<?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">
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<pb facs="00057486_0001"/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
She ?aat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No.68<lb/>
Wednesday, July 7, 1982<lb/>
Campus Crime Rate<lb/>
For $1-82 Reported<lb/>
B CHARLES ROADMAN<lb/>
Due to an increase in robbery and<lb/>
larceny, the campus crime rate rose<lb/>
bv 5.8 percent during the 1981-82<lb/>
school year. Over $100,000 worth of<lb/>
cash and merchandise was reported<lb/>
stolen.<lb/>
This was an increase of $23,000<lb/>
over the 80-81 school year.<lb/>
However, during the same time<lb/>
period, the ratio of reported crimes-<lb/>
to-arrests was up by six percent and<lb/>
the percentage of recovered proper-<lb/>
ty was also up by more than 17 per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
Joseph Calder, director of cam-<lb/>
pus security credits the increase in<lb/>
arrest and recovered property to an<lb/>
elevated student awareness.<lb/>
According to local security ex-<lb/>
perts, the students are the first line<lb/>
of criminal defense and can help<lb/>
reduce the crime rate by reporting<lb/>
crimes as they are happening or as<lb/>
soon as possible afterwards.<lb/>
The blue light system that is cur-<lb/>
rently going into operation<lb/>
throughout campus is designed to<lb/>
Group Keeps Watch<lb/>
make the reporting of suspected<lb/>
crime as easy as picking up a phone,<lb/>
for as soon as any of the phones are<lb/>
picked up, a campus security agent<lb/>
is dispatched to the area.<lb/>
To aid in recovering stolen pro-<lb/>
perty and help reduce the chances of<lb/>
property being stolen, students can<lb/>
have their personal items engraved<lb/>
and the number recorded at the<lb/>
security office at no charge.<lb/>
Another way students can help<lb/>
reduce the campus crime rate is to<lb/>
participate in the student reserve.<lb/>
This is an organization sponsored<lb/>
bv the campus police and designed<lb/>
to aid in crime prevention. Duties in<lb/>
the organization include campus<lb/>
patrol, handling parking violations<lb/>
and stadium parking.<lb/>
According to Calder, over 46 per-<lb/>
cent oi campus crimes are commit-<lb/>
ted by non-students. Of the 54 per-<lb/>
cent committed by students, the vast<lb/>
majority are committed by one-<lb/>
semester freshmen who never return<lb/>
for the second term. Next in line are<lb/>
the sophmores, juniors, seniors and<lb/>
a very low percentage being commit-<lb/>
ted from the graduate level students.<lb/>
How Did You Spend Your Fourth ?<lb/>
These students find two different ways. One relaxing under a shad tree; the others bask-<lb/>
ing in the sun at the beach.<lb/>
Photo By JOHN LYNCH<lb/>
Anti-Defamation League Denounces Far-Right's Effectiveness<lb/>
  ? un.ovc Uv von'rea storm troopers out. ? <lb/>
B JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Null Wnlrr<lb/>
Editor's note: This article is the<lb/>
third installment of a series concern-<lb/>
ing the philosophy of fascism and its<lb/>
supporters. The first article describ-<lb/>
ed the basic beliefs oj fascism, and<lb/>
its most significant outbreak.<lb/>
Hitler's National Socialist or Nazi<lb/>
regime. Lije under the Nazis 'm<lb/>
described by Dr. Bramy Resnik oj<lb/>
ECU'S foreign Language Depart-<lb/>
ment, a survivor of the Holocaust.<lb/>
The second article focused on<lb/>
Richard F. Becker, an ECL<lb/>
graduate student and former<lb/>
member of the Sational Socialist<lb/>
Party of America (NSPA). This ar-<lb/>
ticle will examine the history and ac-<lb/>
tivities oj the NSPA and similar far<lb/>
right-wing groups.<lb/>
Norman Olshansky of the Anti-<lb/>
Defamation League of B'nai B'rith,<lb/>
an organization which keeps watch<lb/>
on the radical right, says that these<lb/>
groups are small and inefficient, all<lb/>
out of proportion to the publicity<lb/>
they often receive. He characterizes<lb/>
them as a "rag tag, outside the<lb/>
mainstream, hunch of sickles. On<lb/>
the other hand, what they stand for,<lb/>
the explosive atmosphere they can<lb/>
generate with just one or two people<lb/>
makes them a force which should he<lb/>
of concern to all . . <lb/>
Because then doings are shrouded<lb/>
in secrecy, the exact activities and<lb/>
origins ol these organizations are<lb/>
often difficult to ascertain. Certain-<lb/>
ly, the oldest and most well-known<lb/>
of them is the Ku Klux Klan, which<lb/>
dates back to the end of the Civil<lb/>
War. The Klan once had tens of<lb/>
thousands of members, but has now<lb/>
dwindled into dozens of small<lb/>
splinter groups.<lb/>
Olshansky calls the Carolina<lb/>
Knights of the KKK the most<lb/>
"visible" ol the many Klan associa-<lb/>
tions in North Carolina, led by a<lb/>
former Green Beret, they reputedly<lb/>
run a military-style training camp<lb/>
near Angier in Johnson County.<lb/>
North Carolina is also home to a<lb/>
branch of the so-called United Klans<lb/>
of America.<lb/>
White the KKK is quite infamous<lb/>
a less well-known organization with<lb/>
members in North Carolina is the<lb/>
National States Rights Party<lb/>
(NSRP). Becker, who was once<lb/>
associated with the NSPA (who says<lb/>
he no longer shares some of these<lb/>
groups' beliefs, describes the NSRP<lb/>
position as being: 'for the expul-<lb/>
sion o all Jews, and including black<lb/>
people in a separate country. The.<lb/>
favor sending some of them back to<lb/>
Africa "In fact Becker adds.<lb/>
"one of them told me, he said, 'we<lb/>
ought to send them half way back to<lb/>
Africa and let them swim the rest ot<lb/>
the way<lb/>
While exact membership figures<lb/>
for these groups are impossible to<lb/>
determine, the NSRP appears to be<lb/>
one of the largest such outfits in<lb/>
America. Says Becker. "There's<lb/>
more National States Righters than<lb/>
there are any other group, and they<lb/>
can be successful in that was<lb/>
Primary<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (UP1) -<lb/>
Democratic candidates for two Ap-<lb/>
peals Court seats and the 2nd<lb/>
District congressional nomination<lb/>
requested runoffs Tuesday, but the<lb/>
2nd District Republican nomination<lb/>
was decided without a fight.<lb/>
F. Douglas Biddy of Durham<lb/>
conceded the GOP nomination to<lb/>
John W. "Jack" Marin following a<lb/>
Monday night meeting.<lb/>
In unofficial returns from the<lb/>
June 29 primary, Marin had 3,076<lb/>
votes or 48.8 percent of the total to<lb/>
1,810 votes for Biddy and 1,421 for<lb/>
Barry L. Gardner of Rocky Mount.<lb/>
Biddy, who is from Durham, will<lb/>
face Libertarian Yvonda Sue Lamm<lb/>
and either H.M. "Mickey"<lb/>
Michaux Jr. or IT. "Tim" Valen-<lb/>
tine in November.<lb/>
Michaux, seeking to become the<lb/>
first black congressman from North<lb/>
Carolina in 80 years, led the<lb/>
Democratic primary with 45,119<lb/>
votes or 44.2 percent of the total<lb/>
compared to 34,048 votes for Valen-<lb/>
tine and 22,983 for former House<lb/>
Speaker James 1 . Ramsey of Ro-<lb/>
boro.<lb/>
Valentine said Tuesday he had<lb/>
called for a runoff.<lb/>
Noon Tuesday was the deadline<lb/>
for calling for a runoff. Second-<lb/>
place candidates in races where no<lb/>
candidate received a majority of the<lb/>
June 29 vote could call for a runoff.<lb/>
There will be two statewide<lb/>
runoffs, with Sidney S. Lagles Jr. of<lb/>
Raleigh requesting a runoff against<lb/>
Paul Wright of Goldsboro for the<lb/>
Appeals Court seat being vacated by<lb/>
Judge Robert Martin and H. Hor-<lb/>
ton Rountree of Greenville calling<lb/>
for a runoff against Eugene H.<lb/>
Phillips ot W inston-Salem for the<lb/>
seat being vacated by Judge Naomi<lb/>
Morris.<lb/>
Larry Edwards, a spokesman for<lb/>
Biddy, said the decision whether to<lb/>
request a runoff was put off until<lb/>
Monday night's meeting with<lb/>
ECU Student Arrested<lb/>
In Restaurant Assault<lb/>
ECU student Kenneth Thomas<lb/>
Ray, Jr. was arrested early Monday<lb/>
morning and charged with assault<lb/>
on a female.<lb/>
According to Greenville Police<lb/>
Captain John Briley, Ray allegedly<lb/>
bit a female patron of the Subway<lb/>
Restaurant on the right breast. The<lb/>
police reported that Ray's action is<lb/>
alledged to have occurred as a result<lb/>
of a bet between him and his two<lb/>
companions.<lb/>
The victim, an employee at<lb/>
Seymour Johnson Air Force Base,<lb/>
told the police that Ray got up from<lb/>
the table where he was seated, came<lb/>
to her table and bit her on the<lb/>
breast.<lb/>
After the incident, which occur-<lb/>
red early Sunday morning, Ray ran<lb/>
from the restaurant.<lb/>
Briley stated that Ray was releas-<lb/>
ed after posting a $300 bond. The<lb/>
amount of the bet was reported by<lb/>
Briley io be ten dollars.<lb/>
Marin.<lb/>
"Mann and Biddy found they<lb/>
were close on many issues he said.<lb/>
"We decided to get together and<lb/>
support one candidate and go ahead<lb/>
with the Republican plan for the<lb/>
economy<lb/>
Valentine, a former member oi<lb/>
the state House and legal adviser<lb/>
and legislative counsel to former<lb/>
Gov. Dan K. Moore, said he<lb/>
believes people who voted for<lb/>
Ramsey in the first primary will<lb/>
switch to him July 27.<lb/>
"I believe my political philosophy<lb/>
represents the political attitude and<lb/>
thinking of a great majority of peo-<lb/>
ple in the 2nd District and I think<lb/>
that this majority of voters is oppos-<lb/>
ed to Mr. Michaux' political<lb/>
stance he said.<lb/>
Eagles had 187,412 votes in the<lb/>
June 29 primary to 195,354 votes<lb/>
for Wright.<lb/>
Announcing his runott bid.<lb/>
Eagles criticized a state judicial code<lb/>
that prohibits candidates tor<lb/>
judicial offices from commenting<lb/>
on issues that might come before<lb/>
their courts.<lb/>
Eagles said the restriction detracts<lb/>
from "a partisan election process in<lb/>
which the people expect to know<lb/>
and are entitled to know where can-<lb/>
didates stand on issues of legal<lb/>
philosophy and any other questions<lb/>
except specific cases coming before<lb/>
the courts to which the candidates<lb/>
aspire<lb/>
Rountree trailed Phillips in the<lb/>
primary bv more than 100,000<lb/>
votes. Phillips got 194,573 or 39.9<lb/>
percent of the vote in the five-way<lb/>
race, while Rountree got 91,858<lb/>
votes.<lb/>
because nobody says, 'Hey, you're a<lb/>
Nazi1 or 'you're a Klansman You<lb/>
don't wear a swastika or a robe with<lb/>
a hood on it in the States Rights<lb/>
Party. It's more socially acceptable<lb/>
to the system to be a member of the<lb/>
States Rights Party<lb/>
Lhe American Nazis have a long,<lb/>
twisted history. Their story begins<lb/>
with George 1 incotn Rockwell,<lb/>
whose National Socialist White Peo-<lb/>
ple Party (NSWPP) attracted a<lb/>
good deal of attention in the early<lb/>
sixties. Rockwell was assassinated<lb/>
bv one of his own followers in 1967,<lb/>
and the NSWPP was taken over by<lb/>
former NSRP member Matt Koehl,<lb/>
who still heads the Nazi group to-<lb/>
day. A tew years after Rockwell's<lb/>
death. NSW PP member Frank Col-<lb/>
lin split with the group (reportedly<lb/>
he was kicked out because they<lb/>
discovered his father was Jewish).<lb/>
Collin moved to Chicago and<lb/>
founded the National Socialist Par-<lb/>
tv o America (NSPA), a mimscule<lb/>
organization which nevertheless<lb/>
managed to become quite<lb/>
notorious.<lb/>
Becker claims that he "met Frank<lb/>
Collin on two occasions. One was at<lb/>
the NSPA rally in St. Louis in April<lb/>
of 1978. That was the one that was<lb/>
attended by our friend Mr. Hinckley<lb/>
(President Reagan's would-be<lb/>
assassin). "1 saw John Hinckley<lb/>
there, didn't know who he was . . .<lb/>
He was just another storm trooper,<lb/>
and at those rallys we don't ask<lb/>
many questions about our fellow<lb/>
storm troopers<lb/>
In 1977, Collin attracted national<lb/>
attention when he announced the<lb/>
NSPA would hold a march through<lb/>
Skokie, Illinois, a small town in<lb/>
which many survivors of the Nazi<lb/>
concentration camps lived. After a<lb/>
storm of controversy and court<lb/>
legislation, Collin never did march<lb/>
on Skokie, but won the right to<lb/>
demonstrate at the Federal Plaza m<lb/>
Chicago on June 24, 1978. Becker<lb/>
says he participated: "About all<lb/>
that march really consisted of was,<lb/>
we rode in a truck up to the post of-<lb/>
fice in the Federal Building there.<lb/>
The police station is down in the<lb/>
basement there, and the police<lb/>
escorted us up through the building,<lb/>
outside onto the Federal Plaza<lb/>
where (Harold) Covington, Frank<lb/>
Collin and several others made<lb/>
speeches to the crowd. They were<lb/>
drowned out by all the veiling and<lb/>
hollering and throwing . . . We were<lb/>
hit bv bottles, brickbats, eggs<lb/>
especially, lots of eggs, tomatoes,<lb/>
and various other missies that were<lb/>
thrown by the crowd<lb/>
In 1979, the NSPA, which was a<lb/>
splinter group from the NSW'PP,<lb/>
splintered again. Collin was ousted<lb/>
from the organization he founded,<lb/>
and Covington became leader of a<lb/>
new NSPA, headquartered in<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. Covington formed an<lb/>
alliance with local Klansmen, and<lb/>
became involved in the single most<lb/>
dramatic event involving far-right<lb/>
wing groups: the Greensboro shoot-<lb/>
On November 3, 1979. five<lb/>
members of the Communist<lb/>
Workers Party were killed and seven<lb/>
more wounded at a "Death to the<lb/>
Klan" rally in Greensboro. Six<lb/>
Klan Nazi members were charged<lb/>
with murder and rioting, and ac-<lb/>
quitted by a jury on November 17.<lb/>
Becker says he, "attended a<lb/>
gat her ins in franklin County about<lb/>
two weeks prior to that incident (on<lb/>
Nov. 3) at which several of the<lb/>
Klansmen, Nazi party members and<lb/>
assorted right wingers appeared<lb/>
there, well-armed with all kinds ol<lb/>
weapons  1 spoke at that gather-<lb/>
ing just briefly, for about five<lb/>
minutes. I didn't make any com-<lb/>
ment about the proposed sojourn to<lb/>
Greensboro. All 1 know is that<lb/>
several people got up and spoke<lb/>
about the fact that there would be-<lb/>
an anti-Klan demonstration in<lb/>
Greensboro on November 3, and<lb/>
wanted everybody to get up there<lb/>
that possiblv could, and that they<lb/>
were having some storm troopers go<lb/>
up there who were well-prepared for<lb/>
anv emergency . . "<lb/>
Becker believes that the group<lb/>
didn't plan any violence, but<lb/>
retaliated after being fired on. "As<lb/>
far as the jury was concerned up<lb/>
there in Greensboro Becker says,<lb/>
"they probably agreed with me that<lb/>
the Communists who were killed<lb/>
needed killing. And as far as I'm<lb/>
See FASCISTS, Page 3<lb/>
Communication Major<lb/>
Status Still Uncertain<lb/>
I<lb/>
Bv CHRIS HARRINGTON<lb/>
siifl Wnlrr<lb/>
During the first few days of East<lb/>
Carolina University's second sum-<lb/>
mer session for 1982, students and<lb/>
some faculty members are still<lb/>
wondering about the status of a pro-<lb/>
posed communication major for the<lb/>
ECU campus.<lb/>
While the University ol North<lb/>
Carolina's Board of Governors did<lb/>
meet last month with an agenda that<lb/>
included discussion and authoriza-<lb/>
tion of two new programs for ECU,<lb/>
the communication major was not<lb/>
one of them.<lb/>
The programs approved by the<lb/>
board of governors in their June<lb/>
meeting were, a bachelor of science<lb/>
program in accounting and a master<lb/>
of social work degree.<lb/>
The accounting major upped the<lb/>
School of Business's concentration<lb/>
in accounting from a minor.<lb/>
The master degree in social work<lb/>
marked the first graduate level<lb/>
degree program offered by the<lb/>
Department of Social Work and<lb/>
Corrective Services here at ECU.<lb/>
Presently there is only one other<lb/>
such graduate program in North<lb/>
Carolina and that is offered at<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The new program should begin in<lb/>
fall of 1984, and applications for<lb/>
admission will be taken during the<lb/>
1983-84 school year.<lb/>
The new graduate level course will<lb/>
focus on the needs of rural areas<lb/>
and small communities.<lb/>
As for the proposed communica-<lb/>
tion major. Dr. Donald J. Stedman,<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
associate vice-president for<lb/>
academic affairs, said, "At the<lb/>
earliest the board of governors will<lb/>
discuss the proposed major at the<lb/>
July meeting<lb/>
However, Stedman was certain<lb/>
that at this month's meeting,<lb/>
members will be more concerned<lb/>
with the budget allocations, so that<lb/>
it is likely that the proposed major<lb/>
will not be discussed until the<lb/>
September board meeting.<lb/>
"My opinion is that the board<lb/>
meetings are far and few between,<lb/>
and that for a proposal to be passed<lb/>
from the planning committee to the<lb/>
board, means that someone (student<lb/>
and faculty) has to be determined to<lb/>
make the committee see that this<lb/>
proposed major is something to be<lb/>
reckoned with explained Sted-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Darlene Chaney is one of four<lb/>
ECU athletes who will be com-<lb/>
peting in the National Sports<lb/>
Festival at Indianapolis, Ind. The<lb/>
event, sponsored by the U.S<lb/>
Olympic Committee, will run Ju-<lb/>
ly 24-31. For complete details, see<lb/>
Sports, page 7.<lb/>
Inside Index<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifieds 2<lb/>
Opinion 4<lb/>
Compos Forum <lb/>
Features <lb/>
Sports<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057486_0002"/><lb/>
I Ml EAS1 i. AROl IM N Jl 1 N 7, 12<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
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? ou may use the form at right or<lb/>
jse a separate sheet of paper i1<lb/>
you need more lines ' here are 33<lb/>
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.ounts as one unit Capitalize and<lb/>
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Return i?- IHh t VMKOI IM N<lb/>
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PRICES effective THRUSat July 1 Oat A4P in Grten ville, NC<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
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easier by the women of the Fleming Center.<lb/>
Counselors are available day and night to<lb/>
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Insurance accepted Free pregnancy testing<lb/>
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Call 781-8880 day or night<lb/>
The Fleming; Center makee the difference.<lb/>
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kX pJ-tspKi t&amp; (LIMIT2PKGS<lb/>
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CARICATURES by Aeyler Hd't<lb/>
a fun color 8 by 10 cartoon por<lb/>
'rjii done of yourself or a loved<lb/>
one A unique qiH a a Call<lb/>
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COTTAGE tor Rent at N Myrtle<lb/>
Beach Sleeps 6 Rent by<lb/>
week weekend Call 758 0206<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT West 5th<lb/>
Street Smqlc 4125 00. double<lb/>
580 00 Ut.ii'ies included call<lb/>
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NEED A PAPER TYPEO IN A<lb/>
HUBRY' Can Mar at 355 2160 for<lb/>
quick dependable service Pro<lb/>
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type papeis of all sues lnt?pen<lb/>
sive bu' professional<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share enerqy efficient duplex 3<lb/>
blocks from campus Hail e?<lb/>
penscs Call Jimmy at 752 3895 or<lb/>
758 6422 Ready Au9 I<lb/>
NEED PROFESSIONAL Typist<lb/>
lor your term paper thesis,<lb/>
manuscript, etc &amp; Call Susan<lb/>
Byers - 758 5488 or 758 8241<lb/>
COLLEGE REP WANTED to<lb/>
distribute 'Student Rate subscrip<lb/>
tion cards at this campus Good in<lb/>
come, no selling involved For in<lb/>
formation and application write<lb/>
to Allen Lowrance. Director 251<lb/>
G'e?iwood Drive, MooresviHe NC<lb/>
28U5<lb/>
SHARE TRAILER 15 Whites<lb/>
Trailer park near Pitt Plaia on<lb/>
ECU bus route 530 month plus<lb/>
half utility<lb/>
Professional TYPING service e?<lb/>
prience. quality work IBMSelec<lb/>
trie typewriter Call Lame Shive.<lb/>
751 5301 or Gail Joyner 756 1062<lb/>
TYPING Term thesis resumes.<lb/>
dissertations, etc Professional<lb/>
quality ' lowest rates Call Kern<lb/>
pie Dunn anytime 752 6733<lb/>
TYPING TERM PAPERS ALL<lb/>
SIZES Proofreading ollered<lb/>
Dependable typist Call Mary.<lb/>
355 240<lb/>
BASS Guitarist Top 40 Country<lb/>
Band based m Greenville NC Sue<lb/>
cesstu' recording act with steady<lb/>
bookings Serious inquiries only<lb/>
(?I) 750 (772 mqht. 756 8828 day<lb/>
Repeat By Popular Demand<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Celebrates It's First Anniversary<lb/>
With Inflation Fighting Prices<lb/>
fj IN QUARTERS OaVIHgS A&amp;P CHILLED<lb/>
1 Mrc Filhort'c flrannp Inirc<lb/>
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Mrs. Filbert's Orange Juice<lb/>
' M"9Brina4oo QQc<lb/>
2<lb/>
1-lb.<lb/>
pkgs.<lb/>
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?V TAB QQc<lb/>
SPRITE<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle<lb/>
ALL NATURAL<lb/>
Breyer's Ice Cream <lb/>
j99 v;<lb/>
12 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
For Your Laundry<lb/>
Punch Detergent<lb/>
42 oz. box 'M'm<lb/>
SEALTEST<lb/>
Polar Bars<lb/>
6<lb/>
ct. pkg.<lb/>
1<lb/>
4:00 P.M9:00 P.M.<lb/>
Sunday Thru Thursday<lb/>
Reg. Shrimp Dinner $339<lb/>
Large<lb/>
Oysters<lb/>
Large<lb/>
S339<lb/>
$459<lb/>
Our Way Of Saying Thank You For Making Our First<lb/>
Year A Successful One.<lb/>
Bob Herring, Manager<lb/>
105 Airport Road<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
PD<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
J<lb/>
tqnnai'<lb/>
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GOOD THRU SAT JULY 10 AT AP<lb/>
Save 40c<lb/>
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644 1<lb/>
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f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057486_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLlNlNJlJLY7,J982 . 3<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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P<lb/>
Local Nun Returns From CentralAmerica<lb/>
By PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff U rilrr<lb/>
"We lack the<lb/>
sophistication to see<lb/>
through the propagan-<lb/>
da the (United States)<lb/>
state department puts<lb/>
out. From my ex-<lb/>
perience, it's a lie<lb/>
said former East<lb/>
Carolina campus<lb/>
minister. Sister Jane<lb/>
Paris.<lb/>
Paris just returned to<lb/>
Greenville after spen-<lb/>
ding the last two years<lb/>
doing missionary work<lb/>
in Central America.<lb/>
Paris receivied a<lb/>
graduate degree in<lb/>
classics from the<lb/>
University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb/>
in 1974. She came to<lb/>
Greenville in 1976 to<lb/>
work as a pastoral<lb/>
associate with the local<lb/>
Catholic community<lb/>
and to do cai.ipus<lb/>
ministry with the ECU<lb/>
Catholic Newman<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
She also worked in<lb/>
ministry for migrant<lb/>
Farm workers for two<lb/>
summers in Sampson<lb/>
county.<lb/>
During her stay in<lb/>
Central America, Paris<lb/>
worked in a rural<lb/>
village in Honduras as<lb/>
well as spending some<lb/>
time working in El<lb/>
Salvadoran refugee<lb/>
boarder camps.<lb/>
From her experience<lb/>
she gained insight into<lb/>
many of the problems<lb/>
m Central America and<lb/>
how the United States'<lb/>
involvement can<lb/>
sometimes be the<lb/>
decisive factor in the<lb/>
outcome of many of<lb/>
these events.<lb/>
"Eighty-five percent<lb/>
of foreign investment<lb/>
in Honduras is from<lb/>
the United States<lb/>
claimed Paris, "but 75<lb/>
percent of the profit<lb/>
goes outside the coun-<lb/>
try<lb/>
She added that most<lb/>
of the Honduran<lb/>
agricultural production<lb/>
is in cash crops such as<lb/>
bananas, pineapples,<lb/>
cotton, sugar cane and<lb/>
coffee, which are used<lb/>
for export, most often<lb/>
to the United States.<lb/>
"In Honduras, four<lb/>
percent of the wealthy<lb/>
people own 55 percent<lb/>
of the land so the other<lb/>
96 percent don't have<lb/>
enough to just basically<lb/>
live said Paris.<lb/>
The land per person<lb/>
ratio is worst in El<lb/>
Salvador, according to<lb/>
Paris, where two per-<lb/>
cent of the people own<lb/>
60 percent of the land.<lb/>
What this means is<lb/>
that the people have no<lb/>
self-determination<lb/>
because someone else<lb/>
owns their land she<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
Paris claims that<lb/>
"land is the key thing"<lb/>
for the people of Cen-<lb/>
tral America. Adding<lb/>
that "our (United<lb/>
States) military aid to<lb/>
El Salvador is helping<lb/>
to keep the people<lb/>
and<lb/>
lm<lb/>
landless<lb/>
poverished<lb/>
The refugee camps<lb/>
Paris visited are located<lb/>
along the Salvadoran-<lb/>
Honduran boarder.<lb/>
They are filled with<lb/>
thousands of<lb/>
Salvadoran peasants<lb/>
who fled the violence in<lb/>
their homeland.<lb/>
Paris worked in a<lb/>
series of six camps over<lb/>
a two mile area that<lb/>
housed seven<lb/>
thousands people.<lb/>
"The people arrived<lb/>
extremely malnourish-<lb/>
ed and ill plus<lb/>
traumatized and fear-<lb/>
ful she said. Because<lb/>
life and death situation<lb/>
and (this) makes our<lb/>
concerns (in the U.S.)<lb/>
look rather petty<lb/>
Many religious<lb/>
leaders have been<lb/>
murdered in Central<lb/>
America, including a<lb/>
group of American<lb/>
nuns. Local people are<lb/>
tortured or killed<lb/>
because of their in-<lb/>
volvement with the<lb/>
work of the mis-<lb/>
sionaries.<lb/>
Paris is against the<lb/>
U.S. military aid to El<lb/>
Salvador and praised a<lb/>
statement from the<lb/>
United States Con-<lb/>
ference of Catholic<lb/>
work in the refugee<lb/>
camps as her most<lb/>
memorable experience.<lb/>
"That's what sticks out<lb/>
in my mind ? the<lb/>
month I spent in the<lb/>
refugee camps with the<lb/>
Salvadoran people<lb/>
Paris said that upon<lb/>
returningI had more<lb/>
questions than what I<lb/>
went with<lb/>
Will she return to<lb/>
this strife torn part of<lb/>
the world to once again<lb/>
be a missionary? Her<lb/>
answer was uncertain.<lb/>
"But if I go back she<lb/>
concluded, "it will be<lb/>
to the refugee camps.<lb/>
The need is tremen-<lb/>
dous. There are not<lb/>
enough people serving<lb/>
there<lb/>
For now, Paris is<lb/>
staying at the Newman<lb/>
center helping out<lb/>
Sister Helen Shondell<lb/>
and Kathleen Jackson<lb/>
in pastoral and campus<lb/>
ministry and renewing<lb/>
old Triendships<lb/>
throughout North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Fascists Still Thrive<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
concerned it's a damn shame they<lb/>
didn't kill them all<lb/>
Despite all the attention they at-<lb/>
tracted in Skokie, Greensboro and<lb/>
elsewhere, the neo-Nazi groups are<lb/>
shrinking rapidly. Collin is currently<lb/>
m prison, convicted of sexually<lb/>
abusing children. Covington has<lb/>
disappeared from the scene, his<lb/>
whereabouts unknown except for a<lb/>
rumor that he ws seen recently in<lb/>
Charleston, S.C.<lb/>
The American Nazis have been<lb/>
plagued with a loss of trust in their<lb/>
leaders, dwindling membership<lb/>
authorities, court entanglements,<lb/>
and lack of funds. "All of this con-<lb/>
tributes to the demise of what was<lb/>
already an impotent operation"<lb/>
says Olshansky. "For all intents and<lb/>
purposes the neo-Nazis are a thing<lb/>
of the past<lb/>
Meanwhile, the Klan, the NSRP,<lb/>
and other fascist associations con-<lb/>
tinue to operate in N.C. and nation-<lb/>
wide. The fourth and final segment<lb/>
of this series, to be presented next<lb/>
week, will discuss the questions that<lb/>
arise about American fascism, and<lb/>
will examine what influence, il any,<lb/>
figures, harassment by legal these groups have had in Greenville.<lb/>
of the high influx of 'Bishops calling for a<lb/>
people, the camps were<lb/>
often ill equiped to<lb/>
meet the demands<lb/>
made by the people.<lb/>
The camps often had<lb/>
"very little food" and<lb/>
poor health care, Paris<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
Paris noted that her<lb/>
return to the U.S. was<lb/>
jarring. "You expect<lb/>
an adjustment when<lb/>
you go, but when you<lb/>
come home you don't<lb/>
expect a difference ?<lb/>
but I'm different<lb/>
"I'm bombarded by<lb/>
the amount of things<lb/>
we have and the<lb/>
availability of material<lb/>
goods explained<lb/>
Paris.<lb/>
Paris also spoke of<lb/>
the struggles and<lb/>
dangers of doing mis-<lb/>
sionary work in Central<lb/>
America. "The church<lb/>
1 come from in Central<lb/>
America is in a daily<lb/>
hal to the military aid.<lb/>
"For once we are<lb/>
speaking out on the<lb/>
right side Paris said.<lb/>
She addedthat the<lb/>
average person doesn't<lb/>
know the facts and<lb/>
doesn't make a point to<lb/>
get them, and that's<lb/>
embarrassing. There is<lb/>
no excuse for this<lb/>
"We're terribly ig-<lb/>
norant about what is<lb/>
going on said Paris,<lb/>
speaking in regard to<lb/>
the U.S. government<lb/>
and corporate activities<lb/>
in Central America.<lb/>
Her solution is to<lb/>
read and study.<lb/>
"Education is our first<lb/>
step according to<lb/>
Paris. She advises all<lb/>
Americans to expand<lb/>
their political<lb/>
knowledge of these<lb/>
events if justice is to be<lb/>
realized.<lb/>
Paris recalls her<lb/>
Students Return Home<lb/>
From 'ECU In Morocco'<lb/>
Nine East Carolina<lb/>
students have returned<lb/>
home from the North<lb/>
African kingdom of<lb/>
Morocco after six and a<lb/>
half weeks of study and<lb/>
travel sponsored by<lb/>
ECU and the Experi-<lb/>
ment for International<lb/>
Living.<lb/>
Their stay in Moroc-<lb/>
co began May II when<lb/>
they flew from New<lb/>
York to Casablanca.<lb/>
After an orientation<lb/>
program and a sightsee-<lb/>
ing tour of Casablanca,<lb/>
they traveled to Rabat,<lb/>
the capital o Morocco,<lb/>
which was home base<lb/>
for the ECU-Morocco<lb/>
program, and took<lb/>
w<lb/>
ith<lb/>
local<lb/>
lodgings<lb/>
families.<lb/>
According to Dr.<lb/>
Robert C. Cramer, pro-<lb/>
fessor of geography at<lb/>
ECU and director of<lb/>
the program, students<lb/>
earned full summer ses-<lb/>
sion credits in<lb/>
geography, political<lb/>
science and indepen-<lb/>
dent studies. Several<lb/>
students also studied<lb/>
conversational French.<lb/>
The students took<lb/>
field trips to the im-<lb/>
perial cities of Fez,<lb/>
Meknes. Marrakech<lb/>
and the ancient Roman<lb/>
ruins of Volubilis.<lb/>
"The students saw<lb/>
herds of camels, sheep<lb/>
and goats, climbed<lb/>
sand dunes, tramped<lb/>
on the deserts and ex-<lb/>
plored modern cities as<lb/>
well as rural villages<lb/>
with adobe buildings<lb/>
Cramer said. He added<lb/>
that they also shopped<lb/>
in modern store where<lb/>
the price of an item is<lb/>
determined onlv after<lb/>
negotiations.<lb/>
Cramer also express-<lb/>
ed hope that the pro-<lb/>
gram can be continued<lb/>
next summer, especially<lb/>
in view of the recent<lb/>
ctiltiir. I agreement bet-<lb/>
ween the governments<lb/>
of Morocco and the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Peace Committee Protests<lb/>
Performers Hold Concert<lb/>
For Public Radio Station j<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
ABORTIONS FROM 13 16<lb/>
WEEKS<lb/>
AT FURTHER EXPENSE<lb/>
1185 00 Pregnancv Test. Birth<lb/>
Control, and Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling For fur<lb/>
'her information call 13? OSJi<lb/>
Toll Free Number<lb/>
00 131 358) between 9 AM<lb/>
md 5 P M Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C<lb/>
B MIKK HAMER<lb/>
si?lf Wriier<lb/>
On July 1, nine<lb/>
members of the Green-<lb/>
ville Peace Committee<lb/>
demonstrated at the<lb/>
Greenville Post Office<lb/>
in support of Ben<lb/>
Sas w a) o t Vista,<lb/>
California tor his<lb/>
resistance to draft<lb/>
registration.<lb/>
The group also ex-<lb/>
pressed support for<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill, a staff<lb/>
writer for the East<lb/>
Carolinian, who is serv-<lb/>
ing a three-month<lb/>
sentence for civil<lb/>
disobedience at Fort<lb/>
Bragg.<lb/>
The committee has<lb/>
been involved in other<lb/>
activities also and, on<lb/>
July 3, met with other<lb/>
peace advocates from<lb/>
around the state to<lb/>
demonstrate outside<lb/>
the main gale of<lb/>
Seymour Johnson Air<lb/>
Force Base in<lb/>
Goldsboro.<lb/>
According to Ms.<lb/>
Edith Webber of the<lb/>
East Carolina faculty,<lb/>
protesters this past<lb/>
Saturday discussed<lb/>
ways to involve the<lb/>
people of Goldsboro<lb/>
more actively in the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Webber also said<lb/>
that the group chose<lb/>
the occasion of the<lb/>
Fourth of July weekend<lb/>
to bring to mind the<lb/>
preservation of the<lb/>
American values of<lb/>
liberty and justice.<lb/>
The protestors nor-<lb/>
mally meet some<lb/>
hostility when pro-<lb/>
testing at Seymour<lb/>
Johnson; however,<lb/>
Webber stated that<lb/>
passers-by seemed<lb/>
friendlier toward the<lb/>
demonstrators this<lb/>
time.<lb/>
ZHXK:XttH:?t- ??? -?????.??-???<lb/>
HELP WANTED ADS<lb/>
fill the<lb/>
job!<lb/>
B MIKKHAMK.K<lb/>
Mall Hnlrr<lb/>
On the evening of Ju-<lb/>
ly 13, several Fast<lb/>
Carolina students and<lb/>
local Greenville musi-<lb/>
cians will perform in<lb/>
the Phoenix room at<lb/>
the Attic to raise money<lb/>
for public service radio<lb/>
?Uatio. WVSP located<lb/>
in Warrenton, N.C .<lb/>
This will be the<lb/>
fourth consecutive year<lb/>
that Greenville musi-<lb/>
cians have donated<lb/>
their time and talents<lb/>
for the radio station.<lb/>
Performers for this<lb/>
year's benefit will in-<lb/>
clude; "Something<lb/>
Else a ja group<lb/>
made up primarily of<lb/>
music students from<lb/>
ECU; Lonely and the<lb/>
Juke Jive Bombers, a<lb/>
local R and B group;<lb/>
its listeners to bring<lb/>
issues to the surface so<lb/>
and the 1 ighting Wells<lb/>
Blues Band ol Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Ihe concert will<lb/>
begin at 9:30 p.m. and<lb/>
will be recorded lot<lb/>
possible airing on the<lb/>
station.<lb/>
WVSP. whose call<lb/>
numbers stand for<lb/>
"voices serving peo-<lb/>
ple got started in<lb/>
August 1976 with the<lb/>
purpose of providing<lb/>
information and enter-<lb/>
tainment for the rural,<lb/>
poor and predominate<lb/>
black population of<lb/>
Warren and neighbor-<lb/>
ing counties in eastern<lb/>
N.C. and Virginia.<lb/>
The station's<lb/>
primary locus, accor-<lb/>
ding 10 Walter<lb/>
Nor fleet, the station<lb/>
director, is on being<lb/>
responsive to the needs<lb/>
of its listeners.<lb/>
Ihe station relics on<lb/>
that the) mav be<lb/>
discussed on the air.<lb/>
Ihe station's stated<lb/>
goal is "making life a<lb/>
little better for all per-<lb/>
sons m the communi-<lb/>
ty <lb/>
The station is located<lb/>
at 9).9 on the FM dial<lb/>
and broadcasts at<lb/>
100,000 watts with<lb/>
Greem tile being on the<lb/>
eastern perimeter of an<lb/>
reception area which<lb/>
extends to the triangle<lb/>
area on the South and<lb/>
to Petersburg, Virginia<lb/>
to the North.<lb/>
WASP is funded bv<lb/>
private and public<lb/>
foundations and also<lb/>
bv listeners' contribu-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
204 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
758-1427<lb/>
SAVE$THISWEEKON<lb/>
THESE NEW RELEASES 2<lb/>
?ALBUMS &amp; TAPES ON SALEj<lb/>
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LARGE PLATE ?$3.75<lb/>
with all u can eal vegetables<lb/>
REGULAR PLATES ? $2.98<lb/>
LUNCH &amp; SUPPER<lb/>
ll:00a.m8p.m. Mon-Sat<lb/>
closed Sunday<lb/>
PLUSTAX,TEA<lb/>
Take Out<lb/>
Orders Welcome<lb/>
512 E. 14th St.<lb/>
(2Dlocksdown from Belk dorm)<lb/>
J.A. UNIFORMS j<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
I<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes,<lb/>
shoes, and hose. Also ? used ECU<lb/>
nurses uniforms. Trade-ins allowed.<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive.<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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F a ast and nutritious meal,try our:<lb/>
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2.89<lb/>
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y EVENING BUFFET Mon and Tues 5 30 8pm<lb/>
SPAGHETTI Wed all you can eat Compare at onlv 2.25-<lb/>
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'All new game room and game machines<lb/>
'Drive up window for 'to go' orders.<lb/>
The liesi Pizza in<lb/>
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BIGSCREENTV<lb/>
?Enjoy the SOAPS with lunch or<lb/>
CURRENT MOVIEStPG) Sat 7pm 9pm<lb/>
Sun thru W<lb/>
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limn  tfpm<lb/>
iwi I In I <lb/>
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ROCK'N'ROLL<lb/>
7oz. pony bottles on<lb/>
Special All Summer<lb/>
Bring Your Quarters<lb/>
Door Open At 9pm<lb/>
Pizza Ian<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
(rue quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
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PIZZA INN has changed all that<lb/>
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CALL 758-6266<lb/>
GREENVILLE BLVD<lb/>
mli Mi?i<lb/>
???<lb/>
<pb facs="00057486_0004"/><lb/>
all? iEaat (Earoimtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, atmmmtmm'<lb/>
Mike Hughes, mmmmemf<lb/>
Waverly Mlrritr, dm. ?, mtmim Cindy Pleasants, v?m,??<lb/>
Roblrr Rucks, ?,??, mm?i. Ernest Conner, mihw<lb/>
Phii i ip Manlss, , ??? MhM, Steve Bachner, awataw &amp;<lb/>
Chris I ichok, r,? ,j,?,? mm, Mike Davis, ?intimv<lb/>
JuK 7. 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Financial Aid<lb/>
Used, A bused A nd Taken A way<lb/>
With the recent federal budget cuts<lb/>
in financial aid for students and<lb/>
those still to come, college tuition in<lb/>
the U.S. has become a sore topic.<lb/>
The cost of an education skyrockets<lb/>
while the availability of government<lb/>
funding plummets.<lb/>
Students in the 1980s will soon<lb/>
have to face the grim reality that<lb/>
Uncle Sam is steadily whittling his<lb/>
way out of higher education. And<lb/>
the transition has left and will leave<lb/>
many students searching frantically<lb/>
for ways to stay in school. Some will<lb/>
survive; some others will have to<lb/>
drop out. And some will never even<lb/>
make it to their first class. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, many capable minds will<lb/>
never know the challenge of a col-<lb/>
lege education. They will never live<lb/>
the "college experience Indeed,<lb/>
the future of the American college<lb/>
student is endangered.<lb/>
But just who is to blame?<lb/>
Spokesmen for the federal govern-<lb/>
ment contend that the aid cuts are<lb/>
actually realignments in the budget<lb/>
and that the Reagan administration<lb/>
will expend even greater amounts of<lb/>
money "to assist American youth to<lb/>
attend colleges, universities and<lb/>
other institutions of higher learn-<lb/>
ing Anyone who believes that gar-<lb/>
bage may be interested to learn that<lb/>
I'm looking to sell some beautiful<lb/>
oceanfront swampland in Florida.<lb/>
On the contrary, these financial aid<lb/>
cuts are for real.<lb/>
However, laying the entire blame<lb/>
on the federal government is equally<lb/>
unjust. Although they do control<lb/>
the ultimate purse strings, at least<lb/>
some of the fault lies on the<lb/>
shoulders of students, students who<lb/>
continually insist on misusing the<lb/>
federally-supported programs.<lb/>
Their abuse is not only irrevocably<lb/>
unfair; it's illegal. <lb/>
Take student loans (NDSL and<lb/>
GSL programs) for example.<lb/>
Although student default may not<lb/>
be "epidemic as some officials<lb/>
have claimed, the misuse of these<lb/>
funds is not as rare an occurrence as<lb/>
one might believe. With the interest<lb/>
rates on these loans comparatively<lb/>
low, many "bargain-conscious"<lb/>
students have made handsome four-<lb/>
year investments, collecting an undo<lb/>
allowance on Uncle Sam's tab. Pret-<lb/>
ty sly? Sure, it's sly, but unfor-<lb/>
tunately, their sly bargain ends up<lb/>
forcing some other, more deserving,<lb/>
students out of school.<lb/>
Of course, abuse of student<lb/>
financial aid monies is but a minor<lb/>
reason for the current federal<lb/>
education budget problems. And<lb/>
perhaps there is some validity to<lb/>
arguing that our government has its<lb/>
priorities somewhat askew ? i.e<lb/>
rising defense spending v. financial<lb/>
aid cuts ? but if the recipients of<lb/>
federal aid continually misuse those<lb/>
funds, then the principle behind<lb/>
monetary assistance is lost, and the<lb/>
incentive to continue the programs<lb/>
dwindles.<lb/>
Therefore, students must accept<lb/>
the fact that they are, at least in<lb/>
part, responsible for the demise of<lb/>
financial aid programs in the U.S.<lb/>
On the other hand, the federal<lb/>
governments cuts in student<lb/>
assistance constitute an act of un-<lb/>
disputed hypocrisy. Where has the<lb/>
government gone in the past for<lb/>
research and innovation? To col-<lb/>
leges and universities. Where have<lb/>
the major advances in technology<lb/>
(medical, engineering, military,<lb/>
etc.) become realities? In colleges<lb/>
and universities. Where have a vast<lb/>
majority of this nation's leaders<lb/>
been cultivated? Certainly not in a<lb/>
multi-million-dollar warplane.<lb/>
It is, indeed, unfortunate that our<lb/>
government cannot see the impen-<lb/>
ding harm of cutting financial aid<lb/>
programs. Without federal<lb/>
assistance, many institutions<lb/>
around the nation will suffer exten-<lb/>
sive drops in student enrollment,<lb/>
despite the contentions of some that<lb/>
the 1983 cuts are minimal. No mat-<lb/>
ter what the "experts" say, campus<lb/>
populations will decline.<lb/>
But it is equally unfortunate that<lb/>
a certain young entrepreneurs feel<lb/>
they have the right to deprive others<lb/>
of much-needed assistance. This in-<lb/>
creasing misuse of student loans has<lb/>
cost American taxpayers a pretty<lb/>
penny, not to mention the damper<lb/>
those abusers have put on the<lb/>
educational goals of others. The<lb/>
dilemma, which is in itself, a<lb/>
microcosm of American economics,<lb/>
is truly a tragedy.<lb/>
And like a tragedy, there are<lb/>
those who must suffer, those whose<lb/>
worthiness will be determined on<lb/>
the basis of money rather than of<lb/>
mind. But eventually, the tragedy<lb/>
winds its course back to the source.<lb/>
The government will inevitably suf-<lb/>
fer, as thousands of willing, apt<lb/>
minds are turned away from the<lb/>
country's colleges and universities.<lb/>
Perhaps this dilemma illustrates<lb/>
that it is time our government<lb/>
reassessed its priorities. Granted,<lb/>
others are also at fault, but because<lb/>
our leaders in Washington have<lb/>
chosen to balance their precious<lb/>
budget at the expense of higher<lb/>
education (and other wothry pro-<lb/>
grams), they must get the brunt of<lb/>
the blame.<lb/>
Regardless of who's at fault,<lb/>
however, the problem of decreasing<lb/>
financial aid is at hand, and it's not<lb/>
simply going to go away. So, those<lb/>
students fortunate enough to con-<lb/>
tinue receiving assistance should use<lb/>
the money with prudence and con-<lb/>
sideration. After all, you could just<lb/>
as easily be on the other side of the<lb/>
educational fence.<lb/>
tfW<lb/>
?,&amp; IMfSL ?&amp; Co?g. r.? Svc.<lb/>
jwran-<lb/>
qBNBWf<lb/>
HWElFtXJEyKNEEDD<lb/>
TAUcteUHuL<lb/>
m<lb/>
The College Experience<lb/>
Was I Expecting Too Much ?<lb/>
I don't know about anyone else, but for<lb/>
me, the first week of college didn't turn<lb/>
out exactly as I'd planned. Something ? I<lb/>
don't know what ? just didn't click. It<lb/>
sometimes makes me wonder what went<lb/>
wrong.<lb/>
To look at all the brochures and<lb/>
bulletins ? the ones they send by the<lb/>
dozen the summer before your first year ?<lb/>
you'd think ECU stands for Euphoric<lb/>
Community Utopia, a place where people<lb/>
live in proverbial harmony: teachers, ad-<lb/>
ministrators, janitorsoh yes, and even<lb/>
students, all working together to make the<lb/>
"learning experience" more beneficial for<lb/>
everyone. Tralala.<lb/>
But it's funny how quickly experience<lb/>
can shatter expectation. Indeed, how<lb/>
quickly the truth emerges. For me, the<lb/>
"learning experience" began shortly ?<lb/>
very shortly ? after I arrived.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Pulling in to the parking lot behind Belk<lb/>
dorm, my parents and 1 were immediately<lb/>
presented with a dubious thrill. We were<lb/>
treated to an exhihition of that great con-<lb/>
test of wit and skill which has become so<lb/>
popular among campus intellects ? target<lb/>
spitting. Yes, three of ECU's finest<lb/>
hawkers were steadfastly engaged in a bat-<lb/>
tle from the third-floor balcony.<lb/>
Their victim was an unexpecting<lb/>
aluminum can, carefully chosen so that ex-<lb/>
pert shots would ring out for all to hear.<lb/>
The tension mounted; the atmosphere<lb/>
thickened; all eyes were on the trio. The<lb/>
vast crowd grew uneasy awaiting the<lb/>
emergence of their dorm's champion spit-<lb/>
ter<lb/>
Just about that time, Mom suggested we<lb/>
go inside and register. 1 must admit I was<lb/>
pained to leave such a close match, but<lb/>
eventually I gave in.<lb/>
Inside the lobby, I got my introduction<lb/>
to the linear concept of college life, the<lb/>
perpetual line. I thought it funny that the<lb/>
brochures had made no mention of lines.<lb/>
When I finally made it to the front, the<lb/>
adviser proudly presented me with a box. I<lb/>
excitedly looked inside, only to find that it<lb/>
?was all the same stuff Mom had bought me<lb/>
a week earlier. There were tiny containers<lb/>
with shampoo, powder, mouthwash<lb/>
Now that 1 think of it, that box was pro-<lb/>
bably just the RA's convenient way of<lb/>
dropping some sort of hint. Well, never-<lb/>
theless, I was overjoyed to learn that all<lb/>
this "Qood Stuff" was absolutely free<lb/>
"That's amazing I mumbled in awe. "I<lb/>
didn't think anything at college was free<lb/>
With that, the adviser just laughed.<lb/>
'There's a lot you don't know about col-<lb/>
lege he explained. "We're not really out<lb/>
to get anybody. We're just here to make<lb/>
your stay at ECU as enjoyable as possible.<lb/>
Oh, by the way, your key deposit is six<lb/>
bucks<lb/>
Mike Hughes<lb/>
Just The Way<lb/>
It Is<lb/>
With my impression of college life<lb/>
dwindling fast, I made my way upstairs to<lb/>
my new room. I tried to picture how it<lb/>
would look after I'd arranged the furniture<lb/>
my way. "It'll be great I thought to<lb/>
myself. Almost like my own little place.<lb/>
Well, I was certainly right about the<lb/>
"little" part. Why, even the cockroaches<lb/>
had to carry their food out into the hall so<lb/>
they could sit down to eat. And as if that<lb/>
wasn't enough, I nearly got a hernia trying<lb/>
to move my bed.<lb/>
I soon found out that dorms were ob-<lb/>
viously not made for sleeping. Very little,<lb/>
if any, actual sleeping takes place there.<lb/>
But like the rest of the college campus, the<lb/>
dorm is an integral part of the total<lb/>
"learning experience Why, in my first<lb/>
night alone, I learned at least seven varia-<lb/>
tions on the ancient backwoods art of<lb/>
mooing. I suppose some parks and recrea-<lb/>
tion majors were busy practicing for their<lb/>
promising careers.<lb/>
I remember the brochures promising<lb/>
hours of informative discussion and in-<lb/>
triguing lecture. I couldn't wait to get in on<lb/>
that! Little did 1 know then that that mean!<lb/>
I'd spend eight hours in a drop-add line<lb/>
listening to three girls gossiping about their<lb/>
friend Beulah and her weight problem<lb/>
How intriguing.<lb/>
Classes, too, were somewhat of a disap-<lb/>
pointment. Being an idealist ? indeed, a<lb/>
naive idealist ? I was up two hours early<lb/>
and marched to my first class on that<lb/>
hum.d Thursday in August full of great<lb/>
hope and expectation. After all, this was<lb/>
my first real day of college, my first en-<lb/>
counter with real learning. Well, I must ad-<lb/>
mit, I did learn something. I didn't unders-<lb/>
tand too much of the objective explana-<lb/>
tions, but I sure learned which teachers I<lb/>
never wanted again.<lb/>
After a rough day of classes, I was cer-<lb/>
tainly ready for a good, hardy lunch at the<lb/>
cafeteria. Boy, was I hungry. I paid no<lb/>
heed to the silly warning I'd read on a<lb/>
bathroom wall. "That's what thev say<lb/>
everywhere I reasoned. "Besides, the<lb/>
food can't be all that bad Take my ad-<lb/>
vice, pay heed to those silly warnings on<lb/>
the bathroom walls.<lb/>
Speaking of which, I was amazed to find<lb/>
that bathroom jargon, or porcelain<lb/>
literature (as it is known in some circles), is<lb/>
one of the most booming non-credit<lb/>
courses on campus. I'm sure that the<lb/>
English faculty would agree that some of<lb/>
the best freshman compositions are done<lb/>
with coins.<lb/>
At first, I was appalled at the language.<lb/>
(The brochures, again, had forgotten to<lb/>
mention it.) But not unlike the smell of my<lb/>
roommate's feet, I eventuallv got used to<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Yes, I got used to a lot of things: the<lb/>
dorm, the teachers, my first name being<lb/>
changed to a six-digit number. I even got<lb/>
used to the environmental sounds from<lb/>
downstairs.<lb/>
And looking back on the experiences I<lb/>
had during my first week of college, I<lb/>
wondered if, in fact, this wasn't what I'd<lb/>
expected after all.<lb/>
It sure as hell wasn't.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Little Denies Henderson's Blame<lb/>
It is amazing at how easy it is for Eric<lb/>
Henderson to criticize me now that I<lb/>
have graduated and no longer reside in<lb/>
Greenville. If he is looking for a<lb/>
scapegoat with regard to this year's<lb/>
financial woes, he should turn to<lb/>
somebody other than Kirk Little. The<lb/>
SGA treasurer's job is primarily an ad-<lb/>
ministrative one. I did not appropriate<lb/>
the monies; the SGA legislature did. (It<lb/>
is interesting to note that Mr. Henderson<lb/>
belonged to the legislature for the past<lb/>
three years.) I merely accurately record-<lb/>
ed the appropriations following accep-<lb/>
table, ethical and sound accounting<lb/>
principles. During the whole funding<lb/>
process, the SGA legislature fully knew<lb/>
how much money was being ap-<lb/>
propriated and to which organizations it<lb/>
was being appropriated. So how was it<lb/>
my fault?<lb/>
As for Mr. Henderson's attempt to<lb/>
place the blame on me, I say nice try.<lb/>
But remember, people will still consider<lb/>
the source.<lb/>
Kirk Little<lb/>
SGA Treasurer, 1980-81-82<lb/>
Forum Use<lb/>
From The Editor:<lb/>
In the past. The East Carolinian's<lb/>
Campus Forum has been probably the<lb/>
most reliable vehicle for disseminating<lb/>
opinion at East Carolina. Where else can<lb/>
students voice their feelings on issues of<lb/>
concern with the promise of being<lb/>
heard? The Jact is, there really aren V<lb/>
any other viable methods on campus.<lb/>
Alt hough we may all be proud oj our<lb/>
school and what it means to us, it is im-<lb/>
possible for an institution the size of<lb/>
ours to be without problems.<lb/>
Sometimes, these problems are trivial<lb/>
(though frustrating). But there are other<lb/>
times when these difficulties just won 7<lb/>
go away.<lb/>
In this latter case, the Campus Forum<lb/>
is ideal. Not only can a letter to the<lb/>
editor voice your own opinion, but by<lb/>
writing, you can injluence the opinions<lb/>
of others. So, if you have some topic<lb/>
that interests you, offends you, enrages<lb/>
you, or just causes you to iunk, your<lb/>
tetters are not only welcome; they're<lb/>
highly encouraged.<lb/>
So, don't just sit back and watch<lb/>
things happen; make things happen.<lb/>
Remember, if no one knows (hat a pro-<lb/>
blem exists, nothing will ever gel done<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our ojfice in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted.<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JULY 7, 1982<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
 Grease' Gets<lb/>
Able Support;<lb/>
Uneven Solos<lb/>
Photo By SCOTT LARSON<lb/>
The cast of EClTs Summer Theatre Production of Crease takes a bow. James Dean, Elvis Presley and others look on.<lb/>
By KATHY WEYLER<lb/>
Matf W nlrr<lb/>
East Carolina's Summer Theatre<lb/>
opened Monday night to an almost-<lb/>
packed house at McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
with the ever-popular musical.<lb/>
Crease. This reviewer must confess<lb/>
the disappointment she felt upon<lb/>
learning that done-to-death Crease<lb/>
was to be the Summer Theatre's<lb/>
first production. Expecting a bor-<lb/>
ing, unoriginal presentation of this<lb/>
fifties tribute such as those 1 have<lb/>
seen in other community andor<lb/>
college theatres, 1 was pleasantly<lb/>
surprised by the all-around good<lb/>
show the ECU cast, directors and<lb/>
technicians assembled.<lb/>
Altogether, Crease is simply en-<lb/>
joyable with its foot-tapping,<lb/>
tinger-snapping fifties-style musical<lb/>
score and a host of rousing dance<lb/>
numbers choreographed bv Dale<lb/>
Muchmore, who also directed this<lb/>
production. Gregory Buch's set<lb/>
designs and Patrice Alexander's<lb/>
nostalgic costumes contribute a<lb/>
great deal to this production as well,<lb/>
conveying with a few symbols the<lb/>
mood and atmosphere ol the world<lb/>
as seen bv 1950s high schoolers<lb/>
Frame blow-ups of photographs<lb/>
depicting everyday kids and teen<lb/>
idols frame the set ? an unusual<lb/>
and effective touch reminding us of<lb/>
the real fifties. The set is also<lb/>
designed on two levels, allowing foi<lb/>
greater creativity in staging<lb/>
As a whole, the cast sings, dances<lb/>
and acts well. However, when solo<lb/>
performances are called tor, the<lb/>
musical element in this production<lb/>
frequentlv weakens. Neithei Sandv<lb/>
nor Dannv (the leads, played by Sal-<lb/>
ly Nell and Robert Bennett) haw<lb/>
particularly outstanding voices, al<lb/>
least not tor this tpc ot music. San-<lb/>
dy sounds a bit strained most of the<lb/>
time and Danny lacks consistency in<lb/>
tone and volume on several occa-<lb/>
See GREASE Pa?e 6<lb/>
Films Of All Time<lb/>
By ROGER EBER1<lb/>
 hit at" Sun-1 iiiu-n<lb/>
CHICAGO ? Once everv 10 years, the British film<lb/>
magazine Sigln and Sound conducts a poll of the<lb/>
world's film critics, who are asked to name their choices<lb/>
tor the 10 best films ol all time. The result is the longest-<lb/>
running parlor game in movie criticism.<lb/>
Hie critics (86 of them, the last time around in 1972)<lb/>
vend in their lists, the editors tabulate them, and the<lb/>
result is a "top 10" that stands for a decade as a<lb/>
barometer of current tastes in film criticism.<lb/>
The magazine's latest decade has just ended, and at<lb/>
this sear's Cannes film Festival, duing a dinner maik<lb/>
ing the 50th antmersarv ot Sight and Sound, editor<lb/>
Penelope Houston distributed letters uniting critics to<lb/>
ake iheii 1982 nominations.<lb/>
The deadline was June 30, the ground rules were<lb/>
wonderfully simple ("Ten titles only, please, in<lb/>
alphabetical order or order of preference, of films made<lb/>
anywhere, at any time"), and this autumn the new "top<lb/>
10" will be published.<lb/>
Such lists are necessarily unsatisfactory and unfair, of<lb/>
course; also fascinating.<lb/>
In 1972. the individual critics listed so many films that<lb/>
even the first-place winner,iiizen Kane, was voted for<lb/>
bv only 32 of them, or barelv more than a third; the two<lb/>
films that tied for 10th place. Mioguchi's geisu<lb/>
Monogatari and Bergman's Mild Strawberries, made<lb/>
the list with only nine votes apiece.<lb/>
Still, the international critics' poll does reveal trends<lb/>
in the movie opinion marketplace.<lb/>
The first time the poll was conducted, in 1952,iiizen<lb/>
Kane did not even make the list. Although it was releas-<lb/>
ed in 1942. it had such an erratic exhibition hist or) that<lb/>
manv criiKs simplv had not seen it.<lb/>
Bv 1962, it jumped to the top of the list, and by 1972,<lb/>
director, Orson Welles, received more votes (46) for<lb/>
his various films than anv other single director. Jean<lb/>
Renoir was next, with 41.<lb/>
Indeed.iiizen hane and Renoir's Rules of the Came<lb/>
were the onlv clear winners in the poll. They were voted<lb/>
tor bv 32 and 28 critics respectively, far out in front of<lb/>
the third-place Battleship PtHemkin, with 16.<lb/>
Other trends became clear after tne first three polls,<lb/>
covering 1952 to 1972. Among the great silent comedy<lb/>
directors, Charlie Chaplin's stock dropped sharplv (The<lb/>
Cold Rush and City I ights, both in the 1952 top 10,<lb/>
dropped out of the 1962 and 1972 lists entirely). Buster<lb/>
Keaton's reputation grew, and his The Ceneral placed<lb/>
eighth in 1972.<lb/>
Although the poll has an obvious built-in bias in<lb/>
favor of more recent films (critics can only vote for<lb/>
films they have seen), silent movies did better in 1972<lb/>
than in the previous three polls. Three silents made the<lb/>
top 10: Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin, Keaton's The<lb/>
Ceneral and Dreyer's The Passion of Joan of ire.<lb/>
Will Newcomers Oust Standards?<lb/>
Now the time has come to compile the 1982 "top 10"<lb/>
list. One of the heated topics of conversation at the<lb/>
Sight and Sound anniversary dinner involved which<lb/>
films from the 1972 list would drop out altogether this<lb/>
time, and which newer films might have a chance of<lb/>
replacing them.<lb/>
Here were the 1972 winners: Welles' Citizen Kane,<lb/>
Renoir's The Rules of the Came, Eisenstein's Battleship<lb/>
Potemkin, Fellini's 81 Antonioni's I 'Avventura,<lb/>
Bergman's Persona, Dreyer's The Passion of Joan of<lb/>
Arc, Keaton's The Ceneral, Welles' The Magnificent<lb/>
Amhersons, and a lOth-place tie between two Films<lb/>
about men searching for the meaning of life,<lb/>
Mioguchi'sgetsu Monogatari and Bergman's Mild<lb/>
Strawberries.<lb/>
My guess is that C iiizen Kane and Rules of the Came<lb/>
will finish first and second again, and that it's up for<lb/>
grabs from then on.<lb/>
Potemkin, a widely-acknowledged silent masterpiece<lb/>
will probably survive. H a film about filmmaking,<lb/>
may survive as an insiders' favorite. I doubt that Anto-<lb/>
nioni's I Avventura will place in the top 10; the film's<lb/>
cool arrogance reminds us of the sorts of "art films"<lb/>
that cause the eyes to glaze.<lb/>
The Magnificent Amhersons won't make it; Welles<lb/>
will get his first place with Kane but other directors will<lb/>
squeeze his second film off the list. And I gefsu, a lovely<lb/>
ehost siorv. and Mild Strawberries, a wonderful but<lb/>
creakily old-fashioned film, will be replaced by newer<lb/>
contenders.<lb/>
What films will move into the top 10? The leading<lb/>
contender is probablv Kubrick's influential 2001, releas-<lb/>
ed in 1968 and obviously an artistic and commercial<lb/>
watershed film that has defined how we see outer space<lb/>
and space travel. It was the fust of the new generation<lb/>
o "event films based on special effects, and it<lb/>
fathered the Siar liars phenomenon.<lb/>
Another contender is John lord's The Searchers,<lb/>
which has become fashionable as the definitive 1-ord<lb/>
film, edging out more traditional lord films like<lb/>
Stagecoach, The Grapes of 0 rath and My Darling<lb/>
C lementine.<lb/>
One movie hkelv 10 leap into the top 10 from out ot<lb/>
the past is Abel Gance's Xapoleon, the 1927 silent epic<lb/>
that existed in obscuritv, in several different incomplete<lb/>
versions, until film historian Kevin Brownlow<lb/>
plundered the world's film archives to produce a nearlv<lb/>
complete version.<lb/>
Amotiki films made since 1972. leading contenders for<lb/>
the top 10 probablv are Coppola's The Godfather, Bei<lb/>
tolucci's Last Tango in Paris or The onformist, and<lb/>
Bergman's Cries and H hispers.<lb/>
Runners-up mav include Altman's Xashville, I ellini'<lb/>
Amarcord, W erner Herog's Aguirre. the M rath of<lb/>
Cod, and one of Bunuel's later films, perhaps Discreet<lb/>
(harm of the Rourgeoise.<lb/>
Now. All o this speculation and handicapping has<lb/>
perhaps just been mv wav ot postponing the moment ol<lb/>
truth when 1 have to write down, in cold black and<lb/>
white, mv own list of the 10 greatest films.<lb/>
What follow are the names of 10 films thai crowded<lb/>
into the forefront of mv memory, admiration and affec-<lb/>
tion on this particular afternoon in June L982. 1 list<lb/>
them alphabetically, as Miss Houston said I could:<lb/>
Arlher Penn's Ronnie and Clyde, Michael Cum'<lb/>
Casablanca, Orson Welles' Citizen Kane. Federico<lb/>
Fellini's la Dolce I iiu, Werner Herog's Aguirre. the<lb/>
Wrath of God. Alfred Hitchcock's Sotorious, Ingmai<lb/>
Bergman's Persona, Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver.<lb/>
Carol Reed's The Third Man, and Stanlev Kubrick's<lb/>
2001. A Space Odyssey.<lb/>
Hinckley Liked It<lb/>
'Taxi Driver' Takes Aim Tonight<lb/>
BvIOHN WEYLER<lb/>
UM V nlrr<lb/>
Tonight at 8 p.m The Student Union Films Commit-<lb/>
tee will screen one of the most unforgettable motion pic-<lb/>
tures ever made: Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver. Next<lb/>
Monday's (July 12) film is Mel Brook's irreverent com-<lb/>
edy classic Blazing Saddles, to be shown at 9 p.m. Both<lb/>
films will be shown at Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
Hendri.x Theatre. Admission is free with ECU ID and<lb/>
Aciivitv Card or MSC Membership.<lb/>
Taxi Driver was considered controversial and shock-<lb/>
ing when it was released in 1976, but an event that oc-<lb/>
cured in 1981 gave the film a truly bizarre distinction:<lb/>
Taxi Driver is the only movie that is known to have in-<lb/>
spired an assassination attempt on a United States presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Robert DeNiro stars in an electrifying character study<lb/>
o the type of person who is driven to commit gruesome<lb/>
acts of violence. When the audience first sees DeNiro's<lb/>
Travis Bickle, he is merely a confused, lonely man sur-<lb/>
rounded by millions of the same. We watch in uneasy<lb/>
fascination as Travis wheels his cab through the sleaziest<lb/>
sections of New York City, and his alienation from and<lb/>
intense disgust with his environment slowly feed on his<lb/>
sanity.<lb/>
The only bright spots in his Travis's existence are two<lb/>
women: Betsy (Cybill Shepherd), a smooth political<lb/>
campaign worker, and Iris (Jodie Foster), a 12-year-old<lb/>
enslaved by prostitution. These women provide Travis<lb/>
with focal points for his frustration and anger. As if to<lb/>
somehow free them from their traps, he first tries to<lb/>
assassinate the presidential candidate Betsy works for,<lb/>
and later kills Iris's captors in one of the bloodiest<lb/>
scenes ever filmed.<lb/>
Last year another confused, "nowhere man" attemp-<lb/>
ted the murder of a political leader. John Hinckley's<lb/>
obsession with Jodie Foster is common knowledge. Hin-<lb/>
ckley has, from his initial outcrys and warnings up to<lb/>
the more recent past, made references to Scorsese's<lb/>
film.<lb/>
"Violence is Travis's only means of expressing<lb/>
himself wrote film critic Pauline Kael in The Sen-<lb/>
Yorker. "He has not been able to hurdle the barriers to<lb/>
being seen and felt. When he blasts through, it's his only<lb/>
way of telling the city that he's there. And, given his<lb/>
ascetic loneliness, it's the only real orgasm he can have.<lb/>
"The violence in this movie is so threatening precisely<lb/>
because it's cathartic for Travis. 1 imagine that some<lb/>
people who are angered by the film will say that it ad-<lb/>
vocates violence as a cure for frustration. But to<lb/>
acknowledge that when a psychopath's blood boils over<lb/>
so that he may cool down is not the same as justifying<lb/>
the eruption. This film doesn't operate on the level of<lb/>
moral judgement of what Travis does. Rather, by draw-<lb/>
ing us into his vortex it makes us understand the psychic<lb/>
discharge of the quiet boys who go berserk<lb/>
For those of you with weak stomachs, or to whom<lb/>
Taxi Driver simply doesn't appeal, there's still the ac-<lb/>
ceptable bad taste spawned by the genius of Mel<lb/>
Brooks. On Monday evening, his Blazing Saddles will,<lb/>
probably for the fiftieth time, provide us with the antics<lb/>
of The Waco Kid, Lilly Von Shtumpp and the rest of the<lb/>
Brooks gang.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057486_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 7. 1982<lb/>
<lb/>
r-<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
'Grease' Played<lb/>
To Near-Capacity<lb/>
Crowd Monday<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
sions. Their vocal problems were not helped by<lb/>
the technical difficulties experienced with the<lb/>
microphones during the second scene of the first<lb/>
act. Houeer, Ms. Nell and Mr. Bennett excel as<lb/>
character players and their dancing is also skill-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
As 1 have often noticed is the case with main<lb/>
musicals, some of the supporting roles tend to be<lb/>
quite memorable. ECU'S Crease boasts a fine<lb/>
supporting cast with some of its members giving<lb/>
particularly outstanding performances.<lb/>
Among the ladies, Shari Krikorian's dancing<lb/>
lalents are especially eye-catching in her role as<lb/>
Marty, the precociously mature-in-appearance<lb/>
Pink Lady. It must be noted that she is well-<lb/>
paired with Rodney Freeze (ECU theatre-goers<lb/>
will remember his show-stopping performance as<lb/>
Frank in last spring's Show Hoar) who, though<lb/>
cast in the unmemorable role of Sonny, still<lb/>
manages to bring graceful movements to his part.<lb/>
Babs Winn (Mrs. Rodnev Freeze) portrays the<lb/>
street-smart Rizzo with a great combination of<lb/>
wisecracks and sensuality. Her solo ("There Are<lb/>
 orse Things 1 Could Do") in Act 11 enables her<lb/>
to use her rich and powerful voice to its fullest,<lb/>
earning thundering applause and more than a<lb/>
few cheers from the audience.<lb/>
Among ihe gents a few voices stand out from<lb/>
the crowd. Michael W. Hill, as Doody, has<lb/>
managed to capture the vocal style of a fifties<lb/>
ballad crooner. Unfortunately only a couple of<lb/>
numbers allow the audience to really listen to his<lb/>
pleasing voice. And as Roger (or Rump). Con-<lb/>
stantine Peters treats us to his smooth, rich voice<lb/>
as well as a terrifically zany performance.<lb/>
Though this production of Grease is a good<lb/>
deal of fun, it's hard to believe there's anyone<lb/>
out there that isn't at least familiar with this pro-<lb/>
duction (especiallv after Hollywood cashed in<lb/>
with one of those big-budget treatments that<lb/>
deservedly get so much attention in this<lb/>
newspaper). Still, after overhearing a remarkable<lb/>
number of comments from shocked patrons, I<lb/>
feel I must issue a word of warning: Yes, there's<lb/>
quite of bit of bawdy dialogue in this show. I<lb/>
know it's hard to believe, but teen-agers in the<lb/>
fifties were just as interested in sex as contem-<lb/>
porary teens. If slang references to various parts<lb/>
ol the human anatomy, sexual functions and<lb/>
birth control brings a blush to your virtuous<lb/>
cheeks, vou'd better bring earplugs if you go to<lb/>
see an production of Hrease.<lb/>
The plav, the first o four this summer, rum<lb/>
through July 10. For ticket information concern-<lb/>
ing an; ot the Fast Carolina Summer Theatre<lb/>
productions, contact the Centra! Ticket Office at<lb/>
757-6611, extension 266<lb/>
 A c <lb/>
O c&amp; J? <lb/>
V C N v " .<lb/>
 s5 V .V ? c<lb/>
??&amp;?$<lb/>
:$?<lb/>
-O<lb/>
VO<lb/>
c6 <lb/>
v v-<lb/>
s" . <lb/>
<lb/>
S-P&amp;&amp;.JP<lb/>
jk?us 0-? y<lb/>
<lb/>
W<lb/>
of '<lb/>
I.nienainment<lb/>
line up<lb/>
for the week<lb/>
WED-THURS<lb/>
BRICE<lb/>
STREET<lb/>
FRI-SAT<lb/>
DRIVER<lb/>
(with SO Super Premium Beverage<lb/>
till 10:30 Sat night)<lb/>
SUN<lb/>
SIDEWINDER<lb/>
(with reduced admission for ECU students)<lb/>
TUES<lb/>
WVSP BLUES BENEFIT<lb/>
(with 3 bands for one price<lb/>
tSSEISHSfflPP<lb/>
FOOD TOWN<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Round Whole<lb/>
S<lb/>
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10-12 Lb.<lb/>
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USDA Choice 7-9 lb. Avg. - Sliced Free<lb/>
Whole Beef<lb/>
Tenderloin <lb/>
Holly Farms Grade A Mixed<lb/>
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Each<lb/>
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MMd fryer Parts<lb/>
USDA Choice Family Pack<lb/>
Cube Steak<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
288<lb/>
Parts<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Round<lb/>
Sirloin Tip Roast<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
S28<lb/>
Jumbo<lb/>
Cantaloupe<lb/>
:J<lb/>
Fteki?? of 6 12 0 Caat<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
BeerS<lb/>
3 Liter - RbiM. Ckablli, Ron B?r?u?dy<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
, California<lb/>
Cellars<lb/>
Package of 12 12 Or Cant<lb/>
Old<lb/>
Milwaukee<lb/>
SL<lb/>
?. i,<lb/>
ii<lb/>
49 Oanee<lb/>
7 25 Oi. Food Town<lb/>
Why Pay<lb/>
6.5 Oz. - Lt. Chunk In Oil<lb/>
??<lb/>
1<lb/>
Star<lb/>
Kist<lb/>
Tuna ?? ?<lb/>
71 Sheet - Lar?e Roll - Anorted<lb/>
m<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
W1lffef79<lb/>
l15<lb/>
Tpr<lb/>
Why Pay 261'<lb/>
Why Pay 99'<lb/>
TUNA<lb/>
12 Oz. - Lar?e<lb/>
tonmoMB<lb/>
Jeno's Pizza<lb/>
<lb/>
it Ounce<lb/>
<lb/>
C3<lb/>
<lb/>
O'<lb/>
MOW<lb/>
22 Oz. - 20 Off<lb/>
Del Monte Catsup g Dove Liquid<lb/>
(oronei<lb/>
Prints<lb/>
400 Sheets ? 4 Roll Pk. ? Coronet<lb/>
Toilet Tissue<lb/>
Quart<lb/>
JFO Mayonnaise<lb/>
JFG<lb/>
24 fit. - Family Sin<lb/>
Upton Tea Bags<lb/>
(ny;<lb/>
96 Oz. - 40 Off - Dony<lb/>
Fabric Softener<lb/>
4100<lb/>
IS Oz. Can - Do? Food<lb/>
Ken-L Ration Stew<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
j<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
M.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
A<lb/>
?<lb/>
?tc'<lb/>
Half Gallon - Soalteit<lb/>
bmi?<lb/>
Z<lb/>
?g?<lb/>
rive<lb/>
I<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
Why Pay M 19<lb/>
1 lb. Food Team<lb/>
Margarine<lb/>
Quarters<lb/>
Why Pay 47? Each ,<lb/>
fec0.<lb/>
48 Oz. IS Off<lb/>
Crisco<lb/>
Why Pay 2 59<lb/>
lBBBFl A JaW Yl 1 "Hiivn a imw y <lb/>
Prices food at Greenville Food Town Store only thru Sat July 10, 1982<lb/>
i<lb/>
mmmmmmmm<lb/>
<lb/>
ii?n mnmi.mn -fsmt m<lb/>
mm mwmmmn<lb/>
<pb facs="00057486_0007"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Stamina<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Trio Berths To Festival<lb/>
By C1ND PI EASANIS<lb/>
SporK I- dihtr<lb/>
On July 13, three ECU students<lb/>
m ill join 3,400 athletes to compete in<lb/>
the National Spoils Festival, the<lb/>
largest amateui sports program in<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
c.ail O'Brien, lud Ausherman<lb/>
and Sam Jones were selected to play<lb/>
on the South's team handball<lb/>
squad. O'Brien will be competing in<lb/>
the festival for the second time.<lb/>
Main people don't know exactly<lb/>
whai team handball is. It's an ex-<lb/>
citing, physical and high scoring<lb/>
sport. In Europe, il is second only to<lb/>
soccei<lb/>
-nd no, it's not throwing a small<lb/>
, k ball against four walls with<lb/>
voui hand.<lb/>
Handball is a team sport, con-<lb/>
isting ot 12 players; seven of which<lb/>
lay .il one time.<lb/>
The concept of the game is sim-<lb/>
ple. The players of each team try to<lb/>
throw the ball into the goal of the<lb/>
opposing team and defend iheir own<lb/>
goal. The ball is played with the<lb/>
hand but other parts of the body can<lb/>
be used, except for the lower leg and<lb/>
NATIONAL<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
FESTIVAL<lb/>
KMANAPOUS<lb/>
JUY 23-311962<lb/>
, ?. ? ?  . lympci lommtee<lb/>
the feet. The player can move three<lb/>
steps and may dribble.<lb/>
Each game has two 30-minute<lb/>
halts with a 15-minute halftime and<lb/>
there are no time-outs.<lb/>
Team handball is only one of 33<lb/>
sports to be held in this year's<lb/>
fourth annual festival in In-<lb/>
dianapolis, Indiana. The United<lb/>
States Olympic Committee sponsors<lb/>
the program in hopes of preparing<lb/>
future olympians. All games in the<lb/>
summer Olympics and three of the<lb/>
winter Olympic games (figure<lb/>
skating, speed skating and ice<lb/>
hockey) are included in the festival.<lb/>
Wayne Edwards, ECU's in-<lb/>
tramural director and the coor-<lb/>
dinator for the festival's handball<lb/>
teams, said transportation, housing,<lb/>
food and competitive clothes are<lb/>
provided for, costing the committee<lb/>
about four million dollars.<lb/>
Edwards served as coordinator in<lb/>
last year's games and was accom-<lb/>
panied by several ECU students.<lb/>
"There were six women and one<lb/>
man on the South's team last year<lb/>
he said. "ECU had more students<lb/>
than anyone in the United States in<lb/>
the sports festival<lb/>
Photo By JAN KCFPLC<lb/>
.S stinger, a member of the East team handball squad, attempts to make a goal against the South team dur-<lb/>
ing last year's National Sports Festival in Syracuse. Stinger is being guarded by ECU s Maureen Buck.<lb/>
The weeks in Indianapolis will be<lb/>
exciting for the athletes. Edwards<lb/>
said the festival's environment is<lb/>
like that of the Olympic games and<lb/>
the accomodation would compare<lb/>
to an Olympic village. "The athletes<lb/>
gain the experience of playing in an<lb/>
Olympic atmosphere he said,<lb/>
"which most people never get to ex-<lb/>
perience<lb/>
The competition will take place at<lb/>
nineteen different sites. The hand-<lb/>
ball teams, along with the swimming<lb/>
and diving teams will compete in the<lb/>
new 4,700-seat natatorium.<lb/>
During the 14-day event, the<lb/>
athletes are housed at seven loca-<lb/>
tions across the city. The handball<lb/>
team will be staying with the soccer,<lb/>
volleyball and rowing teams.<lb/>
After the sports festival has<lb/>
finished, the U. S. Olympic commit-<lb/>
tee will will select members for the<lb/>
1984 Olympic teams.<lb/>
Edwards stated in an earlier inter-<lb/>
view that he believes Jones definite-<lb/>
ly has a shot at the Olympic team,<lb/>
escpecially since she has gained<lb/>
more experience during her Euro-<lb/>
pean tour with the U. S. National<lb/>
team. Jones returned on July 4<lb/>
after playing in West Germany and<lb/>
Paris. "The Olympic team is called<lb/>
the U. S. National team until<lb/>
1984-the Olympic year he said.<lb/>
Edwards said Jones has a tremen-<lb/>
dous chance to make the Olympics<lb/>
but she must be willing to make the<lb/>
personal sacrifices.<lb/>
If Jones is selected by the Olympic<lb/>
committee, she will immediately<lb/>
move to New Jersey to train until<lb/>
the Olympics are held in Los<lb/>
Angeles, California.<lb/>
Edwards heard about Jones's<lb/>
ability as a basketball player and<lb/>
decided to attend a game. That's<lb/>
when Edwards spotted her poten-<lb/>
tial.<lb/>
"Sometimes 1 don't always make<lb/>
the right choices he said, "but this<lb/>
time I was right<lb/>
Jones had the four essentials<lb/>
needed to play team handball:<lb/>
JULY 7, 1982<lb/>
Pa?c7<lb/>
 By JAM KCPFIC<lb/>
Rita Clanton, a graduate of Auburn University, demonstrates the handball<lb/>
player's ability to jump and throw passes simultaneously. Clanton is a<lb/>
member of this year's national team.<lb/>
dedication, intensity, a good<lb/>
disposition and strength. Edwards<lb/>
described Jones as a person who<lb/>
always gives 100 percent and wasn't<lb/>
the type of player to fly off the han-<lb/>
dle. Because off the stiff time<lb/>
penalties, handball players must be<lb/>
able to control themselves.<lb/>
"You get hit a great deal in hand-<lb/>
ball he said, "And if you're a<lb/>
hothead, you won't last long<lb/>
A handball player must also be<lb/>
able to jump above the defense and<lb/>
be strong enough to throw long<lb/>
passes-skills Jones developed as a<lb/>
basketball player. In fact, the ma-<lb/>
jority oi handball players are ex-<lb/>
basketball players, Edwards said.<lb/>
The athletes will leave on July 13<lb/>
for their training camps. The<lb/>
players will have ten days of practice<lb/>
sessions with two-hour workouts<lb/>
twice a day.<lb/>
The Opening ceremonies will<lb/>
begin on the evening of July 23.<lb/>
Entertainer Bob Hope will be per-<lb/>
forming for the athletes and the<lb/>
coaching staff.<lb/>
The round-robin competition<lb/>
starts July 24 and will end with<lb/>
teams competing for gold and<lb/>
bronze medals. The top two teams<lb/>
will play for the gold while the re-<lb/>
maining teams will battle for the<lb/>
bronze.<lb/>
World<lb/>
I v<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
By Neil Admur<lb/>
V limrs e?? srniir<lb/>
WIMBELDON, England ? The<lb/>
first time Jimmy Connors won at<lb/>
' imbeldon, it seemed like a fairy<lb/>
tale. He and Chris Evert were the<lb/>
tournament's "love double" in<lb/>
1974, went to the victory ball as an<lb/>
engaged couple and danced to the<lb/>
musical strains of "The Girl That I<lb/>
Marry ?<lb/>
There was no dancing at Sunday<lb/>
night's champions dinner. Martina<lb/>
Navratilova, a three-set winner over<lb/>
Mrs. I loyd in the women's final,<lb/>
teasingly popped open an umbrella<lb/>
before her victory speech and told<lb/>
the gathering, "The weatherman<lb/>
said il as going to clear today, but<lb/>
I didn't trust him<lb/>
Eighl years after he won his first<lb/>
 imbeldon title. Connors, now 29,<lb/>
thanked the management committee<lb/>
for its more helpful attitude toward<lb/>
the players, thanked his wife Patti,<lb/>
and then paid tribute to John<lb/>
McEnroe, whom he had beaten<lb/>
earlier in the day in five long sets.<lb/>
"The final we had today was the<lb/>
. a it should be Connors said of<lb/>
his 3-6, 6-3, 6-7, 7-6, 6-4 victory.<lb/>
British sports fans agreed, toasting<lb/>
 onnors Monday as a popular<lb/>
.hampion. In 1974, Ken Rosewall, a<lb/>
sentimental runnerup at 39, was the<lb/>
peoples' choice.<lb/>
"I was out in the street this morn-<lb/>
ing Connors said, packing at his<lb/>
hotel, for a return to the United<lb/>
States today, "and I think<lb/>
everybody in London watched the<lb/>
match<lb/>
Connors wanted to win this year<lb/>
more than he had been willing to ad-<lb/>
mit during the fortnight.<lb/>
"Awfully bad said Patti<lb/>
McGuire Connors, whom Connors<lb/>
sought out for a kiss in a corner of<lb/>
the center court seconds after he<lb/>
won Wimbeldon's longest final in<lb/>
history. "I think he wanted to win<lb/>
this one real bad<lb/>
"When you win your first one<lb/>
Connors said, "you never expect to<lb/>
do it. Then after you win it, you<lb/>
think you'll never win it again. 1 had<lb/>
a couple of chances slip by. It got to<lb/>
the point where I hadn't won a<lb/>
Grand Slam event in four years. 1<lb/>
hadn't really thought about that un-<lb/>
til after the match. I wonder if 1 had<lb/>
thought about it before whether it<lb/>
would have affected my play<lb/>
At a time when some rivals<lb/>
thought he might be losing some of<lb/>
his zest for the game, Connors is en-<lb/>
joying one of his finest years. He<lb/>
has won five of 11 Granp Prix tour-<lb/>
naments, was the runnerup in three<lb/>
others and leads the Volvo Grand<lb/>
Prix point standings, which carries a<lb/>
$600,000 season-ending first prize.<lb/>
Asked after the McEnroe match if<lb/>
he had a chance to win the year's<lb/>
No. 1 spot, Connors said. I'm play-<lb/>
ing like it. That has been my line all<lb/>
along<lb/>
Patti Connors has seen positive<lb/>
changes in her husband. "Having<lb/>
Brett has matured him she said,<lb/>
referring to their child. "And he's<lb/>
opened his mind a little more. He<lb/>
used to be narrow-minded about<lb/>
some things<lb/>
One quality about Connors that<lb/>
has not changed is his emotional<lb/>
level on the court.<lb/>
"1 don't think it's possible for<lb/>
John and me to play all five sets at<lb/>
one level because of what we're both<lb/>
trying to do Connors said. "We<lb/>
have a rivalry that's great because of<lb/>
the way we play each other. He's go-<lb/>
ing to play his serve-and-volley, and<lb/>
I'm going to be out there hitting and<lb/>
attacking.<lb/>
"But the most important part is<lb/>
our attitude ? the way we play ?<lb/>
my respect for him and his respect<lb/>
for me. There's a lot more that<lb/>
enters into it besides our tennis.<lb/>
That's what was on my mind in the<lb/>
beginning of the match. Should I go<lb/>
for the first-round knockout? What<lb/>
happens if 1 don't get it, and the<lb/>
match goes five sets? I broke him in<lb/>
the first game, but then I started<lb/>
thinking. That's when we had the<lb/>
lull. 1 said if he goes five sets, I can't<lb/>
play 110 percent. 1 have to drop to<lb/>
92 percent or maybe 90 percent.<lb/>
"I think that's why things were so<lb/>
uneven out there. There were even<lb/>
times for me when the match was<lb/>
boring. But from 3-5 in the third,<lb/>
that was high-powered tennis all the<lb/>
way. There was some unbelievable<lb/>
tennis out there<lb/>
Connors said he often is unaware<lb/>
of how he revs up on the court.<lb/>
"You play, and everything that<lb/>
goes into your thoughts, everything<lb/>
See BRATS, page 8<lb/>
Pirate Offense Worries Coaches<lb/>
Imvroved Bua<lb/>
Seek Revenge<lb/>
East Tennessee State head foot-<lb/>
ball coach Jack Carlisle can only be<lb/>
optimistic about the upcoming game<lb/>
with the Pirates on Sept. 18.<lb/>
After being defeated 66-23 in last<lb/>
year's homecoming game, Carlisle is<lb/>
determined not to let that happen<lb/>
again if there's any way possible.<lb/>
"One thing's for sure he said.<lb/>
"We'll try not to get beaten as badly<lb/>
?<lb/>
Cindy<lb/>
Pleasant s<lb/>
A Look Inside<lb/>
38 points in the First half of the<lb/>
game. Nine ECU players scored in<lb/>
the game, and senior placekicker<lb/>
Chuck Bushbeck set a school record<lb/>
with nine of nine extra points. The<lb/>
high score marked ECU's highest<lb/>
point total in 22 years.<lb/>
The Bucs did have an exceptional<lb/>
some blue chip prospects. Carlisle's<lb/>
staff recruited all over the United<lb/>
States, signing players from Ten-<lb/>
nessee, Virginia, Pennsylvania,<lb/>
Georgia, Florida, Ohio and<lb/>
Mississippi. 23 men will be joining<lb/>
the Buccaneers in the fall.<lb/>
"1 know that this group of men<lb/>
this year<lb/>
The Pirates were fired up, scoring<lb/>
game, but there were only problems who signed with us are the most<lb/>
o" '  i -i. i:u. ?raA i-ilav?r? in i.hirh<lb/>
for East Tennessee. And their kick-<lb/>
ing game was at the head of the list.<lb/>
For example, after receiving the<lb/>
opening kickoff and driving to the<lb/>
42-yard line, punter Phil Wilso<lb/>
fumbled a snap from center and<lb/>
dropped 13 yards-setting up ECU<lb/>
for perfect field position.<lb/>
"Our kicking game killed us<lb/>
heavily recruited players in which<lb/>
we have been interested he said.<lb/>
"Our assistant coaches did an<lb/>
outstanding job in signing the young<lb/>
men<lb/>
The East Tennessee Buccaneers<lb/>
will have 31 lettermen and 14<lb/>
starters returning. Carlisle said he<lb/>
lost 13 lettermen and his starting<lb/>
Carlisle s d "We were banged up quarterback from last season. We<lb/>
when we came into the game and we will only have five seniors on the<lb/>
gotmoreTanged up L the game team he said, "so we're going to<lb/>
went on nave a young team<lb/>
The Pirates got 421 total yards in <lb/>
offense compared to East Tennessee Carlisle said his.team will lack ex-<lb/>
State's 211 perience against a high grade of<lb/>
Carlisle had nothing but the ut- competition ? something ECU has<lb/>
most praise for the Pirates. "East established. Tougher schedules, I<lb/>
Almost Anything Goes<lb/>
n ECU summer league baseball player tags an N.C. State opponent during run homer. The Pirates fell to Campbell University Friday ?<lb/>
Wednesday" doubTeheader. The Pirates lost in the opening game, M, but and 4-2. ECU's Todd Evans hit one-run homers in both games. (Photo by<lb/>
came buck to win the second contest, 11-10, after David Wells hit a three- Scott Larson)<lb/>
Carolina is completely out of out<lb/>
class he said. "Heck, most of our<lb/>
players have never been to Green-<lb/>
ville but they know what kind of<lb/>
team ECU has got<lb/>
As for this year, Carlisle does not<lb/>
believe their kicking game will be a<lb/>
downfall. "Our kicking game will<lb/>
be okay he said. "It's in good<lb/>
shape<lb/>
But the head coach is not quite as<lb/>
confident when it comes to punting.<lb/>
"Our punting game is unknown<lb/>
right now he said, "but we did<lb/>
sign a couple of punters<lb/>
East Tennessee has signed quite a<lb/>
few players this year, including<lb/>
different division and scholarships<lb/>
are three areas Carlisle cited for the<lb/>
contrast in ECU and ETSU. "Some<lb/>
15 years ago we were about the<lb/>
same he said, "but things have<lb/>
changed. A school like ours may<lb/>
come along and beat ECU once<lb/>
every couple of years, but that's<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
What is Carlisle's strategy for<lb/>
Sept. 18? "We really won't know<lb/>
what our strategy is until we see the<lb/>
tapes of East Carolina's earlier<lb/>
games this fall he said. "We do<lb/>
know ECU is going to have a new<lb/>
offensive formation so we'll just<lb/>
have to wait and see<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057486_0008"/><lb/>
?2??THE EAST C AROl INIAN JULY 7. W82<lb/>
First Session<lb/>
IM Results<lb/>
By NANCY MIZE<lb/>
Inlramurth l?ir<lb/>
The numbers are less<lb/>
and the atmosphere is<lb/>
more relaxed, but the<lb/>
fun and enjoyment of<lb/>
participation in in-<lb/>
tramural activities dur-<lb/>
ing the summer is as<lb/>
great as ever!<lb/>
In first session finals,<lb/>
the Sharks infested the<lb/>
co-rec softball program<lb/>
by defeating the All-<lb/>
Stars and Moody Blues<lb/>
to gain the title.<lb/>
In co-rec volleyball<lb/>
action, the Polish Na-<lb/>
tional Squad went into<lb/>
the play-offs<lb/>
undefeated. However,<lb/>
after defeating the<lb/>
Night Spikers, they<lb/>
found the Jammers to<lb/>
be stiff competition. In<lb/>
the final match, Tom<lb/>
Curry and Co. jumped<lb/>
out to a one game lead<lb/>
before losing the next<lb/>
two games to give the<lb/>
Jammers the title.<lb/>
The Great Canoe<lb/>
race was won b y<lb/>
Maureen and Robert<lb/>
Fox, in what they con-<lb/>
sidered to be an un-<lb/>
contented race. They<lb/>
have extended a<lb/>
challenge to all would-<lb/>
be canoeists to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the next race<lb/>
on Thursday. July 15!<lb/>
Tony Saleeby and John<lb/>
Winston came in se-<lb/>
cond after the favored<lb/>
team o' Billy Dixon<lb/>
and Keith G o I d c n<lb/>
found the Tar River to<lb/>
be a rather wet<lb/>
challenge.<lb/>
In the Men's Singles<lb/>
Tennis tournament, it<lb/>
was a battle between<lb/>
Billy Dixon and Cliff<lb/>
Moore. After losing in<lb/>
the second round of<lb/>
competition to Moore,<lb/>
Dixon fought his way<lb/>
through the losers<lb/>
bracket to re-challenge<lb/>
Moore in the finals of<lb/>
the double elimination<lb/>
tournament. However,<lb/>
Cliff was too strong<lb/>
and defeated Billy,<lb/>
10-3, in the regulation<lb/>
pro set.<lb/>
Anthony Martin and<lb/>
Co. and The Enforcers<lb/>
easily gained the title in<lb/>
three-on-three basket-<lb/>
ball. The Runaways<lb/>
gave them a run for<lb/>
their money but were<lb/>
unable to defeat the<lb/>
strong threesome.<lb/>
On the racquetball<lb/>
courts, a lot of action<lb/>
occurred for both men<lb/>
and women. Nancy<lb/>
McCloskey, playing in<lb/>
her first tournament,<lb/>
was victorious over<lb/>
Cheryl Meletis to gain<lb/>
the women's title. In<lb/>
men's competition,<lb/>
Frank Schaede escaped<lb/>
with a victory over Jack<lb/>
Crouch to come from<lb/>
the loser's bracket and<lb/>
win the championship.<lb/>
The Tri-Humps con-<lb/>
tinued their winning<lb/>
form in the men's soft<lb/>
ball tournament by<lb/>
defeating I umber<lb/>
Company and The<lb/>
VValtons to emerge as<lb/>
champions of the dou-<lb/>
ble elimination<lb/>
tourney.<lb/>
Three Track Stars Sign<lb/>
Letters of Intent With ECU<lb/>
Ml SPORIMMOKMAIIUN<lb/>
Three more<lb/>
women's track stars<lb/>
have signed letters of<lb/>
intent to attend ECU<lb/>
on track grants-in-<lb/>
aid under first-year<lb/>
head coach Pat<lb/>
McGuigan. The trio<lb/>
? Jamie Cathcart of<lb/>
East Forsyth High<lb/>
School, Kathy<lb/>
Leeper of High<lb/>
Point Andrews High<lb/>
and Teresa Hudson<lb/>
of Salisbury High ?<lb/>
join previously-<lb/>
signed Delphine<lb/>
Mabrey of<lb/>
Southwest<lb/>
Edgecombe High<lb/>
School and Regina<lb/>
Kent from New<lb/>
York City.<lb/>
Cathcart, also a<lb/>
member of the<lb/>
Greensboro Paceset-<lb/>
ters, was a member<lb/>
of the 1982 N.C.<lb/>
State champion<lb/>
440-meter relay team<lb/>
at East Forsythe<lb/>
High. Cathcart plac-<lb/>
ed second at the 1981<lb/>
AAU Junior Olym-<lb/>
pic in Lincoln, Neb<lb/>
in the mile relay and<lb/>
third and fourth in<lb/>
the 440 relay and 800<lb/>
meter run respective-<lb/>
ly in the 1981 N.C.<lb/>
State meet.<lb/>
Leeper ran the an-<lb/>
chor leg in the 880<lb/>
and mile relays for<lb/>
Andrews High in<lb/>
High Point the last<lb/>
three seasons. Her<lb/>
squad finished first<lb/>
in the mile and se-<lb/>
cond in the 880 at<lb/>
the 1982 State meet.<lb/>
Her 880 foursome<lb/>
also copped State<lb/>
championships in<lb/>
1980 and 1981, while<lb/>
her mile relay squad<lb/>
placed second both<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Hudson, a<lb/>
sprinter from<lb/>
Salisbury, N.C, was<lb/>
conference cham-<lb/>
pion in the 100- and<lb/>
200-meter races<lb/>
Two Generations Of 'Brats9<lb/>
Struggle In Wimbledon Finale<lb/>
Continued from page 7<lb/>
that comes into play is an emotional<lb/>
buildup. For me, to let it out is im-<lb/>
portant. It's actually going crazy;<lb/>
that's what it is. Maybe that's what<lb/>
it takes for me to win a match ? go<lb/>
crazy<lb/>
Connors said he heard McEnroe<lb/>
"doing the same thing" during the<lb/>
crucial fourth-set tiebreaker, which<lb/>
Connors won 7-5.<lb/>
"He was yelling 'C'mon to<lb/>
himself and trying just as much as 1<lb/>
was. That's what made it great<lb/>
By the time he went to serve for<lb/>
the match at 5-4 in the final set.<lb/>
Connors was talking to himself and<lb/>
gesturing after each point.<lb/>
"That might be bad he said.<lb/>
"Instead of concentrating on how<lb/>
to play the point, I was saying 'three<lb/>
more, three more Then after I hit<lb/>
that backhand volley, I said 'two<lb/>
more, two more 1 was at such a<lb/>
position as far as my attitude and<lb/>
adrenaline that 1 was joing berserk;<lb/>
I was flying. 1 couldn't get any<lb/>
higher<lb/>
The match lasted four hours, 14<lb/>
minutes. "I'm a little beat Con<lb/>
nors said. "I'm glad 1 don't have to<lb/>
play today. I don't think the whole<lb/>
thing will take effect until I get<lb/>
home<lb/>
Connors said he declined an in-<lb/>
vitation to play for the United States<lb/>
against Sweden in the Davis Cup<lb/>
quarterfinals this week in St. Loius<lb/>
because of his schedule.<lb/>
"I feel for McEnroe he said.<lb/>
"To go into play this eek, it's going<lb/>
to be rough on him. Last year, he<lb/>
was like a basket case against<lb/>
Czechoslovakia after he won<lb/>
Wimbeldon. It's difficult to go and<lb/>
play after a match like we had.<lb/>
Don't forget, he rides prettv high,<lb/>
too<lb/>
For A Sporting Good Time<lb/>
Call Dwart Fourquarts<lb/>
Or Terez Balzov<lb/>
At 555-121<lb/>
M<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised Items is re-<lb/>
quired to be readily available for<lb/>
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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/>
Copyright 1982<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Rescved<lb/>
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OFFERING THE BES TI<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057486_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>