<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057482_0001"/>
She ?a0t (Earnitntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
ol.58 No.64<lb/>
Wednesday, June 9. 19K2<lb/>
(Greenville, N (<lb/>
M Panes<lb/>
"Last-Ditch Effort' To Pass Amendment<lb/>
ERA Proponents Abandon Referendum Bill<lb/>
KM EIGH, . (UPI) Sup-<lb/>
ers of the I qua! Rights mend<lb/>
meni abandoned efforts ruesday to<lb/>
set up a non-binding statewide<lb/>
,t last-ditch effort to<lb/>
pass the amendment in North<lb/>
olina.<lb/>
Rep l i Vdams, D w ake, said<lb/>
tougl ? otes in the<lb/>
ERA referendum<lb/>
to primary election<lb/>
e measure would not<lb/>
ntroduced because it would be<lb/>
i I in the Senate on procedural<lb/>
"We have explored even avenue<lb/>
think ? to have the<lb/>
ns dered in the<lb/>
 ? ?! mined it is<lb/>
impossible tic said "Our assess-<lb/>
ment is n would be impossible to get<lb/>
it past the Senate rules.<lb/>
?? 1 his referendum bill will not be<lb/>
introduced Adams told reporters<lb/>
following a strategy meeting with<lb/>
1 RA supporters, including House<lb/>
Speaker List on Ramse) .<lb/>
D-Madison.<lb/>
I he ERA has been ratified by 35<lb/>
states, but three more musl approve<lb/>
it before it expires June 30. North<lb/>
c arolina and three other states ? Il-<lb/>
linois, Florida and Oklahoma ?<lb/>
had been targeted in a national cam-<lb/>
paign to pass the amendment.<lb/>
1 he North Carolina Senate oted<lb/>
27-23 Friday to table an ERA<lb/>
ratification bill five minutes after it<lb/>
was formally introduced. I he action<lb/>
means ERA supporters need a two-<lb/>
thirds majority, oi 34 votes, to<lb/>
revive the amendment, but the<lb/>
have no chance of changing that<lb/>
many votes<lb/>
After last week's Senate action,<lb/>
Gov. James B Hunt Jr. began<lb/>
pushing the referendum Undei the<lb/>
proposal, voters in the June 29<lb/>
primary would have been allowed to<lb/>
express their sentiment tor or<lb/>
against the General Assembly's<lb/>
ratification o the amendment.<lb/>
Although the results would not be<lb/>
binding. Hunt was prepared to call a<lb/>
special session oi the 1 egislature<lb/>
June 30 for a vote on I R <lb/>
A spokesman for Hunt. Brent<lb/>
Hackney, said ttie governoi was<lb/>
disappointed at the decision to<lb/>
abandon the referendum, but ae<lb/>
eepted the judgement of legislative<lb/>
supporters.<lb/>
The prospects oi a special session<lb/>
June 30 are slim. Hackney said, but<lb/>
Hunt would be willing to call one it<lb/>
two other states pass ERA b then.<lb/>
"It conditions change, we'll act<lb/>
accordingly he said.<lb/>
Adams and Sen. Robert Jordan.<lb/>
D-Montgomery, said they determin-<lb/>
ed the referendum bill would not be<lb/>
eligible for consideration under the<lb/>
Senate's rules, even it it passed the<lb/>
House.<lb/>
Jordan, whose ERA bill was tabl-<lb/>
ed Iriday, said tie conferred with<lb/>
Senate leaders, including It. Gov.<lb/>
lames c . Green, about the referen-<lb/>
dum idea<lb/>
He said Green gave no indication<lb/>
how he would rule on the matter,<lb/>
but alter discussing the Senate rules,<lb/>
I or dan reluctantly concluded the<lb/>
bill could not be considered.<lb/>
Jordan cited a rule that bars the<lb/>
inclusion oi defeated k :i lat<lb/>
any other measure Becau ERA<lb/>
was ielected last wee!<lb/>
be considered as pa<lb/>
dum bill, tie said<lb/>
He also pointed 1 R<lb/>
referendum bill was introdu<lb/>
year but never consider<lb/>
Green had already ruled it m<lb/>
"I don't think there are an<lb/>
legislative i that we<lb/>
with between now and Friday a<lb/>
week" when th i egislatun an<lb/>
finish u the session, Jordan aid<lb/>
He said the only hope for<lb/>
irendum bill was "a land; I<lb/>
vote in the 120-membei House,<lb/>
dams said he had only 63 votes I<lb/>
the bill. Another 40 wen<lb/>
ant a n creating ai<lb/>
e prima which<lb/>
slative ? a<lb/>
aanis ai r ERA sup<lb/>
ducted ' te co<lb/>
I uesday's House session V<lb/>
m embers conducted i<lb/>
nes 1 K A supporters cii<lb/>
hout the chamb<lb/>
commitments from lawmakei<lb/>
Campus Community Random Survey<lb/>
Shows Varying Opinions On ERA<lb/>
Bv<lb/>
JOHN VF I FK<lb/>
?. d opponents oi the<lb/>
dmendment seem to<lb/>
ual in numbei on the<lb/>
as thev are in<lb/>
e<lb/>
?<lb/>
I K <lb/>
ICMIg.<lb/>
tmen or<lb/>
oi ma-<lb/>
law W!<lb/>
hurt w omen<lb/>
Others were specifically concern-<lb/>
ed that the amendment as written is<lb/>
too vague. "1 don't think it's ex-<lb/>
plicit enough and leaves it too open<lb/>
to interpretation was the opinion<lb/>
1 a graduate student studying<lb/>
administration who asked<lb/>
. name not be used<lb/>
Oeid re Davenport, a senior<lb/>
mess management major,<lb/>
agreed "II they pass it like it is<lb/>
?. . what will the nidges make<lb/>
S ne ERA nts seemed to<lb/>
? eai i hang- would<lb/>
ERA was passed.<lb/>
ae Smith, ior physics ma-<lb/>
 "I think Ciod created in<lb/>
and woman to re different tor a<lb/>
it's the way n always has<lb/>
n and always should be<lb/>
The opponent group's viewpoint<lb/>
can be summed up in one woman's<lb/>
nment. "I'm satisfied with the<lb/>
Id ways<lb/>
On the othei side of the issue.<lb/>
Mane I , I an, assistant dean o art<lb/>
and sciences, ottered thai ERA,<lb/>
"would make a statement, whether<lb/>
or not it passes, in the nation as a<lb/>
whole. A statement about North<lb/>
Carolina's committment to equality<lb/>
for all it citizens<lb/>
"I think it would be symbolic in a<lb/>
concrete wav of what we as a<lb/>
democracy subscribe to echoed<lb/>
Dr. Pan Dunn ot the health educa-<lb/>
tion department.<lb/>
Dr. Erwin Hester oi the English<lb/>
department stated that, "so much<lb/>
oi the opposition to it nas focused<lb/>
on very trivial side issues and lr-<lb/>
relevancies. Things like separate<lb/>
bathrooms tor the sexes and things<lb/>
like that, which 1 don't think ERA is<lb/>
likely to have am impact on at all.<lb/>
And it seems to me that there's real-<lb/>
ly no reason not to be for an<lb/>
admendment which is designed to<lb/>
enhance equality, or give equality to<lb/>
all citizens<lb/>
Herb Carlton oi the political<lb/>
science department is of the opinion<lb/>
that whether or not the I RA is pass<lb/>
ed will make little difference.<lb/>
"Equal rights will happen he said.<lb/>
Photo Courtesy ot DA1LV REFLECTOR<lb/>
Marching For 1 Cause<lb/>
The Southern Christian leadershiponference marched through Greenville on June third in protest ot President<lb/>
Reagan's policies.<lb/>
Hearings Unveil Drunk Driving Proposals<lb/>
B SPENCER STEPHENS<lb/>
Mali Wnirr<lb/>
"In San Salvador, your first<lb/>
drunk driving offense is your last.<lb/>
They kill you. In Turkey, thev take-<lb/>
drunk drivers twenty miles from<lb/>
town, strip them naked, and force<lb/>
them to walk home<lb/>
"Alcohol related accidents are the<lb/>
major cause of death for college<lb/>
students<lb/>
"Setting two age limits for drink-<lb/>
ing is setting a double standard. You<lb/>
5 are saying that drinking beei and<lb/>
wine is not as serious as drinking li-<lb/>
quor when they're both on the same<lb/>
level<lb/>
These are comments that were<lb/>
made during the June 3 public hear-<lb/>
ing on drunk driving. Thev come<lb/>
from some of the approximately 100<lb/>
North Carolinians who endured<lb/>
hailstorms and highlights to attend<lb/>
the testing.<lb/>
This hearing and six others in<lb/>
various North Carolina cities were<lb/>
sponsored by the Governor's Task<lb/>
Force on Drunk Driving.<lb/>
The first purpose of the hearings,<lb/>
according to task force analyst<lb/>
David James, is to inform North<lb/>
Carolinians of a seventeen point<lb/>
propos1 made bv the Governor's<lb/>
Crime Comission.<lb/>
To combat drunken driving, the<lb/>
proposal recommends stiffening<lb/>
drunken driving laws, upping the<lb/>
drinking age for beer and wine,<lb/>
educating school children and<lb/>
young adults about the danger ot<lb/>
drunken driving and supporting<lb/>
alcohol and drug rehabilitation<lb/>
centers.<lb/>
1 he second purpose oi the public<lb/>
hearings is to listen to citizens' iews<lb/>
and ideas about drunken driving<lb/>
and to include some oi these ideas in<lb/>
the final version of the proposal that<lb/>
will be sub mittedto Governor Hunt<lb/>
on October 1.<lb/>
It is hoped that the proposal will<lb/>
be approved by Hunt, then submit-<lb/>
ted to and passed bv the North<lb/>
Carolina State 1 egislature.<lb/>
1 he Governor's Iask force on<lb/>
Drunken Driving is under the direc-<lb/>
tion o the Governor's Crime Com-<lb/>
mission and was organized when the<lb/>
commission realized several tacts;<lb/>
That approximately 50 percent of all<lb/>
traffic fatalities are alcohol related;<lb/>
that North Carolina arrests more<lb/>
people tor driving undei<lb/>
fluence than any othe<lb/>
1 exas and California; and I<lb/>
North Carolina's arrest<lb/>
driving under the influence is rr<lb/>
than twice as high as the <lb/>
average (14 per i .(MX) per yea<lb/>
pared to 6 pel l,(KX per year).<lb/>
About thirty of the KM) pe<lb/>
that attended the hearing spoke.<lb/>
Some of the speakers thought that<lb/>
plea bargaining should not be allow-<lb/>
ed m alcohol-related traffic ac-<lb/>
cidents.Some thought that all<lb/>
alcoholic beverges should be taxed<lb/>
m order to establish a restitution<lb/>
fund tor victims of drunken drb<lb/>
All thought that a solution need- I i<lb/>
be found.<lb/>
ECU Scientists Study Mystery<lb/>
Photo By SCOTT LARSON<lb/>
Ringer<lb/>
This ECU loel tries her hand at a favorite American pastime.<lb/>
ECU Writer Sentenced<lb/>
For Military Protest<lb/>
B GEORGE THRFFWITTS<lb/>
H l Nr? Rurmu<lb/>
On Monday, Fast Carolina stu-<lb/>
dent and Fast Carolinian staff<lb/>
writer, Patrick O'Neill was sentenc-<lb/>
ed to serve three months in jail plus<lb/>
pay court cost of $4(X). following his<lb/>
conviction on charges made while he-<lb/>
was protesting United States<lb/>
military policy.<lb/>
O'Neill sentence is shared by<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
students Mark Beatty, Alex Charms<lb/>
and Stephen Kahn.<lb/>
On May 25, the group were found<lb/>
guilty of "willfully, knowingly and<lb/>
unlawfully blocking traffic" by<lb/>
Magistrate F. Stewart Clark of the<lb/>
District Court of the Fastern Region<lb/>
of North Carolina in Fayetteville.<lb/>
The four were arrested while<lb/>
demonstrating against the training<lb/>
ot Fl Salvadorian soldiers at Fort<lb/>
Breagg.<lb/>
In a written statement released<lb/>
after the sentencing, O'Neill thank-<lb/>
ed his supporters, then said, "I'm<lb/>
still in shock. It seems as if the<lb/>
judge hadn't heard a word we said.<lb/>
I feel as if I have somehow been<lb/>
cheated by the judge's unwillingness<lb/>
to hear the truth. I now sit in jail<lb/>
and the killing in El Salvador and<lb/>
the death work of the Pentagon con-<lb/>
tinues<lb/>
A team of scientists and students<lb/>
headed by geologist Dr. Stan Riggs<lb/>
of East Carolina University is<lb/>
gathering information to help<lb/>
unravel one of the mysteries of<lb/>
geology: the origin of rich deposits<lb/>
of phosphate along the Atlantic-<lb/>
seaboard from North Carolina to<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
Believed to be the largest<lb/>
phosphorites deposits in the world,<lb/>
Riggs believes it originated 12 to 15<lb/>
million years ago when "everything<lb/>
went sort of haywire in the ocean<lb/>
"We're trying to understand what<lb/>
weird sets of conditions existed then<lb/>
that produced this unique and<lb/>
anomalous bed he said, explain-<lb/>
ing that the conditions that formed<lb/>
the phosphate beds are no longer ac-<lb/>
tive in the oceans today.<lb/>
In an effort to gather data on the<lb/>
origin of these deposits, the ECU<lb/>
researchers are spending 20 days at<lb/>
sea on board the RV Cape Hat-<lb/>
teras, a new, modern research vessel<lb/>
operatd by the Duke-University of<lb/>
North Carolina Oceanographic<lb/>
Consortium.<lb/>
Working along the Continental<lb/>
Shelf region oi North and South<lb/>
Carolina, the scientists use special<lb/>
instruments that take seismic-<lb/>
readings of the earth's formations<lb/>
below the ocean floor. In addition,<lb/>
a sophisticated vibrating drill<lb/>
powered by compressed air, allows<lb/>
them to punch through the sea floor<lb/>
to collect 30 to 40 foot core samples<lb/>
of bottom sediment.<lb/>
"We can tell the nature of the<lb/>
rock and the distribution of the<lb/>
rocks (from the seismic readings)<lb/>
and with our core sampling we can<lb/>
tell what these rocks are says<lb/>
Riggs.<lb/>
"We want to understand how this<lb/>
phosphate formed, why it formed<lb/>
and where it formed he said.<lb/>
Phosphate primarily develops<lb/>
from old marine deposits that form-<lb/>
ed on the ocean floor at various<lb/>
times in the past. As one of life's<lb/>
essential elements, it is also found in<lb/>
small amounts almost everywhere<lb/>
but it is extremeiv rare to find it in<lb/>
significant abundance.<lb/>
The large inland deposits of<lb/>
phosphates in North Carolina and<lb/>
Florida are currently being mind as<lb/>
an ingredient for fertilizer, rhese<lb/>
mines provide about 40 percent of<lb/>
the world's supplv and 85 percent of<lb/>
the fertilizer needs in the United<lb/>
States. Other significant deposits<lb/>
that formed at the same time as<lb/>
those in the Southeastern U.S. are<lb/>
found in Mexico, South America.<lb/>
California, Africa and Peru.<lb/>
Riggs said there is little need at<lb/>
the present time to mine o shore<lb/>
deposits o phosphate but this will<lb/>
change in the future as the world's<lb/>
population increases and the de-<lb/>
mand for food becomes greater.<lb/>
Scientists predict that b the end of<lb/>
the 20th century, phosphate<lb/>
resources in the U.S. will play a ma-<lb/>
jor role in world, trade.<lb/>
"Our primary purpose is to<lb/>
understand the origins o these<lb/>
sediments but one of the nice things<lb/>
about it is we will probably be fin-<lb/>
ding new deposits in the process of<lb/>
doing that Riggs said.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Dave Odom, ECU's basketball<lb/>
coach for the past three years, is<lb/>
headed for IVA. For the com-<lb/>
plete story, see Sports.<lb/>
Inside Index<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
7<lb/>
9<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057482_0002"/><lb/>
2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 9, 1982<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
if you or your organization<lb/>
would like to nave an item printed<lb/>
In the announcement column,<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
form and send it to The East<lb/>
Carolinian in care of the produc<lb/>
tion manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications Building.<lb/>
Flyers and handwritten copy on<lb/>
odd siied paper cannot be ac<lb/>
cepted.<lb/>
There is no charge for an<lb/>
nouncements, but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest that you do not rely<lb/>
solely on this column tor publicity<lb/>
The deadline for announcements<lb/>
is 5 P m Friday for the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 5 p.m Tuesday for the<lb/>
Thursday paper No a<lb/>
nouncements received after these<lb/>
oeadlines will be printed.<lb/>
This space is available to an<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
TESTING<lb/>
Three teats quaiifmg college<lb/>
graduates tor advanced studies<lb/>
will be given at ECU during June.<lb/>
The tests are: Law School Admis<lb/>
sion Test, to be given June 16, The<lb/>
Graduate Record Examination,<lb/>
June 12. and the Graduate<lb/>
Management Admission Test,<lb/>
June ?<lb/>
Persons interested in taking the<lb/>
tests must register in advance.<lb/>
Further information and ap<lb/>
plication materials are available<lb/>
from the Educational Testing Ser<lb/>
vice. Box 966 R. Princeton, N.J.<lb/>
08540 or from the ECU Testing<lb/>
Center, 105 Speight, ECU, Green<lb/>
vine, N C 27834<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
Personal Development pro<lb/>
grams begin June 10, Darkroom<lb/>
Photography l, June 12, Small<lb/>
Computer, July 7, Aerobic<lb/>
Exercse. July 8. Nutrition and<lb/>
Weight Control For information<lb/>
Call 757 6143<lb/>
NIGHT CLASSES<lb/>
Credit classes will be offered on<lb/>
weekday nights for the Summer.<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday course<lb/>
include; ECON 2133. MATH 0045.<lb/>
PSYC 1050. Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
nights courses Include; SOCI 2110.<lb/>
SPCH 2080. FINA 2244, and ECON<lb/>
2 2 23<lb/>
Classis begin June 16 and end<lb/>
August 5. Registration begins on<lb/>
June 14 at Erwln Hall.For further<lb/>
information call 757-6324<lb/>
ATTENTION ECU<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
The Buccaneer needs your help.<lb/>
If you or a friend of yours was a<lb/>
member of an organization either<lb/>
Greek, Service oriented, or<lb/>
academicaly or professional<lb/>
oriented and your group had your<lb/>
group picture made for the<lb/>
1981 1982 Book, please call the<lb/>
Buccaneer We need some<lb/>
assistance in identifying the<lb/>
members and find a little bit more<lb/>
about your organization. Call<lb/>
757 6501 between 2 5.<lb/>
PSI CH!<lb/>
Are you interested in self<lb/>
actualization, educational<lb/>
psychology. Intellectual develop<lb/>
ment, sexual behavior or<lb/>
statistical interpetation come to<lb/>
the Psi Chi Library Book Sale held<lb/>
in Speight 202. Books pried from<lb/>
.05 to 85 Ptl Chi throws in a<lb/>
bonus; quiet atmosphere for stu-<lb/>
dying with a comfortable couch to<lb/>
relax In. Hours from 8 to 1. Come<lb/>
to our Book Sale to understand<lb/>
human behavior and be a better<lb/>
person for it.<lb/>
What are you doing on June 22.<lb/>
at 4:30 Psi Chi is having a cook<lb/>
out in the wooded area between<lb/>
the Biology Greenhouse and 10th<lb/>
St. Advance tickets wilt be sold at<lb/>
in the Psi Chi Library for 82 or<lb/>
82.50 at the Door This includes<lb/>
good food, drinks, and beer; plus a<lb/>
chance to win a fifth of Jack<lb/>
Daniels. Drawing will be at 600<lb/>
This is good way to relieve post-<lb/>
exam anxieties and start the se<lb/>
cond Summer Session in style. For<lb/>
more information come by the Psi<lb/>
Chi Library. Hours: 8-1.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use the form at right or<lb/>
use a separate sheet of paper if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line. Each letter, punc<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will be ac<lb/>
cepted over the phone. We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
75 per line or traction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
Return to THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
office by 3:00 Tuesday before<lb/>
Wednesday publications.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
City State.<lb/>
.Zip,<lb/>
.Phone.<lb/>
No lin? at 7Sc pr line No. insertionsenclosed. ?-<lb/>
? 1 T t 1 1??,<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
??-H<lb/>
-??<lb/>
?i?,<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
-i?<lb/>
Foreign Language Exemption<lb/>
Sought For ECU Hearing Impaired<lb/>
Shorld an ECU stu-<lb/>
dent who has a severe<lb/>
hearing and speech im-<lb/>
pairment be declared<lb/>
exempt from the<lb/>
university's foreign<lb/>
language requirement?<lb/>
This question is now<lb/>
being considered by<lb/>
Mike Ernest, director<lb/>
of ECU's Program for<lb/>
Hearing Impaired<lb/>
Students, and Dr. Mar-<lb/>
tin Schwarz, chairman<lb/>
of ECU's Foreign<lb/>
Language Depart-<lb/>
ment.The result of<lb/>
Ernest's and Schwarz's'<lb/>
discussions will directly<lb/>
affect a large majority<lb/>
of ECU's hearing im-<lb/>
paired population and<lb/>
set precedents for other<lb/>
handicapped students<lb/>
who seek concessions<lb/>
from the university.<lb/>
Consideration of the<lb/>
above question stems<lb/>
from the recent lack of<lb/>
successof one hearing-<lb/>
impaired student who,<lb/>
outside of the study of<lb/>
foreign language, has<lb/>
earned a respectable<lb/>
grade point average.<lb/>
This student endured<lb/>
four semesters of<lb/>
beginning level foreign<lb/>
language before receiv-<lb/>
ing a passing grade<lb/>
The student's argu-<lb/>
ment says that not be-<lb/>
ing able to hear a<lb/>
foreign language<lb/>
severely impairs the<lb/>
learning of it. Addi-<lb/>
tionally, while many<lb/>
hearing students can<lb/>
passively sit back, listen<lb/>
and understand a lec-<lb/>
ture, a hearing-<lb/>
impaired student must<lb/>
actively watch an inter-<lb/>
preter who, naturally,<lb/>
is subject to error.<lb/>
Another factor that<lb/>
must be considered is<lb/>
the limitation of sign<lb/>
language. As one inter-<lb/>
preter put it, "One can-<lb/>
not adequately inter-<lb/>
pret a foreign language<lb/>
class with sign<lb/>
language<lb/>
The language forces<lb/>
the interpreter to spell<lb/>
all words on his fingers<lb/>
which is extremely<lb/>
hard. It is even harder<lb/>
for the student to<lb/>
understand the mass of<lb/>
fingers that are fumbl-<lb/>
ing around in front of<lb/>
his eyes. It is also hard<lb/>
to find an interpreter<lb/>
who is both skilled in<lb/>
sign and knows the<lb/>
foreign language well<lb/>
enough to interpret it.<lb/>
The inability to hear<lb/>
that hinders the learn-<lb/>
ing of a foreign<lb/>
language also hinders<lb/>
the learning of English.<lb/>
A hearing-impaired<lb/>
person cannot "sound<lb/>
ouf'words to<lb/>
remember their spelling<lb/>
or use things he has<lb/>
heard as an example of<lb/>
correct English.<lb/>
Despite these facts,<lb/>
there are several col-<lb/>
leges that have 75 per-<lb/>
cent to 100 percent suc-<lb/>
cess rates among the<lb/>
hearing-impaired<lb/>
students they require to<lb/>
study foreign language.<lb/>
(Gardner-Webb,<lb/>
Madonna College, Ten-<lb/>
nessee Temple Univer-<lb/>
sity). These success<lb/>
rates are achieved with<lb/>
tutors, classroom<lb/>
notetakers and in-<lb/>
dividualized instruc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
According to Dr.<lb/>
Jose Baro of ECU's<lb/>
Foreign Language<lb/>
Department, these<lb/>
methods are good and<lb/>
may help hearing-<lb/>
impaired students suc-<lb/>
ceed at ECU, but they<lb/>
are impractical. Baro<lb/>
says that the number of<lb/>
foreign language<lb/>
students at ECU is very<lb/>
high and that in-<lb/>
dividualized instruction<lb/>
of hearing-impaired<lb/>
students would force<lb/>
professors to spend an<lb/>
unreasonably large<lb/>
amount of time with a<lb/>
very small group of<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Edward Burchette, a<lb/>
profoundly deaf<lb/>
graduate of ECU, pass-<lb/>
ed German 1001 in his<lb/>
senior year with flying<lb/>
colors and without ex-<lb/>
tensive tutoring or in-<lb/>
dividualized instruc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
If he was able to suc-<lb/>
ceed without the advan-<lb/>
tage of partial abilities<lb/>
of speech and hearing,<lb/>
then all hearing-<lb/>
impaired students<lb/>
should be able to<lb/>
right?<lb/>
"Wrong says<lb/>
Ernest. "Eddie had a<lb/>
strong language<lb/>
background and didn't<lb/>
use his voice, so he<lb/>
wasn't expected to suc-<lb/>
ceed on an oral or aural<lb/>
level. The other student<lb/>
did have some abilities<lb/>
at speech and hearing<lb/>
and was expected to<lb/>
speak and hear the<lb/>
language when that<lb/>
wasn't possible<lb/>
This statement sup-<lb/>
ports Ernest's proposed<lb/>
solution. He has sug-<lb/>
gested individualized<lb/>
evaluation of hearing-<lb/>
impaired student's<lb/>
speech and hearing<lb/>
abilities. He thinks that<lb/>
then the decision to re-<lb/>
quire language or an<lb/>
alternative (i.e. foreign<lb/>
history or literature)<lb/>
can be properly made.<lb/>
Schwarz says that<lb/>
Ernest's plan is feasi-<lb/>
ble, but that he does<lb/>
not yet have enough in-<lb/>
formation to make a<lb/>
decision. He is also<lb/>
waiting for the Foreign<lb/>
Language Depart-<lb/>
ment's Curriculum<lb/>
Committee to<lb/>
reconvene this fall<lb/>
before going through<lb/>
formal decision making<lb/>
procedures<lb/>
Abubakar Fada, a<lb/>
hearing-impaired stu-<lb/>
dent who may be af-<lb/>
fected by the results of<lb/>
the decision doesn't<lb/>
think that hearing-<lb/>
impaired students<lb/>
should be required to<lb/>
take foreign language.<lb/>
Fada feels this way " . .<lb/>
.because the deaf ear<lb/>
can't hear when that<lb/>
language is spoken and<lb/>
English itself is not easy<lb/>
for a person who can-<lb/>
not hear.<lb/>
RECREATION<lb/>
RENTALS<lb/>
An outdoor recreation equip<lb/>
ment rental service has been pro<lb/>
video througn the Department of<lb/>
intramural Recreational Ser<lb/>
vices Items available tor rent in<lb/>
elude BacHpacKs, tents, canoes,<lb/>
and tandem bicycle The outdoor<lb/>
recreation center is located in the<lb/>
equipment room 115 Memorial<lb/>
Gym Hours of operation are<lb/>
2 00 5 00 p.m Monday through<lb/>
Friday information is available<lb/>
on State and Federal Cam<lb/>
pgrounds. backpacking Trails.<lb/>
Day hiking Trails and Canoeing<lb/>
Rivers<lb/>
JOBS AND JUSTICE'<lb/>
A march tor "Jobs and Justice"<lb/>
sponsored by the Southern Chris<lb/>
tian Leadership Conference will<lb/>
be coming to Greenville on Thurs<lb/>
day All students are invited to<lb/>
participate The march will begin<lb/>
at 401 Moyewood Drive, at 4 p.m<lb/>
Everyone must get together to<lb/>
"stop Reagans war on the poor"<lb/>
and help to win extention of the<lb/>
Voting Rights Act For more mfor<lb/>
mat.on call 758 6820<lb/>
OFF-CAMPUS<lb/>
HOUSING<lb/>
"if you will be needing a room<lb/>
mate or would like to find and<lb/>
share an apartment for Fall con<lb/>
tact the Off Campus Housing Of<lb/>
lice. 211 Whichard Building<lb/>
757 6881. before June 14 Orients<lb/>
tion will begm at that time and<lb/>
many students will be seeking ac<lb/>
commodations<lb/>
listing "<lb/>
We need your<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
The Brothers of th? Kappa<lb/>
Sigma Fraturnity would like to<lb/>
Congratulate the ECU Baseball<lb/>
Team tor their outstanding perfor<lb/>
mance in the ECAC South Cham<lb/>
pionships 'Congratulations' from<lb/>
tne Brothers, Little Sisters. ?"?<lb/>
the Pledges<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
The East Carolinian has an<lb/>
opening coming up for the news<lb/>
edtors position Experience<lb/>
necessary interested persons<lb/>
should contact the East Carolinian<lb/>
to apply tor the position For more<lb/>
information call 757 6J66<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FREE KITTENS t weeks old. Call<lb/>
754-4317 for a precious pet.<lb/>
TYPING: term, Thesis, resumes,<lb/>
etc. 757 W42 before :00 p.m.<lb/>
MEWLETT-paekard HP 97<lb/>
calculator Built-in printer, card<lb/>
programmable, ACDC Perfect<lb/>
condition.(Retails for over S700)<lb/>
$350. Call John 757 3744 after 5<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
FEMALE roommate needed to<lb/>
live at Georgetown Apts. Great<lb/>
location to both downtown and<lb/>
campus area. Pool privileges<lb/>
Half utilities and rent. For infor-<lb/>
mation, call 751-4427.<lb/>
75-205 Macro-zoom for Nikon 5240<lb/>
New-100irm 753-5581 after 5:30<lb/>
RTofF OR RIDER needed to<lb/>
Arkansas or along 1-40 West. Call<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
BASS GUITARIST: top-40 country<lb/>
band based in Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Successful recording act with<lb/>
steady bookings Serious inquiries<lb/>
only. (91?) 758-8772 night. 754-882$<lb/>
day.<lb/>
ATTN. 305 Meade is now officially<lb/>
fair game tor a mass invasion We<lb/>
supply the kegs. You supply the<lb/>
nite Friday at It:00. See you there<lb/>
SUMMER JOB: Need student<lb/>
technical draftsman. Must have<lb/>
working knowledge of electrical<lb/>
schematics. Pay commensurate<lb/>
with skill and productivity.<lb/>
757-4711 D. Lunney, R. Morrison or<lb/>
A. Salt.<lb/>
Professional TYPING service- ex<lb/>
perience, quality work, IBM Selec<lb/>
trie typewriter. Call Lanie Shive,<lb/>
758-5301 or Gail Joyner, 754-1042<lb/>
TYPING: Term, thesis, resumes,<lb/>
dissertations, etc Professional<lb/>
quality at lowest rates. Call Kem-<lb/>
pie Dunn anytime. 752-4733<lb/>
ONE OR TWO female roommates<lb/>
wanted. $230 a month plus utilities.<lb/>
Village Green. Grad students<lb/>
preferred Available in July,<lb/>
752 7584<lb/>
TYPING TERM PAPERS all<lb/>
sues. Proofreading offered<lb/>
Dependable typist Call Mary.<lb/>
3552440<lb/>
1974 DATSUN<lb/>
Manual Shift<lb/>
410 Stn Wgn<lb/>
in good condition<lb/>
($1400) call 758-4445 after 5 30 p.m<lb/>
and before 10 am. weekdays<lb/>
Anytime on weekends.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
(MCY I92S<lb/>
Published ever Tuesday ana<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
tng the summer<lb/>
The Eas' Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ficiai newspaper ot East<lb/>
Carolina university, ownea.<lb/>
operated and published for ?no<lb/>
oy the students ot Eas' Cr I<lb/>
JriverS'ty<lb/>
Subscription Rate $20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus ot ECU.<lb/>
Greenville. N.C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Seo addrivi<lb/>
changes to The Eas- Car ? ?<lb/>
Old Sou'n Building, ? C jreer<lb/>
vine. NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 757 4344. 4347 4309<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
class postage rattnpending at<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Industrial Tech Students Awarded<lb/>
Nine studednts in the<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty School Of<lb/>
Technology have been<lb/>
announced as winners<lb/>
of annual awards by<lb/>
ECU's chapter of Pi<lb/>
Omega Pi honor socie-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
The winners are all<lb/>
members of the campus<lb/>
Beta Kappa chapter of<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi, national<lb/>
society for business<lb/>
eduction.<lb/>
Cedricia Wilson of<lb/>
Kinston is the 1982 reci-<lb/>
pient of the Thomas<lb/>
Clay Williams<lb/>
Memorial Scholarship,<lb/>
given annually to the<lb/>
senior business educa-<lb/>
tion major at ECU with<lb/>
the highest overall<lb/>
academic grade point<lb/>
average.<lb/>
Lloyd Yancey<lb/>
Garner of Williamston<lb/>
received the Marjorie<lb/>
Harrison Scholarship,<lb/>
given to the freshman<lb/>
business education ma-<lb/>
jor with the highest<lb/>
academic grade point<lb/>
average. The Lena C.<lb/>
Ellis Scholarship was<lb/>
given to James R.<lb/>
Smith Jr of Conway,<lb/>
in recognition of<lb/>
achieving the highest<lb/>
academic grade point<lb/>
average among ECU<lb/>
business education<lb/>
sophomores.<lb/>
The Harold M.<lb/>
McGrath Service<lb/>
Award was presented<lb/>
to Linda Hale of New<lb/>
Bern. The McGrath<lb/>
award recognizes an<lb/>
outstanding senior Pi<lb/>
Omega Pi member on<lb/>
the basis of scholar-<lb/>
ship, leadership and<lb/>
service to the chapter<lb/>
and the field of<lb/>
business education.<lb/>
Patricia Strum of<lb/>
Henderson and<lb/>
Lorianne Templeton of<lb/>
Chesapeake, Va tied<lb/>
for the 1982 Beta Kap-<lb/>
pa Service Award,<lb/>
given in recognition of<lb/>
outstanding<lb/>
undergradutes' service<lb/>
to the chapter.<lb/>
Becky Moody of<lb/>
Mount Olive was given<lb/>
the Audrey V. Demp-<lb/>
sey Scholarship, in<lb/>
recognition of having<lb/>
achieved the highest<lb/>
academic grade point<lb/>
average among ECU's<lb/>
junior business educa-<lb/>
tion majors.<lb/>
Sue Wiley of Pink<lb/>
Hill was given the Na-<lb/>
tional Business Educa-<lb/>
tion Association Award<lb/>
of Merit, presented<lb/>
each year to a senior in<lb/>
business education.<lb/>
Sandra Faye Hum-<lb/>
phrey of Jacksonville<lb/>
was recognized as the<lb/>
"Most Outstanding<lb/>
Senior"of the ECU<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Business Education and<lb/>
Office Administration.<lb/>
EXCEPTIONAL<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
Children with learning<lb/>
problems who will enter<lb/>
grades three through nine<lb/>
in the fall are eligible to<lb/>
participate in a summer<lb/>
clinic sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU School of Education<lb/>
and the Greenville City<lb/>
Schools.<lb/>
The clinic will run from<lb/>
June 28 to July 28 at Wahl<lb/>
Coates Elementary<lb/>
School with two-hour<lb/>
morning sessions. In-<lb/>
dividual and small group<lb/>
remedial sessions will be<lb/>
conducted by graduate in-<lb/>
terns in the Department<lb/>
of Special Education's<lb/>
Learning Disabilities<lb/>
Master's Degree Pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Fee for the clinic is<lb/>
$135. Further information<lb/>
is available<lb/>
call 752-4192 or<lb/>
757-6181<lb/>
SAMMY'<lb/>
Country<lb/>
'Cooking<lb/>
naiLY specials $1.99<lb/>
LARGE PLATE ?$3.75<lb/>
with all you can eat vegetables<lb/>
REGULAR PLATES ? $2.98<lb/>
LUNCH &amp; SUPPER<lb/>
11:00 a.m8 p.m. Mon-Sat<lb/>
closed Sundays<lb/>
PLUS TAX, TEA<lb/>
Take Out<lb/>
Orders Welcome<lb/>
512 E. 14th St.<lb/>
 2 blocks down from Bel dorm)<lb/>
J.A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, slethoscopes,<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/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH<lb/>
FOR-<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
ALkGOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CHINA &amp; CRYSTAL<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
&amp;RINC<lb/>
or ?v sales CO <lb/>
401 S.EVANS ST. 0PiN<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 75<lb/>
OPtN H VON V<lb/>
PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER<lb/>
Happy Hour Wednesday<lb/>
Door Open 4:30<lb/>
Casablanca<lb/>
Band!<lb/>
Castaways<lb/>
Performing 7-11 p.m.<lb/>
Ladies'Free n L(?ie?<lb/>
Double Shots<lb/>
Prime Rib Special ? $7.95<lb/>
Surf &amp; Turf ? $9.95<lb/>
Check Weekly Dinner Specials<lb/>
ITALIAN NITE<lb/>
LASAGNA<lb/>
AND<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
Plus Garlic Braad CQQ<lb/>
EVERY WEDS.<lb/>
with all you<lb/>
can eat soup<lb/>
and salad<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
FRIDAY ONLY<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT?<lb/>
FLOUNDER DINNER<lb/>
JSKPPfRINCM FW?S'COLE ?TARTAR<lb/>
SAUCE ? HUSHPUPWES<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
r<lb/>
264 Bv-Pass<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
TOKG CUPPER-<lb/>
"A VOYAGE OF TDTAL ELEGANCE "<lb/>
ZgTHftS CUPPER QrTm TDWmvD WOMB<lb/>
A C(m?TZlJfeV&amp;MCEQ<lb/>
?A CQMPL&amp;E VARtEJYOF Mirtvrs<lb/>
-uur caam&amp; aw p&amp;MAAnr vaviac,<lb/>
-QUtXHJE eutPM?? VAILS<lb/>
? lUcoRtaiUAL Bopy w&amp;p. ciucutQ, afits?)<lb/>
CALL &amp; AJA&amp;AJ7WWT i<lb/>
IOOS-A VWL70V ST.<lb/>
t<lb/>
 ?? . <lb/>
<pb facs="00057482_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 9, 1982<lb/>
Toxic Shock Syndrome Reported<lb/>
Doctors Still Search For Cause<lb/>
ATLANTA (UPI) ?<lb/>
The National Center<lb/>
for Disease Control<lb/>
says about 50 cases of<lb/>
toxic shock syndrome<lb/>
(TSS) are being<lb/>
reported each month,<lb/>
but the specific<lb/>
bacterial toxin that<lb/>
causes the illness re-<lb/>
mains unidentified.<lb/>
1 he federal health<lb/>
agency also gets fre-<lb/>
quent telephone calls<lb/>
from concerned women<lb/>
about the sometimes<lb/>
fatal disease that strikes<lb/>
young menstruating<lb/>
females more ofren<lb/>
than any other group.<lb/>
Ncarl 2,000 cases of<lb/>
I SS hae been reported<lb/>
to the center and there<lb/>
hae been at least 88<lb/>
deaths.<lb/>
To help the public<lb/>
become aware of toxic<lb/>
shock syndrome, which<lb/>
first came to public at-<lb/>
tention in 1980. the<lb/>
Center for Disease<lb/>
recently issued the<lb/>
following list of ques-<lb/>
tions and answers<lb/>
about the disease: '<lb/>
Q. What is toxic-<lb/>
shock sn drome?<lb/>
V foxic shock syn-<lb/>
drome is an illness that<lb/>
occurs primarily in<lb/>
young women during<lb/>
or shortly after their<lb/>
menstrual periods.<lb/>
However, there have<lb/>
been cases reported in<lb/>
men, children and non-<lb/>
mentsruating women.<lb/>
Q. What are the<lb/>
symptoms of toxic<lb/>
shock syndrome&amp;<lb/>
A. Symptoms usually<lb/>
come on suddenly with<lb/>
fever, chills, vomiting<lb/>
and diarrhea being<lb/>
common. The<lb/>
temperature is fre-<lb/>
quently above 104<lb/>
degrees Fahrenheit.<lb/>
Other symptons include<lb/>
a rapid drop in blood<lb/>
pressure and accompa-<lb/>
nying dizziness, fain-<lb/>
ting or shock, sore<lb/>
throat and a sunburn-<lb/>
like rash. Most of these<lb/>
symptoms are present<lb/>
in severe toxic shock<lb/>
syndrome, but the il-<lb/>
lness also occurs in a<lb/>
milder form.<lb/>
Q. Are there early<lb/>
warning signs?<lb/>
A. If a woman is us-<lb/>
ing tampons and<lb/>
develops a high fever<lb/>
and vomiting or diar-<lb/>
rhea during her<lb/>
menstrual period, she<lb/>
should discontinue<lb/>
tampon use and consult<lb/>
a physician immediate-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
Q. How common is<lb/>
toxic shock syndrome?<lb/>
A. It is not yet known<lb/>
how common it is, but<lb/>
available information<lb/>
indicates it is relatively<lb/>
rare. In 1980, during<lb/>
the center's intensive<lb/>
investigation of toxic<lb/>
shock syndrome, mon-<lb/>
thly case counts ran as<lb/>
high as 133. By late<lb/>
1981, the number of<lb/>
casess reported to the<lb/>
center each month had<lb/>
declined to 50 or less.<lb/>
Q. What is the fatali-<lb/>
ty rate.?<lb/>
A. Approximately 3<lb/>
percent of cases<lb/>
reported in 1981<lb/>
resulted in death.<lb/>
Q. Is there a risk of<lb/>
toxic shock syndrome<lb/>
associated with all<lb/>
brands oftampons?<lb/>
A. Studies to date<lb/>
have not shown that<lb/>
any specific brand is<lb/>
without risk. Some in-<lb/>
vestigators have sug-<lb/>
gested that tampons<lb/>
made with synthetic<lb/>
superabsorbent<lb/>
material pose a greater<lb/>
risk.<lb/>
Q. What advice does<lb/>
the Center for Disease<lb/>
Contral give in the use<lb/>
of tampons?<lb/>
A. The cewnter em-<lb/>
phasizes that any<lb/>
preventive measure a<lb/>
woman chooses is an<lb/>
individual decision.<lb/>
Women can markedly<lb/>
reduce their risk of<lb/>
developing menstrual<lb/>
toxic shock syndrome<lb/>
by not using tampons.<lb/>
Women who choose to<lb/>
use tampons may<lb/>
reduce their risk by<lb/>
alternating them with<lb/>
other sanitary aids dur-<lb/>
ing their menstrual cy-<lb/>
cle.<lb/>
Q. Is it possible to<lb/>
have toxic shock syn-<lb/>
drome more than once?<lb/>
A. Yes. The risk of<lb/>
having a recurrence is<lb/>
reduced, however, by<lb/>
treatment of toxic<lb/>
shock syndrome with<lb/>
appropriate antibiotics<lb/>
and by discontinuing<lb/>
the use of tampons.<lb/>
Q. Is there a treat-<lb/>
ment for toxic shock<lb/>
syndrome?<lb/>
A. In the acute<lb/>
phase, severely ill pa-<lb/>
tients need to be<lb/>
hospitalized and given<lb/>
large volumes of in-<lb/>
travenous fluids and<lb/>
medications to help<lb/>
raise the blood<lb/>
pressure. Antibiotics<lb/>
are also usually given to<lb/>
the patient. It has not<lb/>
been documented that<lb/>
antibiotics cure the<lb/>
disease or improve out-<lb/>
come, but they do ap-<lb/>
pear to prevent recur-<lb/>
rences.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Q. What are some of<lb/>
the characteristics of<lb/>
cases in men, children<lb/>
and non-menstruating<lb/>
women?<lb/>
A. A small number<lb/>
of individuals have<lb/>
developed toxic shock<lb/>
syndrome from boils,<lb/>
abscesses, infected<lb/>
burns, infected abra-<lb/>
sions and insect bites.<lb/>
Other cases have occur-<lb/>
red in persons who<lb/>
have had recent<lb/>
surgery. Toxic shock<lb/>
syndrome has also been<lb/>
identified among<lb/>
women who have<lb/>
recently undergone<lb/>
childbirth.<lb/>
Assembly Appropriation Committee<lb/>
Stalls On Teacher Salary One-Year Freeze<lb/>
R A 1 1-1G H, N . C.<lb/>
(UPI) ? The General<lb/>
Assembly's Joint Ap-<lb/>
propriations Commit-<lb/>
tee has stalled oer a<lb/>
proposed one-year<lb/>
salary freeze for<lb/>
teachers and state<lb/>
employees.<lb/>
The com mi nee<lb/>
postponed a vote Tues-<lb/>
day after some<lb/>
members aid they<lb/>
wanted to wait until<lb/>
apoihei committee can<lb/>
iisider a proposed in-<lb/>
crease in liquor and<lb/>
beer taxes to offset part<lb/>
of the freeze.<lb/>
The proposal, which<lb/>
would raise $40<lb/>
million, is part of the<lb/>
highway- funding<lb/>
package Cos. James B.<lb/>
Hunt Jr. asked the<lb/>
deneral Assembly to<lb/>
approve last year. It<lb/>
was never passed and<lb/>
remains in the Senate<lb/>
Finance Committee.<lb/>
But its sponsor, Sen.<lb/>
George Marion,<lb/>
D-Surry, told the Ap-<lb/>
propriations Commit-<lb/>
tee the bill should be<lb/>
brought up this year.<lb/>
Instead of allocating<lb/>
the increased revenues<lb/>
to highways, Marion<lb/>
said the money should<lb/>
be applied to the salary<lb/>
freeze. Because of sagg-<lb/>
ing state revenues,<lb/>
budget leaders'propos-<lb/>
ed the pay freeze,<lb/>
which would save the<lb/>
state $90 million by<lb/>
blocking all automatic-<lb/>
pay increases for the<lb/>
coming fiscal year.<lb/>
Marion did not offer<lb/>
any proposal to raise<lb/>
the remaining $50<lb/>
million needed to<lb/>
cancel the freeze.<lb/>
On a voice vote, the<lb/>
Appropriations Com-<lb/>
mittee apparently re-<lb/>
jected a proposal to<lb/>
delay action on the<lb/>
freeze until the Senate<lb/>
Finance Committee<lb/>
meets Thursday, but<lb/>
opponents of the freeze<lb/>
called for a show of<lb/>
hands and won a delay.<lb/>
Budget leaders then<lb/>
adjourned the Ap-<lb/>
propriations Commit-<lb/>
tee until Thursday.<lb/>
Earlier Tuesday, the<lb/>
committee conducted<lb/>
public hearings on the<lb/>
use of federal block<lb/>
grant funds for pro-<lb/>
grams in community<lb/>
services; preventive<lb/>
health; and alcohol,<lb/>
drug abuse and mental<lb/>
health.<lb/>
In a related develop-<lb/>
ment, a Senate member<lb/>
Tuesday proposed a tax<lb/>
on coin-operated video<lb/>
games.<lb/>
In a speech to the full<lb/>
Senate, Sen. Robert<lb/>
Swain, D-Buncombe,<lb/>
called the games "time<lb/>
wasters' and said the<lb/>
state now receives a tax<lb/>
of $13 per game.<lb/>
But Swain said Penn-<lb/>
sylvania collects an an-<lb/>
nual tax of $200 per<lb/>
game and he has<lb/>
prepared legislation to<lb/>
collect a similar tax in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
He did not propose a<lb/>
use for the money, but<lb/>
later said it could be us-<lb/>
ed to help reduce the<lb/>
impact of the pay<lb/>
freeze.<lb/>
In other legislative<lb/>
action, the House<lb/>
Finance Committee<lb/>
killed a proposal to<lb/>
grant a state income tax<lb/>
exemption for all-<lb/>
savers certificates after<lb/>
members learned it<lb/>
would cost the state<lb/>
between $6 million and,<lb/>
$7 million a year in<lb/>
revenues.<lb/>
Gi Camouflaged Fatigue and<lb/>
T ShirH. Sleepmq Bags.<lb/>
Backpacks. Camping Equip<lb/>
ment. Steel Toed Shoes,<lb/>
Dishes and Over 700 Different<lb/>
New and Used Items Cowboy<lb/>
Bouts ??<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
1 SOI S Evans<lb/>
Sited<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
T<lb/>
00R SPECIAL LAD?K NlGtfT, LADIES P&amp;?<lb/>
WIN DRAFT SPCCUL WHILE THE UjTWKr<lb/>
DOOR PRTX-CS -T 9?CUL3 ALL NIGHT UN&amp;.<lb/>
&amp;m<lb/>
Writers Needed<lb/>
croSfwnow fCTY " cu? SAC SPtcHiS wm,<lb/>
Twi B?T W fX 4tKU$DAWCt MSIC 4aWIGHT UNG<lb/>
FR?tt)0RPRZ?ALLNIC<lb/>
4n COTXA&amp; sr W- 5'9<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is seeking more writers<lb/>
for the news section.<lb/>
Anyone who can<lb/>
write effectively and<lb/>
meet deadlines is en-<lb/>
couraged to apply for a<lb/>
staff writer's position.<lb/>
All interested per-<lb/>
sons will be given an<lb/>
opportunity to write<lb/>
for the paper. In-<lb/>
terested writers should<lb/>
apply at the East<lb/>
Carolinian office or<lb/>
contact Ernest Conner<lb/>
at 757-6366.<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
P-estiurint<lb/>
Not all clinics are IB sameT<lb/>
ABORTXOV 1s a difficult decision that's made<lb/>
easier by the women of the Fleming Center.<lb/>
Counselors are available day and night to<lb/>
support and understand you. Comfort, safety,<lb/>
privacy, and a friendly staff that's what the<lb/>
Fleming Center is all about.<lb/>
Insurance aoc?ptd<lb/>
All lnehjuiiv t?<lb/>
UptolSWMk V?rr ??ly vrnmaaj<lb/>
Call 781 -8850 day or nijUit<lb/>
The Fleming Center mak? tlf diffwaoe.<lb/>
 S.r.i. Ziri<lb/>
mrarsv.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 1)U<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
$11 00 Pregnancy T?t. Sirt<lb/>
Control, and Problam<lb/>
Pregnancy Coum?lin? Far t?r<lb/>
ttier information call U1-M3S<lb/>
(Toll Frae Nvmkir<lb/>
?00 Mi JSi batwaan t AM<lb/>
and I P.M. WaafcSays.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S'<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
?17 Wtit Morgan St.<lb/>
Ralaigh. N.C.<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
$C39<lb/>
All you can eat<lb/>
Bob Hearing ?<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
Phone 758-0327<lb/>
Cross Green Street Bridge<lb/>
Take left at 1st Light<lb/>
Locoed one block down on left<lb/>
WED.&amp;<lb/>
THURS. ONLY<lb/>
A<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily<lb/>
I below the advertised price in each A&amp;P Store except as<lb/>
in this ad<lb/>
available for sale at or<lb/>
specifically noted j<lb/>
prices effective thru Sat Junel2AT A&amp;P in Greenville,NC<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
AN AifP EXCLUSIVE OFFER:<lb/>
GENUINE<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
STONEWARE<lb/>
A 20-Pc. Service<lb/>
For 4 Cost Less<lb/>
Thans14<lb/>
CHOOSE FROM 3 BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
PATTERNS!<lb/>
? r-rwnr To Own To Taot Convwttanc<lb/>
DM??? wd Maw?a San<lb/>
Ertr. Mnmgav Chip ?Uwrt<lb/>
From the Highland Florai Collection.<lb/>
A GREAT VALUE AT A GREAT PRICE!<lb/>
A&amp;PCOUPON<lb/>
SAVE 50?<lb/>
When You Purchase A<lb/>
: "eg individual<lb/>
? 5" Casserole<lb/>
: withThi. With Cover<lb/>
.place :cE?0inT;u C49<lb/>
SETTING PIECE: Pay Only ?1<lb/>
With Each 5.00 Purchase ? W 613<lb/>
? T ,  -W SilABr Good Thru Sal Juna 12<lb/>
sttSTORtnisri ayforcompi hit- ih-taii s<lb/>
THIS WEEKS<lb/>
FEATURE ITEM<lb/>
Bread and<lb/>
Butter Plate<lb/>
69<lb/>
VBfFfaaaW PER PL<lb/>
W- SETTING<lb/>
with supermarket prices<lb/>
JPECTED<lb/>
Cut Whole<lb/>
ICL" rVPT? 2 in a bag,limit 2 bags)<lb/>
?a&amp;p quality heavy western<lb/>
GRAIN FED BEEF Cut Free!<lb/>
WHOLE BONELESS<lb/>
Shoulder ?-<lb/>
Pnast avg<lb/>
BLUE RIDGE BRAND<lb/>
Sliced<lb/>
Bacon<lb/>
1 lb. pkg.<lb/>
ARMOUR<lb/>
Turkey Franks<lb/>
69<lb/>
"2VE FARA I Pn,y 37 Cal?'ie<lb/>
A.V1W ? r-9 ww n ,2 cantaloupe<lb/>
SWEET &amp; JUICY<lb/>
Cantaloupes<lb/>
FIRST OF THE SEASON<lb/>
Honeydews<lb/>
CALIFORNIA RED RIPE<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
ivea toocer <lb/>
designer Savings w TROPICANA gold N PURE<lb/>
Brawny Towels feOrange Juice<lb/>
mm roils I<lb/>
00<lb/>
From Florida<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
LUCKY LEAF<lb/>
Apple Juice<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, JUNE 12 AT AAP<lb/>
64 OZ.<lb/>
bti.<lb/>
99?<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
-?cm<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
CtOROX,<lb/>
AP<lb/>
LIQUID<lb/>
Clorox Bleach e<lb/>
UMTT ONE WITH COUPON AND 750 ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, JUNE 12 AT AAP<lb/>
49<lb/>
c<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
615 <lb/>
I<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
KRAFT REAL<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
AT<lb/>
 ? UMTT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7 JO ORDER<lb/>
I KmMjttWW GOOD THRU SAT, JUNE 12 AT AAP<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057482_0004"/><lb/>
QUje ?afit Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, o?????,?,<lb/>
Mike Hughes, ??????? ???-<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT, Dirtaor of MMMq WILLIAM YELVERTON, sm ???<lb/>
Robert Rucks, ?,??? Mfl(MJf,f Ernest Conner, mm ?d,(0,<lb/>
Phillip Maness. emum? Steve Bachner. an .r . -?.or<lb/>
Chris Lichok, cmmh Nr Mike Davis, production Manager<lb/>
June 9, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Israeli Politics<lb/>
l History Of Violence<lb/>
Week after week, month after<lb/>
month, year after year, generation<lb/>
after generation, the same sad story<lb/>
holds true. Violence breeds<lb/>
violence. It never changes.<lb/>
News of the Falkland Islands<lb/>
crisis was still hot on the presses and<lb/>
yet reports in the past few days have<lb/>
revealed that still another war has<lb/>
emerged in our troubled world. Yet<lb/>
another nation has turned to<lb/>
military siege rather than diplomatic<lb/>
discussion. Israel, enraged by the at-<lb/>
tempted assassination of its am-<lb/>
bassador to Britain, Shlomo Argov,<lb/>
invaded southern Lebanon Sunday<lb/>
in what Israeli leaders called an ef-<lb/>
fort to eliminate PLO strongholds.<lb/>
Indeed, full-scale negotiations<lb/>
with a terrorist organization are un-<lb/>
thinkable at best. But the fault for<lb/>
this newest fighting in the Middle<lb/>
East lies not solely on the shoulders<lb/>
of the PLO. Israel has quite an ex-<lb/>
tensive history of aggression; the in-<lb/>
vasion of Lebanon is merely the tip<lb/>
of the iceberg. Remember, it was lit-<lb/>
tle more than a year ago that Israeli<lb/>
jets staged an unheralded attack on<lb/>
an Iraqi nuclear plant. It would<lb/>
seem the Israelis must have their<lb/>
own sense of justice.<lb/>
It is also somewhat ironic that a<lb/>
nation so concerned with<lb/>
eliminating terrorism has continual-<lb/>
ly opted for military solutions to<lb/>
each of its greater or lesser pro-<lb/>
blems. How long are other nations<lb/>
going to sit idle as Israel itself ter-<lb/>
rorizes the entire Middle East? How<lb/>
, ? ? Kp rnme<lb/>
ui ireedom continue?<lb/>
It will continue for as long as the<lb/>
rest of the world lets it. The ter-<lb/>
rorism will continue until the United<lb/>
States and other nations decide to<lb/>
take action to discourage Israeli ag-<lb/>
gression.<lb/>
U.S. presidential envoy Philip C.<lb/>
Habib arrived in Israel late Sunday<lb/>
in an attempt to halt the escalating<lb/>
war. This is, indeed, an honorable<lb/>
mission. But sadly, Habib's efforts<lb/>
in the warmongering country may<lb/>
all be in vain. Israel, as well as being<lb/>
known for its violence, has a history<lb/>
of shunning political solutions. And<lb/>
even when diplomatic measures are<lb/>
taken, the small nation is quick to<lb/>
forget its own agreements. Former<lb/>
President Carter's Middle East<lb/>
Summit comes to mind. Begin's<lb/>
historic embraces with Carter and<lb/>
former Egyptian President Anwar<lb/>
Sadat soon became mere memories<lb/>
as the peaceful spirit of the summit<lb/>
was fast forgotten.<lb/>
As a nation whose leaders claim<lb/>
they seek international peace,<lb/>
justice and sovereignty, the United<lb/>
States must take more tangible<lb/>
measures against the aggressive<lb/>
countries who continue to spread<lb/>
the threat of war. Economic sanc-<lb/>
tions of one form or another pro-<lb/>
vide a strong deterrent. They've<lb/>
worked in the past, and, if nothing<lb/>
else, they serve to show that this<lb/>
country will not condone terrorism<lb/>
and counter violence.<lb/>
Certainly, the Palestine Libera-<lb/>
tion Organization has been at fault<lb/>
on more than one occasion. Any<lb/>
organization whose sole purpose is<lb/>
to propagate and provoke violence<lb/>
is at fault by virtue of its nature.<lb/>
The elimination of the PLO and ter-<lb/>
rorism worldwide is a necessary step<lb/>
if the dream of international peace<lb/>
is ever to be realized.<lb/>
But countering terrorism with<lb/>
violence only serves as fuel for the<lb/>
fire. And with current alliances in<lb/>
the Middle East and worldwide ?<lb/>
just as the SyrianLebanese pact ?<lb/>
an invasion like the Israeli raid has<lb/>
definite international implications.<lb/>
It's time to take action.<lb/>
The Statistics Game ?<lb/>
Numbers Becoming A Part Of Life<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
In what we like to call a<lb/>
"highly-technological, highly-advanced"<lb/>
world, statistics have, indeed, become as<lb/>
much a part of our routine as eating and<lb/>
drinking.<lb/>
Just name a topic, and somewhere, at<lb/>
some time, someone, for some ungodly<lb/>
reason, has discovered all the pertinent in-<lb/>
formation about it. Births, deaths, in-<lb/>
vestments, sports, unemployment, infla-<lb/>
tion: just name a topic.<lb/>
What's that? You say you want to know<lb/>
about energy consumption in<lb/>
Czechoslovakia? Well, easy enough.<lb/>
Czechs use an average 110 million metric<lb/>
tons of coal or its equivalent annually as<lb/>
opposed to 6.1 million tons, used yearly in<lb/>
Nigeria.<lb/>
So, energy doesn't tickle your fancy.<lb/>
Then how's this for a statistic? Kerkira<lb/>
Airport in Corfu, Greece, is the twelfth<lb/>
most dangerous airport in the world. And<lb/>
anyone planning to jet into Fiji this sum-<lb/>
mer will be glad to hear that Nausori Air-<lb/>
port in Suva is much safer.<lb/>
But, believe it or not, stats aren't all<lb/>
worthless. Some, in fact, can come in quite<lb/>
handy. Just imagine what a great impres-<lb/>
sion you could make on your English pro-<lb/>
fessor if you knew that Hamlet's role in the<lb/>
Shakespearean play spans 1,422 lines as<lb/>
opposed to the part of lago in Othello with<lb/>
1,097.<lb/>
And imagine the fun you could have at<lb/>
parties entertaining all your friends with<lb/>
the above repertory. Why, you'd be the life<lb/>
of any party.<lb/>
Statistics can be interesting, too ?<lb/>
sometimes to the point of being madden-<lb/>
ing. Take these numbers for example. In<lb/>
1977, American Airlines, Eastern Airlines,<lb/>
U.S. Steel and countless other of the na-<lb/>
tion's largest corporations paid nary a pen-<lb/>
ny in federal taxes, despite incomes of<lb/>
more than $34 million each.<lb/>
No doubt the all-time undisputed cham-<lb/>
pion for statistics is the United States<lb/>
government. If it's been spent, eaten,<lb/>
thrown away or just conceived, the U.S.<lb/>
government has statistics on it. But for<lb/>
some reason, it has always struck me funny<lb/>
that in the scores and scores of government<lb/>
statistics volumes, there isn't one page of<lb/>
figures on government wasteful spending.<lb/>
l. t, nonetheless, our beloved<lb/>
bureaucracy bombards us each month with<lb/>
the grim statistics that, to many, have<lb/>
become the sad reality of life. Consumer<lb/>
price indexes, median incomes, prime in-<lb/>
terest rates, unemployment, inflation and<lb/>
a burrage of other sore topics work to the<lb/>
same end time after time. They provide the<lb/>
government with smiles and the citizen<lb/>
with a headache.<lb/>
And nowadays it is difficult to imagine<lb/>
even the world of sports without using<lb/>
statistics. Why, even a 7-year-old boy<lb/>
knows the batting average and on-base<lb/>
percentages of his favorite pro baseball<lb/>
players. Announcers, too, are quick to re-<lb/>
mind the fans about the lesser-known<lb/>
stats. 1 heard one recently who ranted on<lb/>
and on about a team's .729 winning<lb/>
percentage when they were ahead in the<lb/>
eighth inning with at least a two run lead<lb/>
and a right-hander on the mound. It simp-<lb/>
ly amazes me that 1 could ever have watch-<lb/>
ed the game "intelligently" without know-<lb/>
ing that figure.<lb/>
Statistics can reveal the grim tales of life;<lb/>
they can tell us a lot about a number of<lb/>
things. They can reflect a sick society<lb/>
preoccupied with trivia, or just a writer<lb/>
who doesn't know when to sign off.<lb/>
 NO. 5:<lb/>
HONOR THy<lb/>
MOTHER AND<lb/>
FATHER<lb/>
V<lb/>
NO.6:<lb/>
THOU SHALT<lb/>
NOT KILL<lb/>
HMMMttM<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
NOTE-<lb/>
COMMANDMENT NO. 6<lb/>
DOES NCfTAPPLi TO<lb/>
LEBANESE AND<lb/>
PALESTINIANS<lb/>
THE EA9T CAKOLIMAN<lb/>
Imperialism A Worldwide Threat<lb/>
By SAFARI MATHENGE<lb/>
At the dawn of time, says a swahili<lb/>
legend, the divider of the universe created<lb/>
Mount Kenya as his dwelling place and<lb/>
bestowed adjacent lands to my tribe. "I<lb/>
give this land to you and to your posteri-<lb/>
ty announced Murungu, the omnipotent<lb/>
power that white men call "God<lb/>
For generations, Murungu's command<lb/>
remained -unquestioned, uncontested!<lb/>
Fror the Indian Ocean to the shores of<lb/>
what is called Lake Victoria in world<lb/>
maps, the land was ours, and as the elders<lb/>
said, "No one could tunya (take it away)<lb/>
from us<lb/>
But that had been before the British had<lb/>
had a vision. Apparently, in the years that<lb/>
followed, the European "God" had an an-<lb/>
nouncement to make too; "Go unto the<lb/>
world and take all the land in my name<lb/>
Early this century, the British arrived ar-<lb/>
rived in Kenya, indeed in all of Africa,<lb/>
disguised as missionaries and claimed the<lb/>
land that Murungu had bestowed upon my<lb/>
tribe!<lb/>
Of course, our resentment smouldered<lb/>
as time went by, but at first, the elders had<lb/>
been naive and trusting. "Let the<lb/>
Muzungus (white wanderers) be But in a<lb/>
few years, white men proceded to establish<lb/>
themselves as the rulers and owners of that<lb/>
land. For the African, the lesson was learn-<lb/>
ed the hard way.<lb/>
Finally, as life became unbearable, white<lb/>
man's resentment flared into what was<lb/>
called "the mau mau uprising" of the<lb/>
1950s which claimed thousands of lives.<lb/>
The "mau mau terrorists as branded by<lb/>
the British, hid from the British in the<lb/>
caves of the sacred mountain, and from<lb/>
there bombarded the British troops until<lb/>
they had no choice but to pack and go back<lb/>
to England, small as it was.<lb/>
Of course, I do not merely intend to<lb/>
arouse by-gones here by retelling what is a<lb/>
bitter tale for me. I have a purpose!<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Spectrum<lb/>
Neither do I intend to be simplistic in ad-<lb/>
dressing the BritishArgentine crisis. I<lb/>
realize that it is a matter more complicated<lb/>
than I can justly evaluate, but I have ex-<lb/>
plored numerous similaritiess between the<lb/>
problems and developments that face the<lb/>
Argentine people today and those that fac-<lb/>
ed Kenya during those British Colonial<lb/>
days and have found profound similarities.<lb/>
Britain, and now with the support of big<lb/>
brother ?  United States ? is deter-<lb/>
mined more than ever to retain her majes-<lb/>
ty's kingdom intact. "We are fighting for a<lb/>
just cause says Mrs. Thatcher. Now. just<lb/>
what is a "just cause" for a war so<lb/>
away from home? If any other countrv had<lb/>
claimed land at that proximity, 1 assure<lb/>
you the United States would have con-<lb/>
demned it as "imperialistic<lb/>
Judging from such U.S. policies,<lb/>
especially during this period<lb/>
"Reagan-double-standard I sup;<lb/>
East Carolinian staff writer Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill in his assertion that it is not un-<lb/>
patriotic to protest inhuman policies divis-<lb/>
ed by politicians in their quest for power<lb/>
I would be utterly disappointed with the<lb/>
United States, but happily there stil! exists<lb/>
another United States, timeless and un-<lb/>
changing: the vast United States, where<lb/>
there is freedom of expression (although<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill may question that too) and<lb/>
freedom of opportunity, the United States<lb/>
of magnificent distances, where one's<lb/>
spirit roams with the wind in a land<lb/>
beautiful that it seems to expand and<lb/>
magnify the knowledge of the beholder.<lb/>
This is the United States that I s<lb/>
first, travelling mostly by car during<lb/>
golden days, living under tents in<lb/>
parks during crisp summer nights.<lb/>
"Life in those United States 1<lb/>
been told three years ago, "is a story t<lb/>
told and re-told Now that I have lived<lb/>
here myself, I can assure you that I won't<lb/>
be without an anecdote to tell to my grand<lb/>
children ? how vividly the mind's eye will<lb/>
bring back certain unforgettable scenes.<lb/>
"Campus Forum'<lb/>
Is WZMB's General Manager A Tyrant?<lb/>
To the General Manager of WZMB or<lb/>
whom it may concern:<lb/>
A recent problem has arisen on my<lb/>
radio dial. You see, I have this problem<lb/>
of distinguishing whether our college<lb/>
radio station is located at 91.3 or 93.3.<lb/>
The only difference I can find between<lb/>
the stations at these two locations is that<lb/>
one is automated at most times during<lb/>
the day, and the one I assume is the cam-<lb/>
ous station is live. The music played on<lb/>
tne campus station differs very little<lb/>
from that played on the commercial sta-<lb/>
tions in our area.<lb/>
Because of the new programming<lb/>
policy (obviously created by someone<lb/>
who has no idea of the purpose of a col-<lb/>
lege radio station or any knowledge of<lb/>
the music industry) our (student) radio<lb/>
station has lost any individuality it may<lb/>
have had.<lb/>
It is no longer individual in its music<lb/>
selection, and it no longer allows its disc<lb/>
jockeys to be individuals. When our sta-<lb/>
tion first went on the air, it was billed as<lb/>
the "alternative and it was. The DJ's<lb/>
themselves could not stress that point<lb/>
enough. (1 notice that they now restrain<lb/>
from using this term not only because<lb/>
the general manager advised them to do<lb/>
so, but, probably, also because they<lb/>
would be embarassed to breathe such a<lb/>
word.) How alternative can a station be<lb/>
if the management decides what should<lb/>
be played? And for that matter, how<lb/>
much personality andor individuality<lb/>
can a DJ have if he is given a clock divid-<lb/>
ed into sections telling him which songs<lb/>
he can play when? (I know you know all<lb/>
this information Mr. G. Manager, and<lb/>
you may turn off your ears, which you<lb/>
obviously do well and often, but, please,<lb/>
at least read the rest of the letter after<lb/>
the technical stuff is over.) I think the<lb/>
student population should know what<lb/>
WZMB's new general manager has done<lb/>
to, excuse me, with our radio station.<lb/>
The DJ's are given a pie graph which<lb/>
represents one hour of a clock. It is sec-<lb/>
tioned into slots telling the DJ when<lb/>
heshe may play high, medium and low<lb/>
air play cuts and oldies. These limita-<lb/>
tions are not the only ones. The albums<lb/>
which are considered high, medium and<lb/>
low air play are placed in special bins<lb/>
marked accordingly. When the DJ<lb/>
comes to a slot specifying one of these<lb/>
three selections, he must go to the ap-<lb/>
propriate bin and take the first album<lb/>
off the stack (he has no choice) and pick<lb/>
a cut from the marked cuts on the<lb/>
album.<lb/>
Oh, yes, even the songs themselves<lb/>
have been pre-chosen and separated into<lb/>
those that can be played anytime and<lb/>
those that are playable in hours other<lb/>
than morning hours. The only choice a<lb/>
DJ may make is an oldie, and even these<lb/>
are limited by a card catalogue system<lb/>
that is too complicated to describe right<lb/>
now.<lb/>
There are a few "specialty shows"<lb/>
that are allowed to break from this<lb/>
monotony. They are the classical, jazz,<lb/>
new-wave, soul and heavy metal shows.<lb/>
At least these shows are a change of<lb/>
pace.<lb/>
So, what's your excuse, Mr. G.<lb/>
Manager? I have heard you say that you<lb/>
are striving for consistency. WHY? You<lb/>
can't be trying to sell commercials! Con-<lb/>
sistency should not be the main objective<lb/>
of a campus radio station. These limita-<lb/>
tions you have placed on the station<lb/>
violate the principle purpose of a college<lb/>
radio station: Expression. We no longer<lb/>
can express ourselves freely on our own<lb/>
damn radio station. Mr. G. Manager, is<lb/>
it fair for you to decide what we should<lb/>
or should not hear? You have taken our<lb/>
choice away. Let the DJ's control their<lb/>
own shows again. The people who don't<lb/>
like what is being played can exercise<lb/>
their choice by turning their tuning<lb/>
knobs? They'll come back when so-<lb/>
meone who plays exactly what they like<lb/>
comes on the air. Students will at least<lb/>
have a choice of what to listen to and<lb/>
when. People tend to tailor their listen-<lb/>
ing to what they like. To hell with con-<lb/>
sistency!<lb/>
Please consider what I have said. I<lb/>
think you will see that some changes<lb/>
should be made.<lb/>
Edith Jeffreys<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Computer Science<lb/>
P.S.Mr. G. Manager, if 1 may express a<lb/>
personalprofessional opinion, you have<lb/>
poor, if any, taste in music.<lb/>
ERA<lb/>
I'm glad to see a campus newspaper<lb/>
cover such national issues as the Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment. Students need equal<lb/>
rights too.<lb/>
The cavalier manner in which the<lb/>
Senate tabled the Equal Rights Amend-<lb/>
ment is deplorable. Registered voters<lb/>
should call Senator White, he is in the<lb/>
book, Vernon E. White, and complain<lb/>
There is still time for two-thirds of th-<lb/>
senate to untable the bill but only if we<lb/>
who favor it will let those senators know<lb/>
our thoughts by writing and calling on<lb/>
the phone.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Ms. Dot Gronert<lb/>
ERA Hotline<lb/>
Despite the state senate's tabling of the<lb/>
ERA last week, supporters of the<lb/>
amendment feel strongly that it is all but<lb/>
a dead issue. Therefore, with the na-<lb/>
tional deadline fast approaching, it may<lb/>
be worth your while to give your state<lb/>
representatives a phone call and voice<lb/>
your opinion. Pitt County legislators<lb/>
can be reached at the following<lb/>
numbers:<lb/>
? State Sen. Vernon E. White<lb/>
? Rep. Edward N. Warren<lb/>
?Rep. Sam D. Bundy<lb/>
733-5850<lb/>
733-5821<lb/>
733-5824<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Th<lb/>
now d<lb/>
Hawi<lb/>
homei<lb/>
of all<lb/>
Myl<lb/>
the eij<lb/>
show.I<lb/>
aboutl<lb/>
be a<lb/>
cessf i<lb/>
In<lb/>
Outstj<lb/>
the t<lb/>
a dec;<lb/>
I<lb/>
tualiv<lb/>
Sevj<lb/>
l<lb/>
all. il<lb/>
over<lb/>
Obi<lb/>
remer<lb/>
alwa?<lb/>
ev eryi<lb/>
char:<lb/>
enouj<lb/>
serv ed<lb/>
M.j<lb/>
gottel<lb/>
a yoi<lb/>
ears. <lb/>
Jam<lb/>
oven<lb/>
nostj<lb/>
car<lb/>
his ei<lb/>
drive!<lb/>
fromj<lb/>
Spoc<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
steal <lb/>
her<lb/>
Ricaj<lb/>
ed hj<lb/>
netw<lb/>
1<lb/>
fashij<lb/>
I'll<lb/>
? tl<lb/>
Stl<lb/>
drai<lb/>
contj<lb/>
speal<lb/>
centif<lb/>
ston<lb/>
heav<lb/>
Tret<lb/>
at t)<lb/>
fault!<lb/>
entei<lb/>
sum<lb/>
Sf<lb/>
with<lb/>
Saa<lb/>
!<lb/>
?.?mmwmm<lb/>
mmm I ?ttiffljniMW ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057482_0005"/><lb/>
NO. 6<lb/>
yro<lb/>
! II<lb/>
V?<lb/>
-<lb/>
ne<lb/>
the<lb/>
of the<lb/>
s all but<lb/>
the na-<lb/>
ig. it may<lb/>
Pour state<lb/>
md voice<lb/>
legislators<lb/>
following<lb/>
33-5850<lb/>
'33-5821<lb/>
'33-5824<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JUNE 9, 1982<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Fosse Shows<lb/>
Us How It's<lb/>
Done, Again<lb/>
Juiced-Up Summer Concert Slated For Mall Thursday Night<lb/>
With enthusiasm, excitement and plenty of talent. Juicy, a five-member<lb/>
ensemble from North C arrna, will be performing in a concert on the<lb/>
University Mall this Thursday at 8 p.m. The group recently debuted on<lb/>
Arista Records with a good first effort. The band's background stems<lb/>
from classical, jazz, popular, gospel, rock and soul and their sound has<lb/>
been described as "dynamic and quite unique The rain site for the<lb/>
concert is Hendrix Theatre. The performance is being sponsored b the<lb/>
Student Union Special Concerts Committee.<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
SUIIWriln<lb/>
The Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee continues its successful sum-<lb/>
mer film series with the Oscar-<lb/>
winning All That Jazz, to be screen-<lb/>
ed tonight at 8 p.m. Next Monday's<lb/>
movie is the most popular contem-<lb/>
porary comedy to date, Animal<lb/>
House. Both films will be shown at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre. Admission is free with<lb/>
ECU ID and Activity Card or MSC<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
Bob Fosse won the Academy<lb/>
Award for Best Director for the<lb/>
musical All That Jazz, which was<lb/>
awarded Best Picture. Jazz is a col-<lb/>
orful, dizzying, kaleidoscope of<lb/>
music, backstage drama, comedy,<lb/>
sex, soul-searching autobiography,<lb/>
fine performances (starring Roy<lb/>
Scheider as Fosse's alter ego Joe Gi-<lb/>
deon, plus Ann Reinking, Jessica<lb/>
Lange and Ben Vereen), and most<lb/>
of all, dance.<lb/>
"All That Jazz is a film that<lb/>
literally dances says Jack Kroll in<lb/>
Newsweek. "Its opening is brilliant,<lb/>
a thrilling and poignant montage of<lb/>
leaping, straining bodies as Joe win-<lb/>
nows out a stageful of young<lb/>
dancers to the final chorus line. The<lb/>
whole movie comes hurtling at you,<lb/>
in dazzling editing and the superb<lb/>
cinematography of Fellini's<lb/>
cameraman, Giuseppe Rotunno . . .<lb/>
 Fosse has a fierce courage<lb/>
that is a kind of genius: he makes it<lb/>
work by a savage sincerity that out-<lb/>
faces sentimentality. He is a fine<lb/>
director and gets extraordinary per-<lb/>
formances from everyone, especial-<lb/>
ly Scheider. An actor of great in-<lb/>
tegrity. Scheider at last makes the<lb/>
powerful impression we've been<lb/>
waiting for; he plays Joe with<lb/>
wonderfully delicate and telling<lb/>
detail. You see all the lusts and<lb/>
weaknesses, but you see also an<lb/>
underlying sweetness, a kind ot<lb/>
forlorn and desperate innocence<lb/>
that makes something deeply human<lb/>
out of good, bad, weakness,<lb/>
strength, triumph, defeat and all<lb/>
that jazz<lb/>
Moving from the sublime to the<lb/>
ridiculous. Animal House will be<lb/>
shown next Monday night. June 14.<lb/>
at 9 p.m. Nothing more needs to be<lb/>
said here about this film, as it has<lb/>
already been seen several times b<lb/>
every human being under the age of<lb/>
ninety-nine, and so has been im-<lb/>
pressed into the collective memory<lb/>
of mankind for future generations<lb/>
to enjoy.<lb/>
The End Of An Era: 'Mash' Is On The Outs<lb/>
B CD. SAINT-AM AND<lb/>
Miff Whirr<lb/>
The end is near. The leaders have met. and talks are<lb/>
now concluded. The war is ending in 1983. At long last<lb/>
Hawkeye, B.J. and the rest of the 4077th are coming<lb/>
home; and 1A SH, possibly the best television series<lb/>
of all time, will be off the air.<lb/>
My infatuation with fASH began when I was in<lb/>
the eighth grade. I remember watching the very first<lb/>
show. The next day, mv friend Tommy and I talked<lb/>
about it in shop class. We both agreed it was certain to<lb/>
be a hit, but we had no idea it would ever be as suc-<lb/>
cessful as it was.<lb/>
In the show's first year ('7374) it won the Emmy as<lb/>
Outstanding Comedy Series and has been consistently at<lb/>
the top of this category since then. It has been on the air<lb/>
a decade, a feat remarkable in itself, and it is syndicated<lb/>
to stations across the U.S. 4.S can be seen vir-<lb/>
tually every day, often two or three times a day.<lb/>
Several factors account for the series' popularity and<lb/>
its' consistently fresh, unusually creative outlook. After<lb/>
all, the show has been dealing with the same conflict for<lb/>
over 10 years.<lb/>
Obviously Alan Alda, who will always be<lb/>
remembered as the irreverent Hawkeye Pierce, has<lb/>
always been the driving force behind the show. He is<lb/>
everything most of us want in a comedian; charismatic,<lb/>
charming, and a little off. He alone would have been<lb/>
enough to carry the show for a few years. Alda has also<lb/>
served as creative consultant, writer, and director. As<lb/>
creative consultant he works out stories with writers,<lb/>
polishes scripts, makes suggestions on how the set can<lb/>
be improved and sometimes helps write new scenes. As a<lb/>
director he is involved, in addition to coaching per-<lb/>
formers, with the editing of MASH. Alda has also<lb/>
written many a segment and in 1979 won an Emmy for<lb/>
his script entitled "Inga the story of a female doctor<lb/>
with more surgical skills than Hawkeye.<lb/>
But while Hawkeye has been the focal point of most<lb/>
fA SH episodes, one character does not a superior<lb/>
television series make. Maclean Stephenson as Col.<lb/>
Henry Blake gave us the best of two worlds: he played a<lb/>
ridiculously inept commanding officer who also hap-<lb/>
pened to be a warm, compassionate and genuinely<lb/>
human being. Wayne Rodgers, as Trapper John, was<lb/>
the perfect roommate, sidekick, and alter-ego for<lb/>
Hawkeye. The early shows dealt primarily with the off-<lb/>
beat antics of these two bawdy characters. Of course,<lb/>
their counterpart Major Frank Burns (Larry Linville)<lb/>
was the inspired antithesis for the unruly duo.<lb/>
Those early days, as satisfying as they might have<lb/>
been, gave us a serio-comic premise that became<lb/>
perhaps a bit too pat. Episodes tended to evolve along<lb/>
very similar lines: Hawkeye and Trapper spouting one-<lb/>
liners that, as they should be, were wittier than anything<lb/>
one ever hears in daily conversation; Frank, usually the<lb/>
butt of the jokes, was easily made to look foolish; and<lb/>
everything was neatly resolved within the half-hour<lb/>
framework. MA SH began to get stale, the characters<lb/>
shallow and predictable.<lb/>
Following an NBC variety show offer that never<lb/>
amounted to anything, Maclean Stephenson asked that<lb/>
his Henry Blake character be written out of l.S,<lb/>
thus leaving him free to accept the offer. The result,<lb/>
Blake's plane being shot down over the Pacific, is telev i-<lb/>
sion history and proved the turning point in the show's<lb/>
life. Blake's departure meant new personnel in the<lb/>
4077th, a new commanding officer and a chance for the<lb/>
old characters to do a little soul searching.<lb/>
Colonel Sherman Potter (Harry Morgan) was ushered<lb/>
in with all his years of military experience behind him<lb/>
and a big job ahead of him. 1ASH was suddenly<lb/>
converted from a static, formula program into a signifi-<lb/>
cant, ever-suprising, always thought-provoking series.<lb/>
Once B.J. Honnicutt (Mike Ferrell) arrived, the<lb/>
transformation was complete. Character development,<lb/>
which was painfully slow in the beginning, began to take<lb/>
form and each new episode involved more human emo-<lb/>
tions than hi-jinks.<lb/>
An early episode in which Hawkeye and Trapper<lb/>
operate needlessly on a healthy general to keep him out<lb/>
of battle was done later with much different results.<lb/>
This time Hawkeye performs an unnecessary appendec-<lb/>
tomy on a brutal general while B.J. refuses to take part<lb/>
for obvious ethical reasons. The superficiality of the<lb/>
early Hawkeye and Trapper would have made this show<lb/>
See MASH Page 6<lb/>
Can Khan Cope?<lb/>
'Trek II' Slick But Schmaltzy<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
stiff Wrilrr<lb/>
Mr. Spock, taking a cue from Beldarr Conehead, has<lb/>
gotten a job as a driving instructor. His pupil is Saavik,<lb/>
a young female Vulcan who is trying out her training<lb/>
ears. She wrecks the drivers' ed car, almost running over<lb/>
James T. Kirk. Getting old, near-sighted and<lb/>
overweight; needing glasses and a corset, Kirk waxes<lb/>
nostalgic at the sight of the vehicle. He used to be a race-<lb/>
car driver, but they won't let him drive anymore since<lb/>
his eyes are so bad. He gets a chance to get back in the<lb/>
driver's seat however, when he gets a telephone call<lb/>
from an old girlfriend ? the two of them as well as<lb/>
Spock and a pocket calculator used to double-date years<lb/>
ago. She calls to complain that somebody is trying to<lb/>
steal her bottle of Miracle-Gro plant food. Kirk races to<lb/>
her side, not realizing that it's a trap laid for him by<lb/>
Ricardo Montalban, who hates him for having maroon-<lb/>
ed him on Fantasy Island at the beginning of a crucial<lb/>
network ratings period . . .<lb/>
I could continue on in this stream-of-consciousness<lb/>
fashion for another few hours, but I think at this point<lb/>
I'll land this review right back here on the planet Earth<lb/>
? that is, before I'm spent. Soooooo . . .<lb/>
Star Trek has always walked a tightrope between high<lb/>
drama and unwilling humor, with its actors sporting<lb/>
contemporary hairstyles and futuristic outfits. The cast<lb/>
speaks a combination of modern expressions and 23rd<lb/>
century lingo, enthusiastically emoting through a<lb/>
storyline saddled with highly implausable sci-fi and<lb/>
heavy-handed humanistic philosophy. The second Star<lb/>
Trek movie, sub-titled The Wrath of Khan (now playing<lb/>
at the Plaza Cinema in Greenville), has all the above<lb/>
faults and more. All in all though, the film is still decent<lb/>
entertainment mixed with a message. Let's give that plot<lb/>
summary a second try:<lb/>
Spock is teaching Star Fleet cadets on the Enterprise<lb/>
with special emphasis on a young Vulcan woman,<lb/>
Saavik (Kristie Alley). With much simulated mass<lb/>
destruction, she fails her test, the purpose of which is to<lb/>
see how a starship commander would face a "no-win<lb/>
certain death situation. Facing death is the theme of the<lb/>
film, a motif given extra meaning with the arrival of Ad-<lb/>
miral Kirk. Years ago, he was the only cadet ever to pass<lb/>
that same test, but now he is growing old, unsure of<lb/>
himself. Bored by the duties of an admiral, he misses<lb/>
commanding the Enterprise, his first love.<lb/>
Suddenly Kirk receives a distress call from an old<lb/>
love, now a scientistworking on Project Genesis. Her<lb/>
device is capable both of turning a desert planet into a<lb/>
garden overnight and causing incredible chaos, and has<lb/>
become a pawn in a game of revenge. Khan, a<lb/>
genetically-superior renegade, was abandoned by Kirk<lb/>
on a barren planetoid after an attempted takeover of the<lb/>
Enterprise (related on a TV Trek episode) and lusts for<lb/>
vengeance.<lb/>
Once Kirk takes charge of the Enterprise the action<lb/>
begins and never relents until the explosive climax. The<lb/>
plot is twisted with sufficient suspense to keep one at<lb/>
least near the edge of the seat. The direction by Nicholas<lb/>
Meyer (Time After Time, The Seven Percent Solution)<lb/>
is competent; the special effects are superb.<lb/>
The worst part of Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan is<lb/>
Khan. The character is given the most melodramatic<lb/>
lines, mouthed with all the haminess Ricardo Mon-<lb/>
talban can muster after a long career of bad movies and<lb/>
worse TV shows. He looks as well as sounds ridiculous,<lb/>
wearing a white fright wig and what appear to be falsies<lb/>
(to make his chest look more manly). Montalban's<lb/>
Khan is a villian to be classed with the Snidely<lb/>
Whiplashes rather than the Darth Vaders.<lb/>
What salvages Star Trek is its philosophy, however<lb/>
overbearing it may become. Pondering the riddles of life<lb/>
and death save the film from being just another science<lb/>
fiction shootem-up. The saga of Star Trek, both TV<lb/>
and film versions, is about life: a celebration of the<lb/>
human spirit. That is what is important here, not such<lb/>
silliness as whether Leonard Nimoy will get paid enough<lb/>
to survive until Star Trek III.<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057482_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 9. 1982<lb/>
'Mash' Leaving Us<lb/>
With Fond Memories<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
implausable; the regenerated roles made the con-<lb/>
sternation of B.J. and the despair of Hawkeye<lb/>
utterly believable and realistic.<lb/>
The development of the other characters has<lb/>
been a joy, and in some cases a mirror, for most<lb/>
Americans to view. Witness one Margret M.<lb/>
Houlihan (Loretta Switt) who started out as an<lb/>
egocentric, strait-laced, military-minded major,<lb/>
but has survived her trials and tribulations and<lb/>
has emerged as one of the distinct heroes of the<lb/>
series. She has accomplished this through her in-<lb/>
domitable will, and her willingness to bend but<lb/>
not break. Since her recent shucking of two-<lb/>
timing husband Donald Pnobscot, Magret has<lb/>
become the best representation of the modern<lb/>
woman that network television has ever attemp-<lb/>
ted to offer. She has a strong sense of identity,<lb/>
she's proud of that identity, and she has drive <lb/>
and purpose.<lb/>
Other unforgetables include Radar O'Reilly<lb/>
(Gary Burghoff) whose coming of age has been a<lb/>
hallmark for MA SH. Radar is the Iowa farm-<lb/>
hoy who sleeps with a teddybear (but hopes to do<lb/>
better someday), reads minds, runs the camp,<lb/>
and in the meantime becomes a man.<lb/>
Corporal Maxwell Klinger (Jamie Farr) has<lb/>
certainly played a big role in the show's success.<lb/>
A street wise kid from Toledo, he takes to wear-<lb/>
ing dresses in an everlasting attempt to secure a<lb/>
Section 8, until one day realizing the futility of it.<lb/>
Klinger provides 1ASH with a zany misfit<lb/>
who has no inclination whatsoever towards Ar-<lb/>
my Life.<lb/>
Charles Emerson Winchester (David 6gden<lb/>
Steirs) is the most recent addition to the<lb/>
l SH line-up but has always managed to fit<lb/>
in like a veteran. He brings an air of culture and<lb/>
sophistication to this "inflamed boil on the but-<lb/>
tocks of the world He also provides an ex-<lb/>
cellent counterpart for Pierce and Honnicutt,<lb/>
since, unlike Frank Burns, he is an adept surgeon<lb/>
and equally adept at making the quick retort so<lb/>
vital to survival in the 4077th.<lb/>
fASH has aged with grace, but the time<lb/>
has come for this grand show to shut down. Even<lb/>
Man Alda admits that the creative well is finally<lb/>
uinning dry. It is simply running out of ideas.<lb/>
Nevertheless, it has accomplished a great deal. It<lb/>
is a show which has handled real problems in a<lb/>
tare, intelligent and sincere fashion. It has had<lb/>
the courage to expose the futility of war to a<lb/>
country still smarting from the effects of the<lb/>
Vietnam War, and it did this without sugar-<lb/>
coating the material to achieve commercial suc-<lb/>
cess. VM .S will be missed, but, thanks to re-<lb/>
runs, will be enjoyed again-and-again by new<lb/>
fans as well as old. It will continue to be aired,<lb/>
like a classic film, for as long as television is per-<lb/>
muted.<lb/>
Nv<lb/>
X<lb/>
o<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
S<lb/>
-<lb/>
jP ?<lb/>
JT ;XG- 0f J<lb/>
.e ,v e<lb/>
6 ?.o<lb/>
o"<lb/>
v<lb/>
?<lb/>
,6"<lb/>
o"<lb/>
?:?<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
c<lb/>
Vtia1<lb/>
4<lb/>
?ja??agaSO?S03?&amp;50g?????-&amp;a<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
South's No. 6 A Rock Night Club<lb/>
WED June 9<lb/>
? ARTIMUSPYLE<lb/>
wBadge<lb/>
THURS June 10<lb/>
BADGE<lb/>
June 11<lb/>
SUBWAY<lb/>
June 12<lb/>
SUBWAY <lb/>
SUN June 13<lb/>
? MATT GUITAR<lb/>
MURPHY<lb/>
FRI<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
MON June 14<lb/>
STEVIE NICKS VIDEO<lb/>
TUES Junel5<lb/>
LIGHTNING WELL<lb/>
Mckle Draft<lb/>
Free For Freshmen Orientation<lb/>
BStEESSKflP<lb/>
USOA Choice Beef Round Whole<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USOA Choiee Beef Chuck Bom -la<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
USOA Choice Beef Round tJkt<lb/>
Sirloin Tip Roast u. 2Z8<lb/>
?<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USOA Choieo Boef Chuck Booeleis<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
USD Choice Beef Chuck Bom I.<lb/>
Shoulder Roast u. $198<lb/>
(?' :<lb/>
k<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Each - Jumbo<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Cantaloupe<lb/>
?<lb/>
Packae,e of 6 12 Oi Cant<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
1.5 liter Burawdtf Caahlit ??<lb/>
Via Roie French Celemterd yew<lb/>
??<lb/>
1.5 Lifer - Rhiactkelltr Golden Chaalit<lb/>
b-eraid Chehlii<lb/>
lilt<lb/>
2 Liter<lb/>
6.S 0. - lifht Chunk ? Oil<lb/>
Star Kist s<lb/>
22 Ounce<lb/>
Why Pay 99<lb/>
Star-Kfetjl Why P?y M.39<lb/>
CHUNK LIGHT Tl??<lb/>
V.<lb/>
400 Sheett - 4 Roll Pack<lb/>
Why Pay M.09<lb/>
TOrOnet Why Pay 59<lb/>
Prints<lb/>
12 Oz. - American Sliced Singlet Borden<lb/>
48 Oz. - Food Town<lb/>
Cheese Food ju Vegetable Oil<lb/>
32 Ounce<lb/>
Half Gallon - White Houte<lb/>
Apple Juice<lb/>
24 Ct. - Family Size<lb/>
Del Monte Catsups Upton Tea Bags<lb/>
5100<lb/>
6.5 Or-liver ft Beef Beef ftHeortt<lb/>
Bitt-0-Kidney Sinnnered Suitor Cot Feed<lb/>
Kal Kan<lb/>
4100<lb/>
303 Can - Food Town Cut<lb/>
Green Beans<lb/>
49 Ounce<lb/>
Fab Detergent<lb/>
jv<lb/>
Half Gallon - Staltett<lb/>
I<lb/>
wifk<lb/>
iLatrtry Ottmwmt ,<lb/>
Why Pay M 19<lb/>
64 Oz. SO Off<lb/>
Liquid<lb/>
Why Pay 3.33<lb/>
Dsikti<lb/>
MAYONNAISE<lb/>
32 Ounce<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
Why Pay M.35<lb/>
Prices good at Greenville Food Ton Store only<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057482_0007"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
r n . <lb/>
<lb/>
It<lb/>
J<lb/>
N<lb/>
THt tASTC AROl IN1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
II Nf 9, 1982 Page 7<lb/>
Odom Moving To Ralph's House<lb/>
Third-Year Coach Heading To UVA<lb/>
B CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Head basketball coach Dave<lb/>
Odom announced in a press con-<lb/>
ference Tuesday morning that he<lb/>
has accepted the position of assis<lb/>
tant coach at the University ol<lb/>
Virginia.<lb/>
Odom read a prepared statement,<lb/>
saying, "Effective June 30th, I will<lb/>
down a- Head Basketball coach<lb/>
Carolina University to ac-<lb/>
cept a position on Coach Terry<lb/>
Holland's staff at the University of<lb/>
irginia. I will remain at Last<lb/>
Carolina as a working consultant<lb/>
through the end of the second sc-s<lb/>
sion summer school without<lb/>
Odom said he made the decision<lb/>
giving much consideration to<lb/>
the people it affected and to the<lb/>
"two fine universities it involved<lb/>
He went on to thank the ad-<lb/>
ation and staff for its sup-<lb/>
? and described athletic director<lb/>
Dr. Ken Karr as being a friend<lb/>
rather than just his boss.<lb/>
Odom further stated his feelings<lb/>
? ? . ECl basketball team.<lb/>
"The c " anv program is the<lb/>
ayers he said. "The ECU<lb/>
avers have always<lb/>
d the university in a first<lb/>
 exemplifying the high<lb/>
that every coach seeks to<lb/>
tch dom said he has alwav<lb/>
d o' the players and would<lb/>
rish the relationships he had with<lb/>
? them.<lb/>
"1 expect great things from them<lb/>
lually and collectively he<lb/>
 "1 will be available to help<lb/>
:n in anv was the deem ap-<lb/>
idd 'd that he ived<lb/>
total backing from the University,<lb/>
alumni, fans and eastern North<lb/>
Carolina. Odom also thanked the<lb/>
media for "treating him fairly dur-<lb/>
ng the past three years<lb/>
The Answer<lb/>
In itemeni was the<lb/>
question even one wanted an<lb/>
answer to. W hy would a head coach<lb/>
leave to accep i lessei positioi<lb/>
the same division1 "I can honestly<lb/>
?hat there are less than a handful<lb/>
of schools in the country that would<lb/>
be bold enough to make such an of-<lb/>
fer Odom said. "1 would consider<lb/>
such an offer from only three or<lb/>
tour schools in the country And<lb/>
Odom named UVA as being one of<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Odom said he does not know at<lb/>
the present time what his duties will<lb/>
be as Holland's assistant coach. "I<lb/>
believe Holland tries to involve his<lb/>
staff he said. "We'll decide who<lb/>
is best to serve where after we get up<lb/>
there<lb/>
Odom came to ECU three years<lb/>
ago after serving as an assistant<lb/>
coach ai Wake Foist University.<lb/>
During his first season here, he led<lb/>
the Pirates to a 16-11 record. "1 was<lb/>
shocked at the amountof talent<lb/>
when 1 first came here but the talent<lb/>
is as good now as it was when I came<lb/>
in he said.<lb/>
Disappointing Year<lb/>
But the Pirates slipped the next<lb/>
season, ending up with a 12-14<lb/>
record. After the disappointing<lb/>
year, Odom was looking forward to<lb/>
improving his won-loss record the<lb/>
next season but that was not to hap-<lb/>
pen. The Pirates accumulated a<lb/>
10-lb record despite Odom's ef-<lb/>
forts<lb/>
"I've never worked harder for<lb/>
lower positive results he said. "1<lb/>
was sorely disappointed that our<lb/>
record was not better.<lb/>
"If 1 could go back and change it<lb/>
1 would<lb/>
odom compared his leaving to<lb/>
that of a maior medical operation.<lb/>
?sometimes it takes more than one<lb/>
surgeon he said. "Of course<lb/>
we're dealing with a round ball, a<lb/>
bunch of kids and happiness rather<lb/>
than a major operation but in both<lb/>
cases you must sometimes call in<lb/>
another person to do the job<lb/>
When asked when he started con-<lb/>
sidering the UVA offer, Odom<lb/>
answered. "When Terrv Holland<lb/>
backed me in the corner and asked<lb/>
me to visit the campus Odom said<lb/>
he knew he was serious enough<lb/>
about it when he decided to take<lb/>
Holland up on his invitation.<lb/>
Odom, 39, leaves ECL with a<lb/>
38-41 record and the valuable ex-<lb/>
perience of being a head coach. "I<lb/>
can better appreciate both roles<lb/>
now he said. Odom added that<lb/>
he is looking forward to helping<lb/>
continue the winning program at<lb/>
UVA and working with Holland.<lb/>
"I've become associated with a man<lb/>
that does not believe the sun rises<lb/>
and sets on just basketball he<lb/>
said, "I can learn a great deal from<lb/>
him Odom will be filling a void<lb/>
left when Craig Littlepage left his<lb/>
post at Virginia to become the head<lb/>
coach at Penn State.<lb/>
As for ECU's basketball pro-<lb/>
gram, Odom feels the future is a<lb/>
bright one. "I fully expect them to<lb/>
snap back he said. "Recruiting<lb/>
has been good and the goals they<lb/>
have set are definitely reachable<lb/>
Twelve players will be returning to<lb/>
next year's squad in addition to five<lb/>
signees.<lb/>
Odom ended his prepared state-<lb/>
ment by saying. "The ECU ad-<lb/>
ministration, staff, students, alumni<lb/>
and fans have been most supportive<lb/>
and helpful to me. I could not ask<lb/>
for more<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Athletic director Dr. Ken Karr an-<lb/>
nounced at Odom's press con-<lb/>
ference that ECU's new head<lb/>
basketball coach will be named by<lb/>
August 1.<lb/>
Karr said he is looking for the<lb/>
same qualities that Odom acquired.<lb/>
"We want someone who can<lb/>
manage, motivate and recruit he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
We feel it (the basketball pro-<lb/>
gram) has been in very capable<lb/>
hands and we regret his leaving he<lb/>
said. "We're just glad and thankful<lb/>
for having him the three years we<lb/>
did<lb/>
Karr said the available talent will<lb/>
be throughly screened, including<lb/>
those assistants who served under<lb/>
Odom here at ECU.<lb/>
"I think our basketball program<lb/>
is on a solid base he said. "Our<lb/>
charge now is to find the best possi-<lb/>
ble leadership to take us onward<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
"To date, we have received<lb/>
nothing that will verify that either<lb/>
Morris Hargrove or Bill McNair will<lb/>
not be returning to next year's<lb/>
squad coach Dave Odom said<lb/>
during his press conference Tues-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Odom said the players had their<lb/>
best academic semesters ever last<lb/>
year and they are eligible both<lb/>
academically and athletically to<lb/>
return.<lb/>
Both ECU basketball starters<lb/>
have been considering other alter-<lb/>
natives as to where they will play<lb/>
next year Put Odom quickly added<lb/>
that the two players will not be<lb/>
traveling with him to UVA.<lb/>
"We assume they are planning to<lb/>
return he said.<lb/>
Darlene Chaney (12)<lb/>
Odom: Taking his act to Charlottesville<lb/>
Brown Leaving After Two-Year Stay<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
ui?!inl spurts lr dtlnr<lb/>
Head tennis coach Caroline<lb/>
Brown is leaving East Carolina<lb/>
University after a successful two-<lb/>
year stay. She has accepted the posi-<lb/>
tion of women's tennis coach at<lb/>
Davidson College in Charlotte, N.<lb/>
C.<lb/>
Davidson finished first in the<lb/>
state A1AW championship this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Brown took over the women's<lb/>
tennis team during mid-season last<lb/>
year and coached both the men and<lb/>
women's team this past season. She<lb/>
led the men's team to a 15-4 record<lb/>
and guided the women to a third-<lb/>
place ranking in the state this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Brown said it was a very good<lb/>
year for the two teams.<lb/>
"Both teams have improved<lb/>
significantly she said. "The<lb/>
scores weren't as close against the<lb/>
same schools we played earlier<lb/>
Brown mainly attributed the con-<lb/>
vincing wins to the increase of emo-<lb/>
tional support. Brown, along with<lb/>
assistant Alan Farfour and student<lb/>
helper Danny Weant were always on<lb/>
hand to boost the players along on<lb/>
the court. "There were three<lb/>
coaches on the court that cared<lb/>
about the program Brown said,<lb/>
"and that makes a difference<lb/>
Being named as head coach for<lb/>
both tennis teams was a position<lb/>
Brown was thrilled about. "They<lb/>
hired a female she said, "which is<lb/>
not usually the case in the Division I<lb/>
program and 1 appreciate the con-<lb/>
fidence the administration had in<lb/>
me<lb/>
Brown added that the primary<lb/>
reason for hiring one coach for two<lb/>
teams was a matter of economics.<lb/>
"Combining sports is not unusual<lb/>
nowadays she said. She named<lb/>
golf and swimming as two other<lb/>
sports that are practicing this<lb/>
coaching method.<lb/>
Has the method worked for<lb/>
ECU? Coach Brown thinks it has.<lb/>
"Our goal was to promote a team<lb/>
concept she said. "It was not<lb/>
men's or women's tennis but liCU<lb/>
tennis<lb/>
During practices, the two teams<lb/>
did warm-ups together, which in-<lb/>
cluded stretching and jumprope ex-<lb/>
ercises. Afterwards, the teams<lb/>
would then separate and meet back<lb/>
for running and sprintwork during<lb/>
the last 15 minutes of practice. "We<lb/>
felt that by beginning and ending<lb/>
our practices together, the players<lb/>
would have a chance to com-<lb/>
municate and have a real sense of<lb/>
being a team she said.<lb/>
While Farfour worked with the<lb/>
men's team. Brown drilled the<lb/>
women in practice. During her one-<lb/>
and-a-half years as the women's<lb/>
coach, she first directed the Lady<lb/>
Pirates to a seventh and fifth place<lb/>
finish before finally placing third in<lb/>
the state this year ? East Carolina's<lb/>
highest ranking ever.<lb/>
Brown indicated that many<lb/>
players are on partial scholarships<lb/>
but no full scholarships are given<lb/>
out because of the money situation-<lb/>
a problem the team had in other<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
"We are on a tight budget finan-<lb/>
cially she said, "so we had to<lb/>
come up with some creative ideas<lb/>
One of her ideas was to schedule<lb/>
more home matches. About 70 per-<lb/>
cent o our matches were at home,<lb/>
but we discovered that it was not a<lb/>
minus point at all she said. She<lb/>
added that the players were not as<lb/>
tired and could get to their<lb/>
homework sooner because of home<lb/>
matches.<lb/>
It has become evident that<lb/>
Caroline Brown has built a suc-<lb/>
cessful program here at ECU. So,<lb/>
the next question to ask is, what will<lb/>
become of the men's and women's<lb/>
tennis team now?<lb/>
Five members of the men's team<lb/>
and two of the women will be be<lb/>
returning next year but ECU still<lb/>
has a solid foundation to build<lb/>
upon, according to Brown. Top<lb/>
recruit David Creech<lb/>
Bern. N. C, will be joining .am<lb/>
in the fall. Creech was one I<lb/>
leading juniors in the 5<lb/>
Freshman (Catherine rolson, ECU's<lb/>
number two singles player this past<lb/>
year, will be returning to the squad.<lb/>
Tolson is the first woman eve: from<lb/>
ECU to attend the regional<lb/>
Brown said there should also be a<lb/>
large number of potential walk-ons<lb/>
who will be living out in ill.<lb/>
Because the joint-team method ot<lb/>
coaching turned out to be a positive<lb/>
approach, besides an economic<lb/>
short-cut. li.e program will more<lb/>
thank likeiv continue. nci it's a<lb/>
program coach Brown will miss.<lb/>
"1 reallv enjoyed that ex-<lb/>
perience she said. But Brown is<lb/>
looking forward to focusing com-<lb/>
pletely on women's tennis too.<lb/>
"I'm glad 1 can concentrate just on<lb/>
coaching, rather than trvmg to teach<lb/>
and coach she said.<lb/>
Brown said that during her short<lb/>
stay at ECl she gamed new ex-<lb/>
periences that she could carry with<lb/>
her and she feels good about the<lb/>
program she is leaving behind.<lb/>
"We set a solid foundation emo-<lb/>
tionally she said, "and it's a pro-<lb/>
gram that can be built upon<lb/>
Chaney Selected To Eastern Squad<lb/>
By WILLIAM YFLVERTON<lb/>
SporU F.?Hlor<lb/>
For East Carolina center Darlene<lb/>
Chaney, last year's experience was<lb/>
this year's gain.<lb/>
Last summer, Chaney tried out<lb/>
for her East regional basketball<lb/>
team, hoping for a chance to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the National Sports<lb/>
Festival at Syracuse, N.Y. But she<lb/>
was only chosen as an alternate.<lb/>
However, this summer will be a<lb/>
little different. She made the squad<lb/>
? chosen from 177 hopefuls at<lb/>
Rutgers University ? and will be on<lb/>
her way to Indianapolis, Ind. for the<lb/>
Olympic-type competition in a few<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
The big difference in this year's<lb/>
performance? Without a doubt,<lb/>
says her coach Cathy Andruzzi, it<lb/>
was her defense "that made her a<lb/>
sure bet from the start. Her offen-<lb/>
sive game was excellent, but her<lb/>
defense was great.<lb/>
"The selection committee was im-<lb/>
pressed with her fundamentals<lb/>
Andruzzi added. "Most of them<lb/>
said, 'Was she on your team this<lb/>
year? How come we didn't see her<lb/>
play?<lb/>
Chaney. 6-2, was a reserve as a<lb/>
freshman, averaging 6.9 points and<lb/>
5.3 rebounds for the Lady Pirates,<lb/>
who were chosen to participate in<lb/>
the first NCAA women's tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"We're so excited; it's<lb/>
unbelievable Andruzzi said. "It<lb/>
means a great deal to her (Chaney)<lb/>
and East Carolina University. It's<lb/>
the first time we've had a player to<lb/>
make the Sports Festival team. It's a<lb/>
real great opportunity for her. And<lb/>
it opens up a lot of doors. This is<lb/>
one of the things we strive tor for<lb/>
our athletes<lb/>
Andruzzi savs Chaney's ex-<lb/>
perience at the trvouts last summer<lb/>
made an impact. "She knew what to<lb/>
expect this year she said. "She<lb/>
worked very, very hard ? every day<lb/>
? before the trvouts She's shown a<lb/>
lot of improvement ? especially in<lb/>
the two months she's been train-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Another East Carolina player,<lb/>
guard Lorraine Foster, was suppos-<lb/>
ed to have tried out for her regional<lb/>
team but did not do so because she<lb/>
was too old.<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057482_0008"/><lb/>
? THE EAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 9, 1982<lb/>
Robin Still Has Diamond Blood<lb/>
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)<lb/>
? When Robin<lb/>
Roberts hung up his<lb/>
spikes at the end of a<lb/>
19-year major league<lb/>
pitching career that led<lb/>
him to baseball's Hall<lb/>
of Fame, he turned his<lb/>
back on professional<lb/>
coaching.<lb/>
"In my last year,<lb/>
1966, I was pitching<lb/>
coach and active pit-<lb/>
cher for the (Chicago)<lb/>
Cubs and they asked<lb/>
me to stay on the next<lb/>
year as pitching<lb/>
coach Roberts said<lb/>
recently.<lb/>
"I would have liked<lb/>
to have stayed in the<lb/>
major leagues as a<lb/>
general manager or<lb/>
some other front office<lb/>
job Roberts said.<lb/>
"But the travel more<lb/>
than anything else, was<lb/>
distasteful<lb/>
So the fireballing<lb/>
righthander who com-<lb/>
pleted his major league<lb/>
career with 286 vic-<lb/>
tories and 245 losses,<lb/>
an earned run average<lb/>
of 3.41 and a World<lb/>
Series appearance with<lb/>
the Philadelphia Phils<lb/>
Whiz Kids of 1950,<lb/>
stepped out of the<lb/>
limelight and went into<lb/>
the investment business<lb/>
in Fort Washington<lb/>
near Philadelphia.<lb/>
But he had been in<lb/>
baseball too long to<lb/>
quit cold turkey.<lb/>
"I did a little<lb/>
coaching in the high<lb/>
school there as a hob-<lb/>
by Roberts admits.<lb/>
In 1977, the year<lb/>
after he was inducted<lb/>
into the Hall of Fame,<lb/>
Roberts was lured away<lb/>
from the investment<lb/>
business and back into<lb/>
baseball when he was<lb/>
hired as baseball coach<lb/>
at the University of<lb/>
South Florida.<lb/>
Roberts said he<lb/>
always had the thought<lb/>
of college coaching in<lb/>
the back of his mind<lb/>
but had not made any<lb/>
move to seek such a<lb/>
position.<lb/>
"I always mentioned<lb/>
to my wife that maybe I<lb/>
should give college<lb/>
coaching a try before 1<lb/>
got too old he said.<lb/>
"I think what hap-<lb/>
pened was that I sent a<lb/>
pitcher down to Bobby<lb/>
Richardson, who was<lb/>
coaching at South<lb/>
Carolina at the time<lb/>
and Bobby knew I kept<lb/>
a close interest in the<lb/>
player Roberts said.<lb/>
"So when (athletic<lb/>
director) Dick Bowers<lb/>
called Bobby to see if<lb/>
he was interested in<lb/>
coaching at S ith<lb/>
Florida, Bobby sug-<lb/>
gested I might be and<lb/>
Dick called me<lb/>
Roberts said.<lb/>
The USF Bulls went<lb/>
25-25 in his first year in<lb/>
1977 and followed that<lb/>
with seasons of 25-26-1<lb/>
and 28-25 before falling<lb/>
on bad times in 1980<lb/>
with a 20-34 record and<lb/>
a 21-32 showing in<lb/>
1981.<lb/>
But this year the<lb/>
Bulls bounced back<lb/>
with a 45-13 record,<lb/>
winning the Sun Belt<lb/>
Conference and getting<lb/>
their first invitation to<lb/>
the NCAA Atlantic<lb/>
Regional Baseball<lb/>
Tourney in Miami.<lb/>
The Bulls finished<lb/>
third in the regional,<lb/>
beating Florida and los-<lb/>
ing to regional cham-<lb/>
pion Miami and a one-<lb/>
run 11-inning game to<lb/>
Stetson.<lb/>
"It was fun and<lb/>
gratifying Roberts<lb/>
said. "We deserved to<lb/>
be there. We were very<lb/>
happy.<lb/>
"We were a good<lb/>
club last year for the<lb/>
last 15 games and we<lb/>
were better organized<lb/>
and I had a full-time<lb/>
assistant this vear he<lb/>
said. "It was kind of a<lb/>
once in a lifetime mix-<lb/>
ture<lb/>
Roberts wouldn't<lb/>
rule out a possible<lb/>
return to the big time as<lb/>
a manager.<lb/>
"But if I stay right<lb/>
here I would be com-<lb/>
pletely happy he<lb/>
said. "I enjoy watching<lb/>
college baseball. These<lb/>
young men are very<lb/>
capable<lb/>
Roberts said USF<lb/>
still is not in a position<lb/>
of some of the univer-<lb/>
sities that have well-<lb/>
known baseball pro-<lb/>
grams where recruiting<lb/>
is easier because the<lb/>
player wants to go<lb/>
there.<lb/>
"1 can't get over the<lb/>
fact the boy has to want<lb/>
you as much as you<lb/>
want him he said of<lb/>
recruiting. "We don't<lb/>
have the tradition that<lb/>
some of the others<lb/>
have. I still can't just<lb/>
recruit a boy for his<lb/>
ability. He has to want<lb/>
to come here.<lb/>
"I think the college<lb/>
athletes today are a lot<lb/>
smarter than they<lb/>
were he said.<lb/>
"Ninety-nine percent<lb/>
of them come here with<lb/>
a dream of going into<lb/>
pro ball but as the<lb/>
mature and grow up<lb/>
they become more<lb/>
realistic<lb/>
Roberts said he has<lb/>
never made an attempt<lb/>
to be a father figure to<lb/>
any of his players.<lb/>
"I just try to teach<lb/>
them to appreciate the<lb/>
simple things in the<lb/>
game he said<lb/>
?<lb/>
5<lb/>
Diving Coach<lb/>
Looking To Sept.<lb/>
last Carolina<lb/>
1907-1982<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Stiff Whirr<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
diving team recently<lb/>
finished their season<lb/>
with a team meet<lb/>
record of 5-6 for the<lb/>
men and 5-4 for the<lb/>
women. But for Jon<lb/>
Rose, the season was a<lb/>
little different: he is<lb/>
now the head diving<lb/>
coach after his gym-<lb/>
nastic program was cut<lb/>
from the ECU athletic<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"Overall, we had a<lb/>
successful season<lb/>
commented Rose. This<lb/>
successful season saw<lb/>
ECU competing in<lb/>
some tough meets, in-<lb/>
cluding the Eastern In-<lb/>
tercollegiate Swimming<lb/>
and Diving Competi-<lb/>
tion in Pittsburgh,<lb/>
Penn. The team did<lb/>
well, finishing fourth<lb/>
out of a total of seven<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
One of the members<lb/>
of the team is Scott<lb/>
Eagle, a freshman from<lb/>
Winston-Salem. In the<lb/>
Eastern Collegiate<lb/>
meet, Eagle finished<lb/>
eighth on the one-meter<lb/>
board and 13th on the<lb/>
three-meter board. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Rose, "Scott<lb/>
is probably our best<lb/>
diver and is a really<lb/>
super competitor<lb/>
Another top diver is<lb/>
Kim Lowe from Mar-<lb/>
tinsville, N.J. Lowe is a<lb/>
former gymnast at<lb/>
ECU, and she placed<lb/>
high in a number of<lb/>
meets. Both Eagle and<lb/>
Lowe will be returning<lb/>
next season.<lb/>
Among the recruits<lb/>
that Rose will look for-<lb/>
ward to working with<lb/>
next year are Roy<lb/>
Johnson, a transfer<lb/>
from Appalachian<lb/>
State, Tracy Fearr-<lb/>
ington from Greenville<lb/>
and Renee Seech from<lb/>
Allentown, Penn.<lb/>
"As a first-year ex-<lb/>
perience, I learned a lot<lb/>
about diving, and I<lb/>
hope I was able to teach<lb/>
the members of the<lb/>
team a lot also Rose<lb/>
adds.<lb/>
He says he is looking<lb/>
forward to the upcom-<lb/>
ing year with optimism.<lb/>
Next year's team will<lb/>
begin practice in mid-<lb/>
September for the<lb/>
season's opener in<lb/>
November. The season<lb/>
ends in March.<lb/>
Weekdays<lb/>
11:30-11:00<lb/>
Fri ? Sat.<lb/>
11.30-12:00<lb/>
300 ? 101 h St.<lb/>
7 58 6)21<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town! (Honest)<lb/>
Fost Service!<lb/>
Game<lb/>
Machines<lb/>
Big<lb/>
Screen TV<lb/>
Drive Up<lb/>
Window F<lb/>
To Go Orde? s<lb/>
WZZA &amp; SPAGHETTI BUFFET<lb/>
von &amp; Tues. 5:30 8:00<lb/>
Wor thru Fri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
WED. - all you can eat<lb/>
Spaghetti 2.25<lb/>
$2.79<lb/>
$2.69<lb/>
SAT.<lb/>
showing current movies<lb/>
(PC) 7pm-9pm<lb/>
m<lb/>
WELCOMES TME<lb/>
@3<lb/>
o<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is re-<lb/>
quired to be readily available for<lb/>
sale in each Kroger Savon, except<lb/>
as specifically noted in this ad. If we<lb/>
do run out of an item we will offer<lb/>
you your choice of a comparable<lb/>
item when available, reflecting the<lb/>
same savings or a raincheck which<lb/>
will entitle you to purchase the<lb/>
advertised item at the advertised<lb/>
price within 30 days<lb/>
dffaros<lb/>
1 W m m' INVITES YOU TO<lb/>
 HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
Every Mon - Sat.<lb/>
From 3 p.m. 7 p.m<lb/>
and 9pm until<lb/>
Patio Concert ROBERT McDUFFY<lb/>
June 10 &amp; 11 Hpm-umil<lb/>
Concert will be held inside in case of rain<lb/>
Happ) Hour prices are n?i effective during I ive I ntertainmetu<lb/>
m Waitress Service Available on palm during entertainment.<lb/>
We also hae added your<lb/>
favorite selection ne.<lb/>
swiss cheese, whole whe<lb/>
rye breads<lb/>
Our Bar ill Stay Open<lb/>
I AT, for Your Pleasure.<lb/>
RESTAURANT HOURS<lb/>
Mon. Sat lla m. 11p.m.<lb/>
For Take Out Orders Call<lb/>
752 4761<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective thru Sat<lb/>
June 12 1982<lb/>
AHbVisuWUMrVYHAppfY&amp;es vnru<lb/>
our ?.F. C. cwcvwnou Pyurrv" cncck.<lb/>
Fo &amp;AR SPECIALS, TUC BC5T0F UDOtf 4 BALL<lb/>
4 DAJC? MlCC . boot pGiZfiS ALL WICWT<lb/>
5?<lb/>
C0U?G? NITg RCDUC60 A0MiS&amp;ON witvj<lb/>
VAUD WSUMA r.D. TWCBCSriW R0?<lb/>
Poin u6 afCU's VoAtu Center<lb/>
41 COTVCMC ST. 758-459<lb/>
SAN DVICH<lb/>
Pool Cat<lb/>
er in<lb/>
3<lb/>
Mon day - I wkes ? Syiss<lb/>
;y -i- jwn3<lb/>
Tj 3sday - Ham ?? Cnc:<lb/>
car<lb/>
T'nurda - urkey ?? 3cczn<lb/>
Friday - HaTi Bacon<lb/>
?Jonowicnes :cme ui n e jce lOfwaio,mayonnaise crvs<lb/>
'1.50<lb/>
INCLUDES TAX<lb/>
Copyright 1982<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold to Dealers<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd -Greenville<lb/>
Open 8 a.m. to Midnight<lb/>
Open Sunday 9 am to 9 p.m<lb/>
rTlonday- Fridcy<lb/>
1200 NOON- 300 RR1<lb/>
Sandwictas ITlinimum<lb/>
Call<lb/>
MATT<lb/>
752 -t297<lb/>
TABOR<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
$4(09 SAVE<lb/>
 30?<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
VARIETIES<lb/>
POLAR PAK<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
Vj-Ga<lb/>
Ctn<lb/>
LIMIT ONE CTN PER FAMILY<lb/>
WITH $10 00 OR MORE<lb/>
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE<lb/>
INCLUDES LB POTATO SALAD 2<lb/>
FRIED PIES 6 DINNER ROLLS WITH<lb/>
1 WHOLE B BO CHICKEN<lb/>
B.B.Q.<lb/>
Chicken Bucket!<lb/>
f<lb/>
4 OU. OR WATER<lb/>
'chunk LIGHT<lb/>
Starkist Tuna<lb/>
79e<lb/>
6V2-OZ<lb/>
Can<lb/>
SasX&amp;L<lb/>
Only<lb/>
COST CUTTER<lb/>
INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED<lb/>
SINGLES<lb/>
Cheese Spread<lb/>
12 0z,<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
WHITE<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
RHINE, PINK CHABLIS<lb/>
OR BURGUNDY<lb/>
320Z.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
Carlo<lb/>
Rossi<lb/>
Ltr<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057482_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>