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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057466_0001"/>
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' emententers Report<lb/>
(7772 Occupational Outlook<lb/>
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On The Inside<lb/>
ECAC South Action<lb/>
Weather Watch<lb/>
Inside Index<lb/>
Commencement Ceremonies<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 16, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
J<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organiiation<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
In the announcements column<lb/>
please send the announcement (as<lb/>
brief as possible) typed and<lb/>
double-spaced to The East Caroli<lb/>
man in care of the production<lb/>
manager<lb/>
For better service, we are rjow<lb/>
asking that you pick up several<lb/>
copies of our new announcement<lb/>
application for your upcoming<lb/>
events.<lb/>
There is no charge for an<lb/>
nouncements. bu' space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as vou want<lb/>
and suggest that you do not rely<lb/>
solely on this column for publicity.<lb/>
The deadline for announcements<lb/>
is 5 p m Friday for the Tuesday<lb/>
papesr and 5pm Tuesday for the<lb/>
Thursday paper<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organisations and depart<lb/>
merits<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
ANDCORRECTIONS<lb/>
The Department of Social Work<lb/>
Correctional Services at Eas'<lb/>
Carolina University will offer a<lb/>
course 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 of<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 ol 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 Correctional Services, 314<lb/>
Allied Health Building The course<lb/>
has tentatively been scheduled to<lb/>
meet from 2 3 15 on Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday but this may be changed<lb/>
upon sufficient demand<lb/>
SURFCLUB<lb/>
Meeting wed (March 17) at 7<lb/>
p m in the Coffeehouse.<lb/>
MendenhaU Contest this<lb/>
weekend Bring all your ticket<lb/>
money! This meeting is very im<lb/>
portant so be there! Aloha<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
There will be an international<lb/>
Students Association meeting at<lb/>
the International House (306 E 9th<lb/>
Street! behind McDonalds' on<lb/>
Saturday, March 20 at 3 p m. All<lb/>
interested students are invited<lb/>
PHI KAPPATAU<lb/>
LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
Tnere will be a Little Sister<lb/>
Hush on Tuesday and Wednesday,<lb/>
March 16 and 17, at 9 30 There<lb/>
will be a mee'inq anpm each<lb/>
night ah Little Sisters are ex<lb/>
pectea to attend<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
Souls will have its annual Miss<lb/>
Souls Pageant on Sunday. March<lb/>
28 at 7 p m All 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/>
AMA<lb/>
The American Marketing<lb/>
Association will hold a meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday, March 17 in<lb/>
MendenhaU Room 221 at 4 p.m All<lb/>
members are encouraged to<lb/>
come! Please, be sure to bring one<lb/>
dollar it you would like to order a<lb/>
shirt<lb/>
ALL SING<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta would like to re<lb/>
mind all Fraternities and<lb/>
Sororities that the 1982 All Sing<lb/>
will be on Thursday. March 25 We<lb/>
hope to see everyone there<lb/>
PPHA 4<lb/>
The Preprotessional Health<lb/>
Al ,nce (PPHA) will have a<lb/>
meeting this Thursday, March IB<lb/>
This meeting will be held at 530<lb/>
p m at The Afro American<lb/>
Cultural Center AM members and<lb/>
any other interested parties are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
PHYSICAL EDUCATION<lb/>
The Physical Education<lb/>
Physical and Motor Fitness Test<lb/>
will be administered in Minges<lb/>
Colsieum at 1 p m on Tuesday.<lb/>
April 27 (Reading Day). Satisfac<lb/>
tory performance on this test is re<lb/>
quired as a prerequisite lor of<lb/>
ficial admittance to the Physical<lb/>
Education maiors program<lb/>
Satisfactory performance is also<lb/>
required on this test before one is<lb/>
allowed to student teach More<lb/>
detailed information concerning<lb/>
the test is available by calling<lb/>
757 6497<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter of Ph. Sgma Pi Na<lb/>
tionai Honor Fraternity wH meet<lb/>
at6pm Wednesday in 132 Austin<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
To all Correction and Social<lb/>
Work maiors and intended ma<lb/>
jors CORO is proud to sponsor<lb/>
Wilson's Director of Social Ser<lb/>
vices, Jerry White, as he speaks<lb/>
on "Social Worker's Look s<lb/>
Children's Homes " Please ioin<lb/>
Thurs . March 18 at 7 p m<lb/>
auditorium Refreshments will be<lb/>
served'<lb/>
HONORS SEMINAR<lb/>
Honors Seminar i36 HSEMl<lb/>
2070 Psychology Will be offered<lb/>
fall semester 1982 at 9 30 10 45<lb/>
TTh Dr Steve Tacker will in<lb/>
struct the course in seminar tor<lb/>
mat The 3s h course will parallel<lb/>
the PSYC 1050 51 introductory<lb/>
courses it is no' open to students<lb/>
who have completed those<lb/>
courses it is open to Honors<lb/>
students only lor social science or<lb/>
elective credit HSEM 2070 was m<lb/>
advertently omitted from the<lb/>
schedule in the newspaper<lb/>
EL SALVADOR<lb/>
Any students, faculty, or stall<lb/>
mteres'eo in pa'T.opatmg m The<lb/>
ECU Committee on F. i Salvador<lb/>
are welcome to rome to our<lb/>
meeting on Wednesday evening at<lb/>
9pm at the Baptist Student<lb/>
Center For more information.<lb/>
call 752 1002<lb/>
DAT<lb/>
The Dental Aptitude Test Will be<lb/>
ottered a' East Carolina Universi<lb/>
1y on Saturday. April 17, 1982 Ad<lb/>
plicat.on blanks are to be mailett<lb/>
in time to be received by the Divi<lb/>
Sion of Educational<lb/>
Measurements. American Dental<lb/>
Association 211 East Chicago<lb/>
Ave , Chicago, Illinois 60011 by<lb/>
Marcn 22, 1982 Applications may<lb/>
be obtained from the ECU Testing<lb/>
Center, Speight Building,<lb/>
Room 105<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
The Graduate Record Examma<lb/>
tion will be offered a' East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday,<lb/>
April 24, 1982 Application blanks<lb/>
are to be completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Service, Box<lb/>
966 R, Princeton, NJ 08540 Ap<lb/>
plications must be postmarked no<lb/>
later than March 19, 1982 Applied<lb/>
tions may be obtained from the<lb/>
ECU Testing Center, Room 105,<lb/>
Speight Bu'idmg<lb/>
Bahama<lb/>
Mama '82<lb/>
FALL SEMESTER 1982<lb/>
ROOM RESERVATION<lb/>
SIGN-UP INFORMA-<lb/>
TION<lb/>
Students who plan to return to<lb/>
East Carolina University Fall<lb/>
Semester 1982 and who wish to be<lb/>
guaranteed residence hall housing<lb/>
are required to reserve rooms dur-<lb/>
ing the week of March J2-26. Prior<lb/>
to reserving a room, a student<lb/>
must make an advance room pay-<lb/>
ment of W0 These payments,<lb/>
which must be accompanied by<lb/>
housing application contracts will<lb/>
be accepted in the Cashier's Of<lb/>
fice. Room 105, Spilman Building,<lb/>
beginning March 18. Application<lb/>
contracts may be obtained from<lb/>
the residence hall offices as of<lb/>
March 16.<lb/>
Room reservations are to be<lb/>
made in the respective residence<lb/>
hall offices according to the<lb/>
following schedule (Exceptions:<lb/>
Assignments for Fleming Hall will<lb/>
be made in office in Jarvis Hall<lb/>
and those for Umstead Hall will be<lb/>
made m Slay Hall.)<lb/>
Monday, March 22 and Tuesday,<lb/>
March 23: Students who wish to<lb/>
return to same rooms they<lb/>
presently occupy must reserve<lb/>
such rooms<lb/>
Wednesday, March 24 through<lb/>
Friday, March 25: All other retur<lb/>
n.ng students will be permitted to<lb/>
reserve rooms on a first come,<lb/>
first serve basis<lb/>
The hours for room assignments<lb/>
will be<lb/>
8 30 am to 12:30 p m<lb/>
1 30pm to 4 00 p m<lb/>
Returning students enrolled Spr<lb/>
ing Semester will have priority for<lb/>
residence hall housing for Fall<lb/>
Semester 1982 only if they reserve<lb/>
'ooms during the week of March<lb/>
? 26 Based on this, returning<lb/>
. 'udents who do not reserve rooms<lb/>
dumg the week of March 22 26 pro<lb/>
bably will be unable to live on<lb/>
campus Fan Semester<lb/>
THE WALK<lb/>
"The Walk" is only 2 weeks<lb/>
away Sign up to "walk" or soon<lb/>
sor a friend The 11th Annual<lb/>
"CROP WALK FOR HUMANI<lb/>
TY" will be held on April 3 at 8 30<lb/>
a m The money raised will be us-<lb/>
ed to help poor countries become<lb/>
sell sufficient. Church World Ser<lb/>
vice and The ECU Hunger Coali<lb/>
tion are working together on the<lb/>
"walk" sign up cards will be<lb/>
available from ECU campus<lb/>
ministers or from tables to be set<lb/>
up on campus next week More<lb/>
more information call 752 42)6 or<lb/>
come to our meetings at 7 30 p m<lb/>
on Thursdays at the Newman<lb/>
House<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
Be There<lb/>
Aloha!<lb/>
WATERSKIERS<lb/>
All serious recreational and<lb/>
competetive waterskiers In-<lb/>
terested in beginning a waterski<lb/>
dub on campus please contact<lb/>
Tracy Watson at 238 Aycock,<lb/>
phone 758 8895 by March II.<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
The Medical College Admission<lb/>
Test will be offered at East<lb/>
Carolina University on Saturday,<lb/>
April 24, 1982 Application blanks<lb/>
are to be completed and mailed to<lb/>
the American College Testing Pro-<lb/>
gram, P.O. Box 414, lowa City,<lb/>
Iowa 52240, to arrive by March 19.<lb/>
1982. Application blanks are<lb/>
available at the Testing Center,<lb/>
Speight Building, Room 105 East<lb/>
Carolina university<lb/>
ACTING<lb/>
Stephen B Finnan, formerly of<lb/>
ECU'S Drama and Speech Depart<lb/>
ment will be teaching an adult<lb/>
class in Beginning Acting starting<lb/>
Saturday, March 20, at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center, 5th and<lb/>
Holly Streets. The class will meet<lb/>
for ten consecutive Saturdays<lb/>
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and will in<lb/>
voive a registration fee of tt. For<lb/>
further information, call Mr Fin<lb/>
nan at 757 3546<lb/>
UNITED NATIONS<lb/>
Going to New York City for the<lb/>
2nd United Nations Special Ses<lb/>
sion on Disarmament? A group of<lb/>
ECU students, faculty and staff<lb/>
will be and an are invited to<lb/>
ptlgramidge with us. We have a<lb/>
local campaign working on the UN<lb/>
proiect that meets on Friday even<lb/>
ngsat6 30p.m We meet at 610 S.<lb/>
Elm Si For further information<lb/>
call 758 4906<lb/>
BAHAMA MAMA '82<lb/>
The 19(2 Bahama Mama Party<lb/>
sponsored by the Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Fraternity will be held Thursday,<lb/>
April 1, 198 starting at 8 p.m. at<lb/>
he Kappa Sigma across from<lb/>
Unstead dorm on 10th Street.<lb/>
Grand Prize is an all expense paid<lb/>
trip to Nassau, Bahamas. Tickets<lb/>
are SI ? piece on sale now For in<lb/>
formation call 752 5543.<lb/>
PITT COUNTY HEALTH<lb/>
FAIR<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
School of Medicine is recruiting<lb/>
nonmedical and medical<lb/>
volunteers for the Pitt County<lb/>
Health Fair. The Health Fair is be<lb/>
ing sponsored in conjunction with<lb/>
WRAL TV and will be held Thurs<lb/>
day, April 22 through Saturday<lb/>
April 24 at Carolina East Mall in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
The hours for the Health fair will<lb/>
be from 10:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
If you are interested in working a<lb/>
shift as a volunteer, please contact<lb/>
Barbara Berman or Ann Dill at<lb/>
the Office of Health Services<lb/>
Research and Development, ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine, 757 6510 or<lb/>
757 6735.<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 enjoy the sun and tun over Spr<lb/>
ing Break 1982 and then come<lb/>
down to the Elbo the 16th and show<lb/>
us your tan!<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 profes<lb/>
sionals in 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/>
coping with terminal illness. It is<lb/>
designed to assist in understan<lb/>
dmg of the conditions and pro<lb/>
blems involved m facing death,<lb/>
dying and survivorship.<lb/>
Awareness, values, and attitudes<lb/>
are stressed as they relate to pro<lb/>
fessional practice.<lb/>
SocW 5001: Human Behavior<lb/>
and the Social Environment is<lb/>
designed to assist individuals in<lb/>
the development of a social<lb/>
systems concept of the bid<lb/>
psycho social elements of man's<lb/>
being 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/>
hours each week The time will be<lb/>
announced. Students may be<lb/>
allowed 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 BuHding<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N.C 27834<lb/>
(919 757 6961)<lb/>
BINGOICECREAM<lb/>
There will be a Bingoice Cream<lb/>
Party for al ECU students, faculty<lb/>
and staff and their dependents on<lb/>
Tuesday. March 16 in the Muiti<lb/>
Purpose Room of Mendennaii Stu<lb/>
dent Center from 7.00 PM 8 30<lb/>
PM. Play bingo, eat ice cream,<lb/>
win prizes and have fun ail ab<lb/>
soiutely free! !<lb/>
PREPPY PROGRAM<lb/>
REFUNDS<lb/>
If you have not yet turned in<lb/>
your tickets for the Official Prep<lb/>
py Program with Lisa Birnbach<lb/>
(originally scheduled for<lb/>
February 9). you must do so by<lb/>
Friday, March 19 You can get<lb/>
your refund by bringing your<lb/>
ticket by the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
in MendenhaU Monday through<lb/>
Friday from 10 a m to 4 p m<lb/>
There will be NO refunds after<lb/>
March 19 Agam, we apologize for<lb/>
the cancellation<lb/>
GROUNDZERO<lb/>
Get involved ? A campus pro<lb/>
ject to discuss and look for ways to<lb/>
avoid Nuclear War Numerous<lb/>
campus groups will be involved m<lb/>
this most crucial issue during<lb/>
"Ground Zero Week" April 18 to<lb/>
25. Plan a program, hold a study<lb/>
group, or join some other groups<lb/>
already working on proiects For<lb/>
further information call 752 4216<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
The International Language<lb/>
Organization will be having a<lb/>
meeting on March 17 at 2 p m m<lb/>
BC 301 Elections for next year s<lb/>
officers will be held and an<lb/>
members must attend All m<lb/>
terested people are welcome to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
"SPRING" into action with<lb/>
receation a' Mendenhai Student<lb/>
Center Specials scheduled<lb/>
throughout the Spring Semester<lb/>
offer something for everone For<lb/>
conplete information visit the<lb/>
recreational area at MendenhaU<lb/>
or call 757 6611. Ext 260<lb/>
Specials include<lb/>
DISCOUNT DAYS lJ OFF reg<lb/>
prices?3'00 PM 5 30 PM<lb/>
Billards and Table Ten<lb/>
nis Tuesdays<lb/>
Bowlmq Fridays<lb/>
RED PIN BOWLING 7 00<lb/>
PM 10 00 PM. every Sunday<lb/>
Chance to win one ll) FREE<lb/>
GAME with everi game bowled<lb/>
FACULTY STAFF DAY Every<lb/>
Wednesday from 5 00 PM 8 00<lb/>
PM ECU faculty and stall MSC<lb/>
members may bowl 2 games and<lb/>
get a 3rd game free<lb/>
MOONLIGHT BOWLING Sun<lb/>
days 5 00 PM 7 00 PM Bow! in<lb/>
moonlight' and have a Chanci "<lb/>
win a FREE GAME One winner<lb/>
each hour at fne Bowling Center<lb/>
RENT A<lb/>
LANE- Saturdays 17 00 N 6 00<lb/>
PM S3 00 per hour per lane<lb/>
REVIVAL<lb/>
The Fountain of Life Christian<lb/>
Fellowship will be having its an<lb/>
nual Spring Revival March 18 'V<lb/>
and 20 m Jenkins Auditor,urr<lb/>
Various speakers and chdrs w<lb/>
be present each n.gnt Ser.<lb/>
start each night at 7 00 p m and<lb/>
everyone is invited to attend<lb/>
BAHA'I<lb/>
A general meeting of the<lb/>
BAHA'I Association ol ECU w<lb/>
be held tonight al J pm il<lb/>
msc Coffeehouse<lb/>
and anyone interested in ? ?<lb/>
about the BAHA ? ? '?<lb/>
welcome to attend For 'nor.<lb/>
formationall '58 9530 '?' '47 I<lb/>
ST. PATRICK'S DAY<lb/>
The Recreation Students of ECU<lb/>
are planning a St Patrick's Day<lb/>
Celebration for residents and<lb/>
fam.ly of Greenviile V'lla Nu'Sing<lb/>
Home The event will take place<lb/>
March 17 at 7 p m in the dining<lb/>
room Pieftse come! There <lb/>
food, prizes and fon1<lb/>
The East C arolinian<lb/>
Serving tkt emmpta ? ommumii<lb/>
MKI<lb/>
Published every Tuesday ano<lb/>
Thursday during the ad<lb/>
year and every Wednesday au'<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is ?<lb/>
f.oal newspaper of Eas'<lb/>
Carolina Univeri fy wneo<lb/>
operated, ano published for and<lb/>
by the students of East Carol,na<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate $20 year w<lb/>
The East Carolinian officer<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus ol ECU<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address<lb/>
changes to The Eas' Care<lb/>
Old South Building. <lb/>
ville, NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 7S7 6364. 6367 630V<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
INTERVARSITY<lb/>
Hope you all had a god Spring<lb/>
Break Let s start the last half of<lb/>
the semester out right Come to In<lb/>
tervarsity Christian Fellowship<lb/>
Wednesday night at 7 30 in Room<lb/>
221 of MendenhaU Buddy Medlon<lb/>
will speak this week on "Why<lb/>
Christianity is Unique "<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Applications for (82 83) Honor<lb/>
Council menbers ar being taken<lb/>
m the SGA Office, 228 MendenhaU<lb/>
Student Center Between 8 00 a.m.<lb/>
and 5 00 p m . Monday thru Fn<lb/>
day<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
The Cooperative Education Of<lb/>
fice, located m 313 Rawl Building,<lb/>
currently has lOb openings for Fall<lb/>
'83 Interested students should<lb/>
stop by today to complete the<lb/>
necessary forms and to sign up 'or<lb/>
interviews<lb/>
NIH A representative from<lb/>
the National Institutes of Health.<lb/>
Bethesda. MO will be on campus<lb/>
March 22 and 23 to interview<lb/>
?turt?n' Mho wotd Ufc. to work in<lb/>
a clinical setting as Normal<lb/>
Volunteers Students will be paid<lb/>
daily stipends All interested<lb/>
students must attend a general<lb/>
meeting ai 730 p.m. on Monday,<lb/>
March 22 before having inter<lb/>
views<lb/>
Navy A representative from<lb/>
the Navy Civilian Personnel Office<lb/>
will be on campus March 23 and 24<lb/>
to interview students Jobs are<lb/>
available throughout the US<lb/>
They are primarily interested in<lb/>
the following majors Business.<lb/>
Computer Science, Psychology,<lb/>
Sociology, Accounting Finance,<lb/>
industrial Technology, and Prin<lb/>
ting Management Related majors<lb/>
are also encouraged to apply<lb/>
Japanese Courtesy Aimed At Compensation<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
Imagine a part<lb/>
malfunctioning on your<lb/>
car resulting in a fatal<lb/>
accident and killing one<lb/>
of your family<lb/>
members riding with<lb/>
you. Would you expect<lb/>
the president of Ford,<lb/>
General Motors, or<lb/>
some other corporation<lb/>
to pay your family a<lb/>
personal visit to<lb/>
apologize and pay<lb/>
homage on his knees?<lb/>
Well, that's what<lb/>
recently happened in<lb/>
Japan when Yasumoto<lb/>
Takagi, president of<lb/>
Japan Air Lines,<lb/>
"embarked on a so-<lb/>
journ of obligation" to<lb/>
the 24 families who lost<lb/>
loved ones in a recent<lb/>
air crash.<lb/>
It is the expected<lb/>
common,behavior of a<lb/>
top corporate exec-<lb/>
utive to personally<lb/>
apologize to the vic-<lb/>
tim's family and join in<lb/>
the eulogy praying. As<lb/>
of yet none of the 24<lb/>
families have filed suits<lb/>
to gain compensation<lb/>
from the airline.<lb/>
Negotiations will be<lb/>
conducted n a family-<lb/>
to-family basis and<lb/>
compensation will be<lb/>
given after various fac-<lb/>
tors are considered,<lb/>
such as the victims'<lb/>
age, salary, and their<lb/>
responsibilities to their<lb/>
families. Liability com-<lb/>
pensation for air<lb/>
crashes, although now<lb/>
legally limited to<lb/>
$140,000, is always<lb/>
negotiable, according<lb/>
to a Japan Air Lines<lb/>
spokesman.<lb/>
"Generally they (the<lb/>
Japanese) place a much<lb/>
higher value on social<lb/>
harmony then on the<lb/>
rights of the in-<lb/>
dividual said Carl J.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Souths<lb/>
No. 6<lb/>
Rock<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
TUESDAY; MARCH 16<lb/>
FOUR TH A NNUA L SPRING ZING<lb/>
WING DING FLING THING<lb/>
THRUSH<lb/>
?FREE ADMISSION FOR<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
LOTS AND LOTS OF PRIZES<lb/>
DISCOUNT BEER DISCOUNT BEER<lb/>
WED, MARCH 17<lb/>
SKIP CASTRO<lb/>
?REDUCED ADMISSION FOR<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
AOT<lb/>
"NO<lb/>
MORE<lb/>
MR.NICE<lb/>
guy:<lb/>
"I'm not my old lovable<lb/>
self when I'm around<lb/>
cigarettes. I get real<lb/>
cranky. So 1 want ali you !<lb/>
smokers to quit once<lb/>
and for all. And who<lb/>
knows? You might even<lb/>
put a smile on my face<lb/>
American Cancer Society i<lb/>
presents<lb/>
BEST TAN<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
Prizes:<lb/>
1st ? $75.00<lb/>
Tuesday, March 16<lb/>
plus weekend for two at Atlantic Beach<lb/>
wJet Ski Rentals 1 yr. free pass to the ELBO<lb/>
2nd ? $50.00<lb/>
plus keg ? plus 1 yr. free pass<lb/>
to the ELBO<lb/>
3rd ? - $25.00   "Si'SET,rM <lb/>
Admission ? $1 00 plus PrlIes ,or ?'? other contestants<lb/>
Doors open at 1:30 Contestants can sign up at Student Book Store Lobby<lb/>
Entries sign up at ELBO AM DaV Thursday. Friday, and Monday<lb/>
SIS;<lb/>
by:<lb/>
?' Design<lb/>
"ft<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
Jock's Stack House<lb/>
Jeffries Boer &amp; Wine<lb/>
SportsworM<lb/>
oooy anoppe<lb/>
Jomtoit's Stables<lb/>
Flower Basket<lb/>
Toads Stereo<lb/>
Heart' Delight<lb/>
Morgan Printers<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
Sammy's Country Cooking<lb/>
Green, a Washington,<lb/>
D.C. attorney and<lb/>
senior research fellow<lb/>
at the Harvard Law<lb/>
School. Green<lb/>
specializes in the<lb/>
Japanese legal system.<lb/>
"In Japan suing is a<lb/>
last resort Green<lb/>
said. The Japanese<lb/>
"don't like to sharpen<lb/>
the conflict un-<lb/>
necessarily<lb/>
Green also aded that<lb/>
monetary damages are<lb/>
only part of the com-<lb/>
pensation. "People are<lb/>
less mad and less likely<lb/>
to squeeze every dollar<lb/>
of compensation out of<lb/>
the legal system (in<lb/>
Japan)<lb/>
In contrast, 12 suits<lb/>
have already been filed<lb/>
by families of the vic-<lb/>
tims in the Jan. 13 Air<lb/>
Florida crash in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. kill-<lb/>
ing 78 people.<lb/>
Just over 160,000<lb/>
civil suits were filed in<lb/>
Japan in 1979, accor-<lb/>
ding to an article in i he<lb/>
New York Times,<lb/>
"while the comparable<lb/>
total in the United<lb/>
States was several<lb/>
million Japan also<lb/>
only has approximately<lb/>
10,000 lawyers com-<lb/>
pared to nearly 500,000<lb/>
in the United States.<lb/>
This "lack of<lb/>
litigiousness in Japan is<lb/>
often cited as an<lb/>
economic advantage<lb/>
said the Times story.<lb/>
"The Japanese, it is<lb/>
said, do not spend<lb/>
much time, money, or<lb/>
energy suing each other<lb/>
but, instead, concen-<lb/>
trate on outproducing<lb/>
other nations<lb/>
Japan has a cohesive<lb/>
culture and has tradi-<lb/>
tionally shunned open<lb/>
confrontation that<lb/>
could often lead to law<lb/>
suits.<lb/>
"The Japanese<lb/>
prefer traditional<lb/>
methods of conflict<lb/>
resolution said<lb/>
Green. He noted<lb/>
"conciliation, media-<lb/>
tion and alike<lb/>
Green added that in-<lb/>
dividuals identify with<lb/>
a group. "Groups are<lb/>
much more important<lb/>
(in Japan)<lb/>
Negotiations for<lb/>
compensation generally<lb/>
will go more smoothlv<lb/>
because of the Japanese<lb/>
corporations' will-<lb/>
ingness to bear legal as<lb/>
well as moral respon-<lb/>
sibilities for a misfor-<lb/>
tune.<lb/>
In the Japanese<lb/>
airline case it was deter-<lb/>
mined that the Japar<lb/>
Air lines pilot, Seiji<lb/>
Katagiri, was responsi-<lb/>
ble for the accident<lb/>
when he suffered an<lb/>
emotional breakdown<lb/>
during the landing.<lb/>
Something<lb/>
Personal To Say'<lb/>
 r<lb/>
Whisper It In<lb/>
Our Classitieds<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
SHOP AT<lb/>
OVERTON'S<lb/>
AND SAVE<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON<lb/>
5 DISCOUNT<lb/>
on all orders $10.00<lb/>
or more.<lb/>
Expires 3-20-82.<lb/>
Student Name.<lb/>
ID Number<lb/>
Amt. of Purchase.<lb/>
"I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
211 Jarvis St.<lb/>
2 Blocks from ECU<lb/>
Overton s<lb/>
Supermarket, Inc.<lb/>
'Home of Greenville's Best Meats"<lb/>
Coupons will expire Saturday night<lb/>
of the week they are run.<lb/>
<lb/>
This week expires 3-20-82<lb/>
t<lb/>
! h VN<lb/>
Novei<lb/>
numl<lb/>
quart<lb/>
anticil<lb/>
He<lb/>
plans<lb/>
the r<lb/>
dustril<lb/>
!<lb/>
usual!<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
11<lb/>
M ar k I<lb/>
j<lb/>
a<lb/>
I ?!<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
I<lb/>
ind 'I<lb/>
i<lb/>
of ina<lb/>
nual<lb/>
1<lb/>
"r I<lb/>
indu<lb/>
1: i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057466_0003"/><lb/>
THh LAST CAROt INIAN MARCH 16. 1982<lb/>
nan<lb/>
dV<lb/>
In<lb/>
leds<lb/>
Job Prospects Grim<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
thwestern.<lb/>
'Changes occurred from<lb/>
November (when the Endicott<lb/>
numbers were gathered) to the first<lb/>
quarter of this year that were not<lb/>
anticipated Lindquist explained.<lb/>
He blamed the changes in hiring<lb/>
plans on rocky economic times in<lb/>
the retailing, metals and oil in-<lb/>
dustries.<lb/>
'The basic metals industries are<lb/>
usual!) heavy recruiters, and they<lb/>
are barely holding their own this<lb/>
ear Lindquist observed. "The oil<lb/>
industry, which has had enormous<lb/>
growth the last few years, has had to<lb/>
pull back this year in response to<lb/>
falling gas prices. They are tradi-<lb/>
tionally heavy recruiters, and it has<lb/>
caught many by surprise<lb/>
Virginia Benfield, manager of<lb/>
college recruiting for Fexaco, Inc<lb/>
confirmed that "last year, no one in<lb/>
the industry expected the economy<lb/>
to be this bad<lb/>
She said she anticipated "our hir-<lb/>
ing will fall short of our projec-<lb/>
tions but she said Texaco, for<lb/>
one, is "just leveling off at a more<lb/>
predictable rate of hiring<lb/>
The continuing problems of the<lb/>
auto industry have also depressed<lb/>
campus recruiting, especially in the<lb/>
midwest.<lb/>
"Some of our regulars are tied to<lb/>
the automotive industry, and that<lb/>
has been a problem said Pat<lb/>
Markle of Western Kentucky<lb/>
University. "Some of our regulars<lb/>
just aren'1 hiring, and some of the<lb/>
recruiters who set up dates to inter-<lb/>
view have had to call and cancel<lb/>
"I tell them to come back when<lb/>
thev can see daylight again she ad-<lb/>
ded.<lb/>
Such reports contradict most of<lb/>
the student job market predictions<lb/>
made just last fall.<lb/>
The Endicott Report predicted ac-<lb/>
celerated campus recruiting in many<lb/>
industries, with average starting<lb/>
salaries rising nine percent. The Col-<lb/>
lege Placement Council's survey of<lb/>
551 recruiters also uncovered<lb/>
widespread corporate expectations<lb/>
o' increased college hiring. The an-<lb/>
nual Michigan State survey o' 428<lb/>
businesses, however, cautioned that<lb/>
"pockets of prosperity" would<lb/>
balance out hiring declines in some<lb/>
industries.<lb/>
It is turning out differently. Hir-<lb/>
ing of even highly-prized engineer-<lb/>
ing majors is meerly "holding<lb/>
steady according to Johns<lb/>
Hopkins placement head Sharon<lb/>
Baughan. Baughan did caution that<lb/>
"it's too early to make statistical<lb/>
comparisons" to last year.<lb/>
"A recent increase in the numbers<lb/>
of chemical engineering students has<lb/>
brought in new interest from steel<lb/>
and related industries she added.<lb/>
Generally, the placement officers<lb/>
credit defense-related industries'<lb/>
recruiting with keeping student in-<lb/>
terview traffic close to last year's<lb/>
levels.<lb/>
"Twenty to 25 percent of the<lb/>
overall defense spending increases<lb/>
will directly benefit California<lb/>
said Cal State-Sacramento's Mit-<lb/>
chell, "and it shows<lb/>
"Recruitment is up three-to-five<lb/>
percent in technical areas, and I<lb/>
would guess it's up over 50 percent<lb/>
in defense-related industries he<lb/>
said. "Instead of sending one<lb/>
recruiter, the defense-related com-<lb/>
panies are sending in three or four.<lb/>
They're going into the classrooms<lb/>
and dorms to seek students out<lb/>
At Johns Hopkins, the defense-<lb/>
related firms are also "doing a brisk<lb/>
business Baughan said. But at<lb/>
Yanderbilt, Sellers reported "they<lb/>
seem to be keeping it close to the<lb/>
chest<lb/>
Across the country, Lindquisl<lb/>
says "prime defense contractors are<lb/>
showing outstanding strength, and<lb/>
so are those who supply them<lb/>
The military itself has stepped up<lb/>
recruiting, especially of liberal arts<lb/>
majors. However. Mitchell said that<lb/>
student desires "for something a lit-<lb/>
tle more glamorous than the armed<lb/>
forces" has inspired a renewed in-<lb/>
terest in other government agencies.<lb/>
"Applications to the CIA are wav.<lb/>
way up<lb/>
CIA recruitment chief Charles<lb/>
Jackson confirmed "we are very ac-<lb/>
tively recruiting<lb/>
When it comes to liberal arts ma-<lb/>
jors, "we're trying to widen our net<lb/>
a little But "someone with a<lb/>
general background needs the best<lb/>
G.P.A must be a top-of-the-line<lb/>
student<lb/>
Jackson attributes the rise in ap-<lb/>
plications less to a fallout from<lb/>
military recruiting and more to an<lb/>
improved CIA image. "Our bad<lb/>
press is behind us now<lb/>
Student job competition seems to<lb/>
be stiffer in all fields. Because of ris-<lb/>
ing unemployment among older<lb/>
workers, Lindquist said he thinks<lb/>
"it's valid to say students will be<lb/>
competing with a greater number of<lb/>
older, experienced job seekers this<lb/>
year. The advantage goes to the<lb/>
kids, whose education in new<lb/>
technologies makes them more cur-<lb/>
rent in the marketplace<lb/>
M.l.T. Placement Director<lb/>
Robert Weatherall agreed, saying<lb/>
mobility is the major competitive<lb/>
edge students have.<lb/>
"Often a person with a mortgage<lb/>
and a family can't afford to move.<lb/>
But all that a student generally<lb/>
needs is a damage deposit and a<lb/>
IHaul trailer<lb/>
But I indquist warned stiffer com-<lb/>
petition requires students to adopt<lb/>
"a whole new perspective on the<lb/>
recruitment process. The days are<lb/>
gone when they can throw as much<lb/>
bullshit on the wall as they can, and<lb/>
wait to see what sticks<lb/>
ECU Retirees Student Emergency Fund Established<lb/>
Photo By MARIANNE BAINES<lb/>
Retired faculty members celebrated ECU! 75th anniversary on Founder's Da, March 8, b presenting a $7,500<lb/>
gift to establish a permanent student financial aid fund. Interest-free emergency loans will be administered b the<lb/>
student financial aid office with "no strings attached according to Dr. Richard C. Todd (far right), who headed<lb/>
the retired faculty committee. Also pictured are (left to right) Dr. Henry Wanderman, acting chancellor Dr. John<lb/>
M. Howell, Dr. Mildred Southwick, Elizabeth Drake, Louise Williams, Lawrence Brewster and Lee Williams.<lb/>
the No. 3<lb/>
Marshall<lb/>
Dillon<lb/>
ex. thatfs<lb/>
the No. 3 Marshall<lb/>
Old standards never fade<lb/>
away; they seem to get better<lb/>
and better. And like Marshall<lb/>
Dillon, the No. 3 Marshall at<lb/>
Western Sizzlin is a long time<lb/>
standard. Broiled sirloin tips<lb/>
with bell peppers and onions,<lb/>
served with your choice of<lb/>
potato, baked<lb/>
or fried, and<lb/>
Texas toast<lb/>
OnoeyouVe<lb/>
tried the No.<lb/>
3 Marshall,<lb/>
you are sure<lb/>
to be back<lb/>
again and<lb/>
again to West<lb/>
ern Sizzlin.<lb/>
NO. 3<lb/>
BEEF<lb/>
TIPS<lb/>
WITH PEPPERS<lb/>
AND ONIONS<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
izzun<lb/>
.10 W. Greenville Blvd.<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 AAemor lal Drive.<lb/>
Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
s<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town ? Honest<lb/>
Drive-Up<lb/>
Window for<lb/>
To Go Orders<lb/>
Every Day - Butt 11:00-2:0?2.79<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tu?l. - Buffet 50-8:00 2.89<lb/>
Wed. - "AM YoeCoeEef'Spoakeiti $4000 2.25<lb/>
Tkura. - Lasogna 54000Twofor3.$0<lb/>
THURSDAY, MARCH 18<lb/>
BIKINI CONTEST<lb/>
Doors open at 9:00<lb/>
1st PRIZE ? $100 plus merchandise<lb/>
2nd PRIZE ? $50 plus merchandise<lb/>
3rd PRIZE ?$25 plus merchandise<lb/>
Interested participants call 355-2615<lb/>
EM SHOE SHOP<lb/>
II3W4THSTHEET PHONE 758 0204<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
2 DOORS FROM COX FLORIST<lb/>
We repair Shoes, Boots, Hand<lb/>
bags, Belts and some suitcases.<lb/>
We now have Leather and<lb/>
Leather Goods for sell.<lb/>
Large selection ot leather tooled belts<lb/>
Come by P'Ck out one ot our desiqns Let<lb/>
us makp you one<lb/>
With the price ot NEW SHOES, we can<lb/>
save you money by havinq your old ones<lb/>
repaired<lb/>
.i ?<lb/>
Gl Camouflaged Fatigues and<lb/>
T Shirts. Sleeping Bags.<lb/>
Backpacks Camping Equip<lb/>
ment, Steel Toed Shoes.<lb/>
Dishes and over 700 Different<lb/>
Items. Cowboy Boots S3 ?5<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
I SOI S Evans<lb/>
m<lb/>
h<lb/>
anjfe?<lb/>
?ccn<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
I 24 week terminations<lb/>
App'ts. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1-800-321-0575<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
It M . it Print!<lb/>
? r ? ? ? .<lb/>
?? ' i<lb/>
MORGAN PRINTERS<lb/>
INC<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 13 16<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
1185 00 Pregnancy Test. Birth<lb/>
Control, and Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling For fur<lb/>
ther information call 832 0533<lb/>
(Toll Free Number<lb/>
800 221 2S?8) between v AM<lb/>
and 5 P M Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
?17 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh, N C<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
DENS<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S NEWEST BANQUET<lb/>
AND PARTY FACILITY<lb/>
(FORMERLY BALLENTINE'S BUFFET<lb/>
PITT PLAZA. GPEENVILLE)<lb/>
Winter &amp; Spring<lb/>
??FORMALS<lb/>
MEETINGS<lb/>
BANQUETS<lb/>
COMPLETE M)OI NhK 1(1 , All B1 I<lb/>
SPECIALIZING IN CM IslDIAll KIM,<lb/>
Ik<lb/>
tall BOB SAL TLR<lb/>
355-2361 OR 756-0842<lb/>
COHVtNIIHT LOCATION AmPLI f'AfclUNCi<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
u<lb/>
 JP cf r4G<lb/>
<lb/>
c<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
<lb/>
yj<lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
9<lb/>
6 - liSjr <lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
REQUESTING<lb/>
FUNDS FROM THE S.G.A.<lb/>
The SGA recently approved an annual budget resolution. Student groups<lb/>
requesting funds from the SGA are allowed to submit a budget for the<lb/>
1982-83 school year for consideration by the Spring SGA Legislature. The<lb/>
budgets must be submitted by 5:00 p.m. Monday, March 22, 1982, to the<lb/>
SGA office.<lb/>
When the budget is reviewed and approved, funds will be available at the<lb/>
beginning of the fiscal year (July 1, 1982). Budgets not submitted by March<lb/>
22 will not be considered by the Legislature until the Fall Semester.<lb/>
No funds will be appropriated over the summer months except for summer<lb/>
projects or cases with special circumstances as determined by summer<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
IN ALL CASES BUDGETS MUST BE SUBMITTED ACCORDING TO<lb/>
STATE LINE-ITEM CODES.<lb/>
Copies of line-item codes and SGA appropriations guidelines are available on<lb/>
request in the SGA office.<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
THRUSH<lb/>
4th Annual Spring<lb/>
Zing Wing Ding Fling Thing<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
SKIP CASTRO<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
? ? PKM ? ?<lb/>
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY<lb/>
EAZE<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
Soiree De La Fern me<lb/>
? Eaze ? Kidd Blast ?<lb/>
Driver <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
11<lb/>
im<lb/>
TUES. - LADIES' NITE<lb/>
wGENTLEMAN JIM &amp; PIZZA SPECIAL<lb/>
WED. - SALAD BAR SPECIAL<lb/>
THURS. - SPAGHETTI SPECIAL<lb/>
FRI. - HAPPY HOUR 4-7<lb/>
WINE SPEC. - SMOKEY &amp; STEVE<lb/>
SAT. - HAPPY HOUR 4-7<lb/>
WINE SPEC. - BRUCE FRYE<lb/>
SUN. - LASAGNA SPECIAL<lb/>
MON. - COUNTRY COOKING<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA S<lb/>
PARTY CENTER<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
Back<lb/>
E.C.U.<lb/>
Students<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
BEST TAN CONTEST<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
HUMP NITE<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
BULLPEN NITK<lb/>
1st beverage ? 25 wtichet stub<lb/>
from ECU baseball game ? Thurs March <lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
END OF WK. PARTY<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
BEST IN DANCE MUSIC<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
LADIES' NITE<lb/>
111111 i<lb/>
I I I I I I I M I I I I I I X I I I 1 I 1<lb/>
I<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Mon. Sat.<lb/>
? :30a.m.<lb/>
I 00a.m<lb/>
 It takes 12 inches<lb/>
to make a hero . . .<lb/>
Deli Sandwich - Salads -<lb/>
Veajtorian Sandwiches<lb/>
H?.?.?-ride Sount Heroes on tresM baked rolls<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
HARRY &amp; SCRAPPY<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
KURT FORTMEYER<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
TERRY SILVESTER<lb/>
(farewell experience)<lb/>
NOW OPEN SUNDAYS<lb/>
Good food ? Good Times<lb/>
VIDEOGAMES<lb/>
Attitude Adiustment Daily ? a.m. 7 p.m<lb/>
(EljapfrrX<lb/>
' 'Eastern North Carolina's<lb/>
No. I Beach Club"<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
Zoo Nile ? 25C ponies<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Ladies' Night<lb/>
Free Draft for<lb/>
all ladies'<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Happy Hour ? Free<lb/>
Free Admission till 10<lb/>
25 Ponies till 11.<lb/>
FRIDAY AFTERNOON<lb/>
END OF THE WEEK<lb/>
BUCKET PARTY<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
NICKEL NITE<lb/>
Call 752 ?74S tor mare info.<lb/>
r-ffp?Rfir-<lb/>
109 E. 5th St. 752 1361<lb/>
GOOD TIMES<lb/>
MARCH 20th<lb/>
SKIP &amp; FRIENJDS<lb/>
Darts Mon. at 8:00<lb/>
Free Pinball 3-4<lb/>
Happy Hour 4-7<lb/>
Largest selection<lb/>
of imports<lb/>
Mow opendays a wee ? 3 p.m. 1 a.m.<lb/>
M? EAST Sth STREET<lb/>
7M 0711<lb/>
Cartoon Contest<lb/>
Call f or details ?752:8711<lb/>
NOW OPEN FOR<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
DAILY AT 4:30<lb/>
Not open to the general public.<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057466_0004"/><lb/>
QUje Saat (Earaltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree, smmmcm<lb/>
Charles Chandler, ?????,? ?,?<lb/>
Ric Browning, o,mwoj Advtnwnt Tom Hall, ? ?,<lb/>
Fielding Miller, Bui??, Ma William Yelverton, SPor,s mm<lb/>
Alison Bartel, ??? mmm Steve Bachner, ????,?,?,?, Edllor<lb/>
Steve Moore, cmuh Mon?fr Diane Anderson, so ????<lb/>
March 16. 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
Slow Start Leads To Blazing Finish<lb/>
Sometimes persistence does pay<lb/>
off.<lb/>
For example, consider East<lb/>
Carolina's Lady Pirate basketball<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
After a disappointing 62-56 loss<lb/>
to nationally ranked N.C. State in<lb/>
their second outing of the season,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates suffered back-to-<lb/>
back losses to Villanova and New<lb/>
Hampshire in the Montclair State<lb/>
Dial Classic. Later, a four game<lb/>
road trip netted only an 80-61 win<lb/>
over Miami of Ohio in the Miami<lb/>
(FL) Hurricane Classic.<lb/>
Just 11 games into the 1981-82<lb/>
campaign they were down to eight<lb/>
players from the original roster of<lb/>
11 with a dismal 4-7 record.<lb/>
Many people had written off this<lb/>
season as a rebuilding year for<lb/>
fourth year head coach Cathy An-<lb/>
druzzi. The loss of veterans Kathy<lb/>
Riley, Laurie Sikes, Marcia Girven,<lb/>
Lydia Rountree and Heidi Owen<lb/>
had certainly taken its toll.<lb/>
Skeptics figured the Lady Pirates<lb/>
would do well to finish with an even<lb/>
record; a winning record would be<lb/>
exceptional.<lb/>
But a berth in the first NCAA<lb/>
women's tournament ? ludicrous.<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
To accomplish this a team would<lb/>
have to win at least 13 of their last<lb/>
15 games, including upsets over<lb/>
Virginia (64-62), then North<lb/>
Carolina (71-66) and later N.C.<lb/>
State (68-60). It would also have to<lb/>
hold national powers Old Dominion<lb/>
and South Carolina to within 10<lb/>
points (72-63 and 86-81, respective-<lb/>
ly). All this would have to be topped<lb/>
with an even more convincing win<lb/>
over North Carolina (92-72) in the<lb/>
season finale.<lb/>
That's all it took for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates to be invited to Columbia,<lb/>
S.C. for the opening round of the<lb/>
tourney.<lb/>
Those supporters whose loyalty<lb/>
aided the youthful Lady Pirates<lb/>
through through their 17-10 cam-<lb/>
paign were not upset when they fell<lb/>
to South Carolina 79-54 Sunday.<lb/>
No, 1981-82 was not a banner<lb/>
season in terms of statistical ex-<lb/>
cellance. But it was a remarkable<lb/>
year for the development of the<lb/>
identity of women's basketball at<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
It would have been easy tc con-<lb/>
ceed this season to the old excuse of<lb/>
rebuilding, but excuses don't draw<lb/>
crowds ? winners do.<lb/>
lay Garry Trudeau<lb/>
Divine Guidance Through Vietnam<lb/>
u?e back Arc MpPM6tvnn<lb/>
Of PANASHER.MHOHASJVST<lb/>
Sfi.YSINFPOMTHE COASTTO<lb/>
HYPE US LATESTPOPEPK.<lb/>
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youp. space wnHOBwmrs<lb/>
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FZOMMTOP, 10G?TN TOUCH<lb/>
Docm uhfih HmwiKBow<lb/>
WPtmaiD HXNHGscmai,<lb/>
THE MELLOW CHAMPS, ACHIHG<lb/>
MOTHER-TO-BE BACK-JUST LET<lb/>
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Oh the 86 Cy itself, go<lb/>
0p6anic animals dontusf<lb/>
drugs. netth0 swulp you<lb/>
the birthing process is both<lb/>
violent anp beautiful get<lb/>
into the pain-expedience<lb/>
IT FULLY! <lb/>
AWWUR<lb/>
APVICSTC<lb/>
THEMEUM<lb/>
HOBBY'<lb/>
JAKS7HE:<lb/>
any off.<lb/>
SHOUSOME<lb/>
CLASS.<lb/>
<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
You may have been enlightened, as 1<lb/>
was, by the recent news that the late Lyn-<lb/>
don Johnson felt he was visited by the Ho-<lb/>
ly Ghost before he died. President<lb/>
Johnson, according to a new biography,<lb/>
received these divine visitations at critical<lb/>
junctures in his presidency, usually when<lb/>
he was planning to scalate the war in Viet-<lb/>
nam. Does this mean that God is a hawk?<lb/>
Apparently so. Unbeknownst to the<lb/>
Supreme Being ? who, contrary to<lb/>
previous reports, can't really be<lb/>
everywhere, and know everything ? L.BJ<lb/>
taped his conversations with the Supreme<lb/>
Commander by hitting a little button ? a<lb/>
little red button, I believe ? under his<lb/>
desk. He wanted to record those conversa-<lb/>
tions for posterity. Well, we're posterity.<lb/>
Don't we have the right to know what went<lb/>
on? 1 believe we do.<lb/>
Not to brag, but I've got tapes. I flipped<lb/>
Bob Woodward for them and won. Here<lb/>
are some excerpts. I believe you'll agree<lb/>
they show U.S. foreign policy in a new<lb/>
light ? a pure, white, shinine light.<lb/>
GOD: Lvndon?<lb/>
LBJ: It's You!<lb/>
GOD: Damn right.<lb/>
LBJ: Dear God, what should I do? The<lb/>
kids are rioting in the streets again, and the<lb/>
Viet Cong are at the gates of Saigon, strik-<lb/>
ing at the very vitals of our national securi-<lb/>
ty. Should I bomb? Strafe? Hit 'em upside<lb/>
the head?<lb/>
GOD: Hit the kids upside the head, and<lb/>
bomb and strafe the VC.<lb/>
rCampus Forum<lb/>
LBJ: Really? You think so?<lb/>
GOD: SUre. Serve 'em right. Force: it's<lb/>
the only thing they understand. Why, I<lb/>
remember when I nuked Sodom and<lb/>
Gomorrah<lb/>
LBJ: You're always talking about the<lb/>
good old days.<lb/>
GOD: Hey, listen, in the old days, things<lb/>
worked. I was Number One then.<lb/>
LBJ: I want to be Number One now.<lb/>
Just down here, of course.<lb/>
GOD: Of course you do. And you're on<lb/>
your way. You're president of all the peo-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
LBJ: Not all the people. Some of 'em<lb/>
don't like me. The coloreds, the sissies and<lb/>
the draft-card burners, the VC<lb/>
GOD: Then let them know who's boss.<lb/>
They may not like you, but they'll respect<lb/>
you. You'll send a few of them to me a lit-<lb/>
tle early. From dust to dust, you know?<lb/>
Escalate.<lb/>
LBJ. Escalate? Who with ? the<lb/>
Marines? They're all smoking loco weed.<lb/>
The Army? They're fragging their officers.<lb/>
The Air Force?<lb/>
GOD: The Air Force. Bomb Hanoi. Go<lb/>
ahead, you know you want to. If anyone<lb/>
asks, tell them I said it was OK.<lb/>
LBJ: They'll never believe me, even<lb/>
Lady Bird won't believe me, butbut,<lb/>
maybe You're right.<lb/>
GOD: Lyndon, I'm always right. How<lb/>
do you think I got this job? Not to worry,<lb/>
Lyndon. I'll fly every bombing run, lead<lb/>
every calvary charge<lb/>
LBJ: Wrong century. Boss.<lb/>
GOD: Whatever. You get the picture.<lb/>
I'll take Personal control. It'll be a<lb/>
bloodletting to remember, that's for sure.<lb/>
Did you ever hear that song "With God on<lb/>
Our Side"? 1 rather like it. (Sings a few<lb/>
bars). "And you don't count the dead<lb/>
when God's on your side<lb/>
LBJ: Catchy. A great idea, too. I will do<lb/>
it. I will escalate. And if Hubert, the<lb/>
sniveling little Yankee, objects<lb/>
GOD: Great! I haven't had so much fun<lb/>
since I made Alexander the Great in M<lb/>
own image and smote the Egyptians I<lb/>
can't wait! Well, I can, I can do anvthing.<lb/>
but 1<lb/>
LBJ: Thanks, God. I knew I could count<lb/>
on you in my hour of darkest need<lb/>
(Stretches out hand to press the fit.<lb/>
There is no flesh. Pulls hand back.)<lb/>
GOD: Hell's bells, boy think nothing of<lb/>
it. In a few years, I'll be doing the same for<lb/>
Ronnie Reagan. But for now, vou're the<lb/>
only president they've got<lb/>
LBJ: And you're the ony vjod Ve go<lb/>
The tapes get a little tough to understand<lb/>
here, what with all the thunderclaps and<lb/>
stuff, but you get the idea. The ?6th presi-<lb/>
dent did what he did on the best authority.<lb/>
and although things didn't quite work out,<lb/>
he gave it his best shot. And his best<lb/>
bombs, and planes, and napalm and<lb/>
chemical defoliants.<lb/>
When Lyndon Johnson was evicted<lb/>
form the White House in 1969, he found<lb/>
he could still talk to God, but he had to<lb/>
telephone and he was put on hold a lot. He<lb/>
died in 1973. Can you imagine the conver-<lb/>
sations they're having now?<lb/>
'Greed, Bigotry, Narrow-Mindednessy Labels Rejected<lb/>
Recently, I co-signed a letter to Cam-<lb/>
pus Forum. It was attacked by an alum-<lb/>
nus who associated us with neo-<lb/>
conservatism and "greed, bigotry, and<lb/>
narrow-mindedness" in our attitudes<lb/>
towards certain special interest groups<lb/>
(called minorities by some).<lb/>
We accept the label neo-conservative<lb/>
but reject the other accusations.<lb/>
Ironically, I am a life-long, dues-paying<lb/>
member of two of the so-called<lb/>
minorfies I'm supposed to hate.<lb/>
DENNIS KILCOYNE<lb/>
Freshman, Political Science<lb/>
JEFFRY JONES<lb/>
Freshman, English<lb/>
Drinking Age<lb/>
I would like to inform the student<lb/>
body of ECU and all of Nrth Carolina<lb/>
that the governor's ofice may decide in<lb/>
the near future to raise the legal drinking<lb/>
age to 21. Why do this? There is a strong<lb/>
conservative faction (specifically Chris-<lb/>
tian Action Group) which is actively urg-<lb/>
ing passage of the bill in Congress.<lb/>
The reason for raising the drinking<lb/>
age, in theory, is to curb traffic<lb/>
fatalities. In fact, Governor Jim Hunt is<lb/>
seeking election to the U.S. Senate and,<lb/>
toward that end, he is trying to impress<lb/>
North Carolina voters with a new, more<lb/>
conservative image.<lb/>
Raising the legal drinking age is ob-<lb/>
viously unjust. Eighteen year olds, who<lb/>
are considered adults in every other<lb/>
aspect of life, are now about to be told<lb/>
that, although they may drive, marry,<lb/>
die for their country, etc they are too<lb/>
young to drink. Adding insult to injury,<lb/>
in all probability this issue will never<lb/>
come to a public vote. Outside of any<lb/>
moral, legal, and political implications,<lb/>
passage of the bill would also entail<lb/>
severe economic and other repercus-<lb/>
sions, as follow:<lb/>
1. The state will lose between five and<lb/>
ten million dollars in sales and use tax.<lb/>
2. New taxes will have to be im-<lb/>
plemented in order to replace lost<lb/>
revenue.<lb/>
3. Close to 40,000 young people, most<lb/>
of whom are college students, will lose<lb/>
their jobs.<lb/>
4. Obviously, the economies of small<lb/>
college towns like Greenville and Chapel<lb/>
Hill will suffer.<lb/>
5. If Prohibition taught us anything, it<lb/>
is that people who want to drink will<lb/>
drink regardless of legalities. Instead of<lb/>
paronizing bars, joyng people would lbe<lb/>
forced to drive while drinking - this is<lb/>
exactly what the law is supposed to pre-<lb/>
vent.<lb/>
Please register to vote when you go<lb/>
home over spring break.<lb/>
ROGER LAZZARINO<lb/>
Senior, Business<lb/>
El Salvadore<lb/>
The courage in this paper given to<lb/>
human needs and human sights issues<lb/>
deserves much praise. Especially timely<lb/>
are the articles (and letters to the editor)<lb/>
on he issue of U.S. military aid to El<lb/>
Salvador. This is a critical time, as Con-<lb/>
gress is in Washington with the subject<lb/>
of El Salvador's efforts to uphold<lb/>
human rights on its immediate agenda.<lb/>
Previously, Congress made continued<lb/>
aid contingent on progress in this area.<lb/>
Reagan attests to the ruling junta's pro-<lb/>
gress, saying it "is making a concerted<lb/>
and significant effort to comply with in-<lb/>
ternationally recognized human rights<lb/>
Church groups working in the area,<lb/>
international human rights organiza-<lb/>
tions, and most recently, three U.S.<lb/>
Congressmen just returned from El<lb/>
Salvdor, maintain otherwise. The con-<lb/>
gressmen were quoted as saying that<lb/>
Reagan's claim of improvement by the<lb/>
junta was "simply and obviously false<lb/>
The Reagan administration is using its<lb/>
version of the facts to pursue a military<lb/>
solution, while ignoring other avenues<lb/>
towards peace such as negotiation. This<lb/>
in-itself should raise our ire, as<lb/>
Americans. The tremendous loss of life<lb/>
(32,000 since the junta took power in<lb/>
1979) should enrage us as human beings.<lb/>
With these issues in mind, the Ecu Ad<lb/>
Hoc Committee Opposed to El<lb/>
Salvadoran Military Aid is holding a<lb/>
silent vigil and prayer on campus.<lb/>
We encourage your attendence Mon-<lb/>
day at 12:40 in front of the Student<lb/>
Store. Let your congressmen, senators,<lb/>
and President know how you feel about<lb/>
El Salvador. As noted above, critical<lb/>
decisions on the matter are being made<lb/>
even now.<lb/>
RANDY ALLEY<lb/>
Senior, Physics<lb/>
Clear Opinions?<lb/>
I don't know who Kim Albin is, nor<lb/>
do I fully understand why she feels it is<lb/>
important to inflict upon us her strident-<lb/>
ly phrased opinions. Her article in the<lb/>
February 25th East Carolinian, which<lb/>
concerned the policies of James Watt,<lb/>
was remarkable. A topic of great na-<lb/>
tional importance, a topic on which<lb/>
there are intelligent arguments on both<lb/>
sides, is reduced in Ms. Albin's hands to<lb/>
a vicious attack on millions of well-<lb/>
meaning Americans. This is unfortunate<lb/>
as it weakens her article and makes it<lb/>
suspect.<lb/>
Ms. Albin's probity in this article and<lb/>
her command of the arguments involved<lb/>
are distinctly underwhelming. At any<lb/>
rate, if Ms. Albin continues to submit<lb/>
her articles to The East Carolinian I<lb/>
think she would be more effective if she<lb/>
would forgo the almost hysterically<lb/>
whining tone and simply state her opi-<lb/>
nions as clearly as she is able.<lb/>
DAVID R.HAWKINS<lb/>
School of Music<lb/>
EDTOR'S NOTE: Dr. Walter J.<lb/>
Pories is the chairman of the department<lb/>
of surgery at the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine. The cartoon below entitled<lb/>
"A Short Poem" was submitted to<lb/>
Campus Forum as his commentary on<lb/>
WZMB.<lb/>
f<lb/>
1<lb/>
J<lb/>
Mar:<lb/>
that ni<lb/>
coast h<lb/>
lived<lb/>
famou?<lb/>
and thj<lb/>
found<lb/>
bungai<lb/>
hotel n<lb/>
But<lb/>
death<lb/>
fact thi<lb/>
treated<lb/>
lun<lb/>
The<lb/>
Belushil<lb/>
entertal<lb/>
drug o<lb/>
The<lb/>
death<lb/>
March<lb/>
Thom<lb/>
In a<lb/>
said tl<lb/>
dian dij<lb/>
jection<lb/>
known<lb/>
tended<lb/>
Beluj<lb/>
buried<lb/>
Massacl<lb/>
surviv<lb/>
Jacklinl<lb/>
Thrc<lb/>
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East Cl<lb/>
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Kt<lb/>
<pb facs="00057466_0005"/><lb/>
-<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL IN1AN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
MARCH 16. 1982<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
John Belushi's<lb/>
Untimely Death<lb/>
Not Too Funny<lb/>
kler<lb/>
II be a<lb/>
r ure.<lb/>
Ith God on<lb/>
ngs a few<lb/>
the dead<lb/>
b 1 ill do<lb/>
rt, the<lb/>
much fun<lb/>
:al in M<lb/>
.mans. !<lb/>
?hing,<lb/>
ount<lb/>
eed.<lb/>
e flesh.<lb/>
hing of<lb/>
:ne for<lb/>
re the<lb/>
I've got.<lb/>
mderstand<lb/>
aps and<lb/>
prest-<lb/>
authornv.<lb/>
k out,<lb/>
his best<lb/>
and<lb/>
;ted<lb/>
und<lb/>
te had to<lb/>
He<lb/>
nver-<lb/>
Wter J<lb/>
riment<lb/>
)ol<lb/>
pttitled<lb/>
Uec<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
Asislaal Sr?s tdtior<lb/>
March 5, 1982: It was on that day<lb/>
that news reports from coast to<lb/>
coast heralded the death of a short-<lb/>
lived legend. John Belushi, the<lb/>
famous "crazy" of Animal House<lb/>
and the hero of a generation, was<lb/>
found dead at his $200-a-day<lb/>
bungalow at the Chateau Marmont<lb/>
hotel in Hollywood Hills.<lb/>
But the tragedy of John Belushi's<lb/>
death may extend further than the<lb/>
fact that his fans will never again be<lb/>
treated to his own unique brand of<lb/>
lunacy.<lb/>
The real tragedy lies in that<lb/>
Belushi, like far too many other<lb/>
entertainers, died as a result of a<lb/>
drug overdose.<lb/>
The grim news of the cause of<lb/>
death was released on the night of<lb/>
March 10, by Los Angeles coroner<lb/>
Thomas Noguchi.<lb/>
In a written statement, Noguchi<lb/>
said that the actorsingercome-<lb/>
dian died due to intravenous in-<lb/>
jections of heroin and cocaine<lb/>
known as "hardballing as it is in-<lb/>
tended to give the user an extra kick.<lb/>
Belushi, a Chicago native, was<lb/>
buried at Martha's Vineyard,<lb/>
Massachusetts on March 9. He is<lb/>
survived by his widow, Judith<lb/>
Jacklin.<lb/>
The funeral service was attended<lb/>
by Belushi's sidekick on stage and<lb/>
screen, Dan Aykroyd, who led the<lb/>
hazy procession on his motorcycle.<lb/>
Bill Murray, a co-actor with Belushi<lb/>
on Saturday Night Live until 1979,<lb/>
also attended the ceremony.<lb/>
Tears filled the eyes of the<lb/>
relatively small group gathered at<lb/>
Belushi's grave site, an ironic end<lb/>
for a man who brought tears of<lb/>
laughter to millions of Americans<lb/>
for years.<lb/>
Belushi's comic career got a ma-<lb/>
jor lift while he was a member of the<lb/>
Second City "improvisational"<lb/>
troupe, based in Chicago. In 1972,<lb/>
he was recommended for a part in<lb/>
National Lampoon's Lemmings, an<lb/>
Off-Broadway rock musical.<lb/>
The production was swarmed<lb/>
with favorable reviews, and rather<lb/>
than the scheduled six-week stint,<lb/>
the show remained in Greenwich<lb/>
Village for 10 months.<lb/>
Three years later, Lome<lb/>
Michaels, the producer of what was<lb/>
then called Saturday Night, invited<lb/>
Belushi to join the unorthodox team<lb/>
of actors in New York.<lb/>
The rest is history.<lb/>
National exposure and his own<lb/>
uncountable talents brought Belushi<lb/>
See DEATH, Page 6<lb/>
Tokyo String Quartet Announced For y82- '83 Artists Series<lb/>
The internationally acclaimed Tokyo String Quartet will he performing Serkin. This Thursday night at 8 p.m. in the Hendrix Theatre, guitarist<lb/>
as part of next season's MSC Artists Series. Among those also slated Michael Lorimer will perform. Tickets are on sale at the Central Ticket<lb/>
are Julius Baker, Joan Morris and William Bolcom, and pianist Peter Office, MSC.<lb/>
First President's Piano Returns To University<lb/>
By FRANCINE PERRY<lb/>
Ml Nt? Bureau<lb/>
Throughout Dr. Robert Wright's 25 years as Presi-<lb/>
dent of East Carolina Teachers Training School and<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College, the mahogany Chicker-<lb/>
ing parlor grand stood in the music room of his<lb/>
residence on Fifth Street here.<lb/>
A gift from Dr. Wright to his wife, the piano became<lb/>
a focal point of the president's home and was featured<lb/>
at many musical evenings in the Wright home.<lb/>
The piano left Greenville in 1934 when Dr. Wright<lb/>
died and his widow moved to Hampton, Va. Now, after<lb/>
nearly 50 years, the Chickering grand has come back to<lb/>
the East Carolina campus to stay, as a gift from the<lb/>
Wright family in recognition of ECU's 75th anniver-<lb/>
sary.<lb/>
The piano's history ? traced in written records and<lb/>
from recollections of the Wright descendants ? is a<lb/>
fascinating one indeed.<lb/>
At the time of the piano's original purchase in 1903,<lb/>
Robert Wright was an instructor in economics and<lb/>
history at the City College of Baltimore. He and the<lb/>
former Charlotte Peal Murphy, both natives of Samp-<lb/>
son County, N.C had been married but a few months.<lb/>
Where another man might have settled for an inex-<lb/>
pensive small spinet ? easily affordable on a college in-<lb/>
stuctor's salary ? Wright wanted only the best for his<lb/>
bride, an accomplished musician who had studied at<lb/>
Peabody Conservatory.<lb/>
He selected the Chickering. a rare model priced at the<lb/>
then huge sum of $650 at the Kranz-Smith Piano Com-<lb/>
panv in Baltimore.<lb/>
While it delighted young Mrs. Wright to have such a<lb/>
fine piano, its purchase meant some sacrifice. It was<lb/>
first leased for six months, then bought, with monthly<lb/>
installments of $15 until three years later, when it was<lb/>
paid for in full.<lb/>
Robert Wright gave up one of his chief pleasures,<lb/>
smoking fine cigars, so that his wife might have her<lb/>
piano, recalls the Wrights' daughter-in-law, Rugh<lb/>
McLean Wright.<lb/>
" 'Mr. Papa' was a music lover himself and took<lb/>
great pride in Mother Wright's musical skill she said.<lb/>
"He wanted her to have the finest possible instrument<lb/>
In 1909 when Dr. Wright came to Greenville to<lb/>
assume the presidency of the newly-founded East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers Training School, he was just 39 years<lb/>
old, but well trained and experienced in the field of<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Between teaching posts at Oak Ridge Military In-<lb/>
stitute and Baltimore City College and in schools in<lb/>
Bladen and Nash counties, N.C, and ivtanoorough<lb/>
Countv, S.C Wright pursued advanced studies at<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill, Johns Hopkins University and Col-<lb/>
umbia University.<lb/>
He was in his third year as principal of Eastern High<lb/>
School in Baltimore when the East Carolina presidency<lb/>
was offered to him. So the Wrights came to Greenville,<lb/>
and their treasured piano came too.<lb/>
"In those days, the roads into eastern North Carolina<lb/>
were terrible Ruth Wright explained. "The piano had<lb/>
to be transported from Baltimore to Greenville by<lb/>
barge. It landed at the Port Terminal and was carefully<lb/>
unloaded and carried by a mule team to the president's<lb/>
home on Fifth Street<lb/>
When the piano was placed in the right-hand first-<lb/>
floor parlor, that room became known as the "music<lb/>
room" and remained so throughout the Wrights'<lb/>
residence.<lb/>
See PIANO. Page 6<lb/>
A Gay New World<lb/>
Films Now Taking It Seriously<lb/>
 ecture Bv Former Prime Minister Callaghan Cancelled<lb/>
The rescheduled March 29 lecture to be given by James Callaghan, former Prime Minister of Great Britain,<lb/>
has been cancelled. At this time, no word has been given concerning any further rescheduling for a later<lb/>
date This Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Hendrix Theatre, nationally syndicated political columnist James J.<lb/>
KUpatrick will speak. Tickets are on sale at the Central Ticket Office, MSC.<lb/>
By LESLIE BENNETTS<lb/>
The New orfc Times<lb/>
NEW YORK ? A handsome 30-year-old doctor,<lb/>
Zach has been happily married for eight years to Claire,<lb/>
a successful television programming executive. But late-<lb/>
ly Zach has begun to stray. He is powerfully attracted to<lb/>
a voung writer whom he meets as a patient but who ? a<lb/>
lunch date and a dinner later ? becomes his lover.<lb/>
When Zach's wife goes away for the weekend on a<lb/>
business trip, Zach turns up at the writer's apartment<lb/>
for a prolonged tryst. The resulting strains on his mar-<lb/>
riage precipitate a crisis.<lb/>
Thus begins Making Love, a new movie directed by-<lb/>
Arthur Hiller (now playing at the Plitt Entertainment<lb/>
Center in Greenville). In some ways the film deals with<lb/>
familiar themes indeed: It is about "star-crossed lovers<lb/>
and something that comes between them that they can-<lb/>
not control says Hiller, who made the movie Love<lb/>
Story a dozen years ago.<lb/>
But Making Love is decidedly not just another film<lb/>
about adultery and its consequences. For Zach's new<lb/>
lover is another man, and what comes between Zach<lb/>
and his wife is his realization that he is a homosexual.<lb/>
Moreover, while the depiction of homosexual<lb/>
characters on screen is not new, the lovers in Making<lb/>
Love are markedly different from most of their<lb/>
cinematic predecessors.<lb/>
"The film is revolutionary in concept because<lb/>
everyone in it is so sane and seemingly normal<lb/>
observes Vito Russo, the author of The Celluloid<lb/>
Closet, a comprehensive history of the portrayal of<lb/>
homosexuality in the movies. "These guys are matinee<lb/>
idols. Before this, you either got aging, bitter losers or<lb/>
21-year-old leather numbers. Here you have a doctor<lb/>
and a successful novelist<lb/>
Furthermore, not only are they professionally suc-<lb/>
cessful, but Zach (played by Michael Ontkean) and his<lb/>
lover Bart (played by Harry Hamlin) are both good-<lb/>
looking, athletic, virile, sensitive, intelligent and just<lb/>
plain nice. Their sole idiosyncrasy is Zach's developing<lb/>
sexual preference for Bart rather than his wife, played<lb/>
by Kate Jackson.<lb/>
Nor is Making Lo"e the only new movie to deal with<lb/>
homosexual love. Personal Best, written and directed by<lb/>
Robert Towne, stars Mariel Hemingway as an Olympic<lb/>
athlete (the film will be opening soon at the Plitt). While<lb/>
filmmaker and star insist that Personal Best is not a<lb/>
movie about lesbianism, much of the plot revolves<lb/>
around the love affair between the two women and its<lb/>
impact on their competitive goals.<lb/>
Several other forthcoming films feature homosexual<lb/>
relationships as well. Based on the long-running Broad-<lb/>
way play, Deathtrap is a thriller about a successful<lb/>
playwright ? the author of murder mysteries ? who<lb/>
conspires with his young homosexual lover to plot the<lb/>
death of the playwright's wealthy wife. Starring Michael<lb/>
Caine, Christopher Reeve and Dyan Cannon, Deathtrap<lb/>
is directed by Sidney Lumet and will be released this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
In Partners, scheduled to open in the fall, Ryan<lb/>
O'Neal stars as a heterosexual policeman paired with<lb/>
John Hurt as a homosexual policeman; their assignment<lb/>
is to pose as a gay couple, infiltrate the homosexual<lb/>
community in West Hollywood and catch a murderer<lb/>
who is victimizing homosexuals.<lb/>
Victor, Victoria ? which opens with a scene of<lb/>
Robert Preston in bed with a younger man ? stars<lb/>
James Garner as a Chicago nightclub owner visiting<lb/>
Paris. He falls in love with Julie Andrews, who is mas-<lb/>
querading as a Polish count. His love affair with so-<lb/>
meone he believes to be another man causes Garner<lb/>
grave discomfort, but it gladdens the heart of his<lb/>
longtime friend and bodyguard, a large, beefy, former<lb/>
football ?tar played by Alex Karras.<lb/>
Upon finding his employer in bed with the young<lb/>
Polish nobleman, Karras ecstatically announces that he,<lb/>
See FILMS, Page 7<lb/>
?.  'ir Ti Hilni<lb/>
I 1g. <lb/>
<pb facs="00057466_0006"/><lb/>
? .<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 16, 1982<lb/>
Piano Returns<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
In addition to her duties as<lb/>
mother of four and hostess for her<lb/>
husband, Pearl Wright continued<lb/>
her involvement with music and en-<lb/>
couraged her husband to strengthen<lb/>
musical offerings on the fledgling<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
From the beginning, private in-<lb/>
struction in piano was available to<lb/>
the students. Later came a "public<lb/>
school music" curriculum and<lb/>
establishment of chamber music<lb/>
ensembles.<lb/>
Campus music programs included<lb/>
frequent student and faculty con-<lb/>
certs and occasional productions of<lb/>
an operetta or masque. A series of<lb/>
visiting concert artists performed at<lb/>
East Carolina, in public ap-<lb/>
pearences usually sponsored by one<lb/>
of the campus literary societies.<lb/>
"Mother Wright always made<lb/>
sure to invite these performers to the<lb/>
president's home to play or sing for<lb/>
her guests said Ruth Wright.<lb/>
"Sometimes the piano was used<lb/>
alone or as accompaniment for a<lb/>
singer, and other times, it was used<lb/>
in small group performances. But<lb/>
the piano was always featured<lb/>
Visiting artists included musicians<lb/>
of note from New York,<lb/>
Philadelphia and Baltimore, among<lb/>
them dramatic soprano Sarah Storm<lb/>
Crommer, Peabody pianist George<lb/>
F. Boyle and D. Hendrik Ezerman,<lb/>
a pianist and director of the<lb/>
Philadelphia Consevatory. During<lb/>
the early depression came the<lb/>
greatest of them all, internationally<lb/>
noted operatic soprano Amelita<lb/>
Galli-Curci.<lb/>
President Wright himself would<lb/>
no doubt be amazed at all the<lb/>
changes that have taken place since<lb/>
his piano's first journey to Green-<lb/>
ville in a crate aboard a river barge.<lb/>
This time it traveled in a truck over<lb/>
smoothly paved highways.<lb/>
It left East Carolina Techers Col-<lb/>
lege a half-century ago, a small but<lb/>
thriving school of a thousand<lb/>
students which Robert Wright had<lb/>
guided from its beginnings.<lb/>
Death Untimely<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
to the helm of success. Saturday<lb/>
Night Live blossomed into one of<lb/>
the most successful late-night shows<lb/>
in TV history.<lb/>
Aside from his roles as the<lb/>
Samurai warrior, killer bee and<lb/>
cheeseburger chef, Belushi tried his<lb/>
hand at other ventures.<lb/>
Dressed from head to toe in<lb/>
black, Belushi made his singing<lb/>
debut on stage as the raspy-voiced,<lb/>
pot-bellied Jake Blues. With Dan<lb/>
Aykroyd, whose bluesy harmonica<lb/>
sounds gave the band a touch of<lb/>
realism, Belushi was en route to his<lb/>
first (and subsequently only)<lb/>
musical endeavor.<lb/>
The band's first album, titled<lb/>
simply The Blues Brothers, went<lb/>
platinum ? quite an accomplish-<lb/>
ment for what was first conceived as<lb/>
a comic routine.<lb/>
Belushi also made movies, which<lb/>
comes as no surprise to the millions<lb/>
who crowded theaters nationwide to<lb/>
see them.<lb/>
Animal House, Belushi's first<lb/>
motion picture r vrhtch ?tc played<lb/>
Bluto Blutarsky, was a box-office<lb/>
smash. The film portrayed Belushi<lb/>
as an addict of craziness, a lunatic-<lb/>
at-all-costs fraternity brother ? a<lb/>
role which sharply limited his later<lb/>
acting aspirations.<lb/>
Belushi's other film efforts in-<lb/>
cluded 1941, Old Boyfriends and<lb/>
The Blues Brothers. The same type-<lb/>
casting was apparent in each movie,<lb/>
Belushi seeming unable to break the<lb/>
character mold he had established<lb/>
for himself.<lb/>
But in his last two movies, Belushi<lb/>
broke the mold. Playing Ernie<lb/>
Souchak, a Chicago columnist, in<lb/>
Continental Divide, Belushi lost his<lb/>
heart to scientist Blair Brown, a<lb/>
woman living in semi-seclusion in<lb/>
the Rockies.<lb/>
The part was a bit out of<lb/>
character for the "Wild Bill Cody"<lb/>
of 1941, but Belushi's acting talent<lb/>
far exceeded the expectations of<lb/>
viewers, and the film was a success.<lb/>
In his final movie, Neighbors,<lb/>
Belushi was back with his comedy<lb/>
partner, Aykroyd. But this time as<lb/>
the straight man.<lb/>
At Belushi's funeral on March 9,<lb/>
several of his New York and<lb/>
Hollywood contemporaries raved<lb/>
about the multi-talented man they<lb/>
had been "fortunate enough to<lb/>
work with<lb/>
It now scents ironic that in an in-<lb/>
terview last year, Belushi is said to<lb/>
have disclaimed that he was<lb/>
"anything like" the characters he<lb/>
portrayed in films. "I'm really a<lb/>
pretty boring person he said.<lb/>
 <lb/>
-Sv<lb/>
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The<lb/>
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Try our delicious Souvlakia<lb/>
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AFTER 5:00 P.M.<lb/>
Located Across From ECU<lb/>
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SPECIAUZES IN:<lb/>
RESUMES<lb/>
and<lb/>
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? Copies Cost 60 to 30copy<lb/>
? Phototypesetting<lb/>
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Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed Mar 17,<lb/>
thru Sun Mar 21. 1982<lb/>
in Greenville<lb/>
i i :<lb/>
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Kroger Savon<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold to Dealers<lb/>
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ec<lb/>
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TE<lb/>
lu:<lb/>
L?a)v6 i6ovrCou6rTac Hmp Mi<lb/>
01 PJit? AJoi<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 16, 1982<lb/>
TH?r? OffttUtX, A<lb/>
0?0 TOfiO AJI6HTS<lb/>
k Ask a1 Royeifo??<lb/>
Noted PoetTranslator<lb/>
Poulin To Give Reading<lb/>
Films Trv Brave New<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
too, is homosexual and that he has<lb/>
been wanting to tell Garner for 15<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The emergence of a cluster of<lb/>
films dealing with homosexuality<lb/>
constitutes something of a milestone<lb/>
in the history of a topic that long<lb/>
was strictly taboo. The films are<lb/>
widely disparate in style and con-<lb/>
tent, but given the stereotypical<lb/>
ways in which Hollywood has tradi-<lb/>
tionally portrayed homosexuals,<lb/>
their variety alone distinguishes<lb/>
these films.<lb/>
Homosexual-rights activists have<lb/>
long deplored the negative<lb/>
characterization of homosexuality<lb/>
in the movies, and many believe that<lb/>
Hollywood has discriminated<lb/>
against homosexuals to a greater ex-<lb/>
tent than any other minority group.<lb/>
"Blacks were stereotyped in<lb/>
movies, but there was never any law<lb/>
forbidding the portrayal of blacks<lb/>
on the screen Russo notes. "But<lb/>
from 1934 until 1961, the Produc-<lb/>
tion Code forbade any mention of<lb/>
homosexuality on screen or any por-<lb/>
trayal of homosexual characters<lb/>
Such strictures often compelled<lb/>
major revisions in plot and<lb/>
character, as in the case of Lillian<lb/>
H oilman's play The Children's<lb/>
Hour. When first filmed in 1936,<lb/>
"the story of two teachers accused<lb/>
of lesbianism by a vicious child<lb/>
became, on the screen, an<lb/>
adulterous heterosexual triangle in<lb/>
which one teacher is accused of be-<lb/>
ing in love with her best friend's<lb/>
fiance wrote Russo in The<lb/>
Celluloid Closet.<lb/>
While the production code was<lb/>
revised in 1961, the resulting pro-<lb/>
duct was often malignant.<lb/>
"When homosexuality was allow-<lb/>
ed as a subject, the industry seized<lb/>
upon it as a dirty secret that had<lb/>
come out of the closet Russo says.<lb/>
"They could now portray gays, but<lb/>
they knew the public would not ac-<lb/>
cept a positive judgment on such<lb/>
characters. So from 1961 until the<lb/>
present, with very few exceptions,<lb/>
almost every portrayal was one that<lb/>
placed homosexuals in either a<lb/>
psychopathic or a stereotypic con-<lb/>
text, reinforcing the concept that<lb/>
homosexual men axe effeminate and<lb/>
that lesbians are masculine women.<lb/>
"The tendency has been either to<lb/>
make homosexuals a joke, and<lb/>
therefore funny and harmless, or to<lb/>
make them so threatening they<lb/>
become vicious, like the psychotic<lb/>
lesbian killer in Windows who killed<lb/>
her psychiatrist with a butcher<lb/>
knife<lb/>
In Russo's view, "What has come<lb/>
out on screen has been less a state-<lb/>
ment about homosexuality than a<lb/>
statement about the fear of<lb/>
homosexuality<lb/>
Indeed, at the end of his book<lb/>
Russo provides a chart showing the<lb/>
fate of homosexual characters in<lb/>
various movies. It is a grisly list,<lb/>
with most entries ending in suicide<lb/>
(by straight razor, by shot-gun, by a<lb/>
falling tree, by leaping, by hanging,<lb/>
by poison) or murder (by stake<lb/>
through the heart, by being pushed<lb/>
from a balcony, by bludgeoning, by<lb/>
cannibalism, by stabbing, by gun-<lb/>
shot, by castration). In Hollywood's<lb/>
eyes, the price of homosexuality was<lb/>
usually a horrible death.<lb/>
As the 1970s progressed,<lb/>
homosexuality began to surface<lb/>
with increasing frequency on screen,<lb/>
as in the theater and on television.<lb/>
But while there were exceptions,<lb/>
usually the message adhered to<lb/>
traditional conventions.<lb/>
Barry Sandier, the screenwriter<lb/>
for Making Love, says that in<lb/>
writing the movie he was conscious-<lb/>
ly trying to create "a positive image<lb/>
of gay men that we've really never<lb/>
seen on the screen before ? an im-<lb/>
age of gays as normal, decent people<lb/>
that other gays could recognize,<lb/>
identify with and relate to. 1 also<lb/>
wanted to allow the heterosexual au-<lb/>
dience to emerge with a positive<lb/>
perception of gay people<lb/>
Sandier acknowledges that in pur-<lb/>
suit of that end he may have over-<lb/>
compensated somewhat in blessing<lb/>
all his characters with good luck and<lb/>
happy endings in addition to their<lb/>
winning personal attributes.<lb/>
"I feel that over-idealization was<lb/>
necessary he says. "To a lot of<lb/>
people in Middle America, the fact<lb/>
that a gay person can be a doctor or<lb/>
a lawyer will be a major revela-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Doubtless the increasing social ac-<lb/>
ceptance of homosexuality in recent<lb/>
years has contributed to<lb/>
Hollywood's growing willingness to<lb/>
tackle the subject. But this is also an<lb/>
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: : : ?<lb/>
Phi<lb/>
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presents<lb/>
5th ANNUAL HEART FUND<lb/>
BIKINI CONTEST<lb/>
Tuesday, March 23,1982<lb/>
Admission ? $1.00 Doors open at 8:30<lb/>
Sponsored by:<lb/>
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PANTANA BOBS<lb/>
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UNITED FIGURE SALON<lb/>
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All Day TtoKMtoy. rTktay, ? Mowttey<lb/>
CAUFORNIA CONCEPT<lb/>
MARGAUX'S<lb/>
SWENSON-S<lb/>
era when the emergence of the<lb/>
Moral Majority and right-wing fun-<lb/>
damentalism has helped to focus an-<lb/>
tipathy toward homosexuality<lb/>
among other segments of the<lb/>
population, and this season's<lb/>
bumper crop of homosexual themes<lb/>
seems sure to prompt controversy.<lb/>
"I am very nervous admits Ar-<lb/>
thur Hiller. "Certain groups will be<lb/>
distressed because they consider<lb/>
homosexuality a disease and won't<lb/>
understand why we are showing<lb/>
what they could call sick people hav-<lb/>
ing warm, human relationships<lb/>
One index of the persistence of<lb/>
social taboos is that a number of<lb/>
prominent male film actors refused<lb/>
even to consider the lead role in<lb/>
Making Love because they were<lb/>
afraid of its impact on their careers.<lb/>
"The conventional wisdom hao it<lb/>
that people are not interested in<lb/>
homosexual things and won't go to<lb/>
see a movie about the subject says<lb/>
Sherry Lansing, president of 20th<lb/>
Century-Fox Productions. "When<lb/>
we started to do Making Love, a lot<lb/>
of other executives, producers and<lb/>
directors said, 'Why are you making<lb/>
a movie like this ? nobody will see<lb/>
it But I'm very optimistic about its<lb/>
commercial prospects. I would<lb/>
assume that if the film is reasonably<lb/>
successful, it will do an enormous<lb/>
amount to erase some of the<lb/>
negative cliches<lb/>
Noted poet, translator and<lb/>
publisher Al Poulin will conduct a<lb/>
translation workshop and give a<lb/>
poetry reading on the East Carolina<lb/>
campus Wednesday, March 17.<lb/>
At noon Wednesday in Brewster<lb/>
303-C, Poulin will conduct a<lb/>
workshop on translating German<lb/>
and French poetry into English. At-<lb/>
tendance will be limited with special<lb/>
permission required. Anyone in-<lb/>
terested should contact the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Foreign Languages.<lb/>
Later that evening at 8:30 in<lb/>
Biology 103, the author will give a<lb/>
reading of his own poetry. Admis-<lb/>
sion is free and open to the general<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Poulin is the author of the best-<lb/>
selling anthology Contemporary<lb/>
American Poetry and has also been<lb/>
published in Esquire, The Atlantic<lb/>
Monthly, Tar River Poetry and<lb/>
many others.<lb/>
He has received a Creative<lb/>
Writing Fellowship from the Na-<lb/>
tional Endowment for the Arts, a<lb/>
translation award from Columbia<lb/>
University's Translation Center and<lb/>
fellowships from the Research<lb/>
Foundation of the State University<lb/>
of New York for writing and<lb/>
translating poetry.<lb/>
His works include In Advent<lb/>
(1972), Cat an ha: Omens, Prayers<lb/>
and Songs (1977) and The homeless<lb/>
Garden (1978).<lb/>
m<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057466_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
Ice Cold A t<lb/>
S. Carolina<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page8<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
sporn i dilor<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C. ? East<lb/>
Carolina basketball coach Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi could have easily made<lb/>
some excuses Sunday afternoon.<lb/>
Especially after a microscopic 12<lb/>
percent shooting performance in the<lb/>
first half of her team's first-round<lb/>
NCAA tournament game against<lb/>
the South Carolina Gamecocks.<lb/>
Especially after the final buzzer<lb/>
sounded and South Carolina won,<lb/>
79-54, thanks primarily to 28 per-<lb/>
cent shooting by ECU, thus advanc-<lb/>
ing to the Midwest Regionals in<lb/>
Ruston, La.<lb/>
And especially after three<lb/>
members of her squad quit at mid-<lb/>
season, leaving only eight active<lb/>
players.<lb/>
But she chose to look at the<lb/>
positive and honest side of a roller-<lb/>
coaster season that saw her team<lb/>
lose seven of its first 11 contests on-<lb/>
ly to rebound and go 13-3 the rest of<lb/>
the campaign.<lb/>
"We were well-prepared for the<lb/>
game she said, "and we worked<lb/>
very, very hard. We just came<lb/>
against a very good club. We played<lb/>
a very good ball game. But our<lb/>
shooting percentage hurt us. That's<lb/>
the bottom line. And our girls were<lb/>
mismatched like they have been all<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"Overall, our kids tried very-<lb/>
hard. South Carolina is a powerful<lb/>
team, but you can't shoot 30 percent<lb/>
in a tournament game<lb/>
South Carolina was at a disadvan-<lb/>
tage, too, after an NCAA ruling<lb/>
trimmed four walkons from their<lb/>
roster last week, leaving the team<lb/>
with only six players.<lb/>
The heralded front line of<lb/>
Brantley Southers, Sheilia Foster<lb/>
anfl Evenlyn JOhnsfltT more than<lb/>
made up for that difference by com-<lb/>
bining for 70 points and 44 re-<lb/>
bounds for South Carolina, now<lb/>
23-7.<lb/>
South Carolina jumped out to an<lb/>
early 19-5 lead during the first 10<lb/>
minutes and coasted to a 34-14<lb/>
halftime lead as East Carolina hit<lb/>
only four of 34 shots.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates bounced back<lb/>
to shoot 41 percent in the second 20<lb/>
minutes, but South Carolina<lb/>
upgraded their percentage from 52<lb/>
to 64 even though they turned the<lb/>
ball over 25 times.<lb/>
Southers, a 6-1 first-year player,<lb/>
scored a career-high 30 points and<lb/>
19 rebounds, while Foster, a 6-1<lb/>
senior, positioned inside for 23<lb/>
points and 19 boards. Johnson<lb/>
pumped in 16 points and added six<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
East Carolina's Mary Denkler<lb/>
scored 14 points, and Sam Jones<lb/>
scored 13 after a one-point first<lb/>
half. Loletha Harrison added 11<lb/>
points and six rebounds, and<lb/>
freshman Darlene Chaney provided<lb/>
spark off the bench by picking off<lb/>
nine rebounds.<lb/>
"Our kids did an outstanding job<lb/>
in approaching the game Andruz-<lb/>
zi said. "We got their kids in foul<lb/>
trouble, but 1 felt we got to the point<lb/>
where we weren't getting any fouls<lb/>
(calls). The fouls weren't going our<lb/>
way. We were playing hard defense,<lb/>
driving to the hoop.<lb/>
"The officials really choked at<lb/>
the end<lb/>
Even though the season ended on<lb/>
a down note, Andruzzi refused to go<lb/>
along with the old saying of one<lb/>
game a season does make. "We had<lb/>
a great season she said. "Just<lb/>
unbelievable. We made a tremen-<lb/>
dous comeback, and It was just one<lb/>
of the best season's we've ever had<lb/>
for such a young team. These girls<lb/>
are a credit to East Carolina. They<lb/>
have brought East Carolina recogni-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
As for the three players quitting<lb/>
the team, Andruzzi deadpanned, "it<lb/>
was a very positive effect. When<lb/>
tTtey ten, we started ttrwin . -i<lb/>
Even though her team's season<lb/>
has ended, Andruzzi's is beginning<lb/>
her second. "I'm always on the<lb/>
recruiting trail she said. "We<lb/>
hope to sign some players in the next<lb/>
few weeks, but we're against some<lb/>
quality competition<lb/>
Green Selected<lb/>
East Carolina junior forward<lb/>
Charles Green has been named to<lb/>
the All-Junior College Transfer<lb/>
third-team by Basketball Weekly it<lb/>
was announced Monday.<lb/>
Green, who transferred to ECU<lb/>
from Catonsville Community Col-<lb/>
lege in Baltimore this year, was the<lb/>
Pirates' second-leading scorer at<lb/>
11.3 and rebounder with 4.3 per<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
The honor was the second in two<lb/>
weeks Green has received from the<lb/>
publication. The 6-7, 200-pounder<lb/>
was chosen honorable mention All-<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Region last week.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Third In Fla.<lb/>
By CYNTHIA PLEASANTS<lb/>
XssiMum Sports hdilof<lb/>
The ECU's women's softball<lb/>
team joined thousands of college<lb/>
students in sunny Florida this past<lb/>
weekend, but not to soak up the sun<lb/>
rays.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates played in the<lb/>
Florida State Invitational and plac-<lb/>
ed third behind the University of<lb/>
Florida and Lake City Community<lb/>
college, the only two teams that<lb/>
defeated ECU in the tournament.<lb/>
The Pirates lost their first game of<lb/>
the season, 5-2, against the Univ. of<lb/>
Florida this past Friday in<lb/>
Tallahassee, Fla. Florida gained the<lb/>
lead after scoring four runs off of<lb/>
one hit in the third inning.<lb/>
In the tournament, ECU won<lb/>
against South Florida, 6-5; Auburn,<lb/>
8-6; and Florida State, 9-2. Jeanette<lb/>
Roth was the winning pitcher in all<lb/>
three games.<lb/>
ECU lost to Lake City, 10-6, and<lb/>
met the Univ. of Florida once again,<lb/>
losing 9-2.<lb/>
Head coach Sue Manahan said<lb/>
she was pleased with the team's per-<lb/>
formance, especially since the other<lb/>
teams had already gotten their<lb/>
seasons underway before the tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
"It opened the season for us<lb/>
she said, "but we improved as the<lb/>
tournament went on<lb/>
ECU's Mitzi Davis and Yvonne<lb/>
Williams were selected to the all-<lb/>
tournament team for their outstan-<lb/>
ding efforts.<lb/>
Davis had a batting average of<lb/>
.625, hitting three homeruns and a<lb/>
triple in the tournament.<lb/>
According to Coach Manahan,<lb/>
Williams was named to the team for<lb/>
her super defensive play.<lb/>
"She has a lot of speed in out-<lb/>
field she said.<lb/>
Manahan added that she was able<lb/>
to play a lot of players in the tourna-<lb/>
ment and said she definitely saw hit-<lb/>
ting potential.<lb/>
Sherry Stout, an ECU volleyball<lb/>
player who tried out for the team<lb/>
this year, was five for seven in the<lb/>
invite, and returnee Cynthia<lb/>
Shepard slammed two homeruns.<lb/>
Manahan said Fran Hooks will<lb/>
probably be a key hitter for the<lb/>
Pirates. Hooks, an ECU basketball<lb/>
stand-out, had a batting average of<lb/>
almost .500 last year.<lb/>
Manahan said she is looking for-<lb/>
ward to a good season.<lb/>
"I think our future looks promis-<lb/>
ing she pointed out, "and I'm<lb/>
happy to be working with a nice<lb/>
group of ladies<lb/>
The Lady Bucs will play a<lb/>
doubleheader at home against<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro today. Gametime<lb/>
is 3 p.m.<lb/>
Win Fifth Straight<lb/>
Pirates Romp<lb/>
Past<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Sports Idilor<lb/>
For the Huskies of Connecticut,<lb/>
there wasn't much Southern<lb/>
hospitality in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina last week.<lb/>
Not after the Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina pounded out 16 hits Sun-<lb/>
day, rolling to a 12-3 victory ? their<lb/>
fifth straight ? that improved their<lb/>
record to 7-3 and climaxed a four-<lb/>
game sweep of the season-opening<lb/>
Huskies.<lb/>
Two of the losses came to the<lb/>
sixth-ranked Clemson Tigers in<lb/>
closely-contested ball games that the<lb/>
Pirates could have easily have won<lb/>
than lost.<lb/>
"I'm glad we won, but when you<lb/>
have a long game like that it tends to<lb/>
get a little sloppy remarked head<lb/>
coach Hal Baird. "I think it was ob-<lb/>
vious that they were getting pretty<lb/>
low on their (pitching) staff. We<lb/>
knew they didn't have much pit-<lb/>
ching left. We can't be elated,<lb/>
though. They were throwing one of<lb/>
their boys (pitching) down the line<lb/>
(staff)<lb/>
Todd Evans collected three hits,<lb/>
including a homer, and David Wells<lb/>
and Kelly Robinette also added<lb/>
three each as freshman Bob David-<lb/>
son picked up his first win in two<lb/>
starts. He worked seven innings,<lb/>
allowing nine hits and only one<lb/>
earned run. Kirk Parsons picked up<lb/>
the save.<lb/>
East Carolina pressured the<lb/>
Huskies early by scoring four times<lb/>
in the first inning. Mike Sorrell<lb/>
doubled to left and Wells reached<lb/>
first on an error. John Hallow singl-<lb/>
ed to right, driving in Sorrell. Todd<lb/>
Evans reached on a fielder's choice,<lb/>
advancing Wells to third.<lb/>
Todd Hendley then walked,<lb/>
loading the bases and Fran Fit-<lb/>
zgerald singled, scoring Hallow.<lb/>
Robinette's sacrifice fly scored<lb/>
Evans, and Chuck Bishop singled in<lb/>
Hendley.<lb/>
The Pirates tallied two more runs<lb/>
in the second when Sorrell walked<lb/>
and Wells singled. Evans drove in<lb/>
Sorrell and Hendley reached first on<lb/>
a fielder's choice, allowing Wells to<lb/>
score for a 6-0 ECU lead.<lb/>
The Pirates built their lead to 8-0<lb/>
in the third when Robinette singled,<lb/>
and Robert Wells was struck by a<lb/>
pitch. Sorrell and David Wells each<lb/>
Old Dominion<lb/>
Quiets Critics<lb/>
At Tournament<lb/>
singled and drove in a run.<lb/>
Evans homered in the fourth<lb/>
frame when the ball hit the top of<lb/>
the fence in right center and popped<lb/>
over. East Carolina another run in<lb/>
the sixth and two more in the<lb/>
seventh while Connecticut scored in<lb/>
the fourth and sixth.<lb/>
Baird was pleased with young<lb/>
Davidson's performance on the<lb/>
mound. "I think after he got the big<lb/>
lead, he tried to get that first pitch in<lb/>
there every time, rather than work-<lb/>
ing on the batters; he was trying to<lb/>
get ahead of them, and they got to<lb/>
looing for a good first pitch. But at<lb/>
least we have been able to save our<lb/>
arms for the long streak of games<lb/>
we have coming up The Pirates<lb/>
were rained out Monday, but don't<lb/>
have another day off for another<lb/>
week.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
The third-year coach says he is<lb/>
pleased with his team's defense so<lb/>
far this early season, especially the<lb/>
outfield "It has been excellent<lb/>
he says. "We're far ahead of where<lb/>
we were last year. We've tried two<lb/>
or three different combinations in<lb/>
the outfield. Coach (Gary) Overton<lb/>
has done a very fine job with them.<lb/>
We feel real good about depth for<lb/>
the next few years<lb/>
He's also satisfied with the play<lb/>
of freshman outfielder Ricky<lb/>
Nichols, who was involved in a<lb/>
rather interesting incident last week.<lb/>
There were two professional scouts<lb/>
at the Connecticut game Sunday,<lb/>
and one timed Nichols in 3.8<lb/>
seconds when running to first. Kan-<lb/>
sas City's Willie Wilson is the fastest<lb/>
in the majors with a time of 3.7. The<lb/>
first scout was rather amazed at the<lb/>
time and though maybe his stop-<lb/>
watch was broken. He showed the<lb/>
watch to the other scout, who<lb/>
replied, "Mine isn't It seemed the<lb/>
other scout had also timed Nichols<lb/>
in 3.8 seconds.<lb/>
"Ricky has played well Baird<lb/>
said. "He has outstanding athletic<lb/>
ability, and he could be a very good<lb/>
player. He has unlimited potential.<lb/>
But he has really come along. You<lb/>
have to be happy<lb/>
Nichols has driven in eight runs<lb/>
while scoring nine.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
The Pirates host Fair field today<lb/>
and Wednesday. Both games start at<lb/>
3 p.m.<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: For special<lb/>
photo coverage of the ECAC-South<lb/>
Tournament, see page 11.<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
NORFOLK, Va. ? For Old<lb/>
Dominion, the ECAC-South Tour-<lb/>
nament offered more than just a<lb/>
chance to reach the NCAA Cham-<lb/>
pionship Tourney. For the Monar-<lb/>
chs it presented a chance to silence<lb/>
critics.<lb/>
ODU did just that ten days ago,<lb/>
sweeping three straight games at<lb/>
The Scope to win the conference<lb/>
championship and move on to the<lb/>
NCAAs. The Monarchs were seeded<lb/>
third and won the title with wins<lb/>
over George Mason (70-62), second-<lb/>
seeded Richmond (77-69) and top<lb/>
seed James Madison (58-57).<lb/>
"I've been through a lot of<lb/>
games ODU head coach Paul<lb/>
Webb said after his team's title vic-<lb/>
tory, "but I can't remember any<lb/>
more satistfying than this one.<lb/>
There were a lot of questions about<lb/>
where we were going at mid-season<lb/>
when we were 7-8. This win is very,<lb/>
very rewarding. We beat a fine team<lb/>
and one thing is for sure ? both<lb/>
teams fiat came to play<lb/>
That they did. The Dukes and<lb/>
Monarchs put on a show the likes of<lb/>
which may have never been seen<lb/>
before in ECAC-South play. The<lb/>
lead changed hands an even dozen<lb/>
times before the issue was settled.<lb/>
Madison, which lost but one<lb/>
regular season league game and<lb/>
received a first round bye befo<lb/>
defeating William and Mary in the<lb/>
semi-finals, jumped ahead 3-0 in the<lb/>
early going but lost the lead and<lb/>
trailed 28-24 at the half.<lb/>
The Dukes battled back in the se-<lb/>
cond half oehind all-star forward<lb/>
Linton Townes and guard Charles<lb/>
Fisher. JMU overcame ODU and<lb/>
had a five-point advantage, 47-42,<lb/>
with less than seven minutes remain-<lb/>
ing in the contest.<lb/>
The Monarchs applied a vicious<lb/>
pressing defense in the game's final<lb/>
minutes to rally back. It was from<lb/>
the free throw line, though, that Old<lb/>
Dominion ultimately won the game.<lb/>
Guard Billy Mann made six of<lb/>
eight from the charity stripe down<lb/>
the stretch. The first two gave ODU<lb/>
a 52-51 lead, an advantage the<lb/>
Monarchs would never relinquish.<lb/>
Mann's biggest pair of free<lb/>
throws came with his team ahead by<lb/>
just one, 56-55, with four seconds<lb/>
remaining. He calmly sank both and<lb/>
ODU was crowned champion.<lb/>
Mann finished the title game as<lb/>
his team's leading scorer, tallying 19<lb/>
points. Center Mark West and<lb/>
guard Charlie Smith added ten<lb/>
apiece for the victors.<lb/>
Townes led Madison with 16.<lb/>
Fisher added 15 and center Dan<lb/>
Ruland 14.<lb/>
Ruland, Townes, and West were<lb/>
joined on the all-tournament team<lb/>
by ODU's Ronnie McAdoo and<lb/>
Richmond's John Schweitz, who<lb/>
scored 28 points in his team's semi-<lb/>
final loss to ODU.<lb/>
For Madison the title game was a<lb/>
bitter loss, but not a devastating<lb/>
one. Just 24 hours after the defeat<lb/>
the 23-5 Dukes were granted an at-<lb/>
large bid to the NCAA Tourna-<lb/>
ment, joining ODU in the<lb/>
prestigious field.<lb/>
Dukes Surprise, Monarchs tall In<lb/>
NCAAs<lb/>
Once in the NCAA Tournament,<lb/>
James Madison went to work to<lb/>
make amends for the tournament<lb/>
defeat. They did so in top fashion,<lb/>
defeating Big Ten runnerup Ohio<lb/>
State 55-48 in first round action.<lb/>
In the second round JMU had the<lb/>
dubious distinction of facing top-<lb/>
ranked North Carolina. The<lb/>
Dukes showed the entire nation that<lb/>
they were deserving of the at-large<lb/>
bid by taking the Tar Heels to the<lb/>
wire before falling, 52-50. After the<lb/>
game JMU coach Lou Campanelli<lb/>
said he was very proud but emo-<lb/>
tionally "crushed<lb/>
ODU did not fair as well in the<lb/>
national tourney. The Monarchs<lb/>
took on 18th-ranked Wake Forest<lb/>
and played the Deacons tight during<lb/>
the first half.<lb/>
When stars West and McAdoo<lb/>
got in foul trouble, though, the<lb/>
powerful Deacons pulled away,<lb/>
eventually winning 74-57.<lb/>
Pirates Exit Conference Tourney<lb/>
Early<lb/>
ECU's Pirates went into the<lb/>
ECAC-South tourney looking to<lb/>
salvage a damaged reputation. A 2-8<lb/>
league record resulted in a last-place<lb/>
finish and a first-round match with<lb/>
second-seeded Richmond.<lb/>
The Pirates put in a new offense<lb/>
for the tourney, one that was intent<lb/>
on holding the ball for a sure shot<lb/>
against Richmond's zone defense.<lb/>
The Spiders refused to switch<lb/>
defenses, so the game was a relative-<lb/>
ly slow one.<lb/>
The ECU strategy worked well,<lb/>
the Pirates leading much of the first<lb/>
half. Richmond recovered, though,<lb/>
and led 22-20 at the intermission.<lb/>
ECU kept the game close in the<lb/>
second haif and had several ex-<lb/>
cellent opportunities to cut sharply<lb/>
into Richmond's lead, but failed to<lb/>
do so each time.<lb/>
On the other hand, the Spiders<lb/>
made crucial free throws down the<lb/>
stretch and prevailed, 49-42.<lb/>
Jeff Pehl and Tom Bethea paced<lb/>
Richmond, scoring 13 and 12<lb/>
points, respectively.<lb/>
Forward Morris Hargrove led<lb/>
ECU with 14 points, while Charles<lb/>
Green chipped in 13.<lb/>
Following the game ECU head<lb/>
coach Dave Odom was disappointed<lb/>
but remained optimistic about the<lb/>
future despite his club's 10-17 final<lb/>
record.<lb/>
"I'm still proud of our universi-<lb/>
ty Odom said. "And I believe<lb/>
with the proper care, committment<lb/>
and backing we can do well in<lb/>
basketball. 1 was certainly proud of<lb/>
our play tonight<lb/>
????? ?V OARY HTTIItOM<lb/>
East Carolina first baseman Todd Evans stretches for a<lb/>
throw in the season-opening win over Virginia H'esleyan<lb/>
10-8. The Pirates have won five straight and face Fair field at<lb/>
Harrington Field this afternoon.<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
;3U<lb/>
<pb facs="00057466_0009"/><lb/>
THP PACT CAROLINIAN MARCHJjggg?<lb/>
<lb/>
East Carolina Golfers<lb/>
Finish 11th At Iron Duke<lb/>
By THOMAS BRANE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU golf team<lb/>
was busy during spring<lb/>
break with three tour-<lb/>
naments.<lb/>
The first tournament<lb/>
was the Fnpp Island In-<lb/>
vitational in South<lb/>
Carolina. The Pirates,<lb/>
as a team, finished<lb/>
eighth in the 20-team<lb/>
field. Ball State took<lb/>
the team honors with<lb/>
Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga a close se-<lb/>
cond.<lb/>
Don Gafner and Don<lb/>
Sweeting were the<lb/>
leading individuals for<lb/>
the Pirates with two-<lb/>
day totals of 147.<lb/>
"We played<lb/>
mediocre said ECU<lb/>
Coach Bob Helmick<lb/>
about the Fripp Island<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
The next tournament<lb/>
for the Pirates was the<lb/>
East Carolina Invita-<lb/>
tional.<lb/>
Entering the last day<lb/>
of the ECU match, the<lb/>
Pirates were in second<lb/>
place in the team com-<lb/>
petition. "Then the<lb/>
powerhouses took<lb/>
over according to<lb/>
Helmick. Georgia<lb/>
Southern took the team<lb/>
honors, while ECU<lb/>
finished in fourth place<lb/>
in the 12-team field.<lb/>
In the individual<lb/>
competition, the<lb/>
Pirates placed two par-<lb/>
ticipants in the top ten.<lb/>
Chris Czaja finished in<lb/>
fourth place with a 224<lb/>
while Don Sweeting<lb/>
placed ninth with a 227.<lb/>
Eric Moehling of N.C.<lb/>
State took the in-<lb/>
dividual honors with a<lb/>
three-day total of 218.<lb/>
Next on the agenda<lb/>
for ECU was the Iron<lb/>
Duke Invitational. The<lb/>
Pirates finished 11th in<lb/>
the 24-team field at<lb/>
Durham. The Pirates'<lb/>
best individual score<lb/>
was turned in by Don<lb/>
Gafner with a total of<lb/>
226.<lb/>
The top three teams<lb/>
for the Duke match<lb/>
were NSCU, Clemson,<lb/>
followed by Duke.<lb/>
Helmick analyzed his<lb/>
teams' play by saying,<lb/>
"We can't get it<lb/>
together. Only two<lb/>
players play well each<lb/>
match and we can not<lb/>
move up in team com-<lb/>
petition unless we play<lb/>
better together<lb/>
The Pirates have a<lb/>
chance to improve on<lb/>
their consistency this<lb/>
week in Furman. The<lb/>
Furman Invitational<lb/>
gets underway Wednes-<lb/>
day and ends Friday.<lb/>
"This is the strongest<lb/>
field we play in all<lb/>
year said Helmick.<lb/>
The 27-team field con-<lb/>
sists of all the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast and the<lb/>
Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference schools and the<lb/>
major independent<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
"If we play the same<lb/>
as we have been then<lb/>
we are in trouble in this<lb/>
tournament said<lb/>
Helmick. "If we play<lb/>
up to our capabilities<lb/>
we can beat some good<lb/>
teams<lb/>
Lady Pirates Place 16th<lb/>
East Carolina's Lady<lb/>
Pirate swimmers cap-<lb/>
ped their swimming<lb/>
season this past<lb/>
weekend with a 16th-<lb/>
place finish in the<lb/>
AIAW Nationals in<lb/>
Moscow, Idaho.<lb/>
The men completed<lb/>
their season at 5-6 with<lb/>
a surprising fifth-place<lb/>
finish at the Eastern In-<lb/>
tercollegiate Meet.<lb/>
The women, 5-4,<lb/>
scored 109.5 points as<lb/>
Clarion State won the<lb/>
overall championship.<lb/>
In the 400 freestyle<lb/>
relay. Nan George,<lb/>
Nancy Rogers, Nancy-<lb/>
James and Moria<lb/>
McHugh placed sixth in<lb/>
a time of 3:37.91. That<lb/>
same group finished se-<lb/>
cond in the 200 free<lb/>
relay in a time of<lb/>
1:38.96. In the<lb/>
preliminaries of the 200<lb/>
free, the group set an<lb/>
East Carolina varsity<lb/>
mark and broke the<lb/>
AIAW National<lb/>
record.<lb/>
In the 50-yard<lb/>
backstroke, Jayes plac-<lb/>
ed 15th with a time of<lb/>
29:08. George finished<lb/>
sixth with a time of<lb/>
24.59 in the 50-yard<lb/>
freestyle, an East<lb/>
Carolina record. In the<lb/>
500-yard free, Sally<lb/>
Collins placed 16th at<lb/>
5:13.29.<lb/>
The 800-yard<lb/>
freestyle relay squad of<lb/>
Sally Reinhard,<lb/>
Rogers, Collins and<lb/>
James finished seventh<lb/>
in a time of 7:54.90,<lb/>
another Pirate record.<lb/>
George, Jayes,<lb/>
James, McHugh, Col-<lb/>
lins, Reinhard, Han-<lb/>
nelore Korhelr and<lb/>
Rogers are earned All-<lb/>
America honors.<lb/>
West Virginia won<lb/>
the Eastern Inter-<lb/>
collegiate Meet with a<lb/>
total of 411 points.<lb/>
For East Carolina<lb/>
Doug Nieman finished<lb/>
third with a time of<lb/>
4:09.64 in the 400 im<lb/>
and Gregor Wray set a<lb/>
freshman record of<lb/>
4:11.78 in the consola-<lb/>
tion event.<lb/>
In the 200-yard<lb/>
freestyle consolation,<lb/>
freshman Stanley<lb/>
Williams placed fourth<lb/>
in 1:43.01. Doug<lb/>
McMillan placed third<lb/>
in a time of 50.53, a<lb/>
freshman record. Kevin<lb/>
Richards also placed<lb/>
sixth with a time of<lb/>
51.54.<lb/>
Jokim Svensson<lb/>
placed ninth with a<lb/>
time of 54.2 in the<lb/>
100-yard backstroke.<lb/>
In the trials, his time of<lb/>
53.96 set another<lb/>
freshman mark. Bjorn<lb/>
Johansen placed 10th.<lb/>
In the 800 freestyle<lb/>
relay, Williams,<lb/>
Svensson, Nieman and<lb/>
McMillan placed sixth<lb/>
in a time of 6:58.13.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
REWARD Lo?1 Mem. Feb 8th<lb/>
Brown Cordoroy Ladies Pocket<lb/>
Booh with Bamboo Handles Lost<lb/>
in Food Town and Fosdich's Area<lb/>
Please Call 754-4323 Home and<lb/>
754 ion Business Ask for Danny<lb/>
or Ginny.<lb/>
LOST Timex watch ist or 2nd<lb/>
tloor "stacks' Joyner Library<lb/>
Call Trudy 752 2?8I<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
Classified ads will be taken ONLY<lb/>
during, the following hours<lb/>
Monday ? I '5 3 00<lb/>
Tuesday ? 2 00 300<lb/>
Wednesday ? I 15 300<lb/>
Thursday - 2 00 3 00<lb/>
Friday ? I 15-200<lb/>
You must place the ads m person<lb/>
and pay tor them in advance<lb/>
Rates are 1 for the first 15 words<lb/>
and SOS per word after the first tif<lb/>
teen<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FURNITURE Sofa. 2 maple<lb/>
frame arm chairs, one end table.<lb/>
Good Condition Price Negotiable<lb/>
Call 754 5323<lb/>
SKI'S K2 IBScomp 810 ski's with<lb/>
Soloman Bindings ?'25 Call<lb/>
757 3210 and leave number.<lb/>
TOYOTA 1981 Corolla hardtop<lb/>
AC AMFM stereo, tape deck,<lb/>
automatic. 10 months old, like new<lb/>
S4400 neq After 5:00 7544425 or<lb/>
754 5420<lb/>
VIVITAR ZOOM Lens 75 210 with<lb/>
Macro for Nikon Mount used only 2<lb/>
t.mes !45 call 757 3210<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share<lb/>
one bedroom apartment 575 plus<lb/>
one half utilities Call Scott at<lb/>
752 4547<lb/>
1 or 2 roommates needed to share 3<lb/>
bedroom Doublewide beginning<lb/>
April I or after. Nice yard and<lb/>
area For more info call Connie<lb/>
758 7384.<lb/>
STUDENT TO share a fantastic<lb/>
place Hot tub, spa, sauna and sun<lb/>
tan booth. Private Bedroom 51 SO<lb/>
plus shared utilities 752 5048<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted<lb/>
For nicely furnished apt at<lb/>
Cypress Gardens. Within walking<lb/>
distance of campus Call 758 J8V4<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
Do vc know someone with an m<lb/>
terestmg or unigue hobby or<lb/>
craft If so contact the Buccaneer<lb/>
757 4501<lb/>
BEAZ Spring Break was MM<lb/>
good Yea for motorcycle rides,<lb/>
Mickey Mouse, Dennis, Florida<lb/>
State, back rubs at 3 am,<lb/>
strawberrydacquiris, Purdue, the<lb/>
Go Go's, sunburn, O.P s, men<lb/>
Irom Emory Riddle (hahal. Ken<lb/>
tucky, (haha), Maryland, South<lb/>
Dakota (boo). Tallahassee.<lb/>
eK. (let's not forget the locals).<lb/>
Let s keep the lock on S.B.S s<lb/>
Signed (with love), tte girls m the<lb/>
car behind you<lb/>
MO, Mr. Energetci, Whopper.<lb/>
Winston. Lenny, Biscuit. JW, Oc<lb/>
tapus. Foot, Buns, Hot Pants.<lb/>
Thorn. Venus, Herpes, Bruce Lee<lb/>
Thanx for a great time in Norfolk<lb/>
We'll see you on the Hill after Hap<lb/>
py Hour so Herbie leave the chair<lb/>
outside your window. Love, C.<lb/>
and B<lb/>
MARY, there is something under<lb/>
my bed<lb/>
BUNS, TOM: But can you hang?<lb/>
We understand that 104<lb/>
can't. .Meow Paybacks are hell<lb/>
Pooh<lb/>
NEW ORLEANS is 24 hr drives.<lb/>
A.P . K S. and D Unisex.<lb/>
Norwegian Priests. Red Pants,<lb/>
Sue and Luther. Sexkit 105s. Room<lb/>
Healings, your still stood<lb/>
TO THOSE Who Were There<lb/>
Whafi the difference between a<lb/>
r.ard on and darkness It stays<lb/>
dark All night<lb/>
EZ T Cocktail party, absence of<lb/>
malice. ICK s, champagne,<lb/>
strangers watching peck of<lb/>
"wood ' back to RRHS. all adds up<lb/>
to a good spring break. Love No<lb/>
17<lb/>
Dear Busy But Searching<lb/>
Gentleman Your notice was writ<lb/>
ten tor me I, too. enioy travel and<lb/>
ports, anything outdoors also<lb/>
I'm a bit adventurous and certain<lb/>
ly a romantic I appreciate<lb/>
glorious sunsets and fresh Spring<lb/>
Breezes on my skin Sincerity and<lb/>
loyalty count for a lot Are we kin<lb/>
dred spirits? If you think we might<lb/>
be call me at 355 4229<lb/>
(Greenville)<lb/>
7514713 ? r<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC C?ll Amy ?t<lb/>
757 3734<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST wants<lb/>
to type thesis, dissertations,<lb/>
publications, manuscripts or term<lb/>
papers at home Call 754 3440<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST Term.<lb/>
lesearch, Dissertation, Thesis,<lb/>
etc Fast and Efficient cow<lb/>
Rates Call 757-1378 anytime<lb/>
ATTENTION COMMUTERS<lb/>
FROM WILSON. I need a ride dai<lb/>
ly Irom Wilson to ECU and back<lb/>
daily We could trade rides or<lb/>
share expenses Please call<lb/>
Sherry at 343 304 ASAP Would<lb/>
like to start immediately<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
NEED MONEY You wont get<lb/>
rich, but the East Carolinian has<lb/>
openings for writers at the present<lb/>
time. There is also a possibility of<lb/>
training tor editor positions and<lb/>
training on computer terminals<lb/>
Apply at the East Carolinian ol<lb/>
lice. Old South Building<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHER NEEDED<lb/>
Apply with the Media Board<lb/>
secretary. Old South Building.<lb/>
757 4009<lb/>
BASS PLAYERS Exp bass need<lb/>
ed tor country rock band Must be<lb/>
serious Call Steve 754 3314 Drum<lb/>
mers and Lead Guitarist also<lb/>
needed<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
CARICATURES BY WEYLER<lb/>
Greenville's original personalned<lb/>
art service Have cartoon done of<lb/>
yourself or a loved one a unique<lb/>
gift idea. SiO tor 8 x 10, black and<lb/>
white or color Call 752-5775<lb/>
TYPING TERM, Thesis,<lb/>
Resumes, Dissertations, etc. Pro<lb/>
fessional quality at lowest rates<lb/>
Call Kempie Dunn anytime<lb/>
PLAN A<lb/>
HOBIE SAILING<lb/>
ADVENTURE<lb/>
TRIP INTO<lb/>
YOUR SUMMER<lb/>
Week long stress-challenge,<lb/>
adventures along the Outer<lb/>
Banks of North Carolina,<lb/>
Beginning May 23<lb/>
$100.00 Complete,<lb/>
Register Now<lb/>
For information<lb/>
write or call:<lb/>
UNITEOMETHOOIST<lb/>
OUTDOOR MINISTRIES<lb/>
Camp Don Lee<lb/>
 ArapahM, N.C.US10<lb/>
 t1?-34t-HM<lb/>
IF YOU ARE HAVING PROBLEMS WITH DRUGS OR 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 50 lbs. and less than 100 lbs. of marijuana - minimum<lb/>
prison sentence of 5 years.<lb/>
2. PMessiorTof 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/>
I<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POUCV<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale at or<lb/>
ibelow the advertised price in each A&amp;P Store e?cept as specifically noted<lb/>
m this ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT MARCH 20, AT AAP IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
AN A&amp;P EXCLUSIVE<lb/>
GENUINE<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
STONEWARE<lb/>
From the Highland Floral Collection. Criio<lb/>
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THIS WEEK'S<lb/>
FEATURE ITEM<lb/>
veeks M Mm<lb/>
Saucer MB?<lb/>
With Eacr LSETTING P.<lb/>
5.00 Purchase<lb/>
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CHOOSE FROM 3 BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
PATTERNS!<lb/>
PLACE . Fraczar To Ov?r. To Tab Convenience<lb/>
PIECE . oiahwMrwr and Ulcrowav S?(?<lb/>
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TrurJ.<lb/>
fcighth<lb/>
Thirteenth<lb/>
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f-injrth.<lb/>
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hfctk.<lb/>
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With each<lb/>
$S OCrHjit rn-?<lb/>
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fcAl H<lb/>
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$S OOpuHtHNA<lb/>
r.Al H<lb/>
With each<lb/>
$? OOpui.rn.<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON )<lb/>
SAVE 50<lb/>
When You Purchase A Pair<lb/>
01 Cereal-<lb/>
si Soup Bowls<lb/>
With This C4Q F?f Pk9<lb/>
Coupon You Jj OtTwo<lb/>
Pay Only w 54-1<lb/>
Good Thru Sat Mar 20<lb/>
SEE STORE DISPLAY FOR COMPLETE DETAILS.<lb/>
EXTRA LEAN SPECIAL TRIM COUNTRY FARM<lb/>
Assorted<lb/>
Pork Chops<lb/>
10 lbs. or<lb/>
more?Limit<lb/>
2 Pkgs. Please<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN<lb/>
GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
N.Y. Strip Steak<lb/>
2"<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
JAMESTOWN<lb/>
Bone<lb/>
In<lb/>
Sliced Bacon I<lb/>
J39<lb/>
JAMESTOWN<lb/>
Pork<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Hot 1 io ggc 1b-<lb/>
or Mild Pk9<lb/>
Kraft<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
Save 54<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
jar<lb/>
109:<lb/>
638<lb/>
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GOOD THRU SAT , MARCH 10. AT AP IN GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
SUPtft SAVEH COUPONS<lb/>
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You Pay Only 8afla1kA<lb/>
Bath Tissue 4,<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT MARCH 10. AT AAP IN GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
roll<lb/>
Pg.<lb/>
79?<lb/>
FJL<lb/>
SUPC SAVEH COUPONS<lb/>
Fm<lb/>
PURE VEGETABLE DEXO<lb/>
Save 50<lb/>
Ann Page<lb/>
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Iatnzrrw limit one with coupon <lb/>
VauLileaW GOOD THRU SAT , MARCH 10. AT AAP IN GREENVILLE, N C<lb/>
SCHLITZ<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
H2-Oz.<lb/>
Can<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
3<lb/>
SPRITE<lb/>
Sugar Free Litre<lb/>
SPRITE 2<lb/>
PEPSI<lb/>
MOUNTAIN DEV<lb/>
DIET PEPSI 2<lb/>
Plastic<lb/>
Bottle<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
iBBV<lb/>
FRESH WITH QUALITY<lb/>
U.S. 1 EASTERN GROWN ALL PURPOSE<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
10<lb/>
RED RIPE LUSCIOUS<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
29<lb/>
JANE PARKER<lb/>
Shortcakes<lb/>
 69 ?x<lb/>
1<lb/>
FOR ST. PATRICKS DAY<lb/>
Green<lb/>
FLAT END<lb/>
Corned Beef<lb/>
brisket<lb/>
iii<lb/>
1<lb/>
3s 1<lb/>
00<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057466_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 16, 1982<lb/>
FOOD TOWN<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Chuck Bone-In<lb/>
LFPINCSCVAGA<lb/>
U80A<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USDA Cheiee Beef Cheek Benelece<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
Food Town Oil<lb/>
Why Fey M.45<lb/>
4 Rail Petk - White Certeaelle<lb/>
Toilet Tissue<lb/>
Why fey M.St<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
XHC4C?<lb/>
tfSOA Choice Ertrt Use<lb/>
Stew<lb/>
1.S Liter - B?r?M?? Choklie, Rhiee<lb/>
Reie Ory Rei Dnf White<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
California<lb/>
Cellars<lb/>
Prices good March IS thru Mareh 21,1982<lb/>
Quart -tiw<lb/>
Straw<lb/>
Berries<lb/>
8alcb - Freeh California<lb/>
Broccoli<lb/>
8 Oz. Pka. - Snoar White<lb/>
Mushrooms<lb/>
Peckeac of 11 ? 12 Or. Cots<lb/>
Schlitz<lb/>
3qoo<lb/>
1U. - Feed Team<lb/>
Margarine Quarters<lb/>
12 One<lb/>
Duke's Mayonnaise<lb/>
Why Fey ?U5<lb/>
U Omcc<lb/>
Sunshine Crackers<lb/>
Why Fey 47 Bah<lb/>
399<lb/>
14 Oz. - PhlMlfte<lb/>
Pork &amp; Beans I Rally Towels<lb/>
tfk Fee 111 N Fey St<lb/>
Half Oeiitt - White Keeie<lb/>
Apple Juice<lb/>
IS Oz. - tee Feed Beef 1 Cheeee<lb/>
Chlekee 1 Terkey<lb/>
Ken-l<lb/>
Ration<lb/>
Whe Po It lech<lb/>
Kent<lb/>
S Oz. - Ubby'e<lb/>
Vienna<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
wtf ti n<lb/>
Prices good at Oreenville Food Town Store only<lb/>
?<lb/>
jfcr<lb/>
MfiMBjRl ?BMSs<lb/>
<pb facs="00057466_0011"/><lb/>
<lb/>
-South Tourney Scenes<lb/>
Photos By Dave Williams<lb/>
Old Dominion's AAonarchs captured the cham-<lb/>
pionship of the ECAC South Tournament with<lb/>
a narrow win over regular season champ<lb/>
James AAadison. Leading the way for ODU<lb/>
was AAVP AAark West, a 6 10 center who, at<lb/>
left, is elated with his championship trophy.<lb/>
At right, Monarch coach Paul Webb joins his<lb/>
troops just after the win over JMU.<lb/>
The tournament was filled with excitement, much of which was created by the<lb/>
cheerleaders from the seven league schools. Above, Old Dominion<lb/>
cheerleaders whoop it up just after the AAonarchs took the lead for good in the<lb/>
championship game.<lb/>
ODU's AAark West<lb/>
es up against a<lb/>
? JMU Dukes, m<lb/>
. HI tourney choices<lb/>
and (40) and Lin-<lb/>
.vnes (30). At right,<lb/>
coach Lou Cam-<lb/>
n gretfully accepts<lb/>
runnorup award.<lb/>
v, JAAU fans spell out<lb/>
Campanelli and the<lb/>
Dukes bounced back.<lb/>
Despite playing<lb/>
wel I, East<lb/>
Carolina was<lb/>
eliminated in the<lb/>
opening round by<lb/>
Richmond. The<lb/>
Bucs slowed the<lb/>
game down and<lb/>
fell just short at<lb/>
the end. Above,<lb/>
Pirate Tony<lb/>
Byles (24) looks<lb/>
to pass to team<lb/>
mate Bruce<lb/>
Peartree (44). At<lb/>
left, ECU'S<lb/>
Charles Green<lb/>
guards Rich<lb/>
mond's John<lb/>
Schewitz, an all-<lb/>
tourney selec-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057466_0012"/><lb/>
<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 16, 1982<lb/>
Even In Retirement, Jenkins Is No. I Fan<lb/>
No question Dr. Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins was the<lb/>
foremost Pirate fan<lb/>
while serving as<lb/>
Chancellor of East<lb/>
Carolina University. .<lb/>
No question Dr. Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins never took<lb/>
"no" for an answer<lb/>
when it came to deci-<lb/>
sions to move East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
forward, athletically or<lb/>
academically.<lb/>
No question that<lb/>
even into his third year<lb/>
of "retirement Dr.<lb/>
Leo W. Jenkins is still<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty's number one Pirate<lb/>
fan.<lb/>
Speaking Thursday<lb/>
night before the Fayet-<lb/>
teville Pirate Club<lb/>
Chapter, Jenkins told<lb/>
the purple and gold<lb/>
faithful, "we are win-<lb/>
ners and we shall con-<lb/>
tinue to demand this.<lb/>
"I urge each of you<lb/>
to do everything in<lb/>
your power to see that<lb/>
we move forward, we<lb/>
must sacrifice and build<lb/>
a Pirate Club member-<lb/>
ship never dreamed of<lb/>
before.<lb/>
"I assure you that<lb/>
you can count on me to<lb/>
do everything in my<lb/>
power to help us move<lb/>
through this period of<lb/>
money crisis. I know<lb/>
that I can count on you<lb/>
to help shoulder the<lb/>
hard task.<lb/>
"As long as we feel<lb/>
this way, we shall win<lb/>
the battle. We shall-en-<lb/>
joy the fruits of our<lb/>
labor for the past 50<lb/>
years. We shall meet<lb/>
with a destiny that has<lb/>
been at the end of our<lb/>
rainbow for these many<lb/>
years<lb/>
The occasion of<lb/>
Jenkins speaking to the<lb/>
group is most signifi-<lb/>
cant. It is only a begin-<lb/>
ning for Jenkins on the<lb/>
banquet circle.<lb/>
Jenkins was asked by<lb/>
interim Chancellor Dr.<lb/>
John M. Howell to join<lb/>
forces again with East<lb/>
Carolina University in<lb/>
attempts to rekindle the<lb/>
ECU spirit and push<lb/>
forward Pirate athletics<lb/>
to its finest hour. The<lb/>
request by Howell was<lb/>
re-enforced by Board<lb/>
of Trustee members<lb/>
and legislators.<lb/>
Jenkins is slated to<lb/>
appear at numerous<lb/>
fund raising events,<lb/>
beginning immediately.<lb/>
"In the past East<lb/>
Carolina University has<lb/>
ignored the dark<lb/>
clouds noted<lb/>
Jenkins. "And we have<lb/>
achieved every goal<lb/>
that has been set. Our<lb/>
cause was just.<lb/>
"We are at this mo-<lb/>
ment within reach of a<lb/>
truly big time program.<lb/>
We can get for East<lb/>
Carolina a national im-<lb/>
age that we all want<lb/>
and deserve.<lb/>
"This vision or goal<lb/>
is much broader than<lb/>
football or other<lb/>
sports. Quality<lb/>
academics and quality<lb/>
athletics go hand in<lb/>
hand. It is rare indeed<lb/>
to find a university that<lb/>
is truly great and does<lb/>
not excell in its athletic<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
"Athletics create<lb/>
spirit and pride unmat-<lb/>
ched by any other pro-<lb/>
gram. Success in sports<lb/>
programs helps recruit<lb/>
our state's and nation's<lb/>
best students. They<lb/>
want to see what we<lb/>
have and be part of it.<lb/>
They like a winner.<lb/>
"The faculty feels in-<lb/>
spired and proud, and<lb/>
new professors want to<lb/>
join the University<lb/>
team. We are constntly<lb/>
receiving new and ex-<lb/>
citing ideas from peo-<lb/>
ple across the country<lb/>
who want to become<lb/>
part of East Carolina.<lb/>
"And, my friends,<lb/>
people will support a<lb/>
winner. Legislators will<lb/>
do it, businessmen will<lb/>
do it, alumni will get a<lb/>
fever to escort their<lb/>
alma mater to new<lb/>
heights. They will lead<lb/>
the way for others<lb/>
In an attempt to<lb/>
move further ahead<lb/>
with the East Carolina<lb/>
University athletic pro-<lb/>
gram, Jenkins made it<lb/>
known that a major<lb/>
challenge lies ahead.<lb/>
"We face one of the<lb/>
greatest challenges in<lb/>
our history, a challenge<lb/>
that matches any<lb/>
obstacle we have taken<lb/>
on in our march for a<lb/>
national reputation.<lb/>
We are at a great<lb/>
threshold.<lb/>
"Fortunately the<lb/>
NCAA has recognized<lb/>
our great progress, and<lb/>
our commitment to a<lb/>
first class athletic pro-<lb/>
gram. We have been<lb/>
watched over the years.<lb/>
They like what they see.<lb/>
We have been placed in<lb/>
the top NCAA IA Divi-<lb/>
sion<lb/>
"Today my friends,<lb/>
because of our past suc-<lb/>
cesses, we have been<lb/>
placed in the position<lb/>
of facing our most im-<lb/>
portant challenge in 50<lb/>
years of football at<lb/>
East Carolina. We<lb/>
must face it. The task<lb/>
of competing in the big<lb/>
league will not be easy.<lb/>
But, we asked for the<lb/>
chance.<lb/>
"We must double or<lb/>
triple our revenues if<lb/>
we expect to remain in<lb/>
the top matter of doing<lb/>
it now, or forget it and<lb/>
accept less than the best<lb/>
in intercollegiate com-<lb/>
pany.<lb/>
"My friends, the<lb/>
answer is money. We<lb/>
cannot compete with<lb/>
the best unless we pay<lb/>
the price. We must<lb/>
have ample funds for<lb/>
scholarships, for travel<lb/>
to distant places, and<lb/>
for guarantees which<lb/>
bring the best teams to<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium. We<lb/>
have an urgent need to-<lb/>
day for one million<lb/>
dollars.<lb/>
"We have chosen a<lb/>
road to take, and it is<lb/>
long, and right now it is<lb/>
tough. 1 am here with<lb/>
you tonight because 1<lb/>
believe we have chosen<lb/>
the right road. The job<lb/>
can be done<lb/>
Neikro Ready For Season<lb/>
WEST PALM<lb/>
BEACH, Fla. (UPI) ?<lb/>
Phil Niekro has always<lb/>
been an optimist, even<lb/>
in those gloomy years<lb/>
when the Atlanta<lb/>
Braves were running up<lb/>
a string of last-place<lb/>
finishes.<lb/>
But this year, says<lb/>
Niekro, is different<lb/>
because this time he<lb/>
feels in his mind as well<lb/>
as his heart that the<lb/>
Braves are going to<lb/>
have a shot at the Na-<lb/>
tional League West title<lb/>
that has eluded them<lb/>
since 1969.<lb/>
"That's not just us<lb/>
talking says the soon-<lb/>
to-be 43-year-old<lb/>
knuckleballer as he ap-<lb/>
proaches his 19th ma-<lb/>
jor league baseball<lb/>
season. "A lot of other<lb/>
people are high on us<lb/>
this year, too<lb/>
It's easy to see why<lb/>
Niekro, despite all the<lb/>
disappointments of the<lb/>
past, is so hyped up<lb/>
here in mid-March.<lb/>
Take a look at those<lb/>
spring training<lb/>
statistics.<lb/>
The Braves, tradi-<lb/>
tionally slow starters,<lb/>
won seven of their first<lb/>
eight exhibition games<lb/>
and while no one takes<lb/>
the Grapefruit League<lb/>
all that seriously it's<lb/>
hard to ignore a 1.90<lb/>
earned run average and<lb/>
.291 hitting.<lb/>
"The pitching is<lb/>
what has me excited<lb/>
said Niekro who hadn't<lb/>
allowed a run in nine<lb/>
innings. "We've said<lb/>
for the past several<lb/>
years we thought we<lb/>
had the young pitching<lb/>
talent needed to win<lb/>
and I've got the feeling<lb/>
that this is the year it'll<lb/>
all come together<lb/>
Niekro scuffs his toe<lb/>
in the dirt when it's<lb/>
pointed out that he's<lb/>
the only Braves pitcher<lb/>
with a proven track<lb/>
record.<lb/>
"Oh, that may be<lb/>
true if you are talking<lb/>
about a long period of<lb/>
time he said. "But<lb/>
we've got other people<lb/>
who have had good<lb/>
years<lb/>
That's debatable.<lb/>
The only crtTier pro-<lb/>
bable Braves starter<lb/>
who ever won as many<lb/>
as a dozen major league<lb/>
games the same season<lb/>
was Tommy Boggs<lb/>
(1980) who has never<lb/>
won more than three in<lb/>
any other year and that<lb/>
time (last season), he<lb/>
lost 13.<lb/>
Niekro, who usually<lb/>
takes half a season to<lb/>
really get going, was<lb/>
only 7-7 last year when<lb/>
the prolonged baseball<lb/>
strike limited him to<lb/>
only 22 starts, about<lb/>
half his usual<lb/>
workload.<lb/>
But the graying<lb/>
righthander, who won<lb/>
21 games when he was<lb/>
40 years old, is still con-<lb/>
sidered the closest thing<lb/>
to a stopper the Braves<lb/>
have.<lb/>
"I'm looking for-<lb/>
ward to a good year<lb/>
said Niekro while<lb/>
resting in the dugout<lb/>
following a morning<lb/>
workout. "I feel great,<lb/>
really great, and I'm<lb/>
farther ahead than I<lb/>
usually am this early in<lb/>
the spring<lb/>
It has long been Phil<lb/>
Niekro's lament that<lb/>
atthmrgti tre has been<lb/>
playing professional<lb/>
baseball since 1959,<lb/>
he's never been in a<lb/>
World Series. His best<lb/>
chance for that was in<lb/>
'69 when he won 23<lb/>
games while helping the<lb/>
Braves win the Na-<lb/>
tional League West for<lb/>
the only time. But that<lb/>
year's dream was<lb/>
quickly shattered in the<lb/>
National League<lb/>
playoff when the New<lb/>
York Mets swept the<lb/>
series, 3-0.<lb/>
"I guess that is one<lb/>
of the reasons I con-<lb/>
tinue to be so op-<lb/>
timistic said Niekro.<lb/>
"Maybe I want us to be<lb/>
good enough to go all<lb/>
the way because I have<lb/>
waited so long. Each<lb/>
year we come up short,<lb/>
the harder it becomes<lb/>
for me<lb/>
Niekro's record is far<lb/>
more remarkable when<lb/>
you take in considera-<lb/>
tion that, for the most<lb/>
part, he has been pit-<lb/>
ching for a down-in-<lb/>
the-dumps ball club.<lb/>
Remember, we're talk-<lb/>
ing about a team that<lb/>
has only been as high as<lb/>
third once in the past<lb/>
decade and rnit! a frrc-<lb/>
year stretch (1975-79)<lb/>
when it lost at least 92<lb/>
games a season.<lb/>
Niekro, who pro-<lb/>
bably would have been<lb/>
For<lb/>
GRANDMA<lb/>
BOY FRIEND<lb/>
SISTER<lb/>
UNCLE<lb/>
THE YEARBOOKetc<lb/>
get yotuT<lb/>
pictutb takgn<lb/>
Sign Up March 15-19 9:00-5:00 Buccaneer office<lb/>
Call 757-6501<lb/>
Sittings March 22-April 16 9:00-5:00 Buccaneer office<lb/>
a 300-game winner long<lb/>
ago if he had been pit-<lb/>
ching for Cincinnati or<lb/>
Pittsburgh, has won<lb/>
240 games while<lb/>
posting a 3.13 earned<lb/>
run average ' and that<lb/>
includes the no-hitter<lb/>
he hurled in 1973.<lb/>
"It's hard to set<lb/>
goals at this point in my<lb/>
career said Niekro<lb/>
who figures to get his<lb/>
usual 40-plus starts this<lb/>
season. "I feel like I'm<lb/>
throwing my<lb/>
knuckleball as well as<lb/>
ever. If anything, I'm<lb/>
smarter with it now<lb/>
than I was 10-15 years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
Niekro feels the<lb/>
return of his former<lb/>
batterymate Joe Torre<lb/>
as new manager of the<lb/>
Braves is "a definite<lb/>
plus" for his ODtimism.<lb/>
"Joe has brought a<lb/>
new spirit to this club<lb/>
said Niefro. "That's<lb/>
the way he always was.<lb/>
Back when he was cat-<lb/>
ching for us (1061-68),<lb/>
Joe was never afraid to<lb/>
come out from behind<lb/>
the plate and set you<lb/>
straight if things were<lb/>
going wrong<lb/>
Niekro says the key<lb/>
to whatever success the<lb/>
Braves will have this<lb/>
season will be how well<lb/>
they play the first<lb/>
month or two.<lb/>
"For too many<lb/>
years, we've gotten off<lb/>
to a bad start and been<lb/>
too far behind once we<lb/>
started playing winning<lb/>
baseball said Niekro.<lb/>
"With a young club<lb/>
like this, we need to get<lb/>
off on the right foot<lb/>
PIRA TES<lb/>
Yarden Studios. Inc.<lb/>
LITTLE SISTER<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
at the<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
The Brothers and Little Sisters of Phi Kappa Tau would like<lb/>
to extend an open invitation to all interested ladies to attend<lb/>
our Little Sister Rush. The parties begin at 9:30 both TUES.<lb/>
and WED. We are looking forward to your visit.<lb/>
THE MEN OF PHI KAPPA TAU<lb/>
TUES WED 9:30-until<lb/>
"COME SEE WHAT MAKES<lb/>
US BEST<lb/>
409 ELIZABETH ST.<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
.v-<lb/>
i<lb/>
?; .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057466_0013"/>
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