<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057471_0001"/>
?hz<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
A.<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58<lb/>
Noy?<lb/>
Thursday, April 1,1982<lb/>
Green ville,N.C<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Selective Service Begins Prosecuting<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
For all males born between 1960<lb/>
and 1963, failure to register with the<lb/>
Selective Service is a federal crime<lb/>
punishable by a fine of up to<lb/>
$10,000, a term of imprisonment of<lb/>
up to five years or both.<lb/>
Until now, these penalties have<lb/>
not been enforced.<lb/>
According to the state Selective<lb/>
Service director, William H. Mc-<lb/>
Cachren, approximately 91 percent<lb/>
of North Carolina men born bet-<lb/>
ween I960 and 1962 have registered<lb/>
for the draft.<lb/>
But of those state residents born<lb/>
in 1963, only 71 percent have<lb/>
registered.<lb/>
McCachren feels that their failure<lb/>
to register may be due to uncertainty<lb/>
as to current federal policy on<lb/>
registration and enforcement.<lb/>
On Jan. 7, President Reagan an-<lb/>
nounced that a grace period would<lb/>
be granted to allow those who had<lb/>
not already registered to do so.<lb/>
However, the grace period ended<lb/>
on Feb. 28, and the Selective Service<lb/>
System, in accordance with the<lb/>
Department of Justice, has an-<lb/>
nounced that it will now begin to en-<lb/>
force all current registration laws.<lb/>
Legislation now requires that all<lb/>
U.S. men, upon reaching their 18th<lb/>
birthday, must register for the draft<lb/>
within 30 days.<lb/>
According to national Selective<lb/>
Service reports, approximately<lb/>
927,000, or nearly 21 percent of<lb/>
American men required by law to<lb/>
register, have not done so.<lb/>
Another million registrants have<lb/>
failed to inform the Selective Service<lb/>
of a change of address.<lb/>
Under the registration laws, both<lb/>
offenses will be treated as felonies.<lb/>
The announcement that the<lb/>
Reagan administration would begin<lb/>
to enforce the laws has been met by<lb/>
complaints by the members of at<lb/>
least one opposition faction.<lb/>
Dr. Warren Hoover, executive<lb/>
director of the National Inter-<lb/>
religious Service Board for Cons-<lb/>
cientious Objectors (NISBCO), says<lb/>
he feels the prosecution efforts will<lb/>
be "selective and unfair<lb/>
Hoover feels that the Selective<lb/>
Service System will "single out"<lb/>
religious non-registrants for punish-<lb/>
ment, because they will be the<lb/>
easiest to prosecute and gain a<lb/>
favorable ruling against.<lb/>
Associate Director for NISBCO,<lb/>
Shawn Perry, explains, "We have<lb/>
seen that the people who have been<lb/>
selected for prosecution so far have<lb/>
been religious. This is selecting peo-<lb/>
ple who are religious over those who<lb/>
are not<lb/>
Perry says that those who failed<lb/>
to register for the draft for religious<lb/>
reasons are the first to be prosecuted<lb/>
because they pose the greatest threat<lb/>
to the Selective Service System.<lb/>
According to Perry, NISBCO is<lb/>
an organization which offers legal<lb/>
aid and guidance to draft objectors.<lb/>
The group also lends aid to those<lb/>
who classify themselves as conscien-<lb/>
tious objectors, those who have<lb/>
registered but who want their objec-<lb/>
tions to the draft to be placed on<lb/>
record with the Selective Service<lb/>
System.<lb/>
Although Perry says NISBCO is<lb/>
opposed to the draft, he adds, "We<lb/>
don't advise people to not register,<lb/>
but if they don't, we give as much<lb/>
support as possible, legal and other-<lb/>
wise<lb/>
Student Sentenced<lb/>
To Three-Year Term<lb/>
Roger William Creech Jr an<lb/>
ECU student, pleaded guilty to four<lb/>
counts of breaking and entering and<lb/>
larceny in Pitt County Suprerior<lb/>
Court on March 15. The thefts oc-<lb/>
cured during the Thanksgiving<lb/>
holidays in Jarvis dorm.<lb/>
According to Detective Sgt. Gene<lb/>
Mv bee he was holding more than<lb/>
$9,000 in stolen goods when ar-<lb/>
rested on Nov. 27. 1981.<lb/>
The stolen items had been ac-<lb/>
cumulated during Creech's last two<lb/>
years at ECU.<lb/>
He was senteneced on March 19<lb/>
bv Judge David Reid to a three-year<lb/>
split sentence. It consists of a<lb/>
ninety-day active sentence, to be<lb/>
served this summer, and two years<lb/>
nine months probation. In addition<lb/>
he was banned from all campus<lb/>
buildings except for when attending<lb/>
class and ordered to pay the costs of<lb/>
court.<lb/>
Creech is a former resident of Jar-<lb/>
Poet Norris<lb/>
Recites Tonight<lb/>
At Jenkins<lb/>
? Any poet alive or dead, or in<lb/>
any language, would sell half his life<lb/>
lor I eslie Norris's convincingness<lb/>
of tone says James Dickey of the<lb/>
distinguished British poet who is<lb/>
visiting East Carolina.<lb/>
Mr. Norris will be giving a public<lb/>
reading at Jenkins Auditorium on<lb/>
the East Carolina campus tonight at<lb/>
8:30. On Friday morning at 10:30,<lb/>
room 221 Mendenhall, he will be<lb/>
conducting a poetry workshop.<lb/>
Anyone interested in poetry and<lb/>
wants feedback on their work<lb/>
should bring 20 copies of the poem<lb/>
to be discussed if planning to at-<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
His most recent work is Walking<lb/>
the H hire Fields and has had poems<lb/>
and short stones published in The<lb/>
Atlantic Monthly, The New Yorker,<lb/>
vis and is still attending school.<lb/>
In an unrelated incident, three<lb/>
Aycock residents were each sentenc-<lb/>
ed to 50 hours of labor to be deter-<lb/>
mined by the Director of the<lb/>
Physical Plant, James Lowry. Peter<lb/>
Spuller, Jonathan Thayer and<lb/>
Avalon Swain III, all 19, pleaded<lb/>
guilty to charges of vandalizing<lb/>
school property in district court.<lb/>
According to Assistant Security<lb/>
Director Francis Eddings, they were<lb/>
arrested on March 4 for damaging<lb/>
three street lights in the mall area of<lb/>
central campus. One light was<lb/>
broken.<lb/>
Eddings added that these<lb/>
sentence were givien in an attempt<lb/>
to curtail vandalism on campus.<lb/>
Security Director Joseph Calder is<lb/>
offering a $100 standing reward for<lb/>
information leading to the arrest<lb/>
and conviction of people caught<lb/>
tampering with the blue light securi-<lb/>
ty system.<lb/>
Photo Sy SCOTT LARSON<lb/>
It's All Greek To Me<lb/>
the line forms in front of the Sigma Tau (.amma fraternity house for activities celebrating ECU Greek Week.<lb/>
Walk To Be Held This Saturday<lb/>
I eslie orris<lb/>
Harper's and many other<lb/>
periodicals. He was recently<lb/>
honored by being invited to read at<lb/>
Poets Corner in Westminister Ab-<lb/>
bey at the unveiling of a memorial<lb/>
to Dylan Thomas.<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
si?fl Mriirr<lb/>
Local organizers from the Green-<lb/>
villeECU Hunger Coalition are<lb/>
working on the final details for this<lb/>
S a t u r d a v' s 1 11 h Annual<lb/>
CROPW'alk for Humanity.<lb/>
ECU Interim Chancellor Dr.John<lb/>
Howell, has teamed up with Mrs.<lb/>
Nancy Jenkins as the volunteer co-<lb/>
chairpersons of the "Walk which<lb/>
had over 200 participants last year.<lb/>
The walk, as in recent years, will<lb/>
cover a 20-kilometer (12.4 miles)<lb/>
course, beginning at Green Springs<lb/>
Park on East Fifth Street, then win-<lb/>
ding through Greenville city streets,<lb/>
until the last stop at the Baptist Stu-<lb/>
dent Center on 10th Street.<lb/>
This year CROP (The Communi-<lb/>
ty Hunger Appeal of Church V0rl4l<lb/>
Service) will be the promotional<lb/>
organizaton behind the walk.<lb/>
CROP promotes many similar<lb/>
walks throughout the United States<lb/>
for hunger relief.<lb/>
Re. Graham Nahouse, the East<lb/>
Carolina Lutheran campus minister,<lb/>
said the walk is "visible" to<lb/>
everyone as a powerful witness to<lb/>
the needs of the poor. "The walk<lb/>
shows that there are people who<lb/>
care enough and who will take the<lb/>
time to participate he added.<lb/>
Reb. Nahouse said the problem of<lb/>
hunger, both locally and interna-<lb/>
tionally, is worsening.<lb/>
Funds collected by the par-<lb/>
ticipants in the walk will be used for<lb/>
both local and international hunger<lb/>
relief projects. Twenty-five percent<lb/>
of the funds will be split between the<lb/>
local Salvation Army and Catholic<lb/>
Social Services, which both give<lb/>
yearround food assistance to poor<lb/>
residents of Pitt County.<lb/>
Rev. Nahouse said that federal<lb/>
budget cuts will be increasing the<lb/>
numbers of people who will need<lb/>
food assistance in Greenville. "As<lb/>
government assistance, in many<lb/>
areas, is being phased out, there will<lb/>
be less resources available for the<lb/>
poor he said, which will place<lb/>
more reliance on the private sector<lb/>
and volunteerism" as the "major<lb/>
sources" of help going for the care<lb/>
of the needy.<lb/>
CROP gives each person who<lb/>
sponsors a walker the opportunity<lb/>
to "designate" his or her donation<lb/>
to a specific international organiza-<lb/>
tion doing hunger work. CROP lists<lb/>
over a dozen different organiza-<lb/>
tions, including CARE, Project<lb/>
Hope, the Southern Baptist Foreign<lb/>
Mission Board and Lutheran World<lb/>
Relief, to which an individual may<lb/>
specify the other 75 percent of his<lb/>
funds is to go to.<lb/>
Ed King, director of CROP for<lb/>
North Carolina and South Carolina.<lb/>
Paratroopers Killed In Desert Winds<lb/>
said on a recent visit to Greenville<lb/>
that 50,000 people die each day<lb/>
from "dramatic starvation"<lb/>
throughout the world.<lb/>
"I think it's your Christian duty<lb/>
to help people who are starving"<lb/>
said Karen Akers, an ECU early<lb/>
childhood education major, who is<lb/>
coordinating the CROPW'alk for<lb/>
Humanity for Jarvis Memorial<lb/>
United Methodist Church. "I<lb/>
almost think we're commanded to<lb/>
do it  I don't think we can ignore<lb/>
what Christ said. Feed the hungry,<lb/>
clothe the naked, visit those in<lb/>
prison and take care of the oppress-<lb/>
ed "<lb/>
Akers feels that many Christians<lb/>
don't respond to the cry for help<lb/>
from the poor and that people want<lb/>
to "make it (Christianitv) too com-<lb/>
fortable<lb/>
See CROP, Page 2<lb/>
-On The Inside-i<lb/>
FORT BRAGG (UPI) ? One of<lb/>
156 paratroopers injured in a desert<lb/>
parachute jump in which four men<lb/>
died blamed high winds for the in-<lb/>
juries Wednesday, saying troopers<lb/>
were unable to control their chutes<lb/>
in the air and unable to get out of<lb/>
them on the ground.<lb/>
"You had no control at all, none<lb/>
whatsoever said Spec. 4 John<lb/>
Painter who fractured his collar-<lb/>
bone. "You just went down hoping<lb/>
you would make it<lb/>
The soldiers were among 2,500<lb/>
paratroopers participating in a mass<lb/>
parachute drop in California as part<lb/>
of "Gallant Eagle 82 a series of<lb/>
maneuvers designed to test the<lb/>
readiness of the nation's Rapid<lb/>
Deployment Force. Although<lb/>
reporters on the scene said winds<lb/>
were gusting up to 40 mph as little as<lb/>
an hour before the jump, Army<lb/>
Gen. Robert Kingston, commander<lb/>
of the Rapid Deployment Force,<lb/>
said the wind was within the 15 knot<lb/>
limit when the paratroopers<lb/>
jumped.<lb/>
But Painter, a veteran of 40<lb/>
jumps and the last man out of the<lb/>
plane, said he knew the wind was<lb/>
too high before he jumped.<lb/>
"This was over 30, I know that<lb/>
for a fact he said. "You could tell<lb/>
because the bird (the transport jet)<lb/>
was shaking so much<lb/>
Painter said soldiers were dragged<lb/>
across the desert after landing.<lb/>
"Some of them got completely<lb/>
dragged out of their parachute<lb/>
harnesses and out of their<lb/>
uniforms Painter said.<lb/>
Painter said he lost consciousness<lb/>
on the way down but awoke when<lb/>
he hit the ground and his chute<lb/>
began dragging him.<lb/>
"You couldn't collapse your<lb/>
chute he said. "I had to cut<lb/>
mine<lb/>
Painter was among 58 injured<lb/>
soldiers flown back to Fort Bragg<lb/>
Wednesday. Most of the soldiers<lb/>
returning had fractured bones or<lb/>
sprains.<lb/>
Troopers more seriously injured<lb/>
remained in California hospitals<lb/>
while 84 of the injured were treated<lb/>
and sent back to their units.<lb/>
About two-thirds of the injured<lb/>
soldiers who returned Wednesday<lb/>
came back on stretchers. Many had<lb/>
casts on their arms or legs and<lb/>
Painter said several of the injured<lb/>
suffered friction burns and cuts<lb/>
when they were dragged by their<lb/>
parachutes.<lb/>
Painter said the commanding of-<lb/>
ficer in the drop should not have let<lb/>
it happen.<lb/>
"If he had gone through the<lb/>
dispensary, 1 don't think he would<lb/>
have gotten out of it alive he said.<lb/>
Painter said the officers should<lb/>
have realized the wind was too<lb/>
high<lb/>
They definitely should have<lb/>
known something when they drop-<lb/>
ped the heavy equipment and the<lb/>
chutes wouldn't unfold so many of<lb/>
them came down upside down he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Pfc. David Baxter, a paratrooper<lb/>
who knew four of the injured<lb/>
soldiers, said they also told him the<lb/>
wind was to blame for the injuries<lb/>
and the jump never should have oc-<lb/>
curred.<lb/>
"Those parachutes don't have<lb/>
engines on them he said. "You<lb/>
can't pick you spot, you've got to go<lb/>
where the wind takes you and those<lb/>
guys died because (officers) made a<lb/>
mistake.<lb/>
All day Wednesday, relatives<lb/>
telephoned public affairs officers at<lb/>
Fort Bragg to get the names of the<lb/>
injured.<lb/>
Post spokesman Mike Shutak<lb/>
estimated his office had answered<lb/>
800 to 1,000 calls for information by<lb/>
midday Wednesday.<lb/>
Spec. 4 Louis Ortiz, who handled<lb/>
many of the calls, said several of the<lb/>
people inquiring were distraught.<lb/>
"The older wives, they know how<lb/>
to handle it he said. "But, with<lb/>
the younger ones, you just have to<lb/>
be real calm<lb/>
Rape Case Brings Cooperation<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
M?ff Writer<lb/>
The police departments from East<lb/>
Carolina and the city of Greenville<lb/>
work in conjunction in certain in-<lb/>
stances. One such occasion was the<lb/>
rape of a Greenville woman on Jan.<lb/>
1.<lb/>
According to Detective Pete<lb/>
Lavin of the Greenville Police<lb/>
Department, a bulletin was posted<lb/>
on campus with a description of the<lb/>
assailant. "This was done because<lb/>
of the chance that the suspect might<lb/>
be a student. It also increases the<lb/>
number of calls by people who think<lb/>
they've seen the suspect he said.<lb/>
Then, according to Detective<lb/>
Sergeant Gene McAbee of the ECU<lb/>
police, students who believed they<lb/>
had seen a person who fit the<lb/>
description called the Greenville<lb/>
Police Department. "They<lb/>
(Greenville police) then called us<lb/>
and we in turn questioned the<lb/>
suspect McAbee said, "and in<lb/>
some cases asked for a picture line-<lb/>
up<lb/>
Lavin commented that of the 88<lb/>
pictures already shown to the vic-<lb/>
tim, approximately 34 of them have<lb/>
been students.<lb/>
The cooperation not only exists in<lb/>
special cases. According to both<lb/>
detectives, assistance is given to one<lb/>
another in routine matters as well.<lb/>
The two departments often ex-<lb/>
change information and talk over<lb/>
cases with each other.<lb/>
"There is good communication<lb/>
Sec POLICE, Page 2<lb/>
In for the stretch, the ECU<lb/>
women's tennis team smashed<lb/>
Atlantic Christian Tuesday. See<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Weather Watch<lb/>
(UPI) - Mostly c?nny today with<lb/>
highs in the mid-70s. Partly<lb/>
cloudy Friday through Sunday<lb/>
with a chance of showers by late<lb/>
Saturday Highs in the 70s<lb/>
through Saturday; cooling Sun-<lb/>
day. Overnight lows tor the<lb/>
weekend in the 50s.<lb/>
Inside Index<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Opinion 4<lb/>
Campus Forum4<lb/>
Style 5<lb/>
Learning About College6<lb/>
Sports 8<lb/>
Classifieds10<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
'<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057471_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL I, 1982<lb/>
'?-<lb/>
?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
It you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcements column<lb/>
please send the announcement (as<lb/>
brief as possible) typed and<lb/>
double spaced to The East Carol<lb/>
man m care of the production<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
For better service, we are now<lb/>
asking that you pick up several<lb/>
copies of our new announcement<lb/>
application for your upcoming<lb/>
events<lb/>
There is no charge for an<lb/>
nouncements, but space is often<lb/>
limited. Therefore we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest thai you do not rely<lb/>
solely on this column for publicity<lb/>
The deadline tor announcements<lb/>
Is 5 p.m Friday for the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 5pm Tuesday tor the<lb/>
Thursday paper<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
merits<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
BICYCLE CLUB<lb/>
ECRC was born m March 1982.<lb/>
founded by former bicycle racers<lb/>
and by East Carolina Students A<lb/>
seperate organization from ECRA<lb/>
but run by the same people, the<lb/>
East Carolina Road Club has ex<lb/>
cellent potential as a bicycle<lb/>
power The names ECRA and<lb/>
ECRC were chosen to direct atten<lb/>
tion to Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
and specifically to East Carolina<lb/>
University, as a bicycie oriented<lb/>
community<lb/>
Anyone can Oin. whether they<lb/>
are enrolled m the university or<lb/>
not Membership dues are S10 per<lb/>
year, which go to club operating<lb/>
expenses, liscensmg. and covers<lb/>
the cost of printing the monthly<lb/>
newsletter Pleasure rider or<lb/>
Olympian to be, we have<lb/>
something to offer every serious<lb/>
cyclist<lb/>
For more information, contact<lb/>
Kip Sloan at 756 0246 from 8 5 and<lb/>
757 1680 after 6 p.m or Jeff Horton<lb/>
at 758 8519 The first US C F race<lb/>
is March 28 In Virginia Beach<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
BLOOD DRIVE<lb/>
Give Blood: Give so that others<lb/>
may live, Tuesday, April 6, 10:00<lb/>
4:00 and Wednesday, April 7,10 00<lb/>
400 at the Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Center Sponsored by your Inter<lb/>
Fraternity Council<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
Psi Chi, the national honor socie<lb/>
ty tor psychology majors will have<lb/>
their initiation of new members<lb/>
and elections for new officers on<lb/>
Tuesday, April, 6 at 7.00 p.m. at<lb/>
the Three Steers Restaurant. All<lb/>
members and new initiates are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
The 'Electric Rainbow Radio<lb/>
Show 'S on WZMB Saturday and<lb/>
Sunday nights from 10 to 1 This<lb/>
week Saturday's feature album<lb/>
w.ii be "Led Zeppelin 1" The<lb/>
album Sunday will be new<lb/>
"Starfighters" Tune in and enioy<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
NAACP elections will be held<lb/>
April 15, 1982 Anvone interested m<lb/>
running for an office, contact<lb/>
Virginia Carnon at 757 6942 or<lb/>
Jackie Rowe a' 752 8450 The<lb/>
deadline for submitting names s<lb/>
April 7. 1982<lb/>
CAR WASH<lb/>
NAACP will sponsor a car wash<lb/>
Saturday. Apr.I 3. 1982 from 10 un<lb/>
til 3 p m at university Exxon Sta<lb/>
tion on Fifth St The price is SI 00<lb/>
per car<lb/>
CO-ED FRATERNITY<lb/>
The organizational meeting of<lb/>
the National Serv.ce Co Ed<lb/>
Fraternity, Alpha Ph. Omega will<lb/>
be held at 3 30 p m on Friday,<lb/>
April 2. '1982, ill the Conference<lb/>
Room I Room 210) of Erwm Hall<lb/>
The Fraternity is nationally<lb/>
as'Xiated with the Boy Scouts of<lb/>
America The Meeting is open to<lb/>
all students<lb/>
MUSIC LISTENING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
Stop by Mendenhall and spena<lb/>
some quiet time in the Music<lb/>
Listening Center The Center is<lb/>
open daily from 2 00 p m until<lb/>
10 30 p m Bring your own music<lb/>
or make your selection from the<lb/>
wide variety available at the<lb/>
Center Also current magazines<lb/>
are available tor your read.no<lb/>
pleasure<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
Students who are to be initiated<lb/>
into Phi Eta Sigma, national honor<lb/>
society for freshmen, are remind<lb/>
ed to be at the multi purpose room<lb/>
of Mendenhall by 7:15 p.m. on<lb/>
Thursday, April 1<lb/>
REFUNDS<lb/>
All refunds of individual tickets<lb/>
for the Elly Amelmg Concert,<lb/>
cancelled from February 23 and<lb/>
March 2, must be completed by<lb/>
April 2 There will be no refunds<lb/>
after that time Refunds are<lb/>
handled at the Central Ticket Of<lb/>
tice, MSC, Mondays Fridays, 10<lb/>
am 4 p.m ? We regret the in<lb/>
convenience of the cancellation.<lb/>
AHOY MATES!<lb/>
Enroll in the basic sailing class<lb/>
Two classroom sessions and three<lb/>
weekend afternoons on 19 26 ft<lb/>
sailboats on the Pamlico River<lb/>
Tuition is S60 and a required text,<lb/>
Invitation to Sailing is available at<lb/>
the student bookstore. Class<lb/>
begins April 8, and registrations<lb/>
should be received by April 1. Con<lb/>
tact the Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education in Erwin Hall for<lb/>
details (phone 757 6143)<lb/>
"MR. 10"<lb/>
The Elbo and the Little Sisters of<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha present the<lb/>
first annual "Mr. 10" Contest to be<lb/>
held Tuesday, April 6 at 8:30. Con<lb/>
testants wishing to enter, please<lb/>
contact 757 1638 or 758 JW There<lb/>
will be no entry fee. The charge at<lb/>
the door is S.75 before 10 o'clock<lb/>
and ?1 00 after Door prizes will be<lb/>
awarded.<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
The Circle K club of ECU invites<lb/>
all students to attend our Tuesday<lb/>
night meetings in room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall. We are now initiating<lb/>
a membership drive for student<lb/>
who are interested in helping<lb/>
others through our various service<lb/>
projects. See y'ali Tuesday night<lb/>
at 6 30<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
60 Clerk Typists positions are<lb/>
available for the summer in<lb/>
Washington, DC. at the Pentagon<lb/>
in the Office of the Secretary of<lb/>
Defense. The Pentagon, in part,<lb/>
uses a random selection process to<lb/>
select clerk-typists for the sum<lb/>
mer. Students who have social<lb/>
security numbers ending in "7"<lb/>
have been selected for considera<lb/>
tion this summer Also available<lb/>
are 36 internship positions for<lb/>
students majoring in Political<lb/>
Science, MPA, Computer Science,<lb/>
Business, and Business Educa<lb/>
tion. interns will be selected ac<lb/>
cording to their GPA's and work<lb/>
experience. Interested students<lb/>
should apply today! Deadline for<lb/>
applications to be received is April<lb/>
9<lb/>
ACM<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of ACM<lb/>
will meet this Thursday, April 1 at<lb/>
3 30 in Austin room 132 This week,<lb/>
Mr David Sowell, Research<lb/>
Associate and software engineer<lb/>
to the ULTRA Project at ECU, will<lb/>
speak on the last segment of<lb/>
designing and building your own<lb/>
microcomputer Anyone in<lb/>
terested is invited to attend.<lb/>
THE WALK<lb/>
"The Walk" is only 2 weeks<lb/>
away. Sign up to "walk" or spon<lb/>
sor a friend. The Uth Annual<lb/>
"CROP WALK FOR HUMANI<lb/>
TY" will be held on April 3 at 8 30<lb/>
am. The money raised will be us<lb/>
ed to help poor countries become<lb/>
self sufficient Church world Ser<lb/>
vice and The ECU Hunger Coali<lb/>
tion are working together on the<lb/>
"walk" signup 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 4216 or<lb/>
come to our meetings at 7 30 p m.<lb/>
on Thursdays at the Newman<lb/>
House.<lb/>
CROP Walk This Saturday<lb/>
SOCWCORR<lb/>
The Department of Social Work<lb/>
and Correctional Services will of<lb/>
fer courses during the second sum<lb/>
mer session of 1982, beginning<lb/>
June 22 July 29 which will be of in<lb/>
terest to professionals in the<lb/>
human service field, social<lb/>
workers, ministers, lay persons<lb/>
and law enforcement and criminal<lb/>
justice students preparing to enter<lb/>
these fields.<lb/>
SocW 4002. "Crisis Interven<lb/>
tion a generic approach to<lb/>
recognizing, understanding, and<lb/>
intervening appropriately m crisis<lb/>
situations. Time 4.20-5:50 every<lb/>
day in the Allied Health Building<lb/>
Room 204<lb/>
SocW 5003, "Processes of Group<lb/>
Intervention working effectively<lb/>
with the group, utilizing it as the<lb/>
change media Four theoretical<lb/>
approaches will be examined with<lb/>
emphasis on group constellation,<lb/>
group dynamics and group pro<lb/>
cess Time 1.00-2 30 every day m<lb/>
the Allied Health Building Room<lb/>
206<lb/>
For additional information<lb/>
please call or write to the Depart<lb/>
ment of Social Work and Correc<lb/>
tional Services or call 757 6961<lb/>
MARSHALL<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
Marshall applications now being<lb/>
accepted in the SGA Office, Room<lb/>
228 Mendenhall (Monday Friday,<lb/>
from 8 am thru 5 p .11<lb/>
OUTDOOR<lb/>
RECREATION<lb/>
RENTALS<lb/>
The outdoor recreation center<lb/>
located in room 115 Memorial<lb/>
Gym is open from 2 3 p.m each<lb/>
Monday Friday. Reservations<lb/>
andor rentals for equipment in<lb/>
eluding Tents, Backpacks,<lb/>
Canoes, and a Tandem Bicycle<lb/>
can be made during these hours<lb/>
Hand outs are available providing<lb/>
information relative to Hik.ng and<lb/>
Backpacking Trails, Canoeing<lb/>
Waterways and Camping areas on<lb/>
the Federal, State, and Local<lb/>
levels Reservations and rentals<lb/>
are available to all ECU students,<lb/>
faculty and staff<lb/>
FRIDAY NIGHT<lb/>
ACTION<lb/>
Fun filled Friday nights will<lb/>
continue at Minges Coliseum for<lb/>
Volleyball and Badminton Addicts<lb/>
on March 26 and April 2 and 16 All<lb/>
equipment will be supplied for you<lb/>
and your friends This is and ex<lb/>
cellent opportunity to beat the<lb/>
boredom of staying home or it<lb/>
could be the way for that In<lb/>
tramurai Team to get in a Little<lb/>
X tra Practice<lb/>
JEWISH STUDENTS<lb/>
There will be a Passover Seder!<lb/>
For reservations please call Mark<lb/>
Cohen at 757 1155 or Or B. Resuik<lb/>
at 756 5640<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
"Jesus got killed for<lb/>
saying God is not just a<lb/>
God of the rich she<lb/>
added.<lb/>
According to a<lb/>
leaflet from CROP<lb/>
distributed on campus,<lb/>
people should "walk<lb/>
because we can make a<lb/>
difference ? the dif-<lb/>
ference between life<lb/>
and death<lb/>
"We walk because<lb/>
they walk adds Akers<lb/>
referring to CROP'S<lb/>
statement that "women<lb/>
and children in poor<lb/>
rural villages all over<lb/>
the world often spend<lb/>
half their waking hours<lb/>
walking to obtain<lb/>
water<lb/>
Many local churches,<lb/>
schools and organiza-<lb/>
tions will be joining<lb/>
together with ECU par-<lb/>
Police Departments<lb/>
Working Together<lb/>
ticipants to help make<lb/>
the "Walk" a true<lb/>
community event, ac-<lb/>
cording to member of<lb/>
the Hunger Coalition.<lb/>
Greenville Police and<lb/>
volunteer medical pro-<lb/>
fessionals will also be<lb/>
on hand to direct traf-<lb/>
fic and fix-up sore feet<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
T-shirts are available<lb/>
for sale to promote the<lb/>
walk with the theme<lb/>
that has become<lb/>
synonymous with the<lb/>
"Walk' ? "Put a Lit-<lb/>
tle Heart in Your<lb/>
Soul<lb/>
The Hunger Coali-<lb/>
tion said that they will<lb/>
be distributing walk<lb/>
sign-up forms for<lb/>
latecomers at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center organizational<lb/>
booth on Thursday<lb/>
evening and invite all<lb/>
potential walkers or<lb/>
sponsors to call<lb/>
752-4216 or come to<lb/>
their Thursday night<lb/>
meetings for further in-<lb/>
formation.<lb/>
Support the<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
between us said<lb/>
Detective Lavin. "I've<lb/>
known Gene McAbee<lb/>
and (Detective) Wig-<lb/>
gins a long time. We're<lb/>
good freinds<lb/>
"When they<lb/>
(Greenville police) ask<lb/>
for assistance<lb/>
McAbee said, "we help<lb/>
them He added that<lb/>
there has always been<lb/>
"mutual cooperation<lb/>
between the two<lb/>
departments.<lb/>
Detective Lavin said<lb/>
that the description of<lb/>
the rapist is similar to<lb/>
the description of a<lb/>
man who has recently<lb/>
been exhibiting himself<lb/>
between First and Fifth<lb/>
streets. "We,<lb/>
although, have four<lb/>
suspects on the case<lb/>
he explains. Art<lb/>
students were par-<lb/>
ticularly susceptible to<lb/>
this assailant.<lb/>
Detective Lavin also<lb/>
commented that a rape<lb/>
occured early Saturday<lb/>
morning in the<lb/>
downtown area. It was<lb/>
committed by a person<lb/>
who fined the descrip-<lb/>
tion of the Jan. 1<lb/>
assailant except for the<lb/>
hair color.<lb/>
Both departments<lb/>
urge all women to<lb/>
report any assault that<lb/>
occurs.<lb/>
Support me <lb/>
March?<lb/>
BIRTH DEttCTS FOUNDATION<lb/>
SUMMER SCHOOL<lb/>
ROOM RESERVATION<lb/>
Residence hall room deposits tor<lb/>
Summer School 1982 will be ac<lb/>
cep'ed in the Cashier's Office.<lb/>
Room 105. Spilman Building,<lb/>
beginning April I Room<lb/>
assignments will be made n the<lb/>
respective residence hall offices<lb/>
on April 5 and 6 Thereafter, they<lb/>
will be made m the Office of Hous<lb/>
.ng Operations. Room 201.<lb/>
Whichard Building The rent for a<lb/>
term of summer school is $120 for<lb/>
a semi private room and $180 tor a<lb/>
private room Additional rent in<lb/>
the amount of $20 it required for<lb/>
Jarvis Han<lb/>
Students who wish to reserve<lb/>
rooms they presently occupy, pro<lb/>
vided such rooms are to be in use<lb/>
th,s summer, are to make reserva<lb/>
t,ons on Monday. April 5 All other<lb/>
students may reserve rooms on a<lb/>
first come, first serve basis on<lb/>
Tuesday. April 6<lb/>
Residence hails to be used for<lb/>
women are Green. Slay and Jar<lb/>
vis Men will be housed in Garrett<lb/>
Slay and Jarvis Hails.<lb/>
GET<lb/>
ACQUAINTED<lb/>
OFFER<lb/>
BOOK SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
The chapter of Phi Eta Sigma at<lb/>
ECU announces that applications<lb/>
may now be received for book<lb/>
scholarships of $100 to be awarded<lb/>
to the most outstanding rising<lb/>
junior and rising senior Only<lb/>
members of Phi Eta Sigma may<lb/>
apply, and service to the local<lb/>
chapter is a major criteri n. intor<lb/>
mation and application forms may<lb/>
be received from Dr. John D<lb/>
Ebbs, Faculty Adviser, In Austin<lb/>
214.<lb/>
BAHAMA MAMA 1982<lb/>
The 1982 Kappa Sigma and<lb/>
Stroh's Bahama Mama Beach<lb/>
Party and Raffle will be held<lb/>
Tonight, from 8 p m. untill mid<lb/>
mght, located across from<lb/>
Umstead Dorm on Tenth Street.<lb/>
This is presented fc 1 Kappa Sigma.<lb/>
Hallow Distributing Company, Ac<lb/>
cu Copy, University Book Ex<lb/>
change and Hodges Sporting<lb/>
Goods The Grand Prize drawing<lb/>
will be held at midnight for an<lb/>
ALL EXPENSE PAID TRIP TO<lb/>
THE BAHAMAS FOR TWO, all for<lb/>
iust one dollar Tickets are on sale<lb/>
in front the Student Store, or from<lb/>
any Kappa Sigma member For<lb/>
more information call 752 553 Be<lb/>
There Aloha<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 1J-1<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
$185.00 Pregnancy Test, airtti<lb/>
Control, and Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling. For fur-<lb/>
ther information call 832-0535<lb/>
(Toll Free Number<lb/>
800 221 2548) between A.M.<lb/>
and 5 P.M. Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, NX.<lb/>
plaza Bgang<lb/>
cinema<lb/>
PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
HELD OVER!<lb/>
WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY<lb/>
AWARDS.<lb/>
INCLUDING BESTJMCTURE!<lb/>
? COStume ? si?-w<lb/>
faRWfe- ?Original<lb/>
? Original jj . ? Screenplay<lb/>
Score<lb/>
CHATOTSOTFIBE<lb/>
<lb/>
SPECIALIZES IN:<lb/>
RESUMES<lb/>
and<lb/>
Shows MonFn<lb/>
3:00-7:00-9:15<lb/>
Sat. Sun.<lb/>
2:30-4:45<lb/>
7:00-9:15<lb/>
Starts Tomorrow!<lb/>
HE'S TRYING TO BE FAITHFUL,<lb/>
AND FALLING HILARIOUSLY.<lb/>
m<lb/>
THESES<lb/>
DUPLICATION<lb/>
Located Across From Campus<lb/>
In The Georgetown Shops<lb/>
little<lb/>
A LOT OF LAUGHS!<lb/>
Shows MonFri. 3:00-7:10-9:00<lb/>
Shows SatSun. 3:30-5:20-7:10<lb/>
DOhTnUK "RICHARD F- <lb/>
IVE ON THE SUNSET<lb/>
? Copies Cost 60 to 30copy<lb/>
? Phototypesetting<lb/>
? Binding Service<lb/>
? One Day Camera Work<lb/>
? Geotype Supplies For Art Students<lb/>
OPEN 9-7 m-f 9-2 sat.<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
f<lb/>
Current undergredwore pre<lb/>
medical itudenrt may now com?it?<lb/>
tor teverol hur?dr?d Air fort<lb/>
KholartHio. TWe ?cholarthia i<lb/>
to be awarded ro ttwdoan accepted<lb/>
into medical tcfcoolt at fte?nmen or<lb/>
a rk? beginning at rfcoW loofcomoroi<lb/>
year. The ?crtotartrup pioridei<lb/>
tuition, books, tab taei and eoutp-<lb/>
m??i plat a ?J30 monthly<lb/>
oHowanco Investigate Htit financial<lb/>
oltarnotiv to tfee nia cost<lb/>
medical education.<lb/>
Contact<lb/>
I S.AJT. HEALTH<lb/>
PROFESSIONS<lb/>
?KM ITIN,<lb/>
Suite GL-1,1100 Movoho Or<lb/>
totsa, N.C. 27MV<lb/>
Phone Co?eoe(?i9l75S-4134<lb/>
SWIM IN STYLE!<lb/>
Brody's swimwear makes a high fashion<lb/>
splash with new sleek, shape-showing styles.<lb/>
All in sophisticated stripes, patterns and<lb/>
solids. All in lightweight, quick-drying<lb/>
fabrics that never leave you dripping. Except<lb/>
with style. . . . D <lb/>
Lightning Bolt<lb/>
Swimwear Shown: $20 50<lb/>
Ocean Pacific Sun Dek<lb/>
23.00 22.00<lb/>
"Like no other men's store. ? ?<lb/>
bradu<lb/>
pitt plaza J<lb/>
formen<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
Opening in N.C. and Virginia<lb/>
Earn $7.10hr. if qualified<lb/>
Minimum of $1,278.00 guaranteed<lb/>
Part and Full-Time<lb/>
On Campus Applications taken on<lb/>
Cr<lb/>
I M<lb/>
1<lb/>
April 6 and 7<lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
4<lb/>
I<lb/>
TUESAPRIL6<lb/>
Brewster B103<lb/>
WED APRIL7<lb/>
Brewster B104 ? 9a.ml p.m<lb/>
10 a.m4 p.m. Brewster D102 ? 2 p.m4 p.m<lb/>
15<lb/>
DISCOUNT<lb/>
ON ALL PURCHASES<lb/>
WITH THIS<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
IGREENVILLEI<lb/>
FLOWER<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
1027 Evans St.<lb/>
758-2774<lb/>
MasterchargeVisa<lb/>
If you're a senior and have the promise of a $10,000 career-oriented job, do you<lb/>
know what's stopping you from getting the American Express Card?<lb/>
You guessed it.<lb/>
Nothing.<lb/>
Because American Express believes in your future. But more than that. We<lb/>
believe in you now. And we're proving it.<lb/>
A $10,000 job promise. That's it. No strings. No gimmicks. And this offer is<lb/>
even good for 12 months after you graduate.<lb/>
But why do you need the American Express Card now?<lb/>
First of all, it's a good way to begin to establish your credit history. And you<lb/>
know that's important.<lb/>
Of course, the Card is also good for travel, restaurants, and shopping for<lb/>
things like a new stereo or furniture. And because the Card is recognized and<lb/>
welcomed worldwide, so are you.<lb/>
So call for a Special Student Application or look for one at your college<lb/>
book store or on campus bulletin boards.<lb/>
The American Express Card. Don't leave school without it.SM<lb/>
Call today for an application:<lb/>
800528-8000.<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057471_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 1, 1982<lb/>
you<lb/>
We<lb/>
er is<lb/>
you<lb/>
for<lb/>
and<lb/>
Uege<lb/>
Convicted Nazis File Lawsuit<lb/>
ASHEV1LLE (UPI)<lb/>
? Five people ? in-<lb/>
cluding four Nazis ?<lb/>
convicted of plotting to<lb/>
blow up public areas in<lb/>
Greensboro have filed a<lb/>
$15-milIion lawsuit<lb/>
claiming three U.S. of-<lb/>
ficials tampered with a<lb/>
grand jury and<lb/>
obstructed justice.<lb/>
The civil suit was fil-<lb/>
ed Tuesday in U.S.<lb/>
District Court in<lb/>
Asheville by Frank<lb/>
Braswell and his wife,<lb/>
Patsy Braswell, of<lb/>
Penland, Joseph Gor-<lb/>
rell Pierce of Walnut<lb/>
Cove, Raeford Milano<lb/>
Caudle of Winston-<lb/>
Salem and Roger In-<lb/>
gram of Arden.<lb/>
All the plaintiffs ex-<lb/>
cept Ingram were con-<lb/>
victed in 1981 of con-<lb/>
spiring to bomb public<lb/>
areas of Greensboro.<lb/>
The lawsuit also claims<lb/>
the plantiffs' civil<lb/>
rights were violated by<lb/>
the defendants.<lb/>
Named as defendants<lb/>
are Charles Brewer,<lb/>
U.S. attorney for the<lb/>
Western District of<lb/>
North Carolina, Jerry<lb/>
Parnell, assistant U.S.<lb/>
attorney for the<lb/>
Western District and<lb/>
William French Smith,<lb/>
attorney general of the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Braswell said the suit<lb/>
stemmed from actions<lb/>
of former U.S. At-<lb/>
torney Harold Edwards<lb/>
and former Assistant<lb/>
U.S. Attorney Jerry<lb/>
Miller during the Nazi<lb/>
trial in Asheville.<lb/>
During the trial, pro-<lb/>
secutors contended the<lb/>
four and two other<lb/>
defendants conspired<lb/>
to blow up a shopping<lb/>
center, a gasoline tank<lb/>
farm, a fertilizer plant<lb/>
and the Guilford Coun-<lb/>
ty Courthouse if six<lb/>
Nazis and Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan members had<lb/>
been convicted of kill-<lb/>
ing five communists in<lb/>
a 1979 shootout.<lb/>
The defendants in<lb/>
the Greensboro trial<lb/>
were acquitted and no<lb/>
bombing took place.<lb/>
Braswell aid he and<lb/>
the four other plaintiffs<lb/>
had askeu a grand jury<lb/>
to investigate allega-<lb/>
tions against Edwards<lb/>
and Miller.<lb/>
"We are filing<lb/>
against these pro-<lb/>
secutors because they<lb/>
told the grand jury if<lb/>
they returned indict-<lb/>
ments against Edwards<lb/>
and Miller and the<lb/>
BATF (Bureau of<lb/>
Alcohol, Firearms and<lb/>
Tobacco) agents, they<lb/>
would refuse to sign or<lb/>
frame an indictment<lb/>
Braswell said.<lb/>
Each plaintiff is<lb/>
seeking $3 million in<lb/>
actual, substantive and<lb/>
punitive damages.<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 I want all you<lb/>
smokers to quit once<lb/>
and for all And who<lb/>
knows9 You might even<lb/>
put a smile on my face"<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Greenville mayor Percy Cox (center), shown here with NASW co-presidents Yvonne Pierce and Ruth<lb/>
I.ytle, proclaims National Social Work Month.<lb/>
NASW 'Just Getting Started'<lb/>
577 ANNUAL PHI KAPPA TA U<lb/>
SPRING FLING '82<lb/>
Although East Carolina has the oldest<lb/>
undergraduate school of Social Work, the univer-<lb/>
sity chapter of the National Association of Social<lb/>
Workers is "just getting started according to<lb/>
student Ruth Lytle.<lb/>
Lytle. a Social Work major, is running for the<lb/>
?uudent representative's position on the North<lb/>
Carolina NASW, and the state association has<lb/>
hired its own lobbyist to get N.C. legislators to<lb/>
make licensing mandantory for social workers in<lb/>
the state, Lytle said. The ECU branch of the<lb/>
association, with Lytle and Yvonne Pierce as co-<lb/>
presidents, has raised funds toward that cause.<lb/>
FRIDAY AFTERNOON<lb/>
APRIL 2 FROM 3-6:00 P.M.<lb/>
Larceny Highlights Blotter<lb/>
A BEACH WEEKEND FOR 2<lb/>
WILL BE RAFFLED OFF AT THE PARTY<lb/>
MUSIC PROYIDED<lb/>
BY CAROLINA ARTISTS<lb/>
THE NICKY HARRIS<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
BROUGHT TO THE ENTIRE CAMPUS BY OUR SPONSORS AT:<lb/>
By ?iRE(i RIDF.Ol T<lb/>
staff V rilrr<lb/>
The following are<lb/>
dorm reports and<lb/>
related incidents occur-<lb/>
ring between March 24<lb/>
and March 30.<lb/>
March 24. 1 p.m. ?<lb/>
A Greene dorm resi-<lb/>
dent reported the<lb/>
larceny of a necklace<lb/>
from her residence.<lb/>
4:20 p.m. ? A Jones<lb/>
dorm resident reported<lb/>
that his vehicle had<lb/>
been vandalized while<lb/>
parked in the Third and<lb/>
Reade streets lot.<lb/>
March 25. 1:38 a.m.<lb/>
? A Jones dorm resi-<lb/>
dent reported the van-<lb/>
dalism of his room by<lb/>
person(s) unknown.<lb/>
9:30 a.m. ? Steven<lb/>
Baker of Raleigh was<lb/>
arrested for the larceny<lb/>
of supplies fom the Stu-<lb/>
dent Health Center.<lb/>
4:15 p.m. ? An<lb/>
Aycock dorm resident<lb/>
reported the breaking<lb/>
and entering of his<lb/>
residence and larceny<lb/>
from same. 4:15 p.m.<lb/>
? An Aycock dorm<lb/>
resident reported the<lb/>
larceny of his class ring<lb/>
from his residnece. 5<lb/>
p.m. ? Carlos M.<lb/>
Irvela of Scott dorm<lb/>
was served a warrant'<lb/>
for simple possession<lb/>
of marijuana. 11:30<lb/>
p.m. ? Cpl. Anderson<lb/>
reported the larceny of<lb/>
the cover to the<lb/>
telephone of Greene<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
March 26. 12:30<lb/>
p.m. ? A Belk dorm<lb/>
resident reported the<lb/>
larceny of his wallet<lb/>
from his room. 1 p.m.<lb/>
? An Aycock resident<lb/>
reported that his<lb/>
motorcycle had been<lb/>
vandalized while park-<lb/>
ed north of<lb/>
Mendenhall. 5 p.m. ?<lb/>
A Greene dorm resi-<lb/>
dent reported that her<lb/>
wallet had been stolen<lb/>
from her room.<lb/>
March 27. 2:55 a.m.<lb/>
? Jonathan Oleska, a<lb/>
Winston-Salem resi-<lb/>
dent, was arrested for<lb/>
damaging a sign north<lb/>
of Fletcher.<lb/>
March 28. 12:53 a.m.<lb/>
? William Bondurant<lb/>
of Umstead dorm was<lb/>
arrested for assault by<lb/>
Cpl. Pollock. 12:35<lb/>
a.m. ? A Famous Piz-<lb/>
za Delivery man<lb/>
reported the larceny of<lb/>
a pizza he was deliver-<lb/>
ing to Belk dorm.<lb/>
March 29. 1:37 a.m.<lb/>
? A Jones dorm resi-<lb/>
dent reported the van-<lb/>
dalism of his door by<lb/>
person(s) unknown. 5<lb/>
p.m. ? Sgt. Lawler<lb/>
reported the breaking<lb/>
and entering of the coin<lb/>
changing machine<lb/>
located in the canteen<lb/>
of Tyler dorm. 7:23<lb/>
p.m. ? A White dorm<lb/>
resident reported the<lb/>
larceny of a battery<lb/>
from her vehicle parked<lb/>
in the Ninth and James<lb/>
streets lot.<lb/>
March 30. 12:10 a.m.<lb/>
? Paul Bullock of<lb/>
Raleigh was banned<lb/>
fTom campus for<lb/>
assault. 6:50 p.m. ?<lb/>
An Aycock dorm resi-<lb/>
dent reported the<lb/>
larceny of his class ring<lb/>
from his room.<lb/>
GREENVILLE BODY SHOP<lb/>
DOMINO'S PIZZA<lb/>
INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL<lb/>
MARATHON RESTAURANT<lb/>
KING'S SANDWICH<lb/>
GENERAL HEATING &amp; PLUMBING<lb/>
PHARO'S FINE FOODS<lb/>
BISSETTE'S OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
PANTANA BOB'S<lb/>
SHIRLEY'S CUT &amp; STYLE<lb/>
DAN WISEHART<lb/>
RAFTER'S<lb/>
CLARKE-BRANCH REALTY<lb/>
UBE<lb/>
JB'S ISLAND SEAFOOD<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
OVERTON'S SUPERMARKET<lb/>
GROG'S OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
MORGAN PRINTERS<lb/>
CHRIS LICHOK<lb/>
HAPPY STORE<lb/>
PAPA KATZ<lb/>
TACO CID<lb/>
THE WASH HOUSE<lb/>
EDGEWATER MOTORS<lb/>
PIPE DREAMS<lb/>
FOR HEADS ONLY<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
SPORTSWORLD<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
V?(C ?<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during Trie academic<lb/>
ear and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
,ng tne summer<lb/>
Tne East Carolinian is 'he of<lb/>
ficia! newspaper of Eas'<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated, and published tor and<lb/>
by trie students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Hate M0 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
art located in the Ofd Sooth<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address<lb/>
changes to The East Carol.n,an.<lb/>
Old Soutn Bunding, ECU Green<lb/>
ville, NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 757 3. 437. 6309<lb/>
Application to mart at second<lb/>
class postage rates is pending at<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
fcftRBfTiF'S<lb/>
Draw the<lb/>
Wizard Contest<lb/>
$100 Grand Prize<lb/>
also<lb/>
1st, 2nd, 3rd prize winners<lb/>
in 3 age group catagories.<lb/>
Come in and pick up your<lb/>
official entry form at<lb/>
Gandalf's<lb/>
SHOP AT<lb/>
OVERTON'S<lb/>
AND SAVE<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON<lb/>
5 DISCOUNT<lb/>
Expires April 3 1982<lb/>
on all orders $10.00<lb/>
or more.<lb/>
kEASf<lb/>
OPENING SOON<lb/>
, -? FINE<lb/>
QfOS FOODS<lb/>
FEA TURING A MENU OF<lb/>
SPECIA LTYSAND WICHES<lb/>
AND GREENVILLE'S BEST FRIES.<lb/>
LOCATED IN GEORGETOWN SHOPPES.<lb/>
WA TCH FOR US SOON!<lb/>
Student Name<lb/>
I<lb/>
ID Number<lb/>
Amt. of Purchase.<lb/>
"Home of Greenville's Best Meats1<lb/>
Supermarket. <lb/>
211 JarvisSt,<lb/>
2 Blocks from ECU<lb/>
-i' ama?tini ?i?uli iiHMwM<lb/>
 I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057471_0004"/><lb/>
&amp;kt ?a0t (Ewwlinmn<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Jimmy DuPree???<lb/>
Charles Chandler, umemw<lb/>
Ric Browning, ???.?? 4,iiwm? Tom Hall. ???<lb/>
Fielding Miller. n0mn.MMvr William Yelverton. sPomEd?or<lb/>
Alison Bartel, m. Steve Bachner, ???,????, frf?or<lb/>
Steve Moore, ruo? v Diane Anderson, $&amp;??<lb/>
April , 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Purpose Often Mistaken<lb/>
The editorial page.<lb/>
It is the subject of much confu-<lb/>
sion, not only on this campus but<lb/>
across the nation. Many simply are<lb/>
not aware of its purposes.<lb/>
The editorial page is, simply put,<lb/>
a place where opinions are express-<lb/>
ed, where objectivity is thrown out<lb/>
the window.<lb/>
Today's journalists are taught to<lb/>
strive for objectivity. This certainly<lb/>
is the goal of The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Hopefully it is the goal of every<lb/>
newspaper in America. One hun-<lb/>
dred years ago this was not the case,<lb/>
though. Very non-objective stories<lb/>
could be found on most any page of<lb/>
the paper.<lb/>
Nowadays, though, all pages ex-<lb/>
cept the editorial page are supposed<lb/>
to be objective. News stories are not<lb/>
supposed to be slanted in any way,<lb/>
shape or form.<lb/>
When the change to complete ob-<lb/>
jectivity in news came about many<lb/>
years before our time there was the<lb/>
problem of where to express opi-<lb/>
nions. Face it; publishers, editors<lb/>
and journalists will always be opi-<lb/>
nionated. They needed an outlet to<lb/>
express their views and hence the<lb/>
editorial page was born.<lb/>
The editorials that appear here<lb/>
each issue reflect the views of this<lb/>
paper as a whole. In most cases,<lb/>
topics are discussed in editorial<lb/>
board meetings and a staff opinion<lb/>
is developed. The editorials are then<lb/>
written by whatever party the staff<lb/>
elects to do so.<lb/>
DOONESBURY<lb/>
doopewwb topwvp<lb/>
KONOMC APWSOR PHILLIP<lb/>
SLACX&amp;EXB?C4M?7fe<lb/>
I LATBS1' AOWNftmfiON<lb/>
' OFFIQAlTO RETURN 10<lb/>
e PKwm secxx this<lb/>
WASTHE SCENE AT THE<lb/>
HUH7<lb/>
Each week we print columns from<lb/>
two syndicated columnists, Art<lb/>
Buchwald and David Armstrong.<lb/>
We even have our own political col-<lb/>
umnist of sorts in Kim Albin.<lb/>
Occasionally, there are guest col-<lb/>
umnists, as is the case today with<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill's contribution.<lb/>
We would like to stress that any<lb/>
student on this campus can submit a<lb/>
guest column. These columns ap-<lb/>
pear under the "Campus Spec-<lb/>
trum" logo.<lb/>
Whatever Ms. Albin or other col-<lb/>
umnists express does not necessarily<lb/>
jell with the overall opinion of this<lb/>
newspaper. Those columns ? like<lb/>
Albin's and O'Neill's today ? are<lb/>
written by individuals and reflect<lb/>
the opinions and views of those in-<lb/>
dividuals.<lb/>
Of course, what would an<lb/>
editorial page be without a political<lb/>
cartoon? In this paper, the cartoons<lb/>
that appear are very similar to col-<lb/>
umns in that they reflect the views<lb/>
of the artist and not necessarily the<lb/>
entire staff.<lb/>
Besides columns, students may<lb/>
express their views on this page by<lb/>
writing letters to the editor to ap-<lb/>
pear in "Campus Forum This is a<lb/>
superb avenue to speak out on<lb/>
issues that may be of concern to the<lb/>
student body.<lb/>
Don't hesitate to take advantage<lb/>
of the opportunities presented you<lb/>
? the student or faculty member ?<lb/>
by this page. It is, in short, your<lb/>
sounding board as well as ours.<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
MR SlACKMFiCR.<lb/>
ARE YOJRESI6H-<lb/>
!Nb BECAUSE-OF<lb/>
the disparity be-<lb/>
tween- your rosy<lb/>
FOtEOAStSANV<lb/>
the current <lb/>
recession? <lb/>
HOT AT All PM<lb/>
RESI6NIN6 BE<lb/>
cause of rue<lb/>
p&amp;wrrdamn<lb/>
MYEARHIN6SPC<lb/>
1ENTIAL AND MY<lb/>
OJBNT SALARY.<lb/>
ACTUALLY my wife<lb/>
AND I COULD PROdA-<lb/>
BLY MAKE DO WITH<lb/>
MY GOVERNMENT<lb/>
salary, but rr's<lb/>
NOT FOR. US THAI<lb/>
I'M RESIGNING.<lb/>
<lb/>
I'M DONG IT<lb/>
SOMYSON<lb/>
CAN STAY WHAT<lb/>
iHcau&amp;e i<lb/>
aavisn<lb/>
TRuerYOUHB<lb/>
RESIGNING?<lb/>
m<lb/>
BU17HATSMAJ&amp;I<lb/>
HOW COME YOU<lb/>
PIPNTlETME<lb/>
KNOW? <lb/>
I PIP. I<lb/>
FX3URWY0U<lb/>
umyePTte<lb/>
NEWS. SO IAN-<lb/>
VXHCEVrnO<lb/>
THE PRESS<lb/>
couLcm<lb/>
YOU HAVE<lb/>
JUSTPHONEV<lb/>
Me" i<lb/>
TWS064PR<lb/>
to use themecxa<lb/>
YOU'RE NOT STAY-<lb/>
ING FOR DINNER.<lb/>
ARE iWT I<lb/>
"AFTER VU FINISH HERE WHITEWASH If. JEFFERSON DWIS UBW. DUST TrlE RIGHTEOUS<lb/>
RACISM W8PW MID STRNflHTEN TIE WHITE MW5 BURDEN ?T CILLERY"<lb/>
M<lb/>
BITTER m<lb/>
ILLS DIET B0OKT- mother<lb/>
' TERESA<lb/>
a mmw,<lb/>
(denier!<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MOVE TO ANV<lb/>
POOR NATION<lb/>
60 NATIVE"<lb/>
SLOWLV STARVE<lb/>
TO DEATH<lb/>
NOW BEING<lb/>
uset gy<lb/>
MILLIONS<lb/>
WORLP-WbEl<lb/>
Columnist Looks Inside At WZMB<lb/>
By KIM ALBIN<lb/>
Several weeks ago, in a column on the<lb/>
Ebony Herald, I referred to the issue of<lb/>
minority airtime on WZMB. I stand firmly<lb/>
by what 1 said then, but it has since been<lb/>
brought to my attention that my words<lb/>
were ambiguous.<lb/>
My intention was not to exclude<lb/>
minorities from airtime on our radio sta-<lb/>
tion but to comment that these gorups<lb/>
must act in their own behalf. In order to<lb/>
obtain minority airtime, minorities must<lb/>
be willing to contribute their services to the<lb/>
station.<lb/>
At the request of several concerned<lb/>
students, however, I set out to investigate<lb/>
WZMB to discover the exact reasons for so<lb/>
much student dissatisfaction with the new<lb/>
station ? to find out whose musical tastes<lb/>
were being indulged.<lb/>
To begin with, I found no evidence of<lb/>
discrimination against minorities. Of the<lb/>
30 or so disk jockeys employed by WZMB,<lb/>
three of them are black students. This is<lb/>
appropriate for a student population<lb/>
whicn is roughly 10 percent black. Still, I<lb/>
bothered to ask why there were not more<lb/>
minorities represented, and was told that<lb/>
there had not been more minority ap-<lb/>
plicants.<lb/>
At any rate, dissatisfaction with WZMB<lb/>
is hardly confined to minority students.<lb/>
The programming of the station has been<lb/>
described, far and wide, as "ineffective<lb/>
"slanted" and "confused Having listen-<lb/>
ed to the station, my own choice, or words,<lb/>
would have to be something stronger, like<lb/>
"narrow "random" and "useless To<lb/>
each his own, but public radio should<lb/>
strive not to offend any of its listeners.<lb/>
Obviously, whoever spent two hours last<lb/>
Friday spinning AC-DC, King Crimson<lb/>
and Rush albums is unaware of that. But<lb/>
the responsibility for programming the sta-<lb/>
tion's music is supposed to rest not with<lb/>
the disk jockeys but with the program<lb/>
director. According to several sources, the<lb/>
program dirctor's "hands have been tied"<lb/>
since he took office, and he has not been<lb/>
able to do his job.<lb/>
In short, souccs say the station's pro-<lb/>
gramming has been "ineffective" for the<lb/>
following reasons:<lb/>
1) A general lack of organization at the<lb/>
radio station,<lb/>
2) A lack of communication between the<lb/>
program director, Elton Boney, and the<lb/>
general manager, Sam Barwick,<lb/>
3) The prescriptive format that the sta-<lb/>
tion is licensed to play, which is 80 percent<lb/>
album oriented rock (AOR), 15 percent<lb/>
jazz and five percent educational airplay<lb/>
(this includes classical music and news),<lb/>
4) Misunderstanding on the part of the<lb/>
general manager of the definition of album<lb/>
oriented rock, which led to the fifth ex-<lb/>
cuse, and<lb/>
5) A lack of understanding on the part<lb/>
of the disk jockeys about what exactly they<lb/>
are supposed to play. This causes them not<lb/>
to stick to the format they have.<lb/>
I was told that AOR is playing the tracks<lb/>
off LP's which contain hit singles, thus<lb/>
giving the audience a more comprehensive<lb/>
view of a popular artist's works. It does<lb/>
not necessarily refer to programming<lb/>
predominantly obscure, painful acid rock<lb/>
from the early 70's. There are no other<lb/>
AOR stations in this area, which would<lb/>
justify WZMB's "alternative" label, if in-<lb/>
deed the station were playng true album<lb/>
oriented rock at this time.<lb/>
One point on which the WZMB staff<lb/>
members seemed to agree was that Sam<lb/>
Barwick, despite the problems of program-<lb/>
ming, has done a remarkable job of getting<lb/>
WZMB off the ground and on the air. His<lb/>
efforts were applauded by many, yet it<lb/>
seems that his time as general manager is<lb/>
almost over. In April, a newly appointed<lb/>
GM begins his term.<lb/>
Students are instructed to hang in there<lb/>
and watch for changes in WZMB's pro-<lb/>
gramming. What is important, though, is<lb/>
student participation. I do not think that a<lb/>
group of would-be communications ma-<lb/>
jors can possibly represent the tastes of an<lb/>
entire university, but unless they receive<lb/>
some student interest in the station, no one<lb/>
will have the right to complain.<lb/>
Defending A 'Willfull' Stand<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
The United States of America vs Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill, who "did wilfully stand and sit<lb/>
upon the street in such a manner as to im-<lb/>
pede the regular flow of traffic" at Fort<lb/>
Bragg, North Carolina. So states the com-<lb/>
plaint I received on my birthday this past<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
It's the long way of saying I was arrested<lb/>
for trespassing at a military base that<lb/>
"willfully" trains a division of El<lb/>
Salvadoran military officers" in such a<lb/>
manner" that they will be better prepared<lb/>
to terrorize and murder their own citizens.<lb/>
I went to Fort Bragg to commit civil<lb/>
disobediance (or more appropriately,<lb/>
divine obedience) as a last resort. Despite<lb/>
the persistent cry of the American people<lb/>
to "stay out" of El Salvador, U.S. military<lb/>
aid to the murderous ruling junta goes on.<lb/>
Religious leaders throughout the world<lb/>
and many United States representatives are<lb/>
also speaking out in opposition to U.S.<lb/>
military aid.<lb/>
Enormous suffering and bloodshed con-<lb/>
tinue, as thousands of innocent people are<lb/>
killed at the hands of the<lb/>
U.Sbacked-and-supported "military<lb/>
death squads<lb/>
The meaningless rhetoric of Reagan and<lb/>
Haig has not fooled the American public.<lb/>
Opposition to their policies is mounting<lb/>
daily, as Americans realize the obvious<lb/>
potential for another "Viet Nam in the<lb/>
making" in El Salvador.<lb/>
Soviet and Cuban brands of com-<lb/>
munism are repulsive, but ironically, pre-<lb/>
sent U.S. policy in El Salvador is clearly<lb/>
forcing the people into the communist<lb/>
camp.<lb/>
Seventy-five percent of all children suf-<lb/>
fer from malnutrition in El Salvador, one<lb/>
out of four dies before reaching the age of<lb/>
Five.<lb/>
Eighty-five percent of all families have<lb/>
no running water or sanitary facilities. On-<lb/>
ly 16 percent of the population have year-<lb/>
round employment. And the two percent<lb/>
of the people who own 60 percent of the<lb/>
land use it for growing cash crops, which<lb/>
provide no benefit for the poor.<lb/>
The poeple of El Salvador want basic<lb/>
human needs and comforts. They don't<lb/>
want their children to go to bed hungry! If<lb/>
the Communists are the only group willing<lb/>
to make these overtures toward economic<lb/>
security, then indeed El Salvador will be a<lb/>
communist nation and the self-<lb/>
determinaton of the people will be achiev-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
United States missionaries living in El<lb/>
Salvador have continually called on the ad-<lb/>
ministrations of Carter and Reagan to stop<lb/>
their military assistance to El Salvador and<lb/>
to provide the means to sustain life ? not<lb/>
kill it. Archbishop Oscar Romero died for<lb/>
peace, and U.S. Ambasador Robert White<lb/>
resigned in protest for it; but it's all to no<lb/>
avail.<lb/>
Public protest and jail are dramatic ways<lb/>
for us to make our voices for justice heard.<lb/>
It was my intention to go to jail, because,<lb/>
as a person of faith and believer in "The<lb/>
Prince of Peace I can't "sit or stand"<lb/>
silentiy by, as my country supports the kill-<lb/>
ing of innocent El Salvadorans. The call to<lb/>
Christian Action takes priority over any<lb/>
human laws. A law supporting death must<lb/>
be broken. Our training of Salvadoran<lb/>
soldiers at Fort Bragg is a crime against<lb/>
humanity.<lb/>
During my time in the "holding cell" at<lb/>
the Federal building in Fayetteville, I asked<lb/>
one of the military personnel who was<lb/>
recording data on mv case what his per-<lb/>
sonal feelings on the El Salvadoran situa-<lb/>
tion were. He responded. "We should<lb/>
have left 'em alone<lb/>
When my three cellmates and I were<lb/>
brought before Magistrate F. Stuart<lb/>
Clarke for arraignment, the military pro-<lb/>
secutor appealed to him to hold us in lieu<lb/>
of $250 cash bond. Clarke allowed us to<lb/>
address the court with any "facts" we<lb/>
believed to be pertinent to our cases, and<lb/>
soon after he announced his decision to<lb/>
release us on personal recognzance ? no<lb/>
bail!<lb/>
Court was ajourned, but before he left<lb/>
Clarke mentioned that our case reminded<lb/>
him of the time when he was in law school<lb/>
and "everyone was saying, 'go to<lb/>
Washington, go to Washington (to pro-<lb/>
test Viet Nam), and after a pause and a<lb/>
friendly smile of admission he said "and<lb/>
maybe I went, too<lb/>
-Campus Forum<lb/>
Reagan Out For Peace<lb/>
For decades the Soviet Union has been<lb/>
bent upon a policy of world domination.<lb/>
Usually the Soviets do not overtly attack<lb/>
a country such as in the case of<lb/>
Afghanistan. They work by supporting<lb/>
subversive Voups, thus breeding in-<lb/>
surgancy and instability in a country.<lb/>
The United States' policy in El<lb/>
Salvador has the same rationale as its<lb/>
arms build up ? world peace El<lb/>
Salvador is not a Vietnam; it's virtually<lb/>
on our doorstep. A Soviet-dominated<lb/>
Central America would be a serious<lb/>
threat to United States Security.<lb/>
By the use of their excellent propagan-<lb/>
da, Russia has done very good job of<lb/>
breeding western pacifism. I wish<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill, the Greenville Peace<lb/>
Committee and the other "liberal in-<lb/>
fested" groups would WAKE UP and<lb/>
realize the real truth. United States in-<lb/>
telligence has undeniable evidence of<lb/>
massive flows of weapons to the rebels<lb/>
in El Salvador from the Marxist coun-<lb/>
tries of Nicaragua and Cuba. Sticking<lb/>
one's head in the sand, such as Mr.<lb/>
O'Neill and pretending "it will go<lb/>
away" will not solve the problem.<lb/>
The Reagan administration is on a<lb/>
steadfast and realistic course to ensure<lb/>
world peace. The Soviets understand on-<lb/>
ly one thing ? force. If the U.S. feels<lb/>
that troops should eventually be sent to<lb/>
El Salvador, so be it. Yes, Mr. O'Neill,<lb/>
it's time for you and your "leftist<lb/>
cohorts" to wake up.<lb/>
KEITH BRITTAIN<lb/>
Senior, Finance<lb/>
01<lb/>
"I<lb/>
tk<lb/>
wil<lb/>
VV'I<lb/>
nal<lb/>
Ju<lb/>
is<lb/>
nal<lb/>
fuJ<lb/>
<lb/>
1 M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057471_0005"/><lb/>
HMMMSHR<lb/>
I I N 1 S<lb/>
Style<lb/>
i'K II<lb/>
NCSL: Students Getting Involved<lb/>
-<lb/>
i<lb/>
he pn 'i<lb/>
h rm<lb/>
pai<lb/>
f 01<lb/>
ed u<lb/>
aboul ?hai<lb/>
governmeni<lb/>
? i on to Sci<lb/>
f<lb/>
i<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
i i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Mi ??'<lb/>
.?. ell I'<lb/>
N( SI ilumni are G<lb/>
P ' i<lb/>
M<lb/>
m 1(1<lb/>
?<lb/>
?1<lb/>
This Years ECl<lb/>
Academy Awards<lb/>
Predictions Close<lb/>
Bv JOHN WM II H<lb/>
? I<lb/>
it (,rt i<lb/>
uii<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
.t h<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ivenile Court Volunteers Needed<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
nteei<lb/>
niitnie to tun<lb/>
 Is in ihe h<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
ill<lb/>
'<lb/>
, , tined<lb/>
mteei must lei<lb/>
ained a<lb/>
( t l major, Glenn<lb/>
: ? Mauuhan, ha<lb/>
?<lb/>
.i ?<lb/>
ntle wl<lb/>
per,<lb/>
?<lb/>
?ti he<lb/>
while ai the<lb/>
business He eniovs<lb/>
work<lb/>
meone's pai met again M ?<lb/>
has worked with recreai<lb/>
ev is aimed al detoui ing lei<lb/>
ti om the road of desti ik<lb/>
I here are numei oils reasi<lb/>
kids become involved<lb/>
Maughan attributed peer pies<lb/>
broken homes, ai<lb/>
the wrong crowd as the h<lb/>
?<lb/>
Nt-t H I i I I<lb/>
Cayman Island Trip Planned<lb/>
. ? ? ti.i<lb/>
?<lb/>
vs i<lb/>
I ? . ? I er<lb/>
in I<lb/>
' I m n<lb/>
alls<lb/>
? glad<lb/>
a ,ked to maintain<lb/>
h relationship wth<lb/>
ire ei<lb/>
keei ? touch with couri<lb/>
IU I K .K ated on<lb/>
ure of 75 to<lb/>
 It I ai i (Mind<lb/>
i he islands are located about 500<lb/>
a y  m ' Miami. I la . and<lb/>
, , nheast ol Cuba In fact, the<lb/>
must th ovei uba to get<lb/>
It's nearest netghot is<lb/>
ayman lamaica which is 200 mi<lb/>
ld in ,n) , ih, t of the ayman Islands<lb/>
an v.v1 I he island are fairly secluded from<lb/>
I hrough Ra hai I ?ho rc eni ihi ?f i iviliati<lb/>
ly re is HI vimn ?rdin to v harf, the trip was<lb/>
i, a originally planned foi scuba divers.<lb/>
t,on and hi the PC I quatics but there is plenty for the non-divei<lb/>
pr0j iba diving classes t ? ipate in "the non-diver can<lb/>
planning a trip to (.rand go .ailing, snorkeling, diving, and<lb/>
I ?cj ? fishing V harl 'and night<lb/>
th ipulous ol th. ? : diMng is really beautiful with the<lb/>
m Mso the<lb/>
I he main an poi ? hi.<lb/>
h 2S light b l w i h watei<lb/>
1 here is also a separate pi u<lb/>
the iion divei u. ho wants to usi<lb/>
a nice suntan, swmi, ot maybe wmd<lb/>
suit Scuba diving lessons<lb/>
available at an extra cosl<lb/>
Scharf said thai he has been thi<lb/>
before and th.it this is "probably<lb/>
one ol the best places in the world to<lb/>
dive I he watei is so clear, you<lb/>
probably got anywhere from<lb/>
100 :i feel visibility<lb/>
Sk hart mentioned the fa. I thai<lb/>
"good (scuba) divers don't have to<lb/>
be good swimmers You jusi nee.<lb/>
be able to take good care ol yourself<lb/>
in the watei and feel comfortable<lb/>
I here is a s uba di ing i lass ol<lb/>
fered here al the I imet sity vv hii h is<lb/>
taught by Scharl I his class started<lb/>
in 177<lb/>
dun<lb/>
mosi p<lb/>
nlable<lb/>
This 11<lb/>
trips w hu '<lb/>
scuba divers s I ?<lb/>
mote trips<lb/>
his ? tudents n<lb/>
side ol and ?<lb/>
(iue again.<lb/>
v irand av n<lb/>
Holidays. ,<lb/>
mghi 4da<lb/>
Raleigh <lb/>
should conta.<lb/>
possibl - om.<lb/>
also needs to kn<lb/>
v many<lb/>
him on the trip<lb/>
<pb facs="00057471_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRII 1, 1982<lb/>
Ten Students Travel To Morocco<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Ten East Carolina<lb/>
University students<lb/>
have been selected to<lb/>
participate in ECU's<lb/>
first annual summer<lb/>
study program in the<lb/>
northern African<lb/>
kingdom of Morocco.<lb/>
Under the direction<lb/>
of Dr. Robert E.<lb/>
Cramer of the ECU<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Geography and Plann-<lb/>
ing, the program will<lb/>
offer seven semester<lb/>
hours of academic<lb/>
credit and "a unique<lb/>
opportunity to know<lb/>
Moroccan people and<lb/>
to travel in their coun-<lb/>
try<lb/>
Morocco, located in<lb/>
northwestern Africa,<lb/>
offers both diverse and<lb/>
blended French,<lb/>
African and Arabic<lb/>
cultures, Cramer said.<lb/>
"In this country, the<lb/>
modern world exists<lb/>
beside the traditional<lb/>
jellaba dress, veiled<lb/>
woman and vast areas<lb/>
where nomads roam<lb/>
the desert with the<lb/>
sheep herds and tents<lb/>
he said. "Here, the<lb/>
camel may still be seen<lb/>
as a beast of burden<lb/>
Beginning May 11<lb/>
and extending until<lb/>
June 26, the program is<lb/>
a cooperative project<lb/>
between ECU and the<lb/>
Experiment for Inter-<lb/>
national Living, based<lb/>
in Brattleboro, Vt. The<lb/>
Experiment office in<lb/>
Morocco will arrange<lb/>
for the students to live<lb/>
with local families in<lb/>
Rabat, the capital city,<lb/>
and assist in ar-<lb/>
rangements for<lb/>
scheduled field trips,<lb/>
which are an integral<lb/>
part of the program.<lb/>
Instruction for the<lb/>
university courses will<lb/>
be in English and will<lb/>
emphasize the culture,<lb/>
geography and interna-<lb/>
tional relations of<lb/>
Morocco.<lb/>
In addition, a non-<lb/>
L?A&amp;niv&amp; Aeoor Cott?fcC Tht Haup vtj<lb/>
M Omiv AJorhis<lb/>
Of SrtOKJOG THCSfc<lb/>
Pl5&amp;sr,JG ciCAitfrnrs<lb/>
<lb/>
fH?PPl?,l'fA GJIaJ6TD<lb/>
61UIT SV0KJ?06 f<lb/>
cm i hav?? -rue tCST<lb/>
Of tyU PACK 7<lb/>
fiJgT: mAtSp. I<lb/>
credit course in prac-<lb/>
tical French conversa-<lb/>
tion will be required of<lb/>
all students in the pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
The 10 students par-<lb/>
ticipating in the pro-<lb/>
gram represent a varie-<lb/>
ty of major fields of<lb/>
study: history,<lb/>
geography, art, home<lb/>
economics, political<lb/>
science, geology and<lb/>
urban planning. They<lb/>
are Pamela Sumner,<lb/>
Carolyn Boiter,<lb/>
Michael Diaga, Wayne<lb/>
King Jr Michael<lb/>
Monahan, Donna<lb/>
Glisson, Jama Jill<lb/>
Parker, Mary Denkler<lb/>
and William Colightly.<lb/>
ECU Offers Program For Deaf<lb/>
B KRANCEINE<lb/>
PERRY<lb/>
Getting through col-<lb/>
lege and finding a job is<lb/>
rarely easy these days;<lb/>
for a deaf young person<lb/>
who must live and work<lb/>
alongside the hearing,<lb/>
it's particularly dif-<lb/>
ficult.<lb/>
Yet the five deaf<lb/>
graduates of East<lb/>
Carolina University, all<lb/>
of whom received<lb/>
special services through<lb/>
ECU's five-year-old<lb/>
Program for Hearing-<lb/>
Impaired Students,<lb/>
have succeeded, justify-<lb/>
ing a firm belief of pro-<lb/>
gram director Michael<lb/>
Ernest that, given a<lb/>
chance, young deaf<lb/>
people can achieve.<lb/>
Ernest cites as an ex-<lb/>
ample ECU alumnus<lb/>
Edward Nelson Bur-<lb/>
chette, formerly of<lb/>
Wmston-Salem, who<lb/>
receive the BA degree<lb/>
in geography last May.<lb/>
Burchette, one of just<lb/>
two deaf geography<lb/>
graduates in the nation,<lb/>
is now a nautical car-<lb/>
tographer for the U.S.<lb/>
defense department's<lb/>
defense mapping agen-<lb/>
cy.<lb/>
Being a cartographer<lb/>
(mapmaker) fulfills a<lb/>
lifetime ambition for<lb/>
Burchette, who<lb/>
transfered to ECU<lb/>
from Gallaudet College<lb/>
in Washington, D.C<lb/>
to enroll in ECU's<lb/>
geography program.<lb/>
Gallaudet is the only<lb/>
liberal arts college for<lb/>
the deaf in the world.<lb/>
"Fewer than a dozen<lb/>
other campuses in the<lb/>
United States offer ser-<lb/>
vices for deaf students,<lb/>
and ECU is the only<lb/>
campus in the UNC<lb/>
system which has this<lb/>
kind of program<lb/>
Ernest said.<lb/>
"The goal of our<lb/>
program is to provide<lb/>
classroom sign<lb/>
language interpreters<lb/>
and other support<lb/>
which will allow<lb/>
hearing-impaired<lb/>
students to participate<lb/>
fully in academic pro-<lb/>
grams he added.<lb/>
"Traditionally, deaf<lb/>
students are steered in-<lb/>
to vocational or<lb/>
technical training, even<lb/>
the very bright ones<lb/>
who have an aptitude<lb/>
for the sciences or the<lb/>
health professions,<lb/>
areas not covered at<lb/>
Gallaudet<lb/>
This year, 20 deaf or<lb/>
severely hard-of-<lb/>
hearing students are<lb/>
participating in the pro-<lb/>
gram. They receive sign<lb/>
language interpreting<lb/>
for class lectures and<lb/>
laboratory sessions,<lb/>
and if they desire, they<lb/>
can get note-taking<lb/>
assistance, tutoring,<lb/>
counseling and<lb/>
speechhearing testing<lb/>
and therapy at ECU's<lb/>
Audiological Evalua-<lb/>
tion Clinic.<lb/>
"The deaf students<lb/>
who come to ECU<lb/>
generally leave the pro-<lb/>
tected environment of<lb/>
the residental school<lb/>
for the deaf and have to<lb/>
adjust to living and<lb/>
learning in the 'hearing<lb/>
world " Ernest ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
"It's naturally a con-<lb/>
siderable shock for<lb/>
them, but we have<lb/>
found that most can<lb/>
handle the adjustment<lb/>
as well as other<lb/>
freshmen adjusting to<lb/>
campus life<lb/>
The program spon-<lb/>
sors a very active Sign<lb/>
Language Club, which<lb/>
is designed to offer<lb/>
social outlets for deaf<lb/>
students and their<lb/>
friends as well as stu-<lb/>
dent interpreters. The<lb/>
club's major project<lb/>
has been making people<lb/>
on campus and in the<lb/>
community more aware<lb/>
of how deaf persons<lb/>
can interact and com-<lb/>
municate.<lb/>
A popular club ac-<lb/>
tivity is the weekly<lb/>
"silent supper held in<lb/>
loc?' -estaurants, dur-<lb/>
ing which the entire<lb/>
group sits together and<lb/>
communicates totally<lb/>
in sign language and<lb/>
finger-spelling.<lb/>
The club also spon-<lb/>
sors Fantasy, a per for<lb/>
RESEARCH<lb/>
PAPERS<lb/>
10,278 on file ? all subjects<lb/>
Send $1 00 (refundable) for your up-to-date,<lb/>
340 page, mail order catalog.<lb/>
We also provide research all fields<lb/>
Thesis and dissertation assistance available.<lb/>
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE<lb/>
11322 Idaho Ave.206F<lb/>
Los Angeles, Calif 90025<lb/>
(213)477 8226 or 477-8227<lb/>
3UB<lb/>
IHJ -<lb/>
ARTISTS!<lb/>
ENTER OUR<lb/>
WALL PAINTING<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
ioo<lb/>
50<lb/>
$25<lb/>
PRIZES!<lb/>
- 1st<lb/>
- 2nd<lb/>
-3rd<lb/>
COME TO SUBWAY<lb/>
FOR RULES &amp; REGULATIONS.<lb/>
208 E. Fifth 758-7979<lb/>
SunThurs. ? n a.m2a.m.<lb/>
FriSat. ?11 a.m3a.m.<lb/>
sign language classes<lb/>
and presents programs<lb/>
upon request to civic<lb/>
and school groups in-<lb/>
terested in deafness u?id<lb/>
manual communica-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
President of the Sign<lb/>
Language Club is John<lb/>
Welch, formerly of<lb/>
Chevy Chase, Md<lb/>
now of Washington,<lb/>
N.C whose identical<lb/>
twin brother is deaf.<lb/>
ductions, in the<lb/>
libraries, in the lecture<lb/>
rooms of just about<lb/>
every academic depart-<lb/>
ment and even on local<lb/>
television news broad-<lb/>
casts.<lb/>
A positive by-<lb/>
product of the program<lb/>
has been the intensive<lb/>
training and experience<lb/>
offered part-time stu-<lb/>
dent interpreters, many<lb/>
of whom have<lb/>
m<lb/>
R<lb/>
T Sktrtt. ?(???!at ?i<lb/>
? ??I, ???! T- Mill.<lb/>
W.M<lb/>
ARMY.NAVY<lb/>
STORE ??????<lb/>
t<lb/>
USED<lb/>
TIRES<lb/>
$Q00<lb/>
Inquire at<lb/>
Evans Seafood<lb/>
Tonight is opening night for the ECU Pliyhouse<lb/>
production of Show Boat, which will run through<lb/>
April 8.<lb/>
Thurs. April 1st<lb/>
Thunder Thighs Contest<lb/>
Ladies' Lockout<lb/>
from 8:00 to 10:00 p.m.<lb/>
Doors open to general public at 10:00 p.m.<lb/>
PRIZES - 1 st - $50<lb/>
2nd - $25 3rd - $10<lb/>
for information call 355-2615<lb/>
or 752-9745<lb/>
?6iasa???a?a8tf6isai&amp;??&amp;????feii&amp;ss<lb/>
 ??'<lb/>
VWVSOVSi<lb/>
Welch is a sophomore graduated and are<lb/>
speech, langauge and working in jobs in<lb/>
auditory pathology ma-<lb/>
jor and works part-time<lb/>
as one of the 14 sign<lb/>
language interpreters<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Vice president is<lb/>
Keith Stephens, an<lb/>
English major from<lb/>
Annapolis, Md.<lb/>
Secretary is Rebekah<lb/>
Ottaway of Man-<lb/>
chester, England, and<lb/>
Joe Admire, a deaf stu-<lb/>
dent from Springfield,<lb/>
Va is treasurer.<lb/>
Admire is also a<lb/>
member of ECU's stu-<lb/>
dent legislature,<lb/>
representing Slay<lb/>
Residence Hall. A sign<lb/>
language interpreter ac-<lb/>
companies him to the<lb/>
weekly legislative ses-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
During its five years<lb/>
on campus, the Pro-<lb/>
gram for Hearing-<lb/>
which sign language<lb/>
skills are necessary.<lb/>
There is a "critical<lb/>
shortage" of manual<lb/>
communication inter-<lb/>
preters, Ernest noted.<lb/>
For the immediate<lb/>
future, however, ECU<lb/>
has no plans to ac-<lb/>
celerate its interpreter<lb/>
training program, he<lb/>
said. Its present goal is<lb/>
to supply enough train-<lb/>
ed interpreters for the<lb/>
campus' deaf students.<lb/>
"By the end of this<lb/>
semester, we will have<lb/>
graduated eight deaf<lb/>
students, a record of<lb/>
success we're very pro-<lb/>
ud of said Ernest.<lb/>
"With just a little help<lb/>
and a means of com-<lb/>
munication, our deaf<lb/>
students can and do<lb/>
achieve.<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
FOR POSITIONS AT<lb/>
WZMB-FM<lb/>
?ASSISTANT GENERAL MANAGER<lb/>
PROGRAM DIRECTOR<lb/>
?MUSIC DIRECTOR<lb/>
?BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
DEADUNE:<lb/>
5:00 P.M. - THURSDAY, APRIL 8th<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION, COME BY WZMB STUDIOS<lb/>
ming ensemble who in- Impaired Students has<lb/>
terpret the lyrics of been highly visible,<lb/>
popular songs by use of Sign langauge inter-<lb/>
mime and sign preters have appeared<lb/>
language, arranges a on stage at campus lcc-<lb/>
series of free evening tures and drama pro-<lb/>
oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
Summer School Students<lb/>
S. G. Wilkerson &amp; Sons, Inc.<lb/>
is looking for bright, mature<lb/>
young man to work part-time in<lb/>
exchange for free room.<lb/>
Must be available all summer.<lb/>
Please apply in person at 5th St.<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
"Fortunately, ECU<lb/>
has created the kind of<lb/>
climate of acceptance 5<lb/>
which the deaf need to<lb/>
adjust to the hearing<lb/>
world<lb/>
The SGA Transit will be accepting ap-<lb/>
plications for bus drivers for Summer<lb/>
School and Fall Semester.<lb/>
?All applicants must have driven<lb/>
a bus in high school or been employed<lb/>
driving a vehicle of similar<lb/>
size.<lb/>
?Juniors, Seniors and<lb/>
Graduate Students preferred.<lb/>
?Apply by appointment only.<lb/>
Call 757-6611, Ext. 218.<lb/>
GRAND OPENING<lb/>
"EASTER WEEKEND"<lb/>
APRIL 9? 10? 11<lb/>
BURNIE'S<lb/>
ON THE<lb/>
BEACH<lb/>
HWY.58<lb/>
EMERALD ISLE,N.C.<lb/>
Beside Bogue Inlet Pier<lb/>
WATCH FOR SIGNS<lb/>
WEEKEND<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
FriSat. Night<lb/>
THE POOk SOULS<lb/>
Sunday Night<lb/>
THE CHAIRMAN<lb/>
OF THE BOARD<lb/>
FEATURING: GENERAL JOHNSON<lb/>
BEER PERMITS ? LG. DANCE AREA<lb/>
GAME ROOM ? FREE PAVED PARKING FOR 500 CARS<lb/>
DRAFT HAPPY HOUR ? 7:00-8:30<lb/>
OPFN DAILY 9:00 A.M.<lb/>
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
?<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
boOOOOQOOOQOQQQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO(<lb/>
C ontii<lb/>
Th<lb/>
progrj<lb/>
kids<lb/>
One<lb/>
the 1<lb/>
partic<lb/>
"It's<lb/>
verv<lb/>
Then<lb/>
mg n<lb/>
parti<lb/>
grarr.<lb/>
Big B<lb/>
Green<lb/>
a vic<lb/>
tioni<lb/>
mine<lb/>
for<lb/>
is cor<lb/>
a laci<lb/>
a j<lb/>
B<lb/>
Vej<lb/>
v. ate<lb/>
heigi<lb/>
moui<lb/>
"Lo<lb/>
dim!<lb/>
a higl<lb/>
platq<lb/>
It<lb/>
I<lb/>
aboul<lb/>
afai<lb/>
medu<lb/>
to r<lb/>
it<lb/>
Leal<lb/>
Card<lb/>
geogi<lb/>
the<lb/>
RoraJ<lb/>
Gran<lb/>
Venei<lb/>
Le<lb/>
mg<lb/>
ex pec<lb/>
to<lb/>
studvi<lb/>
"T<lb/>
e x<lb/>
heautl<lb/>
I<lb/>
Leah<lb/>
desci<lb/>
Rorai<lb/>
inspi<lb/>
famol<lb/>
L(<lb/>
Pnnj<lb/>
Pnnl<lb/>
thml<lb/>
haunl<lb/>
Englj<lb/>
coun<lb/>
said<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
the<lb/>
of<lb/>
thei<lb/>
sumr<lb/>
betwl<lb/>
millij<lb/>
26- b<lb/>
nea;<lb/>
tow<lb/>
t<lb/>
ST<lb/>
<pb facs="00057471_0007"/><lb/>
mist<lb/>
niuh<lb/>
,<lb/>
O<lb/>
3<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
D<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
D<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
J<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
u<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
?OOd<lb/>
lMt i AM t AROI INIAN<lb/>
APRIL I, 1982<lb/>
Juvenile Program Needs Minorities<lb/>
Continued F.om Page 5<lb/>
The Big Brothers<lb/>
program works with<lb/>
kids from ages 4-16.<lb/>
One problem has been<lb/>
the lack of black male<lb/>
participants. Teel says,<lb/>
"It's a big problem, a<lb/>
very big problem.<lb/>
There is an overwhelm-<lb/>
ing need for blacks to<lb/>
participate in the pro-<lb/>
gram Although the<lb/>
Big Brother Program in<lb/>
Greenville has not been<lb/>
a victim of dispropor-<lb/>
tionate number of<lb/>
minorities, the appeal<lb/>
for minority volunteers<lb/>
is constant. Teel blames<lb/>
a lack of awareness for<lb/>
a significant portion of<lb/>
this problem.<lb/>
Another calamity is<lb/>
getting private<lb/>
businessmen engaged in<lb/>
the Juvenile Court<lb/>
Volunteer Program.<lb/>
"They are unaware<lb/>
that they have the time<lb/>
and resources Teel<lb/>
stated. Businessmen are<lb/>
needed to be positive<lb/>
role models for the<lb/>
juveniles. They will be<lb/>
instrumental in expos-<lb/>
ing the offender to<lb/>
another side of life.<lb/>
Funds is an issue but<lb/>
not the primary one.<lb/>
Big Brother's will be<lb/>
overjoyed if these<lb/>
businessmen would just<lb/>
donate some time and<lb/>
energy. Teel commend-<lb/>
ed Governor Hunt for<lb/>
his volunteer work<lb/>
the school system.<lb/>
in<lb/>
The Pitt County<lb/>
Community Services<lb/>
Restitution Program is<lb/>
another area project to<lb/>
aid youth offenders.<lb/>
The program provides<lb/>
jobs for those who have<lb/>
committed crimes<lb/>
against property. Work<lb/>
hours and pay are in ac-<lb/>
cordance with all<lb/>
government regula-<lb/>
tions. The offender<lb/>
works to pay back the<lb/>
victim of this crime.<lb/>
Cookie Rodgers is the<lb/>
coordinator of the pro-<lb/>
gram. The system is us-<lb/>
ed as a deterrent. The<lb/>
youths learn that he is<lb/>
responsible for his<lb/>
criminal acts. In addi-<lb/>
tion, he gains valuable<lb/>
work expericne that<lb/>
may make the dif-<lb/>
ference whether or not<lb/>
the offender will con-<lb/>
tinue a life of crime.<lb/>
Private businessmen<lb/>
are responsible for pro-<lb/>
viding many of the jobs<lb/>
these youths participate<lb/>
in.<lb/>
The Greenville Pre-<lb/>
Release and Aftercare<lb/>
Center (PRAC) has<lb/>
conducted one class to<lb/>
help juvenile offendes.<lb/>
This trial session was<lb/>
oriented to build self-<lb/>
concept and produce<lb/>
individual motivation.<lb/>
It also dealt with how<lb/>
to respond to different<lb/>
types of relationships,<lb/>
the job market, and the<lb/>
community.<lb/>
PRAC is a branch of<lb/>
te North Carolina<lb/>
Department of Correc-<lb/>
tion's Division of Adult<lb/>
Probation and Parole.<lb/>
The Department of<lb/>
Corrections was "very<lb/>
well pleased with the<lb/>
responsevery positive<lb/>
nd wants to continue<lb/>
it according to Matt<lb/>
Brewington, assistant<lb/>
pre-release training<lb/>
coordinator. PRAC's<lb/>
director is Pat Higgins.<lb/>
The center is located on<lb/>
108 Dexter Street<lb/>
(behing the Beef Barn).<lb/>
PRAC consists of<lb/>
534 community<lb/>
volunteers among 26<lb/>
counties. Its object is to<lb/>
aid inmates to suc-<lb/>
cessfully reenter socie-<lb/>
ty. There are six ex-<lb/>
isting centers in North<lb/>
Carolina that serve all<lb/>
one hundred counties.<lb/>
To be eligible for this<lb/>
program, an inmate has<lb/>
to be 18 or older;<lb/>
however, the majority<lb/>
of the clients are 20 or<lb/>
older. Counseling<lb/>
begins within one year<lb/>
of the inmates uncondi-<lb/>
tional release date.<lb/>
The Community Ad-<lb/>
justment Training Pro-<lb/>
gram (CAT), which<lb/>
was housed in the same<lb/>
building as PRAC, was<lb/>
discontinued in<lb/>
December because of<lb/>
the federal budget cuts.<lb/>
This program was<lb/>
started to handle a vast<lb/>
amount of ihe juvenile<lb/>
cases and as diversion<lb/>
from the active sentenc-<lb/>
ing method.<lb/>
Most juveniles enter<lb/>
the correctional process<lb/>
not because they com-<lb/>
mitted serious crimes<lb/>
but because they com-<lb/>
mitted status offenses.<lb/>
Status offenses include<lb/>
truancy, running away<lb/>
from home, or disobey-<lb/>
ing a curfew. These acts<lb/>
are only crimes because<lb/>
they are committed by<lb/>
a minor. There is a<lb/>
wide assortment of<lb/>
names given to status<lb/>
offenders: PINS<lb/>
persons in need of<lb/>
supervision, CH1NS-<lb/>
children in need of<lb/>
supervision, MINS-<lb/>
minors in need of<lb/>
supervision or JINS-<lb/>
juveniles in need of<lb/>
supervision.<lb/>
Recent developments<lb/>
in juvenile courts have<lb/>
allowed the juveniles<lb/>
more rights. The first<lb/>
courts were very<lb/>
punitive. Two cases did<lb/>
more to transform the<lb/>
system than anv other.<lb/>
They are Kent v. US<lb/>
(1966) and In re (iault<lb/>
(1967). These cases<lb/>
brought about the<lb/>
child's right to: (1) a<lb/>
hearing on a motion of<lb/>
waiver; (2) representa-<lb/>
tion by counsel; (3)<lb/>
District Attorney's<lb/>
right to access to all<lb/>
records and reports us-<lb/>
ed to reach a waiver<lb/>
decision; (4) written<lb/>
statement of reasons<lb/>
for waiver decision; (5)<lb/>
notice of charges; (6)<lb/>
confrontation and<lb/>
cross examination of<lb/>
witnesses, and (7) right<lb/>
against self-<lb/>
incrimination. A mo-<lb/>
tion of waiver is th<lb/>
transfer of a juvenile<lb/>
offenders to criminal<lb/>
courts. The right<lb/>
against self-<lb/>
incrimination is when<lb/>
an alleged offender<lb/>
pleads the Fifth<lb/>
Amendment which in-<lb/>
sures that right.<lb/>
World<lb/>
By WILLIAM A.<lb/>
SHIRES<lb/>
K I Nr?n Duma<lb/>
Veiled by cascading<lb/>
waterfalls, covered<lb/>
with cloud on its<lb/>
heights, the mysterious<lb/>
mountain of a fictional<lb/>
"Lost World" rises<lb/>
dimly in the distance on<lb/>
a high South American<lb/>
plateau.<lb/>
It beckons, but as yet<lb/>
scientists know little<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
"When I saw it from<lb/>
afar, I knew im-<lb/>
mediately that I wanted<lb/>
to return and explore<lb/>
it says Dr. Edward P.<lb/>
Leahy, an East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
geographer who viewed<lb/>
the mountain, Mt.<lb/>
Roraima, in the remote<lb/>
Gran Sabana region of<lb/>
Venezuela last year.<lb/>
Leahy now is plann-<lb/>
ing a full scale return<lb/>
expedition this summer<lb/>
to climb, map and<lb/>
study the mountain.<lb/>
"The whole area is<lb/>
extraordinarly<lb/>
beautiful in a bizarre,<lb/>
primordial way<lb/>
Leahy says. Vague<lb/>
descriptions of Mt.<lb/>
Roraima served as the<lb/>
inspiration for Sir Ar-<lb/>
thur Conan Doyle's<lb/>
famous science-fiction<lb/>
novel, "The Lost<lb/>
World in which the<lb/>
author fantasized a<lb/>
flat-topped mountain<lb/>
existing in biological<lb/>
isolation where<lb/>
dinosaurs survived.<lb/>
"There are no<lb/>
dinosaurs on Mt.<lb/>
Roraima, but it is that<lb/>
kind of place, suffi-<lb/>
ciently remote and eerie<lb/>
to kindle such<lb/>
thoughts Leah said.<lb/>
Gold and diamonds<lb/>
are found in the alluvial<lb/>
sand and gravel of<lb/>
streams flowing from<lb/>
the base of the moun-<lb/>
tain. But the entire<lb/>
20,000-square-mile<lb/>
Gran Sabana, in<lb/>
southeastern<lb/>
Venezuela's Bolivar<lb/>
Province, is populated<lb/>
only by Indians and a<lb/>
few prospectors.<lb/>
Leahy last summer<lb/>
met the only two<lb/>
Americans in the<lb/>
region, prospector<lb/>
George Elledge of San-<lb/>
ta Elena de Urairen, a<lb/>
town some 50 miles<lb/>
from the mountain,<lb/>
and a diamond buyer,<lb/>
Floyd Park, who pro-<lb/>
mised assistance on the<lb/>
exploration project.<lb/>
Elledge has spent 15<lb/>
years in the interior,<lb/>
engaged in mining and<lb/>
prospecting. "He<lb/>
knows the country; he<lb/>
has the equipment, and<lb/>
he knows how to cope<lb/>
with the rigors of<lb/>
wilderness living<lb/>
Leahy said.<lb/>
Also, the Explorer's<lb/>
Club of New York has<lb/>
awarded Leahy a $600<lb/>
grant, which is the<lb/>
maximum amount it<lb/>
allots to a project, and<lb/>
other support is being<lb/>
sought.<lb/>
Leahy's expedition<lb/>
plans include Dr. Don<lb/>
Steila, also an ECU<lb/>
geographer, and a<lb/>
graduate assistant,<lb/>
Boyce Cheek of<lb/>
Kinston, N.C who is a<lb/>
husky, strong<lb/>
outsdoorsman, camper<lb/>
and climber. Leahy<lb/>
himself is an alpinist,<lb/>
having made ascents of<lb/>
Mt. Blanc and other<lb/>
peaks, mostly in the<lb/>
Alps and is a Latin<lb/>
American specialist,<lb/>
having made a number<lb/>
of trips into the upper<lb/>
Amazon.<lb/>
"Once we leave San-<lb/>
ta Elena, we will be on<lb/>
our own. Full camping<lb/>
equipment will be re-<lb/>
quired Leahy said.<lb/>
Only a dirt road,<lb/>
north and south,<lb/>
crosses the high rolling<lb/>
grassland of the Gran<lb/>
Sabana. Flat-topped<lb/>
mountains rise sheer<lb/>
from the plain.<lb/>
"Clouds hang over<lb/>
the mountains. Water-<lb/>
falls cascade down the<lb/>
cliffs. Stands of<lb/>
greenery reach up the<lb/>
lower flanks Leahy<lb/>
says, describing the<lb/>
area as he found it last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"The area is utterly<lb/>
deserted. Not a sound<lb/>
is to be heard.<lb/>
"Geographers have<lb/>
ignored this whole<lb/>
area he says. "We<lb/>
hope to examine it<lb/>
from the viewpoint of<lb/>
its physical<lb/>
characteristics and its<lb/>
development potential.<lb/>
As of now, the region<lb/>
supports only a few In-<lb/>
dians and some miners<lb/>
who work the streams<lb/>
for diamonds and gold.<lb/>
A question Leahy<lb/>
hopes to answer is why<lb/>
the rolling grassland<lb/>
has not been found<lb/>
suitable for cultivation<lb/>
and the possibility that<lb/>
the plateau was a<lb/>
prehistoric lake before<lb/>
the shifting of con-<lb/>
tinents.<lb/>
"We will examine<lb/>
the mesa on top of<lb/>
Roraima for evidence<lb/>
of frost shattering and<lb/>
possible glaciation, as<lb/>
we are interested in the<lb/>
effect of the<lb/>
Pleistocene (age) at that<lb/>
elevation in the<lb/>
tropics Leahy said.<lb/>
"We will bring back<lb/>
soil samples for carbon<lb/>
dating. At the same<lb/>
time we will look for<lb/>
evidence of such ig-<lb/>
neous masses as might<lb/>
serve as the source of<lb/>
the alluvial diamonds<lb/>
and gold found in the<lb/>
area<lb/>
Eventually, Leahy<lb/>
said, he would like to<lb/>
do a book on the Mt.<lb/>
Roraima area and the<lb/>
Gran Sabana. He has<lb/>
published an earlier<lb/>
work, "Venezuela:<lb/>
Search for a Middle<lb/>
Ground and is the<lb/>
author of numerous ar-<lb/>
ticles on Amazonia.<lb/>
Leahy holds a degree<lb/>
in engineering from the<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
and a PhD in<lb/>
geography from the<lb/>
University of Florida.<lb/>
THE SHOE OUTLET<lb/>
(Located beside Evans Seafood)<lb/>
Featuring name brand shoes at bargain prices.<lb/>
Up To 75 OFF regular prices<lb/>
Bass Steward-McGuire Brouse Abouts<lb/>
201 W. Washington St. Within walking distance of campus.<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
l-M week terminations<lb/>
App'ts. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1-800-321-0575<lb/>
Help When You Need It Most.<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here tor women of<lb/>
all ages since 1974, offering understanding and<lb/>
help to anyone faced with an unplanned pregnancy<lb/>
. day or night. Services include:<lb/>
Free Pregnano Testing<lb/>
Weekday &amp; Saturday Abortion Appts.<lb/>
Evening Birth Control Hours<lb/>
CALL 781-5550 DAY OR NIGHT<lb/>
THE FLEMING CENTER<lb/>
We 're here when you need us.<lb/>
H !<lb/>
104 Red Banks Rd. (Behind Shoney's) 756-6000<lb/>
Tuesday Night ?<lb/>
ECU NIGHT<lb/>
JUST $1.00 wID includes<lb/>
Skate Rental<lb/>
7:00-10:00<lb/>
Every Friday &amp; Saturday Nighr<lb/>
ECU Students are admitted for<lb/>
JUST $2.00 including Skate Rental<lb/>
?<lb/>
;<lb/>
May<lb/>
Prince and Princess<lb/>
Move To Haunted House<lb/>
LONDON (UPI) ?<lb/>
Prince Charles and<lb/>
Princess Diana are<lb/>
thinking of moving to a<lb/>
haunted mansion in<lb/>
England's Robin Hood<lb/>
country, the Daily Mail<lb/>
said today.<lb/>
The newspaper said<lb/>
the Prince and Princess<lb/>
of Wales, expecting<lb/>
their first child this<lb/>
summer, had offered<lb/>
between $4.5 and $5.4<lb/>
million for a stately<lb/>
26-bedroom mansion<lb/>
near Nottingham, the<lb/>
town of "Robin<lb/>
Hood" folklore, some<lb/>
110 miles north of Lon-<lb/>
don.<lb/>
The mansion, Belton<lb/>
House, is being sold by<lb/>
Lord Brownlow, who is<lb/>
going into tax exile in<lb/>
Ftjance this week. The<lb/>
house is full of<lb/>
tapestries and fur-<lb/>
niture, some of which<lb/>
Charles is keen to have,<lb/>
but local superstition<lb/>
says it is also haunted.<lb/>
Cleaning women at<lb/>
Belton insist on work-<lb/>
ing in twos and fre-<lb/>
quently complain of<lb/>
seeing a woman dressed<lb/>
in period costume and a<lb/>
man wearing a long<lb/>
black cape, wandering<lb/>
through the house.<lb/>
Buckingham Palace<lb/>
denied the househun-<lb/>
ting reports, saying the<lb/>
royal couple was "very<lb/>
happy" at the present<lb/>
home, Highgrove,<lb/>
which Charles bought<lb/>
in 1980.<lb/>
"There is no truth in<lb/>
the story a<lb/>
spokesman said.<lb/>
One source with<lb/>
royal family connec-<lb/>
tions said, however,<lb/>
that the pregnant<lb/>
princess was unhappy<lb/>
at Highgrove because<lb/>
with only nine<lb/>
bedrooms, it was too<lb/>
small and too<lb/>
vulnerable to the public<lb/>
eye.<lb/>
Belton House is sur-<lb/>
rounded by 600 acres of<lb/>
parkland. It is near the<lb/>
farm of Diana's elder<lb/>
sister, and her father<lb/>
and the royal residence<lb/>
Sandringham are but<lb/>
an hour's drive away.<lb/>
the future in style!<lb/>
Wear a College Ring with<lb/>
diamonds from ArtCarved.<lb/>
On campus now, exclusively with your<lb/>
ArtCarved representative, is the beautiful and<lb/>
very affordable Designer Diamond Collection.<lb/>
Don't miss it! You can choose from<lb/>
three exquisitely crafted styles, all set<lb/>
with diamonds, in 10K or UK gold.<lb/>
(All styles are also avaiiable in the<lb/>
elegant diamond-substitute Cubic Zirconia).<lb/>
Your successes speak for themselves.<lb/>
Let your college ring speak for you,<lb/>
and eloquently, for all the successful<lb/>
years to come.<lb/>
TONIGHT<lb/>
The 1982<lb/>
Kappa SigmaStroh's Bahama Mama<lb/>
Beach Party and Raffle<lb/>
presented by<lb/>
Hallow Distributing Company<lb/>
AccuCopy<lb/>
University Book Exchange<lb/>
Hodges Sporting Goods<lb/>
8 p.m. till midnight<lb/>
featuring Alan Handleman<lb/>
from WITH<lb/>
Location ? Across from Umstead Dorm<lb/>
An All expense paid trip to the<lb/>
Bahamas For just$1.00<lb/>
TICKETS ON SALE NOW!<lb/>
For more information call 752-5543<lb/>
Be There,<lb/>
Aloha!<lb/>
DEPOSIT REQUIRED MASTERCARD OR VISA ACCEPTED<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057471_0008"/><lb/>
IHt fcASI t AROl IN1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
M'KI<lb/>
'Pack Stops<lb/>
ECU Streak<lb/>
ie Pirates oi I ast v aroh<lb/>
 to Raleigh 1 uesday aftei<lb/>
7-0 t, ollegiate ten<lb/>
an into national<lb/>
? i na stale, who<lb/>
a's Kent Zengle was<lb/>
l 2 6 A a<lb/>
e singU tion<lb/>
 . ! . li V<lb/>
ed 1 ast v ai olina's<lb/>
H aid R 6-3, 6-2 ?<lb/>
was beaten by N t<lb/>
4, 6 ;<lb/>
 a k a on then tot<lb/>
when Brad Smith<lb/>
: Pail b 2. ? <lb/>
?5!fcX'<lb/>
'?<lb/>
Ml <lb/>
? ? ,<lb/>
?- <lb/>
ftSft'fck f"<lb/>
tt eat<lb/>
.6-1.6-0<lb/>
? ' -<lb/>
Pai kei . 7-6. 7-5.<lb/>
Norman Bry<lb/>
va Ifpack Ray<lb/>
'??????-<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Lady Bucs<lb/>
Rip ACC<lb/>
At Home<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
lu<lb/>
In The Swing Of Things<lb/>
1 astarolina's Debbie Christine certain!) ?as in the swiny of things in a match with Atlantichristianollege<lb/>
1 ?? I uesday in Greenville, she defeated her opponent 6-1, 6-0, helping her team to an overwhelming 9-0 victory.<lb/>
(Photo b Dave N illiams.)<lb/>
W ill- -<lb/>
w<lb/>
Katl<lb/>
dett<lb/>
Brown Hitting Star<lb/>
????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????<lb/>
Pirates Rip<lb/>
Wilmington,<lb/>
Now 15-3<lb/>
BvIM) PI I sMs<lb/>
?<lb/>
4<lb/>
L N Wilm<lb/>
?<lb/>
II<lb/>
4 <lb/>
I ?<lb/>
id then<lb/>
I and<lb/>
N<lb/>
its<lb/>
'the<lb/>
? in-<lb/>
stil<lb/>
ible i at ead.<lb/>
d in the<lb/>
: i ing in<lb/>
I Yv<lb/>
but t Pirates w ei e<lb/>
i . 20 hit<lb/>
'  ?! carters<lb/>
? 500 m that it: i<lb/>
Mitzi Davis<lb/>
i ?? Shepard also<lb/>
. and Davis<lb/>
1 eslie Bunn<lb/>
B hree-1 foui.<lb/>
homei in the<lb/>
mnetteRoth(l<lb/>
t he<lb/>
ond game, II<lb/>
i idy Seahawks, 6 5.<lb/>
;d twice in the<lb/>
I he Pirates then wain<lb/>
<lb/>
: N( -<lb/>
sixth tor a<lb/>
Yv 11 h<lb/>
i ady<lb/>
the<lb/>
.<lb/>
1 v 1 - Mai - nnger<lb/>
md 'i vonne Yv illiams<lb/>
went I M three. Shepard had a<lb/>
le, And Dav<lb/>
-  ? ? '<lb/>
nioi Angie Hump<lb/>
the w mi pitcl r foi I Pira<lb/>
Head coach sue Manahan s i<lb/>
she was proud o( the team's perfor-<lb/>
linst I fNC-VN ilmington.<lb/>
"Offensively, the team executed<lb/>
she sa<lb/>
Manahan said she feels like<lb/>
'earn is play ing above a erag<lb/>
pomt in the season. "Sometimes<lb/>
you can peak too soon she aid,<lb/>
"but 1 don't thmk we're reached<lb/>
our full potential yet<lb/>
Manahan added that the Softball<lb/>
team is playing unselfishly and<lb/>
that v she likes.<lb/>
"They're finding out what I ex<lb/>
pect out oi them she said, "And<lb/>
re learning to sacrifice then<lb/>
batting averages and persona! goals<lb/>
km<lb/>
I he 1 ads Pirates will play in the<lb/>
ICharlotte tournament this<lb/>
Friday and Saturday. I he other<lb/>
eleven teams participating in the<lb/>
tournament are: Appalachian State,<lb/>
lion. UNC-Chapel Hill, UN(<lb/>
Wilmington, Mars Hill, A&amp;l, N. C.<lb/>
State.amphell, Pembroke, I N(<lb/>
Charlotte and Western Carolina<lb/>
I niversity I he first game begins<lb/>
Friday ai 12 p.m.<lb/>
Just A I ittic I ate<lb/>
I astarolina second baseman Ginger Rothermel ? 1 1? waits tor a late-arriving throw from shortstop Jo 1 an lalavion in<lb/>
a recent victory over the I adv Wolfpack of V Male. I he I ady Pirates are now 15-3 heading into this weekend's<lb/>
tournament at I'M -( harlotle.t Photo by Dave Williams)<lb/>
Pirates Rally To Out slug Cavs<lb/>
( H kl ui 11 s n l I . Va<lb/>
1 he Pirate- ol I astarolina spotted<lb/>
the University ol Virginia i avaliers<lb/>
ighl i un lead only to rally to<lb/>
theii 14th game out ol the last 15,<lb/>
i 8 10, ruesday afternoon.<lb/>
I he Pirates are now t 4 while<lb/>
Virginia dropped to 6-10.<lb/>
1 ast arolina collected 15 hits but<lb/>
the C avaliers banged out 14 ol then<lb/>
on in a contest that saw nine dil<lb/>
ferent pitchers waltz to the mound.<lb/>
I reshman Brian Peterson started<lb/>
the game foi the Pirates but nevei<lb/>
made n past the first inning. Chub-<lb/>
by Butler, another first-year pitcher,<lb/>
entered the game and pitched for<lb/>
tour innings, eventually earning the<lb/>
victory. He is now 3-0 foi the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
I ett hander Bobby Patterson pit-<lb/>
ched the last tour and two-third inn-<lb/>
- to record the sae<lb/>
Virginia's stai ting ? i<lb/>
Scott 1 aporta, but he only managed<lb/>
a little oer three innings before five<lb/>
more pitchers followed him l1<lb/>
Erbaugh, who lasted only a<lb/>
an inning received the loss,<lb/>
cowd in two decisions.<lb/>
Virginia started quickly, scoring<lb/>
three runs in the first inning Brad<lb/>
Miller singled to left with one out,<lb/>
and ?. ilenn Hai i is stroke a double to<lb/>
right field, scoring Miller. Ge<lb/>
Priftis then reached on an ei i oi. and<lb/>
Harris scored when Joe L.ange<lb/>
grounded out. Donnie Meeks then<lb/>
singled, driving in Priftis<lb/>
1 he Cavaliers added tour more in<lb/>
the second inning alter a double b<lb/>
David 1 ynch followed two base hits<lb/>
and a sacrifice, giving the home<lb/>
standing team a lofty 7-0 lead<lb/>
.<lb/>
v<lb/>
Ha<lb/>
bases<lb/>
me in Wells (<lb/>
? then sin m<lb/>
Hallow Rick <lb/>
in Hend<lb/>
mm<lb/>
I he Pira<lb/>
ebaek in the I<lb/>
game<lb/>
?<lb/>
sm. Ha S<lb/>
- ed, brii u t<lb/>
reached first<lb/>
I YV<lb/>
grand dam i,<lb/>
I he t avaliei s tied<lb/>
the bottom i<lb/>
<lb/>
The Matchup: 'Everything One Could Desire'<lb/>
 hup<lb/>
. is much overus<lb/>
: thi vorld I ports M<lb/>
imes gel the la be,<lb/>
lon'l deserve it. Mon<lb/>
S A A basketball cham-<lb/>
: between North<lb/>
fa na md ieoi getown has also<lb/>
praise I his time,<lb/>
label is more ttian ap<lb/>
1 at Heel Hoya matchup had<lb/>
"tie could desire in a<lb/>
. ame 1 rom the<lb/>
to a last-second<lb/>
shot, the action was<lb/>
fast-pa ed and tension filled<lb/>
vs led bv more than four<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
were numerous<lb/>
p int <lb/>
Both t tm played all out foi 40<lb/>
minutes Both came to win and both<lb/>
played well enough to take the big<lb/>
trophy home<lb/>
Northarolina won the title thai<lb/>
had. for 21 ve.ir . eluded head coach<lb/>
Dean Smith. 1 he Heels certainly<lb/>
deserved to win, but Georgetown<lb/>
did not deserve to lose I he game-<lb/>
was that well-played.<lb/>
I he 19H2 title game will certainly<lb/>
go down in the NCAA annals as one<lb/>
ol the best ever played It is the besl<lb/>
collegiate championship that this<lb/>
voung columnist has ever seen. It is<lb/>
matched onlv by the N.C. State<lb/>
1I A 1974 semi-final game.<lb/>
rhe star of the show foi UN( was<lb/>
certainly forward James Worthy.<lb/>
1 he Gastonia native put on an<lb/>
awesome display foi the entire na-<lb/>
tion to see He certainly showed the<lb/>
Associated Press that the made a<lb/>
mistake bv leaving him off their All-<lb/>
America team. Forwards Terry<lb/>
Cummings ol DePaul and Kevin<lb/>
Magee of CalIrvine were listed<lb/>
ahead ol the 6-8 lar Heel.<lb/>
Alter watching Monday night's<lb/>
game, though, I am convinced that<lb/>
there is no better forward in<lb/>
America than lames Worthy.<lb/>
Earth-shattering slam dunks mix<lb/>
ed in with slick moves in the iane lefi<lb/>
Worthy with 2S points and the<lb/>
tourney's M P award.<lb/>
Which brings us to a prediction<lb/>
rhe Gastonia native will not return<lb/>
to North Carolina tor his senioi<lb/>
season He will declare foi profes<lb/>
sional hardship<lb/>
'The Heels certainly<lb/>
deserved to win, but<lb/>
Georgetown did not<lb/>
deserve to lose. The game<lb/>
was that well played<lb/>
I he reasons arc H<lb/>
formance Mondav<lb/>
throughout the ea him in (Ik<lb/>
pet feel bai gaimn tion NBA<lb/>
coaches certainly drooled wa<lb/>
him, and will be willing to pay him<lb/>
the megabucks thai he will certainly<lb/>
demand W hv come back and risk<lb/>
an anti climatic senior seasonY oi<lb/>
thy will go now while he's a red-hoi<lb/>
commoditv<lb/>
nothei prediction is thai 7 4<lb/>
centei Ralph Sampson will be b<lb/>
at Virginia next yeai He wants thai<lb/>
national title too much to leave<lb/>
now<lb/>
Georgetown centei Pal Ewing lei<lb/>
it be known Mondav that he is verv<lb/>
wondering<lb/>
againsl Sampson "Wl<lb/>
v ask<lb/>
Ilu two<lb/>
ers Sa<lb/>
sse while Ewing is definitely<lb/>
more physu .<lb/>
I he feeling hen ,<lb/>
would gel the best ol it<lb/>
were to meel 1 he Hoyas'<lb/>
freshman has the "mean .<lb/>
U Sampson so badly needs<lb/>
W hat we saw Mondav night was a<lb/>
sign ol things to come I wing was<lb/>
simply devastating at times H<lb/>
blessed with the physical attributes<lb/>
thai should make him the most<lb/>
dominant playei in the game for the<lb/>
next 10 15 years, Ralph Sampson<lb/>
notwithstanding<lb/>
<pb facs="00057471_0009"/><lb/>
I Ml I AS! t AROl INIAN<lb/>
APR11 1, 1982<lb/>
Softball Favorites Beginning To Emerge<lb/>
 . . . ? .1?. horA ir? monv tQmc that will have something tc<lb/>
Sports- Shorts<lb/>
By<lb/>
Gregg Melton<lb/>
 little over tvo weeks hae passed since the<lb/>
opening of the regular season for "Intramural<lb/>
Softball" here at ECU, and man teams are<lb/>
beginning to iron out the rough spots and pla<lb/>
some pretty good softball. This is especially true<lb/>
of those teams who played in the<lb/>
?Miller Preseason Tournament" for main ol<lb/>
those teams are now leading then respective dit-<lb/>
sions<lb/>
"Un Kappa Fifth" and "The Rats" are both<lb/>
undefeated at 2-0 and have to be rated as the<lb/>
leading contenders tor the women's independent<lb/>
crown, while Alpha i Delta and Alpha Kappa<lb/>
Alpha also sport ihe same records and aie leading<lb/>
the sororit division the women's dorm leagues<lb/>
are headed by the "Chick-Fil-AV of t lenient<lb/>
n and the team from "Garrett<lb/>
Over in the men's division, the "Bomber's<lb/>
started their season out on a strong note by set-<lb/>
turn an ECU 1M record with their 46-2 triumph<lb/>
over the "Good Ole Boys Even so, they will be<lb/>
hard pressed to win the championship because<lb/>
last vear's champs, the "Sluts" along with the<lb/>
? 1 n Humps" should prove to be tough competi-<lb/>
tion A possible darkhorse could be "The<lb/>
Plague So it should be a very exciting race.<lb/>
The leaders in early season men's dorm action<lb/>
include the "Avcock Yu-Loos the "Jones<lb/>
Screwballers" and the "Jones Time-it-is-<lb/>
Players" all with 2-0 records and appearing to<lb/>
possess the neeesarv ingredients to win it all.<lb/>
Finally, in the Fraternity Division, there seems<lb/>
to be a wide-open race with the men from the<lb/>
I Kl house again fielding a strong team. Teams<lb/>
to watch with a good chance of defeating the<lb/>
I Kl include "Kappa Sigs" and the "Pi Kaps<lb/>
I his bungs us up to date on all the action<lb/>
around the diamonds and as we all know com-<lb/>
petition seems to bring out the best in everyone so<lb/>
there are many teams that will have something to<lb/>
say about the respective championships. The<lb/>
moral of this story is simple, "Hang in there<lb/>
Good Ole Boys'<lb/>
(Note: The W. B. Dodgers won the women's<lb/>
championship in the Miller Softball Tournament,<lb/>
which was incorrectly reported last issue. Janice<lb/>
Parlon was MVP for the Dodgers.)<lb/>
Groom's Top hive<lb/>
Men<lb/>
1. Tri-Humps<lb/>
2. Sluts<lb/>
3. Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
4. Bombers<lb/>
5. Dreadful Plague-Bombsquad<lb/>
Women<lb/>
1. Un Kappa Fifth<lb/>
2. The Rats<lb/>
3. Clement Chick-Fil-A's<lb/>
4. Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
5. Garrett Girls<lb/>
Bahama Mama '82<lb/>
TONIGHT<lb/>
Be There<lb/>
Aloha!<lb/>
-<lb/>
s'j<lb/>
&amp; 48k<lb/>
i - rosy<lb/>
<lb/>
1982-83 arsit t heerleading<lb/>
Squad<lb/>
( ind Balson<lb/>
Kim Blein<lb/>
Marcus Brock<lb/>
Jennifer Cooper<lb/>
Keith Dubois<lb/>
Nusan Dunn<lb/>
Brian "Show Bi" Foye<lb/>
Palti Harrill<lb/>
 ietor Hudson<lb/>
Re nee Mer<lb/>
Donald Sawer<lb/>
Roslvn Singleton<lb/>
'SI<lb/>
Chi<lb/>
Worthy<lb/>
Diligent<lb/>
Knowledgeable<lb/>
Genuine<lb/>
Winners<lb/>
Attn. Psi Chi Members and Initiates<lb/>
VOTE TUESDAY, APRIL 6<lb/>
7:00 p.m. - THREE STEERS RESTAURANT<lb/>
Magnify Psi Chi Awareness ? Increase Student and Faculty Involvement<lb/>
Continue Scholarships ? Expand Psi Chi Library Availability<lb/>
Augment Fund Raisers for Added Enjoyment - Expediate Rush Procedures<lb/>
ED WINGFIELI) ? President<lb/>
WAYNE DAWSON ? Vice President<lb/>
SUE KRUSE ? Secretary<lb/>
ROBERT WOODARD ? Treasurer<lb/>
VERA GEISSLER ? P.R.<lb/>
for PSI CHI Officers<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM PCH i<lb/>
ese advertised items<lb/>
iach Kroger Savon except a ted ir<lb/>
I wed t o an item we w<lb/>
conn, - ? (em when a the<lb/>
neck wt '?"? ' . the advert d item at<lb/>
'??.????'<lb/>
Open 8 a.m. to Midnight<lb/>
Open Sunday 9am to 9 p m<lb/>
MIDNIGHT LATE SHOW THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT<lb/>
HENDRIX THEATER ADMISSION FREE<lb/>
SHARP EL 1188<lb/>
PRINT DISPLAY<lb/>
 Calculator<lb/>
2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
hb SHI ? GmiihIW' S.('???? Shoptimq C-nlef<lb/>
STARTS<lb/>
TOMORROW!<lb/>
. rtght 1982<lb/>
Kroger Savon<lb/>
Quantity Rignts Reserved<lb/>
None Sold to Dea rs<lb/>
N<lb/>
1<lb/>
vv<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
Ribier<lb/>
Grapes &amp;y<lb/>
??<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETY<lb/>
Sour Cream<lb/>
Dips<lb/>
? I Cups<lb/>
COSMETICS A<lb/>
FRAGRANCES<lb/>
16?,<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057471_0010"/><lb/>
Dominique To Announce Decision<lb/>
ATHENS, Ga. (UPl)<lb/>
 Dominique Wilkins<lb/>
says he will reveal his<lb/>
pro basketball inten-<lb/>
tions in the next couple<lb/>
of days and his friends<lb/>
say they believe he has<lb/>
played his last game for<lb/>
the Georgia Bulldogs.<lb/>
Wilkins, a second-<lb/>
team All-America who<lb/>
rejected a million-<lb/>
dollar-plus offer from<lb/>
the Detroit Pistons last<lb/>
year, said Wednesday<lb/>
he has reached a deci-<lb/>
sion whether to declare<lb/>
"hardship" status but<lb/>
would delay the an-<lb/>
nouncement until' a<lb/>
news conference in "a<lb/>
couple of days<lb/>
"It seemed like he<lb/>
was leaning more and<lb/>
more towards- turning<lb/>
pro said sophomore<lb/>
forward James Banks,<lb/>
one of Wilkins' closest<lb/>
friends on the team. He<lb/>
said Wilkins discussed<lb/>
on Tuesday the pros<lb/>
and cons of giving up<lb/>
his senior season with<lb/>
him and Lamar Heard,<lb/>
Wilkins' roommate.<lb/>
"He didn't really tell<lb/>
us 'yes' or 'no but 1<lb/>
think he was leaning in<lb/>
that direction said<lb/>
Banks.<lb/>
"I've come up with a<lb/>
decision Wilkins told<lb/>
United Press Interna-<lb/>
tional. "But I'm going<lb/>
to wait a couple of days<lb/>
before announcing it<lb/>
Wilkins seemed to in-<lb/>
dicate he had decided<lb/>
to go pro. He said if he<lb/>
did enter the draft, he<lb/>
would expect to be in<lb/>
the top five picks,<lb/>
"maybe in the top<lb/>
three He noted a lot<lb/>
would depend on other<lb/>
underclassmen who<lb/>
decide to forsake the<lb/>
rest of their college<lb/>
careers, including<lb/>
Virginia's Ralph Samp-<lb/>
son and North<lb/>
Carolina's James Wor-<lb/>
thy.<lb/>
"There is always the<lb/>
chance that some of<lb/>
those guys might go<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
The 6-foot-7 junior,<lb/>
who averaged 21.3<lb/>
points and 8.1 re-<lb/>
bounds while leading<lb/>
the Bulldogs to a 19-10<lb/>
record, said he decided<lb/>
last Saturday while on<lb/>
spring break from<lb/>
classes after talks with<lb/>
Coach Hugh Durham<lb/>
and his mother.<lb/>
"I did go off by<lb/>
myself for awhile he<lb/>
said. "The thing 1 had<lb/>
to do was to decide<lb/>
whether I wanted to re-<lb/>
main in school and<lb/>
have fun for another<lb/>
year or go pro. That's<lb/>
what 1 had to decide at<lb/>
this time<lb/>
Wilkins, 22, was fac-<lb/>
ed with the same deci-<lb/>
sion last year but final-<lb/>
ly decided to reject a<lb/>
million-dollar offer<lb/>
from the Pistons.<lb/>
??1 didn't regret mak-<lb/>
ing that choice at all<lb/>
said Wilkins. "1 got<lb/>
another year's ex-<lb/>
perience. I had a good<lb/>
year all around. 1 had<lb/>
my heart set on staying<lb/>
in school another<lb/>
year<lb/>
Durham, who was<lb/>
out of town on a<lb/>
recruiting trip, gave no<lb/>
hints earlier as to<lb/>
Wilkins' decision.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST"Wed. March 17. Man's<lb/>
brown tn fold wallet between<lb/>
Aycock and Austin. II tound. can<lb/>
keep money iust return wallet to<lb/>
Ml Aycock or call 7H-2TO.<lb/>
LOST IN MINGES March it, a<lb/>
l??l class ring, blue stones, initials<lb/>
"JAA" on inside. It found, please<lb/>
contact Joe at M Slay (7S-M?S).<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
Classified ads will be taken ONLY<lb/>
during the following hours:<lb/>
Monday ? I 15 3 00<lb/>
Tuesday ? 700-3:00<lb/>
Wednesday ? I IS 3 00<lb/>
Thursday ? 2:00-3.00<lb/>
Friday ? IIS 2 00<lb/>
You must place the ads m person<lb/>
and pay for them m advance<lb/>
Rates are l tor the first IS words<lb/>
and ? OS per word after the first fif<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
TRAILER FOR SALE: Set up in<lb/>
Greenville 2 BR. all electric, ac.<lb/>
excellent condition 17WS call Tar<lb/>
boro 023 ?W4<lb/>
VIVITAR ZOOM LENS 75 210 with<lb/>
macro lor Nikon mount used only<lb/>
two times SUS Call 757 HIP<lb/>
SKIS FOR SALE K 2 US comp<lb/>
110 skis with Soloman bindings<lb/>
I11S. Call 7S7 3710 and leave<lb/>
number. <lb/>
FOUR BIC TURNTABLES tor<lb/>
sale, ?2Seach. Call 752 24S9.<lb/>
DORM SIZE REFRIGERATOR<lb/>
Good condition Price Negotiable.<lb/>
CaM Odile now at 7 5 348<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
I Roommate reedeo 'o share 3<lb/>
bedroom house ? S125 deluding<lb/>
utilities Can 7S6 5303<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FEMALE roommate<lb/>
needed: to share double room in<lb/>
an apartment. 50 plus t3<lb/>
utilities. One block from Jenkins<lb/>
building, call 7S2-200.<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM Furnished<lb/>
mobile home 3-4 miles off campus.<lb/>
SIM monthly. Possibly no lease or<lb/>
deposit. Call 751 7724.<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM Trailer, mostly<lb/>
furnished, ?t40 per month plus<lb/>
utilities, wal to wall carpet One<lb/>
mile from campus. More info, call<lb/>
7S23373.<lb/>
FOUR BEDROOM House Fully<lb/>
furnished and carpeted May IS -<lb/>
Aug IS S22S plus utilities. Call<lb/>
7S2 I72T.<lb/>
CANNON STREET Apt to sublet<lb/>
tor summer, spacious partially<lb/>
furnished townhouse 2 bedrooms,<lb/>
1 12 baths on ECU bus route Call<lb/>
7SO7S?0? tor more into.<lb/>
APT FOR RENT starting m May<lb/>
Two bedroom fully carpeted, dose<lb/>
to campus Air conditioning and<lb/>
pool. Call 757 1104 after t p.m.<lb/>
LARGE HOUSE I blocks from<lb/>
ECU 47 bedrooms, 2 baths,<lb/>
SSOOmo. 7S7-S26. <lb/>
COMPLETELY FURNISHED, air<lb/>
conditioned apartment for one<lb/>
across from College 7SI-7SOS<lb/>
S. HOOTER BOB. How long two<lb/>
months? It' been nothing but<lb/>
"squishy" times tor sure. I guess<lb/>
the ole' cowboy trick worked, huh.<lb/>
I can't resist the rodeo or bull<lb/>
rides. Do you blame me? Than<lb/>
for everything. I enjoyed Ma and<lb/>
Pa what do you think about the<lb/>
floor? I love you. -S.C. Sue<lb/>
LITTLE BIT: I love you almost<lb/>
the mostices. Hope this ad brings a<lb/>
smile to your lace and ightens the<lb/>
day Thin bout me. I love you.<lb/>
Billy. <lb/>
FOR SALE: One silver haired<lb/>
prof. Reasonably good condition,<lb/>
semi-mteiigent Answers to<lb/>
"Dumb Donald" contact S and C<lb/>
Austin 314.<lb/>
I NEED a bicycle. H you have one<lb/>
for sale Call 7SO 445 (after S pm or<lb/>
before 10 am weekdays.) <lb/>
Call Kempte<lb/>
757 4733<lb/>
Dunn anytime<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC - Call Amy at to type thesis, dissertations,<lb/>
757 3734 publications, manuscripts or term<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST wants P?P?" ?' ? !?<lb/>
HELP. Ride needed to Chapel<lb/>
Hill, April IS tor B 52's concert.<lb/>
Call 7S3 000S.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Virginia<lb/>
Beach or surrounding area any<lb/>
weekend Cheryl 7SMW.<lb/>
RIDERS NEEDED<lb/>
DC Northern Va Area for ?!??<lb/>
Weekend (Apr i Call Keith<lb/>
750317<lb/>
Central Book<lb/>
&amp;News<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Open 7 days a week ? 9:30-9:00<lb/>
J<lb/>
JOLLY'S<lb/>
PAWN SHOP<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
20<lb/>
off<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted<lb/>
For nicely furnished apt at<lb/>
Cypress Gardens. Within walking<lb/>
distance of campus Call 750 3I?4<lb/>
GOING TO Summer School and<lb/>
need a place to live? How about a<lb/>
nicely furnished apt instead ol the<lb/>
dorms? Available May thru Aug<lb/>
Walking distance to campus Call<lb/>
7S0 3W4<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR rent May<lb/>
Aug Furnished, one block from<lb/>
campus. Deposit required Cheryl<lb/>
752 KSf.<lb/>
FURNISHED H' ?? tor rent tor<lb/>
summer. 3 bedrooms. I block from<lb/>
campus 5140month. call 7S8-4403<lb/>
AVAILABLE FOR semmer school<lb/>
and net fall it desired 3<lb/>
bedroom 2 full bath. Furnished<lb/>
Duplex walking distance from<lb/>
campus $245 Call 7S7 IW7.<lb/>
SHARE SPACIOUS Apt in Large<lb/>
house females call 75 5450 (work)<lb/>
after S leave message tor Dee<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
Do you know someone with an in-<lb/>
teresting or unique hobby or<lb/>
craft? If so contact the Buccaneer.<lb/>
7S7SOI.<lb/>
BEER DRINKERS WANTED:<lb/>
Think you can chug a beer? Prove<lb/>
it. Enter the Beer Bong Contest on<lb/>
April IS tor details call Alpha<lb/>
Sigma Phi 752 1073 <lb/>
EUZABETH Rabbits, Rabbits,<lb/>
Rabbits. I think of you all month<lb/>
long Have a good one Call you<lb/>
from Atlanta.<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY. Glenn San<lb/>
Marko From the guys on the 2nd<lb/>
floor of Aycock. Look forward to<lb/>
seeing you in Showboat.<lb/>
PSI CHI Members and new in-<lb/>
itiates vote Cathie Murensky<lb/>
President April 6 Be there Be<lb/>
known vote right PS Who is Ed<lb/>
Wingfield' <lb/>
VICKl Happy 24th Birthday, I<lb/>
cant afford a gift so I'll take you<lb/>
downtown and sho you what I<lb/>
would have bought you Your<lb/>
lavonte sister. Michelle<lb/>
TO THE FLORIDA FIVE<lb/>
Veronika, it's easy to tell one and<lb/>
all I know lor sure you're olf the<lb/>
wall And to Kim who had the<lb/>
showing slip, but couldn't get Boio<lb/>
to take a dip So with a tiery heart<lb/>
she headed south, and ended up<lb/>
shooting Kermit the Frog in the<lb/>
mouth. Gern. Gerri, We all know<lb/>
your way, your bound to sleep no<lb/>
matter what time of day Vicki, we<lb/>
tor sure know how you are, you'd<lb/>
claim to out drink anyone at the<lb/>
bar. Val you're time is near and<lb/>
you shall see because it's time to<lb/>
marry Al but only as Melony<lb/>
Love ya lots. A cool, prompt oker<lb/>
TRUMPET PLAYER<lb/>
WANTED?top 40Beach group.<lb/>
Weekend work. Vocal ability<lb/>
preferred. Call 7S4 44vS<lb/>
GOOD SUMMER JOB: Swim<lb/>
coach needed. Salary negotiable, t<lb/>
wk. 3 hrday. Only those looking<lb/>
for serious employment need app-<lb/>
ly. Contact: Swim Chairman, co<lb/>
202 Beverly Drive, Concord, N.C-<lb/>
20025.<lb/>
NEED MONEY? Has Tuition in-<lb/>
creases caught you short? If<lb/>
you're a hard worker, like to<lb/>
travel, earn $l200month. Send<lb/>
name and phone number to Sum-<lb/>
mer Work Box S04 Stanley. N.C.<lb/>
2144<lb/>
MUSICIANS NEEDED: Bass<lb/>
Guitar, Lead Guitar, Kcyborads.<lb/>
Saxophone, and trumpet Able to<lb/>
play top fortybeach, Chicago and<lb/>
Earth. Wind and Fire type music,<lb/>
vocal ability would be nice but not<lb/>
a necesity PA system already<lb/>
purchased Nice place to practice<lb/>
play on weekends If interested or<lb/>
for more information, call Jeff at<lb/>
752 5512. Call Mon. and Wed. I 30<lb/>
pm until, and Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
11:30-0 00 p.m.<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICA<lb/>
TIONS tor Positions at WZMB-<lb/>
FM Assisant General<lb/>
Manager Program Director.<lb/>
Music Director; and Business<lb/>
manager. For more information<lb/>
on positions come by the Studios<lb/>
on 2cd floor Joyner or call 757-445<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
I Any Paperback<lb/>
i or Hardback in Stock<lb/>
j With This Coupon.<lb/>
i<lb/>
 Good through Fri April 9th<lb/>
Large inventory of new and<lb/>
used merchandise<lb/>
We Have<lb/>
Layaway<lb/>
? Accepting any items of value for collatera<lb/>
BICYCLES<lb/>
GUNS<lb/>
JEWELRY<lb/>
STEREOS<lb/>
MUSIC INSTRUMENTS<lb/>
TOOLS<lb/>
?All transactions confidential<lb/>
WE BUY GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
ACROSS THE RIVER ? Corner of N. Green &amp; Hwy 33<lb/>
.Pactolus Hwy.) 752 5759 MonFri. 9 to 6 ? Sat. 8 to 4<lb/>
NO<lb/>
APPOINTMENT<lb/>
NECESSARY<lb/>
G?SIY<lb/>
sxpecmians<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
East Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
756-8694<lb/>
PRECISION HAIRCUTTERS Offer good thru April.<lb/>
:<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Master Card &amp; Visa Accepted<lb/>
CARICATURES BY WEYLER<lb/>
Greenville's original personalned<lb/>
art service Have cartoon done of<lb/>
yourself or a loved" on a unique<lb/>
gift idea HO tor ? x 10, bl<lb/>
white or color. Call 752-577<lb/>
TYPING: TERM. Thesis.<lb/>
Resumes, Dissertations, etc Pro<lb/>
fessional quality at lowest rates<lb/>
Clip coupon &amp; bring it in on yourjiextvsit.<lb/>
' SAV?$2.50 T SAVE $10.00 <lb/>
 ? n.i anv UCDU<lb/>
PRECISION HAIRCUT<lb/>
Re.?U.50<lb/>
ON ANY PERM<lb/>
I Ref $12.50 I<lb/>
t unique sO-1<lb/>
lack and ftJ(Z?<lb/>
?V)<lb/>
.?<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
FOR COLLEGE<lb/>
MONEY AVAILABLE FOR NEXT FALL<lb/>
There is still time &amp; money available<lb/>
for next fall &amp; EDUCATIONAL<lb/>
GUIDANCE SERVICES of N.C, a uni-<lb/>
que computerized service designed to<lb/>
locate sources of financial aid for col-<lb/>
lege students can help you get that<lb/>
money.<lb/>
We know where the money is ? we can<lb/>
tell you how to get it for college next<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
For FREE &amp; Complete<lb/>
Information Write:<lb/>
EDUCATIONAL GUIDANCE<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
OF NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
P.O. Box 1784 Kinston, N.C. 28501<lb/>
1<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/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1.<lb/>
ITSWARI<lb/>
BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!<lb/>
To introduce you to our mouth watering style of pizza, we're mak<lb/>
ing two incredible offers. With this coupon save $1 00 on a<lb/>
medium or $2.00 on a large Godfather's Pizza<lb/>
What's holdin' ya? The doors are open now!<lb/>
Godfather's Pizza<lb/>
$100<lb/>
XOFF<lb/>
Medium<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville Boulevard Phone 756-9600<lb/>
Offer expires March 31, 1982<lb/>
Limit o"e pma per coupon<lb/>
For<lb/>
GRANDMA<lb/>
BOY FRIEND<lb/>
SISTER<lb/>
<lb/>
The Annual Jr. Panhallenic<lb/>
Easter Egg Hunt<lb/>
Monday, April 5th at 4:30<lb/>
Ages 3 and older and 4-6 yrs. of age.<lb/>
Easter Eggs and Candy<lb/>
from the Easter Bunny<lb/>
For Children of the Faculty, Staff, Students.<lb/>
Please Bring Basket<lb/>
?<lb/>
?? <lb/>
;x-<lb/>
ti<lb/>
THE YEARBOOK etc.<lb/>
youf<lb/>
pictuid tak?n<lb/>
CALL BUCCANEER OFFICE FOR APPOINTMENTS<lb/>
757-6501<lb/>
SITTINGS: MARCH 25-APRIL 16 ? 9-5<lb/>
Varden Studios. Inc.<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
??<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057471_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>