>
SKATE FORMS<lb/>
March 4 from 8 to 10 Cost only<lb/>
SI includes skate rental Spon<lb/>
sored by Circle K<lb/>
FLOOR LOOM<lb/>
WEAVING II<lb/>
in this six week class, the stu<lb/>
dent will begin to explore the uses<lb/>
of color, texture, and pattern in<lb/>
the woven item Emphasis will be<lb/>
made on construction of a gar<lb/>
ment or other functional items<lb/>
Floor Loom Weaving ll, a non<lb/>
credit workshop offered by<lb/>
MendenhaNI, will be taught on<lb/>
Thursdays, March 18, 25. April 1.<lb/>
8, 15, and 22 from 6 9pm Class<lb/>
space is limited so register now at<lb/>
the MSC Crafts Center<lb/>
SPS<lb/>
The Society of Physics, students<lb/>
and physics faculty is continuing<lb/>
their weekly seies of nuclear<lb/>
power interest with consideration<lb/>
of nuclear weapons This will be in<lb/>
coordination with nationally spon<lb/>
sored Ground Zero Movement dur<lb/>
mg the week of April 18 25. This<lb/>
series of nuclear arms will begin<lb/>
with a film about Einstein and his<lb/>
inadvertent contribution to<lb/>
nuclear warfare The film will be<lb/>
in room E 205 of the Physics<lb/>
Building if will begin Thursday.<lb/>
March 4 at 4 30 p.m<lb/>
BEST TAN<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority will<lb/>
be sponsoring a "Best Tan" Con<lb/>
test at the Elbow Room the Tues<lb/>
day after Spring Break. March 16<lb/>
So en(oy the sun and fun over Spr<lb/>
mg Break 1982 and then come<lb/>
down to the Eibo the 16th and show<lb/>
us your tan!<lb/>
GAY&amp;<lb/>
It you would like to join n a<lb/>
discussion on homosexuality,<lb/>
come and get involved in the East<lb/>
Carolina Gay Community on<lb/>
March 23 Jim Shay and Kim<lb/>
Patrick will be leading a discus<lb/>
sion group Please come and add<lb/>
your comments Have a wonderful<lb/>
Spring Break and don't forget the<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
DARKROOM<lb/>
TECHNIQUES<lb/>
This workshop will provide in<lb/>
struction mdeveiopmg black and<lb/>
white film, contact printing,<lb/>
enlarging techniques, use of<lb/>
filters, types of paper, and some<lb/>
basic photographic techniques.<lb/>
Participants must have a 35mm or<lb/>
double lens 120 camera to use dur<lb/>
mg the duration of the workshop<lb/>
Darkroom Techniques, a non<lb/>
credit workshop offered by<lb/>
Mendenhall. will be taught on<lb/>
Mondays. March 15. 22. 29. and<lb/>
April 5 from 6 30 9 30 p m Class<lb/>
space is limited so register now at<lb/>
the MSC Crafts Center<lb/>
SKATE ATHON<lb/>
Skate A Thon sponsored by<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigma Service<lb/>
Sorority March 28 from 1 p m to 5<lb/>
p m at Sports World All proceeds<lb/>
go to the Hospice Program in<lb/>
Greenville Sponsors are needed<lb/>
Contact Lou Anne Forbes at<lb/>
758 8042<lb/>
FAITH &amp; VICTORY<lb/>
Do you want to live a victorious<lb/>
life? You can be totally free from<lb/>
life's worries and cares through<lb/>
Jesus Christ, who was your<lb/>
substitute by bearing all the sms of<lb/>
mankind on the cross By accep<lb/>
ting Him as your personal Lord<lb/>
and Savior you can be totally<lb/>
made free and have that security<lb/>
that you are going to Heaven<lb/>
Faith and Victory Fellowship<lb/>
meets every Friday night at 7 p m<lb/>
m Jenkins Auditorium ? the Art<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
PHI ALPHATHETA<lb/>
John Broadwater, head of the<lb/>
Virginia Underwater Archaeology<lb/>
Research Program will present a<lb/>
slide show lecture entitled "The<lb/>
Yorktown Shipwreck Ar<lb/>
chaeological Proiect A Study of<lb/>
the Sunken British Fleet at<lb/>
Yorktown, Virginia on March 3<lb/>
at Brewster B 104 at 8 p m<lb/>
Students To Dive For Sunken Ships<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
will make a map of a<lb/>
one-mile ocean floor<lb/>
section, directly off<lb/>
Cape Lookout. A<lb/>
magnetically sensitive<lb/>
device, the proton<lb/>
magnetometer, will aid<lb/>
the researchers in<lb/>
locating potential<lb/>
sunken ships. If a<lb/>
target is found, it is<lb/>
marked and then in-<lb/>
vestigated by dive<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
According to ECU<lb/>
Maritime Historv Pro-<lb/>
fessor William N. Still<lb/>
Jr "the value of<lb/>
sunken ships is from a<lb/>
historical point of<lb/>
view Anything from<lb/>
clothing, cooking uten-<lb/>
sils to cannonballs can<lb/>
reveal significant<lb/>
historical information.<lb/>
These ships are in<lb/>
essence "time cap-<lb/>
sules<lb/>
ECU has one of the<lb/>
two Underwater Ar-<lb/>
chaeology master's<lb/>
degrees offered in the<lb/>
United States. Because<lb/>
of this, the ECU<lb/>
Underwater Ar-<lb/>
chaeological Field<lb/>
School has attracted<lb/>
the attention of<lb/>
students nationwide.<lb/>
Last summer's Field<lb/>
School involved 11<lb/>
students from nine dif-<lb/>
ferent colleges. Yale,<lb/>
Penn State, Rhode<lb/>
Island University, and<lb/>
Louisiana State Univer-<lb/>
sity are just a few of the<lb/>
schools represented by<lb/>
students attending<lb/>
ECU's Field School.<lb/>
A senior- or<lb/>
graduate-student level<lb/>
is the only prequisite<lb/>
for applying for Field<lb/>
School admission. The<lb/>
10 to 12 students<lb/>
ultimately chosen may<lb/>
come from a wide<lb/>
variety of scholastic<lb/>
studies. Students ma-<lb/>
joring in geography, ar-<lb/>
See DIVERS, Page 3<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
The Department of Social Work<lb/>
and Correctional Services at East<lb/>
Carolina University will offer<lb/>
courses during the first summer<lb/>
session of 1982. beginning May 17<lb/>
and running through June 22.<lb/>
which will be of interest to protes<lb/>
sionals m the human service field.<lb/>
ministers, lay persons, and to<lb/>
students preparing to enter these<lb/>
fields<lb/>
SocW 4001 Death and Dying<lb/>
deals with loss, bereavement, and<lb/>
copmg with terminal illness It is<lb/>
designed to assist m understan<lb/>
ding of the conditions and pro<lb/>
biems involved in facing death.<lb/>
INTERVARSITY<lb/>
Come Wednesday night to the<lb/>
intervarsity Christian Fellowship<lb/>
meeting m MenoenhaH room 221<lb/>
This week we will discuss the<lb/>
Ouest.on of Women's Role in<lb/>
Society with Greg Kennedy<lb/>
dying and survivorship<lb/>
Awareness, values, and attitudes<lb/>
are stressed as they relate to pro<lb/>
tessional practice<lb/>
SocW 5001 Human Behavior<lb/>
and the Social Environment is<lb/>
designed to assist individuals m<lb/>
the development of a social<lb/>
systems concept of the biol<lb/>
psycho social elements of mans<lb/>
bemg Emphasis is given to<lb/>
deeper self awareness of one's<lb/>
own behavior, attitudes . beliefs<lb/>
and values as they relate to profes<lb/>
sionai practice<lb/>
The courses will meet a<lb/>
minimum of seven and one half<lb/>
each week The time will be an<lb/>
nounced students may be allowed<lb/>
to indicate scheduling<lb/>
preferences.<lb/>
For information about applica<lb/>
tion andor registration you may<lb/>
write or call<lb/>
Department of Social Work and<lb/>
Correctional Services<lb/>
School fo Allied Health and<lb/>
Social Professions<lb/>
312 Carol Belk Building<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N C 27834<lb/>
(919 757 6961)<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
The national honor society for<lb/>
psychology maiors, will meet on<lb/>
Tuesday March 1 at 7 p m in Sp<lb/>
129 The guest speaker will be Dr<lb/>
Castellow The topic for the lee<lb/>
ture will be Sleep and Dreams All<lb/>
members and interested others<lb/>
are urged to attend<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
The international Language<lb/>
Organization will be meeting on<lb/>
March 3 HI room BC 301 The<lb/>
meeting will be at 2 p m All m<lb/>
terested peopie are welcome to at<lb/>
tend and all members are en<lb/>
couraged to attend<lb/>
KYF<lb/>
The King's Youth Fellowship<lb/>
w.ll hold .ts next meeting on<lb/>
March 4, Thursday at 8 p m in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Center (Hm Wh<lb/>
Some of the topics discussed win<lb/>
be the coming of our Lord Jesus<lb/>
Chnst Everyone s .nv.ted to<lb/>
come and refreshments w.u be<lb/>
served at the conclusion ot the<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
PHILOSOPHY CLUB<lb/>
There will be a meeting on Tues<lb/>
day. March 2 at 7 p m in Brewster<lb/>
D 313 tor the presentation ot "The<lb/>
Dialectical inferences of Pure<lb/>
Reasons" in Kant's CRITIQUE<lb/>
OF PURE REASON (The<lb/>
Transcendental Dialectic. Book<lb/>
II) by Norns Hoggard All in<lb/>
terested persons are invited to at<lb/>
tend'<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
The Omicron chapter of Phi<lb/>
Beta Lambda will meet March 3 at<lb/>
4 p m m Rawl 130 AH members<lb/>
are requested to bring money<lb/>
and or candy Also, any member<lb/>
interested in attending the state<lb/>
convention is asked to contact<lb/>
Janice Irvine<lb/>
PRCCLUB<lb/>
Will meet at 7 p m Thursday<lb/>
March 4 m the PRC Building to<lb/>
nominate officers Ballots will be<lb/>
cast Monday and Tuesday. Marcn<lb/>
15 and 16<lb/>
LAMP SALE<lb/>
On Wednesday. Ma'rh 3 at 4<lb/>
p m on the mall the lampados of<lb/>
Omega Psi Ph. Fraternity will be<lb/>
auctioned off to the highest bidder<lb/>
So come on down to the mall and<lb/>
buy one of the most unique people<lb/>
m the world A man who dares to<lb/>
accept the challenge that Omega<lb/>
PSi Phi presents to all rnen Cash<lb/>
on Delivery<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
A speaker from the Carreer<lb/>
Planning and Placement Service<lb/>
will be at the Ledona H ?<lb/>
Cultural Center Wednesday.<lb/>
March 3 at 7 p m Anyone in<lb/>
terested in summer employment<lb/>
and iob interviews is inv.ted to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
SUCCESS<lb/>
Success is getting what i want<lb/>
Happmess is wanting what l get<lb/>
Learn the key to Success and hap<lb/>
pmess Come and iom us every<lb/>
Tuesday night, 7 p m at<lb/>
Mendenhall Coffeehouse<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
There will be a mm<lb/>
N C Student Leg.siatur- or. t<lb/>
day, March 2, a' ' P ? r<lb/>
Mendenhall 212 Session on book<lb/>
will be distributed and pians loi<lb/>
session wm be discussed A-<lb/>
members and .nterested person-<lb/>
are welcome<lb/>
PREPPY PROGRAM<lb/>
REFUNDS<lb/>
If you have not ,f '<lb/>
your tickets tor the OH ?l Pre)<lb/>
py Program w.th Lisa B<lb/>
(ongmaiiy scheduiec<lb/>
February 9), rOu must 00 SO by<lb/>
Friday March 19 ?<lb/>
rour refund by brmflti .<lb/>
ticket by 'he Centra' T.ret O" ?<lb/>
,n Mendenhall MoncM,<lb/>
Friday from 10 a m tc 4 p n<lb/>
-mere will be NO ? I<lb/>
March 19 Aga '<lb/>
the cancellation<lb/>
LATTER DAY SAINTS<lb/>
Studem  i spot<lb/>
mg a free film arc retr. ?<lb/>
every Tuesday evening at<lb/>
Mendenhall Coffeehouse<lb/>
rftts wee A  M<lb/>
Build Temples n '<lb/>
,Oih us' For more .nformd'<lb/>
752 7344 or 757 3748<lb/>
BALOON A GRAM<lb/>
Send that special someone a<lb/>
baloon a gram on St Patrick's<lb/>
Day Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority<lb/>
will be selling these baloon a<lb/>
grams in front of the Student Store<lb/>
from 9 2. March 2 5 and March 15<lb/>
4. 16 and will deliver on March 17<lb/>
to all campus locations ano to an<lb/>
fraternity and sorority houses<lb/>
Surprise your little elf on St<lb/>
Patrick's Day1<lb/>
I I I I I I I I<lb/>
auitiiiii<lb/>
I I TT<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
1 24 week terminations<lb/>
App'ts. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1 800-321-0575<lb/>
SunThurs. 11:00-11:00<lb/>
FriSot. 11:00-12:00<lb/>
300 E. 10th St.<lb/>
758-6121<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town ? Honest<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Current und?rgraduott pre<lb/>
medical iiudtnii may now compete<lb/>
tor several hundred Air Force<lb/>
ickolartkipt TTvete ickolonkipi ore<lb/>
to be avorded to students accepted<lb/>
into medicai schools os tresnmen or<lb/>
at tke beainrmg of rtveir sophomore<lb/>
yea Tke scholarship prov?des rot<lb/>
tuition, books, lab tees ond equip<lb/>
ment. plus a 5530 monthly<lb/>
aflovonce Investigate tins financial<lb/>
alternative to the high cost ot<lb/>
medicol education<lb/>
Contact<lb/>
I .S Vr Hr K TH<lb/>
PROrKNMOVs<lb/>
Rr( HI HIM,<lb/>
Swte GL 1. 1100 No. ah o t<lb/>
Roievgh. N C 27M9<lb/>
?fcarvo College 91 9 7 55-4 I 34<lb/>
THE SHOE OUTLET<lb/>
(Located beside Evans Seafood)<lb/>
Featuring name brand shoes at bargain prices.<lb/>
Up To 75 OFF regular prices<lb/>
Bass Steward-McGuire Brouse Abouts<lb/>
201 W. Washington St. Within walking distance of campus.<lb/>
11<lb/>
mm<lb/>
inquire at<lb/>
Evons Seafood I<lb/>
Game<lb/>
Machines<lb/>
Big Screen<lb/>
TV<lb/>
Free Delivery<lb/>
From 5:00 to 12:00<lb/>
Midnight Daily<lb/>
Every Day - BuHat 11:00-2:00279<lb/>
?9 RO<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues. - Buffet SKKWKW M1<lb/>
Wed. - "All You Con Eat" Spaghetti 5:00-8:00 '2.25<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY ON CAMPUS<lb/>
HB????????<lb/>
The Media Board is now accepting applications<lb/>
for Media Heads for all Student Publications<lb/>
for 1982-83.<lb/>
Please pick up applications in the Media<lb/>
Board office in the Publications Bldg. ? 2nd<lb/>
Floor.<lb/>
M?F 8-1 or 2-5<lb/>
Deadline for accepting<lb/>
applications is March 1.<lb/>
PWtcwr4<lb/>
7AWUAlw<lb/>
ADD ?82?<lb/>
nrf-<lb/>
v ring Gift CDMPcnnow<lb/>
l?<lb/>
$ jO-ALfttf N ? T-QUlKr-ftOQ ? QjT4 ?m<lb/>
WlLtfOfg RNAlffrMK<lb/>
OAUWfl-curtGrYifc<lb/>
wm mm v Rounds<lb/>
no AIUN -PAS3 ? DINNB?<lb/>
Pizza Inn<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
PIZZA, SALAD, SPAGHETTI SOUP<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
MonSun. 1-1:30-2:00 $2.69<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tues. 6:00-8:30 $2.89<lb/>
WMCKaFQ: 75t'4&amp;0Ti??. MOUSE<lb/>
4m&amp; -Qm$WSP&amp;D? rtOwtOtoG<lb/>
tf<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DAY<lb/>
LARGE PORTION<lb/>
OF SPAGHETTI,<lb/>
GARLIC BREAD $188 ? aA<lb/>
BONUS TRIP TO SALAD BAR $.49<lb/>
Hwy. 264 Bypass, Greenville<lb/>
SAMMY'S<lb/>
COUNTRY<lb/>
COOKING<lb/>
f<lb/>
Just Opened!<lb/>
Conveniently located<lb/>
at 512 E. 14th St.<lb/>
Hours: from ll:00a.m9:00p m.<lb/>
TAKEOUT ORDERS-<lb/>
PHONE 752-0476<lb/>
Specializing in good old fashioned cooking<lb/>
Fried &amp; BBQ Chicken, Chicken Pastry,<lb/>
Country Style Steak, BBQ Ribs, Spaghetti,<lb/>
Pork Chops, Roast Beef, and many other<lb/>
items.<lb/>
Look for our Doily Special priced at<lb/>
ONLY K ? ?<lb/>
Come on by and check out our generous<lb/>
portions and see our free refill plan.<lb/>
fTar Landing Seafood<lb/>
ResUarut<lb/>
Ap:r. Rul<lb/>
StmbtUU. Berk OkUu<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
499<lb/>
All you can eat<lb/>
Bob Hearing ?<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
Phone 758-0327<lb/>
Cross Green Street Bridge<lb/>
Take left ot 1st Light<lb/>
Located one block down on left<lb/>
SPECIAUZES IN:<lb/>
RESUMES<lb/>
and<lb/>
THESES<lb/>
DUPLICATION<lb/>
Located Across From Campus<lb/>
In The Georgetown Shops<lb/>
Good Tuesday<lb/>
&amp; Wednesday<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
? Copies Cost 6C to 30copy<lb/>
? Phototypesetting<lb/>
? Binding Service<lb/>
? One Day Camera Work<lb/>
? Geotype Supplies For Art Students<lb/>
OPEN 9-7 M-F 9-2 Sat<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
Haul<lb/>
Stan<lb/>
a'ter<lb/>
I<lb/>
"wdi<lb/>
polil<lb/>
a po<lb/>
adm<lb/>
I<lb/>
Hai<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
41<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
)<lb/>
I<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057463_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 2, 1982<lb/>
Haitian Refugees Find United States Shores Unfriendly<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Some U.S officials claim the<lb/>
Haitians only come to the United<lb/>
States for economic reasons in an<lb/>
attempt to flee the widespread<lb/>
poverty of Haiti, the poorest coun-<lb/>
try inthe Western Hemisphere.<lb/>
According to U.S. immigration<lb/>
policy, an illegal alien must have a<lb/>
"vs ell-founded fear of persecution"<lb/>
? based on race, religion or<lb/>
political opinion ? to be considered<lb/>
a political refugee, the grounds for<lb/>
admission to the United States.<lb/>
Official policy enforcement has<lb/>
historically been limited, often en-<lb/>
tirely disregarded, until the recent<lb/>
Haitian boat situation received<lb/>
widespread attention.<lb/>
Haiti lies orj the western half of<lb/>
the island of Hispanola ? the<lb/>
Dominican Republic is on the east<lb/>
? and is ruled by President Jean-<lb/>
Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier.<lb/>
Under the rule of Jean-Claude's<lb/>
father, Francois "Papa Doc"<lb/>
Duvalier, many reports of human<lb/>
rights violations were documented<lb/>
(1957-71). In this era the Ton-Ton<lb/>
Macoutes secret police was formed.<lb/>
The Macoutes were reportedly used<lb/>
to squash any resistence to the<lb/>
Duvalier government.<lb/>
A 1979 Inter-American Commis-<lb/>
sion on Human Rights report found<lb/>
that numerous people had been ex-<lb/>
ecuted or died during incarceration,<lb/>
cases of torture were reported, legal<lb/>
safeguards were restricted and basic<lb/>
economic and social rights were<lb/>
nonexistent due to extreme poverty.<lb/>
"Hundreds of journalists and<lb/>
other persons" have been missing<lb/>
"as a result of the work of the Ton-<lb/>
Ton Macoutes Chisholm said.<lb/>
He ("Baby Doc" Duvalier) will<lb/>
kill you, put you in jail Obas said<lb/>
of people who criticize the Haitian<lb/>
government. "I don't believe<lb/>
Duvalier has any interest in the Hai-<lb/>
tian people<lb/>
Obas cited the large numbers of<lb/>
refugees as proof that "the same<lb/>
situation still remains" under the<lb/>
government of Baby Doc. "Maybe<lb/>
worse than it was before he con-<lb/>
tinues.<lb/>
Chisholm said trfe reason the U.S.<lb/>
treats Haitian aliens differently is<lb/>
"because we have a positive<lb/>
diplomatic relationship with a right-<lb/>
wing repressive regime She said<lb/>
she believes that even refugees from<lb/>
a communist government would not<lb/>
have many of the same entrance<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
Jean-Juste adds that Haiti is a<lb/>
fascist criminal government far<lb/>
worse than that of Cuba or Poland.<lb/>
"It's discrimination, in a sense<lb/>
said Peloquin, "that they seem to<lb/>
treat the Haitians in a different way<lb/>
than they do the other nationalities<lb/>
that have been coming in<lb/>
Obas claimed that Haitians are<lb/>
political as well as economic<lb/>
refugees. "They don't have no<lb/>
education; they don't have<lb/>
anything he said. Obas urged the<lb/>
U.S. to discontinue giving aid to<lb/>
Duvalier, because Obas feels the<lb/>
poor never see the money.<lb/>
"The only government they (the<lb/>
U.S.) support is a dictator who goes<lb/>
around killing people for nothing<lb/>
'Dramatic Starvation' Said To Kill 50,000 Daily<lb/>
By PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
stiff Wrilff<lb/>
"Fifty thousand peo-<lb/>
ple die every day from<lb/>
'dramatic starvation<lb/>
that's one person every<lb/>
6 to 8 seconds said<lb/>
Ed King, the director of<lb/>
CROP for North and<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
CROP was founded<lb/>
as an emergency relief<lb/>
project. The words that<lb/>
made up the acronym<lb/>
are no longer used, but<lb/>
CROP is now the<lb/>
organizational arm of<lb/>
Church World Service<lb/>
(CWS), which oversees<lb/>
economic relief and<lb/>
development aid to<lb/>
third world countries.<lb/>
CWS is made up of<lb/>
protestant churches<lb/>
throughout the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
King said there was a<lb/>
cleaT gospel mandate<lb/>
for Christians to "feed<lb/>
the hungry" during his<lb/>
presentation to the<lb/>
monthly Greenville<lb/>
Ministerial Meeting at<lb/>
the First Christian<lb/>
Church Monday.<lb/>
King was in Green-<lb/>
ville to help promote<lb/>
the 11th Annual "Walk<lb/>
for Humanity" which<lb/>
will be under the spon-<lb/>
sorship of CROP for<lb/>
the first time. "I'm<lb/>
pleased that Greenville<lb/>
and the university have<lb/>
gotten together on the<lb/>
CROP walk King<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Braxton 's A ctions Criticized<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
have written the note to incite him<lb/>
to action so he would "look bad" if<lb/>
he were to run for SGA president<lb/>
for next year.<lb/>
"But 1 don't even have any plans<lb/>
to run. I did until last December,<lb/>
but then I changed my mind<lb/>
Greer pointed out that despite the<lb/>
fact that the resolution did not get<lb/>
the necessary two-thirds vote for<lb/>
adoption, "the bill is still on the<lb/>
floor Furthermore, Greer said<lb/>
that in committee, a simple majority<lb/>
is needed to pass a resolution.<lb/>
In further business at the meeting.<lb/>
the SGA discussed the possibility of<lb/>
Sen. John East speaking on campus<lb/>
during the Handicapped Awareness<lb/>
Week (April 5 through 8).<lb/>
Among several other actions by<lb/>
the legislature, Chuck Blake was ap-<lb/>
proved as the 1982 elections<lb/>
chairperson.<lb/>
Also, a resolution for support of<lb/>
Greenville merchants was approved.<lb/>
This resolution calls for the support<lb/>
of the SGA in the "collection ef-<lb/>
forts of the merchants of Greenville<lb/>
and in prosecuting these irresponsi-<lb/>
ble students if debts (from the<lb/>
writing of worthless checks) remain<lb/>
uncollected<lb/>
CROP promotes<lb/>
"Integrated Rural<lb/>
Development" ? self-<lb/>
help relief projects that<lb/>
include "appropriate<lb/>
technology" with a<lb/>
below-5-percent<lb/>
overhead for ad-<lb/>
ministrative costs.<lb/>
King said one fourth<lb/>
of all deaths in the<lb/>
world are of children<lb/>
under six years of age.<lb/>
"Kids equal security"<lb/>
in a labor-intensive<lb/>
agricultural economy<lb/>
with no social security<lb/>
for parents when they<lb/>
grow old, King added.<lb/>
"700,000 North<lb/>
Carolinians were<lb/>
malnourished  40<lb/>
percent of all pre-<lb/>
school kids were<lb/>
malnourished. -That's<lb/>
one out of every seven<lb/>
in North Carolina<lb/>
King said, citing a 1975<lb/>
nutrition survey.<lb/>
He added that due to<lb/>
food stamps, W1C<lb/>
(Women, Infants, and<lb/>
Children) and AFDC<lb/>
(Aid for Families With<lb/>
Dependent Children)<lb/>
the situation had pro-<lb/>
I<lb/>
bably improved<lb/>
dramatically, but "why<lb/>
don't we have one (a<lb/>
new survey) now?"<lb/>
King said that "New<lb/>
Federalism the<lb/>
newly-coined term for<lb/>
the Reagan budget,<lb/>
wouldn't want to show<lb/>
that Social Programs<lb/>
were "really doing<lb/>
what they're supposed<lb/>
to<lb/>
King challenged "the<lb/>
government as a peo-<lb/>
ple" and the churches<lb/>
to stop supporting<lb/>
"huge expenditures"<lb/>
for military build-up<lb/>
and "to take a stand"<lb/>
against it.<lb/>
He said the root<lb/>
cause of hunger is<lb/>
poverty and that some<lb/>
poverty stemmed from<lb/>
injustice in the division<lb/>
of land and resources.<lb/>
He added that many<lb/>
military projects use up<lb/>
vital resources and this<lb/>
was one of the causes<lb/>
of injustices.<lb/>
The CROP Walk For<lb/>
Humanity is scheduled<lb/>
for April 3. The walk is<lb/>
a 20 kilometer (12.6<lb/>
mile) route through the<lb/>
streets of Greenville.<lb/>
Obas said. "The Haitian people<lb/>
should realize they don't have the<lb/>
United States behind them. The<lb/>
United States is behind Duvalier<lb/>
Despite promises from immigra-<lb/>
tion and government officials,<lb/>
prison-like conditions at the refugee<lb/>
centers continue.<lb/>
They're just sitting there all day<lb/>
with-nothing to do Peloquin said.<lb/>
Hunger strikes and attempted<lb/>
suicides have been frequent at the<lb/>
camps. Numerous riots have taken<lb/>
place outside the Krome Ave. camp,<lb/>
as the otherwise-passive mood of<lb/>
the Haitian people has become more<lb/>
noticeably militant.<lb/>
"Practically all of the Haitians<lb/>
have sponsors in Miami and<lb/>
elsewhere Peloquin said. A spon-<lb/>
sor is typically a family member or<lb/>
friend who can give the refugee a<lb/>
permanent place to live and help in<lb/>
starting 1 new life.<lb/>
"If the administration wanted to<lb/>
release them, they would have some<lb/>
place to go Obas said.<lb/>
Haitian-Americans and various<lb/>
support agengies are calling for the<lb/>
abolition of the camps. "The camps<lb/>
should be closed down and never<lb/>
reopened Obas continued.<lb/>
"They're just taking their time in<lb/>
doing this kind of work Peloquin<lb/>
adds, referring to the legal hearings<lb/>
a refugee is entitled to. "We have a<lb/>
whole group of lawyers in Miami<lb/>
trying to find some legal way of get-<lb/>
ting these people out, but they<lb/>
haven't succeeded<lb/>
More recent policies suggested by<lb/>
the Reagan administration include<lb/>
moving all refugees to an unused<lb/>
Army base near the Canadian<lb/>
border in upstate New York.<lb/>
Critics have compared this sug-<lb/>
gestion with Russian exiles being<lb/>
sent to Siberia. A policy of intradic-<lb/>
tion at sea is also being im-<lb/>
plemented.<lb/>
Under this policy, a U.S. Coast<lb/>
Guard vessel can stop a boatful of<lb/>
refugees, process the cases right<lb/>
away through an interpreter and<lb/>
send the boat back if they decide<lb/>
against granting political refugee<lb/>
status to the passengers.<lb/>
Chisolm called intradiction<lb/>
"some kind of kangaroo court set<lb/>
up<lb/>
Some Coast Guard personnel<lb/>
believe that some boats may have<lb/>
sunk without discovery.<lb/>
"When we picked up the<lb/>
newspapers Chisolm concluded,<lb/>
"and we saw these 10 black bodies<lb/>
sprawled across the front page,<lb/>
when they were washed up on the<lb/>
shores that morning, there was no<lb/>
outcry in this country; they were<lb/>
black. America, we can't let this<lb/>
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ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
STORE W'S Evans<lb/>
Continued From Page 2<lb/>
chaeology, history or<lb/>
any other area of study<lb/>
are encouragd to "fuse<lb/>
together knowledge<lb/>
from the different<lb/>
disciplines" in an effort<lb/>
to maximize research<lb/>
potential. Still said.<lb/>
He added that of the<lb/>
10 to 12 students<lb/>
chosen to participate in<lb/>
the Underwater<lb/>
Research, "I would<lb/>
prefer to have five or<lb/>
six ECU students<lb/>
Still, who was presi-<lb/>
dent of the Monitor<lb/>
Research Foundation,<lb/>
said, "Field schools are<lb/>
fun; you work hard and<lb/>
play hard Students<lb/>
get a firsthand impres-<lb/>
sion of what under-<lb/>
water research is all<lb/>
about, Still said, ad-<lb/>
ding that because the<lb/>
research is historically<lb/>
valuable, their efforts<lb/>
are meaningful.<lb/>
"Underwater Ar-<lb/>
chaeology is just now<lb/>
developing Still said.<lb/>
"There are thousands<lb/>
of sunken ships that<lb/>
could be in our rivers,<lb/>
sounds and harbors<lb/>
In the summer of<lb/>
1980, the Field School<lb/>
received world-wide<lb/>
publicity when a<lb/>
Revolutionary War<lb/>
vessel was discovered in<lb/>
the Edenton harbor.<lb/>
This archaeological<lb/>
find was featured in the<lb/>
Pans Tribune.<lb/>
Still said he would<lb/>
like to commemorate<lb/>
the 400th anniversary<lb/>
of the Lost Colony by<lb/>
conducting the 1984<lb/>
Field School off the<lb/>
Roanoke Island coast,<lb/>
where the colony was<lb/>
located. The objective<lb/>
of this research would<lb/>
be to find the original<lb/>
remains of the settle-<lb/>
ment, which are believ-<lb/>
ed to be underwater<lb/>
due to erosion.<lb/>
Students interested in<lb/>
the 1982 Field School<lb/>
can contact William<lb/>
Still or Gordon Watts<lb/>
in the history depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057463_0004"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
OW?e ?aat (Earnlittian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree, Eduorinchte<lb/>
Charles Chandler, ?????Editor<lb/>
RlC BROWNING, Director oj Advertising TOM HALL, Sews Editor<lb/>
Fielding Miller. Business Manager<lb/>
ALISON BARTEL, Production Manager<lb/>
Steve Moore, csmwm Manager<lb/>
William Yelverton, spans Editor<lb/>
STEVE BACHNER, Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Diane Anderson, <lb/>
March 2 ,1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Tourney Time<lb/>
Pirates Can Make Amends<lb/>
The last two weeks have not been<lb/>
kind to the East Carolina men's<lb/>
basketball team. The Pirates have<lb/>
lost five consecutive games in the<lb/>
ECAC-South, resulting in a last<lb/>
place finish in the conference.<lb/>
Subsequently, ECU is seeded<lb/>
seventh for this weekend's con-<lb/>
ference championship tournament.<lb/>
The winner of the tourney will ad-<lb/>
vance to the Eastern Regionals of<lb/>
the NCAA Tournament.<lb/>
What has been the Pirates' pro-<lb/>
blem of late? The club seems to<lb/>
have lost its intensity, especially on<lb/>
defense. Opponents scoring in the<lb/>
80's against the Bucs has become<lb/>
commonplace. Shooting percen-<lb/>
tages of foes have also skyrocketed.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the Pirate offense has<lb/>
floundered. Shooting percentages<lb/>
are down, as are point totals.<lb/>
On the road, ECU has been met<lb/>
with a great deal of "ribbing" late-<lb/>
ly. Opponents' fans have made fun<lb/>
of the Pirates both with words and<lb/>
laughter.<lb/>
Very depressing, right? Right!<lb/>
But. there is still the tournament. It<lb/>
is there ? at Norfolk's fabulous<lb/>
Scope ? that the Pirates can make<lb/>
amends for all that has gone wrong,<lb/>
for all the jokes and snickers that<lb/>
have come their way.<lb/>
No matter who is at fault in the<lb/>
team's slump ? whether it be<lb/>
coaches, players or both ? the con-<lb/>
ference tournament provides the<lb/>
club with a chance to stand up and<lb/>
be heard.<lb/>
Watching the Pirates play recent-<lb/>
ly has not been very pleasant. The<lb/>
fact is, though, that the team is<lb/>
capable of playing a good brand of<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
basketball. Enough talent is on<lb/>
hand to pull off the big upset in this<lb/>
weekend's tourney. Surely, this will<lb/>
not be easy, but it can be done.<lb/>
To the players and coaches, we<lb/>
say start with PRIDE. Pride in<lb/>
yourselves, the school and students<lb/>
you represent. It cannot be very<lb/>
rewarding getting on a bus, trekking<lb/>
to a strange coliseum, getting your<lb/>
ass beat, and returning home with<lb/>
your head down.<lb/>
The time has come for the Pirates<lb/>
to raise their heads. There appears<lb/>
to be at least a degree of dissention<lb/>
on the club, as was evidenced by<lb/>
Charles Watkins' (starting guard)<lb/>
leaving the team last week. That<lb/>
dissention, if it exists, has no place<lb/>
now, not at the end of the season.<lb/>
This is what the team has sup-<lb/>
posedly worked for all season. This<lb/>
is what everyone was so excited<lb/>
about at the beginning of the year<lb/>
? a legitimate chance to reach the<lb/>
NCAA's. Just think, ECU playing<lb/>
in the NCAA Tournament. Whew!<lb/>
What a thought.<lb/>
We are not asking for miracles<lb/>
and we are not saying that we will<lb/>
settle for anything less than a con-<lb/>
ference championship. What we are<lb/>
saying is that we want and expect a<lb/>
respectable showing in the ECAC-<lb/>
South tournament. We know that<lb/>
the ECU basketball team is capable<lb/>
of coming through.<lb/>
So, fellas, hold your heads up.<lb/>
And don't forget the abuse that has<lb/>
come your way over the last two<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
Remember: you represent an en-<lb/>
tire university, one that doesn't like<lb/>
to be laughed at.<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
(<lb/>
A UIHAT5<lb/>
HIS PROBLEM<lb/>
HESAVSWRE<lb/>
MRS 60RSVCH ?r)v<lb/>
TW.YOu<lb/>
 saw<lb/>
AUFUL1<lb/>
haveyou<lb/>
3E?Nf!?P<lb/>
CSi<lb/>
l?'j<lb/>
NO, BUT TTS JUST A<lb/>
mum of time rck<lb/>
she getting reapy to<lb/>
lav offanother 750<lb/>
or so employees the<lb/>
AG0VCYS<lb/>
being vec-<lb/>
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arowthe<lb/>
aXfRCAH<lb/>
'WEMEETH<lb/>
FRONTOF<lb/>
WRBUKP-<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
TEN BUCKS7 rTSNOTMY<lb/>
THAT'S Alt YOU FAULT YOUR.<lb/>
HAVE f THREE OTHER. HASSEN -<lb/>
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YOU HAVE<lb/>
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$?<lb/>
k<lb/>
A SPOILED CHILD<lb/>
PRODIGY WHO<lb/>
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ALWAYS WRITES HIS<lb/>
OWN TEXTBOOKS.<lb/>
WHATEVER THE<lb/>
TOPIC, HE ALWAYS<lb/>
LECTURES ON ONE<lb/>
SUBECT: HIMSELF.<lb/>
&amp;2-TH? BAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Ebony Herald Firings Explained<lb/>
BY SAFARI MATHENGE<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: Safari Mathenge<lb/>
served as news editor of The Ebony<lb/>
Herald until he and other staff members<lb/>
were fired by Editor Debra Wiggins.<lb/>
Last week, Wiggins resigned her post,<lb/>
saying there is no interest on campus for<lb/>
the publication.<lb/>
In response to Debra Wiggins' vindic-<lb/>
tive statements in the Feb. 25 issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian, I am forced ?<lb/>
with good reason- ? ?to throw a little<lb/>
light on the case concerning the fired<lb/>
staff that Wiggins' found to be a conve-<lb/>
nient scape-goat for her own inability to<lb/>
edit and manage The Ebony Herald<lb/>
Approximately a half dozen months<lb/>
ago, during the summer of 1981, I met in<lb/>
a purely coincidential manner a<lb/>
dedicated young man by the name of<lb/>
Edward Nesbitt. "I have a bone to pick<lb/>
with you" he declared. The subject of<lb/>
his conversation ? "a rebirth of the<lb/>
Ebony Herald a minority publication<lb/>
that would represent the individual in-<lb/>
terests of the different minority com-<lb/>
ponents of the East Carolina Unversity<lb/>
Student Body.<lb/>
Having been a student here for no<lb/>
more than a semester at that time, I was<lb/>
unfamiliar with such a publication. But<lb/>
having been enlightened by A. G. Kelly's<lb/>
assertion that "the way to get at the<lb/>
nature of any institution as anything else<lb/>
that is alive, is to see how it has grown<lb/>
Mr. Nesbitt and I back-tracked to ex-<lb/>
amine the historical background of the<lb/>
then-defunct publicaton. All evidence<lb/>
indicated that zealous dedication and<lb/>
organization on the part of the editorial<lb/>
staff and management would be a<lb/>
necessary pre-requisite fo the establish-<lb/>
ment of such a publication.<lb/>
Tactical and strategic public relations<lb/>
methods were to be employed in order to<lb/>
generate public interest. We realized that<lb/>
the very existence of the publication<lb/>
would be based on student participation.<lb/>
From the very start we sought to<lb/>
achieve this goal. Indeed, even during<lb/>
those infant months for the publication,<lb/>
mere conversations with students gave<lb/>
us what we regarded as "positive<lb/>
developmental focus" for the paper.<lb/>
The months that followed strengthened<lb/>
our commitments to the establishment<lb/>
of the publication. Unpaid volunteer<lb/>
writers were eager to join the staff until<lb/>
such time that the paper could afford to<lb/>
pay them.<lb/>
An editorial staff, although rustic and<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
wanting in some aspects, worked<lb/>
together harmoniously and toward a<lb/>
common goal.<lb/>
Of course, we encountered many un-<lb/>
foreseen challenges and headaches, but<lb/>
with the dedicated leadership of<lb/>
Associate Editor Nesbitt and that of the<lb/>
talented cartoonist-writer John Weyler,<lb/>
business manager Donna Wiyley, not to<lb/>
mention the indispensible staff writers,<lb/>
The Ebony Herald was reborn once<lb/>
again after three years of non-<lb/>
production.<lb/>
Thus a baby newspaper had been<lb/>
born, editorless though it was; it had<lb/>
been born.<lb/>
I do not intend to foster boredom here<lb/>
by way of historical baackground, but I<lb/>
thought a little insight to the origins of<lb/>
our threatened publication would help.<lb/>
When the eve of our second publica-<lb/>
tion approached, the Media Board, with<lb/>
all the wisdom embodied in it,<lb/>
designated Debra Wiggins the editor-in-<lb/>
chief of the Ebony Herald.<lb/>
Relieved, we acknowledged our new<lb/>
editor and after business as usual<lb/>
(briefings and management procedures)<lb/>
we sought to advise her on matters that<lb/>
we had found necessary to the welfare of<lb/>
the paper. We warned of the delicacy<lb/>
and sensitive nature of the staff (given<lb/>
the volunteer nature of it). The editorial<lb/>
staff, we suggested, must slowly build<lb/>
interest on the part of the writing staff,<lb/>
not in a strictly business manner, but in<lb/>
such a manner as would be employed in<lb/>
a small family undertaking. To me, this<lb/>
seemed the best possible policy given the<lb/>
nature of the project we had at hand.<lb/>
After the paper was Firmly established,<lb/>
only then could we conduct business as<lb/>
usual.<lb/>
We intended for the Ebony Herald to<lb/>
be the axis upon which unity and<lb/>
cooperation could be reached among the<lb/>
different minorities and the student<lb/>
body.<lb/>
Such suggestions are the basic reasons<lb/>
for Debra Wiggins' remark that "they<lb/>
did not want to work for me<lb/>
As soon as she took office, Wiggins'<lb/>
leadership qualities came to question.<lb/>
Staff tensions began to grow at an alar-<lb/>
ming rate. When we (the editorial staff)<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Silva's Analysis Draws Reservations<lb/>
I am writing in response to Patrick<lb/>
O'Neil's article on the "Sixth Peace<lb/>
Vigil at Seymour Johnson Air Force<lb/>
Base<lb/>
Mr. O'Neil, thank you for your pro-<lb/>
vocative and timely presentation of the<lb/>
Nuclear disarmament issue. There are,<lb/>
however, a few reservations that 1 would<lb/>
have regarding Sam Silva's analysis of<lb/>
the arms race. Mr. Silva seems to feel<lb/>
that the United States is deliberately ac-<lb/>
celerating the arms race in an attempt to<lb/>
weaken the Soviet economy. There is a<lb/>
certain amount of factual information<lb/>
to support this claim. For instance, the<lb/>
fact that the Soviet Union accepted, in-<lb/>
principle, a British, French, American<lb/>
proposal to disarm down to internal<lb/>
police forces in 1955.<lb/>
There are, never-the-less, certain facts<lb/>
which would seem to militate against the<lb/>
view that the United States is solely to<lb/>
blame for the arms race. The Soviet<lb/>
Union has a history of aggression in<lb/>
Hungary, Chechoslavakia, and<lb/>
Afghanistan. It can be aserted that these<lb/>
countries simply, became satellite coun-<lb/>
tries of the USSR after World War II<lb/>
and that the Soviets, wishing to maintain<lb/>
a buffer zone between themselves and<lb/>
hostile neighbors, took action to protect<lb/>
their interests.<lb/>
This bit of hypothesis, however, does<lb/>
not convince everyone. At the other ex-<lb/>
treme of the ideological spectrum are<lb/>
people who maintain that the Soviets are<lb/>
bent upon uncompromising world<lb/>
domination, because of V.I. Lenin's<lb/>
doctrine of exporting the Communist<lb/>
revolution and Nkaita Khrushchev's<lb/>
statement, "We will bury you which<lb/>
he addressed to capitalists in general.<lb/>
When posing the question of whether'<lb/>
or not to trust the USSR we are Taced<lb/>
with a dilemma. When contemplating<lb/>
the issue of the arms race we are con-<lb/>
fronted with nuclear holocaust.<lb/>
If we continue 6n our present course<lb/>
we are assuming that the Mutually<lb/>
Assured Destruction approach to main-<lb/>
taining world peace makes sense. This,<lb/>
however, fails to take terrorist activities<lb/>
and technological errors which might<lb/>
trigger a holocaust into account. If the<lb/>
citizens, on the other hand, coalesce<lb/>
around this issue without facts their ef-<lb/>
forts are doomed to failure.<lb/>
I distrust efforts at propogandizing<lb/>
issues that are vital to humanity (like<lb/>
disarmament) either by the right or the<lb/>
left. Many foreigners who I have spoken<lb/>
with assert that the American media has<lb/>
a pronounced right-wing bias particular-<lb/>
ly in relation to the USSR. But, my<lb/>
parents and parents of friends who have<lb/>
lived through the burgeoning of the pre-<lb/>
sent arms race insist that the United<lb/>
States has been far too soft to the<lb/>
Soviets, especially during the last<lb/>
decade.<lb/>
I believe that disarmament is a real<lb/>
possibility. And I further believe that it<lb/>
is the citizens who must bring it about,<lb/>
whether through disarmament initiatives<lb/>
like the one in California or petitions<lb/>
and letter writing. There is a peace<lb/>
movement in the Soviet Union. There is<lb/>
a Peace movement in the United States.<lb/>
We all want peace. What need is a ra-<lb/>
tional non-advocacy approach to study-<lb/>
ing this issue so that we can bring it<lb/>
about. Hoepfully, students can be in-<lb/>
stumental in this.<lb/>
JAY STONE<lb/>
Political Sci.<lb/>
warned her of the forthcoming<lb/>
dissatisfaction among the staff wril<lb/>
and the clear lack of foresight in her<lb/>
policy of dictatorial-editorship, she<lb/>
demanded the voluntary resignatio:<lb/>
the editorial staff. She threatened<lb/>
eventually fixed the entire staff of the<lb/>
paper. The Media Board, again with ail<lb/>
its wisdom, upheld this acton at<lb/>
alarm of the entire minority student<lb/>
body.<lb/>
The interest that we had conscious<lb/>
built for the paper slowly dwindled. In<lb/>
my opinion, this was mainly due to<lb/>
of public relations between the paper<lb/>
and the people it was supposed to repre-<lb/>
sent.<lb/>
There was, of course, no conscious<lb/>
fort on the part of the "fired staff" to<lb/>
initiate a "boycott" ol the publicat<lb/>
as Wiggins charged.<lb/>
For instance, advertising in am<lb/>
publication or media is a purely business<lb/>
and public relation issue. How can W g<lb/>
gins blame withdrawal of advertising<lb/>
support on a non-participating "fired"<lb/>
staff? In essence, Wiggins alienated the<lb/>
minority business in the surrounding<lb/>
area. This was done by m tailing to ap-<lb/>
point a minority advertising manage<lb/>
someone who could be easily identified<lb/>
with the minority publication and hence<lb/>
elicit generous contributions and sup-<lb/>
port form the minority businesses whose<lb/>
advertising constituted over 90 percent<lb/>
of all advertising income.<lb/>
To me, such a fatal and tactless lack<lb/>
of insight is enough to destroy even the<lb/>
most flourishing newspaper.<lb/>
Furthermore, any newspaper editor in<lb/>
any given community must command<lb/>
high respect as a knowledgeable and<lb/>
potential leader of that commmunity,<lb/>
not a mere figurehead who cannot ad-<lb/>
dress the issues of the day.<lb/>
But I do not intend to indulge in mere<lb/>
defensive rhetoric here. If The Ebony<lb/>
Herald is to survive, its active participa-<lb/>
tion in the daily lives of the minontv<lb/>
students here and elsewhere must be its<lb/>
major priority. Effective public relation-<lb/>
must be formulated. An effective editoi<lb/>
? one in touch with the reality as envi<lb/>
sioned by the minority student body foi<lb/>
whom the publication is intended ??<lb/>
must be put into office.<lb/>
Wiggins' observation that "no one is<lb/>
interested" and that "there is no need<lb/>
for a minority publication here" is a<lb/>
clear indication of her lack of know ledge<lb/>
concerning the needs that face minoritv<lb/>
students here.<lb/>
Many years ago one of the founding<lb/>
fathers of this country, announced cor-<lb/>
rectly that "Journalism is literature in a<lb/>
hurry Is literature a collection of a<lb/>
society's ethnicity and tradition?<lb/>
Finally, such an assertion that we do<lb/>
not need a minority publication here, is<lb/>
to me, an unforgiveable deprivation of<lb/>
opportunity to those students who<lb/>
would like to learn the basics of jour-<lb/>
nalism and the power that ensues from<lb/>
the freedom of expression.<lb/>
In her experience as a newspaper<lb/>
editor, I am sure, Wiggins has learned<lb/>
the difficulties involved with the<lb/>
business in a manner different from<lb/>
what she would have experienced other-<lb/>
wise. She had a chance to formulate<lb/>
answers to problems that faced The<lb/>
Ebony Herald, but instead chose to flee.<lb/>
There are able leaders among us and 1<lb/>
am sure one will come forth and<lb/>
vigorously provide the leadership we so<lb/>
desperately need.<lb/>
I suggest that a high-level convention<lb/>
among aH the minority groups on this<lb/>
campus be initiated. From there, ways<lb/>
and means for establishing a sound<lb/>
publication that will represent their in-<lb/>
terest should be established. Should the<lb/>
Media Board again be left to nominate a<lb/>
new editor for The Ebony Herald, a<lb/>
mistake similar to those in the past is<lb/>
likely to occur.<lb/>
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IHt t AST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
MARCH 2. I9K2<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Award Winner<lb/>
'Moscow' On<lb/>
For Tomorrow<lb/>
Irina Muravxna (left) and era Alenlova in a scene from '81 Academy Award winner Moscow Does Sot Relieve in Tears.<lb/>
ByJOHNWEYLER<lb/>
Maff Mrilrr<lb/>
Tommorow evening at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre, the Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee will present<lb/>
Russia's Moscow Does Sot Believe<lb/>
in Tears.<lb/>
The film was the 1981 winner of<lb/>
the Academy Award for Best<lb/>
Foreign Film. Vladimir Menshov's<lb/>
tale is a humorous, appealing slice<lb/>
?f Soviet life. The film focuses on<lb/>
fhe lifestyles and loves of three<lb/>
young women, an examination of<lb/>
their aspirations and attitudes.<lb/>
The three are Antonina (Raisa<lb/>
Ryazanova), Liudmila (Irina<lb/>
Muravyova), and Katerina (Vera<lb/>
Alentova), country girls who have<lb/>
come to the big city, Moscow, in<lb/>
search of work and romance. We<lb/>
first see them in the late 1950's, then<lb/>
twenty years later.<lb/>
Antonia is a sweet and simple per-<lb/>
son who settles down to middle-<lb/>
class suburbia Moscow-style with a<lb/>
safe, stolid man. Liudmila is a more<lb/>
flighty, flashy type; a social climber.<lb/>
She and Katerina take over a rich<lb/>
relative's apartment in his absence<lb/>
and throw a formal dinner party in<lb/>
hopes of attracting some<lb/>
distinguished gentlemen.<lb/>
Liudmila nets herself a soccer<lb/>
star, but later divorces him when he<lb/>
takes to the bottle.<lb/>
Katerina is the sensible, studious<lb/>
one. Though she allows herself to be<lb/>
seduced and abandoned by a man<lb/>
she meets at the party, she manages<lb/>
to raise their illegitimate child by<lb/>
herself and work her way up to be<lb/>
manager of the factory she labors<lb/>
in. She eventually finds romance in<lb/>
the person of Gosha (Alexei<lb/>
Batalov), the personification of the<lb/>
Russian "Mr. Right<lb/>
This sensitive, amusing sketch of<lb/>
USSR lifestyles is a departure from<lb/>
the main-stream of Russian film,<lb/>
which is best known for the power-<lb/>
ful propoganda pictures of Eisens-<lb/>
tein and Pudovkin. Moscow Does<lb/>
Not Believe In Tears rather<lb/>
resembles the Hollywood working-<lb/>
girl comedies of the 1930's and 40's,<lb/>
See RUSSIAN, Page 7<lb/>
Fondas Discover New Life 'On Golden Pond'<lb/>
B CORBY Kl'MMF.R<lb/>
W nl?rv Mm<lb/>
LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE, N.H. ? Jane Fonda<lb/>
wanted a friend. Not just any friend, but a man she had<lb/>
nevei worked with before ? her father ? with whom<lb/>
she filmed On Golden Pond (now playing at Green-<lb/>
ville's Plitt Entertainment Center). Most of their dif-<lb/>
ferences had vanished with age. but Henry and Jane<lb/>
Fonda grew closer on the New Hampshire movie set,<lb/>
where the intenseiv focused script required them to play-<lb/>
bitter father-daughter scenes that finally led to recon-<lb/>
ciliation.<lb/>
As it her problems with her father weren't enough ?<lb/>
her way of working is quite different from his. and the<lb/>
difference makes her ashamed ? she worried about<lb/>
making another friend. This was someone she had never<lb/>
met, someone who would plav her mother, someone<lb/>
who terrifies Miss Fonda. Her name is Katharine Hep-<lb/>
burn.<lb/>
In On Golden Pond. Jane Fonda plays Chelsea<lb/>
Thaver. the only child of a college professor, Norman<lb/>
Thaver Jr who wanted a son. As the film opens,<lb/>
Chelsea arrives, after a long absence, at the lakeside cot-<lb/>
tage where the family always spends the summer. It is<lb/>
Norman's 80th birthday, and he is convinced that he has<lb/>
become sharp and unpleasant to his understanding wife,<lb/>
Ethel (Miss Hepburn).<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
Chelsea has brought along her fiance and his 10-year-<lb/>
old son. With the help of the boy. who during the rest of<lb/>
the summer revitalizes him. and his humocous wife,<lb/>
Norman reconciles himself both to his daughter and to<lb/>
enjoying the rest of his life.<lb/>
The story is simple, but the emotions it provoked in<lb/>
its lead actors were not. "The day of m big scene with<lb/>
my father I was nauseous all day long Jane Fonda<lb/>
says, seated on the floor of the cottage set. "1 was sick. 1<lb/>
had a headache, I couldn't eat. Things were coming<lb/>
from way deep down that 1 couldn't handle. It was an<lb/>
incredibly intense experience for me<lb/>
The scene she refers to takes place in a rowboat on the<lb/>
lake, where Chelsea finally screws up her courage and<lb/>
tells her father that she needs to talk to him.<lb/>
"It's so hard for Chelsea to say this Miss Fonda<lb/>
says. "He tries to avoid her by saying something nastv<lb/>
like, 'You're worried about the will, huh? Don't worry.<lb/>
you're getting everything 1 move down to sit next to<lb/>
him and say, '1 don't want anything " Chelsea's voice<lb/>
catches, then she says, "We've been mad at each other<lb/>
for so long Norman says, "I didn't know we were still<lb/>
mad at each other. 1 thought we just didn't like each<lb/>
other<lb/>
"I reached out to take his arm Miss Fonda says of<lb/>
her father, "and I felt him shudder, because he wasn't<lb/>
expecting it. He's not an emotional actor, and everyone<lb/>
on the crew saw it She whispers, "I took his arm and I<lb/>
said, T want to be your friend and I felt him trying to<lb/>
keep the teais back<lb/>
She stops for a moment and regains her own com-<lb/>
posure. "It was a great moment. It was a moment of<lb/>
such intimacy between the two of us I don't even care<lb/>
what it looks like on the screen<lb/>
While she must be drawn out on the subject of her<lb/>
father, Miss Fonda can't stop talking about how much<lb/>
meeting Katharine Hepburn has meant to her.<lb/>
"I sense from her someone who is a treasure chest<lb/>
Miss Fonda says. "She's just filled with wisdom,<lb/>
knowledge and insights. And she loves to pass them cm.<lb/>
You're never No. 1 in this business forever, and most<lb/>
people on the way down get bitter, alienated and<lb/>
downright crazy. So to find somebodv who's remained<lb/>
intact is rare. She has a real perspective to her life<lb/>
See FONDAS. Page 6<lb/>
Rocketing Rocker<lb/>
Rod Stewart Back To Basics<lb/>
By ROBFRTPAI MFR<lb/>
New ??r1? 1 imrs Nrw Nervier<lb/>
M V YORK ? The history of rock 'n' roll is essen-<lb/>
tiallv a rags-to-riches story, the music of poor whites<lb/>
and poor blacks merged in the mid-50s to become the<lb/>
most popular music in America.<lb/>
Performers from poor or middle-class backgrounds<lb/>
have risen to undreamed-of pinnacles of stardom and<lb/>
earned substantial fortunes through rock 'n' roll ?<lb/>
from Elvis Presley, who was living with his parents in<lb/>
federally subsidized housing in Memphis when he made<lb/>
his first record, to Rod Stewart, who grew up in<lb/>
working-class North London, the son of a Scottish-born<lb/>
construction worker.<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Stewart, now 36-years-old, supported himself as a<lb/>
street singer and grave digger before becoming one of<lb/>
the most popular and distinctive rock singers of the<lb/>
70s He now lives as a tax exile from Britain in the<lb/>
Holmbv Hills area of Los Angeles, where his neighbors<lb/>
have included Gregory Peck and Burt Reynolds.<lb/>
There is such a thing as too much success for a rock<lb/>
star Elvis Presley's music grew more predictable after<lb/>
he became a multimillionaire. Mick Jagger's entry into<lb/>
the upper crust of jet-set society in the m.d70s com-<lb/>
promised the Rolling Stones' credibility and co.ncided<lb/>
with the band's musical low point. And Stewart (who<lb/>
will perform at Greensboro Coliseum tonight at 8 p.m.)<lb/>
has been attacked by critics and younger rock musicians<lb/>
for his lavish Hollywood way of living, which reached a<lb/>
pinnacle of sorts during the late '70s when his former<lb/>
girlfriend, Britt Ekland, sued him for $15 million in<lb/>
"palimony ? . .<lb/>
Stewart's responses were an out-of-court settlement<lb/>
and a phenomenally successful album called Blondes<lb/>
Have More Tun ? the title referred to his penchant for<lb/>
blondes, from Miss Ekland to Alana Hamilton, the ac-<lb/>
tress he married in 1978. The album included a song<lb/>
called "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" that became a huge in-<lb/>
ternational hit; but was also a fall from rock 'n' roll<lb/>
grace into the banal shallows of disco.<lb/>
It was seized on by Stewart's detractors as proof that<lb/>
his songwriting had deteriorated markedly since the ear-<lb/>
ly and middle '70s, when he wrote or co-wrote "Maggie<lb/>
May "Tonight's the Night and several other songs<lb/>
that were artistic triumphs as well as commercial suc-<lb/>
cesses.<lb/>
But like the Rolling Stones, who bounced back this<lb/>
year with a superb new album and an American tour<lb/>
that has been garnering enthusiastic reviews at almost<lb/>
every stop Stewart seems to have found his second<lb/>
wind. Tonight I'm Yours (Warner Bros.), his latest<lb/>
album, is his most consistent and satisfying LP since the<lb/>
early '70s when Gasoline Alley and Every Picture Tells a<lb/>
Story established him as one of rock's most gifted<lb/>
singers and songwriters.<lb/>
When he visited New York recently to perform on<lb/>
Saturday Sight live, he brought along the most im-<lb/>
pressive band he has ever led. And he readily, if<lb/>
somewhat ruefully, admitted that these improvements<lb/>
were a response to what many of his fans had recogniz-<lb/>
ed as a deterioration in the quality of his work.<lb/>
When he was asked about "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?"<lb/>
Stewart grimaced. "A lot of us got taken in by disco<lb/>
he said. "1 drifted further and further away from rock<lb/>
'n' roll, in my music and in the way I was living<lb/>
Stewart's marriage, his first, seems to have been a tur-<lb/>
ning point for him. He was once a renowned drinker,<lb/>
and when he was living with Miss Ekland, his life<lb/>
sometimes seemed to be a ceaseless round of Hollywood<lb/>
parties. His music had put him on the cover of Rolling<lb/>
Stone in the early '70s; his celebrity status put him on<lb/>
the cover of People magazine in 1979. He has drastically<lb/>
cut back on his drinking since then. His wife said that<lb/>
"we hardily ever go out now. We'd rather stay at<lb/>
home<lb/>
In New York, the Stewarts got around more. The<lb/>
night before his performance on Saturday Night Live,<lb/>
Stewart visited the Ritz to hear Tina Turner, who donn-<lb/>
See STEWART, Page 7<lb/>
Classical Guitarist Lorimer Next Artist In Series<lb/>
A favorite protege of Andre Segovia, Michael Lorimer will be performing in Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre on March 18 at 8 p.m. Lorimer Has been consistently rated among the world's top classical<lb/>
guitarists and he was the first American guitarist invited to perform in the Soviet Union. He toured the<lb/>
USSR in 1975 and 1977. Lorimer is being brought to campus as part of the '8182 MSC Artists Series.<lb/>
i<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057463_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 2, 1982<lb/>
L??0s)G A&amp;QUT CoiLgfrS Thc MP 1AM?<lb/>
PW?, J N??0 TO 0it?<lb/>
ITS TOO A)01SY H?rt?<lb/>
-?00rV fO&amp; AWH(C? f<lb/>
61 PavjIP AJotS<lb/>
(aJCll<lb/>
AK?0<lb/>
Stewart Getting Back To Basics<lb/>
Continued From P. 5<lb/>
ed a thatch of blond,<lb/>
ersatz hair ? a Rod<lb/>
Stewart look-alike wig<lb/>
? and sang several of<lb/>
his songs. On the spur<lb/>
of the moment, he in-<lb/>
vited Miss Turner to<lb/>
sing a duet with him on<lb/>
Saturday Sight live.<lb/>
The song was "Hot<lb/>
I egs and Miss<lb/>
Turner made it ge-<lb/>
nuinely sexy. Stewart<lb/>
even took a stroll off<lb/>
camera to give her<lb/>
center stage. "Let's<lb/>
face it he said later,<lb/>
in the midst of a late-<lb/>
night party at Studio<lb/>
54, "rock 'n' roll is<lb/>
basically about sex<lb/>
Later still, during an<lb/>
early-morning conver-<lb/>
sation at the mid-town<lb/>
hotel where the<lb/>
Stewarts were staying,<lb/>
Stewart amended that<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
"Musically he said,<lb/>
"what you also need to<lb/>
make good rock 'n' roll<lb/>
is a good bass player<lb/>
and drummer<lb/>
He has them in<lb/>
bassist Jay Davis and<lb/>
newly recruited drum-<lb/>
mer Tony Brock. In the<lb/>
past, Stewart's bands<lb/>
tended to over-play<lb/>
sometimes to the point<lb/>
of unintentional<lb/>
parody. His present<lb/>
group is rhythmically<lb/>
assured, well-stocked<lb/>
with inventive soloists,<lb/>
and notably lacking in<lb/>
inflated egos.<lb/>
Tonight I'm Yours is<lb/>
equally winning, and it<lb/>
manages to allude to<lb/>
virtually every phase of<lb/>
his varied musical<lb/>
career. First, he was a<lb/>
folksinger, then an ear-<lb/>
ly star of the mid60s<lb/>
British blues boom,<lb/>
then a hard-rock<lb/>
screamer with the Jeff<lb/>
Beck group, then lead<lb/>
vocalist with the lively<lb/>
and sometimes chaotic<lb/>
Faces.<lb/>
During his vears as a<lb/>
Face (1969 1976), he<lb/>
also recorded a number<lb/>
of albums under his<lb/>
own name, and he<lb/>
seemed to save the best<lb/>
of the songs he was<lb/>
writing and co-writing<lb/>
for these albums. When<lb/>
his longtime friend and<lb/>
songwriting partner<lb/>
Ron Wood left Faces to<lb/>
become a Rolling Stone<lb/>
in 1976, the group<lb/>
disbanded, and Stewart<lb/>
put together the first<lb/>
band he could call his<lb/>
own.<lb/>
On Tonight I'm<lb/>
Yours, these phases are<lb/>
recalled by a song, an<lb/>
arrangement, a vocal<lb/>
ornament or a frag-<lb/>
ment of a lyric. And<lb/>
Stewart's determina-<lb/>
tion to build his bands<lb/>
around three electric<lb/>
guitarists, a formula he<lb/>
has followed since the<lb/>
demise of the Faces<lb/>
despite the tendency of<lb/>
guitar-heavy bands to<lb/>
indulge in excess, has<lb/>
finally born fruit. Each<lb/>
of the three guitarists<lb/>
who works with him<lb/>
now can do a number<lb/>
of things well, but all<lb/>
three seem to prefer im-<lb/>
maculate ensemble<lb/>
playing to show solo-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Tonight's<lb/>
Greensboro perfor-<lb/>
mance comes at the<lb/>
tail-end of four months<lb/>
of touring (he played<lb/>
Greensboro on<lb/>
November 11 last year<lb/>
as part of the same<lb/>
tour). Stewart is excited<lb/>
about being on the road<lb/>
once again. "What I<lb/>
really look forward to<lb/>
on the road is getting<lb/>
back together with the<lb/>
boys he saicL "I<lb/>
guess that's kind of<lb/>
adolescent. But I love<lb/>
every minute of it<lb/>
Carolina Recording Artist<lb/>
THE<lb/>
NICKY HARRIS<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
Appearing<lb/>
Wednesday, March 3,<lb/>
at the<lb/>
CAROLINA OPRY HOUSE<lb/>
Ladies' Night<lb/>
Ladies admitted free.<lb/>
5C draft<lb/>
from 8:30 to 10:30<lb/>
Mil<lb/>
i j<lb/>
re;<lb/>
thq<lb/>
difl<lb/>
m<lb/>
sin<lb/>
di<lb/>
mi<lb/>
thi<lb/>
XJ<lb/>
HARBIN HIGHLANDER<lb/>
CENTER, INC.<lb/>
Coin-Operated Laundry<lb/>
Self-Service Dry Cleaning<lb/>
10 lb. load - $6.50<lb/>
(8-10 garments)<lb/>
Cleanest laundry in town<lb/>
Color T. V. and Video Games<lb/>
Across from Highway Patrol<lb/>
Station on 10th St.<lb/>
Hours: 8a.m10p.m. 7daysaweek<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 Hiilowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
X?<lb/>
&amp; .J? AC' ? 4 ?<lb/>
o x &amp; y. Jr<lb/>
tr.jf<lb/>
s<lb/>
aM<lb/>
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WOLVERINE<lb/>
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COMFORT INSIDE<lb/>
I<lb/>
h. h . <lb/>
Mt. And<lb/>
J.P. Davenport<lb/>
&amp; Sons, Inc.<lb/>
Phone 752-6930<lb/>
Hwy. 264 E.<lb/>
WOLVERINE<lb/>
IShoes<lb/>
m??i?V MWi<lb/>
N4<lb/>
r?<lb/>
1 st Annual Pre-Spring Break<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
m<lb/>
H<lb/>
Beauty Contest<lb/>
(WET T-SHIRT)<lb/>
March 4th at PAPA KATZ<lb/>
7<lb/>
?&amp;?<lb/>
5<lb/>
"<lb/>
Good chance to get<lb/>
extra money for Spring Break<lb/>
M<lb/>
<lb/>
Five judges to .<lb/>
be selected at random<lb/>
from audience<lb/>
prize<lb/>
Sponsors<lb/>
Overton's Grocery<lb/>
Crow's Nest<lb/>
Mr. Gatti's<lb/>
Nautilus<lb/>
KA Sorority<lb/>
Western Sizzlin'<lb/>
University Exxon<lb/>
East Coast Waterbeds<lb/>
(Call David Hill 758-2408)<lb/>
Sponsored by ?0E<lb/>
Quicksilver Records<lb/>
108 E. 5th St.<lb/>
For Heads Only<lb/>
Clothing Jeans Warehouse<lb/>
200 E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
For more information call:<lb/>
Chuck Brown ? 752-2941<lb/>
Glenn Conway ? 752-6502<lb/>
t<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
tmrnmwmit?9m,tmm wnmiwiww ?i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057463_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
IARCH 2, 1982 7<lb/>
?7 ! 1 '<lb/>
rs<lb/>
E<lb/>
Fondas Shine On In '80s<lb/>
( ontinued From P. 5<lb/>
Director Mark<lb/>
Rydell believes that<lb/>
Miss Hepburn and Miss<lb/>
Fonda "have all the<lb/>
reasons in the world to<lb/>
be antagonists. Even<lb/>
though their politics are<lb/>
different, Katharine<lb/>
must recognize a<lb/>
similar kind of in-<lb/>
dividuality in Jane that<lb/>
must have been<lb/>
threatening he says.<lb/>
"After all, Jane is the<lb/>
big star of the '80s and<lb/>
Katharine was the big<lb/>
star for so long.<lb/>
"They were very<lb/>
standoffish at the<lb/>
beginning; you had the<lb/>
sense of two lionesses<lb/>
prowling the same area.<lb/>
But Jane made some<lb/>
real efforts, and<lb/>
Katharine began to see<lb/>
that Jane really<lb/>
respected her, which<lb/>
she was concerned<lb/>
about. Now you can see<lb/>
the two of them walk-<lb/>
ing arm in arm, and<lb/>
Katharine giving her<lb/>
motherly advice<lb/>
But it is with her<lb/>
father that Miss Fon-<lb/>
da's emotions run<lb/>
deepest. She brushes<lb/>
off the widely publiciz-<lb/>
ed conflicts they had,<lb/>
especially during the<lb/>
1960s.<lb/>
"Mv father had<lb/>
fought in the Second<lb/>
World War she says,<lb/>
"and his view of what<lb/>
the flag represented<lb/>
and what it meant to go<lb/>
to war was different<lb/>
from younger people's.<lb/>
We had a lot of non-<lb/>
verbal clashes over<lb/>
that. But those are<lb/>
perfectly normal when<lb/>
you're still not sure of<lb/>
who you are and you're<lb/>
seeking your own iden-<lb/>
tity<lb/>
Now, at 44, Miss<lb/>
Fonda says she feels<lb/>
sure of her identity,<lb/>
and the problems she<lb/>
had with her father<lb/>
have worked<lb/>
themselves out to a<lb/>
Soviet Life Examined<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
especially the Gold Diggers series<lb/>
with Ruby Keeler and company. t<lb/>
This film does not carefully follow<lb/>
Communist ideology. In fact, as<lb/>
David Denby New York magazine)<lb/>
noted:<lb/>
"The concerns of these women<lb/>
are almost . . . well . . . bourgeois. If<lb/>
the state is present at all, it's only as<lb/>
a kind of invisible hand, distributing<lb/>
punishments and rewards . . . The<lb/>
accountant in the sky, watching<lb/>
over the characters with ledger in<lb/>
hand, obviously worries about such<lb/>
things as productivity, order and the<lb/>
family. In the long run, happiness is<lb/>
a personal matter, but the happy<lb/>
people are also model citizens<lb/>
Barbara Amiel (Maclean's) had<lb/>
this to say about Moscow Does Mot<lb/>
Believe In Tears:<lb/>
"In the end, one leaves the movie<lb/>
uncomfortably on how Soviet socie-<lb/>
ty is getting to be more and more<lb/>
like ours, while ours, alas, in its in-<lb/>
creasing regimentation, its denial of<lb/>
human motivations and realities in<lb/>
the name of a spurious<lb/>
egahtarianism, is getting more and<lb/>
more like theirs.<lb/>
"The Soviets seem, through bitter<lb/>
experience, to have learned many of<lb/>
the lessons we have yet to teach<lb/>
ourselves. They may be behind us in<lb/>
bedrooms-per-household and basic<lb/>
liberties, but where they are clearly<lb/>
ahead of us ? and so demonstrate<lb/>
in this film with astonishing<lb/>
frankness ? is in the understanding<lb/>
that perhaps it is not human nature<lb/>
that needs changing but the artificial<lb/>
systems that would suppress and<lb/>
deny it<lb/>
much more advanced<lb/>
friendship than Nor-<lb/>
man and Chelsea<lb/>
Thayer will ever know.<lb/>
"Norman can be<lb/>
cruel she says. "My<lb/>
father's not a cruel per-<lb/>
son. In the movie,<lb/>
Chelsea has a raw, cold<lb/>
relationship with her<lb/>
father, which is not the<lb/>
case with me and my<lb/>
father. Whatever pro-<lb/>
blems we had are gone.<lb/>
I got older and wiser, I<lb/>
guess. You know. You<lb/>
think you're so smart<lb/>
and then you have your<lb/>
own kids and wind up<lb/>
making the same<lb/>
mistakes.<lb/>
"You begin to realize<lb/>
how hard it is to be a<lb/>
good person, let alone<lb/>
to always be there for<lb/>
your children the way<lb/>
they want you to be.<lb/>
You try but you can't<lb/>
always give them what<lb/>
they need ? and they<lb/>
hardly ever express<lb/>
their deepest needs ver-<lb/>
bally. When you finally<lb/>
understand these things<lb/>
for yourself, you<lb/>
understand your<lb/>
parents a lot better and<lb/>
begin to be a lot more<lb/>
forgiving<lb/>
With age, Henry<lb/>
Fonda, too, has realiz-<lb/>
ed the mistakes he<lb/>
made with his children.<lb/>
"1 don't know how to<lb/>
be a good father he<lb/>
says, relaxed in the<lb/>
comfortable summer<lb/>
house he has rented<lb/>
with his wife, Shirlee.<lb/>
"I'm an actor, and I<lb/>
had to be away a lot<lb/>
when the kids were at<lb/>
an age when they<lb/>
wondered, 'Where's<lb/>
Dad?' Both Peter and<lb/>
Jane grew up not really<lb/>
having the kind of rela-<lb/>
tionship that you feel<lb/>
children should have<lb/>
with their father. I<lb/>
remember being aware<lb/>
of it at the time, but I<lb/>
also thought, 'Am 1<lb/>
gonna quit all this and<lb/>
sell shoes? No, by God,<lb/>
1 like being an actor "<lb/>
Fonda also dismisses<lb/>
reports of a rift bet-<lb/>
ween him and his<lb/>
children. "By the time<lb/>
Jane decided she<lb/>
wanted to become an<lb/>
actress, she went<lb/>
through what I unders-<lb/>
tand is known as a<lb/>
classic rebellion he<lb/>
says. "She had to feel<lb/>
that she was doing it on<lb/>
her own. But there<lb/>
hasn't been any of that<lb/>
stuff in 15 years.<lb/>
"My son, Peter, isn't<lb/>
home a lot. He's either<lb/>
on his ranch or his boat<lb/>
in Maui or on location<lb/>
someplace. But we're in<lb/>
communication all the<lb/>
time. Two or three<lb/>
years ago, I began to<lb/>
notice at the end of a<lb/>
conversation on the<lb/>
phone he'd say, T love<lb/>
you, Dad I'd hang up<lb/>
and think, 'Wow<lb/>
"But it took me a<lb/>
while before I was able<lb/>
to say, T love you,<lb/>
son Isn't that awful?<lb/>
But, 1 guess it's not that<lb/>
unusual<lb/>
J rNN A<lb/>
IF YOU ARE HAVING PROBLEMS WITH DRUGSOR ALCOHOL ?<lb/>
WE CAN HELP ? "STUDENTS HELPING STUDENTS"<lb/>
CAMPUS ALCOHOL &amp; DRUG CENTER ? 757-6793<lb/>
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<lb/>
prison sentence of 5 years.<lb/>
minimum<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/>
L.<lb/>
H0DGES COMPAmr<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
THE SPORTS STORE<lb/>
NIKE SALE<lb/>
THIS WEEK<lb/>
FOR MEN:<lb/>
NIKE WIMBLEDON<lb/>
22'5 J,<lb/>
w<lb/>
? if<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
Reg. $35.95<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
y<lb/>
?<lb/>
gar ? ? ???.??? tj<lb/>
(XT' " <lb/>
fl?&amp;&amp;SS<lb/>
f ALL SALES FINAL<lb/>
NO EXCHANGESOR REFUNDS<lb/>
ft:<lb/>
???<lb/>
?'?'<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
as<lb/>
?? v.vv:<lb/>
?? <lb/>
$<lb/>
??:<lb/>
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.i:<lb/>
???<lb/>
?38<lb/>
m<lb/>
as<lb/>
?v:?i<lb/>
Mt<lb/>
FOR WOMEN:<lb/>
LADY RACQUETTE<lb/>
SALE 1995<lb/>
Re $33 95<lb/>
I<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available tor sale<lb/>
below the advertised price in each A4P Store eicept as specifically noted<lb/>
in this ad <lb/>
at or<lb/>
u<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT MARCH 6, 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/>
'AS AfcflP EXCLUSIVE OFFER.<lb/>
GENUINE<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
STONEWARE<lb/>
From the Highland Floral Collection.<lb/>
A GBEAT mum JOT A CHEAT PUCK<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S<lb/>
FEATURE ITEM<lb/>
Dinner<lb/>
Plate<lb/>
With EacngpSPpIoper placi<lb/>
5.00 Purchase serrate i?e<lb/>
A 20-Pc. Service<lb/>
For 4 Cost Less<lb/>
Than14<lb/>
CHOOSE FROM 3 BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
PATTERNS!<lb/>
? Fraaoar To Ovan To Tabto Convantanca.<lb/>
PLACE . Otahwaahar and Mcrowav Safe.<lb/>
SETTMQPCCE . Extra Strangth, Chip HaSMM<lb/>
hemHtatufr( icnp?raUr ValurSncciaJ Pnce<lb/>
mnnimaiiFtni. StitK$3.00? ? EACH June ?h?h V7 ISOOpurrhmr<lb/>
CUPSecond. Srvmrh, T?rMih$2.20 44. EACH "AKaT tSOOpurchac<lb/>
tAucnThiid. THirtrcfwh$1.60? EACH JUQC Wilhrach VGT S OOpurchar<lb/>
MOTET MSIFourth. Ninrti. Fnurrrrnth$1.60 m EACH JUDJr wh?h "0F ?SO0purrh?r<lb/>
niADt? i iirtTtihrth. Tnuh. hflmtth$1.60j4. EACH "IPaV JS OOpunKaK<lb/>
jfmmm<lb/>
( A&amp;PCOUPON )<lb/>
SAVE 50<lb/>
When You Purchase A Pair<lb/>
Of I<lb/>
Dinner Soup<lb/>
Bowls<lb/>
SEE STORE DISPLAY FOR COMPLETE DETAILS.<lb/>
Rag<lb/>
5.99<lb/>
With This C.AQ<lb/>
Coupon You <lb/>
Pay Only W For Two<lb/>
631<lb/>
Good Thru Sat.Mar 6<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN<lb/>
GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Sirloin Steaks<lb/>
68<lb/>
Bone<lb/>
In<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
2<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN<lb/>
GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
BONELESS WHOLE<lb/>
Bottom &amp; Eye Round<lb/>
I87<lb/>
Cut Fraa Into Bottom<lb/>
Round Staaks, Roaat,<lb/>
Eya Round Staafca.<lb/>
and Roaat, Ground Round<lb/>
20 To 26<lb/>
Lb. Avg.<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH<lb/>
Whole Fryer Legs<lb/>
8 lbs. or<lb/>
more<lb/>
89'<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
Meat Franks<lb/>
(Beef 12 oz. 1.09)<lb/>
ASPOUAUTY<lb/>
Pork Sausage<lb/>
r if ooe<lb/>
AV<lb/>
? a?aaa?????? Pj SUPER SAVER COUPON "?<lb/>
KEG O KETCHUP<lb/>
iiBinz 3o<lb/>
Ketchup<lb/>
UlaTT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER btl.<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT . MARCH 6, AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE. NC.<lb/>
lP tbaF624<lb/>
aVP<lb/>
!?????( jj Jj) SUPER SAVER COUPON ???<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND, RICH IN BRAZHJANCOFFEES<lb/>
Eight 0'Clock save<lb/>
Bean Coffee 60<lb/>
UbBT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT . MARCH 6. AT AAP IN GREENVILLE. N C<lb/>
i ? ? ????"?( PJ SUPER SAVER COUPON )'<lb/>
7 SELF-RISING ? PLAIN<lb/>
M Red Band s3aove<lb/>
RED BAND<lb/>
Flour<lb/>
AT<lb/>
UMT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT , MARCH 6. AT AAP IN GREENV'LLE, NC<lb/>
625<lb/>
aa?aaaaaiB?aasasiasiaSiaaias j J SUPER SAVER COUPON J1???????'??g<lb/>
HiA NEW! Save<lb/>
 Eight 0'Clock Bean so-<lb/>
Decaffeinated coffee<lb/>
AV<lb/>
1-lb.<lb/>
UMTT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7 50 ORDER bag IP! 627<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT MARCH 4, AT ASP IN GREENVILLE, NC.<lb/>
$t?ftvv;<lb/>
FRESH W1TW OUALTTY<lb/>
U.S. 1 ALL PURPOSE<lb/>
White 1ft<lb/>
Potatoes III<lb/>
CALIFORNIA SWEET &amp; JUICY<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW RIPE<lb/>
Navel Oranges Dole Bananas<lb/>
q4a.wl3ar<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057463_0008"/><lb/>
THF EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MAK H 2, 1982<lb/>
I'w 8<lb/>
Johnson Does It All As Hot USC Nips ECU<lb/>
F.CT's I orraine Foster shoots. (Photo h Drew Kumhlcv t<lb/>
Dukes Receive<lb/>
First-Round Bye<lb/>
V mpleting its best season ever with a 22-4 record. ECA South<lb/>
imes Madison has received a first-round bye in the con-<lb/>
irnameni that begins this rhursday in the Norfolk Sco<lb/>
rhe tournament champion receives an automatic berth in the NCAA<lb/>
tout rtament.<lb/>
i I '? Ca i have been seeded ?eehe . om-<lb/>
ind . fa . . d Richmond, a team the lost to.<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
imeni<lb/>
in tru- opening game ihursdav al 5 p.n<lb/>
were announced Sundav afi<lb/>
i -4 41 w in<lb/>
n -<lb/>
toui nameni<lb/>
ason. I<lb/>
(ld Doi<lb/>
ed R<lb/>
a league<lb/>
 oui the<lb/>
n the Scope Sal ui<lb/>
6 4 and 1" to<lb/>
M<lb/>
M.<lb/>
' ? 15-11) is the numbei three set V liam and<lb/>
15 111 is numbei foui<lb/>
,2-4 and 11-13, is ? fifth and George Ma oi 2 7 12 I ;<lb/>
xth.<lb/>
minion and G ee Ma n meet al 7 p.m. in the second contest<lb/>
. followed by William and Mary Navy at 9<lb/>
ner ol Thursday's final game will face lames Madison at 7<lb/>
1 : day while the other two winners meet immediately following,<lb/>
lament championship will be decided Saturday at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
 astarolina<lb/>
semifinal<lb/>
4 )lil Dominion<lb/>
Gt'orpe Mason<lb/>
Semifinal<lb/>
( hampionship<lb/>
W illiam and Mar<lb/>
Saw<lb/>
Semifinal<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
( hampionship<lb/>
NC s<lb/>
Gamecocks Win Despite<lb/>
Turnovers and Game Bucs<lb/>
? r<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Managing tdilur<lb/>
"We tried and tried and tried, but<lb/>
the ball just wasn't going in the<lb/>
hoop<lb/>
I he trust rat ion was evident in the<lb/>
voice o Cathy Andruzi, East<lb/>
Carolina women's basketball coach,<lb/>
following her team's narrow, 86-81,<lb/>
loss to I3th-ranked South Carolina<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
The 1 ady Pirates outrebounded<lb/>
the favored I ady Gamecocks,<lb/>
43-42, and forced 25 turnovers.<lb/>
That was not enough to offset 39.1<lb/>
pet cent field goal shooting, though,<lb/>
especially when coupled with USC's<lb/>
60.3 percent accuracy.<lb/>
rhe I ady Gamecocks were paced<lb/>
bv the trio o forwards Evelyn<lb/>
Johnson and Branley Southers, and<lb/>
center Sheila foster. Johnson, sister<lb/>
oi professional great "Magic"<lb/>
Johnson, scored 26 points, pulled<lb/>
down ten rebounds, and dished out<lb/>
foui assists.<lb/>
Southers. a high-jumping<lb/>
freshman, added 23 points and ten<lb/>
rebounds, foster contributed 22<lb/>
points and nine boards.<lb/>
The 1 ady Bucs were led by Sam<lb/>
Jones, who scored 26 points, had<lb/>
four steals, five assists and eight re-<lb/>
bounds. Even so, "Action" had<lb/>
what was probably an o night,<lb/>
making jusl 12 of 33 field goal tries.<lb/>
lunioi center Mary Denkler add-<lb/>
ed 20 points and 1 rebounds tor the<lb/>
Bucs.<lb/>
ECU jumped out to an early<lb/>
eight-point cad. al 20-12. but cold<lb/>
shooting caused it to dissipate in a<lb/>
hurry. Hot-shooting USC outscored<lb/>
the Lady Bucs 39-18 over the re-<lb/>
maining 13 minutes oi the half to<lb/>
take a 51-38 lead at intermission.<lb/>
South Carolina built its lead to 18<lb/>
points, 73-55, by the midway point<lb/>
of the second half. It was then that<lb/>
ECU began applying pressure, and<lb/>
making its subsequent comeback at-<lb/>
tempt.<lb/>
ECU narrowed the lead to five, at<lb/>
86-81, and had two trips down court<lb/>
in the game's last 60 seconds to tut<lb/>
the USC advantage to three. The<lb/>
Buc shots simply would not go in as<lb/>
the I.ady Gamecocks picked up win<lb/>
number 21 in 28 games.<lb/>
ECU fell to 16-9.<lb/>
"I'm very hard on oui kids An-<lb/>
drui said. "1 thought the first half<lb/>
was our really dead spot, when we<lb/>
dug ourselves into a hole. The press<lb/>
started working at the end and I<lb/>
thought we were in a potential com-<lb/>
eback situation.<lb/>
"South Carolina is a great team<lb/>
and played one helluva game Con-<lb/>
sidering that, our kids did a respec-<lb/>
table job<lb/>
Andruzi said she believes tier<lb/>
club's 16-9 record is good enough to<lb/>
warrant consideration for the<lb/>
NCAA Tournament, especially if<lb/>
the team can finish its regular<lb/>
season with a win over North<lb/>
Carolina on Wednesdav.<lb/>
"People have to look at us she<lb/>
said. "There's no question about it.<lb/>
We beat N.C. State, a top ten team,<lb/>
and lost bv just five points to the<lb/>
I3th-ranked team in the country<lb/>
tonight. 1 think we've go! a<lb/>
shot<lb/>
??<lb/>
I s( veniyn Johnson takts charge. (Photo b Kip san<lb/>
eels-Pirates<lb/>
Set For Burner<lb/>
Darlene Chaney for two. (Photo by Kip Sloan).<lb/>
Tickets Available<lb/>
There are still 500 individual day tickets left for Thursday<lb/>
afternoon competition at the ECAC-South tournament at<lb/>
the Scope in Norfolk, Va. The tickets are priced at $4.50 for<lb/>
students and $6 for everyone else. East Carolina plays Rich-<lb/>
mond at 5 p.m followed by Old Dominion and George<lb/>
Mason at 7 and Navy-William and Mary at 9.<lb/>
Students who won tickets and have not picked them up<lb/>
MUST do so by Wednesday morning.<lb/>
Bv WILLIAM H LKION<lb/>
"p. ri dllOf<lb/>
No n what s meihmg<lb/>
is always al -take when I<lb/>
Carolina and Normarolina m<lb/>
Doesn't matte- I re tall<lb/>
football, basketball or chess.<lb/>
Even though honor and pride are<lb/>
evident. Wednesday's 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
women's basketball encountei<lb/>
Minges Coliseum is esp<lb/>
portant. And somethi it -take.<lb/>
A possible bid to the NCAA t<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
The Lady Tar Heels oj orth<lb/>
Carolina. Alias: Heels Sevenl<lb/>
and 11 after a win and a loss in last<lb/>
weekend's Atlantic Coast (<lb/>
ference tournament. kev area ol<lb/>
team: powerful front line of 6-foot<lb/>
Cathy Crawford (15.7 points, 7 I<lb/>
rebounds), 6'2" rresa Brown 114.2,<lb/>
7.3) and 6'2" Henrietta Walls (13.2,<lb/>
8). (Even though Crawford is not<lb/>
expected to start because ol a<lb/>
hairline fracture in her right arm,<lb/>
she will see action). Other key<lb/>
plavers: Meredith White. 510"<lb/>
senior. 8 4 points; Pam Hammond,<lb/>
5'6" freshman guard, b 2 points;<lb/>
Cindy Miller 5'11" sophomore, 5 2<lb/>
points. Kev playei ofl bench: Aileen<lb/>
McCann, averaging 7.9 points but<lb/>
leads team in assists with 75. Head<lb/>
coach Jennifer Alley uses about nine<lb/>
players again.<lb/>
The lady Pirates oj East<lb/>
Carolina. Alias: Rats, always<lb/>
tenacious, scrappy. Sixteen and nine<lb/>
this season, but hot as of late, hav-<lb/>
ing won 12 of the last 14 games n<lb/>
that streak the only two losses have<lb/>
come to nationally-ranked (third)<lb/>
Old Dominion and South Carolina<lb/>
(13th) in close games. Defeated<lb/>
North Carolina, "1-66. earlier this<lb/>
season in Chapel Hill. I ast vear.<lb/>
also won in C hapel Hill but in<lb/>
: Murn meeting in Greenville, North<lb/>
Carolina defeated it I . ki<lb/>
the 1 ad 2<lb/>
Ke ' ' ?<lb/>
20.3. v n<lb/>
e at 17.2<lb/>
?? . . zuar d<lb/>
1 illion Barnes a<lb/>
"W<lb/>
improved ly - I<lb/>
i ch Cat I .<lb/>
I North Carolina) are<lb/>
tui team with a v t<lb/>
line. I hey're a<lb/>
thai's <lb/>
is- H . .<lb/>
tha line<lb/>
oi Brown, W alls and c ra ??<lb/>
"Thewe very big in size ai  ta<lb/>
rhey're very experienced<lb/>
the players Have been together<lb/>
two years. Any time w<lb/>
; line team, we have our w<lb/>
cut out foi us<lb/>
ndruzzi say s sl p ased ?<lb/>
the way<lb/>
matured through<lb/>
" rhey're dome A<lb/>
they're just a great I <lb/>
with. South a was<lb/>
good team, and we had a tew lap<lb/>
But we really came back. They h<lb/>
a great dea I , aracter I'm<lb/>
ed with the way th<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
rhe NCAA bids go<lb/>
and the 1 ady Pirates are being<lb/>
sidered as one of the 32 teai<lb/>
cording to sources 1 here will b<lb/>
automatic conference<lb/>
19 at-large bids rournament tea<lb/>
will be sen;<lb/>
bat. Mid 1 as w esi and M<lb/>
W esi<lb/>
!<lb/>
tough seas<lb/>
great<lb/>
Roundball Pirates Down But Certainly Not Out<lb/>
Will! AMSIH RCi, Va.<lb/>
I hmi! have not gone so well lately<lb/>
foi the I astarolina men's basket-<lb/>
ball team. Saturdav night was no<lb/>
different as the club lost its fifth<lb/>
straight game. 80-61 to William and<lb/>
M a r v<lb/>
I he worst part about the Satur-<lb/>
dav deteat is that it doomed the<lb/>
Pirates for the cellar in the ECAC-<lb/>
South As a result, the Bucs were<lb/>
seeded seventh lor the :v en-team<lb/>
conference championship tourna-<lb/>
ment, which is scheduled for this<lb/>
weekend at the Norfolk Scope.<lb/>
ECU finished the regular season<lb/>
2-8 in the conference and 10-16<lb/>
overall. The club will play second-<lb/>
seeded Richmond in the tourna-<lb/>
ment's opening game Thursday at 5<lb/>
p.m. It will be carried via radio<lb/>
locally bv WITN-FM (93.3) and<lb/>
WOOW-AM (1340).<lb/>
The Indians shot a torrid 70.6<lb/>
percent in the first half in grabbing a<lb/>
37-21 lead. William and Marry cool-<lb/>
ed down little in the second half,<lb/>
finishing with at 68.3 percent.<lb/>
ECU, meanwhile, shot just 41.6<lb/>
percent for the game. That figure<lb/>
could have been lower had it not<lb/>
been for a late rally.<lb/>
The Indians placed five players in<lb/>
double figures, led by senior Dale<lb/>
Moats' 14 points. Mike Strayhorn<lb/>
was next with 13.<lb/>
Forwards Morris Hargrove and<lb/>
Bill McNair were the only Pirates<lb/>
scoring in double digits. Hargrove<lb/>
talied 17 points, while McNair<lb/>
finished with 14.<lb/>
Following the game, ECU head<lb/>
coach Dave Odom spoke solemly to<lb/>
the press about the game and his<lb/>
team's play of late.<lb/>
"This is about as tought a stretch<lb/>
of time as I've ever had to endure<lb/>
Odom said. "In no way, shape or<lb/>
form have I ever experienced the<lb/>
feelings of frustration that I have<lb/>
now<lb/>
Odom said he was very disap-<lb/>
pointed in recent fan treatment of<lb/>
the Pirates on road trips.<lb/>
"I hope our players never forget<lb/>
the remarks that have been made<lb/>
about them, the laughing and<lb/>
snickering. Those things have no<lb/>
place in athletics. 1 know things<lb/>
have a way o changing. Time has a<lb/>
way o healing all wounds, and the<lb/>
worm will eventually turn<lb/>
The Pirates must now attempt to<lb/>
turn things around before this<lb/>
weekend's tournament. Three vic-<lb/>
tories in the event would put the<lb/>
club in the NCAA Tournament as<lb/>
the conference representative. If this<lb/>
is to happen. Odom said, the club<lb/>
must get more consistent defensive<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
"I don't know it we can g<lb/>
in two days and pick up what w<lb/>
right lor two months he said<lb/>
"We have to cleai our minds, get<lb/>
the right techniques and intei<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
'Ten davs ago, we were holding<lb/>
our opponents to 48 percent from<lb/>
the floor. But we haven't stopped<lb/>
anybody for ten davs<lb/>
<pb facs="00057463_0009"/><lb/>
-I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 2, 1982 V<lb/>
I<lb/>
er<lb/>
s and<lb/>
teams<lb/>
i<lb/>
ut<lb/>
I back<lb/>
uha: we did<lb/>
r minds, get<lb/>
mtensitv h<lb/>
e holding<lb/>
cent from<lb/>
t stopped<lb/>
Pirates Blank Mt. Olive, 9-0<lb/>
l he EC I) men's ten-<lb/>
nis team played theii<lb/>
first match of the<lb/>
season this past Mon-<lb/>
day at Minges courts,<lb/>
and shut out Mount<lb/>
Olive College, 9-0.<lb/>
he team will play<lb/>
again at home against<lb/>
Atlantic Christian Col-<lb/>
lege on Monday,<lb/>
March 15. The match<lb/>
gets underway at 3 p.m.<lb/>
This Monday's<lb/>
results follow:<lb/>
lUd Mikr Bmri 6 1.6-4; lorn Baltic<lb/>
IE) d Jraa V-alrru 61.6I. lKa lair-<lb/>
maa (EJ J lorn t uggia ft I ft -<lb/>
DOUH.ES<lb/>
1 ?-pprr Owta (rd Md.ff ?'?(?<lb/>
-2. W; tok fciaf Bnaal (I) 4.<lb/>
Paftaao-4. ofjtia 6-4. 6-1. Barr Parker-<lb/>
t airman d "wal?ri-Sioa 6-0. 6-0<lb/>
slN?,t Ks<lb/>
Knlh ragel (El d )aid Mi?.?<lb/>
MI.6-V Ifcia KultrdRC lr.1 d. Paul<lb/>
P agano 6-0 6-1. Kf?ia i?in?,loB It Id.<lb/>
krrmit Nixon ft 0.t2 Norman Hrvuni<lb/>
ECU's men's track<lb/>
team competed in the<lb/>
Budweiser Metro In-<lb/>
vitational Meet this<lb/>
past Saturday at Va<lb/>
Tech, and placed ir<lb/>
four events.<lb/>
Runners Keith<lb/>
Clarke, Lawrence Er-<lb/>
vin, Ray Dickerson and<lb/>
Tim Cephus combined<lb/>
for a time of 3:21.7 to<lb/>
take second place in the<lb/>
1600-meter relay.<lb/>
Dickerson placed<lb/>
third in the 800-meter<lb/>
event with a time of<lb/>
1:54.7.<lb/>
Shaun Laney had a<lb/>
time of 1:05.7 to place<lb/>
fourth in the 500-meter<lb/>
race.<lb/>
In the 55-meter<lb/>
event, Clint Harris<lb/>
sprinted for a time of<lb/>
6.48 to take fifth place.<lb/>
Jeff Golden placed<lb/>
sixth in the same event<lb/>
with a time of 6.49.<lb/>
Pirates Start Well But Slide<lb/>
By THOMAS BRAME<lb/>
Aatl. Sports KaHlof<lb/>
The ECU golfers got<lb/>
off to a good start in<lb/>
the Seminole Inter-<lb/>
collegiate Classic but<lb/>
closed with a disap-<lb/>
pointing finish, accor-<lb/>
ding to coach Bob<lb/>
Helmick.<lb/>
In the opening<lb/>
round, Pirate golfer<lb/>
Jerry Lee finished only<lb/>
one stroke behind the<lb/>
individual leader, Jodie<lb/>
Mudd.<lb/>
The Pirates, as a<lb/>
team, finished the first<lb/>
day in eighth place in<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
REWARD Lost Mon Feb 8th<lb/>
Brown Cordoroy Ladies Pocket<lb/>
Book with Bamboo Handles Lost<lb/>
m Food Town and Fosdick s Area<lb/>
Please Call 7S 4373 Home and<lb/>
7s? 20M Business Ask tor Danny<lb/>
or Ginny<lb/>
LOST Timex watcn 1st or 2nd<lb/>
lloor stacks Joyner Library<lb/>
Call Trudy 7S2 2981<lb/>
LOST Silver ID bracelet around<lb/>
Memorial Gym or Tyler Dorm<lb/>
area II tund please call 35S 2?4?<lb/>
and leave messaqe<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
Class.tied ads will be taken ONLY<lb/>
dunr.q the following hours<lb/>
Mondav MS 3 00<lb/>
Tuesday 2 00 3 00<lb/>
Wednesday I IS 3 00<lb/>
Tnursday J 00 3 00<lb/>
Friday i '5 2 00<lb/>
You must place the ads in person<lb/>
and pav tor them m advance<lb/>
Rates are $1 lor the first IS words<lb/>
and S 05 per words after the first<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
JVC PORTABLE AM FM<lb/>
Cassette Piaer RC 6S6 J<lb/>
Normal Cr02<lb/>
Manual Auto Recordmq Sep<lb/>
Bass and Treble Controls 4<lb/>
. . a jTomobiie plug Ex<lb/>
it Cond Must Sell S225<lb/>
752 9704<lb/>
USED YAMAHA quitar owned 2<lb/>
irs in qood condition Si 20<lb/>
? joIp Call ?S7 3107 ask lor<lb/>
1104 East Tenth Street<lb/>
MICROSCOPE-Monolu 4038<lb/>
Magnification to 1200X, four<lb/>
oculars, four obiectives, built in<lb/>
coarse and fine adiustments,<lb/>
wooden carrying case, and slide<lb/>
preparation tools H75 7S8 5S2S<lb/>
BAYLEY WETSUITS-L S<lb/>
pullover top and longiohn com<lb/>
bmation S60 each or JI00 together<lb/>
Call Dirk at 7S7 4947 or 758 6354 or<lb/>
come by Rawl 123.<lb/>
FOR SALE: two tickets to Rod<lb/>
Stewart Concert Reynolds<lb/>
NCSU -March 2 Excellant seats!<lb/>
Call 758 6710<lb/>
SURFBOARD FOR SALE 64<lb/>
Challenger, single tin Good condi<lb/>
tion, price negotiable Call Bobby<lb/>
at 752 9662<lb/>
STEREO RECEIVER Marantz<lb/>
2230 receiver. Excellent cond Call<lb/>
756 5323<lb/>
cAR STEREO Pioneer com<lb/>
ponents Cassette Deck, 40 watt<lb/>
amplifier, and 2 cross axial<lb/>
speakers Price Negot Call<lb/>
756 5323<lb/>
FURNITURE 2 maple frame<lb/>
arm chairs one end table Good<lb/>
Condition Price Negot Call<lb/>
756 5323<lb/>
GUITAR. Alvarez Yain Model<lb/>
DY 78 with hardshell case Ex<lb/>
cellent Cond Call 756 5323<lb/>
FRAP ACOUSTIC Guitar<lb/>
Pickups Unused, must sell S55 or<lb/>
best offer Call Danny at 757 1336<lb/>
ACC TOURNAMENT Tickets<lb/>
Sec N Row P seals 4 ' 5 Call<lb/>
758 S258<lb/>
SKIS K 2 ISScompBIOskiswith<lb/>
Soloman Bindings S12S Call<lb/>
757 3210 and leave number<lb/>
1978 CJ 5 Renegade, 3 speed, V-8<lb/>
excellent sound system hardtop<lb/>
sunrool, chrome rims, plus much<lb/>
more 757 I7IS<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share<lb/>
one bedroom apartment J75 plus<lb/>
one halt utilities. Call Scott at<lb/>
752 4S47 <lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
MS a month plus 12 utilities<lb/>
WasherDryer, nonsmoker plus<lb/>
serious student Vera 752 7185<lb/>
FURNISHED one bedroom apt<lb/>
for rent. May ?August Walking<lb/>
distance from campus Call<lb/>
758 7024<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE wanted<lb/>
For nicely furnished apt at<lb/>
Cypress Gardens Within Walking<lb/>
distance of campus Call 758 3894<lb/>
CYPRESS GARDEN One<lb/>
bedroom apartment to sublease<lb/>
J235 per month cable TV, low<lb/>
utilities Call 758 0467<lb/>
RESA What happened Sat night?<lb/>
Sure left a mark on your life or<lb/>
rather stomach Charlene. Heard<lb/>
you blew away the F B s, C B s,<lb/>
and the Marines Have you got<lb/>
something against Bean Bag<lb/>
Chairs?<lb/>
introducing<lb/>
the No. 1<lb/>
Sizzlin.<lb/>
Sirloin<lb/>
TO THE LOSER S TOMMY. If<lb/>
B stands for "Bacca what<lb/>
does "F" stand for? Flunk"?<lb/>
Mitch We enioyed the FREE<lb/>
Peter Adonis Show Sat nite There<lb/>
was definitely a lull moon that<lb/>
night BRIAN, Want some cocktail<lb/>
sauce? Go for it, Shrimp'<lb/>
MICHAEL, why do you take<lb/>
showers with your key in your<lb/>
mouth? Paranoid, huh? Still have<lb/>
slim trained? Bigger stall. Get<lb/>
urn young. Raise em right Go<lb/>
Jail Bait SLIM, Better watrh out<lb/>
Though you didn't want to get in<lb/>
volved Too Bad Paybacks are<lb/>
hell B'Cers<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL LADIES The<lb/>
men of Aycock Hall invite you to<lb/>
the Elbo this Thursday March 4<lb/>
from 7 until 9 15 You favorite<lb/>
beverage is free while it lasts<lb/>
After that we will have Happy<lb/>
Hour prices<lb/>
Western Sizzlin intjxxiuces<lb/>
the No 1 Sizzlin, our most pop-<lb/>
ular menu item USDA Choice<lb/>
western beef sirloin steak that<lb/>
?v comes<lb/>
complete<lb/>
with baked<lb/>
potato or<lb/>
french<lb/>
fries and<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
toast The<lb/>
No. 1<lb/>
Sizzlin is<lb/>
the star<lb/>
attraction<lb/>
at Western<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
NEED MONEY You won't get<lb/>
rich, but the East Carolinian has<lb/>
openings lor writers at the present<lb/>
time. There is also a possibilitv of<lb/>
raining for editor positions and<lb/>
raining on computer terminals.<lb/>
Apply at the East Carolinian of-<lb/>
ice, Old South Building<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHER NEEDED<lb/>
Apply with the Media Board<lb/>
secretary. Old South Building.<lb/>
757 600?1<lb/>
SERVICES<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. 110 for 8 x 10, black and<lb/>
white or coior. Call 752-5775<lb/>
TYPING: TERM, Thesis,<lb/>
Resumes, Dissertations, etc. Pro<lb/>
fessional quality at lowest rates<lb/>
Call Kempie Dunn anytime<lb/>
752 6733<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Call Amy at<lb/>
757 3734 <lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST: Term,<lb/>
Research, Dissertation, Thesis,<lb/>
etc. Fast and Efficient. Low<lb/>
Rates Call 757 1378 anytime<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST wants<lb/>
to type thesis, dissertations,<lb/>
nubhcations. manuscripts or term<lb/>
papers at home. Call 7S6 340<lb/>
RIDERS<lb/>
the 24-team field.<lb/>
On the third day of<lb/>
the tournament, ECU<lb/>
dropped another eight<lb/>
spots to finish 16th.<lb/>
Helmick explains the<lb/>
Pirates' finish by say-<lb/>
ing, "We beat the<lb/>
teams comparable to<lb/>
us. However, we're<lb/>
capable of beating<lb/>
some of the others if we<lb/>
had played better. Only<lb/>
two players played well<lb/>
each day, and it takes<lb/>
four to contend for<lb/>
team honors<lb/>
Home team Florida<lb/>
State won the classic<lb/>
with UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
a close second.<lb/>
Tournament favorite<lb/>
Mudd of Georgia<lb/>
Southern took the in-<lb/>
dividual honors with a<lb/>
69.6 average for the<lb/>
match.<lb/>
Inconsistency<lb/>
plagued the Pirates<lb/>
throughout the classic,<lb/>
says Helmick. "Don<lb/>
Gafner played the best<lb/>
due to his consistent<lb/>
scores he said. t<lb/>
Gafner finished with<lb/>
the best average for the<lb/>
Pirates with a 75.6.<lb/>
Mike Moye was next<lb/>
with a 76.3 average.<lb/>
Chris Czaja was close<lb/>
behind with a 77 for the<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
Other Pirate par-<lb/>
ticipants were Jerry Lee<lb/>
with a 77 and Don<lb/>
Sweeting with a 79.<lb/>
"We are capable of<lb/>
playing much better,<lb/>
and we should stress-<lb/>
ed Helmick.<lb/>
ABOH-nONSVTO<lb/>
ifthWEEKOF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
AMMtTtOMtPatOMIt-U<lb/>
AT 'IMTHM ?KMUMB <lb/>
?t?m Wwp? ???. ??<lb/>
Coatral. ??? pr)ftX44B<lb/>
(T?l ?r?a<lb/>
WniUMI<lb/>
aaaJSPJ i<lb/>
?avumi wottmw<lb/>
MI4.LTM<lb/>
0??aMttAT?ON<lb/>
tl?H?l?lflK<lb/>
? ???. at.C.<lb/>
Helmick and the<lb/>
Pirate golfers compete<lb/>
in the Fripp Island In-<lb/>
vitational in South<lb/>
Carolina this weekend.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Nashville TN<lb/>
Spring Break or any weekend<lb/>
Willing to 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/>
ATTN WILSON COMMUTERS:<lb/>
Responsible person to share rides<lb/>
daily to and from Wilson starting<lb/>
immediately. Call Sherry,<lb/>
243 3099. Need someone who com<lb/>
mutes everyday from 15.<lb/>
RIDE needed to Philadelphia area<lb/>
spring break. Will share expenses<lb/>
and driving call CJ. 754 1765.<lb/>
RIDER needed to Arkansas or<lb/>
anywhere along Interstate 40<lb/>
west Spring break Call 75 0204<lb/>
RIDE needed to Winston Salem<lb/>
area. Can leave after 4:00 on Fri<lb/>
day Call 754 1638<lb/>
WE ARE READY But we might<lb/>
miss the Boat. We need a ride to<lb/>
Florida for Spring Break Ready<lb/>
Willing and Able to share expenses<lb/>
and good times Call 758 7335 if you<lb/>
have room for us<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Ohio for Spring<lb/>
Break Call 758 8348<lb/>
I OR 2 roommates needed to share<lb/>
3 bedroom doublewide beginning<lb/>
April I or after Nice yard and<lb/>
area For more info call Connie<lb/>
758 7386. <lb/>
I NEED 2 riders to Orlando<lb/>
Florida leaving Friday Call Don<lb/>
na 758 4840<lb/>
CASH PAID FOR<lb/>
Dl AMONDS AND GOLD<lb/>
FLOYD G.<lb/>
ROBINSON<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
407 EVANS AAALL<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
JO SPARROW<lb/>
MIKE ROBINSON<lb/>
VALERIE HARRIS<lb/>
(919)758-2452<lb/>
YOUR INDEPENDENT<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
College<lb/>
Graduates<lb/>
BECOME A LAWYER'S ASSISTANT.<lb/>
? Program approved by American Bar Association<lb/>
? Day or Evening classes available<lb/>
? Employment assistance<lb/>
A Representative from The National Center for Paralegal<lb/>
Trainings Lawyers Assistant Program will be on campus<lb/>
on Tuesday. Mar 16, from 1:00 p.m. - 4:30 pm. at the<lb/>
Placement Office to meet interested students for more<lb/>
information contact the Placement Office or The "?f0<lb/>
Center for Paralegal Training. 3376 Peachtree Road. Nfc,<lb/>
Suite 430 Atlanta. Georgia 30326. 1404) 266-1060<lb/>
Please send me information about a career as a lawyers<lb/>
assistant<lb/>
Name<lb/>
State<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
Phone???<lb/>
College? ? "<lb/>
Yr Grad?<lb/>
1982<lb/>
SPRING DAY  SUMMER DAY FALL DAY<lb/>
FeD 8 May 7 June 10 - Sept 7 Sept 16 - Dec 21<lb/>
SPRING EVE FALL EVI<lb/>
Mar 16-Sept 18 Oct 19 - May 7<lb/>
THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR<lb/>
PARALEGAL TRAINING<lb/>
3376 Peachtree Rd NE<lb/>
Atlanta, Ga. 30326<lb/>
404 266-1060<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed Mar 3<lb/>
thru Sun Mar 6. 1982<lb/>
in Greenville<lb/>
Copyright 1982<lb/>
Kroger Savon<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold to Dealers<lb/>
W.J<lb/>
NO. 1<lb/>
SIZZLIN1<lb/>
SIRLOIN<lb/>
)M <lb/>
$3.39<lb/>
Mon &amp; Thurs<lb/>
Sp.m until<lb/>
Closing<lb/>
includes baked<lb/>
potato or French<lb/>
tries and Texas toast<lb/>
-?3<lb/>
i<lb/>
:l<lb/>
L<lb/>
fACOAIr<lb/>
Sizzlin. And it's awaiting your<lb/>
comments now!<lb/>
Two Greenville Locations<lb/>
2403 E 10th Street<lb/>
and 610 W Greenville Blvd<lb/>
?'li'ifX<lb/>
?5 ?<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
L<lb/>
1<lb/>
111<lb/>
I<lb/>
S<lb/>
7-THEY'RE<lb/>
f f RACKU<lb/>
Sweatshirts<lb/>
v<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd -Greenville<lb/>
Open 8 a.m. to Midnight<lb/>
Open Sunday 9 a.m. to 9 pm<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is re-<lb/>
quired to be readily available for sale in<lb/>
each Kroger Savon, except as specifical-<lb/>
ly noted in this ad. If we do run out of an<lb/>
item we will offer you your choice of a<lb/>
comparable item when available, reflec-<lb/>
ting the same savings or a raincheck<lb/>
which will entitle you to purchase the<lb/>
advertised item at the advertised price<lb/>
within 30 days<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
ADJUSTABLE<lb/>
Chaise<lb/>
Just in time<lb/>
for Spring Break!<lb/>
Limited suppl<lb/>
All sues avail;<lb/>
iy<lb/>
table.<lb/>
The pastels<lb/>
you wanted<lb/>
to show off<lb/>
your tan!<lb/>
(Available in<lb/>
pink and yellow<lb/>
only )<lb/>
COMING<lb/>
SOON:<lb/>
Lilac colored<lb/>
sweatshirts.<lb/>
Sweatpants<lb/>
in Lilac,<lb/>
Pink and Yellow.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
 ?.<lb/>
Blue<lb/>
PABST<lb/>
Ribbon<lb/>
f. <lb/>
Y<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
,12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
SUNKIST OB<lb/>
br 1<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
IP?PS?<lb/>
Ur.<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
NATURAL FLAVOR<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
$499<lb/>
v2-Gal. S<lb/>
Ctn. ?<lb/>
PEPPERIDGE FARMS<lb/>
LEMON COCONUT<lb/>
Cake<lb/>
$419<lb/>
Reg.<lb/>
$10.99<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
sou<lb/>
WASHINGTON STATE<lb/>
Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
,12.5-Oz<lb/>
Box<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
I<lb/>
fiat Qtfokfl<lb/>
<lb/>
.IIMM<lb/>
?-t.fcwini<lb/>
i him ? ?<lb/>
 x<lb/>
i <lb/>
f<lb/>
 <lb/>
J<lb/>
COST CUTTER<lb/>
Tea Bags<lb/>
10<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
60-<lb/>
SERVE N SAVE<lb/>
SLICED<lb/>
Luncheon Meat:<lb/>
$4 28<lb/>
1-Lb. m<lb/>
Pkg m<lb/>
ake a bit oj<lb/>
tL to Florida<lb/>
with you this year<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
SUPPLY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
Owned and operated by<lb/>
the University<lb/>
Wriqht Building<lb/>
Sale Continues<lb/>
on Shorts, T Shirts<lb/>
and Jackets ?<lb/>
March 15.<lb/>
A) ioo-ct.<lb/>
f , Box<lb/>
64-Oz<lb/>
Btl<lb/>
COST CUTTER<lb/>
Apple Juice<lb/>
14 09<lb/>
<lb/>
o<lb/>
1 tfoTJ-<lb/>
VAN CAMP'S<lb/>
pork 'n Beans<lb/>
<lb/>
16-Oz<lb/>
Can<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
COtMITICS<lb/>
IraAMANCIj<lb/>
a<lb/>
n<lb/>
<pb facs="00057463_0010"/><lb/>
 .<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 2,1982<lb/>
Put a LFPINC bumper sticker<lb/>
on your ear and you eould win<lb/>
i up to<lb/>
1000<lb/>
in FREE<lb/>
groceries<lb/>
Hundreds of winners weekly!<lb/>
Details at Food Town Stores.<lb/>
USDA Grade A Holly Farms<lb/>
4 lb?. - S.ift<lb/>
Hid - lirjt Ctlibralt<lb/>
20 lb. Bi US 1<lb/>
Hostess Hams Iceberg Lettuce White Potatoes<lb/>
TETLEY <lb/>
24 FAMILY SIZI<lb/>
TEA BAGS<lb/>
99<lb/>
24 C?. - Faarily Size<lb/>
Tetley<lb/>
Tea Bags<lb/>
Why Pay '1.49<lb/>
J99<lb/>
1.5 Liter - Cheeie Bloic, French ColeMiari,<lb/>
Ziefaadel, Bur?M?V Chablis. Rom Rhine<lb/>
Inglenook Navelle<lb/>
1.S Liter - 3er?n?e'y Ckebiit Rhiae,<lb/>
Rote, Ory Red, Pry White<lb/>
Taylor California<lb/>
Cellars<lb/>
4100<lb/>
7.25 Ox. -FtodTeeM<lb/>
Macaroni &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Why Pay 2 61<lb/>
$4,39<lb/>
48 Oaaee<lb/>
Food Town Oil<lb/>
Way Pay '1.87<lb/>
389<lb/>
1 Lb. - Mar?ariae Qaartert<lb/>
Shedd's Spread<lb/>
Way Pay 39 Eael<lb/>
32 Oaaee<lb/>
Duke's Mayonnaise<lb/>
Why Pay'1.35<lb/>
489.<lb/>
6 er 6.5 Oz. - TaatTaaa 8 Chicken Beef 8 Liver<lb/>
Turkey 8 Oiblets Cat Foee!<lb/>
Purina 100<lb/>
Why Pay 33 Each<lb/>
Why Pay 3.83<lb/>
Liquid Wisk wm Tater Boy<lb/>
$f79<lb/>
49 Oz. - With Sefteaer<lb/>
Fab Detergent<lb/>
WhyPay ?39<lb/>
Way Pay '2.09<lb/>
99<lb/>
32 Oanea<lb/>
Del Monte<lb/>
Catsup<lb/>
Why Pay M.19<lb/>
99<lb/>
Large<lb/>
Jeno's<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
Why Pay M 29<lb/>
$4,19<lb/>
42 Oaaee<lb/>
Bake Rite<lb/>
Shortening<lb/>
Prices good at Greenville Food Town Store only<lb/>
f<lb/>
!<lb/>
. <lb/>
<pb facs="00057463_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>