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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057529_0001"/>
Stye SaHt (Earnlmian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Thursday, January 27, 1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Job Prospects Look Good For Business Grads<lb/>
By MILLIE WHITE<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
According to business professors<lb/>
at the School of Business,<lb/>
graduating business majors should<lb/>
not have too much trouble finding<lb/>
jobs in May.<lb/>
Although jobs are available,<lb/>
students must be willing to go to the<lb/>
jobs because the jobs will not come<lb/>
to them. Dr. Edward Wheatley,<lb/>
chairman of the marketing depart-<lb/>
ment, states, "Graduates are going<lb/>
to have to be willing to relocate and<lb/>
be flexible in their feelings about<lb/>
mobility<lb/>
The strategy should get a job<lb/>
offer, get in and perform, Wheatley<lb/>
says. "The performer and learner<lb/>
will later have the opportunity to<lb/>
have a greater impact on where he<lb/>
will be located<lb/>
Professors at the School of<lb/>
Business say that grades also play a<lb/>
major role in getting jobs. Good<lb/>
grades, according to the professors,<lb/>
are not necessarily 4.0s.<lb/>
A student who is actively involved<lb/>
on campus or a student that works<lb/>
and manages to maintain a GPA of<lb/>
3.0 is considered by many employers<lb/>
well-rounded and adaptable. Dr.<lb/>
Carl Gooding, chairman of the<lb/>
management department, says,<lb/>
"There are organizations who<lb/>
would rather hire a student who has<lb/>
a 3.0 than a student with a 4.0<lb/>
According to Wheatley, more<lb/>
students from the arts and sciences<lb/>
are taking business courses. This in-<lb/>
crease of students means a larger ap<lb/>
SGA Vacanies<lb/>
plicant pool, thereby, causing com<lb/>
panies looking for employees to dif-<lb/>
ferentiate through grades.<lb/>
Dr. Louis Zincone, chairman of<lb/>
the decision science department,<lb/>
states, "Grades are important, ex-<lb/>
tremely important. People don't get<lb/>
passed the front door because their<lb/>
grades aren't good enough<lb/>
Grades, says Zincone, represent the<lb/>
ability and desire to learn.<lb/>
The ability to learn is important<lb/>
because, as Zincone says, "New<lb/>
skills taught today will be obsolete<lb/>
in ten years Students with good<lb/>
grades have proven that they are<lb/>
quick and able learners and this apt-<lb/>
ness is an immense help when look-<lb/>
ing for employment.<lb/>
Also stressed by the professors is<lb/>
communication. Dr. Bruce War-<lb/>
drep, chairman of the Finance<lb/>
department, believes that students<lb/>
who have decent grades, present<lb/>
themselves nicely and possess good<lb/>
communication skills, both verbal<lb/>
and written, have an advantage over<lb/>
other students.<lb/>
Although business students in<lb/>
every concentration are needed in<lb/>
the working world, Dr. Dan Hines,<lb/>
chairman of the accounting depart-<lb/>
ment, says that accountants will<lb/>
have a relatively easier time finding<lb/>
jobs because "accounting is the<lb/>
language of business<lb/>
According to Hines, 70 percent of<lb/>
ECU's accounting majors find<lb/>
employment as accountants, and the<lb/>
other 30 percent find jobs in<lb/>
management.<lb/>
Students waited in line yesterday at the Career Pianni �- m  "  � c�-<lb/>
Ceer i. Blox,�� �oJ,o sisup ��&amp;��&amp;���� �  J- ��-I �� �. jobs outside N�n� CZTn<lb/>
professor, fores! good employmem opportune for bsine� Z� J  "  ds " <lb/>
PlWro By CINDY WALL<lb/>
ere were<lb/>
City Police Begin New Towing Practices<lb/>
Legislature Unfilled<lb/>
By DARKY I BROWN<lb/>
A series of resignations and<lb/>
dismissals has left 17 vacant seats in<lb/>
the SGA Legislature which this<lb/>
week the student governing body is<lb/>
trying to fill. The Screenings and<lb/>
Appointments Committee, which<lb/>
selects the new legislators, is accep-<lb/>
ting applications and will be inter-<lb/>
viewing students for the vacancies<lb/>
tonight.<lb/>
Gina Lynch, chairperson of the<lb/>
Screenings and Appointments Com-<lb/>
mittee, hopes to have all the seats<lb/>
filled within two weeks, though<lb/>
there is no deadline and the process<lb/>
will go on as long as necessary. The<lb/>
ccmmittee of ten legislators screens<lb/>
and appoints all candidates for the<lb/>
empty seats, since according to the<lb/>
SGA Constitution they do not have<lb/>
to be voted in by the student body or<lb/>
the Legislature.<lb/>
The legislative committee can ap-<lb/>
point students without public elec-<lb/>
tions because "The Legislature is<lb/>
empowered to enact laws as are<lb/>
deemed necessary to fill Legislature<lb/>
vacancies according to the Con-<lb/>
stitution.<lb/>
Positions for both day and dorm<lb/>
representatives are currently open in<lb/>
the SGA. Schedule conflicts or<lb/>
disinterest haved caused students to<lb/>
resign the posts for which they were<lb/>
elected in September. Also, if a stu-<lb/>
dent moves out of the dorm in<lb/>
which he or she was elected, they<lb/>
may no longer serve as the represen-<lb/>
tative from that area. Students may<lb/>
be dismissed from the Legislature<lb/>
for poor attendance to mandatory<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
According to Lynch, the the com-<lb/>
mittee has had a good response of<lb/>
interested students who want to fill<lb/>
the vacant seats. She said many<lb/>
students who were not elected in<lb/>
September are reapplying for the<lb/>
Legislature now, as are some<lb/>
students who were elected as dorm<lb/>
representatives but have since mov-<lb/>
ed off campus. Those students must<lb/>
reapply because the number of<lb/>
dorm and day representatives must<lb/>
remain the same.<lb/>
Students must meet the re-<lb/>
quirements set forth in the SGA<lb/>
Constitutuion which include enroll-<lb/>
ment as a full-time student with a<lb/>
2.0 grade point average.<lb/>
Applications should be picked up<lb/>
at the SGA offices in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Students appointed<lb/>
to the Legislature will begin serving<lb/>
as regular members immediately.<lb/>
Greenville Chief of Police Glenn<lb/>
Cannon has announced that his<lb/>
department, beginning Sunday mor-<lb/>
ning Jan. 30, will begin a policy of<lb/>
towing all cars parked on Elm Street<lb/>
in the vacinity of J.H. Rose High<lb/>
School between 10th and 14th<lb/>
streets.<lb/>
According to Cannon, there are<lb/>
now signs posted in designated areas<lb/>
informing motorists that no parking<lb/>
will be permitted between 1 a.m.<lb/>
and 6 a.m. on Elm Street. Other<lb/>
signs have been erected also warning<lb/>
motorists that towing will be enforc-<lb/>
ed for illegally parked vehicles.<lb/>
This new policy will especially ef-<lb/>
fect students living in the college hill<lb/>
area. Cannon claims that the ma-<lb/>
jority of vehicles parked in the area<lb/>
belong to ECU students.<lb/>
"I just didn't want to start towing<lb/>
cars without first warning the<lb/>
students Cannon told The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
The new parking restrictions have<lb/>
come about as a result of a com-<lb/>
plaint filed by the administrator of<lb/>
Rose High School to the Greenville<lb/>
City Council. The complaint, which<lb/>
was handled by the city's special<lb/>
traffic commission, was made by<lb/>
Rose High officials who claimed<lb/>
that students and teachers from the<lb/>
school have been unable to find con-<lb/>
venient parking spaces in the vacini-<lb/>
ty of the school.<lb/>
"Elm Street is a public parking<lb/>
place said Rose High principal<lb/>
David Bumsardncr. "ECU students<lb/>
are using it 24 hours-a-day<lb/>
Cannon agreed with Bumgardner<lb/>
saying that many ECU students<lb/>
leave their cars parked on Elm<lb/>
Street for several days without mov-<lb/>
ing them. "Some students park their<lb/>
cars on Sunday night ana never<lb/>
drive them again until Friday after-<lb/>
noon Cannon said.<lb/>
Bumgardner claims that parents,<lb/>
students and teachers have been<lb/>
complaining for quite some time<lb/>
about the parking problem and that<lb/>
he didn't want to hurt anyone's feel-<lb/>
ings, but he felt the new restrictions<lb/>
were necessary in the interest of<lb/>
fairness. "We have a serious park-<lb/>
ing problem too Bumgardner<lb/>
said. He added that parents wanted<lb/>
to see the Elm Street parking<lb/>
available to everyone.<lb/>
"They (ECU students) leave their<lb/>
cars there all week Bumfwdnn<lb/>
said.<lb/>
During this week only. Cannon<lb/>
has instructed his department to put<lb/>
tickets on cars that are parked in<lb/>
violation of the new regulation, but<lb/>
that this warning policy wouid out)<lb/>
be in effect this week.<lb/>
Cannon also admitted that before<lb/>
the new signs were erected, the park-<lb/>
ing policy was "a little contusing"<lb/>
in the area ot Rose High He a:d<lb/>
that there already uere parking<lb/>
restrictions in the area, but the<lb/>
were rarely enforced. "But with the<lb/>
new signs, there's no question about<lb/>
it<lb/>
Anyone who does have their car<lb/>
towed will have to pay a S30 fee to<lb/>
get it back. This tee includes a S25<lb/>
towing fee to the towme company<lb/>
and an additional S5 in fines to the<lb/>
city.<lb/>
Bumgardner thanked the traffic<lb/>
commission and Greenville City<lb/>
Manager Gail Mechs for doing a<lb/>
fine job in straightening out the<lb/>
parking problem.<lb/>
Holocaust Class Part Of National Trend<lb/>
By LISA RYAN<lb/>
Staff Wriiei<lb/>
According to a recent survey of<lb/>
the Modern Language Association,<lb/>
most schools have incorporated a<lb/>
course on the Holocaust into their<lb/>
curriculum. ECU has joined this<lb/>
movement with an honors seminar<lb/>
entitled "Literature of the<lb/>
Holocaust<lb/>
Dr. Michael Bassman of the<lb/>
Department of Foreign Languages<lb/>
and Literatures suggested the course<lb/>
and now teaches it. The seminar is<lb/>
based on discussion and is informal-<lb/>
ly conducted. According to Karen<lb/>
Muir, a sophomore enrolled in the<lb/>
course, "We've only had two<lb/>
classes, but I've gotten more out of<lb/>
those two classes than I have in a<lb/>
whole semester of other courses<lb/>
Bassman proposed the course<lb/>
because the Holocaust "is<lb/>
something that has always interested<lb/>
me.<lb/>
"We can think of it as something<lb/>
apart from us Bassman said,<lb/>
"yet, we are involved. It has shaped<lb/>
our mentality Bassman has<lb/>
previously taught honors courses,<lb/>
but with this particular seminar he<lb/>
feels he will more closely share in<lb/>
the learning experience of the class.<lb/>
The students in the seminar read a<lb/>
book each week and then come to<lb/>
class prepared to discuss it. Each<lb/>
person writes a pre-journal on their<lb/>
reactions to the book, as well as a<lb/>
post-journal after the class discus-<lb/>
sion. At the end of the semester, in-<lb/>
dividual creative projects will be<lb/>
presented.<lb/>
A wide variety of literature has<lb/>
been selected. This has helped to<lb/>
dispel the notion that the Jewish<lb/>
people were the only target of the<lb/>
Holocaust. Although the Jews ac-<lb/>
count for 6 million of the genocide<lb/>
victims, 5 million gypsies and<lb/>
homosexuals, among others, were<lb/>
murdered. Like Donna Watson, a<lb/>
sophomore taking the seminar, the<lb/>
class hopes "to gain a more realistic<lb/>
view about the Holocaust<lb/>
The class has essentially created<lb/>
its own course objectives. The<lb/>
students proposed questions which<lb/>
they hope to answer at some point<lb/>
during the semester. For example:<lb/>
To what extent were Americans<lb/>
aware of the Holocaust? How could<lb/>
"religious" people justify their in-<lb/>
action? How effective is interna-<lb/>
tional law?<lb/>
Bassman mentions three ques-<lb/>
tions of a more basic nature.<lb/>
"Could it happen again? How did it<lb/>
happen?" He also hopes to con-<lb/>
front the "whole issue of respon-<lb/>
sibility<lb/>
If one word were to summarize<lb/>
the major goal of this Honors<lb/>
seminar, it might be "awareness<lb/>
Bassman reminded the class at its<lb/>
first meeting of the words of George<lb/>
Samtayana: "Those who ignore the<lb/>
past are condemned to relive it<lb/>
The seminar plans to host several<lb/>
'�itiU<lb/>
' <lb/>
'V<lb/>
Dr. Michael F. Bassman<lb/>
guest speakers, including Holocaust<lb/>
survivors and Professor and Chair-<lb/>
man of the Department of<lb/>
Psychiatry Dr. James Mathis.<lb/>
When asked why she had enrolled<lb/>
in the course. Susan Lynch respond-<lb/>
ed: "It struck me that after taking<lb/>
two years of history, how come<lb/>
something as significant as this was<lb/>
not presented in more detail?<lb/>
r������� in iiiuic uciail<lb/>
Aid Office Attempts To Raise Hopes<lb/>
As Part Of State Awareness Program<lb/>
That's Dedication<lb/>
��� �V CINDY WALL<lb/>
It takes more than n�taito academic excellence to make students study outdoors in the near-freezing<lb/>
temperatures Greenville has experienced lately. Wonder what they are looking at in that book, anyway?<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
AaMaat Newi BBN<lb/>
The ECU Financial Aid Office is<lb/>
conducting workshops and meetings<lb/>
to dispel rumors that aid is not<lb/>
available and to instruct people on<lb/>
the art of obtaining money for<lb/>
education. The effort is part of the<lb/>
statewide financial aid awareness<lb/>
week, which ends Friday, declared<lb/>
by Gov. James B. Hunt Jr.<lb/>
The fianancial aid office, under<lb/>
the direction of Robert Boudreaux,<lb/>
is concerned that pessimistic<lb/>
forecasts and news reports may be<lb/>
causing some students to not apply<lb/>
for financial aid and even not attend<lb/>
college. "There is an indication that<lb/>
some students are giving up<lb/>
Boudreaux said. "We want them to<lb/>
know that financial aid is not drying<lb/>
up<lb/>
Bad financial aid forecasts by ad-<lb/>
ministrators and the media have<lb/>
caused some students and parents to<lb/>
feel financial assistance is no longer<lb/>
available, while in fact some pro-<lb/>
grams haven't been drastically<lb/>
reduced, according to Boudreaux.<lb/>
"There is financial aid available<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
The ECU financial aid staff is<lb/>
conducting workshops and seminars<lb/>
this week at various high schools in<lb/>
the area to alert potential college<lb/>
students of funding assistance<lb/>
possibilities. Boudreaux's staff has<lb/>
visited four high schools this week,<lb/>
and held five meetings at nearby<lb/>
J.H. Rose High School to increase<lb/>
student and parent awareness of all<lb/>
funding alternatives. Similar pro-<lb/>
grams are being conducted<lb/>
throughout the state.<lb/>
Students should apply early for<lb/>
the aid programs, however,<lb/>
Boudreaux said, as the increased<lb/>
validation process of applications<lb/>
can greatly slow up results. He said<lb/>
students could have mailed in some<lb/>
applications for aid in 1983 84 as of<lb/>
Jan. 1, and he said that his office<lb/>
wouldn't be receiving the results<lb/>
from the first applications for two<lb/>
or three weeks.<lb/>
See ASSISTANCE, Page 3<lb/>
I<lb/>
�<lb/>
xi<lb/>
-aat<lb/>
<pb facs="00057529_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 27,1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your oroanuation<lb/>
would like to nave an item printed<lb/>
in the announcement column,<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
lorm and send it to 1 he E ast<lb/>
Carolinian in care of the produc<lb/>
tton manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in tne Publications Building<lb/>
Flyers and handwritten copy on<lb/>
odd wed paper cannot be ac<lb/>
cepted.<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements but space Is often<lb/>
limited Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
men' will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest that you do not rely<lb/>
soleiv on this column tor publicity<lb/>
The deadline tor announcements<lb/>
,s 3 p m Monday tor the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 3 p m Wednesdayy tor<lb/>
tne Thursday paper No an<lb/>
nouncemen's received alter these<lb/>
deadlines will be printed<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organna' 'ins and depart<lb/>
merits<lb/>
PUT A LITTLE HEART<lb/>
IN YOUR SOUL<lb/>
The MwWfll annual walk tor<lb/>
humanity is coming up this spring<lb/>
The walk will take place on April<lb/>
16 beginning at Green Springs<lb/>
Park Anyone interested m help<lb/>
ing come to the Hunger Coalition<lb/>
meetings on Thursday nights at<lb/>
7 00 p m at the Newman Center<lb/>
953 East Tenth S'reet or call<lb/>
751 �16<lb/>
RESIDENCE<lb/>
ADVISOR<lb/>
Applications are now being<lb/>
taken tor Resident Advisor posi<lb/>
tions m the residence halls Any<lb/>
student who has at least a 5 2<lb/>
average, clear iudioal record,<lb/>
enrolled tun time, and has lived in<lb/>
a residence hail is eligible to app<lb/>
ly<lb/>
information and application<lb/>
forms may be obtained trom any<lb/>
Residence Director Area Coor<lb/>
dinator. or the Resdence Lite Ot<lb/>
fice They should be 'urned nto<lb/>
me Residence Lite Oft-ce 21<lb/>
Wh'Charo Building<lb/>
PLEASE DO<lb/>
NOT RELY<lb/>
TOTALLY UPON<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
Due to the increased organution<lb/>
participation m me a"<lb/>
nouncements column o the East<lb/>
Carolinian, we would like to stress<lb/>
agam that we nave limited space<lb/>
and that we are trying to see 'hat<lb/>
we get as many in as we possibly<lb/>
can A g- xl advertising campaign<lb/>
should ivlude. announcements.<lb/>
WZMB. and posting flyers on<lb/>
classroom building wans We ao<lb/>
not nave any sympathy for those<lb/>
groups that rely totally �n an<lb/>
nouncements to get their message<lb/>
to the student body Please use'he<lb/>
announcements lorms 'hat �re<lb/>
provided in our office, and please<lb/>
type II out<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Campus Crusade tor Chris<lb/>
presents Prime Time " A weekli<lb/>
time of tun fellowship, trammt<lb/>
and teaching M how to live a v,c<lb/>
torious Christian nte Thursday 7 �<lb/>
in Biology building room 103<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
SGA currently has position<lb/>
open tor live Day Representative-<lb/>
and Dorm Openings tor Scott i2<lb/>
Fletcher II). White (U. Garret<lb/>
111. Jones (1). Greene (1). Cle<lb/>
ment ill. and Tyler (1) l� in<lb/>
terested in applying tor any ot th.<lb/>
positions, applications can be ob<lb/>
tained m the SGA office on the se<lb/>
cond floor of Wenoenhall For adi<lb/>
tionai information contact Gini<lb/>
Lynch 752 9058 Screening wil<lb/>
begin January 26 1983 at 6 00 pn<lb/>
m room 27 Mendenhall<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
SCUBA<lb/>
Anyone interested m starting a<lb/>
Scuba Club' Please attend<lb/>
mee'inqs on January 31 and<lb/>
Fesruary 7 at 5 00 m Room 105 B<lb/>
Memorial Gym<lb/>
SKY DIVING<lb/>
EXHIBITION<lb/>
Enpert skydivers will speak or<lb/>
Skydiving The Ultimate Sport<lb/>
sta'e of the ar equ.ptment win be<lb/>
on exhibi' and demonstrated<lb/>
Topics win include, bu' are no'<lb/>
limited to first lump instruction<lb/>
parachute packing ntermediate<lb/>
sky diving, advanced sky Diving<lb/>
techniques, tree tall aircraft.<lb/>
parachuting acoden's sky divmg<lb/>
facts and myths All questions per<lb/>
ta-ning to the sport will be<lb/>
answered Recent skydiving<lb/>
movies will be shown Excellent<lb/>
opportunity to mee' some ot the<lb/>
Greenville sky divers a no or 'ake<lb/>
Sky diving instruction Thurs Feb<lb/>
2 Lobby of umsteao dorm Free<lb/>
to anyone I<lb/>
COUNSELING<lb/>
The Strong Campbell interest<lb/>
Inventorv is ottered every Tues<lb/>
dav at 4 PM. when school is m<lb/>
session with tne exceptions of ex<lb/>
animation periods and registra<lb/>
tion day This is available to all<lb/>
students at no cost No formal<lb/>
registration is required<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service m the Bloxton House<lb/>
iS offering these one hour sessions<lb/>
to aid you m developing better m<lb/>
terv.ewmg sk.Hs tor use m your<lb/>
,ob search The workshops are on<lb/>
Wednesday Feb 2 a' 4 OC p m<lb/>
Wednesday Feb 2 at 7 00 p m<lb/>
A film and discussion of -nter<lb/>
viewing through the Career Plann<lb/>
,ng and Placement Service will be<lb/>
shared<lb/>
NEEDATUTOR<lb/>
Ph. Sigma P. National Honor<lb/>
Fraternity has 'utors for a variety<lb/>
ot Genera' College subiects cor<lb/>
more miormation. call 752 3022<lb/>
BAHAMA MAMA<lb/>
Coming soon!<lb/>
COMMITTEES<lb/>
Applications are still being ac<lb/>
cepted for students wishing to<lb/>
serve on university Committees<lb/>
for 1982 82 school year Twenty<lb/>
three 123) students positions are<lb/>
open committees with vacancies<lb/>
are Canvassing &amp; Soliciting on<lb/>
Campus(l) international Student<lb/>
Affairs ID. Residence Life (3).<lb/>
Status of Minorities (2). Status of<lb/>
women (3). Student Health Ser<lb/>
vices (1). Calendar (I). Teaching<lb/>
Effectiveness (2). Continuing<lb/>
Education (1), Course Drop Ap<lb/>
peals (1). Credits, (l). General<lb/>
College (U. Teacher Education<lb/>
(1). University Libraries (1).<lb/>
University Curriculum (2). Ap<lb/>
plications are available at the<lb/>
following locations: Office of the<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life.<lb/>
204 Whichard; Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center information Desk.<lb/>
SGA Office. Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, Office of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services. Memorial<lb/>
Gym and Residence Hall Direc<lb/>
tors' Offices Questions about<lb/>
University committees and<lb/>
memberships may be directed to<lb/>
the Office of the Vice Chancellor<lb/>
tor Student Life (757 6541)<lb/>
EL SALVADOR<lb/>
DEMONSTRATION<lb/>
A group ot ECU students at<lb/>
fihated with the ECU Committee<lb/>
on El Salvador will hold a local<lb/>
demonstration today opporing<lb/>
President Reagans recent re<lb/>
certiticaion of El Salvador few-<lb/>
more military aid It will be held<lb/>
at the post office on Tenth street<lb/>
trom 1 to 2 PM Anyone interested<lb/>
can attend The group claims that<lb/>
students will be the first ones ex<lb/>
pected to tight it the US further<lb/>
intervenes in Centra1 America<lb/>
INTER VARSITY<lb/>
Are you excited about God So<lb/>
are we I Come oin us as we ex<lb/>
plore the word of God, every Wed<lb/>
night, 4.30, in the Biology Bldg .<lb/>
Rm 102.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
District 773 of rotary interna<lb/>
tionai is pleased to announce the<lb/>
avallablity to two young people for<lb/>
an academic year of foreign study<lb/>
for IWI These awards include<lb/>
transportation, tuition, books, sup<lb/>
plies, and a sflpend for living ex<lb/>
penses<lb/>
They may be in the areas of<lb/>
Graduate Study, Undergraduat<lb/>
Study. Teachers of the Han<lb/>
dicaplped. journalism or Voca<lb/>
tionai Study<lb/>
Applications must be made<lb/>
through the local rotary Club in<lb/>
the person's permanent residence<lb/>
or in the place in which they are<lb/>
full time students As it take<lb/>
several weeks to complete the ap<lb/>
plication process, it is necessary<lb/>
for interested persons to start im<lb/>
mediately Submission ot appiica<lb/>
tions must be no later than March<lb/>
1. 1983<lb/>
Traits which will be evaluated in<lb/>
tne selection process shall include<lb/>
academic achievement, leader<lb/>
ship ability, personal character<lb/>
and the promise of being an<lb/>
outstanding ambassador of good<lb/>
will to a foreign country<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use the form �t right or<lb/>
use � separate sheet of paper if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line. Each letter, punc<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
Hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will be ac<lb/>
cepted over the phone. We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
75� per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
Briar to THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
offtee by 3:H Tuesday before<lb/>
Wedacadajr pabbcattoaa.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
Np, lines <lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
. at 7J� per bne S.<lb/>
.No. insertions.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
�1�-<lb/>
��1�-<lb/>
�<lb/>
��Tr� r�1j<lb/>
�<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
si Am-1� 1 1�J�<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
CO�OP<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
The Student Council for Excep<lb/>
t.onal Children is having a<lb/>
membership drive at the back en<lb/>
trance to Speight Building The<lb/>
drive will be trom Jan 31 Feb 4,<lb/>
9 00 3 00 For more information,<lb/>
asx a' 'able where the drive for<lb/>
membership will be Everyone s<lb/>
welcome!<lb/>
BIBLE CLAS�<lb/>
Lets Get Back To The Bible! In<lb/>
formal campus Bible discussions<lb/>
Men Tuesday ; 30 PM 110 Belk<lb/>
women Thursday 7 30 SPM 212<lb/>
Mendenhall. Bring a Bible and br<lb/>
mg a friend Everyone w�lcome!<lb/>
NCSL the North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature is discussing and<lb/>
debating the topics of today that<lb/>
will affect our lives tomorrow!<lb/>
They debate issues as diverse as<lb/>
automobile safety to regulations to<lb/>
the threat of nuclear war NCSL is<lb/>
now conducting its membershilp<lb/>
drive, so why not see what NCSL is<lb/>
all about! The meetings are held<lb/>
Monday nights at 7 p m a'<lb/>
Mendenhall m room 212<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
A Christian fellowship founded<lb/>
on the Word of God meets each<lb/>
Friday night at 7 X in Jenkins Art<lb/>
Building Auditorium Know that<lb/>
YOU are LOVED! Come join the<lb/>
action<lb/>
MEN'S RUGBY<lb/>
There will be meeting of an<lb/>
those interested m playing Spring<lb/>
Rugby Thursday Jan 27 in<lb/>
Memorial Gym Room 102 at 5 00<lb/>
pm Everyone is invited and those<lb/>
returning players should surely at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
SPEAKER AVAILABLE<lb/>
Russell Ford will be in Green<lb/>
ville on February 1, 2 and 3 He's<lb/>
the first person to be sent to prison<lb/>
tor refusing to register tor the<lb/>
draft since the Vietnam war He's<lb/>
presently out on bail Ford will be<lb/>
available to speak m ECU classes<lb/>
on any of the above dates He will<lb/>
be speaking at a public meeting in<lb/>
Mendenhall's Coffee House at 7 30<lb/>
PM on Feb 2 For further ior<lb/>
mation please call 752 4216 or<lb/>
758 4906<lb/>
ZETABETATAU<lb/>
Zeta Beta Tau The Brothers and<lb/>
Pledges would like to con<lb/>
gradulate all the girls that were<lb/>
selected to become our little<lb/>
sisters We are looking forward to<lb/>
a tun and successful year Don't<lb/>
forget our superbowl party Sun<lb/>
day1 if there are any questions,<lb/>
feel free to call Scott Sutker at<lb/>
752 7290 or Jay Vaughn at 758 9626<lb/>
Representatives from camps<lb/>
Don Lee Seafarer and Cherno<lb/>
among others are coming to East<lb/>
Carolina to interview students tor<lb/>
summer 10OS They will be a'<lb/>
Mendenhall. Room 248 on<lb/>
February 7 interview appoint<lb/>
men's mus' be made a' 'he Co op<lb/>
office Rawl 313 Phone 757 6979<lb/>
BASKETRY<lb/>
A beginner s course m Basxe'ry<lb/>
is being ottered on Wednesday<lb/>
nights beginning Feb 9 1983 trom<lb/>
6 9 PM The instructor is Mary<lb/>
Ann Hu"o The workshop'S tree'o<lb/>
an members of 'he Crat's Center<lb/>
The cos of the Crotts Center<lb/>
Membership is S10 00 per<lb/>
semester Sign up m the Crafts<lb/>
Center on the bottom floor of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center bet<lb/>
ween the hours of 3 10 PM Monday<lb/>
through Fnaay and 12 5 PM on<lb/>
Saturdays For turtner informa<lb/>
lion, call Linda Barkano MSC<lb/>
Crafts and Recreation Director at<lb/>
757 611 ext 260 or the Crafts<lb/>
Center at 757 6611 ext 271<lb/>
ASPA<lb/>
American Society of Personnel<lb/>
Administrators will mee'<lb/>
February 2 at 3 o'clock m Rawls.<lb/>
Room 207 ASPA's feature speaker<lb/>
will be Mr James trom the Career<lb/>
Placement Office This meeting is<lb/>
open to any one who wishes to at<lb/>
tend See you there<lb/>
CO�OP CLUB<lb/>
There will be a meeting of 'he<lb/>
Co op Club on Thursday. January<lb/>
27 1983 a' 4 00 p m m 313 Rawl<lb/>
All Co op students and any student<lb/>
interested m a Cooperative Educa<lb/>
tion internship should a'tend<lb/>
EPISCOPAL STUDENT<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING<lb/>
The Outdoor Recreation Center<lb/>
is sponsoring horseback rifling<lb/>
trips 'o Jarman s Stables Reser<lb/>
vations and payment tor the<lb/>
Thursday afternoon trips are due<lb/>
by 3 00 PM each Thursday Rates<lb/>
are S5 00 per hour Transportation<lb/>
is provided with shuttle leaving<lb/>
Memorial Gym at 3 30 PM sharp<lb/>
For more information or reserve<lb/>
tions call or stop by the<lb/>
intramural Recreational Services<lb/>
Outdoor Recreation Center (113)<lb/>
Memorial Gym Phone 7576911<lb/>
Hours Monday and Friday 1 00<lb/>
PM 5 00 PM Tuesday. Wednes<lb/>
day. Thursday 2 00 PM 4 00 PM<lb/>
A student Episcopal service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated on Tuesday February 1<lb/>
in St Paul s Episcopal Church 406<lb/>
W 4tn St (one block f'om Garret<lb/>
Dormi The service will be at 5 30<lb/>
PM with the Episcopal Chaplain<lb/>
The Rev Bill Hadden. celeorant<lb/>
Dinner will follow<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
The Student Council lor Excep<lb/>
tionai Children is having its first<lb/>
program meeting of the semester.<lb/>
Monday, Jan 31 at 4 00 There will<lb/>
be a speaker to talk about com<lb/>
outers m Education. The meeting<lb/>
will be m Speight 129<lb/>
NEWS RELEASE<lb/>
Sophomores. iuniors and seniors<lb/>
currently enrolled in a North<lb/>
Carolina college or North Carolina<lb/>
residents attending an out ot state<lb/>
college have until February 11 to<lb/>
apply tor the institute of Govern<lb/>
men' Summer internship Pro<lb/>
gram in state government<lb/>
Twenty three s'udents win be<lb/>
selectee by an advisory commit<lb/>
tee to participate m a living<lb/>
learning internship in North<lb/>
Carolina sta'e government<lb/>
directed by the msti'u'e of<lb/>
Government The mstute ot<lb/>
Government interns will work<lb/>
trom May 31 through August 5<lb/>
Students will work 40 hours each<lb/>
week m a responsible position m a<lb/>
state department, participate m<lb/>
evening educational seminars and<lb/>
be paid approximately S1S0 per<lb/>
week<lb/>
Students interested m 'he pro<lb/>
gram should secure a brochure an<lb/>
nouncmg the program and a S'a'e<lb/>
of North Carolina application torm<lb/>
trom their college or university<lb/>
placement office or local Job Ser<lb/>
vice office A brief description of<lb/>
possible internships are available<lb/>
in college placemen' offices<lb/>
Studentd interested in the in<lb/>
stitute of Government program<lb/>
should mail an aplication to tne in<lb/>
stitute ot Government, Knapp<lb/>
Building 0S9A. The University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
cnapet Hill North Carolina 27514<lb/>
by February II. V�ej<lb/>
Applicants will be accepted<lb/>
without respect to race, sex color,<lb/>
national origin religion or han<lb/>
dicap<lb/>
GREENVILLE PEACE<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Greenville Peace Commit<lb/>
tee meets every Friday night at<lb/>
610 S Elm St GPC consists of peo<lb/>
pie actively engaged m peace and<lb/>
justice work on a local, state, and<lb/>
naitonal level. If you �� m<lb/>
terested in learning more about<lb/>
the GPC please call 758 4906 or<lb/>
come at 6 30 p m (Fridays) for a<lb/>
dinner meeting<lb/>
SLC<lb/>
The ECU Sign Language Club<lb/>
will hold its regular bimonthly<lb/>
covered dish supper and meeting<lb/>
on Sunday, January �. 1983 at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Mult.<lb/>
Purpose Room The supper will<lb/>
begm at 6 00 PM with a short<lb/>
business meeting and captioned<lb/>
film to follow<lb/>
The meal and meeting are open<lb/>
to any interested student, faculty<lb/>
member, or a member of tne com<lb/>
munity You do not need to know<lb/>
Sign Language to attend, but<lb/>
students who are taking sign<lb/>
language classes or who have<lb/>
taken them m the pas' are en<lb/>
couraged'o attend The purpose ot<lb/>
SLC is to allow sign language<lb/>
students and hearing impaired<lb/>
students and community<lb/>
members to socialize and develop<lb/>
communication sklls We hope M<lb/>
see vchi fnere<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
The ECU Sing Language Club<lb/>
will hold its regular bimonthly<lb/>
covered dish supper and meeting<lb/>
on Sunday. January 30tn at Room<lb/>
244 Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
The supper will begin at 6 00 PM<lb/>
with a short business meeting and<lb/>
captioned film to follow<lb/>
The meal and meeting are open<lb/>
to any interested student, faculty<lb/>
member, or a member of the com<lb/>
munity You do not need to know<lb/>
Sign Language to attend, but<lb/>
students who are taking sign<lb/>
language classes or who have<lb/>
taken them m the past are en<lb/>
couragesd to attend The purpose<lb/>
of tne SLC is to allow sign<lb/>
language students and hearing im<lb/>
paired students and community<lb/>
members t0 socianue and develop<lb/>
communication skills We nope 'a<lb/>
see you mere<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
To all Social Work Maiors and<lb/>
intended maiors CORSO will<lb/>
meet January 31, at 5 00 m the<lb/>
Allied Health Building m room 103<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
Spring Drea March 6 12 dive<lb/>
tne Bahamas From F1 Lauder<lb/>
dale. S540 00 includes meais. loog<lb/>
mg and diving aboard the 65 dive<lb/>
boat. -The Bottom Time ' There<lb/>
are a limited number of places<lb/>
available and reservations are on<lb/>
a first come basis For informa<lb/>
tion and registration call or visit<lb/>
Ray Schart. Director of Aquatics<lb/>
Mmges Aquat.c Center 757 6441<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Our next Di weekly mee'ing wit<lb/>
be held on Thursday. Jan 27 m the<lb/>
Mendenhall S'udent Center room<lb/>
24 Members are expected to at<lb/>
'end We urge persons desiring to<lb/>
be members of GBP 'o a"end<lb/>
however aGPA of30isa<lb/>
minimum requirement tor<lb/>
membership Come and be a par'<lb/>
RESUME<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service m the Bloxton House<lb/>
is offering the following one hour<lb/>
sessions to help you prepare your<lb/>
own resume Tuesday. Feb 1 at<lb/>
7 00 p m Wednesday Feb 2 at<lb/>
2 30 p m Those seniors or<lb/>
graduate students t.nisn.ng this<lb/>
year and planning to register Bl<lb/>
us are urged to attend You rr.air<lb/>
come 'o the Bloxton House a' any<lb/>
of 'he above times<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
In Tuesday's edition<lb/>
of The East Carolinian<lb/>
it was incorrectly stated<lb/>
that staff writer Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill had paid a $50<lb/>
fine for obstructing a<lb/>
public entrance during<lb/>
a demonstration. He<lb/>
was charged but did not<lb/>
pay the Fine. His trial is<lb/>
set for Feb. 22.<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service m tne Bloxton House<lb/>
is offering these one hour sessions<lb/>
to aid you m developing better .n<lb/>
terviewmg skills tor use m your<lb/>
i00 searcn The workshops are on<lb/>
Wednesday Feb 2 a' 4 00 p m .<lb/>
Wednesday Feb 2 at 7 00 p m<lb/>
A film and discussion of inter<lb/>
viewing through 'he Career Plann<lb/>
mg and Placement Service will be<lb/>
shared<lb/>
S. R. A.<lb/>
Escorts are needed tor the<lb/>
Escor' Service Anyone interested<lb/>
m be-ng an escort please contact<lb/>
your oorm director if you are a<lb/>
dorm resident of if you live o�t<lb/>
campus contact the SGA office<lb/>
NEW STUDENT<lb/>
ORIENTATION<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
The Office of the Associate Dean<lb/>
of Student Life, located M<lb/>
Whichard Building. Room 210. is<lb/>
now taking applications tor me<lb/>
New Student Orientation Program<lb/>
heio in June end JUty Applicants<lb/>
nouio have � good scholastic<lb/>
average, and should not be plann<lb/>
mg on attending Summer School<lb/>
interviews of tne applicants will<lb/>
begm around the middle ot March<lb/>
NASW<lb/>
To an Soc.a. work Ma.ors and<lb/>
.ntenoed ma.ors- -SW <lb/>
MODELS NEEDED<lb/>
Models needed tor Ar' Depa"<lb/>
men' self hetp posi'ions are<lb/>
available for nude modeling a'<lb/>
S5 02 per hour PL ease see the<lb/>
following teachers Ray Elmore<lb/>
Tran Goroiey Da.y Davenport<lb/>
WesCrawiey Betsy Ross Micnaei<lb/>
Voors<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vix � �<lb/>
��<lb/>
Published every Toescar a-c<lb/>
Thursday during -he acaden-<lb/>
year and every Wednesday do'<lb/>
,ng the summer<lb/>
The Eas' Caruiian S "he -<lb/>
t.oai newspaper ot Eis'<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
opera'ed. and pubusned tor ac<lb/>
oy 'he s'udents of Eas' Carol.na<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate MO yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located m the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus ECU<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send aoo'es-<lb/>
Icnarges tc The Eas' Care. - a'<lb/>
Oio ieJ� 9u lo.ng ECbO'ef-<lb/>
.lie NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 757 43 �J' �'<lb/>
PHILOSOPHY CLUB<lb/>
The Ph.iosophy Ciuo �HII mee'<lb/>
Monda y January 3V<lb/>
Mendenhall conference room 2'2<lb/>
a' 00 PM The conference room<lb/>
.s loca'eo or -he second tioor of 'he<lb/>
s'udent center .n 'he mus.c listen<lb/>
.ng room area Norns Mogga'C<lb/>
will presen' a commentary on<lb/>
jean Pjj Sa're s<lb/>
Transcendence of "At Egc<lb/>
Ma'er.a'S on 'he subiect win be<lb/>
available W 'he Philosophy off.ee<lb/>
BA 327; on Fnoay January 28<lb/>
We welcome an interested persons<lb/>
'o par'icpa'e in 'he duo meetings<lb/>
and discussions<lb/>
The Pni Sigma Tau National<lb/>
Philosophy Honor Society w.ll also<lb/>
be holding Itj annual initiation<lb/>
ceremony on Friday. February 11<lb/>
at Four Seasons Restaurant<lb/>
Those interested attending the<lb/>
ceremony are asked to bring a<lb/>
vs oo deposit to tne meetna Mon<lb/>
day af'emoon This deposit is<lb/>
necessary in order to .nsure a<lb/>
specific number tor reservation<lb/>
arrangement<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
Oeita ze'a Happy Hour a' "<lb/>
Attic with island' Fr.oay<lb/>
January 28, 4 00 7 30<lb/>
SNOWSKI<lb/>
REGISTRATION<lb/>
Ai. persons wMl piar" H Sx<lb/>
snowsnoe du' ng spr.ng oreax<lb/>
snooO regis'e' or Tvesday. Feo I<lb/>
a' 4 OC 0 rr n Ve a- O<lb/>
Room 108 A S5 depes ' ! be re<lb/>
qu.rea a'  s I e Space s<lb/>
i.med 'o 'he Hrsl �C who 'eg s'e-<lb/>
For pacxage pr.ces con'ac' .<lb/>
Saunoers a' '57 600C M�"�-j<lb/>
Gym 205<lb/>
ECU LARCRSSE CLUB<lb/>
Mee- a 'he oc'am o Conege<lb/>
H or Monday "jesca� a"C<lb/>
Thursday aflwiiuans, from 3 00 tc<lb/>
5 90 PM For more nto .a-<lb/>
757 6064 Of rSI 1366<lb/>
SAB<lb/>
There w n De a mee' ng ot 'he<lb/>
s'udent A'nie'ic Board Tuesoa.<lb/>
February 1 1983 a' 5 30 PM in<lb/>
Room 248 of Menoennall Sfuden'<lb/>
Center<lb/>
Cam<lb/>
tCL students<lb/>
donated aimosi 500<lb/>
pints of blood Tuesda<lb/>
and rednesda during<lb/>
a blood drie spon-<lb/>
sored b the ECL<lb/>
Escori<lb/>
The Pirate Valk.<lb/>
ECU's ne stud<lb/>
escort -erve<lb/>
nounced an extension<lb/>
o? their seruc-<lb/>
:ed l beginning<lb/>
�  the service �<lb/>
now begin at 6 ;<lb/>
sa;d Pirate alk c<lb/>
tor Paul Sumrell<lb/>
�rell va:u �-�<lb/>
� va enacte<lb/>
.htate the need<lb/>
.dent- vho '<lb/>
Assistant<lb/>
Still Av<lb/>
Despite<lb/>
Continued From Pant l<lb/>
The federa<lb/>
aid<lb/>
198<lb/>
financial a<lb/>
pr -<lb/>
tualh<lb/>
gre C<lb/>
reto-<lb/>
aance pi<lb/>
that were curtaik<lb/>
the ra-<lb/>
tion, including<lb/>
ing the<lb/>
for the Pell Grani pi<lb/>
eram In<lb/>
7<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
The ECU chapter of 'he Society<lb/>
tor the Advancement of Manage<lb/>
ment willwofo a neeTuesdah<lb/>
Feoruary , in Raw! JOa A<lb/>
members and anyone mteres'ed'i<lb/>
becoming a member are ur9ed to<lb/>
attend The meeng �. i be a'<lb/>
4 00<lb/>
Th&amp;vs<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
All cans 45<lb/>
til 11:00 p.m. h<lb/>
70C til 1:00 a.m. <lb/>
Adm.n.OO<lb/>
 5c-54;<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
MARSHA<lb/>
SURFN'SEA<lb/>
Winter Sale<lb/>
All Specially Marked Winter Items<lb/>
30 off<lb/>
with Student ID 40 off<lb/>
Starts Tue Jan. 25 Thru Tue Feb 1<lb/>
All Women '5 Bikinis and<lb/>
bathing suits also arriving<lb/>
Men's bathing suits also arriving<lb/>
Sale lasts one week only<lb/>
Located Downtown<lb/>
Phone 752-7711<lb/>
The ALAMO<lb/>
Restaurant &amp; Nightclub<lb/>
Greenville's newest nightspot &amp; eatery.<lb/>
Thurs. The Chairman of the Board<lb/>
Fri. The Breeze - The best in Beach<lb/>
Sat. The Breeze - The best in Beach<lb/>
loor open al 6:34)<lb/>
$1 off Admission nilh t otleRe l.l.<lb/>
Bottle of C hampaune given to each<lb/>
50th Customer.<lb/>
v<lb/>
i<lb/>
BREi<lb/>
� Freshly Scramol<lb/>
� Country Milk G'<lb/>
Homemade Muft<lb/>
Shoneys Own<lb/>
PLUS The F'U't BJ<lb/>
SHO<lb/>
��-t90i<lb/>
Closed Sundays except for special events<lb/>
1104 V Memorial Dr.<lb/>
cross from reeBMlte iraori<lb/>
Phoae T5T-0OO5 for additional laformiifoa<lb/>
m<lb/>
-&amp;<lb/>
208 5th St.<lb/>
SI<lb/>
<lb/>
HAVING PPOBLEMS<lb/>
witii<lb/>
DRUGST ALCOHOLT FAMILY?<lb/>
SCHOOL?<lb/>
h<lb/>
i<lb/>
n<lb/>
The Kast Carolii<lb/>
It I<lb/>
<lb/>
TsstatL<lb/>
fe�i<lb/>
123E. SthStr.<lb/>
S2-7483<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
Open late every night.<lb/>
We Can Help<lb/>
Students helping Students<lb/>
CAMPUS ALCOHOL A DBUO PSOOBAM<lb/>
501-305 Erwin Bldtf.<lb/>
757-6795<lb/>
Thursday � Spaghetti Special $2.49 Myou can Eat 5-9<lb/>
Friday Happy Hour 4-7 Dollar Specials<lb/>
Friday and Saturday Nights<lb/>
Lahnn &amp; Lofton<lb/>
Saturday-All Marguarita's Served<lb/>
by the pitcher, 9-until, Specially Priced<lb/>
with free nachos<lb/>
Sunday-Lasagna Special aiiyou can Eat 5-9<lb/>
Monday � Pizza and Pasta $2.99 an you can Eat 5-9<lb/>
Watch For Our Daily Luncheon Specials<lb/>
We now have a new head chef to better serve your needs<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
'V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057529_0003"/><lb/>
Phorvr<lb/>
.exi<lb/>
  m<lb/>
1 1 I I I<lb/>
�<lb/>
� <lb/>
PVHOUR<lb/>
GlSTRATION<lb/>
�CKSSE CLUB<lb/>
�<lb/>
A B<lb/>
SArVN<lb/>
.� t<lb/>
� v -<lb/>
MO<lb/>
ightclub<lb/>
ghtspot &amp; eatery.<lb/>
i�t tht Hoard<lb/>
I in Beai Is<lb/>
m in Beach<lb/>
Ur<lb/>
' V? ss<lb/>
�?&amp; ,4.4<lb/>
2-7483<lb/>
49<lb/>
Dollar Specials<lb/>
IV Nights<lb/>
fton<lb/>
ta's Served<lb/>
Jeaally Priced �<lb/>
jos "<lb/>
� on � a <lb/>
:neon Specials <lb/>
etter serve your needs �<lb/>
�V �&amp; &amp; � "� 00�&amp; -CrCrJ<lb/>
I<lb/>
THh hAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANLARY 2"?,i983<lb/>
Campus Blood Drive Attracts Student Crowds<lb/>
ECU students<lb/>
donated almost 500<lb/>
pints of blood Tuesday<lb/>
and Wednesday during<lb/>
a blood dne spon<lb/>
sored bv the ECU<lb/>
Biology Club lor the<lb/>
Pitt Count) Red Cross.<lb/>
"We got close to 5(X)<lb/>
pints and that's tremen-<lb/>
dous said ECU Dean<lb/>
of the General College<lb/>
Dr. Donald E. Baily<lb/>
who helped out with<lb/>
the blood drive. Baily<lb/>
wears a pin that<lb/>
acknowledges him as a<lb/>
three-gallon donor in<lb/>
his lifetime. He claims<lb/>
that he got a late start<lb/>
and only began giving<lb/>
blood when he was 30<lb/>
years old.<lb/>
"The attitudes of the<lb/>
students are just<lb/>
tremendous; we're very<lb/>
pleased said Ruth<lb/>
Taylor, executive direc-<lb/>
tor for the Pitt County<lb/>
Red Cross. "Despite<lb/>
Escort Service Lengthens Hours<lb/>
The Pirate Walk,<lb/>
EC I 's new student<lb/>
escort service has an<lb/>
nounced an extension<lb/>
ot their services In-<lb/>
stead ol beginning at 7<lb/>
p.m the service will<lb/>
now begin at f p.m<lb/>
said Pirate Walk direc<lb/>
tor Paul Sumrell<lb/>
Sumrell said the time<lb/>
shift was enacted to<lb/>
facilitate the needs ot<lb/>
students who took<lb/>
evening classes, main<lb/>
ol which begin before 7<lb/>
p.m. "We've been get-<lb/>
ting a iot of calls for<lb/>
escorts before 7 p.m<lb/>
Sumrell said "So we<lb/>
decided to expand the<lb/>
time He added that<lb/>
the escor t er s w e r e<lb/>
agreeable to the time<lb/>
change.<lb/>
Escorters now work<lb/>
in throe shifts, t to S<lb/>
p.m 8 to 10 p.m. and<lb/>
10 p.m. until midnight.<lb/>
Pirate Walk has a total<lb/>
of 63 escorters on their<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
As of Tuesday night<lb/>
Pirate Walk has pro-<lb/>
vided 115 escorts to<lb/>
ECU students. Sumrell<lb/>
said he was pleased<lb/>
with the total so far.<lb/>
Sumrell loans his per-<lb/>
sonal computer to the<lb/>
project to help match<lb/>
the names of escorters<lb/>
and escortees as quickly<lb/>
as possible. He saiu he<lb/>
has noticed that the<lb/>
number of students re-<lb/>
questing escorts has im-<lb/>
proved every night.<lb/>
Any student requesting<lb/>
a escort can do so by<lb/>
calling 757-6616.<lb/>
Assistance Funds<lb/>
Still Available,<lb/>
Despite Cutback<lb/>
ECU Med School Gets<lb/>
New Treatment Facility<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
I he federal student<lb/>
aid appropriations lor<lb/>
fiscal 1982 were only<lb/>
eight percent less than<lb/>
1981. Main publicized<lb/>
financial aid cuts were<lb/>
proposed but nevei a<lb/>
tualh passed bv c on-<lb/>
gress. Congress has<lb/>
restored man<lb/>
assistance programs<lb/>
that were curtailed bv<lb/>
the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion, including tighten-<lb/>
the requirements<lb/>
tor the Pell (irani pro-<lb/>
gram. In some cases.<lb/>
Congress has not only<lb/>
maintained programs<lb/>
but aUo adjusted them<lb/>
tor inflation.<lb/>
1 he Guaranteed Stu-<lb/>
dent I oan is one pro-<lb/>
gram that has been<lb/>
restricted recentIv. but<lb/>
many students are still<lb/>
eligible tor them, ac-<lb/>
cording to Boudreaux.<lb/>
From 1978 to 1981 anv<lb/>
student could apply tor<lb/>
the program. Currently<lb/>
only students corning<lb/>
from a family with an<lb/>
income below $30,000<lb/>
can receive the federal<lb/>
loan.<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Contracts have been<lb/>
awarded for construc-<lb/>
tion of the S5.2 million<lb/>
radiation therapy<lb/>
center at the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine.<lb/>
1 h e<lb/>
24.000-square-foot<lb/>
facility will be used for<lb/>
comprehensive cancer<lb/>
care for patients in<lb/>
Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina. T he center's<lb/>
staff will work closely<lb/>
with existing therapv<lb/>
units in New Bern,<lb/>
Kins ton and<lb/>
Goldsboro.<lb/>
.). H. Hudson, Inc<lb/>
of Greenville will be the<lb/>
general contractor for<lb/>
the project. Other con-<lb/>
tracts were awarded to<lb/>
Braxton Bntt Plumbing<lb/>
and Heating Co Inc.<lb/>
tttlMmCorctofia<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
IBREAKFAST BAR OFFERINGS<lb/>
� Freshly Scrambled Eggs � Homemade Buttermilk Biscuits � Bacon<lb/>
� Country Milk Gravy � Home Fried Potatoes � Southern Style Grits �<lb/>
Homemade Muffins � Link and Patty Sausage � A Choice of<lb/>
Shoneys Own Special Fruit Toppings �Grated American Cheese �<lb/>
PLUS The Fruit Bar featuring a variety of fresh fruit and tomatoes<lb/>
MONDAY-FRIDAY<lb/>
6 00 A M 11 00 AM<lb/>
SATURDAY-SUNDAY<lb/>
&amp; HOLIDAYS<lb/>
6 00 AM -2 00 P M<lb/>
E.C.U.<lb/>
I) A N E<lb/>
1 he East Carolina Pla house<lb/>
T H E ATR E<lb/>
McGinnis I heat re<lb/>
January 27-29. 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
EC I Students: 2.5f Public: '4.00 Call 757-6390<lb/>
ot Wilson, plumbing;<lb/>
Henry Baker Heating<lb/>
Co Inc. of Wilson,<lb/>
heating, ventilation and<lb/>
air conditioning; and<lb/>
Live Wire Electric Co<lb/>
Inc of Goldsboro,<lb/>
electrical.<lb/>
The center will be<lb/>
located between the<lb/>
medical school's Brody<lb/>
Medical Sciences<lb/>
Building and Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital. Construction<lb/>
will begin in February<lb/>
and is expected to be<lb/>
completed in the sum-<lb/>
mer of 1984.<lb/>
The radiation<lb/>
therapy center will<lb/>
house two medical<lb/>
m<lb/>
i<lb/>
linear accelerators, a<lb/>
6-milhon-volt unit and<lb/>
a 20-million-volt unit.<lb/>
Linear accelerators<lb/>
generate high-energy<lb/>
radiation used in the<lb/>
treatment of malignant<lb/>
tumors.<lb/>
The unit will also in-<lb/>
clude a radiation<lb/>
therapv simulator that<lb/>
provided the high<lb/>
quality radiographic<lb/>
images necessary for<lb/>
planning radiation<lb/>
treatment and deter<lb/>
mining the appropriate<lb/>
doses. Nearly hail of<lb/>
the center's5.2<lb/>
million budget will be<lb/>
used to purchase equip-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
the waiting, they were<lb/>
still anxious to sit it<lb/>
out<lb/>
For most of the two-<lb/>
day blood drive, long<lb/>
lines, with waits up to<lb/>
an hour, could be seen<lb/>
stretching into the<lb/>
hallways from room<lb/>
224 in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
Taylor told The East<lb/>
Carolinian that the<lb/>
local Red Cross chapter<lb/>
was trying out their<lb/>
new equipment for the<lb/>
first time during this<lb/>
drive. The new equip<lb/>
ment included special<lb/>
chairs with built in arm<lb/>
rests to support the arm<lb/>
while giving blood.<lb/>
The nurses were also<lb/>
trying out new equip-<lb/>
ment tor the first time.<lb/>
"I think overall it went<lb/>
very well Taylor said.<lb/>
Many students have<lb/>
been especially relieved<lb/>
to see the Red Cross us-<lb/>
ing a new hand-held<lb/>
spring gadget which<lb/>
painlessly pricks the<lb/>
finger for the initial<lb/>
blood test.<lb/>
Lhe drive coor-<lb/>
dinator was Biology<lb/>
Club President Karen<lb/>
Thomas. Taylor was<lb/>
pleased with the ettort<lb/>
of the Biology Club in<lb/>
making the drive a suc-<lb/>
cess. I want to thank<lb/>
the Biology Club and<lb/>
their President Karen<lb/>
I homas for the fan-<lb/>
tastic job they did<lb/>
Taylor said. "The<lb/>
publicity tor this drive<lb/>
was excellent " Taylor<lb/>
also noted that she had<lb/>
never seen so many<lb/>
posters put up around<lb/>
campus to announce a<lb/>
blood drive before.<lb/>
One large sign outside<lb/>
Mendenhall stated:<lb/>
"Help to save a lite,<lb/>
give blood The 494<lb/>
people who gave blood<lb/>
were given sandwiches<lb/>
and snacks and juices<lb/>
designed to make up<lb/>
tor the fluid loss. Each<lb/>
was told to reduce his<lb/>
or her activity for the<lb/>
remainder ot the day.<lb/>
Donors were also<lb/>
given a red cross badge<lb/>
with the words "Be<lb/>
nice to me, I gave blood<lb/>
today" written on it.<lb/>
Tuesday's total was<lb/>
238 donors, with 2;6<lb/>
coming on Wednesdav<lb/>
Baily said that close to<lb/>
50 people who intended<lb/>
to give blood were turn-<lb/>
ed down for various<lb/>
medical reasons.<lb/>
Tavior said she was<lb/>
particularly disap-<lb/>
pointed because so tew<lb/>
faculty or staff par-<lb/>
ticipated ;n the drive.<lb/>
"We had very very few<lb/>
faculty and staff she<lb/>
said<lb/>
OPEN24HOURS DRIVE THRU WINDOW<lb/>
10 Discount<lb/>
beginning Feb. 1st<lb/>
on all<lb/>
dinners &amp; biscuits<lb/>
1011 Charles Street � 752 1373 1 Block from Campus<lb/>
Copyright 1963<lb/>
Kroger Savon<lb/>
Quantity Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Sold to Dealers<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed Jan 26<lb/>
thru Sat Jan 29 1983<lb/>
'V?<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
tac of these advertised items s re-<lb/>
quired to be readily available for<lb/>
sale m each Kroge Savon except<lb/>
as specifically noted m this ad If we<lb/>
do run out of an item we will otter<lb/>
you your cho�ca of a comparabta<lb/>
item whn available reflecting the<lb/>
same savings ot a ramchec whtcn<lb/>
will entitle you to purchase the<lb/>
advertised item �� tn� advertised<lb/>
price within 30 days<lb/>
Open Mori, thru Sat. 8am to Midnight<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. �<lb/>
v2-GALLON SALE<lb/>
Kroger Whole Milk,<lb/>
Chocolate Milk. 2 Skim<lb/>
Milk. Buttermilk, or<lb/>
Sun. 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
<lb/>
V2-Gal<lb/>
Ctn<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
99<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Navel Oranges<lb/>
FRESH FRIED DAILY<lb/>
SOUR CREAM<lb/>
Cake Oonuts<lb/>
$469<lb/>
PREMIUM<lb/>
Mffler Beer<lb/>
N R afei TJaMriF<lb/>
 � L V BATHROOM TISSUE<lb/>
Ot.PepP" 199<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
30c<lb/>
CHICKEN OF THE SEA<lb/>
IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
Chunk Light<lb/>
Tuna<lb/>
6v?-Oz<lb/>
Can<lb/>
Bt�.<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
50c<lb/>
BAGU HOMESTLE<lb/>
SpaghcW<lb/>
Sauce<lb/>
wMt<lb/>
DUKES<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
English<lb/>
Muffins<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
32-Oz<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
12-Oz<lb/>
Pkgs<lb/>
T<lb/>
w<lb/>
KROGEBTH�N<lb/>
Spa!<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
Box<lb/>
COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
ALL BEEF<lb/>
SANDWICH STEAKS<lb/>
Steak-Thins<lb/>
2�<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057529_0004"/><lb/>
2Uje iEaat (Karflltnfan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fiti ding Miller, GeneralManger<lb/>
Mike Hughes, Managing&amp;bm<lb/>
WAVERl Y MERRlir, Director oj Advents<lb/>
SCOTT L.1NDLEY, ����� Mm"<lb/>
ALI AFRASHTEH. CMt Manager<lb/>
Stephanie Groon, odm umam<lb/>
Clay Thornton, r�dMats�ra�r<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants, spomsmm<lb/>
Greg Rideout, mm em<lb/>
STEVE BACHNER, Lntertatnment tdilor<lb/>
J U LIA N A F A H R B AC H, style tutor<lb/>
TODD EVANS, Production Manager<lb/>
January 27, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Crime Crackdown<lb/>
Hunt's Plan A Logical Course<lb/>
"We must recognize that the<lb/>
most common murderer in North<lb/>
Carolina is the drunk driver<lb/>
Speaking to a joint session of the<lb/>
state legislature on Tuesday, Gov.<lb/>
Jim Hunt prefaced his most recent<lb/>
crack-down-on-crime speech with<lb/>
just those words, once again echo-<lb/>
ing his firm commitment to<lb/>
toughening the laws regarding<lb/>
drinking and driving on the state's<lb/>
roads.<lb/>
Later in that same speech, Hunt<lb/>
introduced his own drunk-driving<lb/>
package, which includes provisions<lb/>
for mandatory jail terms for<lb/>
flagrant offenders, elimination of<lb/>
plea bargaining where persons<lb/>
charged with driving under the in-<lb/>
fluence are concerned and a raise in<lb/>
the state's legal minimum drinking<lb/>
age from 18 to 19. He has also pro-<lb/>
posed a new "dram shop" provi-<lb/>
sion, which would make retail<lb/>
outlets liable for civil suits if they<lb/>
sell alcohol to underage or intox-<lb/>
icated persons who later cause ac-<lb/>
cidents.<lb/>
The drunk-driving proposals are<lb/>
part of Hunt's new anti-crime<lb/>
package, aimed at tightening the<lb/>
reigns on the state's criminals. The<lb/>
major revisions Hunt is proposing<lb/>
include:<lb/>
� Giving judges wider discretion<lb/>
regarding the denial of bail,<lb/>
� Sentencing and generally<lb/>
treating juveniles who commit<lb/>
serious crimes more toughly,<lb/>
� Allowing for the waiver of jury<lb/>
trials in the state's Superior Court,<lb/>
and<lb/>
�Making criminals pay restitution<lb/>
to their victims before they pay<lb/>
court costs.<lb/>
Plain and simple, the proposals<lb/>
make sense. Whereas under current<lb/>
legislation, a judge can deny bail<lb/>
only in capital cases, Hunt's plan<lb/>
calls for an extension in a judge's<lb/>
discretion, enabling the judge to<lb/>
deny bail to a person charged with a<lb/>
serious felony committed while on<lb/>
bail from a previous charge.<lb/>
In addition, his plan to crack<lb/>
down on juvenile criminals is a<lb/>
legitimate proposal, one whose time<lb/>
has come. Since 1976, the number<lb/>
of juvenile felonies � felonies, not<lb/>
misdemeanors � has increased by<lb/>
28 percent. Hunt's crime package, if<lb/>
passed, would enable judges to<lb/>
sentence juveniles to set terms in<lb/>
training schools, an alternative<lb/>
heretofore non-existent.<lb/>
He also endorsed a proposal by<lb/>
the state courts commission that<lb/>
minor traffic cases be made civil in-<lb/>
fractions rather than crimes, thus<lb/>
diverting them from the state's<lb/>
already overloaded District Court<lb/>
dockets.<lb/>
Hunt's plan also calls for a<lb/>
tightening in legislation concerning<lb/>
resisting arrest. His proposal<lb/>
outlaws resisting any arrest, even<lb/>
those which are later deemed<lb/>
unlawful. "These (police) officers<lb/>
put their lives on the line for the rest<lb/>
of us every day he said. "And<lb/>
they deserve to have the law of the<lb/>
state of North Carolina standing<lb/>
behind them<lb/>
As can be expected with any ma-<lb/>
jor legal revision, Hunt's proposed<lb/>
crime package has already drawn<lb/>
petty criticism from several state<lb/>
legislators. The brunt of the new<lb/>
plan, however, has received the<lb/>
favor of most of the representatives.<lb/>
As well it should. The governor's<lb/>
crime package is not just another<lb/>
futile exercise aimed at quelling the<lb/>
fears of the state's concerned<lb/>
citizens. It proposes nothing more<lb/>
than logical, necessary and timely<lb/>
revisions.<lb/>
OBIS CM<lb/>
TOMEINA<lb/>
VISION-HE<lb/>
TEiMY PEOPLE<lb/>
im,<lb/>
iTEStlDRft<lb/>
IS THAT<lb/>
EACH W I'LL IM-Ij?:<lb/>
CURE CANCER'i<lb/>
TOSENPYOU<lb/>
2H0P0LLARS<lb/>
he mm<lb/>
TEU.1HEMI<lb/>
ACCEPTS<lb/>
WWASTER<lb/>
THEQDRSTHESE<lb/>
WES ARE<lb/>
I FIXED?<lb/>
Reaganomics: His Gamble<lb/>
Has Us "Staying The Curse9<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
It would be interesting to see just how<lb/>
Noah Webster would define the term<lb/>
"Reaganomics I'm sure he'd have a lot<lb/>
of "fun" with that one. Undoubtedly, the<lb/>
word would bring with it diverse connota-<lb/>
tions of high unemployment, outrageous<lb/>
federal spending and even more<lb/>
outrageous budget deficits.<lb/>
But all adverse economic side effects<lb/>
aside, I honestly wonder if even a word-<lb/>
smith like Webster could accurately define<lb/>
just exactly what President Reagan has<lb/>
been attempting for the last two years.<lb/>
Since Reagan took office in 1981 and<lb/>
began trying to implement his "recovery<lb/>
plan" for the United States economy, the<lb/>
nation's unemployment rate has climbed<lb/>
from 7.4 percent to 10.8 percent, and his<lb/>
first full budget, which took effect last<lb/>
year, raised the nation's federal deficit to a<lb/>
record $110.7 billion � indicating the<lb/>
country's longest recession since World<lb/>
War II.<lb/>
But almost as if to ignore these very real<lb/>
economic ills, Mr. Reagan is oh so quick to<lb/>
credit himself with the overstated im-<lb/>
provements in such renowned economic in-<lb/>
dicators as the Consumer Price Index and<lb/>
the prime interest rate. Sure, inflation for<lb/>
1982 was measured at 3.9 percent, an ob-<lb/>
vious numerical improvement from the<lb/>
Carter era in the late Seventies. But just<lb/>
ask the people around you ask yourself,<lb/>
has the cost of living � the combined costs<lb/>
of food, housing and fuel, for example �<lb/>
really improved as much as the president<lb/>
would have us believe?<lb/>
And can anyone honestly say that the<lb/>
Reagan-inspired tax "cuts" have made any<lb/>
difference at all, let alone improvement, in<lb/>
the general state of the economy?<lb/>
As has been the case with its<lb/>
predecessors, the Reagan administration<lb/>
has dealt inconsistently in handling most<lb/>
of its federal aid programs: Financial aid<lb/>
programs for college students have literally<lb/>
dwindled, as have programs and benefits<lb/>
for the elderly and underprivileged. In<lb/>
fact, the only consistency illustrated by the<lb/>
administration thus far is its continuous ig-<lb/>
norance of the central, structural problems<lb/>
of federal programs like the waning Social<lb/>
Security system.<lb/>
The fact is, while President Reagan<lb/>
revels in his numerical accomplishments in<lb/>
the fight against a dying economy, the<lb/>
economy is, very literally, dying.<lb/>
His general attitude toward the "state of<lb/>
the union" makes it difficult to believe<lb/>
that Mr. Reagan views the nation's<lb/>
economic ills from the same perspective as<lb/>
an unemployed auto worker in Detroit or<lb/>
as a family of four living one day at a time<lb/>
in the back seat of a car.<lb/>
It's difficult to believe that he com-<lb/>
prehends the degree of our nation's<lb/>
economic tensions. It's difficult to believe<lb/>
that he understands the problem at all.<lb/>
Indeed, how can he sincerely and<lb/>
realistically relate to the needs of the<lb/>
American people from the cozy confines of<lb/>
his California ranch, from the back seat of<lb/>
his executive limousine or from the pomp<lb/>
and circumstance of the oval office.<lb/>
"We have a long way to go he said<lb/>
Tuesday night in his State of the Union ad-<lb/>
dress in Washington, "but thanks to the<lb/>
courage, patience and strength of our peo-<lb/>
ple, America is on the mend<lb/>
Well, at least he's right about one thing:<lb/>
We certainly do have a long way to go.<lb/>
"The deficit problem is a clear and pre-<lb/>
sent danger to the basic health of our<lb/>
republic he affirmed. "We need a plan<lb/>
to overcome this danger With these<lb/>
words still fresh on his tongue (and stale in<lb/>
our ears), Reagan announced his budget<lb/>
proposal for fiscal 1984, a plan which, ac-<lb/>
cording to estimates, will create a federal<lb/>
deficit of $188 billion Thank God he's<lb/>
going to put an end to the clear and present<lb/>
danger.<lb/>
Finally, he proposed a few amendments<lb/>
to his economic program, which, at first,<lb/>
seemed like a breath of fresh air � amend-<lb/>
ments such as a W-billion reduction in his<lb/>
Pentagon buildup. A good idea'1 At first<lb/>
glance, it's an excellent idea That is, it was<lb/>
until he further proposed that the reduc-<lb/>
tion take place over a five-year penod<lb/>
Forty-seven billion dollars � indeed, a<lb/>
large sum of money by most any other<lb/>
standards � is relatively inconsequential<lb/>
when dealing with a defense buildup ex-<lb/>
pected to cost $1.6 trillion and annual<lb/>
federal deficits neanng $200 billion<lb/>
"For too many of our felloe citizens �<lb/>
farmers, steelworkers and autoworkers.<lb/>
lumbermen, black teenagers and working<lb/>
mothers � this is a painful penod<lb/>
Reagan empahsized. "We must all do<lb/>
everything in our power to bnng their<lb/>
ordeal to an end<lb/>
Thus, he proposed a one-percent sur-<lb/>
charge on taxable incomes and an exise tax<lb/>
on domestic and imported oil. a tax which<lb/>
analysts say will add 12 cents to the cost of<lb/>
a gallon of gasoline for the American con-<lb/>
sumer. This is. indeed, a "painful period<lb/>
"It has fallen to us, in our time he<lb/>
stressed to the legislators, "to undo<lb/>
damage that was a long time in the mak-<lb/>
ing Ah, the grace and style with which he<lb/>
passes the buck. I suppose that's wh<lb/>
Reaganomics and the Reagan-era deficit<lb/>
are expected to total more than all previous<lb/>
federal deficits combined.<lb/>
From the plan's inception. Democrats<lb/>
and Republicans alike � with the possible<lb/>
exception, of course, of Mr. Reagan �<lb/>
have frequently referred to Reaganomics<lb/>
as a "riverboat gamble Unfortunately<lb/>
for the American people, the past two<lb/>
years, two of the worst years in the history<lb/>
of U.S. economics, have shown it's a fail-<lb/>
ing gamble.<lb/>
r�Campus Forum<lb/>
Give Me Shelter SGA Says No<lb/>
A situation has arisen which is of<lb/>
great concern to me because it involves a<lb/>
service provided to the students. The ser-<lb/>
vice involved is the SGA Transit, and the<lb/>
situation that concerns me is the fact<lb/>
that a bill has been introduced to the<lb/>
SGA Legislature asking that money be<lb/>
appropriated to build two needed bus<lb/>
shelters. One located at the bottom of<lb/>
College Hill and another in front of<lb/>
Speight Building.<lb/>
The bill was first sent to the SGA Stu-<lb/>
dent Welfare Committee, which found<lb/>
that there was indeed a need for such<lb/>
shelters. After approval by the Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee, the bill was then<lb/>
sent to the Appropriations Committee to<lb/>
decide whether the SGA would fund a<lb/>
bus shelter.<lb/>
The problem begins here: It seems<lb/>
that everytime a bill which would benefit<lb/>
the students comes before the<lb/>
legislature, it is quickly brought to a<lb/>
screeching halt! There are several people<lb/>
responsible for heading up the opposi-<lb/>
tion against the bus shelters. These peo-<lb/>
ple do not want the SGA to help im-<lb/>
prove a student service. They would<lb/>
rather see the money spent on academic<lb/>
departments, which already receive<lb/>
money from the univeristy. They agree<lb/>
that since the Transit System will use the<lb/>
shelters, why not have Transit pay for<lb/>
them?<lb/>
The facts are: (1) the transit budget<lb/>
does not have extra money available for<lb/>
building bus shelters; (2) the Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee found and approved<lb/>
by unanymous vote a need for bus<lb/>
shelters; (3) the SGA has a budget of<lb/>
$100,000 from student activity fees ap-<lb/>
propriated annually which can pay for<lb/>
the shelters, and (4) if the SGA would<lb/>
provide the money for materials, the<lb/>
Department of Industrial Technology<lb/>
will construct the shelters free of charge.<lb/>
Eric Henderson, SGA president, and<lb/>
Bob Mills, SGA vice president, are tired<lb/>
of having bills that benefit the students<lb/>
snuffed out and see a need to help im-<lb/>
prove student services. If we are going to<lb/>
provide a service to the students, why<lb/>
not do it right?<lb/>
If you have some input into this situa-<lb/>
tion, call the SGA office at 757-6611,<lb/>
ext. 218.<lb/>
Rob Poole<lb/>
Half-Baked Econ<lb/>
In a recent commentary, Staff Writer<lb/>
Jay Stone wrote that Pat O'Neill and<lb/>
college Republican President Dennis Kil-<lb/>
coyne were uninformed on economics.<lb/>
Stone then treats us to a wordy disserta-<lb/>
tion on solving our economic ills. An in-<lb/>
teresting part is when he refers to<lb/>
O'Neill's suggestion of doing away with<lb/>
the defense department as insufficiently<lb/>
developed. I think "half-baked" would<lb/>
be a better description. Mr. Stone would<lb/>
be well advised to read some more books<lb/>
before he throws the word economics<lb/>
around. In the study of economics, tak-<lb/>
ing a "point of view" reduces the value<lb/>
of economic principles. There are<lb/>
thousands of economics volumes in<lb/>
print, yet Stone recommends only three<lb/>
� all written by neo-liberal gurus. It<lb/>
should be clear that I disagree with both<lb/>
Stone and O'Neill. Lester Thurow is a<lb/>
favorite among Northern liberals. Ideas<lb/>
such as "Economic Democracy" are not<lb/>
new; they are the same old liberal womb-<lb/>
to-the-tomb socialist demagoguery,<lb/>
which have caused many of our<lb/>
economic problems, renamed.<lb/>
It does not take an expert, even one<lb/>
like Jay Stone, to realize that we have<lb/>
some serious problems. As future col-<lb/>
lege graduates, we all have an interest in<lb/>
the job market, economic growth and<lb/>
the standard of living of America for<lb/>
years to come. History has shown that<lb/>
economic freedom is a vital requirement<lb/>
for the survival of democracy. As con-<lb/>
tributing members of society, we should<lb/>
be well informed.<lb/>
In ending this letter, I recommend<lb/>
that reading economics should not be<lb/>
limited to one small radical extreme of a<lb/>
very large spectrum.<lb/>
Tim Whisenant<lb/>
Junior, Business<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office 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 authorfsj. 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/>
Hunt<lb/>
In a sti<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
�'<lb/>
l<lb/>
�<lb/>
message to the Mate<lb/>
I egisiaiure. (.<lb/>
"anifv H H mt, Jr .<lb/>
isked state to<lb/>
support r. efforts to<lb/>
nd North Carolina<lb/>
- �<lb/>
ers<lb/>
h to<lb/>
�<lb/>
ak, seve<lb/>
dealt �<lb/>
drunken<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
er H<lb/>
Han<lb/>
Md.<lb/>
(COLI<lb/>
SERVI4 I<lb/>
mv<lb/>
.<lb/>
tO IT �<lb/>
I<lb/>
Arthur (<lb/>
-<lb/>
1 o ola eg<lb/>
Mary la<lb/>
buildsr. �<lb/>
and some <lb/>
elderiv people live<lb/>
headed bv t<lb/>
are rr<lb/>
l 0<lb/>
them are<lb/>
Gatman re:<lb/>
f-or I ovoia. tr .<lb/>
is survival. .<lb/>
� . ;ding to<lb/>
-� .dent-<lb/>
"ve have<lb/>
more rev.dent a 1<lb/>
students explains<lb/>
toy ola -poke-man<lb/>
Robert Sweeaey<lb/>
2!<lb/>
undergraduates, �<lb/>
,uac wonoiiiicfs.<lb/>
Studies indicate there<lb/>
will be fewer commuter<lb/>
-tudenrs m the future.<lb/>
so "we'd reaJh hae to<lb/>
have r�0 percent<lb/>
resident-student- hv the<lb/>
end of the decade" to<lb/>
stav healthv<lb/>
I ovola. howev er,<lb/>
has no place to fa<lb/>
them, and feels if c<lb/>
attract them to the<lb/>
school without one<lb/>
The problem is <lb/>
mon to manv colleges,<lb/>
which in the la<lb/>
years have begun or<lb/>
again to consider ad-<lb/>
ding housing to uw<lb/>
campuses<lb/>
But now vme<lb/>
schools, espedalh ur-<lb/>
ban ones, are find j<lb/>
their efforts to get mo<lb/>
housing often lea<lb/>
iar-h polil ishes<lb/>
with their sum<lb/>
neighborhoods<lb/>
ultimaieiv with the<lb/>
political authorities<lb/>
that give mono to the<lb/>
schools<lb/>
Such "town-gown"<lb/>
frictions have lonw.<lb/>
i s t e d. hut<lb/>
reasonable to expeel<lb/>
things on urban cam<lb/>
puses are going to get<lb/>
worse now that some<lb/>
universities are in the<lb/>
housing market<lb/>
again sa- the fa<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN �<lb/>
DEP�ND ON<lb/>
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,15 IS FRITZ<lb/>
WSHOltPBE<lb/>
kmemai<lb/>
ID RUN FOR<lb/>
 FRITZ<lb/>
DALE<lb/>
MNK<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 27, 1983<lb/>
nble<lb/>
urse<lb/>
r the dear and present<lb/>
ed a few amendments<lb/>
pi gram, which, at first,<lb/>
I -eath of fresh air � amend-<lb/>
S47 K:li:on reduction in his<lb/>
I dup good idea1 At first<lb/>
enl :dea That is, it was<lb/>
� ied that the reduc-<lb/>
i five-yeai period.<lb/>
dollars �- indeed, a<lb/>
none) h most any other<lb/>
relative!) inconsequential<lb/>
nth a defence buildup ex-<lb/>
I 6 trillion and annual<lb/>
j 5200 billion.<lb/>
low citizens �<lb/>
and autoworkers,<lb/>
� � �����age and working<lb/>
- a painful period<lb/>
ed "V,e must all do<lb/>
our power to bring their<lb/>
I<lb/>
-ed a one-percent sur<lb/>
able incomes and an exise tax<lb/>
land imported o:l, a tax which<lb/>
I v. add 1 cents to the cost of<lb/>
ne for the American con-<lb/>
sed a painful period<lb/>
ien to . n our time he<lb/>
the ef i rs, "to undo<lb/>
i me in the mak-<lb/>
.e with which he<lb/>
tck i suppose that why<lb/>
and the Reagan-era deficit<lb/>
al more than all previous<lb/>
�turned.<lb/>
inception, Democrats<lb/>
ans alike � with the possible<lb/>
irse, ol Mr. Reagan �<lb/>
 referred to Reaganomics<lb/>
boat gamble Unfortunately<lb/>
ierican people, the past two<lb/>
I � ears in the history<lb/>
l nics, have shown it's a fail-<lb/>
iys No<lb/>
Uemocracv" are not<lb/>
he same old liberal womb-<lb/>
socialist demagoguery,<lb/>
caused many of our<lb/>
'iems, renamed.<lb/>
t take an expert, even one<lb/>
le. to realize that we have<lb/>
roblenu As future col-<lb/>
we all have an interest in<lb/>
ket. economic growth and<lb/>
living of America for<lb/>
� r has shown that<lb/>
:dom is a vital requirement<lb/>
 �i democracy As con-<lb/>
fers of society, we should<lb/>
fined,<lb/>
this letter, I recommend<lb/>
economics should not be<lb/>
ke -mall radical extreme of a<lb/>
Wctrum.<lb/>
Tim Whisenant<lb/>
Junior, Business<lb/>
rum Rules<lb/>
Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
il points oj view. Mail or<lb/>
)y our ojjice in the Old South<lb/>
:ross from Joyner Library.<lb/>
)ses oj verification, all letters<lb/>
ie the name, major and<lb/>
lt. address, phone number<lb/>
ye oj the author(s). Letters<lb/>
to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
ed or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
yect to editing for brevity,<lb/>
id libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
permitted.<lb/>
Hunt Pushes Strict Laws For Drunken Drivers<lb/>
In a strongly worded<lb/>
message to the State<lb/>
legislature, (iov.<lb/>
James B. Hunt, Jr<lb/>
asked state leaders to<lb/>
support his efforts to<lb/>
rid North Carolina<lb/>
highways of drunken<lb/>
drivers.<lb/>
During his speech to<lb/>
a joint legislative ses-<lb/>
sion. Hunt outlined a<lb/>
series of crime pro-<lb/>
posals, several of which<lb/>
dealt with the question<lb/>
of drunken driving.<lb/>
"We must recognize<lb/>
that the most common<lb/>
murderer in North<lb/>
Carolina is the drunk<lb/>
driver Hunt told the<lb/>
lawmakers.<lb/>
Hunt's drunken-<lb/>
driving package in-<lb/>
cludes mandatory jail<lb/>
sentences for repeat of-<lb/>
fenders, the elimination<lb/>
of plea bargaining and<lb/>
a new proposal called<lb/>
"dram shop" which<lb/>
would make retail<lb/>
alcohol outlets liable<lb/>
for civil suits if they<lb/>
serve underage or in-<lb/>
toxicated patrons who<lb/>
are later involved in ac-<lb/>
cidents.<lb/>
Hunt's final pro-<lb/>
posal appears to be the<lb/>
most controversial,<lb/>
especially among<lb/>
college-age youths. His<lb/>
last proposal recom-<lb/>
mends that the<lb/>
legislature pass a law<lb/>
raising the minimum<lb/>
drinking age from 18 to<lb/>
19. Hunt has also in-<lb/>
dicated that he would<lb/>
not be opposed to rais-<lb/>
ing the age to 21.<lb/>
ECU English student<lb/>
Gary Black noted that<lb/>
although a change in<lb/>
the drinking age may<lb/>
cause some reduction in<lb/>
consumption by<lb/>
minors, it would also<lb/>
have a strong negative<lb/>
impact on North<lb/>
Carolina businesses<lb/>
that sell alcohol pro-<lb/>
ducts.<lb/>
"Raising the drink-<lb/>
ing age to 19 may be a<lb/>
good idea because it<lb/>
could possibly cut<lb/>
down on the high<lb/>
school-age drinkers<lb/>
Black said.<lb/>
Black added that<lb/>
raising the age to 21<lb/>
would be "next to im-<lb/>
possible" to enforce or<lb/>
control. "North<lb/>
Carolina is a big college<lb/>
state and most people<lb/>
at college are under<lb/>
21 continued Black.<lb/>
"Downtown businesses<lb/>
would be wiped out<lb/>
Another student,<lb/>
Kathleen Colbert, who<lb/>
majors in social work,<lb/>
said she agreed with the<lb/>
governor's proposals.<lb/>
"At 18, people still<lb/>
aren't responsible<lb/>
enough to handle it<lb/>
(drinking) Colbert<lb/>
said. "At 21, they<lb/>
know a little bit more<lb/>
about the total effects<lb/>
of alcohol<lb/>
"I don't think rais-<lb/>
ing the legal drinking<lb/>
age is going to be effec-<lb/>
tive in stopping alcohol<lb/>
consumption or in<lb/>
reducing drunken driv-<lb/>
ing said another<lb/>
social work student<lb/>
Mickey Skidmore.<lb/>
Skidmore claims that<lb/>
he has been able to pur-<lb/>
chase alcohol in North<lb/>
Carolina ABC stores<lb/>
since he was 16. "I<lb/>
think they're (the<lb/>
governor and the<lb/>
legislature) going about<lb/>
it in a backwards way<lb/>
Skidmore also ob-<lb/>
jected to Hunt's age<lb/>
proposal on both moral<lb/>
and civil libertarian 18 Skidmore said, seems very inconsistent if they're old enough to<lb/>
grounds. "It makes no<lb/>
sense that they sent<lb/>
people to jail who<lb/>
refused to register for<lb/>
the draft when they're<lb/>
Md. Town Fights Loyola<lb/>
(CGI l EGE PRESS<lb/>
SERVICE) � "This is<lb/>
my last fight, my<lb/>
friend, and I'm going<lb/>
to make it a good one<lb/>
resolves  1 -year-old<lb/>
Arthur Ciutman.<lb/>
Ciutman's fighting<lb/>
Loyola College of<lb/>
Marvland, which wants<lb/>
to buy the apartment<lb/>
building where Gutman<lb/>
and some 90 other<lb/>
elderly people live.<lb/>
Organized in a group<lb/>
headed by Gutman,<lb/>
they "are mad as hell at<lb/>
Loyola, and a lot of<lb/>
them are Catholic<lb/>
Gutman reports.<lb/>
For I oyola, the issue<lb/>
is survival. It needs the<lb/>
building to house<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"we have to get<lb/>
more residential<lb/>
students explains<lb/>
I oyola spokesman<lb/>
Robert Sweeney. "Of<lb/>
our 2500<lb/>
undergraduates, 60 per-<lb/>
,�cnj�rs commuters<lb/>
Studies indicate there<lb/>
will be fewer commuter<lb/>
students in the future,<lb/>
so "we'd really have to<lb/>
have 60 percent<lb/>
resident-students by the<lb/>
end of the decade" to<lb/>
stay healthy.<lb/>
I oyola, however,<lb/>
has no place to house<lb/>
them, and feels it can't<lb/>
attract them to the<lb/>
school without one.<lb/>
The problem is com-<lb/>
mon to many colleges,<lb/>
which in the last few<lb/>
years have begun once<lb/>
again to consider ad-<lb/>
ding housing to their<lb/>
campuses.<lb/>
But now some<lb/>
schools, especially ur-<lb/>
ban ones, are finding<lb/>
their efforts to get more<lb/>
housing often lead to<lb/>
harsh political clashes<lb/>
with their surrounding<lb/>
neighborhoods, and<lb/>
ultimately with the<lb/>
political authorities<lb/>
that give money to the<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Such "town-gown"<lb/>
frictions have long ex-<lb/>
isted, but "it's<lb/>
reasonable to expect<lb/>
things on urban cam-<lb/>
puses are going to get<lb/>
worse now that some<lb/>
universities are in the<lb/>
housing market<lb/>
again says the hous-<lb/>
ing director of a<lb/>
Chicago campus.<lb/>
The campus, which<lb/>
the officer asked to<lb/>
keep anonymous, is "in<lb/>
dire need of quality, af-<lb/>
fordable housing for<lb/>
our students, and we're<lb/>
negotiating now with<lb/>
several parties to bring<lb/>
that about. We're very<lb/>
worried that premature<lb/>
public awareness of our<lb/>
plans will make getting<lb/>
the housing politically<lb/>
impossible for us<lb/>
Gutman's tenant<lb/>
group, for example,<lb/>
has made Loyola's at-<lb/>
tempt to buy Wyn-<lb/>
newood Towers for<lb/>
$6.9 million into a<lb/>
cause celeb re in<lb/>
Baltimore.<lb/>
Loyola plans to<lb/>
move 40 students into<lb/>
the high rise in<lb/>
September, and then<lb/>
move more in as the<lb/>
elderly tenants' leases<lb/>
run out,<lb/>
After hearing the<lb/>
plans from Loyola<lb/>
President Joseph Scll-<lb/>
mger, the tenants met<lb/>
under blinding TV<lb/>
lights with college of-<lb/>
ficials, who they<lb/>
repeatedly interrupted<lb/>
with questions like,<lb/>
"Where can we go?"<lb/>
and "How can they do<lb/>
this to us?"<lb/>
Such scenes scare<lb/>
housing officials on<lb/>
other campuses.<lb/>
"Higher education is<lb/>
having a hard time in<lb/>
this legislature ex-<lb/>
plains the Chicago<lb/>
housing official. "The<lb/>
(university) administra-<lb/>
tion won't want to<lb/>
jeopardize state fun-<lb/>
ding by causing an un-<lb/>
due ruckus in our com-<lb/>
munity<lb/>
The spectre of con-<lb/>
troversy apparently<lb/>
also helped convince<lb/>
Johns Hopkins to alter<lb/>
plans for buying and<lb/>
converting apartment<lb/>
houses into dorms.<lb/>
But, the fact that<lb/>
schools are thinking<lb/>
about new housing at<lb/>
all is a change.<lb/>
They've been putting<lb/>
off building new hous-<lb/>
ing since the mid-<lb/>
seventies. Despite terri-<lb/>
ble overcrowding in ex-<lb/>
isting dorms, ad-<lb/>
ministrators resisted<lb/>
building new ones for<lb/>
fear the precipitous<lb/>
enrollment decline due<lb/>
in the eighties would<lb/>
leave them with no<lb/>
students to house in the<lb/>
new buildings.<lb/>
But "the enrollment<lb/>
decline has not happen-<lb/>
ed yet points out Bill<lb/>
Paleen, Cornell's hous-<lb/>
ing chief and head of<lb/>
the Association of Col-<lb/>
lege and University<lb/>
Housing Officers.<lb/>
Now, "I think there<lb/>
are more schools who<lb/>
have a demand (for<lb/>
housing) which exceeds<lb/>
available space<lb/>
Harvard, for one,<lb/>
warehouses five<lb/>
students in some four-<lb/>
person suites. West<lb/>
Georgia College has<lb/>
temporarily converted<lb/>
some campus con-<lb/>
ference rooms in to<lb/>
sleepers. At Cal-Santa<lb/>
Barbara, "the situation<lb/>
this year is even worse"<lb/>
than last, says Housing<lb/>
Director Joan Devine.<lb/>
North Dakota State,<lb/>
Missouri Southern,<lb/>
Texas A'M, Florida, Il-<lb/>
linois State and San<lb/>
Jose State, among<lb/>
many others, have had<lb/>
to shove students into<lb/>
off-campus temporary<lb/>
housing because of<lb/>
dorm room shortages.<lb/>
Under pressure from<lb/>
students, some schools<lb/>
have lost patience<lb/>
waiting for the squeeze<lb/>
to ease.<lb/>
The American Coun-<lb/>
cil on Education found<lb/>
that 25 percent of the<lb/>
housing officers it<lb/>
questioned said finding<lb/>
more housing is their<lb/>
top priority through<lb/>
1986.<lb/>
ACE researcher<lb/>
Charles Anderson adds<lb/>
that an increasing<lb/>
percentage of the hous-<lb/>
ing officers prefer buy-<lb/>
ing and converting ex-<lb/>
isting buildings to<lb/>
building new dorms.<lb/>
Anderson attributes<lb/>
the trend to "economic<lb/>
conditions including<lb/>
lower mortgage rates.<lb/>
"Anyone who has<lb/>
the opportunity to ac-<lb/>
quire a place and adapt<lb/>
it should do that<lb/>
because the economics<lb/>
involved make it a<lb/>
more feasible ap-<lb/>
proach Paleen says.<lb/>
Some estimate a<lb/>
school can save 20-50<lb/>
percent by buying and<lb/>
converting.<lb/>
Others say the<lb/>
political costs of con-<lb/>
verting negate the<lb/>
monetary savings.<lb/>
Loyola's Sweeney<lb/>
contends "the costs are<lb/>
about the same, and, as<lb/>
in the Wynnewood<lb/>
case, you don't save all<lb/>
that much time<lb/>
Wynnewood<lb/>
residents hope to stall<lb/>
students' arrival for a<lb/>
year while they<lb/>
negoiate with the col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
"Loyola told us that<lb/>
tenants over 70 who are<lb/>
disabled and not active<lb/>
may continue to live<lb/>
here Gutman says.<lb/>
"I drive<lb/>
downtown mourns<lb/>
86-year-old Jacob J.<lb/>
Edelman, a 22-year<lb/>
Wynnewood resident,<lb/>
"and that means I'm<lb/>
active, that I have to<lb/>
leave<lb/>
Told of the Loyola<lb/>
entanglement, the<lb/>
Chicago housing of-<lb/>
ficer groaned in an-<lb/>
ticipation of what's to<lb/>
come when he unveils<lb/>
his own plans. "That's<lb/>
why we're keeping it<lb/>
under wraps. Nobody<lb/>
likes a landlord, and<lb/>
nobody likes evicting<lb/>
people. But nobody<lb/>
goes to a university<lb/>
without housing<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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"They want them to<lb/>
fight, to have the<lb/>
resposibility to defend<lb/>
our country, but they<lb/>
won't let them drink. It<lb/>
to me.<lb/>
Several other<lb/>
students had mixed<lb/>
feelings about the age<lb/>
limit. Some noted that<lb/>
vote for national<lb/>
leaders, they should be<lb/>
old enough to make<lb/>
responsible decisions<lb/>
regarding alcohol.<lb/>
Greenville Helps 111 Child<lb/>
More than $4,000<lb/>
has been raised to help<lb/>
aid a Greenville family<lb/>
pay the medical ex-<lb/>
penses of their<lb/>
10-month-old infant<lb/>
who is afflicted with<lb/>
leukemia.<lb/>
However, the family<lb/>
of Douglas Moore,<lb/>
because of new infor-<lb/>
mation regarding the<lb/>
child's medical<lb/>
coverage, has found<lb/>
out that they need more<lb/>
than the $2,000<lb/>
originally thought .<lb/>
The plight of the<lb/>
Moore child came to<lb/>
light when ECU<lb/>
Catholic chaplin Girard<lb/>
Sherba made a plea to<lb/>
ECU students at a<lb/>
church service.<lb/>
Students were asked to<lb/>
make donations to a<lb/>
special collection to<lb/>
help the family. Those<lb/>
attending responded by<lb/>
donating $263.<lb/>
According to Sister<lb/>
Helen Shondcll, ECU<lb/>
Catholic Campus<lb/>
Minister, over $100<lb/>
more has been collected<lb/>
from students bringing<lb/>
the ECU total close to<lb/>
$400.<lb/>
"I'm just over-<lb/>
whelmed to say the<lb/>
least Sherba said.<lb/>
"The gospel calls us to<lb/>
action and we have<lb/>
responded<lb/>
Sherba said the<lb/>
father. Douglas Moore,<lb/>
Sr is in the Army and<lb/>
that because of a policy<lb/>
change his medical<lb/>
benefits will only cover<lb/>
the cost of his son's<lb/>
operation, not the<lb/>
hospital stay, which<lb/>
could be for several<lb/>
months.<lb/>
The Moore child is<lb/>
scheduled to be treated<lb/>
at a civilian hospital in<lb/>
Gainsville, Fla. The in-<lb/>
surance will not pay for<lb/>
the baby's stay in the<lb/>
hospital, according to<lb/>
Sherba. The Florida<lb/>
facility is the only place<lb/>
in the United States<lb/>
that has an opening for<lb/>
the special operation.<lb/>
Presently the Moore<lb/>
family has arrived in<lb/>
Florida and they are<lb/>
awaiting doctors' deci-<lb/>
sions regarding the date<lb/>
for the operation which<lb/>
will involve two of their<lb/>
children. The operation<lb/>
was originally schedul-<lb/>
ed for last Saturday,<lb/>
but was postponed at<lb/>
least until today so doc-<lb/>
tors can make further<lb/>
preparations.<lb/>
The delicate and<lb/>
painful operation will<lb/>
involve a transplant of<lb/>
bone-marrow from<lb/>
Douglas' 22-month-old<lb/>
sister Latasha Moore to<lb/>
her brother. Because<lb/>
Latasha has the same<lb/>
blood-type and similar<lb/>
chromosome structure<lb/>
as her brother, doctors<lb/>
were optimistic that the<lb/>
operation could save<lb/>
the infant's life.<lb/>
Doctors originall<lb/>
thought the Moore in-<lb/>
fant had very little<lb/>
chance of surviving the<lb/>
usually deadly cancer<lb/>
of the blood cells, but<lb/>
now doctors say the<lb/>
transplant operation in-<lb/>
creases the child's<lb/>
chances of survival<lb/>
from 20 to 80 percent.<lb/>
Sherba said dona-<lb/>
tions to the family were<lb/>
at present coming from<lb/>
many churhces in the<lb/>
city through the Green-<lb/>
ville Ministerial<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
St. Gabriel Church<lb/>
where Sherba is pastor<lb/>
has already raised close<lb/>
to $1,100 for the in-<lb/>
fant. Another $1,000 in<lb/>
donations was raised by<lb/>
enthusiastic children at<lb/>
St. Gabriel's School<lb/>
who embarked on a<lb/>
door-to-door collection<lb/>
campaign in their<lb/>
neighborhoods.<lb/>
Another Greenville<lb/>
resident ho manages a<lb/>
local hotel had original-<lb/>
ly made arrangements<lb/>
for the family to stay<lb/>
free of charge in a<lb/>
Gainsville. Fla hotel<lb/>
for three weeks. But<lb/>
when the family arrived<lb/>
in Florida a opening<lb/>
came at Ronald<lb/>
McDonald House and<lb/>
the family decided to<lb/>
stay there because there<lb/>
was no time limit<lb/>
Sheroa asks that<lb/>
anyone wishing to<lb/>
make contributions to<lb/>
the medical fund con-<lb/>
tact the First Christian<lb/>
Church of Greenville.<lb/>
520 E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-3138.<lb/>
QUIXOTE<lb/>
TRAVELS,<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK CRL'ISF.<lb/>
March 4 from Miami<lb/>
$285 per person<lb/>
double<lb/>
3 night aboard s AMERIkAMS<lb/>
Plus 2 night FRF.E al Diploma; Hold.<lb/>
Hollywood ion Ike beach i. Fla.<lb/>
March 7 from Mimmi<lb/>
$399 per person<lb/>
quad<lb/>
4 ai(kts aboard s DOl PHIS<lb/>
M Cetaacfte Si . I( ou tike cruising in llw sun<lb/>
Greenville 7s7-e�4 CaU ao�-Space limited<lb/>
Join Mickey and<lb/>
Minney for fun and<lb/>
excitement in<lb/>
Disney WorldFt.<lb/>
Lauderdale during<lb/>
Spring Break<lb/>
(March 4 - March<lb/>
13, 1983).<lb/>
rco<lb/>
e<lb/>
zn<lb/>
G<lb/>
Applica-<lb/>
tions are being ac-<lb/>
cepted now until<lb/>
February 1, 1983.<lb/>
For more informa-<lb/>
tion call the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office,<lb/>
757-6611, Ext. 266.<lb/>
7"<lb/>
MEAL DEAL!<lb/>
You know PTA delivers great<lb/>
hot pizza. But did you know that<lb/>
with every pizza PTA delivers cold<lb/>
Cokes too7 Free 14-ouncers.<lb/>
Its the Meal Deal.<lb/>
Savings for real.<lb/>
When it comes to pizza,<lb/>
PTA comes to you.<lb/>
We will open<lb/>
11:00a.m. Sat. � Sun.<lb/>
ir<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
Transit<lb/>
Authority<lb/>
Super Bowl Special<lb/>
Vj� Pizza Transit Authority Inc<lb/>
;<lb/>
Buy Large 2 or more topping Pizza �-1<lb/>
Get a small Pizza with equal number of<lb/>
I toppings FREE Saturday �Sunday Only<lb/>
757.1955 FREE DELIVERY I<lb/>
 ejF M JJ anywhercwoubS�RV1C�zone<lb/>
"<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057529_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THfc fcST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
JANl ARY27, 1983<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
A rtist Doleys Work<lb/>
On Display A t Gray<lb/>
K I Ne.v Bureau<lb/>
Recent work by internationally recognized collage ar-<lb/>
tist William Dole (born 1917) will be on view in ECU's<lb/>
Grav Gallery Jan. 27-March 18.<lb/>
The show will begin with an opening reception on<lb/>
Jan. 27 from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. The public is invited to<lb/>
attend. In addition, ti re will be three screenings of a<lb/>
videotape dealing with the artist, his theories and his<lb/>
studio. The tape will be shown in the gallery at 2 p.m.<lb/>
on three Sundays, Jan. 30, Feb. 20 and March 13.<lb/>
Called by Alfred Frankenstein, art critic of the San<lb/>
Francisco Chronicle, the "greatest master of collage to<lb/>
appear on the world scene since the death of the great<lb/>
Kurt Schwitters Dole is represented by major galleries<lb/>
on both U.S. coasts and in the permanent collections ot<lb/>
numerous art museums.<lb/>
His collages are characterized by sensitivity to aspects<lb/>
of paper and printing. He uses fragments from ancient<lb/>
documents in distinctive typefaces combined with<lb/>
carefully washed or stained watercolor papers and<lb/>
marbelized end papers from discarded books.<lb/>
Each collage painting is a balanced compositional<lb/>
whole which invites careful examination and study. Of<lb/>
his work Dole says. "The printed word � even in an<lb/>
unknown foreign language � has a sense of authority<lb/>
that no other graphic element has 1 intend each of my<lb/>
works to be apoetic statement<lb/>
Dole credits the influence of major writers ot the 20th<lb/>
century, among them Gertrude Stein, W.H. Auden.<lb/>
Carl Sandburg and Ford Maddox Ford, as well as con-<lb/>
temporary artists.<lb/>
He is currently on the faculty of the University ot<lb/>
California at Santa Barbara.<lb/>
According to Gray Gallery Directory Randolph<lb/>
Osman. most of the 29 works to be on view at ECU are<lb/>
for sale.<lb/>
Area In Brief<lb/>
Gray Gallery, located in the east end of the Jenkins<lb/>
Fine Arts Center on the main campus, is open each<lb/>
weekday from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. and on Sundays<lb/>
from 1 to 4 p.m.<lb/>
In honor of the 75th anniversary of ECU, the East<lb/>
Carolina Dance Theatre is presenting a concert on Jan.<lb/>
27, 28, and 29 at 8:15 p.m. in McGinnis Theatre which<lb/>
features a fusion of the arts in celebration of dance, one<lb/>
of the newest performing arts majors on campus.<lb/>
Composer Otto Henry of the Music Faculty and<lb/>
sculptor Tom Grubb, M.F.A. candidate in the School<lb/>
of Art, are working on original pieces for new dances<lb/>
choreographed by Patricia Weeks and Patricia Per-<lb/>
talion, respectively.<lb/>
Paula Johnson is doing a danced version of A Street-<lb/>
car amed Desire and a lively, colorful adaptation of<lb/>
the Japanese fairy tale, A Tongue-Cut Sparrow.<lb/>
Petrus van Muyden will be presenting a version of Act<lb/>
II of The utcracker and the pas de deux from Le Cor-<lb/>
saire. Other pieces in the concert by Weeks and Per-<lb/>
talion will be to music by Copland, Vivaldi and<lb/>
Janacek.<lb/>
Costume designs by Patrice Alexander will be par-<lb/>
ticularly unique and extravagant, and lighting designed<lb/>
by David Downing will fully utilize the computerized<lb/>
lighting control system recently installed in McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Tickets are available for $4 at the McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
Box Office from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on week days, or call<lb/>
757-6390 for reservations.<lb/>
The ECU Dance Theatre is celebrating the school's 75th anniversary with a special concert series<lb/>
The Art Gallery of Mendenhall Student Center will be<lb/>
displaying "A Collection of African Sculpture" Jan. 30<lb/>
� Feb. 13 as a part of the Black Arts Festival Week.<lb/>
The show is a division of more than 3,500 art and craft<lb/>
items of Africa which comprise the North Carolina<lb/>
Agricultural and Technical State University Heritage<lb/>
Center's collection.<lb/>
Director and Curator of the Heritage Center, Mrs.<lb/>
Mattye Reed, will be the special guest speaker at the<lb/>
show's reception, 6:30 p.m Wednesday, Feb. 2. Mrs.<lb/>
Reed will discuss the show, and the relationship of<lb/>
sculpture and African life, as well as Field questions<lb/>
about the show. Admission to the Gallery and reception<lb/>
is free.<lb/>
Many of the show's sculptures are pieces from rites of<lb/>
birth, puberty, marriage and death 1 raditional Atncan<lb/>
sculptures are useful objects which meet the spiritual,<lb/>
ritual, ceremonial and atilitanan need of the group<lb/>
While aesthetic merit may be a part of the sculptural in-<lb/>
tegrity, it is almost always will have a more significant<lb/>
purpose.<lb/>
Indeed, aethetic appeal ma not be desired at all when<lb/>
representing nahvolent spirit It is not ala an ap<lb/>
preciation ot aesthetic in African sculpture, but rather<lb/>
the skill and validity in each piece's portrayal<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student Center -rt Gallery is located<lb/>
in the second floor lobby and is open Monday - I riurs-<lb/>
dav, 8:30a.m. � 11 p.m Friday, 8:30 a.m. -� 12a.m<lb/>
Saturday. 12 p.m � 12 a.m and Sunday 1pm � 11<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
North And South'<lb/>
John Jakes' Latest First In A Trilogy<lb/>
No writer so successfully captures<lb/>
the essence of the American spirit as<lb/>
John Jakes. The renowned author<lb/>
of the 30 million-copy bestselling<lb/>
Kent hamily Chronicles, he again<lb/>
brings history to life in his most am-<lb/>
bitious work to date. Sorth and<lb/>
South, a stunning saga of pre-Civil<lb/>
War America. A number 1 national<lb/>
best-seller with oer 300.000 hard-<lb/>
cover copies in print. Sorth and<lb/>
South was a Literary Guild featured<lb/>
g national magazine. Family Circle.<lb/>
The first volume of an extensively<lb/>
research trilogy. North and South is<lb/>
the compelling and dramatic tale of<lb/>
two wealthy families living on op-<lb/>
posite sides of the Mason Dixon line<lb/>
during one of the most explosive<lb/>
eras in American history. The two<lb/>
decades leading up to the divisive<lb/>
Civil War were a time when families<lb/>
and friends turned against each<lb/>
other, and the color of a man's skin<lb/>
could mean the difference between<lb/>
life and death.<lb/>
The Mains, descendants of<lb/>
French aristocracy, are South<lb/>
Carolina planters whose way of life<lb/>
is rooted in years of tradition that<lb/>
they will fight to the death to main-<lb/>
tain. No such tradition binds the<lb/>
Hazards, a family of Pennsylvania<lb/>
industrialists who scorn the concept<lb/>
of owning men and being dependent<lb/>
on them for success. Several genera-<lb/>
tions back, the Hazards were<lb/>
fugitive fleeing to a new land and.<lb/>
by taking advantage ot their oppor-<lb/>
tunities, they were able to amass a<lb/>
vast amount of money in a very<lb/>
short time.<lb/>
Cieorge Hazard and Orry Main<lb/>
meet as they are both about to enroll<lb/>
at West Point, the nation's fledgling<lb/>
military academy and. despite the<lb/>
differences in their backgrounds,<lb/>
they establish an immediate and<lb/>
lasting friendship which irrevocably<lb/>
intertwines their own lives and those<lb/>
of their families.<lb/>
Through their years at West Point<lb/>
and as young soldiers fighting<lb/>
together with General Zachary<lb/>
Taylor in Mexico, Orry and George<lb/>
continue their relationship, even<lb/>
after they return to their respective<lb/>
horns. Orry is George's Best Man at<lb/>
his wedding to Constance, a liberal<lb/>
Catholic who is ostracized by Penn-<lb/>
sylvania society, and George is the<lb/>
only person Orry confides in about<lb/>
his deep abiding love for a married<lb/>
white woman who carefully guarads<lb/>
the secret of her Black ancestor.<lb/>
It becomes more and more dif-<lb/>
ficult to remain friends, however, as<lb/>
the grim shadows of slavery and<lb/>
politics loom ever larger. The<lb/>
families must struggle valiantly to<lb/>
maintain peace among themselves as<lb/>
events catapult to their inevitable<lb/>
conclusion.<lb/>
John Jakes has earned the im-<lb/>
pressive distinction of "America's<lb/>
best-read writer" (San Francisco<lb/>
Chronicle). The author of 200 short<lb/>
stories, 50 books, four plays, and<lb/>
the librettos and lyrics for six<lb/>
musicals, he is also one of the coun-<lb/>
try's most prolific writers.<lb/>
Born in Chicago in 1932, Jakes<lb/>
began writing professionally during<lb/>
his freshman year at Northwestern<lb/>
University, where he was studying<lb/>
to become an actor. Once the<lb/>
writing bug bit, however (in the<lb/>
form of a $25 check for his first<lb/>
short story), there was no shaking it.<lb/>
He enrolled in the creative writing<lb/>
program at DePauw University and<lb/>
also received an M.A. in American<lb/>
Literature from Ohio State Univer-<lb/>
sity. He completed his first book, a<lb/>
historical novel, during examination<lb/>
week of his senior year at DePauw.<lb/>
Under the pseudonym Jay Scotland,<lb/>
Jakes went on to author more than<lb/>
half a dozen books of this genre<lb/>
while working in the creative depart-<lb/>
ments of several regional and na-<lb/>
tional advertising agencies in<lb/>
Rochester, New York and Dayton.<lb/>
Ohio.<lb/>
In March of 1973. Jakes began<lb/>
work on the Kent Family<lb/>
Chronicles, an eight-volume series<lb/>
that accurately depicts the nation's<lb/>
history through the lives of a fic-<lb/>
tional family. A spectacular success<lb/>
and a publishing phenomenon, the<lb/>
Kent Family Chronicles now totals<lb/>
more than 30 million copies in print.<lb/>
When he became the first author to<lb/>
ever have three books on The en<lb/>
York Times paperback bestseller list<lb/>
in one year, that newspaper<lb/>
reported "In the history of U.S.<lb/>
book publishing there's never been a<lb/>
success story quite like that of John<lb/>
Jaks All eight volumes of the<lb/>
series were national bestsellers<lb/>
Beatty A nd Keaton Star In 'Reds'<lb/>
Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton star in epic biography Redi<lb/>
showing this weekend in Mendenhall's Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Adage 'Til Death Do Us Part'<lb/>
Has Big Meaning For Women<lb/>
Film 'Black Orpheus' On Tap For Festival<lb/>
Considered one of the most beautiful films ever made. Black Orpheus retells the legend of Orpheus<lb/>
and Eurydice in a modern setting. The film is scheduled for Wednesday, Feb. 2, at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall's Hendrix Theatre. Sponsored by the Student Union Films Committee, the film is part of<lb/>
the Department of University Unions' '8283 Black Arts Festival.<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) � When a<lb/>
woman marries a man, she imagines<lb/>
growing old with him when she<lb/>
vows "till death do us part But<lb/>
current statistics indicate women are<lb/>
becoming widowed at an average<lb/>
age of 56, says Mona Shevlin, an<lb/>
assistant professor in the School of<lb/>
Education at the Catholic Universi-<lb/>
ty of America.<lb/>
To help women prepare for the<lb/>
probable return to "singlehood<lb/>
Ms. Shevlin, who sees many women<lb/>
in her counseling practice at the<lb/>
Counseling Center for Greater<lb/>
Washington, advises them to be<lb/>
realistic.<lb/>
"You'll probably be either<lb/>
widowed or divorced at least once in<lb/>
your lifetime she tells them.<lb/>
Little formal preparation for<lb/>
widowhood exists, says Ms. Shevlin,<lb/>
who teaches in the university<lb/>
counseling and guidance master's<lb/>
and doctoral programs. She feels<lb/>
there should be more.<lb/>
An area of great hardship for<lb/>
many widows who have had<lb/>
satisfactory marriages is the loss of<lb/>
an intimate campanion and a part-<lb/>
ner for decision making. Financial<lb/>
decisions are an area of particular<lb/>
weakness, says Ms. Shevlin.<lb/>
"Women are trained early on to<lb/>
espouse dependence and passivity<lb/>
she says. "They are taught to nur<lb/>
ture and serve others. When they<lb/>
lose their mates, they often lose<lb/>
their identities because all their mar-<lb/>
ried lives they've been somebody's<lb/>
wife. When their husbands die. they<lb/>
feel as though their lives are over,<lb/>
and they proceed to merely tolerate<lb/>
the rest of their lives<lb/>
An elderly widow must face the<lb/>
fact that if she does desire to date<lb/>
and possibly remarry, there is the<lb/>
problem of numbers. There is a<lb/>
much larger pool of single elderly<lb/>
women than men.<lb/>
Ms. Shevlin counsels women that<lb/>
hile it may be desirable, it is not<lb/>
necessary to have a mate. And thus<lb/>
women who have lost their<lb/>
husbands must learn to live alone<lb/>
for perhaps the first time in 30 to 50<lb/>
years in a world that is totally dif-<lb/>
ferent from the one in which they<lb/>
may have been single years before.<lb/>
The idea of preparing for<lb/>
widowhood is a much avoided<lb/>
topic, Ms. Shevlin says, because<lb/>
people have difficulty accepting that<lb/>
there are usually beginnings, mid-<lb/>
dles and ends in all relationships.<lb/>
"And the ends don't always come<lb/>
when they're expected or wanted<lb/>
In addition to enrolling in<lb/>
seminars and workshops when<lb/>
they're available, women should<lb/>
foster and encourage both male and<lb/>
female friendships, Ms. Shevin says.<lb/>
"Enjoy the person you're married<lb/>
to, but make sure to build other<lb/>
relationships as well say- Ms.<lb/>
Shevlin. who adds that throughout<lb/>
her life, a woman should expand her<lb/>
interests and continue to engage in<lb/>
them.<lb/>
To cope with a common feeling of<lb/>
anger directed at the dead spouse,<lb/>
Ms. Sheviin tells women. "Give<lb/>
yourself permission to be angry. For<lb/>
anybody who has experienced a<lb/>
loss, it's a normal feeling. Talk<lb/>
about the anger with other people.<lb/>
Vent it<lb/>
Though there are not many<lb/>
seminars or workshops to prepare<lb/>
for widowhood, there are self-help,<lb/>
support groups for the already-<lb/>
widowed, which she suggests join-<lb/>
ing. The advantage of joining a<lb/>
group, she says, is that the people in<lb/>
it have all experienced the loss of a<lb/>
spouse, and there is a common<lb/>
understanding that can't be found<lb/>
among the best intentioned of<lb/>
friends and relatives.<lb/>
"Friends and relatives can listen<lb/>
and be helpful up to a certain point,<lb/>
but then they often get bored or im-<lb/>
patient she says.<lb/>
See WIDOWS, Page 7<lb/>
Wan Fi<lb/>
Top-N<lb/>
B Jl 1 II<lb/>
KHRBMH<lb/>
The Man trm<lb/>
Snoy Rier (noi<lb/>
piavmg at Greenville'<lb/>
Phi! Theatre! .ora:r<lb/>
all of thecharac-<lb/>
of an Austrahar.<lb/>
that audiences <lb/>
come to expect e at<lb/>
afforded an- a<lb/>
glimpse at <lb/>
geography and societ)<lb/>
of Australia w I<lb/>
nmg about the hi 1<lb/>
of a virtually unk: -I<lb/>
nation thr <lb/>
breathtaking<lb/>
cinematogr<lb/>
This tiim is n. j<lb/>
about a young I<lb/>
sent to ma-<lb/>
also about a<lb/>
try that sorr<lb/>
some harcd no<lb/>
Hiver ;s a It �f<lb/>
western, ar. a<lb/>
and. :n some<lb/>
fairytale<lb/>
Jim Craic<lb/>
boy wl the -<lb/>
den death .<lb/>
- 1888.<lb/>
become amai<lb/>
to be re. i<lb/>
such he rau<lb/>
mounta <lb/>
right<lb/>
:n the h gj<lb/>
goes down the rac<lb/>
tain and proves hims<lb/>
by workr.g on the H<lb/>
ris ranch Here<lb/>
in love �-<lb/>
ihta<lb/>
raer, tan<lb/>
horse and capture<lb/>
- j - rses<lb/>
Spe<lb/>
Win<lb/>
<lb/>
T.<lb/>
Cah<lb/>
Bil<lb/>
cnu<lb/>
Tre<lb/>
Sa<lb/>
Joi<lb/>
Hal<lb/>
Joi<lb/>
 " <lb/>
<lb/>
-�� "���i � mm<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057529_0007"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
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Urican<lb/>
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In Reds'<lb/>
i btograptn M<lb/>
ln I beat re<lb/>
Part'<lb/>
omen<lb/>
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re married<lb/>
i other<lb/>
Ms<lb/>
ighout<lb/>
man should e.pand her<lb/>
i 'age in<lb/>
�union feeling of<lb/>
:ted at the dead spouse.<lb/>
Us women, "Give<lb/>
ion to he angry. For<lb/>
nas experienced a<lb/>
mal teeiing. Talk<lb/>
"i other people.<lb/>
ire not man<lb/>
r workshops to prepare<lb/>
od, there are velf-help.<lb/>
nips tor the already-<lb/>
. inch he suggests join-<lb/>
advantage of joining a<lb/>
iys, is that the people in<lb/>
epenenced the loss of a<lb/>
u there is a common<lb/>
ling that can't be found<lb/>
le best intentioned of<lb/>
relatives.<lb/>
and relatives can listen<lb/>
jtul up to a certain point,<lb/>
c often get bored or im-<lb/>
ie says.<lb/>
lDOWS. Page 7<lb/>
�A<lb/>
'Man From Snowy River'<lb/>
Top-Notch Aussie Fare<lb/>
By JULIE<lb/>
FAHRBACH<lb/>
Stytt<lb/>
The Man From<lb/>
Snowy River (now<lb/>
playing at Greenville's<lb/>
Plitt Theatre) contains<lb/>
all of the characteristics<lb/>
of an Australian film<lb/>
that audiences have<lb/>
come to expect. We are<lb/>
afforded another<lb/>
glimpse at the<lb/>
geography and society<lb/>
of Australia while lear-<lb/>
ning about the history<lb/>
of a virtually unknown<lb/>
nation through<lb/>
breathtaking<lb/>
cinematography.<lb/>
This film is not only<lb/>
about a young boy's as-<lb/>
sent to manhood, but<lb/>
also about a hard coun-<lb/>
try that some loved and<lb/>
some hated. Snowy<lb/>
River is a love story, a<lb/>
western, an adventure<lb/>
and, in some ways, a<lb/>
fairytale.<lb/>
Jim Craig is a young<lb/>
boy who after the sud-<lb/>
den death of his father<lb/>
in 1888, struggles to<lb/>
become a man. In order<lb/>
to be recognized as<lb/>
such he must leave the<lb/>
mountains and earn the<lb/>
right to return and live<lb/>
in the high country. He<lb/>
goes down the moun-<lb/>
tain and proves himself<lb/>
by working on the Har-<lb/>
ris ranch. Here, he falls<lb/>
in love with the<lb/>
daughter of the ranch's<lb/>
owner, tames a prize<lb/>
horse and captures a<lb/>
herd of wild horses. All<lb/>
this is done in grand<lb/>
style, which of course<lb/>
earns him the right to<lb/>
return and be a<lb/>
"mountain man<lb/>
Kirk Douglas plays<lb/>
the owner of the ranch<lb/>
and the owner's<lb/>
brother. Douglas is one<lb/>
of my least favorite ac-<lb/>
tors but is brilliant in<lb/>
this dual role. The<lb/>
brothers are as dif-<lb/>
ferent as night and day,<lb/>
but Douglas lends<lb/>
authenticity to both<lb/>
roles.<lb/>
The ranch owner's<lb/>
daughter, is a strong-<lb/>
willed girl named<lb/>
Jessica, played convin-<lb/>
cingly by Sigrid Thorn-<lb/>
ton. Thornton is a<lb/>
newcomer to the<lb/>
screen, but I am sure<lb/>
she will soon be a<lb/>
familiar sight.<lb/>
Tom Burlinson is<lb/>
Jim Craig. Burlinson<lb/>
was excellent and will<lb/>
soon become as famous<lb/>
as well-known<lb/>
Australian actor Jack<lb/>
Thompson. In the film<lb/>
Thompson played<lb/>
Clancy, a famous<lb/>
tracker.<lb/>
The forty-two-year-<lb/>
old actor is a very-<lb/>
recognizable face<lb/>
because of his previous<lb/>
roles in Breaker<lb/>
M or ant, The Chant of<lb/>
Jimmie Blacksmith,<lb/>
The Earthling and a<lb/>
remake Somerset<lb/>
Maugham's of The Let-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
The other well<lb/>
known figure involved<lb/>
in The Man From<lb/>
Snowy River is George<lb/>
Miller, the director.<lb/>
Miller has thrilled us<lb/>
with great films Mad<lb/>
Max (1979) and The<lb/>
Road Warrior (1982)<lb/>
(showing on campus<lb/>
Wednesday, March 2 ).<lb/>
George Miller is an<lb/>
MD but in his last<lb/>
year of medical school<lb/>
he helped his twin<lb/>
brother make a one<lb/>
minute film and he was<lb/>
hooked. He graduated<lb/>
from med school and<lb/>
practiced long enough<lb/>
to raise the $350,000<lb/>
necessary to make Mad<lb/>
Max. To date, Mad<lb/>
Max has grossed over<lb/>
80 million dollars.<lb/>
The Man From<lb/>
Snowy River is a<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 27, 1983<lb/>
Widows Lonely<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
To confront depression, Ms.<lb/>
Shevlin suggests viewing it simply as<lb/>
"learned helplessness and<lb/>
hopelessness" that can be unlearn-<lb/>
ed. Socialize, be involved with peo-<lb/>
ple, be active. It's important to<lb/>
establish companionship, especially<lb/>
in cases where there is no family<lb/>
support system, she says.<lb/>
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people wonder how to react to the<lb/>
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"Don't say, 'I know exactly how<lb/>
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The most appropriate response,<lb/>
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And then let the individual know<lb/>
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Beyond saying the right thing,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057529_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANLAK1 27, 198?<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Top Conference Rookies To Battle<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
uHt�l Sports tdlto<lb/>
When the ECU Pirates and Navy<lb/>
Midshipmen clash this Saturday in<lb/>
Annapolis, Md the two top<lb/>
rookies in the ECAC-South will<lb/>
square off.<lb/>
ECU'S Johnny Edwards was<lb/>
named rookie of the week for the<lb/>
third time in five weeks. Edwards<lb/>
leads the club in scoring (17.6), re-<lb/>
bounding (7.9), field goal percen-<lb/>
tage (56.9), and steals (25).<lb/>
If there is anyone in the league<lb/>
who could beat out Edwards as<lb/>
rookie of the year, it might be<lb/>
Navy's Vernon Butler.<lb/>
Butler has a slight edge over Ed-<lb/>
wards as the league's top rebounder.<lb/>
and contributes with 10.7 points per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The Pirates and Midshipmen are<lb/>
similar in that both teams are in the<lb/>
middle of winning streaks.<lb/>
ECU has put together their<lb/>
longest winning streak of the<lb/>
season, having won the last three<lb/>
games.<lb/>
The three wins include a 10-point<lb/>
upset of South Carolina and an<lb/>
overtime win at UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
in a game in which the Pirates never<lb/>
led until overtime.<lb/>
The Midshipmen, who have won<lb/>
four in a row, are off to their best<lb/>
start in 23 years. The 9-4 record in-<lb/>
cludes a 6-1 mark at home in Halsey<lb/>
Field House.<lb/>
The front line of Navy is con-<lb/>
tributing far more that in past<lb/>
seasons. Junior Cliff Maurer. 6-10,<lb/>
tallest player in Navy history, is hit-<lb/>
ting for 11.7 points and rebounds at<lb/>
6.8 per game.<lb/>
Last season was the first meeting<lb/>
of the two clubs, with Navy winning<lb/>
88-76. The man that really hurt<lb/>
ECU last year, guard Rob Romaine,<lb/>
leads the Midshipmen with 87<lb/>
assists, setting a pace that will give<lb/>
him the school record next season.<lb/>
In last year's game, Romaine hit<lb/>
19 of 20 free throws and scored 29<lb/>
points and had five assists.<lb/>
In comparison with last year at<lb/>
this time, ECU is off to a better<lb/>
start, 9-8 vs. 7-10. One of the main<lb/>
reasons is an aggressive defensive<lb/>
strategy employed by first-year<lb/>
coach Charlie Harrison.<lb/>
Since the season began, the<lb/>
Pirates have watched a steady<lb/>
decline in opponent scoring average.<lb/>
From a high of 71 points after three<lb/>
games, ECU has pushed that<lb/>
average down to 63.5 points per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Unless a major turnaround oc-<lb/>
curs, ECU will set a new school<lb/>
defensive mark. The current record<lb/>
is 64.9 points per game, set 20 years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
The Pirates are still hurting from<lb/>
the loss of senior co-captain Charles<lb/>
Cireen, who dislocated a shoulder<lb/>
two weeks ago.<lb/>
There is still hope that Green,<lb/>
who was second in scoring and re-<lb/>
bounding, will return to action this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Sophomore Barry Wright has had<lb/>
to play a different role since the loss<lb/>
of Green. But the 6-5, Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
native has responded well. Known<lb/>
for his defense, Wright is now the<lb/>
second leading scorer at 12.5 points<lb/>
per game.<lb/>
The greatest strides of late have<lb/>
been from senior co-captain Thorn<lb/>
Brown. With his season high 11<lb/>
points against Campbell, as well as<lb/>
back-to-back highs in rebounding<lb/>
(10 and eight), the Pirates have<lb/>
received definite added support on<lb/>
the front line from Brown.<lb/>
ECU faces four of its next five<lb/>
opponents on the road. After Satur-<lb/>
day night's contest with Navy, the<lb/>
Pirates will travel to UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte, in a game set for 7:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Brown A Steady Performer<lb/>
Bv RANDY MEWS<lb/>
suff �niff<lb/>
Due to injuries, a new coach and<lb/>
lack of confidence, the Pirates have<lb/>
had their ups and downs this season.<lb/>
But one player, senior forward<lb/>
Thorn Brown, has been a steady per-<lb/>
former all year long<lb/>
Brown, a 6-6, 225-pound Physical<lb/>
Therapy major is averaging 4.4<lb/>
points and 3.6 rebounds per game.<lb/>
Although Brown does not score a<lb/>
lot of points, he contributes greatly<lb/>
to the team with his defensive and<lb/>
rebounding skills.<lb/>
Brown is from East Grenich,<lb/>
Rhode Island, where his high school<lb/>
won the state championship his<lb/>
senior year.<lb/>
Brown was the most valuable<lb/>
player, as well as the third leading<lb/>
scorer in the state tournament, and<lb/>
was the third leading scorer in the<lb/>
state that year with a 25 point-per-<lb/>
game average.<lb/>
Upon graduating from high<lb/>
school, Brown was not that heavily<lb/>
recruited and went to prep school to<lb/>
improve his basketball skills While<lb/>
at Worchester Academy, Brown's<lb/>
team won the New England State<lb/>
Championship.<lb/>
Brown decided to attend college<lb/>
at the University of Maine but left<lb/>
after two years. "The University<lb/>
(Maine) wouldn't put anv money in-<lb/>
to the basketball program, and they<lb/>
lost a lot of good athletes because of<lb/>
this Brown commented<lb/>
Rick Carslisle, a good friend ol<lb/>
Brown's and now a starter on the<lb/>
nationally-ranked University oi<lb/>
Virginia Cavaliers, left Maine the<lb/>
following year because ol the same-<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
Brown became acquainted with<lb/>
ECU when Maine was playing the<lb/>
Pirates several years ago. "1 liked<lb/>
the campus a lot he said, "and<lb/>
when 1 found out East Carolina had<lb/>
a good Physical Therapy program. I<lb/>
decided to come here.<lb/>
"1 came to ECU with no intention<lb/>
of playing basketball, but 1 started<lb/>
playing pick-up games with guys on<lb/>
the team and 1 just got more and<lb/>
more involved<lb/>
Brown was offered a scholarship<lb/>
when he became eligible, and began<lb/>
playing for the Pirates last season as<lb/>
a fourth-year junior.<lb/>
Brown, who excels in the<lb/>
classroom, carries a 3 6 grade-point<lb/>
average. He was also a candidate for<lb/>
Academic Ail-American last season.<lb/>
Brown said he applies himself and<lb/>
makes the most of his time. "People<lb/>
don't realize how little tree time<lb/>
athletes have with games, practices<lb/>
and team meetings all the time<lb/>
Struggling through most of last<lb/>
season with a deep muscle pull.<lb/>
Brown later discovered that he had a<lb/>
hernia. He was operated on last<lb/>
May. "1 was inactive tor two mon-<lb/>
ths and lost 25 pounds he said.<lb/>
"But now I'm playing lighter and<lb/>
feel at 100 percent<lb/>
He worked his way into the star-<lb/>
ting lineup by the James Madison<lb/>
game, and after forward teammate<lb/>
Charlie Green suffered a shoulder<lb/>
separation. Brown acquired a star-<lb/>
ting position on the Pirate Squad.<lb/>
"The low point of the year was<lb/>
when Charlie injured his shoulder,<lb/>
but we've bounced back from that<lb/>
and are playing good ball now<lb/>
Brown attributed the shaky start<lb/>
this season to a lack of confidence.<lb/>
"Everyone was extremely tentative<lb/>
at the beginning of the season. We<lb/>
have a lot of young players, and<lb/>
everybody had to learn a completely<lb/>
new system<lb/>
When speaking of Coach Har-<lb/>
rison, Brown had nothing but praise<lb/>
to offer. "Charlie Harrison ha<lb/>
been the biggest plus for East<lb/>
Carolina basketball since Coach<lb/>
Patten led the 1974-75 Pirates to a<lb/>
Southern Conference Champion-<lb/>
ship. He has a great concept of the<lb/>
game, and influences the team with<lb/>
his never-give-up attitude<lb/>
Brown hopes to attend graduate<lb/>
school at Duke or Stanford when he<lb/>
grduates, but right now his main<lb/>
concern is finishing the 83' season<lb/>
with success. And with three con-<lb/>
secutive wins, the Pirates are cer-<lb/>
tainly off to a good start.<lb/>
Photo DV STANLEY LEABY<lb/>
Squirewell: Okay Just Not Good Enough<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
spon. Mi:or<lb/>
Hanging on her dormitory wall<lb/>
was a most-fitting poster for Lady<lb/>
Pirate basketball player Lisa<lb/>
Squirewell: "I'll face my problems<lb/>
one tomorrow at a time<lb/>
"You know, that's been true for<lb/>
me since I've been here at-ECU<lb/>
Squirewell said. "I've just had to<lb/>
take things day by day<lb/>
If Squirewell has learned anything<lb/>
this season as a freshman, she has<lb/>
learned how to be patient. More<lb/>
than six weeks ago, she first suf-<lb/>
fered a stress fracture, then later<lb/>
discovered she had broken her foot.<lb/>
Diagnosis: out of practice for a<lb/>
minimum of six weeks.<lb/>
But after wearing a soft cast and<lb/>
living through what seemed to be a<lb/>
lifetime wait, the former All-State<lb/>
erformer is back on the court<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Squirewell played a limited<lb/>
amount of time against UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte one week ago but saved<lb/>
her exploding performance for<lb/>
ECU'S bout with Mercer this<lb/>
weekend at the Nike-Carolina<lb/>
Classic at the University of South<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Squirewell grabbed nine re-<lb/>
bounds, made three three-point<lb/>
plays and was eight-for-eight from<lb/>
the freethrow line to rack up 14<lb/>
points in the tournament's consola-<lb/>
tion game. The Pirates won, 71-67.<lb/>
"I felt good Squirewell said. "I<lb/>
guess you could tell I was a little<lb/>
anxious to play again. When you sit<lb/>
out and watch your teammates play,<lb/>
you feel like maybe you could get<lb/>
out there and really help them<lb/>
With starting forward Loraine<lb/>
Foster out of the lineup with an in-<lb/>
jury, Squirewell will be relied on to<lb/>
do quite a bit of helping out. And<lb/>
Squirewell readily admitted that she<lb/>
had not expected to have as much<lb/>
playing time this year. "I thought I<lb/>
was gonna have time to develop my<lb/>
skills � maybe a year � but I've<lb/>
had to step in because of what has<lb/>
happened (Foster's injury) she<lb/>
said. "Sometimes you've got to just<lb/>
do what is right. It's all part of be-<lb/>
ing on the team<lb/>
Head Coach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
couldn't have been more pleased to<lb/>
have Squirewell return after her un-<lb/>
fortunate absence. "We're very glad<lb/>
�U,h.l<lb/>
Lisa Squirewell (left) works out with<lb/>
(right) and Rita Simmons.<lb/>
to have her back with us she said.<lb/>
"She has shown a lot of intensity on<lb/>
the court and played good defense<lb/>
When asked about her game,<lb/>
Squirewell said she has been mainly<lb/>
worked on two areas � freethrow<lb/>
shooting and defense. "During the<lb/>
Bill Croner All-Star Camp, I missed<lb/>
so many freethrows she said, and<lb/>
I knew it was something I needed to<lb/>
work on Apparently Squirewell<lb/>
didn't miss too many freethrows.<lb/>
She was named as the camp's most<lb/>
valuable player.<lb/>
Squirewell mostly played a zone<lb/>
defense during her high school days<lb/>
at Wake Forest-Rolesville, and<lb/>
quickly realized that the Lady Rats'<lb/>
man-to-man defense would definite-<lb/>
ly be a new challenge for her. "I<lb/>
learned I can't stand still and play<lb/>
defense she said with a laugh. "I<lb/>
use to think I could, but I know bet-<lb/>
ter now. If she goes, you go<lb/>
Andruzzi described Squirewell as<lb/>
a competitor � a quality that has<lb/>
endured and increasingly grown in<lb/>
her. "I'm the kind of person who is<lb/>
never satisfied with being okay<lb/>
Squirewell said. "I want to be better<lb/>
than okay<lb/>
"There's a difference in being a<lb/>
good competitor and a bad com-<lb/>
petitor and I try to be a good one. In<lb/>
basketball I not only want to start, I<lb/>
Photo fry CMY PATTERSON<lb/>
fellow teammates Loraine Foster<lb/>
want to be somebody someone takes<lb/>
notice of, not just a number,<lb/>
another player on the court<lb/>
Squirewell has also proven to be<lb/>
competitive in another area � the<lb/>
classroom. She obtained a 2.7<lb/>
gradepoint average during her first<lb/>
semester here and said she enjoyed<lb/>
attending classes. "In my book, stu-<lb/>
dying comes first she said. It's<lb/>
just a matter of priorities. For in-<lb/>
stance, if I have a choice of going to<lb/>
a party or studying for a test, I'm<lb/>
gonna study<lb/>
Squirewell said she wanted her<lb/>
peers to recognize her as a student-<lb/>
athlete. "I'm not just an athlete<lb/>
she said. "Some here are just<lb/>
athletes, but I want to be a stu-<lb/>
dent<lb/>
Because she is attending ECU on<lb/>
a full basketball scholarship,<lb/>
Squirewell said she feels like she<lb/>
owes the program her best effort.<lb/>
"They did me a favor she said.<lb/>
"They put me through school my<lb/>
freshman year because they want me<lb/>
here. It's up to me now. I don't ever<lb/>
want to be a thorn in their side.<lb/>
"1 want an education, and I want<lb/>
it from ECU. If basketball is gonna<lb/>
pay for my education, I feel I should<lb/>
do the best I can in my studies<lb/>
Scoring 24 points per game and<lb/>
averaging 13.5 rebounds, Squirewell<lb/>
was recruited by such schools as<lb/>
Peace College, Western Kentucky,<lb/>
Louisburg College and Mississippi<lb/>
State during her senior year.<lb/>
But East Carolina was her top<lb/>
choice for a number of reasons.<lb/>
"ECU was only one hour and 15<lb/>
minutes from home, and I felt like I<lb/>
owed it to my community to stay<lb/>
close to home she explained. "A<lb/>
lot of people supported me in high<lb/>
school. If they wanted to come and<lb/>
watch me play, I wanted them to be<lb/>
able to<lb/>
Just as any freshman, Squirewell<lb/>
has faced many rude awakenings.<lb/>
"If you don't look out for yourself,<lb/>
nobodv else will she said. Yet<lb/>
Squirewell doesn't believe she has<lb/>
really changed that much since ar-<lb/>
riving at ECU. "I've realized many<lb/>
things she said, "like how much I<lb/>
value my family, but basically I'm<lb/>
still the same ole' Lisa<lb/>
Squirewell, who is soft-spoken<lb/>
and attractive, has gotten somewhat<lb/>
more tough-skinned since her high<lb/>
school davs. Of course any player<lb/>
who would let her opponents score<lb/>
because she felt sorry for them<lb/>
would have to become more ag-<lb/>
gressive in the college ranks. "We<lb/>
had a weak conference in high<lb/>
school she said. "I've never liked<lb/>
blowing a team out. Whether you<lb/>
win by one or two points, you still<lb/>
win<lb/>
The thrill of winning, however,<lb/>
isn't why Squirewell plays basket-<lb/>
ball. "Playing basketball gives me a<lb/>
little bit of self-esteem she said.<lb/>
"It pulls me out of the set of people<lb/>
who are just going to college. It<lb/>
gives me that little extra.<lb/>
"If 1 wasn't playing basketball,<lb/>
I'd get lazy. How would I feel my<lb/>
time? I'd have no priorities<lb/>
And for that reason, Squirewell is<lb/>
even happy to be running suicides<lb/>
and practicing man-to-man drills.<lb/>
Now that she's back, she can get her<lb/>
priorities straightened out once<lb/>
again.<lb/>
And it's not too difficult to<lb/>
assume that playing basketball is<lb/>
high on her list. "I couldn't go to<lb/>
school without playing basketball. I<lb/>
love it.<lb/>
"Sometimes I don't want it to<lb/>
end<lb/>
ECl s I horn Bro�n grabs rebound in game action.<lb/>
Foster, Mabry Lost<lb/>
B kE BOLTON<lb/>
ivisllll H.rt lJi'�'<lb/>
The ECl ladv Pirates received<lb/>
some verv bad news vesterdav when<lb/>
it was announced that I oraine<lb/>
foster and Delphine Mabrv. tw<lb/>
backcoun starters, will most I �<lb/>
be lost tor the remainder ol the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Foster injured her knee in last<lb/>
week's ganc again I Nc �<lb/>
Charlotte whe: she drove to the<lb/>
basket.<lb/>
foster is scheduled tor or<lb/>
throscopk surger today, when the<lb/>
final determination will be made.<lb/>
According to head coach Cathy An-<lb/>
druzzi. chances are slim tor Foster<lb/>
returning this season<lb/>
Mabry, a 5-4 freshman guard<lb/>
from Rock) Mount, injured her<lb/>
hand two week- ago in a pick-up<lb/>
game. She underwent X ravs yester-<lb/>
dav and decided to have the hand<lb/>
operated on now<lb/>
Mabrv. like foster, will be<lb/>
operated on toda<lb/>
This latest occurence leaves the<lb/>
Ladv Pirates squad at only seven<lb/>
plavers.<lb/>
"When it rams, it pours,<lb/>
responded Andruzzi. "There is no<lb/>
question that this will hurt us<lb/>
But Andruzzi points out that the<lb/>
character o the team will enable<lb/>
them to overcome this setback.<lb/>
"It's going to be a real challenge<lb/>
for US she stated. "The plavers<lb/>
are going to have to handle it. We<lb/>
have our work cut out tor us. so<lb/>
we're going to have to play ery<lb/>
smart basketball<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will have to set<lb/>
aside their disappointment and con-<lb/>
centrate on this weekend's road trip.<lb/>
At the halfwav point o the<lb/>
1982-83 season, the ECL Ladv<lb/>
Pirates are beginning to get ac-<lb/>
customed to life on the road.<lb/>
Of ECU'S 14 games to date, 11 of<lb/>
them have been away from home.<lb/>
And considering that the next two<lb/>
are also on the road, the Ladv<lb/>
Pirates couldn't be blamed for feel-<lb/>
ing a little homesick.<lb/>
Head coach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
stresses a lack of fundamentals, not<lb/>
the schedule, as the main problem at<lb/>
this point.<lb/>
"As for our performance thus<lb/>
Mr. we are not going to win d �<lb/>
the stretch it we don't execute the<lb/>
fundamentals of passing anc ca<lb/>
ching and our defensive intensity<lb/>
Andruzzi -tated "Our prance<lb/>
have to exemplify that and we h r<lb/>
thev will be more intense ar.j<lb/>
1 he 1 ady Pirates have not play<lb/>
since last weekend when thev finish-<lb/>
ed third in the South Carolina In-<lb/>
vitational<lb/>
Iromcallv. EC! has the identical<lb/>
rd (7-7) thai I id at this -ame<lb/>
pom! last year.<lb/>
I his Saturday, Johnson v :t.<lb/>
lenn. will be the site ol the lady<lb/>
Pirates' next visit. There, thev will<lb/>
play East Tennessee State, a team<lb/>
ECU beat b 1? points last year in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
ETSL. currently 6-8, is led in<lb/>
scoring b Marsha Cowart with a<lb/>
23.4 points-per-game average<lb/>
In a Mondav night game against<lb/>
Marshall. Cowart scored her 2(X)th<lb/>
career point in the Ladv Bucs "S-65<lb/>
victory. She is the onlv basketball<lb/>
plaver m ETSU history to score<lb/>
2000 points in a career<lb/>
Laurie Hmes and Pmk:e Mill-<lb/>
complement Coward well Mills is<lb/>
leading the team in rebounding with<lb/>
8.4 per contest, and Hmes  scoring<lb/>
12.2 points a game while plavmg the<lb/>
point guard position.<lb/>
ETSl is 5-1 at home, and have<lb/>
plaved a verv competitive road<lb/>
schedule, featuring teams like Ken-<lb/>
tuckv and Penn State.<lb/>
"We've always had verv tough<lb/>
games with Last Tennessee State<lb/>
ever since I've been here Andruzzi<lb/>
commented. "Thev are a big team<lb/>
and they execute the fundamentals<lb/>
We expect a tough game<lb/>
Andruzzi pointed out that two<lb/>
important areas thus far have been<lb/>
rebounding and shooting percen-<lb/>
tage.<lb/>
"Defensive, board-wise, there are<lb/>
times I feel we are doing a good 10b<lb/>
and there are others when I teel we<lb/>
could do much better Andruzzi<lb/>
stated. "Our field goal percentage<lb/>
has improved<lb/>
After Saturday's contest at ET-<lb/>
SL. the Lady Pirates will hit the<lb/>
road once more on Sunday when<lb/>
they travel to Appalachian State.<lb/>
ECU In Wanamaker<lb/>
B ED NTCKLAS<lb/>
staff ttnio<lb/>
Hurdler Craig White<lb/>
and the mile-relay team<lb/>
of Eddie Bradley,<lb/>
Wayne Richardson.<lb/>
Nathan McCorkle and<lb/>
Reuben Pirece will<lb/>
compete Friday in the<lb/>
star-filled Wanamaker<lb/>
Milrose Games in New<lb/>
York City. In the meet<lb/>
will be names such as<lb/>
the highly publicized<lb/>
sprinter, Stanley Floyd.<lb/>
Although highly<lb/>
competitive schools as<lb/>
Howard, Tennessee,<lb/>
Seton Hall, and George<lb/>
Mason will be par-<lb/>
ticipating in the games,<lb/>
the event "is for the<lb/>
most part a meet for in-<lb/>
dividuals ECL coach<lb/>
Bill Carson said.<lb/>
According to Car-<lb/>
son, ECU's relay time<lb/>
is faster than some of<lb/>
the more powerfvul<lb/>
schools in the games.<lb/>
ECU has the third best<lb/>
time behind Howard<lb/>
and George Mason in<lb/>
the relay.<lb/>
"1 expect us to be in<lb/>
the top sight Carson<lb/>
said. "But I told mv<lb/>
runners not to get their<lb/>
hopes up because so<lb/>
many of the runners<lb/>
competing are equal<lb/>
McCorkle. who will<lb/>
run third on the relay<lb/>
team, is excited about<lb/>
participating in the<lb/>
games. "I am really<lb/>
happy about going to<lb/>
New York he said.<lb/>
"It is really a big meet<lb/>
for everybody because<lb/>
there will be so many<lb/>
big teams competing<lb/>
"We are looking to<lb/>
have some fun and to<lb/>
do the best we can<lb/>
McCorkle added.<lb/>
Snea<lb/>
Basketball Gets n<lb/>
way<lb/>
Iniram .<lb/>
ball got oft to - I<lb/>
ing start tf f<lb/>
the sound of �<lb/>
:<lb/>
ing fo <lb/>
M nge<lb/>
Memorial Gy<lb/>
:ms seemed ner<lb/>
ed<lb/>
.<lb/>
�<lb/>
ed do �-<lb/>
�<lb/>
M�<lb/>
'�'<lb/>
Kolltr Hock.<lb/>
BCOOGCC<lb/>
COCXX<lb/>
<lb/>
 Sigm:<lb/>
8 Jan. 2<lb/>
I i<lb/>
8 Vfenaem<lb/>
ff<lb/>
$ Dr.<lb/>
lOCOCOOCCT<lb/>
401 S. E<lb/>
HARMON!<lb/>
J<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057529_0009"/><lb/>
tie<lb/>
Lost<lb/>
Sneaker Sam Sez<lb/>
Basketball (,ets I nder-<lb/>
wa<lb/>
Intramural Basket<lb/>
ball got off to a bounc-<lb/>
ing start this week as<lb/>
the sound o whistles,<lb/>
buzzers, and scamper-<lb/>
ing feet filled the air of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum and<lb/>
Memorial Gym. All<lb/>
teams seemed nervous<lb/>
as thev plaved their<lb/>
first games, but after a<lb/>
few baskets, they settl-<lb/>
ed down Games are<lb/>
plaved Monday<lb/>
through Thursday from<lb/>
5 00-1 1:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Memorial Gym and<lb/>
from 8:15-11:15 p.m.<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
c ome on out and watch<lb/>
as the team go into ac-<lb/>
tion!<lb/>
Roller Hockey<lb/>
The first night of<lb/>
toller hockey proved to<lb/>
be a "slap shooting"<lb/>
battle as many players<lb/>
attempted to par-<lb/>
ticipate on wheels. A<lb/>
new record was missed<lb/>
by just 3 points in the<lb/>
Puckers vs. Bad to the<lb/>
Bone contest. Danny<lb/>
Monahan and Teresa<lb/>
Vick led the scoring<lb/>
drive with seven goals<lb/>
each for the Puckers<lb/>
Among the teams<lb/>
undefeated after the<lb/>
first night of competi-<lb/>
tion are: Night<lb/>
Cruisers, Puckers,<lb/>
Delta eta Destroyers,<lb/>
Rolla Doobie. Rolling<lb/>
Warriors, and El loco<lb/>
Flyers.<lb/>
rm Wrestling<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
The In-<lb/>
tramural Budweiser<lb/>
Arm Wrestling 1'ourna-<lb/>
men! registration<lb/>
deadline is today at<lb/>
S:(X) p.in at Memorial<lb/>
Gym room 204. Weigh-<lb/>
ins foi the event will be<lb/>
Monday January 31, at<lb/>
5:00 p.m during the<lb/>
required participants'<lb/>
meeting in Memorial<lb/>
Gym, room 102. Mat-<lb/>
ches begin February 1<lb/>
with the finals at the<lb/>
halftimes of the Lady<lb/>
Pine Classic.<lb/>
Budweiser will be pro-<lb/>
viding T-shirts to all<lb/>
participants and<lb/>
trophies to the first and<lb/>
second places in each<lb/>
weight class.<lb/>
Co-Ree Bowling<lb/>
Start getting your<lb/>
teams together for Co-<lb/>
Ree Bowling. Registra-<lb/>
tion is just down the<lb/>
lane from February<lb/>
14-16, room 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
New Record Set<lb/>
A new intramural<lb/>
record has been achiev-<lb/>
ed in the sport of<lb/>
basketball. A total of<lb/>
171 teams registered for<lb/>
the popular sport, as<lb/>
compared to the 143<lb/>
teams last year. Every<lb/>
division experienced an<lb/>
increase in the number<lb/>
of teams entered. In<lb/>
order to give credit<lb/>
where credit is due, a<lb/>
fitting phrase might be<lb/>
"thanks to you it<lb/>
works, for all of us<lb/>
New Weight Equip-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Come check out the<lb/>
new Universal weight<lb/>
equipment in Memorial<lb/>
Gym. Hours are<lb/>
Monday-Thursday 9:00<lb/>
a.m. - 10:00 p.m Fri-<lb/>
day 9:00 a.m. - 6:00<lb/>
p.m and Saturdav-<lb/>
Sunday 1:00 p.m. -5:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
rtwto bv STANLtr ilmi<lb/>
ECl cheerleader nerform in front of a non-reponsi�e crowd.<lb/>
�OSSOSOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOSOOOOOGOCO<lb/>
Tau Delta<lb/>
1<lb/>
ill meet<lb/>
I Jan. 27 at 7:00p.m. at<lb/>
 Mendenhall Coffee Shop<lb/>
 guest speaker<lb/>
 will be<lb/>
8 Dr. Peter Makuck <lb/>
�cocooocooooacsoc�ocoooccoooc�coc�<lb/>
Phone: 756 4144<lb/>
Jli c I lew l<lb/>
313 Plaza Dri�<lb/>
Greenvill. NC<lb/>
ma<lb/>
�o'iut -<lb/>
THE NEW IMAGE<lb/>
HAIRSALON<lb/>
313 PLAZA DR.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC 27834<lb/>
THE BEST HA IRCLTS by:<lb/>
Barbara Morris<lb/>
Lou Joyner<lb/>
Grace Peoples<lb/>
Delores Elks<lb/>
Beverly Dickens<lb/>
Larry Elswicks<lb/>
( 1 FOR A PPOI1SITMEN T<lb/>
OPFIS EVERYDAY<lb/>
IHfc fcASI I AKOl IMAN<lb/>
JANLARV 27. y�l<lb/>
Charleston Approved For Site<lb/>
CHARLESTON,<lb/>
S.C. (UPI) - The<lb/>
NCAA formally ap-<lb/>
proved Charleston,<lb/>
S.C, Wednesday as the<lb/>
new site for the Divi-<lb/>
sion IAA football<lb/>
championship for the<lb/>
next two years.<lb/>
The Citadel, a<lb/>
Southern Conference<lb/>
member, will serve as<lb/>
the host school for the<lb/>
nationally televised<lb/>
game Dec. 17, 1983,<lb/>
and Dec. 15, 1984, said<lb/>
Jerry Miles, an official<lb/>
at the NCAA's head-<lb/>
quarters in Mission,<lb/>
Kan.<lb/>
The game will be<lb/>
played in the<lb/>
22,500-seat Johnson<lb/>
Hagood Stadium, but<lb/>
several thousand more<lb/>
seats can be added with<lb/>
portable bleachers.<lb/>
The Division 1-AA<lb/>
football committee<lb/>
heard presentations<lb/>
Jan. 13 from represen-<lb/>
tatives of three cities<lb/>
seeking the game '<lb/>
Charleston; Wichita<lb/>
Falls, Texas, which<lb/>
hosted it as the Pioneer<lb/>
Bowl the past five<lb/>
years; and Lake<lb/>
Charles, La.<lb/>
Charleston was the<lb/>
unanimous recommen-<lb/>
dation of the panel,<lb/>
and the NCAA's Ad-<lb/>
ministative Committee,<lb/>
which has the power to<lb/>
act on such matters bet-<lb/>
ween meetings of the<lb/>
Executive Committee,<lb/>
approved the switch to<lb/>
Charleston 6-0, said<lb/>
Miles, the NCAA's<lb/>
director of men's<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
The committee acted<lb/>
on the recommendation<lb/>
during a conference call<lb/>
to discuss several<lb/>
issues, he said.<lb/>
Mayor Joseph P.<lb/>
Riley Jr. and J. Mac<lb/>
Holladay, executive<lb/>
vice president of the<lb/>
Charleston Trident<lb/>
Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce, who made the<lb/>
presentation to the<lb/>
football committee at<lb/>
the NCAA's annual<lb/>
convention in San<lb/>
Diego, were not im-<lb/>
mediately available for<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
Riley had said earlier<lb/>
the game should pro-<lb/>
vide a minimum<lb/>
economic windfall to<lb/>
the citv of more than<lb/>
$500,000.<lb/>
The contractural<lb/>
agreement, which in-<lb/>
cludes 1 mancial<lb/>
guarantee to the NCAA<lb/>
by the city, gives<lb/>
Charleston the cham-<lb/>
pionship for two vears<lb/>
with an option to ex-<lb/>
tend for an additional<lb/>
two vears.<lb/>
Riley said when the<lb/>
city's oiler was ten-<lb/>
tatively approved that<lb/>
it was based on a con-<lb/>
servative estimate ol<lb/>
revenue trom ticket<lb/>
sales and other pro-<lb/>
ceeds less expenses and<lb/>
included an offer to<lb/>
share the gate with the<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
"It has two ver<lb/>
positive economic com-<lb/>
ponents ' the national<lb/>
publicity created b live<lb/>
television coverage and<lb/>
the actual economic ac-<lb/>
tivity from the game<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
'Bear' Dies Of Heart A ttack<lb/>
TUSCALOOSA,<lb/>
Ala. (UPI)<lb/>
Alabama's Paul<lb/>
"Bear" Bryant, who<lb/>
won more football<lb/>
games than any other<lb/>
college coach in<lb/>
history, died of a<lb/>
massive heart attack<lb/>
Wednesday, 28 days<lb/>
after winning the game<lb/>
he knew would be his<lb/>
last.<lb/>
He was 69 and a<lb/>
legend in his own time.<lb/>
Bryant, who an-<lb/>
nounced his retirement<lb/>
Dec. 15 and then<lb/>
coached the Crimson<lb/>
Tide for the last time in<lb/>
a I iberty Bowl victory<lb/>
over Illinois Dec. 29,<lb/>
entered Druid City-<lb/>
Hospital Tuesday night<lb/>
suffering from chest<lb/>
pains.<lb/>
A friend said doctors<lb/>
told him earlier<lb/>
Wednesday they had<lb/>
found no signs of heart<lb/>
damage but said it<lb/>
"might be a warning<lb/>
If so, it was too late.<lb/>
The grizzled, gruft-<lb/>
voiced coach, whose<lb/>
teams won 323 games<lb/>
in his 37 seasons, went<lb/>
into "sudden car-<lb/>
diopulmonary arrest"<lb/>
at 12:24 p.m. while<lb/>
talking to his nurses.<lb/>
Led by his own<lb/>
physician, Dr. William<lb/>
Hill, a team of doctors<lb/>
attempted heroic<lb/>
resuscitation measures<lb/>
for more than an hour.<lb/>
"We did put in a<lb/>
pacemaker through the<lb/>
chest wall and were<lb/>
able to restore a weak<lb/>
heartbeat, which subse-<lb/>
quent failed Hill<lb/>
told reporters. "We<lb/>
quit working with him<lb/>
and pronounced him<lb/>
dead at 1:30 p.m<lb/>
He said the cause of<lb/>
death was a massive<lb/>
coronary occlusion.<lb/>
"He had been stable,<lb/>
had been talking to<lb/>
nurses immediately<lb/>
prior to this said<lb/>
Jack Perry, assistant<lb/>
athletic director for<lb/>
public relations at<lb/>
Alabama.<lb/>
The first official<lb/>
word of Brvant's death<lb/>
KINGS ISLAND<lb/>
KINGS DOMINION<lb/>
CAROWINDS<lb/>
CANADA S WONDERLAND .<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Aj PietcMe' Music Buiidng. Reala Man<lb/>
Tuesday February i 3 0O6 0CPM<lb/>
University ot North Carolina<lb/>
Greensboro<lb/>
Elliot University Certe'<lb/>
Aienander and Ptiiliips Rooms<lb/>
Thursday. February 3 2 0O-5 0C PM<lb/>
Singers � Dancers � Instrumentalists � Technicians<lb/>
Variety Performers � $180 250week<lb/>
Zo �c Bos .�- - �� in aSM<lb/>
came in the Alabama<lb/>
Senate, where Lt. Gov.<lb/>
Bill Baxley broke the<lb/>
news to a hushed<lb/>
chamber.<lb/>
Bryant was at the<lb/>
home of a longtime<lb/>
friend, Jimmy Hinton,<lb/>
when he was stricken<lb/>
by the chest pains Tues-<lb/>
day night. He was rush-<lb/>
ed to Druid City<lb/>
Hospital by am-<lb/>
bulance.<lb/>
"He had been here<lb/>
about 10 minutes and<lb/>
was talking about how<lb/>
good he felt, and I was<lb/>
telling him how good<lb/>
he looked. And in a tew<lb/>
minutes after he sat<lb/>
down, he had a few<lb/>
pains and some<lb/>
breathing problems,<lb/>
and we called his doc-<lb/>
tor and then the<lb/>
paramedics Hinton<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Hinton said Hill ar-<lb/>
rived at the house<lb/>
about the same time as<lb/>
the ambulance and<lb/>
Tuscaloosa city<lb/>
paramedics. The physi-<lb/>
cian accompanied<lb/>
Bryant to the hospital.<lb/>
"1 talked with the<lb/>
doctor afterwards, and<lb/>
he said he didn't see<lb/>
from his LKG elec-<lb/>
trocardiogram an<lb/>
heart damage. But he<lb/>
said it might be a warn-<lb/>
ing Hmton said.<lb/>
Nursing supervisor,<lb/>
June Hoggle, said<lb/>
Brvant "slept good"<lb/>
Tuesdav night. "His<lb/>
vital signs remained<lb/>
stable<lb/>
The sudden death of<lb/>
the most famous living<lb/>
college football coach<lb/>
cast a pall over the na-<lb/>
tion's athletic com-<lb/>
munity<lb/>
T hated to see him<lb/>
across that field more<lb/>
than an coach 1 had<lb/>
the pleasure of<lb/>
coaching against said<lb/>
h- old nemesis. Bobby<lb/>
Dodd of Georgia Tech.<lb/>
"He came a long way<lb/>
for a boy who came out<lb/>
of Fordyce. Ark<lb/>
"They just don't<lb/>
make them like Bear<lb/>
Bryant anymore said<lb/>
former Arkansas<lb/>
Coach Frank Broyles.<lb/>
Brvant started his<lb/>
career at Maryland,<lb/>
then went to Kentuckv<lb/>
and Texas A&amp;M before<lb/>
returning to his alma<lb/>
mater at Tuscaloosa.<lb/>
where he spent the la<lb/>
25 years.<lb/>
Bryant retired after<lb/>
the Crimson Tide beat<lb/>
Illinois 21-15 in the<lb/>
Libert y Bow! ! a � t<lb/>
month. It was his 32nd<lb/>
career victory, more<lb/>
than any other college<lb/>
football coach He<lb/>
broke Amos Alonzo<lb/>
Stagg record of 314<lb/>
wins in 1981.<lb/>
His teams provided<lb/>
the proiessional rank-<lb/>
with some of 11 <lb/>
greatest plae's �<lb/>
quarterbacks Babe<lb/>
Panlli from Kentucky<lb/>
and Joe Namath and<lb/>
Kenny Stabler trom<lb/>
Alabama, linebacker<lb/>
Lee Rov Jordan and<lb/>
receiver Ray Perkins �<lb/>
who replaced him at<lb/>
Alabama.<lb/>
SHOOT BILLIARDS<lb/>
era<lb/>
WEEKLY PBZES FOB UlWScoRB<lb/>
ON VIDEO PlNrMLL GAMES<lb/>
MOW OPEN SUNDAYS 1:00-<lb/>
158-9090<lb/>
420COWJCHEST. ACROSS Ff?0M ELB0<lb/>
 1<lb/>
namaker<lb/>
th<lb/>
�<lb/>
the relay<lb/>
ted about<lb/>
in the<lb/>
ira really<lb/>
il going to<lb/>
he said<lb/>
a big meet<lb/>
od because<lb/>
II he so marr,<lb/>
ami competing<lb/>
He are looking to<lb/>
have some fun and to<lb/>
�0 the best we can<lb/>
McC orkle added<lb/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH FOR:<lb/>
CLASSRINGS WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
ALL GOLDS. SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CHINA&amp;CRYSTAL<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
CW oF �Y SALES CO ,l ft<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. open�:m-5:3omon sat<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 752"3866<lb/>
"YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER<lb/>
kVV<lb/>
Happy Hour Friday, Jan. 28<lb/>
4:00 to 7:30 at the Attic <lb/>
Have You<lb/>
.3<lb/>
s<lb/>
K,<lb/>
Signed up For<lb/>
 � The Great Rat Race<lb/>
on Feb. 2 when the Lady<lb/>
Pirates play Old Dominion<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum at<lb/>
7:30 p.m.?<lb/>
Sponsored by<lb/>
fSSudm<lb/>
KING OF BEERS<lb/>
Signed up For<lb/>
"The Great Pizza Contest"<lb/>
on Feb. 5 when the Pirates play<lb/>
George Mason in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
at 7:30p.m.?<lb/>
Sponsored by<lb/>
PIZZA HUT<lb/>
-call 757-6417 For Information<lb/>
Watch the Pirates attack.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057529_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE bAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 27, 1983<lb/>
Swim Team To<lb/>
Test UNC-C<lb/>
By ED NIC KLAS<lb/>
suf fv. riirr<lb/>
The ECU men's and<lb/>
women's swim teams<lb/>
will take on UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte this Saturday<lb/>
at Minges Aquatic<lb/>
Center for their first<lb/>
home meet in over two<lb/>
months.<lb/>
The men (3-4) and<lb/>
women (3-5) will be<lb/>
facing a rather inex-<lb/>
perienced UNC-C<lb/>
squad, who are in their<lb/>
first season of NCAA<lb/>
competiton.<lb/>
"It shouldn't be a<lb/>
real difficult meet<lb/>
ECU coach Rick Kobe<lb/>
said. "Our last four<lb/>
meets have been tough,<lb/>
so it will be good to<lb/>
take a little pressure off<lb/>
the team and also get<lb/>
our sights set on our<lb/>
final meet against<lb/>
Duke.<lb/>
"We are happy to see<lb/>
a new team in the<lb/>
state Kobe con-<lb/>
tinued. "It just shows<lb/>
how interest in swimm-<lb/>
ing is still flourishing<lb/>
Kobe also mentioned<lb/>
two advantages of hav-<lb/>
ing another North<lb/>
Carolina team on<lb/>
ECU's schedule. First,<lb/>
he said, ECU would<lb/>
spend less money<lb/>
traveling in-state to<lb/>
compete. Secondly, he<lb/>
added, because of the<lb/>
relative proximity of<lb/>
the two schools, a<lb/>
"good rivalry" could<lb/>
develop.<lb/>
Kobe feels his squad<lb/>
will thoroughly enter-<lb/>
tain the home crowd<lb/>
Saturday. "In our first<lb/>
home meet this season,<lb/>
we almost had the place<lb/>
tilled Kobe said.<lb/>
"We alternate the<lb/>
men's and women's<lb/>
events, which are usual-<lb/>
ly short and exciting<lb/>
Also, Kobe said,<lb/>
"Swimming is one of<lb/>
the few sports in which<lb/>
you can yell your head<lb/>
off without everyone<lb/>
looking at you funny<lb/>
Virginia Wins<lb/>
CHAR L () T -<lb/>
USVII lb, Va (L'PI)<lb/>
� Ralph Sampson<lb/>
scored 16 points, grab-<lb/>
bed 16 rebounds and<lb/>
blocked four shots as<lb/>
fourth-ranked Virginia<lb/>
pulled away from stub-<lb/>
born George<lb/>
Washington in the final<lb/>
seven minuter to claim<lb/>
a 59-44 win Wednes-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Jim Miller came off<lb/>
the bench to add 11 for<lb/>
the Cavaliers, now 16-2<lb/>
on the season. George<lb/>
Washington, which got<lb/>
13 points from Mike<lb/>
Brown and 10 from<lb/>
Trov Webster, fell to<lb/>
8-8<lb/>
Leading by only<lb/>
three points, 38-35,<lb/>
with 7:30 to play,<lb/>
Virginia reeled off eight<lb/>
straight points on<lb/>
lumpers by Rick Carli-<lb/>
sle and Othell Wilson<lb/>
and four free throws by<lb/>
Miiier to open up an<lb/>
1 1 -point advantage.<lb/>
46-35. with 5:44 to<lb/>
play.<lb/>
George Washington<lb/>
could get no closer than<lb/>
eight points the rest ot<lb/>
the wav, as Virginia<lb/>
recorded its 99th vic-<lb/>
V ir ginia. Holland's<lb/>
record is 180-80.<lb/>
Virginia never got<lb/>
untracked offensively<lb/>
against the Colonials.<lb/>
In the first half, the<lb/>
Cavaliers connected on<lb/>
only eight of 21 field<lb/>
goals and turned the<lb/>
ball over 11 times. Four<lb/>
of Virginia's baskets<lb/>
came on dunks by<lb/>
Sampson (who had six<lb/>
tor the game), two on<lb/>
layups by Ricky Stokes<lb/>
and another on a layup<lb/>
by Wilson.<lb/>
Carlisle's 15-footer<lb/>
at the 3:26 mark<lb/>
represented Virginia's<lb/>
only score from the<lb/>
perimeter in the open-<lb/>
ing half.<lb/>
George Washington<lb/>
tied the score four<lb/>
times in the opening 20<lb/>
minutes and gained the<lb/>
lead briefly 20-18 on a<lb/>
layup by Mike O'Reilly<lb/>
with 3:38 remaining in<lb/>
the first half,<lb/>
tory against 20 defeats<lb/>
during the Sampson<lb/>
era.<lb/>
The victory also gave<lb/>
head coach Terry<lb/>
Holland exactly 100<lb/>
more victories than<lb/>
defeats in his nine-year<lb/>
coaching stint at<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
BLAIR I LOVE YOU. KATIE<lb/>
WHO WAS THAT PRETTY LADY<lb/>
DRINKING GIN and tonics during<lb/>
nappy hour at Grog's? Whoever<lb/>
she was site j busy this weekend<lb/>
Tom Roger. Mick and George will<lb/>
have to wait until February It's a<lb/>
put-on? Still haven t seen the man<lb/>
with tne snakes I hope Clark<lb/>
doesn't think I'M one of them! See<lb/>
you at Reds. Little DEBBIE Go<lb/>
get them heels?<lb/>
BEATRICE I wasn't going to say<lb/>
anything the other night at dinner<lb/>
I swore to myselt I wouldn t But<lb/>
Christ B isn't seven hot dogs a<lb/>
little many? I'll give you a word ot<lb/>
tnendly advice The Spa's pro<lb/>
bably having a get in shape<lb/>
special or something like that<lb/>
sometime neit month Why don't<lb/>
you take advantage ol the special<lb/>
student rate SLIM<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
NEEDED MALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
to share 4 bedroom house on<lb/>
Biltmore St Halt block trom cam<lb/>
pus Rent MS 00 plus one fourth<lb/>
utilities 7S7 MM<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
itsmonth plus t1 utilities<lb/>
7 minute walk to campus Private<lb/>
bedroom' Can 7St tit<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
FEMALE to share 3 bdrm apt 1<lb/>
block from from campus SI27 SO<lb/>
per month plus 11 utilities Call<lb/>
757 ?11<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEED<lb/>
ED 3 blocks from ECU Partly<lb/>
furnished 3 bedroom apt Rent<lb/>
ill SO plus I utilities Will con<lb/>
sider J girls willing to share room<lb/>
Call 75 1442<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
EXCELLENT TYPIST<lb/>
Reasonable rates All papers Call<lb/>
7S7 1171 after 4 p.m.<lb/>
AUDIO ELECTRONICS SER<lb/>
VICE; Complete audio repair call<lb/>
alter a p.m. Mark 753 im<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST GOLD Time, watch.<lb/>
Reward ottered Call evenings<lb/>
753 �?<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
WANTED HANDCRAFT and<lb/>
POTTERY items for resale on<lb/>
commission basis only Land and<lb/>
Sea Outlet, Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping. Ph '5 4770 Open 11-4<lb/>
M S<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Richmond. Va<lb/>
either Thursday Jan 37 or Thurs<lb/>
day. Feb 3. Leave in the late<lb/>
afternoon Please call Steve at<lb/>
75307a Will pay for gas.<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
WE BUY USED MUSICAL IN<lb/>
STRUMENTS: CALL 7S� etc or<lb/>
7S� 077<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE, experience quality work.<lb/>
IBM Seiectnc typewriter Call<lb/>
Lanie Shive 7SI 5101 or GAIL<lb/>
JOYNER 75 lOeJ.<lb/>
TYPING Term papers), ItMtis.<lb/>
etc Call Kempie Dunn. ?52 4713<lb/>
io YEARS TYPING - Reasonable<lb/>
rale. Spelling, punctuation and<lb/>
grammar corrections pro-<lb/>
ofreading Cindy � am to � p m<lb/>
155 344<lb/>
LEARN TO FLY Call Joe<lb/>
754-442<lb/>
YARD SALE: ITEMS OLD AND<lb/>
NEW SATURDAY. MS College<lb/>
View Apts<lb/>
FORSALE<lb/>
NICE GRAY AND WHITE RAB<lb/>
BIT FUR JACKET FOR SALE 14$<lb/>
CALL HHM.<lb/>
SALE I ft blue-green high back<lb/>
couch Good condition �75<lb/>
7S0 32SJ4.<lb/>
"73 Cutlass Supreme. Good condi<lb/>
tion Best offer 155 3711<lb/>
FOR SALE: II" Mack-and-white<lb/>
TV only 1 year old Excellent con<lb/>
dition. i� Call 7S0-5SO.<lb/>
JVC AUTO RETURN TURN<lb/>
TABLE: L All, diamond stylus<lb/>
cartridge MS; eicellent condi<lb/>
Won. Call Becky after i. 7St-0tt<lb/>
FOR SALE: HIDE ABED SOFA,<lb/>
best offer, call 750 544<lb/>
Sittota<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Lola<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, January 29, 1983<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
XNOiCE.<lb/>
OSPA Cboie. Bf C.aek - Br.il.it<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
USDA Ck-oie- Beef Uie<lb/>
T-Bone Steak<lb/>
u 25�<lb/>
Heed<lb/>
4-1 Li. A�.<lb/>
Crlta<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Picnics<lb/>
USDA Cbgi � Ettra lee.<lb/>
Stew Beefu. 1M<lb/>
Iceberg<lb/>
Lettuce<lb/>
FUrUa - Soil. $?<lb/>
Orangessum M29<lb/>
Pka. ef 12 12 Oz Cent<lb/>
Old<lb/>
I Milwaukee<lb/>
Pk�. of 6 - 12 0 Cats<lb/>
Budiveiser<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
3 lit.r - Rhine Gfcabiit Blue Re. Rotr<lb/>
Puk eti.t<lb/>
2 Liter<lb/>
�289<lb/>
12 Or Lieai. Pith Deteraent<lb/>
9<lb/>
32 Ohci<lb/>
Why Pay 49 Eaeh<lb/>
, Del<lb/>
M Monte<lb/>
;Jl Catsup<lb/>
32.<lb/>
389<lb/>
Lb. - Qaartert<lb/>
by Pay 59 Ea�b<lb/>
t '<lb/>
?<lb/>
$279<lb/>
Half eallaa - 50' Off<lb/>
Liquid Wisk m Chicken Of The Sea<lb/>
6 5 Ot. - Lt. Cbwh Taae. la Oil<lb/>
489<lb/>
I<lb/>
Half Oellee - �.bite Heete k?i<lb/>
Apple Juice<lb/>
4.5 Ot. � Li��r Vi.aoy pjaerty 5�t - Cat F<lb/>
Purina 100<lb/>
2 Caa - Cherry Pie Fllli-i<lb/>
Thank Vou<lb/>
Qaart<lb/>
JFC Mayonnaise1<lb/>
j n( �. mi f�i<lb/>
�don Toilet Tissue<lb/>
<lb/>
Oallea<lb/>
Clorox Bleach<lb/>
15 Or Stew<lb/>
Ken-l<lb/>
Ration<lb/>
"V Pay 2 77�<lb/>
Kent<lb/>
DOG<lb/>
pood<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
- �<lb/>
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