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<pb facs="00057472_0001"/>
She lEaat (Earnltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58 No.54 5 H<lb/>
Tuesday, April 6, 1982<lb/>
Greenville, JN.C<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
ECU Major Attractions Books<lb/>
Joan Jett For April 25 Concert<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
The ECU Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee announced Monday that<lb/>
they hae scheduled Joan Jett and<lb/>
the Blackhearts to appear in concert<lb/>
at Minges Coliseum later this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Jett. whose album Love Rock<lb/>
TV" Roll and the single by the same<lb/>
name are currently atop the music<lb/>
charts, will perform in Greenville on<lb/>
Sunday, April 25.<lb/>
Jerry Dilsaver, chairman of the<lb/>
committee, said that he is still trying<lb/>
to book an opening act for the Jett<lb/>
concert. "There are a few bands<lb/>
we're thinking of he said, "but<lb/>
nothing has solidified as yet<lb/>
According to Dilsaver, tickets for<lb/>
the concert will probably go on sale<lb/>
April 13 at a cost of $6 for students<lb/>
and S8 for the general public. All<lb/>
tickets at the door will be S8.<lb/>
Students must hae a valid l.D.<lb/>
and activity card to purchase tickets<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Despite the fact that there has not<lb/>
been a concert this semester,<lb/>
Dilsaver says he and the rest of the<lb/>
committee have been busy at work<lb/>
with various prospects.<lb/>
In January, for example, a con-<lb/>
cert with the Cars at Minges almost<lb/>
became a reality. Likewise, Dilsaver<lb/>
said that two shows in February<lb/>
were lost because of "a problem in<lb/>
scheduling with athletics<lb/>
The same held true in March,<lb/>
when scheduling difficulties kept the<lb/>
committee from finalizing a concert<lb/>
with Hall and Oates.<lb/>
Dilsaver explained that it is dif-<lb/>
ficult enough to book "big-name"<lb/>
rock bands at Minges. "Large<lb/>
bands cannot make money at a<lb/>
6,000-seat auditorium he said.<lb/>
"We really hate to do a show that<lb/>
late (April 25) Dilsaver said.<lb/>
"Our last show is usually the first<lb/>
weekend in April  but the timing<lb/>
is almost excellent<lb/>
He was referring to Jett's current<lb/>
popularity on the record charts. Her<lb/>
hit single tops the Billboard top-40<lb/>
singles chart, while the Blackhearts"<lb/>
first LP effort checks in at third on<lb/>
the album list.<lb/>
She made her debut in the rock<lb/>
world in 1976, with The Runaways,<lb/>
one of the first all-female rock n'<lb/>
roll bands.<lb/>
After the group released five<lb/>
albums, it disbanded in 1979, and<lb/>
Jett put an ad in a Los Angeles<lb/>
newspaper for musicians. Those<lb/>
who responded � guitarist Eric<lb/>
Ambel, drummer Lee Crystal and<lb/>
bass player Gary Ryan � became<lb/>
The Blackhearts.<lb/>
As a performer, Jett has receded<lb/>
rave reviews in several magazines<lb/>
and newspapers, including the New<lb/>
See JETT, PaRe 5<lb/>
Handicap A wareness Week Focuses<lb/>
On Recognizing Potentials, Abilities<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
" 'Focus on ability' � that really<lb/>
says it all said Christine Boyd,<lb/>
assiatant professor in special<lb/>
physical education, speaking about<lb/>
the activities and hopes of<lb/>
"Handicap Awareness Week"<lb/>
(April 5-8).<lb/>
"Focus on ability" is the theme<lb/>
for the four-day program sponsored<lb/>
bv the Handicap Awareness Com-<lb/>
mittee, the Student Union, The<lb/>
Minority Arts Council and the<lb/>
S.G.A<lb/>
"We want people to focus on<lb/>
what the (handicapped) individual<lb/>
can do, their potentials as in-<lb/>
dividuals, as employees and as com-<lb/>
munity members said Romona<lb/>
Lopez, who, along with James War-<lb/>
ren and Sharon McClung, is coor-<lb/>
dinating the weeks activities.<lb/>
All three are ECU gradute<lb/>
students in rehabilitation counsel-<lb/>
ing. Lopez adds that many people<lb/>
often focus on a persons disability<lb/>
instead of "looking at the person as<lb/>
a total person<lb/>
Being handicapped doesn't<lb/>
always mean a wheelchair, blind-<lb/>
ness, or deafness says Warren,<lb/>
referring to the various Mendenhall<lb/>
Awareness Booths dealing with<lb/>
alcoholism, lung disease and cancer.<lb/>
"Alcohol is the number one pro-<lb/>
blem for impairing people in the<lb/>
work area, let alone the problem it<lb/>
causes on highways and for<lb/>
families said Mr. Dan Kelly,<lb/>
Director of Training at the Walter<lb/>
B. Jones Alcohol Rehabilitation<lb/>
Center (ARC of Pitt County). Kelly<lb/>
adds that while active, alcoholism is<lb/>
a disability but with treatment<lb/>
"the handicap can be removed<lb/>
Alcoholism is a disease and will<lb/>
always be with a person continued<lb/>
Kelly, and "the only known treat-<lb/>
ment for alcoholism is abstinence<lb/>
Boyd, who thought up the<lb/>
"Focus on ability" theme, is co-<lb/>
organizing the "Special Olympics"<lb/>
with Bill Twine of the Greenville<lb/>
Recreation and Parks Department.<lb/>
The "Special Olympics another<lb/>
one of the many events planned for<lb/>
the week, will take place on<lb/>
Wednesday at ECU's Bunting Field<lb/>
at 9 a.m. Most of the officiating at<lb/>
the Olympics will be conducted by<lb/>
handicapped students from ECU.<lb/>
Programs will take place all day<lb/>
long today, Wednesday and Thurs-<lb/>
day at various locations around the<lb/>
campus. The awareness booths,<lb/>
along with handicap simulation<lb/>
booths, will be set up in Mendenhall<lb/>
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
Other awareness booths were set<lb/>
up by the American Cancer Society,<lb/>
American Lung Association.<lb/>
Regional Rehabiliation Center ol<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital,<lb/>
East Carolina Vocational Center,<lb/>
Inc the ECU Sign Language Club.<lb/>
North Carolina Council for the<lb/>
Hearing Impaired, Adult Develop-<lb/>
ment Activities Program with Mar-<lb/>
tin County Community College and<lb/>
the Pitt County Mental Health<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Booths designed to simulate<lb/>
blindness, deafness and wheelchair<lb/>
use are also being used. ECU com-<lb/>
puter science freshman Susan<lb/>
Freeman, took part in a blindness<lb/>
simulation. "It was frightening; 1<lb/>
kept running into things A pair of<lb/>
blinders and a long cane (used for<lb/>
object location) are issued to each<lb/>
participant. Then, a guide walks<lb/>
with the participant around the lob-<lb/>
by of Mendenhall. Freeman noted<lb/>
that the experience helped her<lb/>
"appreciate and admire" the<lb/>
abilities that handicapped people<lb/>
have with coping.<lb/>
Free screening for audiology im-<lb/>
pairment and rubella (German<lb/>
See HANDICAP, Page 5<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
"This iheater is a fining monu-<lb/>
ment to John Messick. If is im-<lb/>
portant, however, that we keep in<lb/>
mind that the even this magnifi-<lb/>
cent structure is secondary to<lb/>
ECU'S largest purpose � the<lb/>
education of our youth. "<lb/>
I eo H . Jenkins<lb/>
Photo By MARIANNE BAINES<lb/>
Messick Theater Arts Center Dedicated By<lb/>
Namesake And Former Chancellor Jenkins<lb/>
B TOM HALL<lb/>
Nt� fdilor<lb/>
East Carolina University thanked the man who<lb/>
helped change ECTC into a full-sized college with the<lb/>
dedication of the John Decatur Messick Theater Arts<lb/>
Center Saturday.<lb/>
Dr. Messick, 85, told an audience of family,<lb/>
friends, educators and students, "I know why 1 have<lb/>
lived so long � to hear you speak those good things<lb/>
about me<lb/>
The former university president, who served from<lb/>
1947-60, was acknowledging the praise given him by<lb/>
his successor, Dr. Leo W. Jenkins.<lb/>
The new $3 million-plus center includes what was<lb/>
the Wahl-Coates Laboratory School and McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium plus several additions.<lb/>
Five-year-old Sarah Willets, Messick's great-<lb/>
granddaughter, unveiled a new portrait of the former<lb/>
president painted by Wilmington artist Dot<lb/>
Daughtry. Board of Trustees chairman Ashlev<lb/>
Futrell accepted the portrait in behalf of the universi-<lb/>
tv.<lb/>
In the new center are classrooms and laboratories<lb/>
for speech and drama classes, costume and scenery<lb/>
workshops, acting and dance studios and a flexible<lb/>
studio theater for experimental drama.<lb/>
McGinnis Theater, no longer an auditorium, has a<lb/>
quadrupled stage area, an orchestra pit and expanded<lb/>
seating. Total cost of the renovations to the center<lb/>
was $3,129,516, with $150,000 going to a computer-<lb/>
operated lighting center. Another $60,000 has been<lb/>
spent for equipment.<lb/>
During Messick's tenure, enrollment at the small<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College tripled and became<lb/>
Fast Carolina College in 1951.<lb/>
Jenkins said Messick's "tactics (were) more<lb/>
favorable to politicians than to educators As the<lb/>
college pushed for more classrooms, faculty<lb/>
members, library resources and housing space,<lb/>
Messick wheedled the campus's first theatrical facili-<lb/>
ty out of state legislators.<lb/>
The dedication coincided with the third day of the<lb/>
run of Show Boat, the first ECU Playhouse produc-<lb/>
tion in the renovated facility. The musical, inspired<lb/>
b a floating theater in Washington, is directed by<lb/>
Drama and Speech department chairman Edgar R.<lb/>
Loessin.<lb/>
Jenkins came to the university as dean of instruc-<lb/>
tion with Messick. In addition to obtaining theatrical<lb/>
facilities, Messick's tenure was marked by the addi-<lb/>
tion of 200 scholarship programs, television and<lb/>
radio facilities, extension and Air Force ROTC pro-<lb/>
grams, and the approval for the School of Nursing.<lb/>
Presidential Runoff To Be Held Wednesday<lb/>
By DIANE ANDERSON<lb/>
suit Milor<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association will be holding a run-<lb/>
off election for the position of SGA<lb/>
president Wednesday. The can-<lb/>
didates are Eric Henderson and<lb/>
David Cook. Students eligible to<lb/>
vote in the election are reminded<lb/>
that they must present their student<lb/>
See Candidates' Platforms,<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
l.D. and activity card to be allowed<lb/>
to vote.<lb/>
In their regular meeting Monday,<lb/>
the SGA appropriated $2,488 to<lb/>
various campus organizations.<lb/>
A $600 appropriation was award-<lb/>
ed to the SGA's student welfare<lb/>
committee for the printing of 3,000<lb/>
ECU informative posters.<lb/>
Mitch Daub, chairman of the<lb/>
committee, explained that the<lb/>
posters will be especially helpful to<lb/>
freshmen and even even older<lb/>
students in answering questions<lb/>
about drop-add procedures and<lb/>
even what to do if a car is towed.<lb/>
The information will be nut in<lb/>
poster form so that students can put<lb/>
them on the walls in dorm rooms,<lb/>
Daub said.<lb/>
Funds in the amount of $1,170<lb/>
were approved for the Gray Art<lb/>
Gallery in the art department<lb/>
building. The money will provide<lb/>
showcases and help pay for com-<lb/>
munication and other various ex-<lb/>
penses of the gallery.<lb/>
The ECU Reserve Officers Train-<lb/>
ing Corps received a $500 ap-<lb/>
propriation for registration fees, of-<lb/>
fice supplies, printing and other<lb/>
general expenses.<lb/>
The Phi Sigma Tau national<lb/>
honor society, an undergraduate<lb/>
society in philosophy, received $218<lb/>
in funds.<lb/>
An appropriation to the Ground<lb/>
Zero Committee, a national com-<lb/>
mittee which attempts to educate the<lb/>
people on th? issue of nuclear war,<lb/>
was brought before the legislature<lb/>
for consideration, but the motion to<lb/>
suspend the rules and bring the bill<lb/>
to the floor was defeated.<lb/>
Constitutions were approved for<lb/>
the ECU Marching Pirates and the<lb/>
Visual Arts Forum.<lb/>
Liddy and Leary To Debate At Hendrix<lb/>
�On The Inside-<lb/>
By TOM HALL<lb/>
New Mitor<lb/>
In what promises to be a "very<lb/>
hot program Timothy Leary, pro-<lb/>
fessor of the psychedelic drug<lb/>
culture, and Watergate mastermind<lb/>
G. Gordon Liddy will square off at<lb/>
Mendenhall's Hendrix Theater.<lb/>
The debate is scheduled for Tues-<lb/>
day, April 20 at 8 p.m. Liddy will<lb/>
address "The Power of the State"<lb/>
vs. Leary's "The Freedom of the In-<lb/>
dividual<lb/>
"This is going to be a very hot<lb/>
program said Student Union pro-<lb/>
gram director Ken Hammond. "We<lb/>
are very, very lucky to get this one<lb/>
in" , k-<lb/>
Liddy refused to reveal his<lb/>
associates in the Watergate break-in<lb/>
� even after more than four years<lb/>
in prison that included 106 days in<lb/>
solitary confinement. He has been<lb/>
termed "a thoroughly dangerous<lb/>
man" by historians and "a brilliant<lb/>
mind" by newswoman Barbara<lb/>
Walters.<lb/>
Leary was director ot the<lb/>
Psychedelic Research Project at<lb/>
Harvard. He was a founder of the<lb/>
Timothy leary<lb/>
"humanistic" psychology move-<lb/>
ment, and reportedly refused the<lb/>
chief psychologist's post at Boston<lb/>
General Hospital in exchange for<lb/>
playing down his drug research.<lb/>
Liddy, an assistant district at-<lb/>
torney in 1966, presided over<lb/>
Leary's arrest for transporting one-<lb/>
half ounce of marijuana over the<lb/>
U.SMexico border. After another<lb/>
drug-related arrest, Leary was<lb/>
C, Gordon Liddy<lb/>
sentenced to two consecutive<lb/>
10-year sentences. He escaped from<lb/>
prison and left the country, but was<lb/>
extradicted from Afghanistan in<lb/>
1973. Leary was released on parole<lb/>
in 1976.<lb/>
Liddy, once an unsuccessful can-<lb/>
didate for Congress, was a staff<lb/>
assistant in the first Nixon ad-<lb/>
ministration. He later served in the<lb/>
special investigative unit that<lb/>
became the "Plumbers" and as<lb/>
general counsel to the Committee to<lb/>
Re-elect the President, from which<lb/>
he directed the Watergate break-in.<lb/>
Leary and Liddy had been touring<lb/>
college campuses successfully for<lb/>
some time before their lecture-<lb/>
management company booked them<lb/>
together last fall.<lb/>
Leary, quoted in The New York<lb/>
Times, said he warmed up for the<lb/>
first debate by appearing with<lb/>
Moral Majority leaders. "I love to<lb/>
eat Christians for breakfast he ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
Liddy has been applauded across<lb/>
college campuses as he talks about<lb/>
his indomitable will. In Will, his<lb/>
best-selling autobiography, Liddy<lb/>
tells how he once ate cooked rat's<lb/>
flesh to overcome a childhood<lb/>
phobia.<lb/>
Additional information about the<lb/>
debate is available at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office or by calling 756-6611,<lb/>
extension 266. Tickets cost $2.50 for<lb/>
ECU students, $3.50 for faculty and<lb/>
staff, and $5 for the public. All<lb/>
tickets sold at the door before the<lb/>
debate will be priced at $5.<lb/>
Hommerstein and Kern's<lb/>
magical Show Boat (left)<lb/>
floated into the renovated<lb/>
McGinnis Theater Thursday<lb/>
night. For The East Carolinian<lb/>
review, see Entertainment.<lb/>
You'll also find the latest on<lb/>
ECU athletics, with.full coverage<lb/>
of Pirate baseball and softball<lb/>
victories. It's in Sports.<lb/>
All this and more in today's<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
Weather Watch<lb/>
(UPI) - Windy and mostly sunny<lb/>
today with highs in the mid-60s.<lb/>
Lows m the 40s. Fair Wednesday<lb/>
with highs in the 60s.<lb/>
Inside Index<lb/>
Announcements 2<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Campus Forum 4<lb/>
Entertainment 6<lb/>
Learning About College 7<lb/>
Sports 9<lb/>
Classifieds10<lb/>
r<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057472_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 6, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
i<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
The I L O is meeting at 2 50 on<lb/>
Wednesday April 7 We will be<lb/>
meeting m from ot the depart men<lb/>
tal offices, Department of Foreign<lb/>
Languages and Literatures. The<lb/>
purpose of the meeting is to nave a<lb/>
group picture taken for next<lb/>
year s Buccaneer The picture will<lb/>
be taken at 3 p m<lb/>
BINGOICECREAM<lb/>
The next Bingo, ice Cream Par<lb/>
ty is scheduled for Tuesday. Apr.<lb/>
13 at 7pm m Mendenhaii's Wuiti<lb/>
Purpose Room Students. Faculty<lb/>
Staff, and their dependents are In<lb/>
vited to 0in m on the fun Wli<lb/>
prizes, eat ice cream, play bingo<lb/>
an absolutely tree!<lb/>
EL SALVADOR<lb/>
A meeting to discuss, study and<lb/>
plan further activities of the<lb/>
GreenviiieECU Committee on El<lb/>
Salvador will be held tonight<lb/>
(Tuesday. April a) at 9 p.m. In the<lb/>
Baptist Student Center at S11 East<lb/>
10th St All Greenville residents,<lb/>
and ECU Students. Faculty, Staff<lb/>
are welcome to attend For more<lb/>
information call 75MOOJ<lb/>
GAY?<lb/>
If you are gay or know someone<lb/>
who is and would like to talk about<lb/>
It. come to the ECU Gay Com<lb/>
munlfy meeting on April 6 at 7 30<lb/>
at the Newman House Bring a<lb/>
friend and loin in the conversa<lb/>
tlon. Members don't forget your 13<lb/>
deposit tor the Self Awareness<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
Free Rubella Screening To Be<lb/>
Included In Weeklong Activities<lb/>
B PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
"Attention � Hop-<lb/>
ing to have children<lb/>
someday?" This is the<lb/>
opening line of a flyer<lb/>
appearing all over cam-<lb/>
pus during "Handicap<lb/>
Awareness Week The<lb/>
sign pertains especially<lb/>
to all women of<lb/>
childbearing age,<lb/>
because they belong to<lb/>
a group with the<lb/>
gieatest likelihood of<lb/>
acquiring Rubella,<lb/>
more commonly known<lb/>
as German Measles.<lb/>
If it occurs during<lb/>
pregnancy, rubella can<lb/>
cause anyone of a long<lb/>
list of handicaps and<lb/>
een death. "You may<lb/>
not even know you<lb/>
have it said Leigh<lb/>
Dickens, a registered<lb/>
nurse in the Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty Hospital emergency<lb/>
room. Dickens is con-<lb/>
ducting -a "Free<lb/>
Rubella Screening" for<lb/>
all the women of<lb/>
childbearing age on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Rubella has few<lb/>
symptoms and is not<lb/>
usually considered<lb/>
dangerous to the reci-<lb/>
piant, but unborn<lb/>
children of a recipiant<lb/>
mothers can develop<lb/>
various disorders such<lb/>
as deafness, congenital,<lb/>
heart defects, cataracts,<lb/>
kidney disease and<lb/>
blindness.<lb/>
"You get it once ana<lb/>
you acquire an immuni-<lb/>
ty to it said Dickens.<lb/>
So women who have<lb/>
had it once will not<lb/>
need to get a screening.<lb/>
From 1963 to 1965<lb/>
the United States went<lb/>
through a "Rubella<lb/>
Epidemic" and there<lb/>
was "A great big baby<lb/>
boom of handicapped<lb/>
kids said Dickens.<lb/>
Those handicapped<lb/>
children are now ap-<lb/>
proaching college age<lb/>
or starting to enter the<lb/>
workforce, and job<lb/>
placement is particular-<lb/>
ly difficult for them.<lb/>
Rubella has a tenden-<lb/>
cy to run in 20-year<lb/>
epidemic intervals, and<lb/>
rubella screenings are<lb/>
one of the efforts being<lb/>
made by the health<lb/>
community to preven<lb/>
another outbreak. Ap<lb/>
proximately 30,00(<lb/>
children were born with<lb/>
"multiple handicapps"<lb/>
during the last<lb/>
epidemic. "We have<lb/>
the means of preven-<lb/>
tion said Dickens,<lb/>
"and we must work<lb/>
hard to prevent another<lb/>
epidemic she added.<lb/>
The Rubella screen-<lb/>
ing is a quick, simple<lb/>
and painless procedure.<lb/>
"It takes five minutes,<lb/>
and the results can be<lb/>
picked up in two<lb/>
weeks said Dickens.<lb/>
The screenings are<lb/>
offered at the ECU in-<lb/>
firmary throughout<lb/>
"Handicap Awareness<lb/>
Week" from 2 to 5<lb/>
p.m. on the second<lb/>
floor of Mendanhall in<lb/>
Room 114.<lb/>
"People in health<lb/>
professions are re-<lb/>
quired to get a rubella<lb/>
screening said<lb/>
Dickens. However, she<lb/>
added it is an equally<lb/>
good decision for all<lb/>
women to take these<lb/>
simple preventative<lb/>
precautions. All ECU<lb/>
students, faculty and<lb/>
staff are invited.<lb/>
AED<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
premedical predental honor<lb/>
society on Tuesday. April 6 at 7 30<lb/>
p m . in room 307 Flanagan<lb/>
Building Elections will be held for<lb/>
officers for the 82 83 school year<lb/>
All members should plan to at<lb/>
tend!<lb/>
WALK FOR HUMANITY<lb/>
The ECU Hunger Coalition<lb/>
wishes to thank everyone who<lb/>
helped with the 1982 Walk For<lb/>
Humanity" and invites all in<lb/>
terested Students. Faculty and<lb/>
Staff to Oin in the t oaltion's week<lb/>
ly meetings (no meeting this week<lb/>
next meeting Apr.I 151 The<lb/>
Hunger Coalition meets a' 7 30<lb/>
p m In the Newman House VS3 E<lb/>
10th St<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like tn nave ar, ,tem pr<lb/>
in the announcements rolumn<lb/>
please send the announi emenl tas<lb/>
brief as possible i typed and<lb/>
double spaced to The East Caroli<lb/>
man m rare of tht pi � ��� ' �<lb/>
manager<lb/>
For better irri . .<lb/>
asking that you p ip several<lb/>
copies ot our f-ew announcement<lb/>
application tor your upcor- <lb/>
events<lb/>
There is no charge f( I<lb/>
nouncements. bu' spar �<lb/>
limited Therefore we cannot<lb/>
guarantee (ttal r'lur arrounie<lb/>
ment will run as long as ou ��<lb/>
and suggest that you no not<lb/>
solely on th1s column mr puni<lb/>
Theoeadi I ements<lb/>
s 5 p m Fi lay tor thi ' � sit<lb/>
paper and S p m t . I<lb/>
Thursday papei<lb/>
This si . �<lb/>
campus organ .�,(�<lb/>
men's<lb/>
N. C. Council Of Churches<lb/>
Sponsors Nuclear Convocation<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Muff Wrllrr<lb/>
"Even the most hawkish of hawks would agree<lb/>
that a nuclear war would be holocaust said<lb/>
Bishop James Armstrong during his address to an<lb/>
ecumenical convocation. The address, titled<lb/>
"Security, Peace, and the Arms Race was spon-<lb/>
sored by !he North Carolina Council of Chur-<lb/>
ches<lb/>
Armstrong is the president of the national<lb/>
c ouncil of Churches and a resident bishop of the<lb/>
United Methodist Church in Indiana. He has<lb/>
written several books on social justice and had<lb/>
done much work in the area of human rights.<lb/>
Armstrong is just one of the many religious<lb/>
leaders who have been speaking out and deman-<lb/>
ding nuclear arms reduction. "Today there are<lb/>
more than 50,(XX) nuclear weapons deployed and<lb/>
stockpiled�Armstrong told an audience of more<lb/>
than 300 ministers and church members gathered<lb/>
at the United Church of Christ in Greensboro.<lb/>
"Once it (nuclear war) comes, life will never be<lb/>
the same again he continued. "Life as we know<lb/>
it will cease to exist<lb/>
According to Armstrong, thousands of today's<lb/>
nuclear weapons are 50 times more powerful than<lb/>
the ones the United States dropped on Japan in<lb/>
1945.<lb/>
"Ever major city is targeted with deaths ex-<lb/>
pected to number over 100 million each for the<lb/>
United States, the SovietUnion, and Europe,<lb/>
Armstrong said. He added that "35 nations<lb/>
possess the knowledge to manufacture nuclear<lb/>
weapons and that the bomb technology could<lb/>
easily fall into the hands of terrorists and organiz-<lb/>
ed crime.<lb/>
Armstrong called the arms race "primitive<lb/>
morality" and said thaf'the belicose rhetoric<lb/>
(and) the radical increase in military spending in<lb/>
this country are not deterrants (but) rather they<lb/>
feed the flames of fear and irrationlity All of<lb/>
these fears, coupled with human error, could lead<lb/>
to "global extinction Armstrng said.<lb/>
Armstrong addressed what he called the<lb/>
"Biblical basis for nuclear disarmament" when<lb/>
he quoted Isaiah 9: "Nations shall beat their<lb/>
swords into plowshares, their spears into pruning<lb/>
hooks. Nation shall not lift up sword against na-<lb/>
tion, neither shall they learn war anymore<lb/>
He also mentioned the "Sermon on the<lb/>
Mount" where Jesus said, "Those who live by the<lb/>
sword shall perish by the sword<lb/>
"Those who live by the bomb will perish by the<lb/>
bomb he added.<lb/>
"In a dark time can their eyes see?" Armstrong<lb/>
said, speaking about the leaders who were not<lb/>
"seeing" the need for nuclear disarmament. "I<lb/>
do believe in uni-lateral initiatives based on good<lb/>
faith and trust he said, adding that uni-lateral<lb/>
disarmament was not a practical option at this<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"The taproot of violence in our society today is<lb/>
our intention to use nuclear weapons Arm-<lb/>
strong said, quoting a Jesuit priest at Georgetown<lb/>
University, Father Richard McSorley. "Once we<lb/>
have agreed to that, all other evil in minor incom-<lb/>
parison<lb/>
Armstrong also announced that Billy Graham<lb/>
and Pope John Paul II were among his long list of<lb/>
religious leaders who were calling for disarma-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"Nuclear disarmament is a risk-taking ven-<lb/>
ture he said. "How much greater is the risk<lb/>
forced upon usthat insists that our security can<lb/>
be found in a balance of nuclear terror or in winn-<lb/>
ing an unwinable Nuclear Arms Race?"<lb/>
Armstrong called on the participants to "stick<lb/>
with it, do your homework, make your plans, and<lb/>
return to your several spheres of influence better<lb/>
prepared to do that which the day calls for, the<lb/>
hour calls for, and reality calls for<lb/>
The Last Carolinian<lb/>
Published every<lb/>
Thursaav durir<lb/>
yeat and every W lat ' '<lb/>
ing the sun n � �<lb/>
i Cat<lb/>
f i c'a � v s p a pei I<lb/>
opera<lb/>
b the stud<lb/>
Subscription Rate S20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian oftices<lb/>
are located m the Old South<lb/>
Buildinq on the campus ot ECU<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
POS ����<lb/>
changi I ' I I<lb/>
Old Si '<lb/>
Nl 834<lb/>
Telephone 757 6366 6367 630�<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
viass postaqe rates is pendinq at<lb/>
G-eenviile. North Carolina<lb/>
WORLD CHAMPIONS<lb/>
COMING<lb/>
April 17 and 18. Saturday and<lb/>
fjnday, the ECU Fnsbee Disc<lb/>
Ilub invites you to the Natural<lb/>
.ight Flying Disc Classic Come<lb/>
?ratch fnsbee experts do their<lb/>
fling, catch some rays, and join<lb/>
he fun If you like to throw the<lb/>
lisc. come Oin the crowd Mon<lb/>
lays at 8 p m , room 247<lb/>
Mendenhall, andor Tuesdays and<lb/>
fhursdays at 3 p m , bottom of<lb/>
toiiege Hill Be there or be<lb/>
b long!<lb/>
MARSHALL<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
Marshall applic at ions now being<lb/>
B i epted m the SGA Office. Room<lb/>
228 Mendenhall (Monday Friday,<lb/>
from 8 a rn thru 5pm<lb/>
ALPHA PHI<lb/>
On Wednesday. April 7 at 8 X<lb/>
p m there will be a rush party for<lb/>
- . Alpha Pni Big Brothers m the<lb/>
Tar River Club House Plenty of<lb/>
good times, good people and cold<lb/>
beverage Make plans to iom in on<lb/>
fun!<lb/>
SUMMER SCHOOL<lb/>
ROOM RESERVATION<lb/>
Residence hall room deposits tor<lb/>
Summer School 1982 will be ac<lb/>
n the Cashier's Office,<lb/>
Room 105. Spilman Building.<lb/>
. r p . pg April 1 Room<lb/>
inments will be made m the<lb/>
respective residence hail offices<lb/>
pr.i 5 and 6 Thereafter, they<lb/>
w.H be made m the Office of Hous<lb/>
ing Operations. Room 701.<lb/>
Whichard Bu'lding The rentier a<lb/>
term of summer school is $.120 'or<lb/>
room and $180 tor a<lb/>
private room Additional rcnl m<lb/>
" - amount ot $20 is required<lb/>
Han<lb/>
Students who wish to reserv<lb/>
N � t presertly occupy, pro<lb/>
! such rooms are to be in use<lb/>
Summer are 10 make reserv a<lb/>
� Monday April 5 Another<lb/>
s'udep.ts may reserve rooms or a<lb/>
� � � � . � oasis or<lb/>
 April 6<lb/>
Residence halls to De u'j I i<lb/>
er are Greer, siar and Jar<lb/>
. s Mi-p will be housed n Gan I<lb/>
Hans<lb/>
ECU LAWSOCIETY<lb/>
 � ig deta-is on<lb/>
� � : mee t i ng in<lb/>
er C 105 a' 4 p �<lb/>
- Trip is planned<lb/>
-<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
iei<lb/>
I<lb/>
meet ngs on<lb/>
' 30 .n Room<lb/>
hall t f s a- � �<lb/>
i � � . , . � a ead our<lb/>
"MR. 10"<lb/>
The Elbo and the Little Sisters of<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha present the<lb/>
first annual "Mr 16" Contest to be<lb/>
held Tuesday. April 13 at I �<lb/>
Contestants wishing to enter.<lb/>
please contact 757 163�, 7Si 2799.<lb/>
or call the Elbo There will be no<lb/>
entry tee The charge at the door is<lb/>
$.75 before 10 o'clock and $1 00<lb/>
after Door prizes will be awarded<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
The Circle K club of ECU invites<lb/>
all students to attend our Tuesday<lb/>
night meetings m room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall We are now initiating<lb/>
a membership drive for students<lb/>
who are interested m helping<lb/>
others through our various service<lb/>
proiects See y'all Tuesday night<lb/>
at 6 30<lb/>
AEDELECTIONS<lb/>
Elections for Alpha Epsilon<lb/>
Delta pre med honor sry i a<lb/>
be held on Tuesday. April 6 at 7 30<lb/>
p m in Flanagan 307 Tn.s<lb/>
meeting is mandatory for an<lb/>
members A cookout will be held<lb/>
on Saturday April 24. at 'he f im<lb/>
St park from 4 to 7 p m<lb/>
RUGBY CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Men's RugDy Cluo will<lb/>
hold an organizational meeting on<lb/>
yVeanesdar April 7 at 7 p m In<lb/>
Memorial 104 Elections of new of<lb/>
ficers and plans for the 'an tourna<lb/>
ment will be on the agenda<lb/>
Anyone interested m playing m the<lb/>
fall is welcomed to attend Return<lb/>
ing players should make a con<lb/>
scious effort to attend this mpor<lb/>
lap' meeting<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
Studer a" would likf 'o con<lb/>
Sider changing to a maior m . �<lb/>
Work or Corrections should apply<lb/>
now for Fall 1982 admission by<lb/>
contacting the Department Ott es<lb/>
1312 Alhed Health Build .<lb/>
P'Ck up an aplication and maki �<lb/>
����A app" n t me n t s Ar<lb/>
ments should be con<lb/>
prior To the ena of 'he spring<lb/>
semester To be eligible to apply<lb/>
the student must have completed<lb/>
at leas' �ne socia a� �� -<lb/>
tions course ano is expected to<lb/>
nave a minimum gi<lb/>
average of 2 5 Can 757 6961 Mrs<lb/>
JOynerj for additional ��<lb/>
BOOK SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
�: '�<lb/>
ECU announces ,f"a- -<lb/>
may now tx tot ooofc<lb/>
' � i - f $100 I " � �a �<lb/>
� jt u's'apc; pq i s ng<lb/>
' s ps sen Of Orir<lb/>
Eta S'gm<lb/>
appw anc<lb/>
mation and appi<lb/>
h m D' JOhrl O<lb/>
rths Faculty Arjv-se" A<lb/>
214<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
60 Clerk Typists positions are<lb/>
ava able tor the summer lit<lb/>
Washington, DC at the Pentagon<lb/>
m the Office of the Secretary of<lb/>
Defense The Pentagon, in part<lb/>
uses a random selection process to<lb/>
select clerk typists tor the sum<lb/>
mer Students who have social<lb/>
security numbers ending in "J"<lb/>
have been selected tor considera<lb/>
tion this summer Also available<lb/>
are it internship positions KH<lb/>
students maioring in Political<lb/>
Science. MPA. Computer Science<lb/>
Business and Business Educa<lb/>
tion interns w.H be selected a'<lb/>
cording to their GPA s and work<lb/>
experience interested students<lb/>
should apply todaf1 Deadline tor<lb/>
applications to be re' e v. o s April<lb/>
9<lb/>
SOCWCORR<lb/>
The Department of SOCi<lb/>
and Correctional Services wi! of<lb/>
fer courses during the second '<lb/>
mer session of 1982, befliru<lb/>
June 27 July 29 which will be O in<lb/>
'eest to professionals if<lb/>
human service ' �<lb/>
workers, ministers, lay persons<lb/>
and law enforcement ar<lb/>
� re students pr. ;<lb/>
these fields<lb/>
SocW 4002. Crisi!<lb/>
tion a getter11 apr- i<lb/>
recognizing, undersMrd rcj and<lb/>
intervening approp' 'iS'S<lb/>
Situations Time 4 20 5 50 �<lb/>
day in the Aii.ei Hea" B.<lb/>
Room 206<lb/>
SocW 5003 "Pi<lb/>
mterver'<lb/>
with 'he groul<lb/>
change media Four ��<lb/>
approaches will Re e�a- � ed a ft<lb/>
emphasis on group constellat<lb/>
group dypan- CS and group<lb/>
I r me i 00 2 30 everf ;��<lb/>
the Alhed Health Building Room<lb/>
206<lb/>
For aoc '<lb/>
please call r a<lb/>
ment of Social Wort<lb/>
1 696'<lb/>
COMIC BOOK CLUB<lb/>
�an'asy tans ani<lb/>
a ha � �� a chance to met<lb/>
"� irrj Our<lb/>
treasurea terns op Sup- �<lb/>
IS whep the ECU Com,c (' �<lb/>
a sponsor it's anr j<lb/>
corventior Ap aodei<lb/>
this rear is record cone' I<lb/>
con oe neic a' the Hoii<lb/>
nay Inn op 714 S Memorial D<lb/>
I'Orri 10 a m 'c 5 P m A<lb/>
. JbliC FO'<lb/>
�a'lor. ano<lb/>
� �<lb/>
51� D �' <lb/>
-T 6389 befwet r - l(<lb/>
SIGMA ALPHA IOTA<lb/>
T he '<lb/>
� . � � - �-�<lb/>
oounces a C .<lb/>
oe helo Apr i 8 a' 8 15<lb/>
�<lb/>
ECU faculty ar-a studi<lb/>
-<lb/>
music Ou'ic ' . � a . " �<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
Psi Ch. the rational honor socie<lb/>
ty tor psychology maiorj wii' nav<lb/>
their initiation of new members<lb/>
ano elections tor new officers or<lb/>
Tuesday Apr at 7 00 p m at<lb/>
the Three Steers Restaur�r- a<lb/>
members ana new initiates art<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
JEWISH STUDENTS<lb/>
Ther. DC a Passove<lb/>
i ,  . � as o Va'�<lb/>
Cohen at 757 1155 or Or B C-<lb/>
a' 756 5640<lb/>
BICYCLE CLUB<lb/>
E CRC a M ,y82<lb/>
. � �  ' ' i .� - 'i<lb/>
and by anhj A<lb/>
ate oat ia' yt fron ECU<lb/>
Eas' Caroi r.a Road Clots hai �<lb/>
as a D" �<lb/>
I � u c ana<lb/>
ECRC wet<lb/>
10 Eas'e-<lb/>
and spe- ' any 1 ! -<lb/>
. ersify. as a D<lb/>
comm<lb/>
Ar . '�<lb/>
are <lb/>
� Met : ��� Q'<lb/>
yea' a-<lb/>
expe- �<lb/>
�<lb/>
I r f e o e e ' I<lb/>
� �<lb/>
146 ft n '<lb/>
6H ��� � � .<lb/>
-<lb/>
S March 21 � ' <lb/>
. " 4<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
a<lb/>
� <lb/>
-<lb/>
'52 845C<lb/>
dear<lb/>
MUSIC LISTENING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
Stct � - v.<lb/>
�<lb/>
ope<lb/>
10 30 p n � r-r ft<lb/>
� n .<lb/>
�<lb/>
POMS PONS<lb/>
198"<lb/>
A- � � 4 a-<lb/>
� s must be<lb/>
� ��� innot attend<lb/>
"X'Oorsh at '58 -<lb/>
NAACP Supports<lb/>
for SGA President<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
DAVID COOK<lb/>
SGA PRESIDENT<lb/>
Encourage more minority representation<lb/>
in SGA<lb/>
Reexamine all SGA salaries<lb/>
vs Revamp refrigeration rentals<lb/>
Full support of Art, Drama and<lb/>
Music Bills<lb/>
Support campus-wide referendums<lb/>
tKeep intact SGA loan programs<lb/>
DAVID COOK<lb/>
ENDORSED BY:<lb/>
Kirk Little � SGA Treas. ('808182)<lb/>
Gary Williams � SGA Speaker ('8182)<lb/>
Brett Melvin � SGA Pres. ('79 80)<lb/>
Tim Sullivan � SGA Pres. ('76'77)<lb/>
Jay Nichols � Former SGA Pres. Cand.<lb/>
Bobby Pierce � Former SGA Pres. Cand<lb/>
Coalition for Better Student Government<lb/>
Becky Strine � Fresh. Class Pres.<lb/>
Becky Talley � SGA TreasElect<lb/>
Sarah Coburn � SGA SecElect<lb/>
Mike Hitchcock � V.A.F. Pres.<lb/>
Dasha Little � Former SGA Elections Chairman<lb/>
Julie Fahrbach � Chair S.U. Art Exhibition Committee<lb/>
Russell Parker � Pres. SOULS<lb/>
SGA ELECTIONS RUN-OFF WED APRIL 7<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057472_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRU 6. IV82<lb/>
liters<lb/>
on<lb/>
�1<lb/>
All<lb/>
Is are<lb/>
IS<lb/>
Supreme Court Rules 5-4<lb/>
For Seniority System Immunity<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) � The<lb/>
Supreme Court, splitting 5-4, made<lb/>
it harder Monday for minorities and<lb/>
women in the labor force to fight<lb/>
discrimination in job seniority<lb/>
policies.<lb/>
The justices ruled that seniority<lb/>
systems are immune from job<lb/>
discrimination suits � even if<lb/>
statistics show the system tends to<lb/>
favor white males � unless actual<lb/>
intent to discriminate can be pro-<lb/>
ven.<lb/>
The broad protection applies no<lb/>
matter whether the seniority system<lb/>
was put in place before or after the<lb/>
nation's civil rights laws were<lb/>
strengthened in 15, the high court<lb/>
concluded.<lb/>
Justice Byron White, writing for<lb/>
the sharply divided court, said that<lb/>
drawing a distinction between<lb/>
seniority systems based on when<lb/>
they were put into effect "would be<lb/>
contrary to (the law's) plain<lb/>
language, inconsistent with our<lb/>
prior cases, and would run counter<lb/>
to the national labor policy<lb/>
But William Brennan, one of the<lb/>
four dissenting justices, called his<lb/>
colleagues' ruling "truly<lb/>
remarkable" and protested that<lb/>
Congress never intended to protect<lb/>
"the byproduct ofdiscrimination<lb/>
The ruling is a setback for a group<lb/>
of blacks who work in two Rich-<lb/>
mond, Va tobacco plants. They<lb/>
had argued that seniority systems<lb/>
adopted after enactment of Title VII<lb/>
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 must<lb/>
rigidl) conform with the law's man-<lb/>
date against discrimination on the<lb/>
basis of race, color, religion, sex or<lb/>
national origin.<lb/>
When Title VII of the Civil Rights<lb/>
Act went into effect in July 1965, it<lb/>
became illegal for an employer to<lb/>
discriminate in hiring, firing and<lb/>
pay. But the act granted special<lb/>
treatment to seniority systems,<lb/>
allowing them to continue to treat<lb/>
employees differently to protect<lb/>
workers' accrued rights to promo-<lb/>
tions and wage benefits.<lb/>
The law provided that a bona fide<lb/>
seniority system could not He<lb/>
challenged in court under Title A<lb/>
unless the system intentionally<lb/>
discriminated.<lb/>
The exemption made it harder to<lb/>
throw out seniority systems, but it<lb/>
had been unclear whether Congress<lb/>
meant to protect only those seniori-<lb/>
ty systems in operation before 1965<lb/>
or any future seniority systems.<lb/>
Monday's high court ruling sets<lb/>
aside a lower court order that con-<lb/>
demned an employee promotion<lb/>
system adopted in 1968 by the<lb/>
American Tobacco Co. and the<lb/>
local union in two Virginia tobacco<lb/>
plants. The plants, until 1963, had<lb/>
openly discriminated through<lb/>
segregation by race and sex in job<lb/>
assignments, cafeterias, restrooms,<lb/>
lockers and plant entrances.<lb/>
At issue was a 1968 "lines of pro-<lb/>
gression" promotion system requir-<lb/>
ing an employee to work a certain<lb/>
lower level job to advance a top<lb/>
position still excluded blacks from<lb/>
the better, higher-pavine iobs.<lb/>
A federal district court found the<lb/>
policy violated Title VII because it<lb/>
discriminated against blacks by<lb/>
keeping them in the lowest-paying<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
Between 1968 and 1973, only one<lb/>
black was appointed to fill 30 vacan-<lb/>
cies in the top jobs, which were<lb/>
usually reserved for whites. The two<lb/>
lower-paying departments within<lb/>
the plant were 81 percent and 92<lb/>
percent black.<lb/>
Pboto By SCOTT LAKSON<lb/>
Over The River And Through The Woods<lb/>
Two well-prepared coeds start the long trek to Moser's Farm Saturday to<lb/>
celebrate the finale of ECU's Greek Week.<lb/>
GREETINGS<lb/>
&amp;.<lb/>
A<lb/>
,f<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 13 H<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
S1IS.O0 PregmiKy Tetl, airtti<lb/>
Control. and Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling. For fur<lb/>
ther information call U2-OS35<lb/>
(Toll Free Number<lb/>
�00 221 25; between � A.M.<lb/>
and 5 p M Weekdays<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
v� ��� femmatt��<lb/>
App'ts. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
l-WO-321-0575<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
? 17 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C<lb/>
Phone 752-0326<lb/>
The<lb/>
Marathon 1<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
The Best in<lb/>
Greek food, Pizzas, and Subs.<lb/>
Try our delicious Souvlakia<lb/>
Special only $2.65<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
AFTER 5:00 P.M.<lb/>
Located Across From ECU<lb/>
at 506 Evans St.<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
air Band<lb/>
COMTESr<lb/>
THURS, APRILS, 1982 7-9<lb/>
ADMISSION $1.00<lb/>
- 1ST &amp; $50.00 CASH<lb/>
JET PLUS 1 YEARS FREE PASS<lb/>
N D 515 �� PLUS ONE CASE BEVERAGE<lb/>
PLUS 1 TIARS F REE PASS<lb/>
RD<lb/>
PRIZES PROVIDED BY SPONSORS<lb/>
PLUS I YEARS FREE PASS<lb/>
PRIZES PROVIDED BY:<lb/>
TODD'S STEREO<lb/>
APPLE RECORDS<lb/>
FREDDIE'S<lb/>
FAMOUS PIZZA<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
HAPPY STORE<lb/>
U<lb/>
Oi Caieeni� Patlfii aarf<lb/>
T-Sbirts, Sleeping tegs,<lb/>
��cfcawck. Camping �����-<lb/>
neat. Steel Teed IDmi.<lb/>
Otsfce and ever rag rttar�t<lb/>
I<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
STORE �'<lb/>
VY I<lb/>
USED<lb/>
TIRES<lb/>
10<lb/>
inquire at<lb/>
Evans Seafood<lb/>
$<lb/>
oo<lb/>
Bausch &amp; Lomb<lb/>
Soft Lenses<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
includes initial eye examination, lenses, care<lb/>
kit, instructions and follow up visits for one<lb/>
month. ECU student l.D. required.<lb/>
9900<lb/>
a � euoon and<lb/>
?<lb/>
OPTOMETNC<lb/>
�Y�CAR�C�H1�R<lb/>
Of Greenville PA<lb/>
228GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
TIPTON ANNEX<lb/>
754-9404<lb/>
Dr. Peter Hollis<lb/>
�sow<lb/>
LOOKING GOOD COSTS LESS<lb/>
BnnS � V <lb/>
$?CH-rT for comparaoi<lb/>
products. �5<lb/>
nald<lb/>
Limited to valid coupons from any Fast Service<lb/>
Restaurant in our area. Limit one coupon per person per<lb/>
visit. Please present when ordering Not good with<lb/>
other offers. Customers must pay sales tax.<lb/>
Good only at McDonalds�<lb/>
10th and Cotanchc St<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
Offer valid thru April 30, 1982.<lb/>
"&amp; J.A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes,<lb/>
shoes, and hose. Also � used ECU<lb/>
nurses uniforms. Trade-ins allowed.<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive.<lb/>
Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
� SOUTHS (6 I ROCK NIGHTCLUB <lb/>
G&amp;<lb/>
ROCK NIGHTCLUB<lb/>
1 1  I i i i 1 x x i i i i i i r : i r i i r i i<lb/>
Every Day<lb/>
11:00-11:00<lb/>
300 E. 10th St.<lb/>
750-4121<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town � Honest<lb/>
Gome<lb/>
Big Screen<lb/>
TV<lb/>
Drive-Up<lb/>
Window for<lb/>
To Go Orders<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
LIGHTNING<lb/>
BLUES BAND<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
X-RAVES<lb/>
ECU 13 PRICES AOM<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Jtf THE DREGS fc<lb/>
3 P.M.<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
DRIVER<lb/>
 , SATURDAY<lb/>
 If LARRY RASPBERRY &amp;<lb/>
THE HIGHSTEPPERS<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 1<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
TRICKS<lb/>
EASTER SPECIAL<lb/>
TUES APR. 6 - LADIES' NITE<lb/>
wBRIAN HUSKEY<lb/>
FRI APR. 9 - HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
4-7 FANTASIA &amp;<lb/>
WALTER LYERLY<lb/>
SAT APR. 10 - FANTASIA<lb/>
wWALTER LYERLY<lb/>
TUES APR. 13 - LADIES'<lb/>
NITE wBRUCE FRYE<lb/>
�C<lb/>
USI� f$L�L<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
NEW WAVE NITE<lb/>
LADIES' SPEC.<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
THOMPSON-<lb/>
PARNELL BAND<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
MATINEE<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA S<lb/>
PARTY CENTER<lb/>
TUESDAY <lb/>
MALE BEST CHEST CONTEST<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
HUMP NITE<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
BULLPEN NITE<lb/>
1st beverage � JSc w ticket stub<lb/>
from ECU baseball game � Thurs . March 4<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
END OF WK. PARTY<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
BEST IN DANCE MUSIC<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
LADIES' NITE<lb/>
IT TAKES 12 INCHES<lb/>
TO MAKE AMMO .<lb/>
Every Day - Buffet 110O-2HW2.79<lb/>
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Good Food � Good 7 imes<lb/>
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WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Ladies' Night<lb/>
Free Draft for all ladies<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Ladies Lockout<lb/>
8-10 Free Draft<lb/>
For Ladies' Men's Thighs<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
FRIDAY AFTERNOON<lb/>
END OF THE WEEK<lb/>
BUCKET PARTY<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
NICKEL NITE<lb/>
Call 7Si �7�5 lor mere info.<lb/>
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GOOD TIMES<lb/>
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Mon. at 8:00<lb/>
Free Pinball<lb/>
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NOW OPEN FOR<lb/>
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DAILY AT 4:30<lb/>
Not open to the general public.<lb/>
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<lb/>
T<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057472_0004"/><lb/>
SUfe iEaat (Earnliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE, mmam<lb/>
Charles Chandler, �� �.�,<lb/>
Ric Browning. n.m m ntmrnm ToM Hall- �"�tii,Mr<lb/>
Fielding Miller, b, ��. William Yelverton. m mm<lb/>
Alison Bartel, nii�� Steve Bachner, &amp;MrmMi �-<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
Steve Moore, )&amp; Manager<lb/>
Diane Anderson, stsmm<lb/>
April 6, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Run-Off Time<lb/>
Platforms Similar, Yet Choice Exists<lb/>
Surprise, surprise!?!<lb/>
It's SGA presidential run-off time<lb/>
and there has been no controversy<lb/>
� none during the five-way election<lb/>
two weeks ago and none during the<lb/>
Henderson-Cook challenge to be<lb/>
decided tomorrow.<lb/>
Voter turnout was higher this<lb/>
year than in several previous cam-<lb/>
paigns, but will it remain high<lb/>
through the run-off. Only time will<lb/>
tell, though student interest remains<lb/>
unusually high.<lb/>
Both candidates seem to be well<lb/>
recognized by the students they wish<lb/>
to serve. Both have managed to<lb/>
garner support from a variety of<lb/>
factions. One claims support from<lb/>
numerous past and present SGA<lb/>
leaders � but then, so does the<lb/>
other.<lb/>
No sooner does one candidate<lb/>
come out in favor of better lighting<lb/>
on campus and an escort system for<lb/>
coeds than the other establishes the<lb/>
same desires.<lb/>
One candidate touts the support<lb/>
of the current SGA secretary; the<lb/>
other has the endorsement of the<lb/>
1982-83 secretary-elect. One enjoys<lb/>
the support (financial and strategic)<lb/>
of a political party; the other does<lb/>
not. One ran with a full ticket of<lb/>
candidates for other offices in the<lb/>
original ballotting; one stood alone.<lb/>
Both candidates have distinguish-<lb/>
ed themselves through their service<lb/>
in the SGA legislature; despite<lb/>
anything which may be rumored,<lb/>
neither candidate has established<lb/>
what could be termed an<lb/>
"exemplary" legislative record.<lb/>
One boasts the "Most Outstanding<lb/>
Legislation" of the 1980-81 term,<lb/>
while the other has introduced an<lb/>
abysmal amount of legislation in re-<lb/>
cent weeks.<lb/>
Henderson and Cook are both<lb/>
politically intelligent. Both have at-<lb/>
tempted to appeal to as many vital<lb/>
publics as possible � fraternaties,<lb/>
sororities, SOULS, NAACP, music<lb/>
and art groups, etc.<lb/>
So what are we trying to illustrate<lb/>
here? Political clones!?!<lb/>
It's not quite that bad.<lb/>
Cook supports the use of wheel<lb/>
locks on vehicles parked in violation<lb/>
of campus law, while Henderson<lb/>
counters that the university should<lb/>
purchase its own tow truck and<lb/>
pocket the profit. The latter plan<lb/>
would still insure cars illegally park-<lb/>
ed could not occupy needed spaces.<lb/>
Henderson also proposes to in-<lb/>
stall a book rental system in order to<lb/>
save students money. Books would<lb/>
be used for several semesters with<lb/>
students paying a minimal fee for<lb/>
their use, though they would still<lb/>
have the option to buy their own.<lb/>
Cook suggests installation of a<lb/>
Xerox copier in the Student Supply<lb/>
Store would be of significant conve-<lb/>
nience to the students and faculty at<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
As we have previously stated, The<lb/>
East Carolinian has taken no active<lb/>
stance in favor of one candidate<lb/>
over the other. Some staff members<lb/>
have shown a preference for<lb/>
Henderson, while others show sup-<lb/>
port for Cook.<lb/>
Previous administrations have<lb/>
shown that no matter how bad a<lb/>
president appears to be, the system<lb/>
is adequately provided with checks<lb/>
and balances to counter any unwise<lb/>
or illogical political ploys.<lb/>
The important thing � as always<lb/>
� is to vote. Whether you cast your<lb/>
vote for Eric Henderson or David<lb/>
Cook, you have no right to com-<lb/>
plain later if you don't at least par-<lb/>
ticipate in the selection process.<lb/>
DOONESBU�Y<lb/>
wubzucn wanA<lb/>
atmiumm nenoos<lb/>
OKAY?<lb/>
smaw HGArmws<lb/>
nnoimx tsuwsae ex<lb/>
Tnem&amp;m OFtiesuti cuse<lb/>
AHtuc&amp;rr tanlux test'<lb/>
VOtSXTI7M� He PIP<lb/>
lOus&amp;KNou- lemwT<lb/>
mFCKKN&amp;j neaw uh<lb/>
ABOUTMAmX IS COM- SX?<lb/>
NAPViC�' Pisrt Hmo<lb/>
HHffr WATS1HE<lb/>
fin- KEZIPefiOK.<lb/>
ni 5COKH0H<lb/>
nemcxs?<lb/>
by Garry Trudeau<lb/>
Eric Henderson<lb/>
My name is Eric Henderson, and 1 am<lb/>
running for SGA President. I am a<lb/>
junior, majoring in Chemistry .and<lb/>
minoring in English.<lb/>
Having served as freshman class presi-<lb/>
dent, sophomore class president, SGA<lb/>
executive chairman and Scott Dorm<lb/>
representative, 1 feel that I am the most<lb/>
experienced candidate for the office of<lb/>
SGA president.<lb/>
Since East Carolina will be getting a<lb/>
new chancellor, experience is a very im-<lb/>
portant factor. The new chancellor will<lb/>
need as many experienced people work-<lb/>
ing with him in the administration as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
With my knowledge of SGA and East<lb/>
Carolina University, I feel that I am<lb/>
qualified for the office and will be an ef-<lb/>
fective representative for the students to<lb/>
the new administration.<lb/>
Since the SGA president serves on the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees, I feel that he is<lb/>
the students' voice to the administra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Without you, the students, there<lb/>
would be no need to have a Student<lb/>
Government Association. Therefore, I<lb/>
encourage more student input.<lb/>
As president, I would extend my<lb/>
cabinet to have representatives from the<lb/>
large organizations on campus, in-<lb/>
cluding SRA, Panhellenic, Inter-<lb/>
Fraternity Council, arts, music and<lb/>
minorities. If elected, I encourage any<lb/>
student with suggestions or complaints<lb/>
to come and talk to me.<lb/>
In past elections issues concerning the<lb/>
students have been neglected; as presi-<lb/>
dent, I plan to deal with these issues.<lb/>
Political Endorsements<lb/>
As a student who is concerned for the<lb/>
well-being of the SGA and student in-<lb/>
terest, I would like to recommend Eric<lb/>
Henderson as president of the SGA.<lb/>
I feel that Eric is the most experienced<lb/>
candidate since he has been involved in<lb/>
the SGA for the past three years as<lb/>
freshman class president, sophomore<lb/>
class president, executive council chair-<lb/>
man and Scott Dorm representative. He<lb/>
also introduced the best SGA legislation<lb/>
for the year 80-81.<lb/>
Since ECU will be getting a new<lb/>
chancellor, experience is a very impor-<lb/>
tant factor. With Eric's background in<lb/>
the SGA and ECU, 1 feel he is most<lb/>
qualified for the office and will be a<lb/>
good representative of our student body<lb/>
to the new administration.<lb/>
I would like to remind everyone that<lb/>
there will be a run-off Wednesday, April<lb/>
7 for the office of SGA president and<lb/>
would like to encourage each and every<lb/>
one of you to vote for the most ex-<lb/>
perienced and devoted candidate: Eric<lb/>
Henderson.<lb/>
OUSSSAHHAR<lb/>
Junior, FrenchSpanish<lb/>
Henderson Backed<lb/>
The run-off election of this Wednes-<lb/>
day presents students here at ECU with a<lb/>
rare opportunity � a chance to vote for<lb/>
an honest, experienced candidate who<lb/>
always has the needs of the students in<lb/>
mind. This candidate is Eric Henderson.<lb/>
As a member and chairman of the<lb/>
ECU Honor Council, 1 have had<lb/>
numerous opportunities to work with<lb/>
Mr. Henderson, and I have never seen a<lb/>
more serious, hard-working person in<lb/>
my life. Candidates with Eric's integrity<lb/>
and ability are seldom found, and the<lb/>
students here would be doing themselves<lb/>
a great disservice if they fail to recognize<lb/>
just what kind of man Mr. Henderson<lb/>
really is.<lb/>
Eric has brought out many issues of<lb/>
great concern to the students, such as a<lb/>
book rental service at the Student Supp-<lb/>
ly Store, better lighting on campus<lb/>
especially around the women's dorms,<lb/>
and in general a presidency which will<lb/>
cater to the needs of the individual stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
The opportunity is available; so vote<lb/>
Eric Henderson for experience, integrity<lb/>
and the students.<lb/>
MIKE SW AIM<lb/>
Junior, History<lb/>
Cook Supported<lb/>
For the second time in two years, I<lb/>
have seen the SGA spring elections forc-<lb/>
ed into a run-off. Being very much<lb/>
aware of the public records of both can-<lb/>
didates in this run-off, I feel that it is im-<lb/>
perative for the students to make the<lb/>
correct choice. It is my personal opinion<lb/>
that David Cook is the only choice in<lb/>
this instance. As a recent graduate of the<lb/>
School of Art, I can unequivocally state<lb/>
that he will serve the best interests of<lb/>
students in art, drama, and music.<lb/>
Please remember to vote for David<lb/>
Cook on Wednesday.<lb/>
DASHAEFIRD LITTLE<lb/>
ECU Alumnus<lb/>
Book Rental<lb/>
Being a recent graduate of Western<lb/>
Carolina University, I was exposed to a<lb/>
book rental service. This service allowed<lb/>
the students to rent their books for a<lb/>
minimal cost of $30 a semester.<lb/>
Attending graduate school at ECU<lb/>
and having to purchase all my books, I<lb/>
can say that a book rental service greatly<lb/>
reduced my school expenses.<lb/>
Eric Henderson, a candidate for SGA<lb/>
president, proposes to install a book ren-<lb/>
tal service for the students of ECU. The<lb/>
service will be similar to that of Western<lb/>
Carolina's in that it will be available to<lb/>
all students for all books. The student<lb/>
also has the option to buy the books.<lb/>
I would like to remind you that<lb/>
Wednesday, April 7 is the run-off day<lb/>
for the office of SGA president. I<lb/>
recommend Eric Henderson for<lb/>
presidesnt as someone who will work for<lb/>
the best interest of the students at ECU.<lb/>
KADY GRIFFIN<lb/>
Graduate Student<lb/>
Refrigerator Service<lb/>
This letter is in answer to presidential<lb/>
candidate David Cook's allegations that<lb/>
the SGA refrigerator service needs to be<lb/>
revamped. Upon questioning Mr. Cook<lb/>
about his grounds for making such a<lb/>
statement he claims to have received<lb/>
some type of "report" about the<lb/>
refrigerators in the legislature at the<lb/>
beginning of the semester.<lb/>
After talking with some of the SGA<lb/>
legislators it seems that none of the ones<lb/>
I conversed with had ever seen this<lb/>
report. If such a report did exist, why<lb/>
didn't Mr. Cook step forward and take<lb/>
some type of action to see that ap-<lb/>
propriate changes were made.<lb/>
Since taking office as manager of the<lb/>
SGA refrigerators in May 1981, each<lb/>
one of the suggestions made by the state<lb/>
auditors have been carefully and cons-<lb/>
cientiously employed. 1 do not know<lb/>
what David Cook's educational<lb/>
qualifications are but 1 seriously doubt<lb/>
that as an undergraduate he could offer<lb/>
any suggestion that the state auditors<lb/>
have not previously made.<lb/>
When asked what type of changes he<lb/>
would incorporate Mr. Cook stated that<lb/>
he had "no specific changes" that need-<lb/>
ed to be employed. A very odd reply for<lb/>
someone who claims that the whole<lb/>
system needs to be revamped.<lb/>
My suggestion to you Mr. Cook,<lb/>
would be that before you go making idle<lb/>
(or as in this case false) statements, see<lb/>
to it that you do your homework and<lb/>
have some qualified grounds for making<lb/>
such accusations. It seems that using<lb/>
such statements as a foundation for a<lb/>
politicl platform makes for a very shaky<lb/>
platform indeed. The winds around<lb/>
Greenville blow very hard.<lb/>
CLYDE JOHNSON<lb/>
SGA Refrigerator Manager<lb/>
Campus Escorts<lb/>
Being a resident, R.A and recently<lb/>
chosen as head R.A. in Tyler Dorm, 1<lb/>
feel that there is a great need to improve<lb/>
the lighting system around the campus.<lb/>
Eric Henderson, a candidate for SGA<lb/>
president, sees the need to improve this.<lb/>
He also proposes to develop an escort<lb/>
service for girls walking on campus late<lb/>
at night. With these improvements I feel<lb/>
the number of attacks on campus will be<lb/>
reduced.<lb/>
I would like to remind you that a<lb/>
runoff election for SGA president will<lb/>
be held Wednesday, April 7. I highly<lb/>
recommend Eric Henderson as a<lb/>
representative of the students' needs.<lb/>
MARY CORBETT<lb/>
Junior, English<lb/>
Best Candidate<lb/>
As the secretary of the Student<lb/>
Government Association, I would like to<lb/>
recommend Eric Henderson for SGA<lb/>
president. No. only does Enc deal with<lb/>
relevent issues and student needs, he a so<lb/>
has the experience necessary to fulfilthe<lb/>
position of student government presi-<lb/>
dThave worked with Erie for the pas.<lb/>
two years, and I have seen the effort he<lb/>
puts forth in accomplishing his dut.es<lb/>
He has been successful as freshman class<lb/>
resident, sophomore class president,<lb/>
chairman of the SGA Executive Coun-<lb/>
cil and Scott Dorm representative.<lb/>
Eric's enthusiasm and experience<lb/>
make him the best candidate for the<lb/>
position.<lb/>
Words are not necessary to convey<lb/>
Eric's qualifications for the job; his<lb/>
record speaks for itself. Vote In,<lb/>
Henderson for SGA president on April<lb/>
7.<lb/>
DENISEPHTH1SK<lb/>
Senior. Busin<lb/>
'Extremely Competent'<lb/>
Good leadership comes from cod<lb/>
fidence and support. You have sup<lb/>
ported and have shown your confidence<lb/>
in me. I will work diligently in fulfilling<lb/>
my campaign pledges and promises. But<lb/>
I am just one officer.<lb/>
Serving all of the students of LC !<lb/>
going to require the combined efforts ol<lb/>
all the executive officers. The SGA ex-<lb/>
ecutive officers need someone to guide<lb/>
them in coordinating efforts. This needs<lb/>
to be someone who is level-headed, com-<lb/>
passionate, and decisive. No. only is<lb/>
David Cook all of these, he is also ex-<lb/>
tremely competent. 1 have confidence in<lb/>
him.<lb/>
1 hope that you will join me in suppor-<lb/>
ting the one candidate that possesses all<lb/>
of the best in leadership qualities re-<lb/>
quired of a SGA president. Displa) your<lb/>
confidence and support tomorrow b<lb/>
voting for David Cook in the SGA<lb/>
presidential run-oft.<lb/>
BECKY 1 Al1 I V<lb/>
Sophomore, Accounting<lb/>
Communication Gap<lb/>
Wednesday. April 7 there is to be a<lb/>
SGA presidential run-off. One can-<lb/>
didate, David Cook, expemlifies the<lb/>
qualities needed for SGA president.<lb/>
During his time in the SGA legislature,<lb/>
David has shown himself to be a hard-<lb/>
working individual. He has the<lb/>
knowledge, expertise and leader shjr<lb/>
necessary to effectively act as SGA presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
David Cook is concerned about the<lb/>
welfare of the students and is dedicated<lb/>
to working for them. He is also concern-<lb/>
ed about the lack of communication bet<lb/>
ween the SGA and the student body, and<lb/>
supports campus wide referenda, to help<lb/>
resolve this. In addition to this Daid<lb/>
supports more minority involvement in<lb/>
the SGA. He is a strong supporter of the<lb/>
arts and realizes how important they are<lb/>
to the university. In short, he wants the<lb/>
best for the student body, and I know he<lb/>
will work his hardest to achieve it.<lb/>
In closing, I want to urge the student<lb/>
body to go out and vote on Wednesday.<lb/>
April 7. This run-off election is just as<lb/>
important to the students as the regular<lb/>
elections are. Make the effort to vote,<lb/>
and vote for someone that cares. Vote<lb/>
David Cook for SGA president.<lb/>
Wednesday April 7.<lb/>
SARAH E.COBLRN<lb/>
Sophomore, English<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view.<lb/>
For example, I propose to install a<lb/>
book rental system which would prevent<lb/>
students from being required to puchase<lb/>
their books. Appalachian State Univer-<lb/>
sity uses a rental system which costs the<lb/>
students $30 per semester for books.<lb/>
Also, the student has the option to buy<lb/>
the book. This will encourage the Stu-<lb/>
dent Supply Store to use the books for<lb/>
several semesters instead of one or two<lb/>
semesters.<lb/>
With the increasing number of girls<lb/>
getting attacked, I feel that more lights<lb/>
should be placed around dorms and<lb/>
other dark areas on ca npus. An escort<lb/>
service should also be put into effect.<lb/>
This and better lighting will reduce the<lb/>
chances of student being attacked on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
In closing, 1 would like to remind<lb/>
everyone that a run-off for SGA presi-<lb/>
dent will be held Wednesday, April 7.<lb/>
1 encourage everyone to vote and to<lb/>
keep in mind the points which 1 have<lb/>
presented.<lb/>
Once again, I am Eric Henderson �<lb/>
your candidate for SGA president.<lb/>
David Cook<lb/>
As you know, run-off elections for the<lb/>
president of SGA will be held tomorrow,<lb/>
April 7. 1 would like to take this oppor-<lb/>
tunity to thank everyone that supported<lb/>
me in the elctions two weeks ago.<lb/>
Because of your support, my campaign<lb/>
has been a great success.<lb/>
During the past month while cam-<lb/>
paigning, many students have stopped<lb/>
me to inform me of various problems on<lb/>
campus and where improvements need<lb/>
to be made. Inadequate lighting in park-<lb/>
ing lots is a major concern of many<lb/>
students. The possibility o' placing a<lb/>
Xerox copying in the Student Supply<lb/>
Store was suggested by several students.<lb/>
Female students arc interested in the for-<lb/>
mulation of an escort service so that<lb/>
crossing campus at night will be safer. I<lb/>
encourage all students to stop me on<lb/>
campus and let me know what they<lb/>
would like to see changed or where im-<lb/>
provements can be made. After all, the<lb/>
SGA is your student government and we<lb/>
need your input!<lb/>
I am not a smooth-talking politician; 1<lb/>
am a concerned student who cares about<lb/>
what happens at this university. 1 am<lb/>
willing and able to dedicate myself to<lb/>
you and the SGA to fulfill the duties and<lb/>
responsibilities of SGA president.<lb/>
Above all, I pledge to you my honesty,<lb/>
sincerity, objectivity, fairness and con-<lb/>
cern. I want to work with you to best<lb/>
represent you so that together we may<lb/>
secure the best possible student govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Thank you for your support tommor-<lb/>
row � vote David Cook for SGA presi-<lb/>
dent!<lb/>
C<lb/>
The<lb/>
Humantl<lb/>
ticipantj<lb/>
mile) trl<lb/>
Greenvif<lb/>
High<lb/>
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last yeai<lb/>
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engagin<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057472_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 6. 1982<lb/>
III<lb/>
INS<lb/>
h'i'r<lb/>
I<lb/>
P<lb/>
fe id<lb/>
h" ne<lb/>
Urn<lb/>
elish<lb/>
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tor-<lb/>
It hat<lb/>
rr. I<lb/>
on<lb/>
im-<lb/>
the<lb/>
vse<lb/>
in; I<lb/>
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am<lb/>
It to<lb/>
and<lb/>
lent.<lb/>
lest).<lb/>
icon-<lb/>
best<lb/>
may<lb/>
ern-<lb/>
mor-<lb/>
uesi-<lb/>
CROP Walk Said Successful<lb/>
The 1982 "CROPWalk for<lb/>
Humanity" drew mor than 100 par-<lb/>
ticipants for the 20-kilometer (12.4<lb/>
mile) trek through the streets of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
High winds prevailed throughout<lb/>
most of the walk, which had con-<lb/>
siderably fewer participants than<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
Sister Helen Shondell of the<lb/>
Greenville-ECU Hunger Coalition<lb/>
called the walk a success and thank-<lb/>
ed everyone who participated in the<lb/>
17th annual event.<lb/>
No figures are yet available on the<lb/>
funds raised because of many dif-<lb/>
ferent walkers, sponsors and<lb/>
donators involved and an invariably<lb/>
long collection process.<lb/>
Sister Shondell asked that the<lb/>
funds be deposited at Wachovia<lb/>
Bank and Trust in the Walk for<lb/>
Humanity account or brought to the<lb/>
Newman Center on 10th Street.<lb/>
Collection tables will be set up on<lb/>
campus latr this week.<lb/>
Greenville police were positioned<lb/>
at various locations alonf the Walk<lb/>
route to stop trattic and help with<lb/>
directions.<lb/>
ECU nursing student Katie Gillis,<lb/>
who coordinated first aid for the<lb/>
Walk, said "nothing major" was<lb/>
needed in medical care except<lb/>
"pretty many had blisters She<lb/>
also reported that "not many drop-<lb/>
ped out<lb/>
Ed King, coordinator of the<lb/>
CROP Church World Service en-<lb/>
couraged people to carry signs and<lb/>
bring out the many issues that are<lb/>
the related of hunger. King blamed<lb/>
increases in military spending as one<lb/>
major cause.<lb/>
Many walkers wore T-shirts<lb/>
printed especially for the event that<lb/>
read "Put a Little Heart in Your<lb/>
Soul" and had a small heart in a<lb/>
footprint.<lb/>
The walk ended with a sandwich<lb/>
lunch at the Baptist Student Center<lb/>
and a sigh of relief for all � par-<lb/>
ticularly ECU student Karen Akers<lb/>
and Peter West, who were the first<lb/>
man and woman finishers.<lb/>
Akers raised $450, which was the<lb/>
most pledged for any walker.<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/>
April 6 and 7<lb/>
TUES APR1L6 WED APRIL7<lb/>
Brewster B103 Brewster B104 � 9 a.m p.m.<lb/>
10 a.m4 p.m. Brewster D102 � 2 p.m. 4 p.m.<lb/>
Jett And The Blackhearts<lb/>
Receiving Favorable Reviews<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
York Times and Village Voice.<lb/>
Robert Palmer of the Sew York<lb/>
Times wrote about Jett and her per-<lb/>
formance on stage: "Energetic and<lb/>
engaging  aggressive attack  ap-<lb/>
pealing melodies  Ms. Jett pro-<lb/>
vides a commanding visual focus<lb/>
According to The Fridav Morning<lb/>
Quarterback, I Love Rock TV" Roll<lb/>
is currently the most-requested<lb/>
album in the country.<lb/>
Earlier this year, Joan Jett and<lb/>
The Blackhearts replaced the Go-<lb/>
Go's as the opening act for the<lb/>
Police. Record sell-outs for those<lb/>
concerts became a nightly event.<lb/>
Handicap Awareness Week<lb/>
Activities And Events Slated<lb/>
To All Honor,<lb/>
Service, and Social Groups<lb/>
If your organization is interested in being<lb/>
represented in the yearbook, please call<lb/>
757-6501 or 758-8015. Pictures will be taken<lb/>
through April 15. Contact us as soon as<lb/>
possible!<lb/>
BTSWOMJl<lb/>
104 Red Banks Rd. (Behind Shoney's) 756-6000<lb/>
Tuesday Night �<lb/>
ECU NIGHT<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
measles) are also available in the<lb/>
ECU Infirmary. The audiology<lb/>
screening will be conducted from 9<lb/>
a.m. to 3 p.m. in room one, and the<lb/>
rubella screening is from 2 p.m. to 5<lb/>
p.m. in room one. Rubella frequent-<lb/>
ly occurs among college age young<lb/>
adults and can be especially<lb/>
dangerous to pregnant women and<lb/>
their babies.<lb/>
"Beep Ball a revised version of<lb/>
baseball for the blind will be played<lb/>
at the bottom of College Hill Drive<lb/>
at noon til 2 p.m. on Tuesday, and<lb/>
all are welcome to join in this in-<lb/>
teresting experience.<lb/>
Other events will include a perfor-<lb/>
mance by the "Caswell Choir"<lb/>
from the Kinston Caswell Center, in<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium from 7:30 to 8<lb/>
p.m. on Tuesdsay. This will be im-<lb/>
mediately followed by a film festival<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Also to be held are a tour of<lb/>
Joyner Library's Media Center<lb/>
Study Room, a wheelchair basket-<lb/>
ball game, various workshops and a<lb/>
"concluding conference open to<lb/>
the public at 3 p.m. on Thursday in<lb/>
Room 248 of Mendenhall.<lb/>
The final event of the week's pro-<lb/>
gram will be a "free performance"<lb/>
by ECU's "Fantasy" drama troupe.<lb/>
"Fantasy" has been recognized na-<lb/>
tionally for its "song-to-sign" per-<lb/>
formances. They can be seen in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Monday's program included the<lb/>
film "A Different Approach<lb/>
which dealt with the lighter pro-<lb/>
blems of the "attitudinal barriers"<lb/>
that frequently surround handicap-<lb/>
ped people.<lb/>
Interim Chancellor John Howell<lb/>
introduced N.C. State Liaison for<lb/>
the International Year of Disabled<lb/>
persons, Chet Mottershead. who<lb/>
gave the keynote address.<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
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Support the<lb/>
VOu e put a lot of time<lb/>
and care into your Senior<lb/>
how to make it your best<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
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Phone 758-0327<lb/>
Cross Green Street Bridge<lb/>
Take left ot 1st Light<lb/>
Located one block down on left<lb/>
JUST $1.00 wID includes<lb/>
Skate Rental<lb/>
7:00-10:00<lb/>
"Every Friday &amp; Saturday Night<lb/>
ECU Students are admitted for<lb/>
JUST $2.00 including Skate Rental<lb/>
Ae at Morgan Printers.Inc<lb/>
rea.ze your poste: ���<lb/>
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MORGAN PRINTERS INC<lb/>
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Olympic free weights, sauna, whirlpool and locker<lb/>
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Call and ask about our pro-rated student rates and<lb/>
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Call and schedule a<lb/>
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HOURS OF OPERATION:<lb/>
MonThurs. � 10 a.m10 p.m. Friday � 10 a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday � 10 a.m5 p.m. Sunday � 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
COME ON OUT<lb/>
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� Limit one per person per day<lb/>
1<lb/>
Henderson States Views<lb/>
On SGA Run-Off<lb/>
Eric Henderson,<lb/>
ECU junior, faces a<lb/>
run-off election for<lb/>
SGA President on<lb/>
April 7th. The<lb/>
21-year-old chemistry<lb/>
major has served as<lb/>
president of both his<lb/>
freshman and<lb/>
sophomore class.<lb/>
With three years ex-<lb/>
perience in the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government<lb/>
Association, Hender-<lb/>
son states he feels he<lb/>
brings the most ex-<lb/>
perience to the office<lb/>
he seeks.<lb/>
More student input<lb/>
into the college is one<lb/>
of Henderson's goals<lb/>
as president. He adds<lb/>
that student services,<lb/>
SRA, Panhellenic,<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity<lb/>
Council, arts and<lb/>
minority groups<lb/>
should be positions of<lb/>
the President's<lb/>
cabinet.<lb/>
As SGA President,<lb/>
Henderson wishes to<lb/>
see the initiation of a<lb/>
book rental system,<lb/>
reduction of drop-add<lb/>
lines, and solutions to<lb/>
campus lighting pro-<lb/>
blems.<lb/>
Eric has served on<lb/>
the Executive Council<lb/>
of the SGA and was<lb/>
awarded last year for<lb/>
best legislation. He is<lb/>
deeply interested in<lb/>
the university and the<lb/>
Student Government,<lb/>
and hopes to bring<lb/>
benefit to the office<lb/>
through his involve-<lb/>
ment and experience.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057472_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
APRIl 6, 1982<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
'Show Boat' A<lb/>
Musical Worth<lb/>
The Build Up<lb/>
B KATHYWEYLER<lb/>
sitff Wnier<lb/>
Sightseers sing and dance on the<lb/>
Photo Bv GARY PATTFRSON<lb/>
Midway Plaisance at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair in this scene from Show Boat.<lb/>
The long-awaited grand opening<lb/>
of McGinnis Theatre at ECU took<lb/>
place on April Fool's Day, Thurs-<lb/>
day April 1, with the first public<lb/>
performance of Hammerstein and<lb/>
Kern's Show Hoar, but there was no<lb/>
evidence of trickery in the newly<lb/>
remodeled theatre � only a packed<lb/>
house filled with excitement and an-<lb/>
ticipation.<lb/>
When the curtain rose, the crowd<lb/>
was not disappointed. A stunning<lb/>
panorama of beautiful sets, lights,<lb/>
costumes and chorus met the eye<lb/>
and continued to do so throughout<lb/>
the musical. Edgar R. Loessin,<lb/>
Mavis Ray, Gregory Buch, Joseph<lb/>
Distephano, David F. Downing and<lb/>
Patrice Alexander (with the aid of<lb/>
Eves-Brooks Costume Company)<lb/>
are deserving of a standing oation<lb/>
for their contributions to the<lb/>
musical in the areas of direction,<lb/>
choreography and musical staging,<lb/>
scenic design, music direction,<lb/>
lighting design and costume design.<lb/>
Show Boat, for those of you who<lb/>
are unfamiliar with the storv, is bas-<lb/>
ed on a novel by Edna Ferber, in-<lb/>
spired by a real showboat from our<lb/>
own Washington, N.C. The story<lb/>
centers on the problems and<lb/>
pleasures of the performers and<lb/>
crew on Captain Andy's "Cotton<lb/>
Blossom The audience sees not<lb/>
only their story but the entertain-<lb/>
ment they present as well, creating<lb/>
almost a play-within-a-play effect.<lb/>
Buch's set designs take this into con-<lb/>
sideration and never quite let us<lb/>
forget that we are watching a play,<lb/>
and a play about actors and singers<lb/>
at that.<lb/>
In fact, the sets are one of the best<lb/>
features of the ECU production of<lb/>
Show Boat. Sometimes elaborate,<lb/>
sometimes amazingly simple, they<lb/>
are always effective and remarkably<lb/>
well done � the best this reviewer<lb/>
has ever seen in any college or<lb/>
university production anywhere.<lb/>
But the sets are only part of the<lb/>
production. Life and realism are ad-<lb/>
ded by creative ligh'ing (a sunset is<lb/>
beautifully simulated t the first act)<lb/>
and, of course, the cast.<lb/>
Against the background of an ex-<lb/>
See SPLASHY, Page 7<lb/>
Weisberg Could Play His Magic<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
Tim Weisberg is not a stereotypical rock musician.<lb/>
The stereotype drinks and smokes heavily (possibly il-<lb/>
legally), is uneducated and basically abuses his body un-<lb/>
til collapse at an early age. None of these fits Weisberg.<lb/>
"1 was a chemistry major. I ended up with a<lb/>
bachelors in cultural anthropology, a masters in<lb/>
psychology and I got accepted to Berkeley for a PHD<lb/>
program in psychology but what happened was that in<lb/>
the middle of graduate school all of a sudden it dawned<lb/>
on me that I loved to perform. That's what did it. The<lb/>
audiences did it. 1 started jammin' while 1 was about a<lb/>
sophomore in college says Weisberg.<lb/>
"1 started in Junior High school basically as a flute<lb/>
player in the orchestra and played in the marching<lb/>
bands and played in a couple of Rose parades. That's<lb/>
about all flute players end up geting to do<lb/>
Weisberg is also very health conscious. His favorite<lb/>
activities are beach volleyball and biking (the former he<lb/>
once did with Wilt Chamberlain, the latter about 200<lb/>
miles per ueek when at home). He once did San Fran-<lb/>
cisco to L.A. in three and a half days (about a 400 mile<lb/>
trip). He neither drinks nor smokes.<lb/>
But his music is his first priority. Still, he expresses<lb/>
uncertainty about just what his music is. "I don't know<lb/>
what it is. It's a classical flute player (myself) and four<lb/>
or five musicians, a drummer from the Dave Mason<lb/>
Band, a keyboard player from Manhatten Transfer, a<lb/>
bass player from various rock and roll groups and the<lb/>
same with percussion and guitar. So 1 don't know what<lb/>
it is. I mean it's pretty energetic and by the same token<lb/>
some of the stuff is really rnellow and sensitive<lb/>
He is a determined performer also. Sound checks<lb/>
Music<lb/>
don't end until everything has the best sound it possibly<lb/>
can, which is difficult when you are playing different<lb/>
clubs every night.<lb/>
He is also unsure of just what he would consider sue<lb/>
cess in the music business. "After 10 years and 13<lb/>
albums I don't think that my definition of success is<lb/>
static. I think that everytime I achieve some success my<lb/>
goal keeps going further up so I'll probably never reach<lb/>
it. I think it's like a carrot out in front of me and I think<lb/>
that something inside of me keeps it just out of my reach<lb/>
and maybe that's good becasue I'll always keep trying to<lb/>
improve and reach for something that is slightly unat-<lb/>
tainable<lb/>
Tours Always Prove Grueling<lb/>
He tours extensively and the tours are grueling. The<lb/>
tour which brought him and his band to Greenville's At-<lb/>
tic night club began in Miami, went to Fort Lauderdale,<lb/>
to Greenville, to Blowing Rock, to Raleigh, to Clemson,<lb/>
S.C to Atlanta, GA, and to Gainsveille, FL with no<lb/>
breaks or nights off scheduled. The next day they flew<lb/>
back to LA for 10 days and after that they began a four<lb/>
week tour in the Midwest.<lb/>
"What's a personal life?" he replies to a question<lb/>
about the tour's effect. "I like touring and I love to per-<lb/>
form. It's difficult sometimes. The hardest part is when<lb/>
you're tired  if you get sick or you get the flu or<lb/>
something (which he did in Atlantabefore you have a<lb/>
show to do They did do the show in Atlanta (two ac-<lb/>
tually) and Weisberg's solo's recieved standing ovations<lb/>
in both shows. No matter what prevails, quality perfor-<lb/>
mances are brought forth.<lb/>
"I like to get up and perform and I'll do this probably<lb/>
all my life  I like all the positive reinforcement<lb/>
His music being misunderstood is a problem that<lb/>
bothers Weisberg. Most of the music that he has record-<lb/>
ed is instrumental, and by many radio stations that<lb/>
classifies U as jazz. But W eisberg does not like the jazz<lb/>
label. Though he is unsure just what the music is, as<lb/>
traditional genres go, he does not classify it as jazz and<lb/>
forbids promoters from using the term to promote his<lb/>
concerts.<lb/>
And what new directions will the industry be headed<lb/>
in? "I haven't the faintest idea . . . and I don't think<lb/>
anybody else does either<lb/>
Double Feature Looks<lb/>
At The Sporting Life<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
si�ff W rtWT<lb/>
From Harold Lloyd's The Freshman (1924) to<lb/>
Sylvester Stallone's Rocky series, athletics have been a<lb/>
popular subject for film. While boxing, probably"<lb/>
because it is such a simple sport and therefore easy to<lb/>
See BASEBALL, Page 8<lb/>
'VictorVictoria'<lb/>
Brash New Film Reminiscent<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
M�f( Wriltr<lb/>
Florida, late 1920 's . . . a speeding motorboat bearing<lb/>
Jour strange passengers: three female musicians and one<lb/>
elderly male millionaire. Sugar (Marilyn Monroe)<lb/>
realizes that Josephine is not really a she but a he, Joe<lb/>
I Tony Curtis). Daphne confesses to Osgood (Joe E.<lb/>
Brown), the aging lecher who has been ardently pursu-<lb/>
ing her, that she is also a he, Jerry (Jack Lemmon). Says<lb/>
Osgood: "Well, nobody's perfect. " Fade to black on<lb/>
the final scene in Billv Wilder's Some Like It Hot<lb/>
(1958).<lb/>
. . . Fade in on Blake Edward's new film, VictorVic-<lb/>
toria. Paris, early 1930's  the triumphant singing<lb/>
debut of Victoria, sexy soprano. The act over, she<lb/>
reveals herself to be a he, Victor. Later, he confesses :o<lb/>
a smitten admirer, King Marchan (James Garner), that<lb/>
he is really is a she, Victoria (Julie Andrews). Says King,<lb/>
as he kisses her, "I don't care what you are<lb/>
VictorVictoria, now playing at the Buccaneer<lb/>
Theatre in Greenville, is the cinematic descendant of the<lb/>
classic Some I,ike It Hot. Like it's predecessor, VV is a<lb/>
very funny farce that mixes slapstick with sly commen-<lb/>
tary on sexual identities and attitudes. Like it's<lb/>
ancestor, VV introduces stereotypes including dumb<lb/>
blonds, macho men on the make, and Chicago hoods,<lb/>
then pushes them into a whirlwind of sexual reversal<lb/>
and confusion. Unlike Some I ike It Hot, whose jazz-<lb/>
inspired title Edwards pays homage to in a production<lb/>
number entitled "Hot Jazz this new film Lts it all<lb/>
hang out, at least out of the closet.<lb/>
While the 1958 film could only hint at homosexuality,<lb/>
and even then only at the very end, VictorVictoria<lb/>
openly explores alternative lifestyles from the opening<lb/>
scene, as Toddy (Robert Preston), performer at a seedy<lb/>
gay nightclub, awakens to find his male lover leaving<lb/>
him. Alone, Toddy soon finds company in the person of<lb/>
Victoria, a penniless singer he takes pity on. Seeing her<lb/>
in his former love's suit, Toddy has a brainstorm: pass<lb/>
Victoria off as a Polish count turned transvestite enter-<lb/>
tainer, producing the world's first female female imper-<lb/>
sonator.<lb/>
Cinema-wise, it's no surprise that the ruse works, and<lb/>
VictorVictoria becomes an instant star. The surprises<lb/>
are in store for King, who is first attracted to the pretty<lb/>
young performer, then dismayed to find out she's<lb/>
acutally a man, then delighted to discover her true<lb/>
gender. Next, he's baffled, by how to uphold his<lb/>
machismo image while remaining what the world thinks<lb/>
is a man.<lb/>
Garner gives his long-practiced, laid-back he-man<lb/>
routine. Preston is perfect in his patented highly<lb/>
theatrical way, equalling his doped-up Dr. Feelgood in<lb/>
S.O.B Edward's last film. Andrews is fine in her dual<lb/>
role (those who saw S.O.B in which she also appeared,<lb/>
will want to know if she goes topless again � 'fraid not,<lb/>
folks). Alex Karras gives a surprising performance as<lb/>
Squash, King's beefy bodyguard who admits to being<lb/>
gay after mistakenly believing his boss is. About the on-<lb/>
ly stereotype that is not destroyed is the numbskulled<lb/>
blonde broad, well-played by Lesley Ann Warren.<lb/>
Edwards wrote and produced Victor Victoria, and<lb/>
directed it with a flair for farce finely tuned through<lb/>
years of practice: the Pink Panther series, "10 S.O.B.<lb/>
He is at the top of his form with this film, deftly infus-<lb/>
ing slapstick with some substance, provoking thought as<lb/>
well as belly-laughs.<lb/>
VictorVictoria is not quite as incisive or<lb/>
sophisticated as Some Like It Hot � especially, it lacks<lb/>
the other's climactic twist, substituting instead a funny<lb/>
but unoriginal drag queen routine. Nevertheless, Ed-<lb/>
wards' entertaining investigation of The Games People<lb/>
Play is one of the best American film comedies in recent<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Runaway Jett Rapidly Approaching Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Leather-rocker Joan Jett and her band The Blackhearts will appear in concert at Minges Coliseum on Sun-<lb/>
day, April 25 at 8 p.m. An opening act has not yet been announced. The date marks the only area<lb/>
pearance of the petite Ms. Jett, a former member of the devastating all-girl group The Runaway ml k<lb/>
presently perched atop (he Billboard charts with her smash single "I Love Rock W Roll " Tkli� , ITn.<lb/>
sale next Tuesday at the Central Ticket Office. Mendenhall Student Center as well as all area outlet. Ami<lb/>
Records and both Record Bar locations in Greenville. (Major credit cards will be accented 1 TiTk'Ju !<lb/>
specially priced at $6 for ECU students and $8 for the general public - admission the eveidna of ihfhow<lb/>
will be $8. The concert is being sponsored by the Student Union Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
<lb/>
k<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057472_0007"/><lb/>
LCAt0�OG jgOUT Cocc�rfe- ThC HaP WH<lb/>
6V QAMW AWl5<lb/>
THfcl ASI C ARO! INIAN<lb/>
APR II 6. I WO<lb/>
CGfA�T1t Sk)C�<lb/>
CAST W��K <lb/>
(M0�a);M0 THAT'S<lb/>
mmw!<lb/>
Splashy New Start For Theatre<lb/>
l onlinued Krom I. 6<lb/>
cellent chorus, the pun<lb/>
ers stand oui<lb/>
well Captain Andy,<lb/>
played bv Dick St<lb/>
 is perhaps the<lb/>
bes man of the<lb/>
�up with a strong,<lb/>
asani voice and ital<lb/>
presence on the stage<lb/>
His stage-wife, Parthy<lb/>
v Hawkes (Karen<lb/>
I ana Gunther) brings<lb/>
force and a touch oi<lb/>
med to her role as<lb/>
owboat captain's<lb/>
- - - ggish be:<lb/>
I he main cha<lb/>
Viom Boat arc (<lb/>
ndy's daughter,<lb/>
Magnolia, and her<lb/>
� -hand, the<lb/>
gamblei Gay lord<lb/>
Ravenal. I a net P.<lb/>
Noyes and I redeiick<lb/>
Johnson portray the<lb/>
young couple and both<lb/>
are to be applauded foi<lb/>
then fine singing<lb/>
voices, though Ms.<lb/>
Noyes' speaking vo<lb/>
wa- occasionally<lb/>
almost inaudible in the<lb/>
back oi the theatre.<lb/>
Ms. Noyes brings a<lb/>
charming naivete and<lb/>
outhtulness to the role<lb/>
ol Magnolia, but, un-<lb/>
?rtunately, a com<lb/>
parable compliment<lb/>
cannot be given to Mi.<lb/>
Johnson 1 hough he<lb/>
looks the part ot a<lb/>
dashing river gamblei<lb/>
able to win the heart oi<lb/>
innocent Miss Hawkes.<lb/>
he seems to do very lit-<lb/>
tle on si age except<lb/>
stand there Perhaps<lb/>
because ol this, the<lb/>
relationship between<lb/>
the iMi is never quite<lb/>
believable. Indeed, as<lb/>
he woos Magnolia dur-<lb/>
ing the song "Only<lb/>
Make Believe he is<lb/>
singing directly to the<lb/>
audience most ol the<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Ihe i eal show -<lb/>
stealers are I ori Mahl<lb/>
and Rodney Freeze as<lb/>
I Ihe and I rank (later<lb/>
Schultz and Schultz), a<lb/>
singing-dancing<lb/>
d namic duo. With Ms<lb/>
Mahl's perky Bet<lb/>
nadette Peters-style<lb/>
cute and squeaky-sex)<lb/>
voice and Ml I teee's<lb/>
exceptional dance<lb/>
abilities, these two real-<lb/>
K should consider a<lb/>
professional team-up<lb/>
off-stage as well.<lb/>
Also worthy of men-<lb/>
tion are several actors<lb/>
in smaller, but never-<lb/>
theless important parts.<lb/>
Jackie Vn. Games br-<lb/>
ings a warm voice and<lb/>
gentle manner to the<lb/>
tragic showboat star<lb/>
Julie Laverne, and<lb/>
Lyndon R. Fuller<lb/>
deserves praise for his<lb/>
line performance as<lb/>
Julie's husband, Steve.<lb/>
Furthermore, the<lb/>
two black leads, Anita<lb/>
R Beamon as Queenie<lb/>
and Anton T. Wesley<lb/>
as Joe. deserve to be<lb/>
commended for bring-<lb/>
ing dignity and realism<lb/>
to their roles. In the<lb/>
world of Show Boat,<lb/>
the 1880s to 1920s,<lb/>
racism runs rampant,<lb/>
and Queenie and Joe<lb/>
could have easily been<lb/>
portrayed as offensive<lb/>
Aunt Jemima and Un-<lb/>
cle Tom types.<lb/>
Thankfully, Ms.<lb/>
Beamon and Mr.<lb/>
Wesley did not allow<lb/>
this to happen.<lb/>
All too often, the<lb/>
music behind the<lb/>
singers, so to speak, is<lb/>
overlooked � especial-<lb/>
ly in non-professional<lb/>
productions where it is<lb/>
sometimes best<lb/>
overlooked. However,<lb/>
this is not the case with<lb/>
Show Boars orchestra.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Coalition for Better Student Government<lb/>
Urges You to Vote For<lb/>
91 �IH�<lb/>
SGA PRESIDENT<lb/>
RUN-OFF ELECTIONS �APRIL7, 1982<lb/>
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mraTe'coupon<lb/>
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Coupon expires April 10th<lb/>
on all orders $10.00<lb/>
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M<lb/>
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Supermarket, Inc.<lb/>
Though small, they<lb/>
produce a marvelous<lb/>
sound. The interludes<lb/>
between songs were<lb/>
especially well-done �<lb/>
effective but unob-<lb/>
trusive. So here's a<lb/>
round of applause for<lb/>
the people in the or-<lb/>
chestra pit � unseen,<lb/>
perhaps, but not<lb/>
forgotten.<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre,<lb/>
then, has had a truly<lb/>
grand opening with Us<lb/>
first production.<lb/>
-I I.it tie Hit Xtra (Xtra)<lb/>
tra lra lead sinter Kdle Jeffreys and bassist lac jhu art shown<lb/>
during Ihe hand's second set at II' Music Hall last Wednesday.<lb/>
211 Jarvis St.<lb/>
2 Blocks from ECU<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057472_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 6. 1982<lb/>
Baseball Film &amp; Comic Hockey<lb/>
Epic 'Slapshot' Are Teamed Up<lb/>
t ontinued From P. 6<lb/>
film, has been by far<lb/>
the sport most fre-<lb/>
quently transferred to<lb/>
celluloid, nearly every<lb/>
organized physical ac-<lb/>
tiit has been tackled<lb/>
by Hollywood.<lb/>
Tomorrow night we<lb/>
will all have an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to see the in-<lb/>
dustry's best sports<lb/>
films, Bang the Drum<lb/>
Slowly (tuned to coin-<lb/>
cide with the opening<lb/>
o f baseball's n e w<lb/>
season) and Slapshot<lb/>
(coming neatl on the<lb/>
heels of pro hockey's<lb/>
regular season). Hani;<lb/>
the Drum Slowly is the<lb/>
fust half of the Student<lb/>
Union Films Commit-<lb/>
tee's "Sporting Life"<lb/>
double feature and will<lb/>
be shown at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Slapshot will follow at<lb/>
9 p.m. Both films will<lb/>
be shown in the Hen<lb/>
dn Theatre and ad-<lb/>
mission is b II) and ae-<lb/>
tiit cards oi MSC<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
Hum; I he Drum<lb/>
Slowly is John Han-<lb/>
cock's 1973 visualiza-<lb/>
tion oi Mark Harris'<lb/>
1955 noel about a<lb/>
dim wit ted. mediocre<lb/>
member ol the New<lb/>
York Mammoths, the<lb/>
butt of all his team-<lb/>
mate's jokes, who is<lb/>
slow I dvine of<lb/>
Hodgkin's disease. On-<lb/>
ly the Mammoth's star<lb/>
pitcher knows that fatal<lb/>
fact, and he strives to<lb/>
keep it secret and to<lb/>
comfort the stricken<lb/>
catcher. Eventually the<lb/>
entire team rallies<lb/>
around the poor fellow<lb/>
i n a display of<lb/>
brotherhood and sup-<lb/>
port .<lb/>
Someone who should<lb/>
know, Jim Bout on,<lb/>
former New York<lb/>
Yankees pithcer turned<lb/>
writer, wrote that<lb/>
though the dying man's<lb/>
thick-skinned and<lb/>
thick-skulled team-<lb/>
mates would likely have<lb/>
remained insensitive to<lb/>
him even after the<lb/>
knew the truth, the film<lb/>
is highly effective in its<lb/>
e v oca t ion of the<lb/>
baseball mileu:<lb/>
"So the storv is cor-<lb/>
ny and the players"<lb/>
reaction to death may<lb/>
not be a quite true, but<lb/>
Hang The Drum Slowly<lb/>
works because of the<lb/>
marvelous perfor-<lb/>
mances bv Robert<lb/>
DeNiro as Pearson, the<lb/>
dving catcher, and<lb/>
Michael Moriarty as his<lb/>
friend Henry VYiggen,<lb/>
the pitcher<lb/>
While the above film<lb/>
is about athletes who<lb/>
overcome their natural<lb/>
harshness, Slapshot<lb/>
concerns sportsmesn<lb/>
who deliberately<lb/>
become as brutal as<lb/>
possible. Paul Newman<lb/>
stars as Reggie Dunlop,<lb/>
the aging player-coach<lb/>
of the third-rate<lb/>
Charlestown Chiefs ice<lb/>
hockey team. To save<lb/>
his team he urges the<lb/>
once clean-playing men<lb/>
to raise hell and smash<lb/>
heads on the playing<lb/>
field.<lb/>
Dunlop's painful<lb/>
plan works, of course:<lb/>
their highly violent and<lb/>
eccentric playing<lb/>
methods win the Chiefs<lb/>
games and audiences.<lb/>
As Vincent Canbv o<lb/>
the ?' ork Times<lb/>
once put it, "Slapshot<lb/>
dramatizes the age-old<lb/>
contest between good<lb/>
and evil as clean versus<lb/>
dirty, and its dirty that<lb/>
wins hands (and pants)<lb/>
down Expertly<lb/>
directed by George Roy<lb/>
Hill Hutch C assidy and<lb/>
the Sundance hid. The<lb/>
Sting), Slapshot is<lb/>
athletically accurate,<lb/>
hilarious, thought-<lb/>
provoking, very violent<lb/>
and very profane. Can-<lb/>
by discussed the heavy<lb/>
use of profanity in the<lb/>
script by Nancy Dowd:<lb/>
"She knows the<lb/>
favorite word that can<lb/>
be used as a noun, verb<lb/>
or adjective, sometimes<lb/>
all in one sentence. She<lb/>
also knows the favorite<lb/>
sexual image that<lb/>
haunts the language of<lb/>
these hockey players as<lb/>
if all living had been<lb/>
reduced either to com-<lb/>
mitting a sexual act or<lb/>
to preventing one,<lb/>
which is more or less a<lb/>
reflection of what the<lb/>
guys are doing out<lb/>
there on the ice with<lb/>
their hockey sticks and<lb/>
the puck. If you don't<lb/>
invade the enemy ter-<lb/>
ritory, the enemy will<lb/>
invade yours<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 Sleward-McGuire Brouse Abouts<lb/>
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Ec ol these advertised items is required to be readily available to sale a<lb/>
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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT , APRIL 10, AT AAP IN GREENVILLE, N C<lb/>
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ASSORTED<lb/>
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2 big I<lb/>
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SUNSHINE<lb/>
Krispy Crackers<lb/>
16 oz.<lb/>
tjyy.?PY p<lb/>
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AMBURGER � SAUSAGE � PEPPERONL<lb/>
COMBINATION<lb/>
Jeno'c Pizza<lb/>
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2 Litre<lb/>
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FIRM FRESH�LOW IN CALORIES<lb/>
California<lb/>
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US. 1 EASTERN GROWN<lb/>
Russet Potatoes<lb/>
fast<lb/>
in the I<lb/>
off a<lb/>
forma<lb/>
Mahnl<lb/>
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did to<lb/>
Baud,<lb/>
forma<lb/>
"( ;<lb/>
well<lb/>
thing<lb/>
�a on<lb/>
games<lb/>
days !<lb/>
we di<lb/>
stretel<lb/>
game'<lb/>
begin<lb/>
with<lb/>
pone(<lb/>
the I<lb/>
tual<lb/>
wrap<lb/>
Kit<lb/>
Butlei<lb/>
eai<lb/>
hits fi<lb/>
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ching<lb/>
team<lb/>
than t<lb/>
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,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057472_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
ECU Holds<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
APRIL 6, 1982<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
Off Tri<lb/>
Host Heels<lb/>
East Carolina picked up five runs<lb/>
in the first two innings and then held<lb/>
off a two-home run, four-rbi per-<lb/>
formance by Catawba's Ken<lb/>
Mahnken for a 9-6 win at Harr-<lb/>
ington Field Friday afternoon<lb/>
The victory pushed the Pirates'<lb/>
record up to 18-6 on the season but<lb/>
did totally impress head coach Hal<lb/>
Baird, who termed his team's per-<lb/>
formance as "lackluster<lb/>
"Catawba swung the bats very<lb/>
well he said. "The only good<lb/>
thing I can say about it is that we<lb/>
won.<lb/>
"We've really got to get our act<lb/>
together. We have a number of<lb/>
games coming up in the next few<lb/>
days that could kill us if we play like<lb/>
we did (today). It's the toughest<lb/>
stretch of the season. Many of these<lb/>
games are on the road and against<lb/>
good people<lb/>
That stretch was supposed to<lb/>
begin this past Saturday, but a game<lb/>
with James Madison was post-<lb/>
poned due to rain. The Pirates face<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
tonight at Harrington Field.<lb/>
Catawba used four homer, two<lb/>
by Ken Mahnken, to earn an even-<lb/>
tual 5-5 tie before East Carolina<lb/>
Ncored three runs in the seventh to<lb/>
wrap up the win.<lb/>
Kirk Parsons relieved Chubby<lb/>
Butler in the second inning and<lb/>
earned his third victory against no<lb/>
losses as the Pirates banged out 10<lb/>
hits for nine earned runs.<lb/>
Baird said he felt Catawba's pit-<lb/>
ching wasn't that strong and his<lb/>
team should have scored more runs<lb/>
than they did. "We didn't execute<lb/>
he pointed out, "and we missed<lb/>
signals. Had we played a team with<lb/>
a couple of more horses, we would<lb/>
have gotten beaten<lb/>
Catawba forged ahead in the first<lb/>
inning when Mahnken hit his first<lb/>
homer over the right-center field<lb/>
fence for a 1-0 lead that could have<lb/>
been more if not for second<lb/>
baseman Mike Sorrell's fine play on<lb/>
a grounder by Rick Izze that was<lb/>
followed by a double.<lb/>
The Pirates tied the game in the<lb/>
bottom of the inning when, with one<lb/>
out, David Wells walked and scored<lb/>
when John Hallow banged a dou-<lb/>
ble. It was his 12th double of the<lb/>
season, only two short of the record<lb/>
14 by Sonny Wooten.<lb/>
The Indians rallied in the next in-<lb/>
ning, though, scoring once alter<lb/>
Greg Stadther walked and stole se-<lb/>
cond. Terry Radford then singled ro<lb/>
right with two ou and a single by<lb/>
Mahnken scored Stadther for a 2-1<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
East Carolina then bounced back,<lb/>
scoring four times in the second for<lb/>
a 5-2 lead. With two out, Ricky<lb/>
Nicols was hit by a pitch and stole<lb/>
second, bringing up Kelly Robinette<lb/>
who singled him in. Robert Wells<lb/>
walked and scored along with<lb/>
Robinette when Sorrell tripled to<lb/>
center field. Sorrell crossed on the<lb/>
plate on a double by David Wells.<lb/>
But Catawba again rallied to tie<lb/>
the game at 5-5 after a third-inning<lb/>
homer by Charles Beatty and two<lb/>
more runs in the fourth. With two<lb/>
outs, Radford reached first on an<lb/>
error and was driven home by<lb/>
Mahnken's second homer of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The Pirates finally took the lead<lb/>
for good in the seventh, scoring<lb/>
three runs. David Wells led off with<lb/>
a walk, and Todd Evans singled.<lb/>
Todd Hendley followed with<lb/>
another hit, scoring Wells. Jay Car-<lb/>
rawayalso singled, and Robinette<lb/>
slammed a two-run double for a 8-5<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
Stadther's eight-inning home run<lb/>
for Catawba made the score 8-6.<lb/>
The Pirates scored the last run of<lb/>
the afternoon when Evans reached<lb/>
first base on a field's choice and ad-<lb/>
vanced on a wild pitch. He scored<lb/>
after Hendley singled to center.<lb/>
David Wells, Evans, Robinette<lb/>
and Hendley had two hits for East<lb/>
Carolina. Mahnken and Stadther<lb/>
added three and two, respectively,<lb/>
for the Indians, who are now 6-8 on<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
East Carolina's contest with<lb/>
North Carolina begin tonight at 7<lb/>
p.m. The Pirates travel to North<lb/>
Carolina State for a double-header<lb/>
Wednesday, beginning at 1 p.m.<lb/>
In the top photo, ECU'S Rkky Nichols speeds down the first-base line in an attempt to beat out an infield hit<lb/>
in the 9-6 win over Catawba. Jay Carraway swings away in the bottom photo while a teammate takes his lead<lb/>
off first. (Photos by David Williams)<lb/>
Lady Pirates Big<lb/>
Hit A t Charlotte<lb/>
Women Upset UNC-C<lb/>
Tough ACC<lb/>
Sweeps Past<lb/>
Home ECU<lb/>
The East Carolina men's tennis<lb/>
team met a strong Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College squad Monday afternoon,<lb/>
coming out on the short end of an<lb/>
8-1 score.<lb/>
The Pirates are now 8-3 for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The East Carolina women<lb/>
defeated a powerful UNC-Charlotte<lb/>
squad Friday afternoon, 5-4, after<lb/>
splitting the singles and taking the<lb/>
number one and three doubles.<lb/>
The win enabled the Lady Pirates<lb/>
to push their season record to 5-1<lb/>
while the Lady 49ers fell to 7-2.<lb/>
Saturday, the Pirate men whipped<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte by a 6-3 margin for<lb/>
their eighth win of the spring.<lb/>
In the Atlantic Christian match,<lb/>
East Carolina was defeated in the<lb/>
opening match, but teammate<lb/>
Donald Rutledge bounced back to<lb/>
defeat Johan Sturen. That was the<lb/>
onlv win of the day for the Pirates,<lb/>
as Bulldogs took the next seven.<lb/>
The Saturday match with<lb/>
Charlotte saw East Carolina win<lb/>
four of the six single's matches and<lb/>
two of the three in double's com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
"It was a great win considering<lb/>
the circumstances said assistant<lb/>
coach Allan Farfour. "The wind<lb/>
conditions were terrible. We lost<lb/>
two straight so we needed a good<lb/>
win.<lb/>
ACC Summary<lb/>
Keith Zengel (ECU) d. John Holl-<lb/>
ingsworth, 6-0, 6-1.<lb/>
Ed Caldwell (UNC-C) d. Don<lb/>
Rutledge, 4-6, 6-3, 7-6.<lb/>
Ted Lepper (ECU) d. Todd<lb/>
Stewart, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.<lb/>
Barry Parker (ECU) d. Dan<lb/>
Holland, 7-5, 7-6.<lb/>
Norman Bryant (ECU) d. Rick<lb/>
McElreath, 6-3, 2-6, 6-3.<lb/>
Zengel-Parker (ECU) d.<lb/>
Caldwell-Jose Acosta, 7-6, 6-3.<lb/>
Lepper-Bryant (ECU) d. Bill<lb/>
Holden-Mark Allen, 7-6, 6-1.<lb/>
McElreath-Hollingsworth<lb/>
(UNC-C) d. Paul Owen-Rutledge,<lb/>
1-6, 6-3, 6-4.<lb/>
Women's Summary<lb/>
Susan Romeo (UNC-C) d. Debbie<lb/>
Christine, 7-6, 6-3.<lb/>
Kathrine Tolson (ECU) d.<lb/>
Dorothy Brown, 6-2, 6-3.<lb/>
Dawn Maybank (UNC-C) d<lb/>
Laura Redford, 6-0, 6-3.<lb/>
Janet Russell (ECU) d. Kelly<lb/>
Kauton, 6-3, 6-7, 6-3.<lb/>
Tracey Eubank (ECU) d. Renn<lb/>
Ruff, 7-5, 6-2.<lb/>
Patricia Dunlop (UNC-C) Han-<lb/>
nah Adams, 4-6, 6-2, 6-2.<lb/>
Tolson-Christine (ECU) d.<lb/>
Romeo-Brown, 7-5, 7-6.<lb/>
Maybank-Kauton (UNC-C) d.<lb/>
Redford-Russell 6-3, 6-1.<lb/>
Eubank-Adams (ECU) d. Ruff<lb/>
Dunlop, 7-5, 6-4.<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Aublanl Sport Kdilor<lb/>
The East Carolina women's soft-<lb/>
ball team gained another tourna-<lb/>
ment title over the weekend, winn-<lb/>
ing the UNC-Charlotte, Invitational<lb/>
softball tournament.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates downed UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte, 10-3, in the champion-<lb/>
ship game Saturday after meeting<lb/>
the Forty-Niners twice before on the<lb/>
same day.<lb/>
The score was tied 3-3 in the bot-<lb/>
tom of the third inning, but the<lb/>
Lady Pirates drove in five runs in<lb/>
the fifth inning and added two more<lb/>
in the sixth to win.<lb/>
ECU had seventeen hits in the<lb/>
game, with Shirley Brown driving in<lb/>
four runs and Cynthia Shepard with<lb/>
two. Shepard, Brown, Mitzi Davis<lb/>
and Jo Landa Clayton were all<lb/>
three-for-four, and Davis and<lb/>
Clayton both had one run batted in<lb/>
against UNC-C.<lb/>
The Pirates, now 22-4, were<lb/>
followed behind UNC-C for second<lb/>
place and N. C. State finished third.<lb/>
ECU's Yvonne Williams was<lb/>
named the Most Valuable player in<lb/>
the tournament. Brown, Shepard<lb/>
and Williams were all named on the<lb/>
all-tournament team.<lb/>
Head coach Sue Manahan said<lb/>
the team gained more confidence<lb/>
after each game, and hitting im-<lb/>
proved all day.<lb/>
"Our hitting and defense really<lb/>
came together in the last<lb/>
game(championship)<lb/>
The Lady Pirates opened the<lb/>
tournament Friday, playing round-<lb/>
robin style. Their first game was<lb/>
against North Carolina A&amp;T, easily<lb/>
defeating them, 11-3. Angie Hum-<lb/>
phrey(5-l) was the winning pitcher.<lb/>
ECU won the next game by a<lb/>
forfeiting Mars Hill College, and<lb/>
went on to face N. C. State for a<lb/>
third victory, winning 3-2.<lb/>
On the last day of the tournament<lb/>
play, ECU went up against Ap-<lb/>
palachian State, now in a double<lb/>
elimination contest. The Pirates<lb/>
dominated, beating ASU, 3-0. ECU<lb/>
scored singles in the first, third and<lb/>
fourth innings to ensure a lead.<lb/>
The Pirates' only loss in the tour-<lb/>
nament was in the next game against<lb/>
hosting UNC-C. The Pirates were<lb/>
defeated 5-2 in nine innings.<lb/>
The game was scoreless through<lb/>
four innings, but UNC-C scored<lb/>
twice in the fifth to jump ahead.<lb/>
ECU cut the lead to one after<lb/>
scoring in the bottom of the seventh<lb/>
to send the game into extra innings.<lb/>
UNC-C came back, scoring three<lb/>
runs in the top of the ninth to win.<lb/>
Williams was two-for-two, slam-<lb/>
ming a homerun and having two<lb/>
runs batted in. Maureen Buck went<lb/>
two-for-three and Davis went two-<lb/>
for-four.<lb/>
With one game away from being<lb/>
eliminated, ECU confronted N. C.<lb/>
State for a 7-3 victory.<lb/>
ECU scored three runs in the first<lb/>
to take the lead. N. C. State trailed<lb/>
by one. 3-2, scoring two runs in the<lb/>
top of the third but the Lady "Pirates<lb/>
scored three runs in the bottom of<lb/>
the the inning to guarantee the win.<lb/>
Williams, Shepard, and Davis<lb/>
were all two-for three, with Shepard<lb/>
hitting a homerun and Williams a<lb/>
triple.<lb/>
ECU met UNC-C once again.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates jumped out to a<lb/>
2-0 lead in the first inning but ECU<lb/>
tied the game with two runs in the<lb/>
bottom of the inning. They went on<lb/>
to take a lead they never lost, scor-<lb/>
ing two runs-in the third, for a final<lb/>
score of 4-2.<lb/>
Shepard, Brown and Clayton<lb/>
were all two for three for ECU.<lb/>
Brown and Shepard both had<lb/>
doubles and Brown had two runs<lb/>
batted in.<lb/>
Jeanette Roth(16-3) pitched in<lb/>
every game except one in the tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Manahan praised Roth for her<lb/>
performance in the invite.<lb/>
"She did a good job pitching con-<lb/>
sidering how windy it was<lb/>
Manahan said.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates travel to Camp-<lb/>
bell Tuesday.<lb/>
ODU Elects<lb/>
To Join Sun<lb/>
Belt League<lb/>
ByANNESAKER<lb/>
NORFOLK, Va. (UP!) �<lb/>
Athletic officials at Old Dominion<lb/>
University unveiled their worst-kepi<lb/>
secret Monday � the school wil join<lb/>
the Sun Belt Conference.<lb/>
Athletic Director Jim Jarrett said<lb/>
the affiliation provides a "great<lb/>
marriage" of television coverage<lb/>
and the cities in which the circuit<lb/>
plays will enhance recruiting.<lb/>
"This is the beginning of a new<lb/>
era; the next step in a plateau for us<lb/>
to reach excellence he said.<lb/>
ODU drops its affiliation with the<lb/>
ECAC-South to become the eighth<lb/>
member of the Sun Belt, one of the<lb/>
nation's youngest collegiate basket-<lb/>
ball leagues.<lb/>
The conference includes Western<lb/>
Kentucky University, which has<lb/>
fielded winning teams in recent<lb/>
years, and the University of<lb/>
Alabama-Birmingham, piloted by<lb/>
former UCLA coach Gene Bartow.<lb/>
UAB gained attention when it<lb/>
knocked off Virginia in the recent<lb/>
NCAA tournament.<lb/>
Other members are intrastate<lb/>
rival Virginia Commonwealth<lb/>
University, Jacksonville, South<lb/>
Alabama, South Florida and the<lb/>
Univeristy of North Carolina at<lb/>
Charlotte.<lb/>
Old Dominion and conference of-<lb/>
ficials have talked about the move<lb/>
for three years. Jarrett said he and<lb/>
his staff evaluated other conferences<lb/>
before picking the Sun Belt.<lb/>
"We've been discussing a variety<lb/>
of conferences over the last two and<lb/>
a half years, and we have had some<lb/>
time to evaluate our decision. I'm<lb/>
plesed that we have made the right<lb/>
one Jarrett said.<lb/>
Basketball coach Paul Webb told<lb/>
reporters he is anxious to join the<lb/>
league.<lb/>
"I'm excited about joining the<lb/>
Sun Belt Conference because it is<lb/>
another step forward toward mak-<lb/>
ing the Sun Belt Conference the top<lb/>
basketball league in the country<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Also on hand at the news con-<lb/>
ference was conference commis-<lb/>
sioner Vic Bubas, who said "it just<lb/>
seem logical for ODU to join us in<lb/>
the Su Belt Conference, and this<lb/>
will push us into prominence<lb/>
Despite Rough Weather<lb/>
Pirates Perform Well<lb/>
The East Carolina Pirate<lb/>
tracksters competed in the Duke In-<lb/>
vitational last Saturday and, despite<lb/>
windy conditions, placed well in<lb/>
several events as well as posting<lb/>
three new IC4A qualifying times.<lb/>
The IC4A is one of the most<lb/>
prestigious track conferences in the<lb/>
United States. The Pirates were<lb/>
finally admitted to the powerful<lb/>
league after a long seven-year wait.<lb/>
Both the mile relay squad and the<lb/>
4 X 100-meter relay unit captured<lb/>
second-place honors. Michael<lb/>
Goins, Tim Cephas, Terry Ford and<lb/>
Jeff Golden clocked a 41.1 in a<lb/>
photofinish race with winner St.<lb/>
Augustine's in the finals of the 400<lb/>
meter relay. Keith Clarke, Shaun<lb/>
Laney, Carlton Frazier and<lb/>
Lawrence Ervin combined for a<lb/>
3:13.1 for second place in the mile<lb/>
relay.<lb/>
Standout Cephas was orginally<lb/>
supposed to run anchor but suffered<lb/>
a pulled hamstring in the 200 meter<lb/>
race. Laney substituted for usual<lb/>
second-man Ervin, who moved to<lb/>
fill the anchor spot in the race.<lb/>
Ford, a freshman from Fayet-<lb/>
teville, qualified for two 1C4A<lb/>
Championship Meet events. The<lb/>
sprinter ran a : 10.48 in the semin-<lb/>
finals of the 100 meter dash only to<lb/>
be disqualified in the final heat due<lb/>
to a false start. Nevertheless, his<lb/>
time bettered the 10.8 required for<lb/>
the IC4A's. Needing a :21.75 to<lb/>
qualify for the conference, Ford<lb/>
took fourth place in the 200-meter<lb/>
race with a :21.3 clocking.<lb/>
Pirate newcomer Michale Goins<lb/>
clocked the third new IC4A require-<lb/>
ment as he ran a :10.5 for fourth<lb/>
place in the 100-meter event.<lb/>
Freshman Goins, also from Fayet-<lb/>
teville, enrolled at East Carolina<lb/>
and joined the Pirate thinclads just<lb/>
this semester.<lb/>
Frazier and Ervin placed second<lb/>
and third, respectively, in the<lb/>
400-meter contest with a :48.21 and<lb/>
48.3 times. Neither managed to post<lb/>
the IC4A qualifying requirement of<lb/>
:47.70.<lb/>
Coach Bill Carson will take his<lb/>
track sq?:ad to the Carolina Relays<lb/>
in Chapel Hill this Saturday.<lb/>
ECU'S Debbie Christine<lb/>
ECU Tennis<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Improving<lb/>
By THOMAS BRAME<lb/>
Aiuiwi Storti Mttor<lb/>
The East Carolina men's tennis<lb/>
team is off to an impressive beginn-<lb/>
ing to their spring. The Pirates were<lb/>
7-0 before a tough loss to the<lb/>
Wolfpack of N.C. State Tuesday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
East Carolina is now 8-3.<lb/>
Pirate head coch Carolina Brown<lb/>
explains this surge. "There are three<lb/>
reasons for our success this spring.<lb/>
One reason is that the players feel<lb/>
there is concern for their program.<lb/>
This attitude has helped the players<lb/>
emotionally<lb/>
Brown is in her second year as<lb/>
head coach. She coached the AIAW<lb/>
squad to a 5-4 record last spring and<lb/>
is a graduate of Furman University.<lb/>
She is also a former player on the<lb/>
Avon Future's Qualifying Tennis<lb/>
Circuit. .<lb/>
She also says that having one<lb/>
coach for both the men and women<lb/>
creates stability and a program in<lb/>
which players can tnan by.<lb/>
These aspects have motivated the<lb/>
players, according to Brown, to per-<lb/>
form better and more as a team. The<lb/>
new system has challenge the per-<lb/>
formers to better the'r persona)<lb/>
games.<lb/>
The addition ot a tennis staff has<lb/>
improved the program, too, she<lb/>
says. Along with Brown, the staff<lb/>
includes assistant coach Alan Far-<lb/>
four and Dean Weant, a volunteer<lb/>
coach, who have brought experience<lb/>
and knowledge to the East Carolina<lb/>
tennis program.<lb/>
"Basically, everyone on the team<lb/>
has improved some emotionally,<lb/>
physically and mentally she says.<lb/>
The Pirate men are winning mat-<lb/>
ches by larger scores than the past<lb/>
years squads. "These traits indicate<lb/>
imrovement Brown says.<lb/>
CA<lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
V- . "�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057472_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EASTCAROl 1NIAN<lb/>
APRIL 6, 1982<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
LOST IN MINGES March u. a<lb/>
'��) class ring, blue stones, initials<lb/>
"JAA on inside II found please<lb/>
contact Joe at 149 Slay 7M (485)<lb/>
FOUND Ladies watch on the mall<lb/>
in tront of the infirmiry Contact<lb/>
Fielding Miller at the East Caroli<lb/>
nian<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
TRAILER FOR SALE set up in<lb/>
Greenville I SR all electric, a c.<lb/>
eicellent condition S2WS call Tar<lb/>
boro 823 894<lb/>
VIVITAR ZOOM LENS 75 JlOwith<lb/>
macro for Nikon mount used only<lb/>
two times H5 Call 757 3210<lb/>
SKIS FOR SALE K 2 185 comp<lb/>
BIO skis with Soloman bindings<lb/>
II2S Call 757 3210 and leave<lb/>
number<lb/>
DORM SUE REFRIGERATOR<lb/>
Good condition Price Negotiable<lb/>
Call Odile now at 758 3688<lb/>
TEN SPEED racing bike 25<lb/>
frame Call 752 '300<lb/>
AKC REG LABRADOR PUP<lb/>
PIES Black 5125 males 5100<lb/>
females Call 757 3701 or ?58 �462<lb/>
1 5 CUBIC FEET<lb/>
REFRIGERATOR Encellentcon<lb/>
dition 550 or best offer Call<lb/>
"8 9405<lb/>
WATERBEDS Don t pay retail<lb/>
lor your waterbed Buy a complete<lb/>
l$1 quality waterbed with a IS yr<lb/>
lactory warranty tor as low as<lb/>
U7 May stvlt to choose irom<lb/>
taway and Delivery adv Buy now<lb/>
.no recieve a tree set oi padded<lb/>
�ails 153 value) Call David tor<lb/>
appointment ?i8 :408<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
Do you know someone with an m<lb/>
terestintj or unique hobby or<lb/>
c raif it so contact the Buccaneer<lb/>
'V 6SOI<lb/>
PSl CHI Members and new in<lb/>
� ates vote Cathie Murensky<lb/>
President April 6 Be there Be<lb/>
�nown Vote right P S Who is Ed<lb/>
A iqiield<lb/>
i NEED a bicycle it you have one<lb/>
�or ale Call 758 46 5 latter 5 pm or<lb/>
Before 10 am weekdays I<lb/>
TAERP It is a rare and special<lb/>
�n.nq to tind a friend who will re<lb/>
riam a friend forever TWIT<lb/>
TO THE SIG EP BROTHERS<lb/>
you raiders of the night How<lb/>
ed we wire to find our lawn<lb/>
Dinq covered m white So here s a<lb/>
i of caution as you can surely<lb/>
e are going to get even and<lb/>
PAYBACK is always hell<lb/>
T E  i US how outstanding your<lb/>
inization is II it has won an<lb/>
aard any time during the<lb/>
�� mic ,fji type up the mlor<lb/>
� 'on keep t bnefe and mail it<lb/>
the East Carolinian oltice m<lb/>
care ol the News Editor Deadline<lb/>
5 vonda April 13<lb/>
��SS KiMBv Ha.e a happ.<lb/>
'y second We re thinking<lb/>
dDOot you in Cnapi'i Hill Love.<lb/>
John and Hussev<lb/>
A BiG D D welcome to Bob<lb/>
Kim E ame Brtnda Karen Lyn<lb/>
Ardie �� Jim and David<lb/>
You're all brothers now. so now<lb/>
the real work begins Be active<lb/>
and stay active<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR rent May<lb/>
Aug Furnished, one block from<lb/>
campus Deposit reguired Cheryl<lb/>
752 1959<lb/>
AVAILABLE FOR summer school<lb/>
and nent tall if desired 3<lb/>
bedroom 2 lull bath Furnished<lb/>
Ouple walking distance from<lb/>
campus 5245 Call 757 1917<lb/>
SHARE SPACIOUS Apt m Large<lb/>
house females call 75 550 (work I<lb/>
after 5 leave message tor Dee<lb/>
CHRISTIAN FEMALE roommate<lb/>
needed to share double room in<lb/>
an apartment 50 plus 13<lb/>
utilities One block Irom Jenkins<lb/>
building call 752 20<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM Furnished<lb/>
mobile home 3 4 miles off campus<lb/>
510 monthly Possibly no lease or<lb/>
deposit Call 758 7724<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM Trailer mostly<lb/>
furnished 5140 per month plus<lb/>
utilities, wai to wall carpet One<lb/>
mile irom campus More info call<lb/>
752 3372<lb/>
FOUR BEDROOM House Fully<lb/>
furnished and -arpeted May 15<lb/>
Aug 15 5225 p us utilities Call<lb/>
7S2 1727<lb/>
CANNON COLIR' Apt to sublet<lb/>
tor summer spacious partially<lb/>
furnished fownhous 2 bedrooms<lb/>
i l 2 baths on ECU bus -rote Call<lb/>
758 S809 lor more into<lb/>
APT FOR RENT starting in May<lb/>
Two bedroom fully carpeted, close<lb/>
to campus Air conditioning and<lb/>
pool Call 757 110 alter 9 p.m.<lb/>
LARGE HOUSE 2 blocks from<lb/>
ECU � 7 bedrooms. 2 baths.<lb/>
5S00 mo 752 529<lb/>
COMPLETELY FUR Nl SHED, air<lb/>
conditioned apartment tor one<lb/>
across Irom College 758 258S<lb/>
EASTER WEEKEND Cottage HI<lb/>
North Myrtle Bead Sleeps 7<lb/>
Available Thursday thru Monday<lb/>
5200 Call 758 4588 or 7 58 020<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEED<lb/>
ED lr wither or both sessions sum<lb/>
mer school I block irom campus<lb/>
Call 758 597<lb/>
FURNISHED APARTMENT for<lb/>
rent One block Irom campus May<lb/>
through August Deposit required<lb/>
Cheryl 752 1959<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt beginning<lb/>
May i Available lor Fan also On<lb/>
bus route Pets allowed l 2<lb/>
deposit, 1 2 rent Call '58 �442<lb/>
TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT<lb/>
available lor the summer Fur<lb/>
nished an conditioned great back<lb/>
porch for sun bathing good loca<lb/>
tion For more info call 758 3759<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED One or<lb/>
two to share 3 bedroom<lb/>
doublewide lor sum mer Available<lb/>
immediately No deposit required<lb/>
Nice yard For more into call Con<lb/>
nie 75 734.<lb/>
FURNISHED TWO BEDROOM<lb/>
Apartment available tor rent May<lb/>
August. Scenic setting- faces the<lb/>
River. Air conditioning and within<lb/>
walking distance to campus.<lb/>
5250month Call 757 3052<lb/>
SUMMER. FURNISHED or un<lb/>
kmiatmt Apt Available May<lb/>
August On. block Irom campus<lb/>
2bdrm 5175 mth. 757 3054<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
TRUMPET PLAYER<lb/>
WANTED�top 40 Beach group<lb/>
Weekend work. Vocal ability<lb/>
preferred Call 75 49S<lb/>
GOOD SUMMER JOB Swim<lb/>
coach needed Salary negotiable. �<lb/>
wk. 3 hr day Only those looking<lb/>
tor serious employment need app<lb/>
ly Contact Swim Chairman, co<lb/>
282 Beverly Drive, Concord. N.C<lb/>
28025<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICA<lb/>
TIONS tor Positions at W7.MB<lb/>
FM Assisant General<lb/>
ManagerProgram 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 5<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
CARICATURES BY WEYLER<lb/>
Greenville's original personalized<lb/>
art service Have cartoon done ol<lb/>
,ourseli or a loved one a unique<lb/>
jilt idea 510 for 8 i 10. black and<lb/>
white or color Call 752-5775<lb/>
TYPING TERM Thesis<lb/>
Resumes, Dissertations, etc Pro<lb/>
lessional quality at lowest rates<lb/>
Call Kempie Dunn anytime<lb/>
752 6733<lb/>
NOTARY PUBLIC Call Amy at<lb/>
757 3734<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST wants<lb/>
to type thesis, dissertations<lb/>
publications, manuscripts or term<lb/>
papers at home Call 75 360<lb/>
TYPIST All papers Professional<lb/>
quality at low rates, 10 years ei<lb/>
perience Call 757 1378<lb/>
HEBREW LESSONS Biblical and<lb/>
contemporary language E�<lb/>
perienced. qualified Israeli<lb/>
teacher Group or individual<lb/>
classes Call Carmela 752 0083<lb/>
TERM PAPERS TYPED All<lb/>
lengths for more information call<lb/>
758 9798<lb/>
RIDERS<lb/>
RIDERS NEEDED to<lb/>
DC Norfhri nVa Area for Easter<lb/>
Weekend iApr 9) Call Keith<lb/>
758 931"<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Virginia Beach<lb/>
or anywhere near Thursday April<lb/>
8th Cheryl 752 I9S9<lb/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH<lb/>
FOR:<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
AkkGOLD&amp; SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CHINA &amp; CRYSTAL C<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
<lb/>
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Tonight<lb/>
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 7F<lb/>
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113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758 1228<lb/>
Current undergraduate pre-<lb/>
nedial ttodenM mot now compete<lb/>
tor several Hundred Air Force<lb/>
scholarship These scholarships ore<lb/>
o be awarded to students accepted<lb/>
into medical schools as freshmen or<lb/>
ot the beginning o the� sophomore<lb/>
eor The scholarship provide for<lb/>
tuition book lab fees and equ<lb/>
mt. plus o S530 monthly<lb/>
allowance Investigate this financial<lb/>
alternative to tKe high cost of<lb/>
medicol education<lb/>
Contact<lb/>
� S.A.F. Mr i IH<lb/>
PRUrrSMONs<lb/>
KM Rl IIIM,<lb/>
Su.te GL 1 1 100 Novaho Dr<lb/>
Raleigh N C 27689<lb/>
Phone College i919V5V41 34<lb/>
Coalition for Better Student Government<lb/>
Urges You to Vote For<lb/>
�jlVai �wsrsn<lb/>
SGA PRESIDENT<lb/>
RUN-OFF ELECTIONS �APR.L7,1982<lb/>
Ok)<lb/>
and j<lb/>
Dcpar<lb/>
Fling'<lb/>
p m<lb/>
mitor<lb/>
indue<lb/>
to be<lb/>
"HoH<lb/>
petit'<lb/>
Char<lb/>
vunn<lb/>
f '<lb/>
meet<lb/>
Root<lb/>
the I<lb/>
Inf<lb/>
Items and Pr.ces<lb/>
Effective Wed Ap-<lb/>
thru Sun Ann! 1 1 19Q2<lb/>
Cop jht "982<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold to Dealers<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
rO<lb/>
2<lb/>
,ot<lb/>
'<lb/>
In n<lb/>
13<lb/>
�;<lb/>
wSSt<lb/>
�<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each pi these advertised items is required to be readily ava<lb/>
?� ?? ,reach Kr�9er Sav on e�ceDt as specifically noted<lb/>
ad r we do run out of an item we will offer v . your cno-re �.<lb/>
compare .tem hen available reflect.ng the same sav rigs or a<lb/>
t.tte you to purchase the advertised .tern at<lb/>
- a  n 30 days<lb/>
600 Greenv-iiie Bivrj Greenville<lb/>
Open 8 a.m. to Midnight<lb/>
Open Sunday 9am to 9 p m<lb/>
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MARSHALLEN<lb/>
18" HANG UP<lb/>
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12-Oz.<lb/>
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HAMBURGER OR<lb/>
Hot Dog Bun<lb/>
2 $1�<lb/>
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�.<lb/>
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Coca-Oo�a<lb/>
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ASSORTED TOPPINGS<lb/>
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ted Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
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Each<lb/>
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KROGER ALL MEAT OR<lb/>
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Wieners<lb/>
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raAGRANCIS<lb/>
12-Gat-<lb/>
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16<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057472_0011"/><lb/>
Students Encouraged To<lb/>
Compete In 'Spring Fling'<lb/>
Sports-N-Shorts<lb/>
By<lb/>
Gregg Melton<lb/>
Co-Rec. Spring Fling<lb/>
Okay guys and gals. Get your groups together<lb/>
and join in the fun as the East Carolina Intramual<lb/>
Department is sponsoring the first 1982 "Spring<lb/>
Fling" on Wednesday, April 14, starting at 3:30<lb/>
p.m. at the top of College Hill beside Tyler Dor-<lb/>
mitory. This will be a team competition and must<lb/>
include three males and three females. Activities<lb/>
to be included in the program are "Target-Golf<lb/>
"Horseshoe Toss "Pressure Free-Throw Com-<lb/>
petition" and the ever popular "Tug-O-War<lb/>
Championship T-shirts will be awarded to the<lb/>
winning team, so join the fun!<lb/>
Entries will be accepted until 5 p.m. on Tues-<lb/>
day, April 13, and there will be a Captain's<lb/>
meeting on that day at 7 p.m. in Memorial Gym,<lb/>
Room 102. A representative from each team must<lb/>
attend. For more information, you can come by<lb/>
the Intramural Office or call 757-6397.<lb/>
Homerun Derby Results<lb/>
On Wednesday, March 24, the East Carolina<lb/>
Intramural Department sponsored its first<lb/>
Homerun Derby Competition. The event drew<lb/>
over 60 contestants to the women's softball fields<lb/>
where they tried to knock a softball over the fence<lb/>
some 260 feet away. Those hits not clearing the<lb/>
fence were scored as to the distance they were<lb/>
from the home plate. Contestants were allowed to<lb/>
supply their own pitcher or use the one provided<lb/>
by the IM office.<lb/>
Well, after the dust had settled and all of the<lb/>
would-be Caseys had delivered their might blows,<lb/>
the following students had finished as the top 5 in<lb/>
their respective divisions.<lb/>
Men<lb/>
1. Whit Bradham 740 pts.<lb/>
2. Dwight Tart 660 pts.<lb/>
3. Garland Thomas 670 pts.<lb/>
4. Martin Holloway 570 pts.<lb/>
5. Keith Golden 570 pts.<lb/>
Women<lb/>
1. Judy Ausherman 345 pts.<lb/>
2. Stacy Weitzel 325 pts.<lb/>
3. Gail O'Brien 295 pts.<lb/>
4. Kathy Kokiko 185 pts.<lb/>
5. Angela Pepe 140 pts.<lb/>
Contratulations go to all of the above students<lb/>
and also to the other people who helped in mak-<lb/>
ing the event such a good time for everyone.<lb/>
RESEARCH<lb/>
PAPERS<lb/>
10,278 on file � all subjects<lb/>
Send $1 00 (refundable) for your up-to-date.<lb/>
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We also provide research - all fields.<lb/>
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For FREE &amp; Complete<lb/>
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P. O. Box 17S4 KHuton, N. C. 21501<lb/>
tmmsmsm<lb/>
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