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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057487_0001"/>
?he ISaBt (Earnlinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No.69<lb/>
Wednesday, July 14,1982<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
SGA Executive Council Still<lb/>
Undecided On 82-83 Budget<lb/>
By ERNEST CONNER<lb/>
In the financial crisis which con-<lb/>
fronts the executive council of East<lb/>
Carolina's Student Government<lb/>
Association, the council still has not<lb/>
made a final decision,according to<lb/>
Eric Henderson, SGA president.<lb/>
The executive council was caught<lb/>
in this financial crisis when SGA<lb/>
Treasurer Becky Talley discovered<lb/>
that the SGA legislature had ap-<lb/>
propriated up to $29,000 over the<lb/>
expected revenue for the upcoming<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
Incoming revenue from which the<lb/>
SGA appropriates money is<lb/>
estimated to be around $90,000 to<lb/>
96,000. However, during last<lb/>
semester the SGA legislature ap-<lb/>
propriated $119,000 for various<lb/>
organizations, putting the budget<lb/>
$23,000 to $29,000 in the red.<lb/>
This financial problem was made<lb/>
public two weeks ago. Henderson<lb/>
then said that the council would<lb/>
make a decision by last Tuesday on<lb/>
w hat action to take as a result of the<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Henderson now explains that<lb/>
there is no reason for the executive<lb/>
counsel to rush into a decision,<lb/>
since one is not needed until the end<lb/>
of August.<lb/>
The SGA president said that the<lb/>
council is currently researching the<lb/>
problem so that a decision could be<lb/>
made, but he would not give a date<lb/>
for proposing action, saying only<lb/>
that a decision would be made<lb/>
before the end of August.<lb/>
Henderson did say that whatever<lb/>
action the council took would in-<lb/>
volve having the affected groups<lb/>
return to the fall SGA legislature to<lb/>
reapply for more money if needed.<lb/>
For example, Henderson explain-<lb/>
ed that one option the council could<lb/>
take would be to cut every group by<lb/>
50 percent. If this choice is taken,<lb/>
then any group needing more money<lb/>
would have to go before the SGA<lb/>
legislature in the fall and reapply for<lb/>
the additional funding.<lb/>
This, however, is only one of the<lb/>
options available to the council and<lb/>
is not necessarily the one that will be<lb/>
taken.<lb/>
No one is exactly sure how the<lb/>
financial crises came about.<lb/>
Henderson, in an interview con-<lb/>
ducted two weeks ago tated that<lb/>
last year's SGA treasurer. Kirk Lit-<lb/>
tle, failed to kep the SGA informed<lb/>
of how much money was available<lb/>
for appropriation.<lb/>
Little, who was not available for<lb/>
comment before the story appeared<lb/>
in the June 30 issue of The East<lb/>
Carolinian, claimed that it wasn't<lb/>
his fault that too much money was<lb/>
appropriated.<lb/>
In a letter to the editor, Little<lb/>
stated that the "SGA treasurer's job<lb/>
is primarily an administrative one<lb/>
The treasurer, according to Little,<lb/>
merely accurately records the ap-<lb/>
propriations made by the SGA<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
This view reflects Talley's belief<lb/>
that no one person was at fault in<lb/>
the over-appropriations. According<lb/>
to her all the students were in a<lb/>
hurry toward the end of semester,<lb/>
and nobody noticed how much<lb/>
money was left to appropriate.<lb/>
In other action, the executive<lb/>
council approved a resolution call-<lb/>
ing for the SGA to fund groups bas-<lb/>
ed on a zero based budget. This<lb/>
would mean that a group's funding<lb/>
for the current year would not be<lb/>
based on their previous year's<lb/>
budget. They would have to justify<lb/>
everything starting from scratch<lb/>
each year.<lb/>
One Yard<lb/>
W?oto By OAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
These three feet embark on a search for their missing companion. They are confident the private podiatrist<lb/>
they hired will find their friend and bring her safely back to her shoe.<lb/>
Basketball Camper Assaulted<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOLT<lb/>
frwillill Nf Vditor<lb/>
A Greenville girl attending<lb/>
basketball camp at East Carolina<lb/>
University last Wednesday was the<lb/>
victim of an assault and attempted<lb/>
rape.<lb/>
The 12 year-old girl, was outside<lb/>
Minges Coliseum directly across<lb/>
from Ficklen Stadium when, accor-<lb/>
ding to police records, two black<lb/>
male juvenilles approached her.<lb/>
Then, according to the girl's<lb/>
statements, the older male grabbed<lb/>
her arm and pulled out a knife. He<lb/>
then told the girl he intended to have<lb/>
sex with her.<lb/>
According to Detective Lt. Gene<lb/>
McAbee of the university police, the<lb/>
incident was observed by an uniden-<lb/>
tified adult female. The witness ran<lb/>
towards the girl scaring the<lb/>
assailants away.<lb/>
The unidentified woman then<lb/>
took the girl to ECU basketball staff<lb/>
member Beth Burns' office. She was<lb/>
calmed down and her parents were<lb/>
notified.<lb/>
McAbee said that the girl and the<lb/>
witness left before the police arriv-<lb/>
ed. He added that the girl was subse-<lb/>
quently reached, but the observer<lb/>
was never identified.<lb/>
McAbee said that there are no<lb/>
suspects in the case, but urges<lb/>
anyone with knowledge of the situa-<lb/>
tion to contact the university police.<lb/>
"For the remainder of basketball<lb/>
camp the reserve officers are work-<lb/>
ing in plain clothes over at Minges<lb/>
McAbee stated.<lb/>
Photo By SCOTT LARSON<lb/>
Photo<lb/>
Think We Can Make It Back To Campus:<lb/>
These students enjoy a bud and wagon ride at Moser's Farm. They undoubtedly wish the going wasn't as<lb/>
rough, but a cold beer makes it much smoother.<lb/>
University Earns Respect<lb/>
Degrees Now Competitive In Market<lb/>
By CHARLES ROADMAN<lb/>
M?ff Wnlrr<lb/>
East Carolina University, once<lb/>
dubbed through out the state as<lb/>
EZU, has grown into a university<lb/>
that is respected.<lb/>
No longer is E.C.U. considered<lb/>
an alternate or second choice to<lb/>
North Carolina State University or<lb/>
the Univeristy of North Carolina,<lb/>
for according to Howes Com-<lb/>
prehensive Guide to Coleges,<lb/>
degrees from ECU in art, business,<lb/>
medical records, medical technology<lb/>
and nursing can compete with<lb/>
similar programs in any other<lb/>
university in the state. And ECU'S<lb/>
occupational therapy program is<lb/>
considered the best in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
ECU's reputation has caught the<lb/>
eye of prospective freshmen not on-<lb/>
ly from North Carolina but also<lb/>
from as far away as Illinois. Con-<lb/>
necticut and Brazil.<lb/>
Freshman applications are up b)<lb/>
18 percent over last year, while<lb/>
freshman enrollment is predicted to<lb/>
increase by approximately three per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
Dr. Susan McDaniel, acting direc-<lb/>
tor of admissions, feels that the ma-<lb/>
jor factoi influencing the increasing<lb/>
enrollment is the enthusiastic<lb/>
reports that current students carry<lb/>
with them to all parts of the state.<lb/>
According to Chancellor John M.<lb/>
Howell, barring an economical<lb/>
disaster, enrollment at E.C.U. will<lb/>
continue to increase at approximate-<lb/>
ly 1 percent for the next ten years<lb/>
Howell credits the increasing enroll-<lb/>
ment to the advantagous location of<lb/>
the university and the continual ef-<lb/>
fort oi the university to maintain a<lb/>
working relationship with the sur-<lb/>
rounding community.<lb/>
?Mont' with an increasing student<lb/>
body arc plans for physical growth<lb/>
ot the university. Plans have been<lb/>
drawn up for a new 13 million dollar<lb/>
classroom building which would<lb/>
become the largest building on cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Appropriations tor the building<lb/>
are expected in the 1982-83 budget,<lb/>
and work on the building could<lb/>
begin as early as the summer of<lb/>
1983.<lb/>
Two locations are currently being<lb/>
considered for the building. The<lb/>
first and least desirable is behind the<lb/>
library which presently is the second<lb/>
largest parking area on campus. The<lb/>
second place under consideration is<lb/>
the area between the steam plant<lb/>
and science complex.<lb/>
ECU Student Fasts<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Sliff Wrilrr<lb/>
The bright blue tent on the mall<lb/>
across from Flanagan building is<lb/>
not there because a squatter is tak-<lb/>
ing over the East Carolina campus.<lb/>
It is there because student Glenn<lb/>
Maughan is publicly fasting all this<lb/>
week and, along with other<lb/>
members of the ECU peace commit-<lb/>
tee, using the area to voice his view-<lb/>
points.<lb/>
"Are you interested in helping<lb/>
prevent world hunger, racism, pre-<lb/>
judice, sexism, the arms race?" are<lb/>
the questions being asked by the<lb/>
peace committee.<lb/>
They will be on the mall every day<lb/>
this week from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. to<lb/>
engage in informal discussions with<lb/>
passers-by, distribute literature and<lb/>
engage in various other activities.<lb/>
One of the committee's activities<lb/>
is taking a survey of people's at-<lb/>
titudes about the threat of nuclear<lb/>
war. They are also asking people to<lb/>
sign a petition addressed to F.<lb/>
Stewart Clark, the magistrate who<lb/>
on June 7 sentenced ECU student<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill to 90 days imprison-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
O'Neill, a peace committee<lb/>
member and East Carolinian staff<lb/>
writer, was arrested for "willfully,<lb/>
knowingly and unlawfully blocking<lb/>
traffic while demonstrating<lb/>
against the training of El<lb/>
Salvadoran soldiers at Fort Bragg.<lb/>
O'Neill has ccontinued his<lb/>
political activism in prison by<lb/>
organizing the other inmates and<lb/>
protesting prison conditions.<lb/>
Maughan hopes his fast will re-<lb/>
mind people of the bad treatment he<lb/>
believes O'Neill is receiving and<lb/>
serve to symbolize the world hunger<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
He quoted a United Nations<lb/>
estimate that 12,000 people die from<lb/>
starvation daily and said, "Basically<lb/>
I'm fasting as a symbol of how most<lb/>
of the population of the world ex-<lb/>
ists. That is, they don't have food,<lb/>
thev wake up hungry, go to bed<lb/>
hungry, spend their whole day<lb/>
hungry<lb/>
When asked why he was par-<lb/>
ticipating in the ECU peace commit-<lb/>
tee's activities. Jay Stone answered:<lb/>
"Because I think the arms race is a<lb/>
parasite sucking the material and<lb/>
spiritual well-being out of the<lb/>
planetary community<lb/>
Environmentalists Oppose Helm's Bill On Pesticide Labeling<lb/>
ByMlKEHAMER<lb/>
NUff Wriler<lb/>
Senate hearings began June 21 on<lb/>
a proposal by Senator Jesse Helms,<lb/>
R-N.C to limit public access to in-<lb/>
formation on the content and<lb/>
manufacturers of pesticides.<lb/>
In introducing his bill to revise the<lb/>
Federal Insecticide and Rodenticide<lb/>
Act 1978, Helms stated that two<lb/>
main problems have been causing<lb/>
concern to the pesticide industry.<lb/>
One problem is the amount of<lb/>
data that must be provided to the<lb/>
Environment Protection Agency for<lb/>
registration of pesticides and other<lb/>
purposes.<lb/>
The other problem as presented<lb/>
by Helms is in public access to<lb/>
health and safety data. Helms said,<lb/>
"the extensive test data submitted to<lb/>
the EPA is not adquately protected<lb/>
under the present law to prevent<lb/>
competitors from gaining access to<lb/>
it, and prevent the orginal<lb/>
developers from recovering its in-<lb/>
vestment and making a profit<lb/>
Another Senate bill, introduced<lb/>
by Senator S.I. Hayakawa,<lb/>
R-Calif would keep state and local<lb/>
governments from being tougher<lb/>
than the federal government on<lb/>
pesticide manufacture and use.<lb/>
Environmentalist and public in-<lb/>
terest groups have foimed a coali-<lb/>
tion called the National Coalition<lb/>
Against the Misuse of Pesticides,<lb/>
and have spoken out against both<lb/>
bills.<lb/>
Jay Feldman, spokesman for the<lb/>
national coalition, stated on July<lb/>
12, that certain states would want<lb/>
more data on pesticide than is cur-<lb/>
rently available from the EPA. He<lb/>
also stated that these states should<lb/>
be free to research and legislate on<lb/>
long-term effects of pesticides.<lb/>
"The crux of the matter is that<lb/>
states have a constitutional right to<lb/>
deal with matter in the state and<lb/>
there is no reason for the United<lb/>
States Congress to impose restraints<lb/>
on the states Feldman said.<lb/>
Dr. Frank Guthrie, chairman of<lb/>
the entomology department at<lb/>
North Carolina State University,<lb/>
testified before the Senate<lb/>
Agriculture Commettiee in late June<lb/>
on behalf of the March of Dimes<lb/>
Birth Defect Foundation. He<lb/>
reacted against the assertion pro-<lb/>
duct secrecy is of paramount impor-<lb/>
tance.<lb/>
5 Contacted at his office on Mon-<lb/>
day, Guthrie said that he felt that<lb/>
there should be no secrecy involved<lb/>
when pesticide may have the<lb/>
possibility of causing birth defects.<lb/>
"When it comes to the safety of<lb/>
persons, this is more important than<lb/>
company secerts Guthrie said.<lb/>
Ms. Susanne Harker, chief of<lb/>
policy and liaison staff with the<lb/>
pesticide registration division of the<lb/>
EPA was questioned on Monday<lb/>
about the problem that Helms refer-<lb/>
red to regarding the ammount of<lb/>
data required of a pesticide<lb/>
manufacturer in order to register a<lb/>
new pesticide. She stated that the<lb/>
amount of information required by<lb/>
the EPA is, "very extensive, more<lb/>
than you could fit in a briefcase<lb/>
She explained that a product<lb/>
registration may require up to 1,000<lb/>
pages of data.<lb/>
When asked about who perform-<lb/>
ed toxology tests on new pesticides,<lb/>
Harker explained that the pesticide<lb/>
companies provide all the data con-<lb/>
cerning the effect of new pesticides<lb/>
and these results are then examined<lb/>
by EPA scientists.<lb/>
Feldman critized the EPA<lb/>
because of its methodology in<lb/>
testing pesticides. He said that the<lb/>
coalition felt that too much testing<lb/>
was conducted in secrecy without<lb/>
the benefit of peer criticism in the<lb/>
scientific community and through<lb/>
scientific journals.<lb/>
He stated that because of a<lb/>
backlog, the EPA has not released<lb/>
data on several new pesticides and<lb/>
because of thisthe EPA is being<lb/>
sued by the AFL-CIO and the Na-<lb/>
tional Coalition Against the Misuse<lb/>
of Pesticides.<lb/>
In reply to this, Harker admitted<lb/>
that there does exist a backlog at the<lb/>
EPA but claimed that since the<lb/>
Reagan adminstration has been in<lb/>
office, strong emphasis has been put<lb/>
on reducing the backlog of new<lb/>
pesticide products.<lb/>
Feldman mentioned that a bill<lb/>
will be introduced on the House<lb/>
floor in September by Leon Panetta<lb/>
of California and Dan Glickman of<lb/>
Kansas which will insure victims of<lb/>
pesticides poisonings access to the<lb/>
federal courts. "This is because the<lb/>
laws in the separate states are so<lb/>
unclear Feldman said.<lb/>
Thomas R. Clark, deputy counsel<lb/>
to the Senate Agriculture Commit-<lb/>
tee which Helms chairs, spoke about<lb/>
Helms' bill recently. "It is not in-<lb/>
tended to deny or squelch people<lb/>
with a legitimate interest in over-<lb/>
sight over the EPA's activities<lb/>
He also said, "you've got groups<lb/>
like the March of Dimes and<lb/>
migrant labor advocates who want<lb/>
to keep a pretty close eye on<lb/>
pesticides and their effects. But we<lb/>
think the industry has come a long<lb/>
way toward compromise, consider-<lb/>
ing that at first they wanted the in-<lb/>
formation restricted to everybody<lb/>
On the pesticide front here in<lb/>
North Carolina, Farmworkers Legal<lb/>
Services has been lobbying in<lb/>
Raleigh for a rule which would re-<lb/>
quire farmers with labor camps and<lb/>
10 or more agricultural employees<lb/>
to provide portable drinking water<lb/>
and handwashing facilities close to<lb/>
the fields.<lb/>
A public hearing was held two<lb/>
weeks ago, attracting more than 100<lb/>
people on both sides of the issue.<lb/>
Several North Carolina facilities<lb/>
are receiving federal funds for<lb/>
seasonal and migrant farm workers<lb/>
and are covered by a recent EPA re-<lb/>
quirement to develop a pesticide<lb/>
hazard management program.<lb/>
According to a News and<lb/>
Observer editorial on June 24, there<lb/>
are 45,000 commercial products<lb/>
containing 1,200 pesticides ingre-<lb/>
dients available to American con-<lb/>
sumer, and neither EPA or the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Agriculture has a<lb/>
. good handle on dangers faced by<lb/>
chemical industry workers, farmers,<lb/>
homeowners, migrant workers and<lb/>
consumers.<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057487_0002"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JULY 14, 1982<lb/>
r<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
'ou may use the form at right or<lb/>
?se a separate sheet of paper it<lb/>
vju need more lines t here are 33<lb/>
units per line Each letter, punc<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unt Capitalize md<lb/>
nyphenate words oroperly Leave<lb/>
space at end o? ime it word<lb/>
doesn't tit No ads will be ac<lb/>
cepted over mp phone We<lb/>
reserve the right to reiect any ad<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. I njnu<lb/>
?5? per line rt iractkM ot ' '?-<lb/>
Please pnni legiblv' L se capital uiki<lb/>
louer CSM tellers<lb/>
Rf turn to THK KAT CAROLINIAN<lb/>
office b 3:00 Tuesda betore<lb/>
rdneda publkalions.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
No lines ?<lb/>
p.<lb/>
.Phone.<lb/>
at 75? pei line S.<lb/>
. No. insertion-<lb/>
S<lb/>
.enclose i<lb/>
I?<lb/>
L<lb/>
T-<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
???<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? t-<lb/>
. 1<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
if you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcement column,<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
torm ana send it to The East<lb/>
Carolinian in care o? the produc<lb/>
tton manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office m the Publications Building<lb/>
Flyers and handwritten copy on<lb/>
odd sized paper cannot be ac<lb/>
cepted<lb/>
There is no charge for an<lb/>
nouncements. but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest that you do not relv<lb/>
solely on this column for publicity<lb/>
The deadline for announcements<lb/>
is 5 p m Friday tor the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 5pm Tuesday tor the<lb/>
Thursday paper. No an<lb/>
nouncements received at'er these<lb/>
deadlines will be printed<lb/>
This space s available to ail<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
ments<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
TOURNAMENT<lb/>
The Second Summer Recreation<lb/>
Slow Pitch Softball Tournament<lb/>
will be held July 20 24 This will be<lb/>
a double elimination tournament<lb/>
With no entry fee open tc all ECU<lb/>
faculty, students and staff Entry<lb/>
deadline is Friday July '6 a' 5 00<lb/>
p m For additional information<lb/>
come by 204 Memorial Gym or call<lb/>
757 AM?<lb/>
CHAIRPERSON<lb/>
The SGA is new accepting ap<lb/>
plications for Fall Election<lb/>
Chairperson ' MercVed persons<lb/>
should appiy in person a'<lb/>
Mendenhall Boom 228<lb/>
APPLY NOW<lb/>
Students who intend to apply to<lb/>
maior in Social Work or Correc<lb/>
tions m the Fall of 1982 should re<lb/>
guest an application and an ap<lb/>
pomtment for an interview from<lb/>
the Department Office. 312 Carol<lb/>
Belk (Allied Health Bunding)<lb/>
For more information call Mrs<lb/>
Joyner. 7576V61, Ext 218<lb/>
Deadline for fall app:ica'ions<lb/>
September 7. Students are en<lb/>
couraged to apply during summer<lb/>
school<lb/>
ARE YOU<lb/>
INTERESTED0<lb/>
Are you interested in helping<lb/>
prevent world hunoer. racism<lb/>
preiucicc sexism, or the arms<lb/>
race Are you interested in peace<lb/>
and lustice issues and human<lb/>
rights0 The ECU Peace Ccmmit<lb/>
tee is sponsoring a display on tne<lb/>
campus man across form<lb/>
Flanagan Bu'ldmg The display<lb/>
will be there all week, sc come out<lb/>
and discuss these mportant topics<lb/>
with us!<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE<lb/>
ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Applications are needed from<lb/>
those interested in becoming Per<lb/>
sonal Care Attendants to<lb/>
wheelchair students. We are par<lb/>
ticularly interested in anyone who<lb/>
ahs a background of assisting in<lb/>
divduais whim their activities of<lb/>
daily living. For futher details,<lb/>
contact: Office of Handicapped<lb/>
Student Services, 212 Wichard<lb/>
Building, 752 6799<lb/>
OFF-CAMPUS<lb/>
HOUSING<lb/>
"If you will be needing a room<lb/>
mate or would like to find and<lb/>
share an apartment for Fall, con<lb/>
tact the OH Campus Housing Of<lb/>
fice, 211 Whichard Building<lb/>
757 6881, before June 14 Orienta<lb/>
tion will begin at that time and<lb/>
many students will be seeking ac<lb/>
commodations We need your<lb/>
listing<lb/>
CATHOLIC NEWMAN<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Center<lb/>
would like to invite everyone to<lb/>
join in with us for celebrating<lb/>
Mass every Sunday in the Biology<lb/>
Lecture Hall starting at 12 30 and<lb/>
5 00 every Wednsday at the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center Dinner<lb/>
and good friendship follows Mass<lb/>
every Wednsday, so come out and<lb/>
bring a friend<lb/>
TENNIS<lb/>
First Annual Colonial Invita<lb/>
'ional Doubles Tournament, Mens.<lb/>
Ladies, and Mixed Doubles m<lb/>
Edenton NC at the City C urts on<lb/>
July 23 25 Pick uo entry terms at<lb/>
H L Hodges o' Bonos i-oorting<lb/>
Goods Entry deadl.ne is Mcnday,<lb/>
July 19 a1 noon<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE<lb/>
ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Applications are needed from<lb/>
those interested m becom.ng Per<lb/>
?sonal Care Attendan's fe<lb/>
wheelchair studf rts We art: par<lb/>
ticularly interes'ec in anyone who<lb/>
ahs a backyrour-rt of assisting in<lb/>
dividuais whith 'heir activities of<lb/>
da'ly living For fu'her details.<lb/>
contact Office of Hanaicappec<lb/>
Student Services 212 Wichard<lb/>
Building. 757 67W<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true qualtty and have 'hidden'<lb/>
delivery costs in the price<lb/>
PIZZA INN has changed all that.<lb/>
 We sell our delivery<lb/>
pizzas at vlenu Prices!<lb/>
No Surcharge. We also<lb/>
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our large and giant<lb/>
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tf<lb/>
CARICATURES bv Weyler Have<lb/>
? fultcolor. 8 by 10 cartoon por<lb/>
trait done of yourself or a loved<lb/>
one. A unique gift idea Can<lb/>
752 5775<lb/>
COTTAGE for Rent at N Myrtle<lb/>
Beach Sleeps 6 Rent by<lb/>
week weekend Call 75 020<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT West 5th<lb/>
Street Single. $125.00, double<lb/>
580 00 Utilities included, call<lb/>
7s 6336<lb/>
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IHt EASTCAROl IN1AN<lb/>
JU1 Y 14.1982<lb/>
Cocaine Seized<lb/>
In Drug Bust<lb/>
i<lb/>
R.J. Reynolds To Pay Advertisement Penalty<lb/>
( MM 1 NOOGA,<lb/>
(UPI) A van<lb/>
aded with 2t duffle<lb/>
filled with the<lb/>
inland seizure of<lb/>
U.S history<lb/>
as moved to An un-<lb/>
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ty by "backwoods<lb/>
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One of those ar-<lb/>
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Mark Scarborough,<lb/>
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Robert George, 59. of<lb/>
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Court officials said a<lb/>
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lackie Wayne Scar-<lb/>
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WASHINGTON<lb/>
(UPI) ? RJ. Reynolds<lb/>
Tobacco Co. Inc. has<lb/>
agreed to pay a penalty<lb/>
and alter its cigarette<lb/>
advertisements to settle<lb/>
charges that it did not<lb/>
?'clearly and con-<lb/>
spicuously" display the<lb/>
surgeon general's<lb/>
health warning, the<lb/>
federal Trade Commis-<lb/>
sion said Tuesday.<lb/>
The FTC said the<lb/>
penalties result from<lb/>
alleged violations of a<lb/>
1972 consent order re-<lb/>
quiring the six major<lb/>
icigarette companies to<lb/>
include a boxed state-<lb/>
ment with the warning<lb/>
in clear and con-<lb/>
spicuous lettering on all<lb/>
cigarette ads.<lb/>
The required letter-<lb/>
ing says, "Warning:<lb/>
The Surgeon General<lb/>
has Determined That<lb/>
Cigarette Smoking Is<lb/>
Dangerous to Your<lb/>
Health<lb/>
The five other com-<lb/>
panies, who already<lb/>
have settled identical<lb/>
charges, are Philip<lb/>
Morris Inc Lorillard<lb/>
Division of Loew's<lb/>
Theaters Inc Brown<lb/>
and Williamson Tobac-<lb/>
co Corp American<lb/>
Brands Inc. and Liggett<lb/>
and Myers Inc.<lb/>
The Justice Depart-<lb/>
ment filed the case at<lb/>
the request of the FTC<lb/>
in the U.S. District<lb/>
Court for the Southern<lb/>
District of New York.<lb/>
Consent judgments<lb/>
have the force of law,<lb/>
but are for settlement<lb/>
purposes only and do<lb/>
not constitute admis-<lb/>
sion by the company<lb/>
that it violated the law.<lb/>
"Reynolds has<lb/>
agreed to pay $100,000<lb/>
in civil penalties to set-<lb/>
tle charges that it did<lb/>
not clearly and con-<lb/>
spicuously disclose the<lb/>
surgeon general's<lb/>
health warning in all<lb/>
cigarette adver-<lb/>
tisements FTC said.<lb/>
It said the company,<lb/>
which produces<lb/>
Camels, Winstons,<lb/>
Salems and other<lb/>
cigarettes, has agreed<lb/>
to display the warning<lb/>
in all advertising, use<lb/>
larger lettering for<lb/>
billboard ads and put<lb/>
the warning on vending<lb/>
machines.<lb/>
"The company also<lb/>
agreed to print the war-<lb/>
ning in a single line<lb/>
across the bottom of<lb/>
the billboard, rather<lb/>
than in a box; carry the<lb/>
warning in ads appear-<lb/>
ing in the United States<lb/>
and all American ter-<lb/>
ritories; and, in<lb/>
foreign-language ads,<lb/>
disclose the message in<lb/>
the same language as in<lb/>
the ads the FTC said.<lb/>
David Fishel, public<lb/>
relations director for<lb/>
R.J. Reynolds, in<lb/>
Winston-Salem, N.C<lb/>
said the settlement<lb/>
"involves no big<lb/>
changes for us, because<lb/>
we've been in com-<lb/>
pliance with everything<lb/>
else for going on three<lb/>
years, and as far as the<lb/>
billboards are concern-<lb/>
ed we've been doing<lb/>
this for six months<lb/>
The 1975 complaint<lb/>
against the six top com-<lb/>
panies said they had<lb/>
failed to display the<lb/>
health warning on ven-<lb/>
ding machines, had not<lb/>
disclosed the warning<lb/>
at all m other advertis-<lb/>
ing, printed the warn-<lb/>
ing in smaller-than<lb/>
required lettering on<lb/>
billboards, failed to<lb/>
translate it in foreign-<lb/>
language ads and im-<lb/>
properly placed the<lb/>
warning in some ads.<lb/>
An agreement reach-<lb/>
ed in 1979 covered all<lb/>
six companies, but R.J<lb/>
Reynolds objected to<lb/>
the size of health warn<lb/>
ing lettering on<lb/>
billboards. H went to<lb/>
court against the FTC<lb/>
in the spring of 1981,<lb/>
but lost.<lb/>
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July 14, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
U.S. Congress<lb/>
Can They Really Be Trusted?<lb/>
The most recent episode in the<lb/>
saga of U.S. politics ? the current<lb/>
investigation on Capitol Hill into<lb/>
alleged drug use and sexual miscon-<lb/>
duct ? says it all.<lb/>
What a tragic state of affairs it is<lb/>
when a nation's leaders cannot<lb/>
refrain from such conduct. And<lb/>
they wonder why Americans don't<lb/>
trust politicians.<lb/>
Although the history of corrup-<lb/>
tion in United States politics is prac-<lb/>
tically as old as the U.S. itself, most<lb/>
of us best remember the past decade<lb/>
as a period of corruption explosion.<lb/>
First came Watergate, with its<lb/>
break-ins, investigations and subse-<lb/>
quent arrests and resignations of<lb/>
many of the country's top politi-<lb/>
cians.<lb/>
Next came the infamous<lb/>
ABSCAM hearings. Our country's<lb/>
leaders caught taking bribes.<lb/>
Now, two former congressional<lb/>
pages claim that several con-<lb/>
gressmen have engaged in the illegal<lb/>
use and marketing of cocaine as well<lb/>
as in illicit sexual behavior.<lb/>
Just when will this immoral,<lb/>
decadent conduct come to an end?<lb/>
How long will Americans have to<lb/>
live with the fact that its govern-<lb/>
ment cannot be trusted?<lb/>
Of course, it may be "jumping<lb/>
the gun" to condemn anyone at this<lb/>
point. After all, no one has been<lb/>
convicted of these crimes as yet. But<lb/>
as has been the case with every other<lb/>
"scandal" on Capitol Hill, so-<lb/>
meone is guilty. You can bet on<lb/>
that. Maybe not all of those accus-<lb/>
ed, but someone. And even that is<lb/>
"one too many<lb/>
It is also wrong to characterize all<lb/>
of Congress by the acts of<lb/>
(presumably and hopefully) a few.<lb/>
Granted, there are many highly-<lb/>
moral congressmen and women in<lb/>
Washington. Still, it is frightening<lb/>
to realize that even a small percen-<lb/>
tage of our legislators could be so<lb/>
dimented, so immoral. With this<lb/>
latest "scandal politics in the<lb/>
United States has reached the very<lb/>
depths of perversion.<lb/>
The argument that lawbreakers<lb/>
shouldn't be lawmakers is valid<lb/>
though overused nowadays. But it is<lb/>
also tragic that that argument has to<lb/>
be used in the first place. One would<lb/>
hope that honesty would be a<lb/>
premise (as opposed to a rare quali-<lb/>
ty) upon which political careers are<lb/>
built. Unfortunately, many times,<lb/>
one would be dead wrong.<lb/>
Who do American youth have to<lb/>
pattern their lives after when year<lb/>
after year, their own government<lb/>
sinks deeper and deeper into the<lb/>
proverbial "jaws" of corruption?<lb/>
How can the United States function<lb/>
as a unified nation in light of this<lb/>
and other scandalous affairs in<lb/>
Washington?<lb/>
We, as citizens, should be outrag-<lb/>
ed by what has happened. The very<lb/>
heart of our legislative system has<lb/>
been perverted by criminals. And<lb/>
despite the number who will emerge<lb/>
from these investigations with clean<lb/>
records, the reputation of the U.S.<lb/>
Congress has, once again, been tar-<lb/>
nished.<lb/>
But what is, perhaps, more<lb/>
disgusting is the fact that we, as<lb/>
Americans, have become almost im-<lb/>
mune to such a shock as this. News<lb/>
of corruption on Capitol Hill has<lb/>
become so commonplace that<lb/>
nowadays it draws scarcely a second<lb/>
glance.<lb/>
Certainly, politicians should not<lb/>
be expected to be without flaw.<lb/>
Mistakes are as much a part of<lb/>
humanity as is breathing. But the il-<lb/>
legal use of cocaine and homosexual<lb/>
acts with minors are not mere<lb/>
mistakes. Rather, they are a reflec-<lb/>
tion of a sad state of affairs, a state<lb/>
of affairs that must not persist if<lb/>
our government is to survive and<lb/>
function in any meaningful form.<lb/>
Expert Tells The 'Inside' Story<lb/>
Shuttle Flight A Hoax!<lb/>
"Space Shuttle Columbia, flight four<lb/>
landing scene take one 10 nine<lb/>
eight seven six five four  three<lb/>
two one Roll cameras action<lb/>
Just when you thought you'd heard it<lb/>
all; just when you thought the world had<lb/>
run out of surprises, someone somewhere<lb/>
does something to throw you off. It never<lb/>
fails.<lb/>
The newest surprise comes to us, of<lb/>
course, from California. Lancaster,<lb/>
California, to be exact. Something else<lb/>
that never fails.<lb/>
But what makes this latest discovery, er<lb/>
"uncovery so magnificent is that it will<lb/>
undoubtedly change the way each and<lb/>
every American views the world. This<lb/>
startling piece of information will shock<lb/>
even the most stable mind. So, be advised.<lb/>
Last week, in a startling, biting state-<lb/>
ment, Charles K. Johnson, a resident of<lb/>
Lancaster (a small city near Edwards Air<lb/>
Force Base) revealed to the news media<lb/>
that the latest flight of the Space Shuttle<lb/>
Columbia was a mere hoax.<lb/>
"This airpiane landed Johnson admit-<lb/>
ted, "but it's just a simple, stupid old<lb/>
airplane caried piggyback and dropped<lb/>
over Lancaster It hasn't orbited the<lb/>
Earth; that we know<lb/>
Needless to say, Johnson's discovery<lb/>
came as a sharp blow to NASA resear-<lb/>
chers, engineers and astronauts, who had<lb/>
carefully planned every detail of the hoax<lb/>
to avoid such an embarrassment. But<lb/>
thank goodness at least some Americans<lb/>
weren't "taken in" by NASA's latest trick.<lb/>
As Johnson boasted, "Nobody in the<lb/>
whole Lancaster area believes it's for<lb/>
real<lb/>
Mike Hughes<lb/>
Just The Way<lb/>
It Is<lb/>
It is also interesting to note that Johnson<lb/>
is currently president of the Flat Earth<lb/>
Society, a group which has disproved<lb/>
many of today's accepted scientific<lb/>
theories.<lb/>
The group found out that not only was<lb/>
the latest flight a fluke but that man has<lb/>
never gone into space. Furthermore,<lb/>
Johnson is certain that there are no<lb/>
satellites orbiting the Earth, a fact that has<lb/>
TV weathermen running frantic.<lb/>
Johnson's Flat Earth Research Society<lb/>
International currently stands at 1,600<lb/>
members. No doubt, each is as highly-<lb/>
trained in astronomy, astrology, physics<lb/>
and the other sciences as is Johnson<lb/>
himself, a janitor.<lb/>
"Campus Forum"<lb/>
And to think that all this time, we<lb/>
thought the Earth was round. Almost<lb/>
makes one wonder where r.he edges might<lb/>
be.<lb/>
Johnson's findings, as expected, have<lb/>
caused mixed emotions among space ex-<lb/>
perts nationwide, but as of Tuesday,<lb/>
science textbook publishers were ignoring<lb/>
the Johnson breakthroughs. "Hell ihey<lb/>
contended, "we're never sure what's going<lb/>
on anyway<lb/>
Spokesmen for NASA, apparently cm<lb/>
barrassed by Johnson's discovery, refused<lb/>
to comment. Naturally then, the first<lb/>
scheduled flight of the Challenger<lb/>
spacecraft will be postponed until scientists<lb/>
can figure out some way to get that<lb/>
crazy thing to fly<lb/>
Speculation has it that Johnson, inspired<lb/>
by his instant fame, will now seek to<lb/>
disprove Einstein's theory of relativity by<lb/>
submitting that theory to the Flat Earth<lb/>
Society for a club vote. Several of the<lb/>
group's members have already vowed to<lb/>
kill the damned thing, 'cause it never<lb/>
made sense anyway<lb/>
Future topics of consideration to go<lb/>
before the Flat Earth Society's executive<lb/>
council include: Do birds really migrate, or<lb/>
is it just a hoax? Were Plato and Aristotle<lb/>
actually from Brooklyn? And, did Elvis<lb/>
take drugs because he had cancer?<lb/>
Remember, you heard it here first.<lb/>
Peace Movement Strives For Victory In Defeat<lb/>
There is a need for clarifying, perhaps<lb/>
redefining, Dennis Kilcoyne's letter on<lb/>
"Imperialism This need arises from<lb/>
what some readers may derive from<lb/>
Dennis' description of the anti-nuclear<lb/>
weapons movement. I prefer it to be<lb/>
labeled a peace movement, for it encom-<lb/>
passes much broader goals than just the<lb/>
elimination of nuclear weapons.<lb/>
Dennis' statement about the move-<lb/>
ment being a defeatist one is correct, but<lb/>
the negative connotations many readers<lb/>
might associate with that term is not.<lb/>
The movement is a defeatist one only in<lb/>
the sense that it wishes to defeat the at-<lb/>
titudes and practices of fear, hatred,<lb/>
racism and exploitation.<lb/>
Those involved in the movement will<lb/>
eradicate these problems through educa-<lb/>
tion. Already, such programs as Ground<lb/>
Zero and Ground Swell are bringing<lb/>
people from all walks of life to discuss<lb/>
the reality of nuclear war. By sharing<lb/>
ideas surrounding the use and produc-<lb/>
tion of nuclear weapons as well as infor-<lb/>
ming the public of the real threat to<lb/>
humanity these weapons pose, the peace<lb/>
movement will have help put an end to<lb/>
the fear and hatred these weapons repre-<lb/>
sent. Maybe a day will come soon when<lb/>
no one need live in fear.<lb/>
At the present time, however, the<lb/>
threat is very real, and everyone is<lb/>
justified in being afraid. As Dr. David<lb/>
Goodc of the Bowman Gray School of<lb/>
Medicine recently stated, "Most threats<lb/>
we can turn off for the moment, but<lb/>
they're still there people, particularly<lb/>
young people feel they're not going to<lb/>
make it or they're not sure Dr. Goode<lb/>
sees many more people these days ex-<lb/>
periencing the fear from nuclear<lb/>
Weapons. He also feels strongly about<lb/>
the peace movement, adding, "It's<lb/>
healthy to say 'Look, I've got this<lb/>
threat. I should do something about it<lb/>
To deny that it (the nuclear threat) exists<lb/>
is not in your long-term interests It's<lb/>
a little nutty The peace movement<lb/>
probably believes we're all a little nutty<lb/>
for allowing the growth of nuclear<lb/>
weapons to reach its current dimensions.<lb/>
The ongoing START negotiations in<lb/>
Geneva are encouraging, yet how nutty<lb/>
is it not to include MX missiles, Trident<lb/>
subs and B-l bombers in the discus-<lb/>
sions? Do the Soviets and Americans<lb/>
truly want arms reduction, or are we<lb/>
hearing the usual "lip service" humanity<lb/>
gets from its leaders these days?<lb/>
The struggle for peace is an intense<lb/>
one. As Kilcoyne points out in his letter,<lb/>
the world suffers from warmongering<lb/>
political creeps who deny people from<lb/>
living in peace and equality. Fear,<lb/>
hatred, racism and exploitation are<lb/>
worldwide afflictions propagated by<lb/>
those now in power. The peace move-<lb/>
ment has grown because of these prac-<lb/>
tices, and it will continue to grow with<lb/>
the common belief that such practices<lb/>
and attitudes must be stopped.<lb/>
If Dennis had attended the anti-nuke<lb/>
rally at N.Y. recently, he would have<lb/>
realized as I did how much everyone<lb/>
there recognized all to well that we are,<lb/>
indeed, defeatists. To put an end to pre-<lb/>
judice and racism were major topics at<lb/>
the rally. Again, I believe the movement<lb/>
will use education as its tool to defeat<lb/>
the hatred of one or another due to skin<lb/>
color, sex or religious practices.<lb/>
The work to be done in this area is a<lb/>
monumental task. We have elected a<lb/>
U.S. senator who claims he cannot find<lb/>
qualified minorities so he has none on<lb/>
his staff. Senator Helms claims he is not<lb/>
a bigot, yet the truth lies in one's own in-<lb/>
terpretation. It is also disurbing that<lb/>
Greenville fosters prejudice. 1 have<lb/>
heard too often from too many people<lb/>
that they have been denied the common<lb/>
pleasures of living because of their skin<lb/>
color. It is sickening to note such<lb/>
behavior exists, and it will make it all the<lb/>
harder to eliminate. Let those who prac-<lb/>
tice racism be warned, for the peace<lb/>
movement will not support you.<lb/>
In another part of Kilcoyne's letter, he<lb/>
mentions locating some nation that has<lb/>
adopted totalitarian beliefs and govern-<lb/>
ing systems. I am not interested in a<lb/>
search for this political entity. 1 am not<lb/>
so smug as to think that it doesn't exist<lb/>
but believe if it did exist, the similarities<lb/>
between it and other nations would be<lb/>
more pronounced than the differences.<lb/>
Such a system would probably pay "lip<lb/>
service" to humanity while going about<lb/>
its business of exploiting third-world na-<lb/>
tions. It would also be similar to today's<lb/>
nations in that it would provide token<lb/>
support of human rights and needs, and<lb/>
such support would be extended to a<lb/>
limited, token, privileged few. Your<lb/>
mythical nation, Dennis, would<lb/>
manufacture and export weapons like<lb/>
our own. But I seriously doubt it would<lb/>
reach the level of horror America and<lb/>
the Soviet Union find themselves in to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
If this gets too "mumbojumbo" for<lb/>
you, Dennis, perhaps you should stop<lb/>
reading this letter, pick up any<lb/>
newspaper, view any television to sec if<lb/>
you can deal with the insanity presented<lb/>
for all to see. World leadership is out of<lb/>
control. Prejudicial attitudes, fear and<lb/>
hatred are being fostered and<lb/>
perpetuated, and, unfortunately, we on-<lb/>
ly see a small picture of what goes on.<lb/>
The small picture includes the college<lb/>
students, faculty members, scientists,<lb/>
doctors, nuns, priests, civilians from all<lb/>
ways of life who are starved, beaten, ex-<lb/>
iled and killed by the thousands every<lb/>
day, while our democratic and not-so-<lb/>
democratic governments reign over us.<lb/>
The Statue of Liberty sits in N.Y. Har-<lb/>
bor for all to see, and the words, "Give<lb/>
me your tired, your poor, your huddled<lb/>
masses yearning to breathe remain<lb/>
the ultimate paradox for thousands of<lb/>
foreign refugees rotting behind the barb-<lb/>
ed wire of concentration camps here in<lb/>
the "good old U.S. of A Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill sits in federal prison as<lb/>
testimony to the heinous crime of our<lb/>
government's training of El Salvadoran<lb/>
death squads. Pat cools his jets while the<lb/>
civilian population of El Salvador lives<lb/>
in fear. Thank you very much Uncle<lb/>
Sam; thank you for sending more bullets<lb/>
and the people with the know-how to<lb/>
continue the civil war. Governments,<lb/>
ours and others, continue their destruc-<lb/>
tive means, locking up those who might<lb/>
speak out against such treachery of<lb/>
humanity.<lb/>
Yes, the movement is a defeatist one,<lb/>
and the price paid is expensive, it is the<lb/>
cost of Martin Luther King, Jr lying in<lb/>
his own blood on a Memphis balcony. It<lb/>
is the loss of civilian life in South Africa<lb/>
and Lebanon, where leaders have decid-<lb/>
ed to answer the questions of freedom<lb/>
with machine guns but not with words.<lb/>
It is the cost of losing one's trust in<lb/>
humanity when in Greenville, people are<lb/>
denied the common pleasures of living<lb/>
through the prejudice that exists. And<lb/>
the beat goes on, and on<lb/>
The defeatist attitude, the peace<lb/>
movement, must be strong, unyielding<lb/>
to those who make false promises and<lb/>
deliver more of the same fear, hatred,<lb/>
prejudice and exploitation that have<lb/>
plagued humanity. Maybe all of this<lb/>
"soapboxing" is best summed up by an<lb/>
event at the N.Y. rally. Small children<lb/>
led the hundreds of thousands of mar-<lb/>
chers through the streets with signs bear-<lb/>
ing the slogan "Help us save ourselves<lb/>
from ourselves Perhaps if we realize<lb/>
we are all part of these problems and can<lb/>
be part of the solution, the struggle will<lb/>
end soon.<lb/>
Glenn Maughan<lb/>
Inter. Ed.<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JULY 14, 1982<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Disney's Most<lb/>
Recent Blazes<lb/>
Hi-Tech Trail<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
SUM Writer<lb/>
 Wasn l it the desire to create life<lb/>
that inspired Victor Frankenstein to<lb/>
his greatest efforts? That's the in-<lb/>
spiration of computer animation ?<lb/>
you can create a world" ? com-<lb/>
puter programmer Lance Williams,<lb/>
quoted in Science Digest.<lb/>
The creation of the world through<lb/>
computers is exactly what occurs in<lb/>
the new Walt Disney production<lb/>
TROS, now playing at the Buc-<lb/>
caneer Theatres in Greenville.<lb/>
Writer-director Steven Lisberger,<lb/>
aided by an immense crew of artists<lb/>
and technicians, has used the latest<lb/>
in computer technology to give form<lb/>
to the fantastic universe that exists<lb/>
inside a computer system. TRON is<lb/>
flawed but visually dazzling and<lb/>
thought-provoking film.<lb/>
The storyline follows three com-<lb/>
puter programmers, Flynn (Jeff<lb/>
Bridges), Lora (Cindy), and Alan<lb/>
(Bruce Boxleitner), in their fight<lb/>
against Dillinger (David Warner),<lb/>
an unscrupulous executive of EN-<lb/>
COM, the communications con-<lb/>
glomerate for which they all work.<lb/>
While the trio toils away at their ter-<lb/>
minals trying to break through the<lb/>
Master Control (a program that<lb/>
hides Dillinger's dark secrets and<lb/>
has gotten out of control), Flynn is<lb/>
zapped by a laser beam and<lb/>
disintegrated.<lb/>
Flynn finds himself reintegrated<lb/>
in the world he and thousands of<lb/>
other computer programmers<lb/>
created but never knew existed: the<lb/>
realm inside the computer. This<lb/>
electrical land, the terrain of which<lb/>
is constantly changing at the push of<lb/>
a button, is inhabited by walking,<lb/>
talking, humanoid programs, the<lb/>
alter-egos and worshippers of the<lb/>
programmers, or Users, who devis-<lb/>
ed them.<lb/>
As an User in a universe of pro-<lb/>
grams, Flynn has incredible powers.<lb/>
He joins up with the electronic war-<lb/>
rior TRON, a security program con-<lb/>
cocted by Flynn's friend Alan, and<lb/>
the two continue their scheme to<lb/>
destroy Dillinger and the Master<lb/>
Control. In the computer world,<lb/>
See'TRON Page 6<lb/>
Two "light cycles" race across the video game grid in this scene from Walt Disney's state-of-the-art adventure TRON<lb/>
Andy's 'Frankenstein' A Maximum Gross-Out<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Staff VMler<lb/>
The next two installments of The Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee's summer cinema series will honor one<lb/>
of filmdom's most durable characters ? Frankenstein.<lb/>
Mel Brooks' modern comedy classic Young Frankens-<lb/>
tein will be shown tonight, July 14, at 8 p.m. Next Mon-<lb/>
day's presentation will be the X-rated cult film Andy<lb/>
Warhols Frankenstein, to be shown at 9 p.m. Both<lb/>
features will be screened in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center's Hendrix Theatre. Admission is free with ECU<lb/>
ID and Activity Card or MSC Membership.<lb/>
When a nightmare inspired Mary Shelley to write her<lb/>
1818 novel Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus,<lb/>
she had little idea that her story about a man who made<lb/>
a monster would become one of the predominant myths<lb/>
of popular culture. A moral fable about man's in-<lb/>
humanity to man and a prophecy of the coming<lb/>
mechanization of mankind, as well as a masterpiece of<lb/>
gothic horror, Frankenstein has mesmerized the world<lb/>
in general and filmmakers in particular.<lb/>
The innumerable filmic interpretations of Shelley's<lb/>
story range from the sublime ? the 1930's series with<lb/>
Boris Karloff ? to the ridiculous ? Young Frankens-<lb/>
tein, Mel Brooks' affectionate parody of that series.<lb/>
Certainly the strangest version is Andy Warhol's<lb/>
Frankenstein(914).<lb/>
A worldwide poll considered H arhol's Frankenstein<lb/>
to be one of the two hundred worst movies ever made,<lb/>
prompting The Golden Turkey Awards authors Harry<lb/>
and Michael Medved to describe the film as "an amaz-<lb/>
ing 3-D retelling of the classic story that has little to do<lb/>
with the original Gore abounds in the lab of the<lb/>
necrophilic Dr. Frankenstein, as do terrible perfor-<lb/>
mances. Listen for this line: "To know life, you first<lb/>
must fuck death through the gall bladder<lb/>
Unfortunately, Monday night's showing will not be in<lb/>
the original 3-D (unlike the Films Committee's recent<lb/>
presentation of It Came From Outer Space, complete<lb/>
with glasses). Or perhaps we should say fortunately, for<lb/>
few viewers can handle having bloody human entrails<lb/>
flung in their faces in three dimensions.<lb/>
Everything else remains intact for the July 19 screen-<lb/>
ing: the flying guts, the kinky sex, the outrageous<lb/>
humor, in short, everything that was conjured by the<lb/>
twisted imaginations of writer-director Paul Morrissey<lb/>
and producer Warhol. Andy, you will recall, is the apos-<lb/>
tle of the avant garde, whose first major work was a<lb/>
painted portrait of a Campbell's soup can, and whose<lb/>
earlier cinematic efforts include a 24-hour long static<lb/>
visualization of the Empire State Building.<lb/>
"What does it all mean?" asked The Sew York<lb/>
Times critic Paul Gardner in his review of Andy<lb/>
Warhols Frankenstein. "Probably that today's<lb/>
moviegoers, who can see all the hardcore fare they want<lb/>
at the so-called skin flicks, prefer their sex spiked with<lb/>
horror, and with humor. Audiences are laughing at<lb/>
Frankenstein, his sexually repressed, bug-eyed assistant<lb/>
and the doctor's sister-wife, who makes the fatal<lb/>
mistake of seducing a zombie. They even giggle when<lb/>
one victim's stitches pop open, spilling something that<lb/>
looks like beet soup-and-knishes across the screen<lb/>
Or, as Warhol himself said regarding his Frankstein:<lb/>
"We're interested in making nice clean comedies. But<lb/>
violence is what people want, so we're giving it to them.<lb/>
That's the secret of my success ? just give the people<lb/>
what thev want<lb/>
Rockabilly's Jerry Lee Lewis Winning A Long<lb/>
Fight Against Illness And His Own Lifestyle<lb/>
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP1) ? Entertainer Jerry Lee<lb/>
Lewis fought off death against worse than 50-50 odds<lb/>
after major surgery last summer and has lived up to the<lb/>
utterance he made as he left the hospital: "The Killer is<lb/>
back<lb/>
A year later, the 46-year-old musician who pioneered<lb/>
the rockabilly style that was mastered by Elvis Presley is<lb/>
following a full concert schedule. And, he's "singing<lb/>
better than ever according to J. W. Whitten, his<lb/>
manager in Memphis.<lb/>
Returning last weekend from gigs in Flint, Mich and<lb/>
Nashville, Ind the irrepressible performer will travel to<lb/>
St. Clairsville and Salem, Ohio, this Saturday and Sun-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Lewis' frenetic lifestyle quieted down after his critical<lb/>
bout with death that started with a ruptured stomach<lb/>
June 30, 1981, but his professional life continues to be<lb/>
active, Whitten said.<lb/>
On stage, the singer still entrances his audiences with<lb/>
piano-pounding performances using fist and foot to<lb/>
strike the ivories, but Lewis' associates try to temper the<lb/>
master.<lb/>
"He may not put out quite as much energy as before,<lb/>
because we tell him not to said Whitten. "We want<lb/>
him to stay around for a long time<lb/>
Normally a 162-pounder, Lewis emerged Aug. 29<lb/>
See LEWIS, Page 6<lb/>
Now Batting 1,000<lb/>
'Shenandoah' Another Success<lb/>
Roos Recreates Lead From Broadway Experience<lb/>
r?.r Boo leads a cast of some 20 singers and dancers in Shenandoah. For more than 30 theatrical years he has<lb/>
SZl2 Broadway shows including Brigadoon, Mame, How to Succeed and Shenandoah, in which he<lb/>
JE! En?role of Charlie Anderson. He recreates this role for the ECU Summer Theatre production of<lb/>
2?!L JT3 and repertory credits include The Merchant of Venice at Lincoln Center, The Price Side by<lb/>
Udey SoVdhZ Man of La Mane ha. Bloomer Girl, Feather Top, Street Scene and a six-month 77-c.ties tour of<lb/>
Deathtrap.<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Moving from the gregariousness of Grease, with its<lb/>
raunch, rock 'n' roll and high school hi-jinx, to the<lb/>
folksy country setting of the Shenandoah Valley, the<lb/>
East Carolina Summer Theatre has produced another<lb/>
professional, highly entertaining musical.<lb/>
Shenandoah is a sentimental celebration of the simple<lb/>
life and virtues, an often exhuberant yet also tragic<lb/>
story, with musical numbers ranging from lusty hoe-<lb/>
downs to love songs to hymnals. On opening night<lb/>
(Monday) the Summer Theatre cast and crew were able<lb/>
to create all these moods and styles with success.<lb/>
The story takes place during the Civil War, and its<lb/>
relation to one man, Charlie Anderson, who's determin-<lb/>
ed that his family will stay out of it. He, his now-<lb/>
deceased wife, and his daughter and six sons turned a<lb/>
patch of Virginia wilderness into a prosperous farm<lb/>
without the aid of a single slave, so Anderson sees no<lb/>
reason why his sons should fight someone else's war.<lb/>
But the conflict comes to them anyway when the<lb/>
youngest boy is taken prisoner, sending the family in<lb/>
pursuit and on a path leading to tragedy and despair,<lb/>
until the final scenes of acceptance and healing.<lb/>
Casper Roos stars as Charlie Anderson, repeating his<lb/>
role in the original Broadway production. He is a<lb/>
powerful stage prescence, with a fine voice capable of<lb/>
handling both quiet communions with the spirit of his<lb/>
wife and robust ballads. Roos also shows considerable<lb/>
comedic talents in the show's funniest scene, a talk with<lb/>
his fumbling future son-in-law (Paul Myers).<lb/>
Regarding Roos' roost, the actors playing the five<lb/>
older Anderson boys (Michael W. Hill, Mitch Nathan,<lb/>
Rodger Baldwin, Chris Phillips, John Gibson) all give<lb/>
professional performances, especially during the foot-<lb/>
stomping, almost slapstick number, "Next To Lovin' (I<lb/>
Like Fightin') However, none of them is especially<lb/>
memorable, as none of them is very individualized ex-<lb/>
cept for Mitch Nathan as James.<lb/>
Nathan shares the spotlight with the excellent Patricia<lb/>
Preston as his wife Anne, in the quiet sentimental song<lb/>
"Violets and Silverbells Preston gets a chance to be<lb/>
funny and lively in the humorous number "Freedom<lb/>
accompanied by Eric Jennings. In his difficult role as<lb/>
Gabriel, a slave from a nearby farm, Jennings is both<lb/>
touching and quite comical. Usually paired with Aaron<lb/>
Neimann as the littlest Anderson, Robert, Jennings<lb/>
shows off his skills to Neimann's disadvantage, though<lb/>
the young actor is talented.<lb/>
The brightest star of Shenandoah is Babs Winn, as<lb/>
the sweet but straight-shootin' Anderson daughter, Jen-<lb/>
ny, a role contrasting with her slutly, streetwise Rizzo in<lb/>
Grease. In a brawl with government agents, singing A<lb/>
heartwarming songs like We Make A Beautiful Pair and<lb/>
Papas Gonna Make It Alright, and clowning around in<lb/>
the hilarious number Over The Hill, Winn has enough<lb/>
zest and spark to light up the whole stage.<lb/>
Another star of Shenandoah is the sets. With just a<lb/>
few finely-detailed painted peices, accompanied by well-<lb/>
timed, realistically-sounding effects and creative<lb/>
lighting, enough atmosphere is created so that the au-<lb/>
dience can easily imagine the rest. Gregory Buch's set<lb/>
designs and David Downing's lighting, in union with<lb/>
Mavis Ray's choreography and musical staging, Joe<lb/>
Distefano's leading of the orchestra, and Edgar R.<lb/>
Loessin's direction and the rest of the crew and cast<lb/>
combine to make Shenandoah another triumph for the<lb/>
East Carolina Summer Theatre. Shenandoah will be<lb/>
presented each night this week, with curtain time at 8:15<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The next production to pack people into McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre will be Cabaret, opening next Monday night<lb/>
and running throught Saturday. She Loves Me will be<lb/>
the final show of the summer season, running from July<lb/>
26-31. Tickets may be purchased at the McGinnis Box<lb/>
Office or reserved by calling 757-6390.<lb/>
-?:?. . ? ???? ?? -? ar s . ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057487_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
JULY 14, 1982<lb/>
'TRON' Tech's Best<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
Dillinger is a villianous warrior named SARK,<lb/>
while the MC is a god-like force with a James<lb/>
Earl Jonesian voice.<lb/>
TRON, SARK and their fellow programs, are<lb/>
portrayed by the same actors who play their<lb/>
human counterparts. They are the only "real"<lb/>
elements in the computer universe ? everything<lb/>
else is "played" by computer images, animation<lb/>
and optical effects. While computer-generated<lb/>
art is becoming increasingly commonplace today,<lb/>
its extensive use and unique beauty and<lb/>
dynamism in this film makes TRO a landmark.<lb/>
POSITIONS<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
SALES<lb/>
PEOPLE<lb/>
Apply In Person at I<lb/>
(The East Carolinian"<lb/>
Tues July 20 i<lb/>
From 2 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
TROK's faults are found mostly in the "real"<lb/>
world. The overall dramatic structure is weak<lb/>
and predictable, the characterizations are<lb/>
shallow and one-dimensional, the "reality"<lb/>
scenes are unimaginatively directed. Once the ac-<lb/>
tion enters the electronic wonderland, however,<lb/>
the viewer is awed by a spectacular show of light,<lb/>
color and motion.<lb/>
Another possible flaw of TRO is that all the<lb/>
high-tech jargon will fly right over the heads of<lb/>
most "byte brains" such as this reviewer. This<lb/>
does not mean that to most people TRON will<lb/>
not be enjoyable, it's just that if one wants to<lb/>
understand it, they sould take along a computer<lb/>
programmer to the theatre with them.<lb/>
Lewis Still In Race<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
from a 61-day stay under intensive care at<lb/>
Methodist Hospital South in Memphis weighing<lb/>
128 pounds.<lb/>
After Lewis' second stomach operation last<lb/>
summer, the unstoppable entertainer battled to<lb/>
stay alive with poorer than a 50-50 chance of sur-<lb/>
vival, doctors said at the time.<lb/>
Lewis has since worked his way back up to 162<lb/>
pounds and adheres to doctors' orders to watch<lb/>
his lifestyle and abstain from the superhuman<lb/>
schedule of two shows a night, six or seven times<lb/>
a week, which he followed before his collapse.<lb/>
"He basically leads a quiet life now said<lb/>
Whitten. "He socializes occasionally, but not<lb/>
like he used to<lb/>
That's a longshot from the old Jerry Lee.<lb/>
"I'm the lonliest man in the business that's<lb/>
made $15 million and spent $17 million, but the<lb/>
thing about it, I've had a hell of a good time<lb/>
Lewis once said.<lb/>
Every Thursday<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
SUMMER THEATRE<lb/>
the best in<lb/>
ROCK'N'ROLL<lb/>
7oz. pony bottles on<lb/>
Special All Summer<lb/>
Bring Your Quarters<lb/>
Door Open Al 9pm<lb/>
July 12 17<lb/>
Singularly beautiful'<lb/>
NY Times<lb/>
jjjBM&amp;ay<lb/>
I'Absolutely magnificent'<lb/>
Boston Globe<lb/>
V.O'i<lb/>
<lb/>
First rate"<lb/>
NBC<lb/>
'Clean as a whistle,<lb/>
youthfully vibrant'<lb/>
Christian Science<lb/>
Monitor<lb/>
ECU Students $5.00<lb/>
J.A. UNIFORMS<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
All types of uniforms at reasonable<lb/>
prices. Lab coats, stethoscopes,<lb/>
shoes, and hose. Also ? used ECU<lb/>
nurses uniforms. Trade ins allowed.<lb/>
Located 1710 W. 6th St.<lb/>
off Memorial Drive.<lb/>
Near Hollowell's Drug and old hospital.<lb/>
??<lb/>
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!??Wl??,Sw5fJfe,JMJ,5R??S?!8!??S!??!??!?r??R??!t?Sl:??!8!??!5!??T8:??!5!??!S!????<lb/>
<lb/>
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Ramada Inn<lb/>
Featuring This Week:<lb/>
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i All You Can Eat &amp; Drink Specials<lb/>
<lb/>
t. Wed &amp; Fri nights-Shrimp &amp; ChabIis-$7.95<lb/>
? Thurs night-Ribs &amp; Rose $6.95<lb/>
5j Sat night-Prime Rib &amp; Burgandy-$9.95<lb/>
?ann<lb/>
Roth located on 264 Bypass at Ramada Inn<lb/>
TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE AT<lb/>
McGinnisTheatre-ECU Campus<lb/>
Call 757-6391<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised Items is re-<lb/>
quired to be readily available (or<lb/>
sale in each Kroger Savon, except<lb/>
as specifically noted in this ad If we<lb/>
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Copyright 1982<lb/>
Kroger Savon<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold To Dealers<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd -Greenville<lb/>
Open 8 a.m. to Midnight<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057487_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JULY 14, 1982<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
One Was Magic Number<lb/>
?? ? ? ,  ? -f<lb/>
Pirates Reach Tourney<lb/>
v?w<lb/>
' ? -<lb/>
. &amp;t$a&amp;i<lb/>
tft<lb/>
<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Sf?fU Utlor<lb/>
One was the magic number for<lb/>
the East Carolina Pirates Monday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
That's how many wins the Bucs<lb/>
needed to edge out UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill and earn a berth in the North<lb/>
State Summer League Baseball<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
And ECU got it, shutting out the<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington Seahawks, 10-0,<lb/>
in the second game of a<lb/>
doubleheader.<lb/>
The Pirates may have gotten a lit-<lb/>
tle worried after losing the first<lb/>
game, 5-4.<lb/>
But ECU pitcher Chubbie Butler<lb/>
tossed a three-hitter in the second to<lb/>
assure ECU of a win over the<lb/>
Seahawks.<lb/>
The nightcap win gave ECU an<lb/>
11-20 record, while UNC-W is now<lb/>
14-16.<lb/>
Butler struck out five and walked<lb/>
one, pitching his first shutout ever<lb/>
at Harrington field.<lb/>
In the second contest, ECU<lb/>
scored their first run in the second<lb/>
inning when Todd Evans hit a cou-<lb/>
bk and was brought in by a single<lb/>
from Mike Williams.<lb/>
The next inning belonged to the<lb/>
Pirates all the way. Williams hit a<lb/>
three-run homer to boost ECU's<lb/>
lead to 6-0.<lb/>
Ricky Nichols led off the hitting<lb/>
streak with a single, then stole se-<lb/>
cond and scored on a triple by Kelly<lb/>
Robinette. Robinette came in after<lb/>
John Hallow singled, making it 3-0.<lb/>
Williams was up next, hitting a<lb/>
homer over the 350-yard fence, his<lb/>
second of the year.<lb/>
The Pirates scored four more runs<lb/>
in the bottom of the fifth. Robert<lb/>
Langston singled home Jack Curl-<lb/>
ings and Nichols tripled to bring in<lb/>
Mark Shank and Langston. Nichols<lb/>
then scored on an error.<lb/>
Nichols went three-for-three to<lb/>
lead the Pirates and Williams was<lb/>
two-for-four with four RBI's.<lb/>
Williams had three hits and six<lb/>
RBI's in two games.<lb/>
In the first game, ECU retaliated<lb/>
twice to tie the game going into the<lb/>
fifth, but a homer from UNC-W's<lb/>
centerfielder Don Stephenson gain-<lb/>
ed the Seahawks a 5-4 lead.<lb/>
ECU had the chance to score in<lb/>
the sixth when Evans walked and<lb/>
Curlings hit a single, but Williams<lb/>
flew out and Art Barnhardt ground-<lb/>
ed into a forceplay to end the inn-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The Pirates passed up another<lb/>
chance for a win in the third when<lb/>
the Pirates made two consecutive er-<lb/>
rors just before a homer from<lb/>
Seahawk John Slaughter.<lb/>
The Pirates led in the first inning,<lb/>
1-0, after Hallow's homer but UNC-<lb/>
W came back ?vith three runs.<lb/>
ECU pitcher Charlie Smith, who<lb/>
pitched a five-hitter, struck out two<lb/>
batters in the third before Stephen-<lb/>
son reached on an error by Evans.<lb/>
Slaughter then hit a homer to give<lb/>
the Seahawks a 3-1 lead.<lb/>
ECU scored in the bottom of the<lb/>
third when Nichols walked, stole se-<lb/>
cond and scored on a single by<lb/>
Robinette.<lb/>
The Seahawks scored in the<lb/>
fourth, however, when Brad<lb/>
Walters doubled to score Robert<lb/>
Hudson.<lb/>
The Pirates tied the game again in<lb/>
the bottom of the inning after<lb/>
Williams hit a two run single.<lb/>
Hallow singled and Evans walk-<lb/>
ed, then both moved up a base on<lb/>
Curlings' sacrifice. Both runners<lb/>
came in when Williams hit a single<lb/>
to center field.<lb/>
"We really felt like we should<lb/>
have won the first ballgame Over-<lb/>
ton said. "We played hard enough<lb/>
but not well enough<lb/>
&amp;F7'r:<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
:0it'&amp; ? ?<lb/>
'<lb/>
,&amp;&amp;? ?- ? ? " ? ?<lb/>
- ?? ? ? ir <lb/>
,<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? '?Otf?<lb/>
?-<lb/>
???<lb/>
mJi<lb/>
Pirate Baseball Action Against The Tar Heels<lb/>
'4<lb/>
Phofo bv SCOTT LARSON<lb/>
Bucs Split Doubleheader<lb/>
With Cellar-Bound Tar Heels<lb/>
By KENNETH BOLTON<lb/>
East Carolina and UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill swapped fine pitching perfor-<lb/>
mances on July 6 to split a<lb/>
doubleheader at Harrington field.<lb/>
ECU downed the Tar Heels, 8-0<lb/>
in the first game before being edged<lb/>
out by Chapel Hill, 5-2 in the second<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
In the first game, ECU's Bob<lb/>
Davidson won his fifth game of the<lb/>
year, blanking out the Tar Heels.<lb/>
Davidson's teammates gained a 4-0<lb/>
lead, however, before he ever threw<lb/>
his first pitch.<lb/>
John Hallow opened the game<lb/>
with an infield hit and then proceed-<lb/>
ed to steal second. After Kelly<lb/>
Robinette walked, David Wells beat<lb/>
out a bunt down the third baseline<lb/>
to fill the bases.<lb/>
Todd Evans greeted Carolina<lb/>
starter John Wilde with a single<lb/>
through the middle, scoring both<lb/>
Hallow and Robinette.<lb/>
Two outs later, a wild pitch and<lb/>
an infield single by Robert Wells<lb/>
produced two more runs and chases<lb/>
Wilde.<lb/>
While Davidson was handcuffing<lb/>
the Heels with five strikeouts and<lb/>
allowing only six hits, the Pirates<lb/>
scored four more runs in the sixth.<lb/>
David Wells hit a triple and Todd<lb/>
Evans's two-run homer highlighted<lb/>
the inning.<lb/>
In the second game, Carolina's<lb/>
Greg karpuck kept the Pirate's bats<lb/>
quiet. He limned ECU to only five<lb/>
hits while striking out eight and<lb/>
walking three. Evans, with a single<lb/>
and a double, was the only person<lb/>
able to hit Karpuck effectively.<lb/>
And as if the loss wasn't bad<lb/>
enough. David Wells injured his<lb/>
hand while trying to make a diving<lb/>
cat-h in left field, making his ability<lb/>
to perform for the remainder of the<lb/>
season uncertain.<lb/>
Chips, Tigers Top Opponents<lb/>
Tough '82 Schedule<lb/>
Cathv Andruzi<lb/>
Andruzzi Stresses Hard Work<lb/>
By Kenneth Bolton<lb/>
utt4ani Sports Milor<lb/>
The Cathy Andruzzi Basketball<lb/>
Camp is no picnic.<lb/>
With over one-hundred and fifty<lb/>
kids attending both sessions, hard<lb/>
work and basketball fundamentals<lb/>
are stressed rigidly. Basketball<lb/>
players pour in from all over the<lb/>
country, and the camp is soon<lb/>
becoming one of the most successful<lb/>
programs in this region.<lb/>
One reason for the success is the<lb/>
staff, which features a group of the<lb/>
finest college and professional<lb/>
basketball players in the United<lb/>
States. Among the staff members<lb/>
this year are assistant coach Beth<lb/>
Burns and all twelve members of the<lb/>
Lady Pirate basketball team.<lb/>
According to Andruzzi, the staff<lb/>
as well as the campers benefit from<lb/>
the sessions. 44It gives the staff a<lb/>
chance to learn. It is a great<lb/>
teaching opportunity because it<lb/>
gives them a chance to guide people<lb/>
as well as increase their organizaa-<lb/>
tional skills<lb/>
With a ratio of one staff member<lb/>
to every five campers, the instruc-<lb/>
tors are able to give more individual<lb/>
attention. "We want to have a lot<lb/>
of personal contact with the<lb/>
campers Andruzzi said, "We<lb/>
have a major impact on their lives<lb/>
because through athletics they build<lb/>
self-confidence as well as a sense of<lb/>
achievement<lb/>
The camp consists of two ses-<lb/>
sions. One was held last week, July<lb/>
5-10, and the second one is being<lb/>
held this week, July 11-16 .<lb/>
The participants have to follow a<lb/>
strict schedule every day, beginning<lb/>
with wake-up calls at 7 a.m. Each<lb/>
daily session lasts from 9 a.m. until<lb/>
10 p.m. and includes teaching<lb/>
basketball fundamentals, individual<lb/>
help from all of the coaches, a lec-<lb/>
ture by coach Andruzzi and league<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Andruzzi said, "We try to teach<lb/>
the kids to work hard and develop a<lb/>
good attitude<lb/>
Among the members of this<lb/>
year's camp were seven high school<lb/>
seniors that Andruzzi is interested in<lb/>
as future Lady Pirates, including<lb/>
three top players from Virginia.<lb/>
With another summer of the<lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi Camp coming to an<lb/>
end, the staff is already looking for-<lb/>
ward to next year.<lb/>
"I love working with and meeting<lb/>
the kids Andruzzi said. "Our<lb/>
camp is an extension of our basket-<lb/>
ball program?it is just as intense as<lb/>
our program. The kids really get<lb/>
fired up and leave with a good feeli-<lb/>
ing about ECU basketball<lb/>
The East Carolina football team<lb/>
has probably never had a schedule<lb/>
with as many tough competitors on<lb/>
the agenda as this year. And Cen-<lb/>
tral Michigan and Missouri are two<lb/>
such teams the Pirates will be facing<lb/>
this coming fall.<lb/>
The East Carolina football team<lb/>
will play Central Michigan on<lb/>
September 25 and then travel to<lb/>
Missouri on October 2 for another<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
Both schools have about the same<lb/>
enrollment of students?16000.<lb/>
And both schools have very im-<lb/>
pressive records, along with ac-<lb/>
complished athletes.<lb/>
Central Michigan University, led<lb/>
by coach Herb Deromedi, had a 7-4<lb/>
record last year and placed third in<lb/>
the mid-American conference.<lb/>
Deromedi has accumulated a<lb/>
35-8-1 record during his four-year<lb/>
stay at CMU and led the Chippewas<lb/>
to their first two mid-American<lb/>
titles. He has led them to 14 con-<lb/>
secutive victories, a 10-0-1<lb/>
undefeated season and a school<lb/>
record of 23 consecutive wins by<lb/>
mid-season of 1980.<lb/>
52 percent of his 162 passes for 105<lb/>
yards per game and five<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
Brian Ballops. the starting wide-<lb/>
side halfback had 13 pass deflec-<lb/>
tions and two interceptions during<lb/>
his sophomore year. A player who<lb/>
possesses excellent speed, added<lb/>
three more deflections and a fumble<lb/>
recovery to his junior year totals.<lb/>
Cheerleaders Attend East<lb/>
Carolina Training Camp<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
In case you're walking by<lb/>
Memorial Gym, don't be alarmed if<lb/>
you hear the rustle of pom-poms<lb/>
and harmonious voices yelling<lb/>
sideline chants.<lb/>
East Carolina is hosting a tour-<lb/>
day cheerleading camp for over 140<lb/>
girls this week. The campers range<lb/>
from eighth to twelth graders.<lb/>
Mrs. Gay Blocker, ECU coor-<lb/>
dinator for the camp, said eight<lb/>
staff members are assisting the<lb/>
twenty squads and a few indepen-<lb/>
dent campers.<lb/>
Brenda Moore, who is from<lb/>
Memphis State, serves as chairper-<lb/>
son for the camp. Moore is accom-<lb/>
panied by college cheerleaders from<lb/>
all over the United States, including<lb/>
Ohio, Florida, Memphis and East<lb/>
Tennessee State.<lb/>
The staff will hold private<lb/>
coaching sessions to help each squad<lb/>
with particular difficulties and<lb/>
special seminars to train the<lb/>
cheerleaders in building pyramids,<lb/>
tumbling, crowd control, giving pep<lb/>
rallies and effective money-raising<lb/>
projects.<lb/>
Most of the cheerleading squads<lb/>
are from Eastern North Carolina,<lb/>
with the exception of one team from<lb/>
Hartsfield, S.C. Three schools<lb/>
from the Greenville area are atten-<lb/>
ding the camp. They are: D. H.<lb/>
Conley High School, Farmville Cen-<lb/>
tral High and E. B. Aycock Junior<lb/>
High School.<lb/>
According to Blocker, awards are<lb/>
given at the end of the camp for the<lb/>
most improved, best cheering squad<lb/>
and best pom-pom routine. She ad-<lb/>
ded that each squad will be<lb/>
evaluated and presented with a rib-<lb/>
bon.<lb/>
The camp is in session each day<lb/>
from 8 a.m. until 8:30 p.m with<lb/>
"pass out" breaks, Mrs. Blocker<lb/>
said.<lb/>
No experience is required to at-<lb/>
tend the camp, Mrs Blocker said,<lb/>
"only a willingness to learn<lb/>
The cheerleading camp consists<lb/>
only of girls but boys were not<lb/>
restricted from attending the camp.<lb/>
"We just didn't happen to have<lb/>
any boys Blocker said, "but there<lb/>
are boys at the other camps<lb/>
East Carolina has a contract with<lb/>
the Universal Cheerleading Associa-<lb/>
tion to arrange for the camp's<lb/>
facilities. The association, in turn,<lb/>
hires the staff members for the four-<lb/>
day session.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Cindy<lb/>
Pleasants<lb/>
A Look Inside<lb/>
Missouri Star Randy Jostes<lb/>
In 1981, the Chippewas averaged<lb/>
365.7 yards and 20.3 points per<lb/>
game. Their 5?2 defense was na-<lb/>
tionally ranked last year, and<lb/>
although CMU lost five starters, 17<lb/>
lettermen will be returning on the<lb/>
defensive end of the squad.<lb/>
The Chippewas have some quality<lb/>
players and certainly a few to watch<lb/>
out for.<lb/>
Ray Bentley, the 6-2, 220-pound<lb/>
linebacker, has averaged 130 total<lb/>
tackles during the past two years<lb/>
and has a chance to become the first<lb/>
Chippewa ever to record 400 career<lb/>
tackles. His 13.3 t.p.g. last fall,<lb/>
made Bentley the second leading<lb/>
tackier in the mid-American con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
For his career, he has 19 tackles for<lb/>
lost yardage, ten pass deflections<lb/>
and one interception.<lb/>
Junior quarterback Bob DeMarco<lb/>
finished as the top-rated young<lb/>
passer in the mid-American con-<lb/>
ference. His 110.4 passing efficien-<lb/>
cy ranked him fourth behind two<lb/>
juniors and a senior. He completed<lb/>
CMU Head Coach<lb/>
Herb Deromedi<lb/>
Coach Deromedi is counting on<lb/>
his returning lettermen to lead the<lb/>
Chippewas this year, especially after<lb/>
losing eight starters who received<lb/>
all-conference recognition. "Once<lb/>
again we'll be looking for our retur-<lb/>
ning sohpomores and juniors to<lb/>
take up the slack, particularly along<lb/>
the offensive line and at tailback<lb/>
and wide receiver he said.<lb/>
Deromedi said their offensive<lb/>
play will be one of his main con-<lb/>
cerns. "We led the league in total<lb/>
offense last year he said, "but we<lb/>
had trouble putting the ball in the<lb/>
end zone and that's one of the<lb/>
things we'll have to work on<lb/>
The Chippewas' nationally-<lb/>
ranked defense will also have some<lb/>
quality people this year, even<lb/>
though five starters and one punter<lb/>
was lost, according to Deromedi.<lb/>
"It will be a plus, also, having<lb/>
five conference home games and six<lb/>
home games in all he said.<lb/>
The Pirates, on the other hand,<lb/>
only have four games scheduled at<lb/>
home, which may prove to take a<lb/>
toll on the Bucs.<lb/>
Missouri. The 8-4 squad that won<lb/>
its third bowl game in four trips<lb/>
under head coach Warren Powers<lb/>
has 48 lettermen returning.<lb/>
The Tigers made their fourth<lb/>
straight bowl trip in December,<lb/>
beating the University of Mississip-<lb/>
pi, 19-17, in the Tangerine Bowl.<lb/>
Powers has an overall coaching<lb/>
record of 38 wins and 21 losses. He<lb/>
is 31-17 at Missouri.<lb/>
Powers said this year's team will<lb/>
be more experienced offensively and<lb/>
the quarterback position is more<lb/>
solid than a year ago. Defense,<lb/>
however, is another matter, accor-<lb/>
ding to Powers.<lb/>
Gone are two linebackers, two<lb/>
tackles and two noseguards. That .<lb/>
group included the team's four<lb/>
leading tacklers, and Powers said,<lb/>
"we lost people who gave us the big<lb/>
plays<lb/>
But Powers is depending on some<lb/>
of his ace players to come through<lb/>
this fall. One such player, for exam-<lb/>
ple, is Randy Jostes. The senior<lb/>
defensive tackle had 57 tackles, in-<lb/>
cluding seven for 32 yards in losses, I<lb/>
blocked a conversion and recovered I<lb/>
two fumbles.<lb/>
Cornerback Demetrious Johnson<lb/>
will be relied on for his explosive<lb/>
hitting ability. The senior had 60<lb/>
tackles, including four for 20 yards<lb/>
on losses, two interceptions and<lb/>
broke up seven others, and<lb/>
recovered two fumbles.<lb/>
Without a doubt, both teams are<lb/>
strong?very strong. Each possess<lb/>
solid programs and will definitely<lb/>
pose as two of the toughest con-<lb/>
tenders the Pirates will be up<lb/>
against this fall. <lb/>
;<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057487_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE HAST CAROLINIAN JULY 14, 1982<lb/>
Pftoto Bv SCOTT LAMO<lb/>
Victorious Wolf pack<lb/>
Wolfpack Blank<lb/>
Struggling Bucs<lb/>
B KENNETH<lb/>
BOLTON<lb/>
ss.iinn( Sports hdtftir<lb/>
N.C. Slate, led by<lb/>
Hugh Brinson's tour-<lb/>
hit shutout, blanked<lb/>
the Pirates, 3-0,<lb/>
Wednesday night.<lb/>
Brinson's t e n -<lb/>
strikeout, three-walk<lb/>
performance was so<lb/>
strong, that ECU did<lb/>
not get a runner past se-<lb/>
cond base all night.<lb/>
According to Pirate<lb/>
coach Gary Overton,<lb/>
Brinson ui the dif-<lb/>
ference in the game.<lb/>
"We played a good, er-<lb/>
rorless ballgame he<lb/>
said. "We executed<lb/>
out gameplan just as<lb/>
we wanted to against<lb/>
State but we just<lb/>
weren't able to hit Brin-<lb/>
son<lb/>
The Wolfpack sup-<lb/>
posed Brinson with<lb/>
runs in the first, filth<lb/>
and seventh mings. In<lb/>
the first, Artie Hall<lb/>
opened the game with a<lb/>
single through the mid-<lb/>
dle After Chris Baird<lb/>
walked. Tracy Black<lb/>
singled hall home, with<lb/>
proed to be the<lb/>
il ran state would<lb/>
need.<lb/>
Doug Davis led off<lb/>
fifth inning with a<lb/>
mble to right and<lb/>
after one out. Davis ad-<lb/>
van ed to third on an<lb/>
infield squibbler by<lb/>
Hall. With runners on<lb/>
first and third, Chris<lb/>
Baird hit a sacrifice fly<lb/>
to left field to score<lb/>
Davis.<lb/>
State added its final<lb/>
run in the seventh with<lb/>
a double down the left<lb/>
field line on a 3-2 count<lb/>
bv Davis, followed by a<lb/>
triple by Hall. Hall<lb/>
went three-for-four to<lb/>
lead the Wolfpack.<lb/>
ECU's biggest threat<lb/>
came in the third inning<lb/>
when Robert Langston<lb/>
got his first of two<lb/>
singles of the night.<lb/>
With two outs, Kelly<lb/>
Robinette coaxed a<lb/>
walk on a full count but<lb/>
Brinson got Hallow to<lb/>
pop up to the catcher,<lb/>
stranding two runners.<lb/>
The outstanding per-<lb/>
formance by Brinson<lb/>
overshadowed an im-<lb/>
pressive outing by ECU<lb/>
pitcher Charlie Smith.<lb/>
"The two pitchers<lb/>
were the key to the<lb/>
gameOverton said.<lb/>
"Both teams hit the<lb/>
ball well but it was just<lb/>
a matter of both pit-<lb/>
chers doing a good<lb/>
job<lb/>
????<lb/>
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49 Ounce<lb/>
Cold Power<lb/>
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Cheese Food<lb/>
489<lb/>
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Why Pay '1.29<lb/>
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32 Ounce<lb/>
Del Monte<lb/>
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Priest 900. et 0r?ill Food To Store ly thru Soturaoy, July 17,1982<lb/>
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