<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057534_0001"/>
Qftiz lEaat (Earfllttttan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.<lb/>
Tuesday, February 15,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Dean Laing Of Art School Resigns From Post<lb/>
 D. fUUUM UDAU.A denartmnf nf the ;rhool into tWO the famltv anH arlminictrntirkn at thinoc fr? mv ahmif I aino "Hr I a- ?IJ.? ?,? ? ;iui- u ,<lb/>
Photo By NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Richard H. Laing<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Aatalaal Non Etlor<lb/>
Dean of the School of Art<lb/>
Richard H. Laing resigned his post<lb/>
as the head of the state's only ac-<lb/>
credited art school last week and<lb/>
will step down as soon as his suc-<lb/>
cessor is chosen.<lb/>
Laing assumed the post in 1979<lb/>
after being selected by a faculty<lb/>
committee from the art school in a<lb/>
national search. The post was made<lb/>
vacant upon the death of Well-<lb/>
ington G. Gray, who served as dean<lb/>
for 21 years.<lb/>
Laing is responsible for some ma-<lb/>
jor changes and improvements in<lb/>
the art school. Most notably, he<lb/>
consolidated the nine smaller<lb/>
departments of the school into two<lb/>
larger departments of fine arts and<lb/>
design last year.<lb/>
Some faculty were in support of<lb/>
Laing's methods and ideas. One<lb/>
faculty number claimed that Laing<lb/>
has increased the art school's<lb/>
recognition and respect around the<lb/>
country. "We are much better<lb/>
known because of Dean Laing. He<lb/>
has made us better known<lb/>
throughout the U.S<lb/>
The faculty member, who asked<lb/>
not to be identified, said that ten-<lb/>
sion among the some faculty and a<lb/>
lack of support made Laing's job<lb/>
difficult. He "didn't have support"<lb/>
from all the faculty, the source said,<lb/>
and was not fully appreciated. A<lb/>
"problem of personalities" among<lb/>
the faculty and administration at<lb/>
times created "just an unpleasant<lb/>
type of situation<lb/>
Some faculty did agree with Laing<lb/>
and the direction he was taking the<lb/>
School of Art. "He was the right<lb/>
dean for this school. We were head-<lb/>
ed in the right direction<lb/>
A contingent of faculty endorsed<lb/>
Laing in a routine faculty evalua-<lb/>
tion report last year. A standard<lb/>
report must by completed by the<lb/>
faculty of all university departments<lb/>
every four years regarding its<lb/>
evaluation of the department's ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
Dr. Angelo Volpe, vice chancellor<lb/>
of academic affairs, had only good<lb/>
things to say about Laing. "Dr. La-<lb/>
ing is an artist and an art educator<lb/>
of the first caliber he said. "His<lb/>
creativity has enhanced the already<lb/>
excellent reputation of our School<lb/>
of Art<lb/>
The ECU School of Art is the on-<lb/>
ly art school in North Carolina fully<lb/>
accredited by the National Associa-<lb/>
tion of the Schools of Art. It is<lb/>
ranked in the top catagory, division<lb/>
A.<lb/>
Laing had good communication<lb/>
with students and a good awareness<lb/>
of student work, the faculty<lb/>
member said. Many students<lb/>
agreed, saying of Laing that "his<lb/>
door was always open<lb/>
He was always available. He is a<lb/>
very nice person said one fine arts<lb/>
student<lb/>
Laing supported the aquisition of<lb/>
regional and national shows and ex-<lb/>
hibitions by the school's gallery. He<lb/>
was active in student recruitment<lb/>
and in the founding of the Friends<lb/>
of Art, a fund raising group created<lb/>
late last year for the art school.<lb/>
Laing, who could not be reached<lb/>
for comment, will continue to serve<lb/>
on the faculty as a professor of art<lb/>
He holds degrees in art from<lb/>
Eastern Michigan University and<lb/>
Wayne State University and receiv-<lb/>
ed a doctorate in education at Penn-<lb/>
sylvania State University.<lb/>
Increased Accessibility<lb/>
New Automatic Doors Aid Handicapped<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
The installation of seven<lb/>
automatic door openers in four<lb/>
campus buildings is welcome news<lb/>
to ECU's handicapped students.<lb/>
The students often had trouble in<lb/>
the past using a number of entrances<lb/>
around campus.<lb/>
"1 think they're great said ECU<lb/>
psychology, student Wayne Dawson.<lb/>
"I've had a lot of trouble in the past<lb/>
with certain doors on campus<lb/>
Most handicapped students said<lb/>
the installment of the door openers<lb/>
was a valuable asset. Handicapped<lb/>
students Brian Rangeley and Rich<lb/>
Burke agreed with Dawson's state-<lb/>
ment. These three students all rely<lb/>
on wheelchairs to go places on cam-<lb/>
pus. They live in Slay dorm where<lb/>
one of the seven electric openers has<lb/>
been installed.<lb/>
According to Director of Han-<lb/>
dicapped Students Services C. C.<lb/>
Rowe, the university will be install-<lb/>
ing nine additional door openers<lb/>
during the spring semester, bringing<lb/>
the total to 16. "We've had an on-<lb/>
going program for removing<lb/>
physical barriers Rowe said.<lb/>
Rowe said that opening doors was<lb/>
one of the major problems faced by<lb/>
many handicapped students, par-<lb/>
ticularly those students in<lb/>
wheelchairs and on crutches.<lb/>
"Many people sitting in<lb/>
wheelchairs don't have the physical<lb/>
ability to open doors Rowe said.<lb/>
"They have to wait for somebody to<lb/>
come along to open it for them<lb/>
Burke and Dawson were both<lb/>
grateful that an automatic opener<lb/>
was installed in Spillman building<lb/>
because the building's wheelchair<lb/>
ramp goes to a front door that most<lb/>
people don't use.<lb/>
"1 got trapped in there (Spillman)<lb/>
once Burke said. "I was in there<lb/>
during lunchtime and nobody was<lb/>
around to let me out Burke had to<lb/>
wait 15 minutes before someone<lb/>
came to let him out. "Now I don't<lb/>
have to sit around and wait for so-<lb/>
meone to come along. It makes me<lb/>
more independent. Now 1 just go up<lb/>
there and hit it (the door switch) and<lb/>
go right in<lb/>
Dawson said many doors are too<lb/>
heavv for him to open and that it<lb/>
was difficult for him to grip the<lb/>
handles on some doors. Dawson<lb/>
said that many of the students have<lb/>
a handicapped that prevents them<lb/>
from gripping the door adequately.<lb/>
Burke and Dawson both said cer-<lb/>
tain doors could cause serious<lb/>
damage to wheelchairs and injure<lb/>
the person in it. The students said<lb/>
the new openers are much safer for<lb/>
them and their wheelchair.<lb/>
Dawson said that a door which<lb/>
opens both ways is the easiest for a<lb/>
wheelchair student to use. Most<lb/>
doors on campus open one way, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to Rowe the automatic<lb/>
door openers cost $1,245 each. Bids<lb/>
are now being accepted by the<lb/>
university for the installation of the<lb/>
other nine. The funds for the pro-<lb/>
ject were taken from the Handicap-<lb/>
ped Student Services budget for<lb/>
maintenance and operations. Rowe<lb/>
said no special federal funds had<lb/>
been allotted for the project.<lb/>
"This has been one of the things<lb/>
that many (handicapped students)<lb/>
felt was needed on campus Rowe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
A feature of the new door openers<lb/>
includes a timer that can be set to<lb/>
keep the doors open for various<lb/>
amounts of time. The timer is now<lb/>
set to keep the door open 12<lb/>
seconds. Rowe said the door<lb/>
openers were moveable and could be<lb/>
changed to a different door if<lb/>
necessary.<lb/>
Besides Slay dorm and Spillman,<lb/>
the automatic openers have been in-<lb/>
stalled in Brewster and the Allied<lb/>
Health building. The other nine<lb/>
openers are scheduled to be installed<lb/>
in Speight, Rawl (2). the Library (4),<lb/>
Whichard and the library science<lb/>
building. The wall plate has the blue<lb/>
and white symbol of a wheelchair,<lb/>
an internationally recognized sym-<lb/>
bol for the handicapped.<lb/>
Rowe said the new door openers<lb/>
served many purposes and could be<lb/>
a help to everyone, not just<lb/>
wheelchair users. "I'm very happy<lb/>
to see them installed Dawson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I've gotten a lot of use out of<lb/>
them in just this short time they've<lb/>
been in service Dawson said. All<lb/>
seven openers have been install ed ?<lb/>
I B CtMOT WALL<lb/>
Rich Barke is one of many students on campus who will make frequent<lb/>
of the new automatic door openers being installed around campus.<lb/>
Residence Life To Give New Award<lb/>
In Honor Of Former Staff Member<lb/>
By ED NICKLAS<lb/>
SuflWrtht<lb/>
Photo Sv CINDY WALL<lb/>
The SGA Legislature approved $2000 for the construction of a new bus shelter at the bottom of College Hill.<lb/>
Appropriated at the weekly meeting last night, the money is half the amount needed to consruct the shelter for<lb/>
the ECU transit system.<lb/>
SGA Appropriates Money To Build<lb/>
Bus Shelter At College Hill Location<lb/>
By GREG R1DEOUT<lb/>
Nm Milor<lb/>
The SGA in its weekly meeting<lb/>
Monday night approved by an over-<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Stan Landers<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
Page 13<lb/>
For the sports scoop on the<lb/>
Converse Lady Pirate Classic<lb/>
turn to the SPORTS section.<lb/>
Read how number five-ranked<lb/>
Cheyney State defeated the host<lb/>
Lady Pirates to capture the tour-<lb/>
nament crown. The Lady Pirates<lb/>
finished in second place ahead of<lb/>
Clemson and Detroit University.<lb/>
whelming majority to appropriate<lb/>
$2,000 to assist the Student Transit<lb/>
Authority in constructing a bus<lb/>
shelter on campus. The shelter is<lb/>
tentatively scheduled to be built at<lb/>
the bottom of College Hill, pending<lb/>
approval of the Board of Trustees.<lb/>
The bus shelter bill, passed by a<lb/>
voice vote, had been brought up on<lb/>
the legislature floor two weeks ago.<lb/>
At that time, the bill called for the<lb/>
SGA to appropriate the full $4,000<lb/>
for the shelter. The original bill was<lb/>
then tabled and sent back to the stu-<lb/>
dent welfare committee for recon-<lb/>
sideration. The SGA had $8,000 left<lb/>
to spend two weeks ago.<lb/>
The student welfare committee<lb/>
rewrote the bill to say the SGA<lb/>
would pay half the cost of the bus<lb/>
shelter if the Student Transit<lb/>
Authority would appropriate the<lb/>
other $2,000.<lb/>
SGA president Eric Henderson<lb/>
spoke in favor of the bill. He ex-<lb/>
plained that the transit authority is a<lb/>
separate organisation from the<lb/>
SGA and receive their own money<lb/>
from student funds. But, he said,<lb/>
they are planning to purchase new<lb/>
buses collectively priced at $63,000<lb/>
and need help to construct the<lb/>
shelters.<lb/>
If the College Hill site is not ap-<lb/>
proved by the trustees at their<lb/>
March 4, meeting, the bill calls for<lb/>
construction of the shelter in front<lb/>
of the Speight building on Fifth<lb/>
Street. The site on Fifth street has<lb/>
already been approved.<lb/>
The $4,000 is the cost of the<lb/>
materials. The labor is to be provid-<lb/>
ed by the Industrial Tech Majors<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
One legislator did point out that<lb/>
many students don't use the bus ser-<lb/>
vice, and therefore, he thought the<lb/>
bill should be defeated. He seemed<lb/>
to be alone in his opinion of the bill.<lb/>
Most of the other legislators<lb/>
thought that the benefits for all<lb/>
students outweighed the disadvan-<lb/>
tages, pointing to the fact that the<lb/>
system is overused at present.<lb/>
Construction of the shelter will<lb/>
begin after approval of the site by<lb/>
the trustees in March.<lb/>
Residence Life has announced<lb/>
that it will present a Reggie Swinson<lb/>
Service Award in mid-April, to<lb/>
honor a student staff member who<lb/>
has contributed most to serving<lb/>
residence life and the ECU campus<lb/>
during his or her tenure.<lb/>
The award, which will be<lb/>
presented annually, is a memorial to<lb/>
former student staff member Swin-<lb/>
son, who died last August from in-<lb/>
juries suffered in an auto accident.<lb/>
The recipient of the award will be<lb/>
chosen by a selection committee<lb/>
composed of two residence life ad-<lb/>
ministrators, an area coordinator,<lb/>
and two resident advisors.<lb/>
The award process begins with<lb/>
students and staff filling out<lb/>
nomination data sheets, which can<lb/>
be obtained from individual<lb/>
residence hall offices. The nomina-<lb/>
tion deadline is March 3.<lb/>
The committee will narrow the list<lb/>
to three or five nominees, who will<lb/>
in turn partake in an interview pro-<lb/>
cess to determine the award reci-<lb/>
pient.<lb/>
The award, although in part a<lb/>
tribute to Swinson and his qualities,<lb/>
involves other criteria. The nominee<lb/>
must have a grade point average of<lb/>
2.5 or above, have completed a full<lb/>
year of service, have demonstrated<lb/>
involvement in residence hall and<lb/>
campus organizations and met the<lb/>
selection process qualifications.<lb/>
"We felt we needed to create<lb/>
some sort of honor and recognition<lb/>
for those who go above and beyond<lb/>
the call of duty said Susan Ken-<lb/>
nedy, who is the residence director<lb/>
in Fletcher Hall and also chairing<lb/>
the committee.<lb/>
The idea for an award originated<lb/>
when certain College Hill staff<lb/>
members last August had talked<lb/>
about giving out some type of an<lb/>
award in memory of Swinson, who<lb/>
was very popular among the staff<lb/>
and students during his employment<lb/>
at Aycock Hall.<lb/>
"Reggie was energetic, involved<lb/>
in campus activities (he was an ECU<lb/>
ambaasador), an all-around type<lb/>
person and respected by many<lb/>
Kennedy said. "So, it was a good<lb/>
chance to show our appreciation of<lb/>
the student staff as well as provide<lb/>
for an award in memory of Reg-<lb/>
gie<lb/>
Sleeping On The Job<lb/>
?v cimov WALL<lb/>
Osmosis and digestion may be popular methods of study, bat most pro-<lb/>
fessors aad report cards will testify that they are not the most effective study<lb/>
habits. Sleeping works as well on homework as it does on class lectures.<lb/>
<lb/>
1 "<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0002"/><lb/>
J<lb/>
Stye izaat (Ear0itman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.4<lb/>
Tuesday, February 15, 1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Dean Laing Of Art School Resigns From Post<lb/>
hoto By NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Richard H. laing<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Dean of the School of Art<lb/>
Richard H. Laing resigned his post<lb/>
as the head of the state's only ac-<lb/>
credited art school last week and<lb/>
will step down as soon as his suc-<lb/>
cessor is chosen.<lb/>
Laing assumed the post in 1979<lb/>
after being selected by a faculty<lb/>
committee from the art school in a<lb/>
national search. The post was made<lb/>
vacant upon the death of Well-<lb/>
ington G. Gray, who served as dean<lb/>
for 21 years.<lb/>
Laing is responsible for some ma-<lb/>
jor changes and improvements in<lb/>
the art school. Most notably, he<lb/>
consolidated the nine smaller<lb/>
departments of the school into two<lb/>
larger departments of fine arts and<lb/>
design last year.<lb/>
Some faculty were in support of<lb/>
Laing's methods and ideas. One<lb/>
faculty member claimed that Laing<lb/>
has increased the art school's<lb/>
recognition and respect around the<lb/>
country. "We are much better<lb/>
known because of Dean Laing. He<lb/>
has made us better known<lb/>
throughout the U.S<lb/>
The faculty member, who asked<lb/>
not to be identified, said that ten-<lb/>
sion among the some faculty and a<lb/>
lack of support made Laing's job<lb/>
difficult. He "didn't have support"<lb/>
from all the faculty, the source said,<lb/>
and was not fully appreciated. A<lb/>
"problem of personalities" among<lb/>
the faculty and administration at<lb/>
times created "just an unpleasant<lb/>
type of situation<lb/>
Some faculty did agree with Laing<lb/>
and the direction he was taking the<lb/>
School of Art. "He was the right<lb/>
dean for this school. We were head-<lb/>
ed in the right direction<lb/>
A contingent of faculty endorsed<lb/>
Laing in a routine faculty evalua-<lb/>
tion report last year. A standard<lb/>
report must by completed by the<lb/>
faculty of all university departments<lb/>
every four years regarding its<lb/>
evaluation of the department's ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
Dr. Angelo Volpe, vice chancellor<lb/>
of academic affairs, had only good<lb/>
things to say about Laing. "Dr La-<lb/>
ing is an artist and an art educator<lb/>
of the first caliber he said. "His<lb/>
creativity has enhanced the already<lb/>
excellent reputation of our School<lb/>
of Art<lb/>
The ECU School of Art is the on-<lb/>
ly art school in North Carolina fully<lb/>
accredited by the National Associa-<lb/>
tion of the Schools of Art. It is<lb/>
ranked in the top catagory, division<lb/>
A.<lb/>
Laing had good communication<lb/>
with students and a good awareness<lb/>
of student work, the faculty<lb/>
member said. Many students<lb/>
agreed, saying of Laing that "his<lb/>
door was always open<lb/>
He was always available He is a<lb/>
ver nice person said one fine arts<lb/>
.tudent<lb/>
Laing supported the aquisition of<lb/>
regional and national shows and ex-<lb/>
hibitions by the school's gallery. He<lb/>
was active in student recruitment<lb/>
and in the founding of the Friends<lb/>
of Art, a fund raising group created<lb/>
late last year for the art school.<lb/>
Laing, who could not be reached<lb/>
for comment, will continue to serve<lb/>
on the faculty as a professor of art<lb/>
He holds degrees in art from<lb/>
Eastern Michigan University and<lb/>
Wayne State University and receiv-<lb/>
ed a doctorate in education at Penn-<lb/>
sylvania State University.<lb/>
Increased Accessibility<lb/>
New Automatic Doors Aid Handicapped<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
staff Wnlc<lb/>
The installation of seven<lb/>
automatic door openers in four<lb/>
campus buildings is welcome news<lb/>
to ECU's handicapped students.<lb/>
The students often had trouble in<lb/>
the past using a number oi entrances<lb/>
around campus.<lb/>
"1 think they're great said ECU<lb/>
psychology student Wayne Dawson.<lb/>
"I've had a lot of trouble in the past<lb/>
with certain doors on campus<lb/>
Most handicapped students said<lb/>
the installment of the door openers<lb/>
was a valuable asset. Handicapped<lb/>
students Brian Rangeley and Rich<lb/>
Burke agreed with Dawson's state-<lb/>
ment. These three students all rely-<lb/>
on wheelchairs to go places on cam-<lb/>
pus They live in Slay dorm where<lb/>
vine of the seven electric openers has<lb/>
been installed.<lb/>
According to Director of Han-<lb/>
dicapped Students Services C. C.<lb/>
Rowe the university will be install-<lb/>
ing nine additional door openers<lb/>
during the spring semester, bringing<lb/>
the total to 16. "We've had an on-<lb/>
going program for removing<lb/>
physical barriers Rowe said.<lb/>
Rowe said that opening doors was<lb/>
one of the major problems faced by<lb/>
many handicapped students, par-<lb/>
ticularly those students in<lb/>
wheelchairs and on crutches.<lb/>
"Many people sitting in<lb/>
wheelchairs don't have the physical<lb/>
ability to open doors Rowe said.<lb/>
"They have to wait for somebody to<lb/>
come along to open it for them<lb/>
Burke and Dawson were both<lb/>
grateful that an automatic opener<lb/>
was installed in Spillman building<lb/>
because the building's wheelchair<lb/>
ramp goes to a front door that most<lb/>
people don't use.<lb/>
"1 got trapped in there (Spillman)<lb/>
once Burke said. "I was in there<lb/>
during lunchtime and nobody was<lb/>
around to let me out Burke had to<lb/>
wait 15 minutes before someone<lb/>
came 10 let him out. "Now I don't<lb/>
have to sit around and wait for so-<lb/>
meone to come along. It makes me<lb/>
more independent. Now 1 just go up<lb/>
there and hit it (the door switch) and<lb/>
go right in<lb/>
Dawson said many doors are too<lb/>
heaw for him to open and that it<lb/>
was difficult for him to grip the<lb/>
handles on some doors. Dawson<lb/>
said that many of the students have<lb/>
a handicapped that prevents them<lb/>
from gripping the door adequately.<lb/>
Burke and Dawson both said cer-<lb/>
tain doors could cause serious<lb/>
damage to wheelchairs and injure<lb/>
the person in it. The students said<lb/>
the new openers are much safer for<lb/>
them and their wheelchair.<lb/>
Dawson said that a door which<lb/>
opens both ways is the easiest for a<lb/>
wheelchair student to use. Most<lb/>
doors on campus open one way, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to Rowe the automatic<lb/>
door openers cost $1,245 each. Bids<lb/>
are now being accepted by the<lb/>
university for the installation of the<lb/>
other nine. The funds for the pro-<lb/>
ject were taken from the Handicap-<lb/>
ped Student Services budget for<lb/>
maintenance and operations. Rowe<lb/>
said no special federal funds had<lb/>
been allotted for the project.<lb/>
"This has been one of the things<lb/>
that many (handicapped students)<lb/>
felt was needed on campus Rowe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
A feature of the new door openers<lb/>
includes a timer that can be set to<lb/>
keep the doors open for various<lb/>
amounts of time. The timer is now<lb/>
set to keep the door open 12<lb/>
seconds. Rowe said the door<lb/>
openers were moveable and could be<lb/>
changed to a different door if<lb/>
necessary.<lb/>
Besides Slay dorm and Spillman,<lb/>
the automatic openers have been in-<lb/>
stalled in Brewster and the Allied<lb/>
Health building. The other nine<lb/>
openers are scheduled to be installed<lb/>
in Speight, Rawl (2), the Library (4),<lb/>
Whichard and the library science<lb/>
building. The wall plate has the blue<lb/>
and white symbol of a wheelchair,<lb/>
an internationally recognized sym-<lb/>
bol for the handicapped.<lb/>
Rowe said the new door openers<lb/>
served many purposes and could be<lb/>
a help to everyone, not just<lb/>
wheelchair users. "I'm very happy<lb/>
to see them installed Dawson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I've gotten a lot of use out of<lb/>
them in just this short time they've<lb/>
been in service Dawson said. All<lb/>
seven openers have been installed<lb/>
Rich Burke is one of many students on campus who will make frequent use<lb/>
of the new automatic door openers being installed around campus.<lb/>
Residence Life To Give New Award<lb/>
In Honor Of Former Staff Member<lb/>
By ED NICKLAS<lb/>
Siaff MM<lb/>
  photo ?y CINDY WALL<lb/>
a onnn for the construction of a new bus shelter at the bottom of College Hill.<lb/>
ZSXZiZZ? k h"f ,he ?mo ?"M ,o ?"<lb/>
the ECU transit system.<lb/>
SGA Appropriates Money To Build<lb/>
Bus Shelter At College Hill Location<lb/>
.i ? ??? tn rinrrhase nev<lb/>
By GREG HIDEOUT<lb/>
Ncan Mi<lb/>
The SGA in its weekly meeting<lb/>
Monday night approved by an over<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Stan Landers<lb/>
Kntertainment<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
Page 13<lb/>
For the sports scoop on the<lb/>
Converse Lady Pirate Classic<lb/>
turn to the SPORTS section<lb/>
Read how number five-ranked<lb/>
Cheyney State defeated the host<lb/>
Ladv Pirates to capture the tour-<lb/>
nament crown. The Lady Pirates<lb/>
finished in second place ahead of<lb/>
Clem son and Detroit University.<lb/>
whelming majority to appropriate<lb/>
$2,000 to assist the Student Transit<lb/>
Authority in constructing a bus<lb/>
shelter on campus. The shelter is<lb/>
tentatively scheduled to be built at<lb/>
the bottom of College Hill, pending<lb/>
approval of the Board of Trustees.<lb/>
The bus shelter bill, passed by a<lb/>
voice vote, had been brought up on<lb/>
the legislature floor two weeks ago.<lb/>
At that time, the bill called for the<lb/>
SGA to appropriate the full $4,000<lb/>
for the shelter. The original bill was<lb/>
then tabled and sent back to the stu-<lb/>
dent welfare committee for recon-<lb/>
sideration. The SGA had $8,000 left<lb/>
to spend two weeks ago.<lb/>
The student welfare committee<lb/>
rewrote the bill to say the SGA<lb/>
would pay half the cost of the bus<lb/>
shelter if the Student Transit<lb/>
Authority would appropriate the<lb/>
other $2,000.<lb/>
SGA president Eric Henderson<lb/>
spoke in favor of the bill. He ex-<lb/>
plained that the transit authority is a<lb/>
separate organisation from the<lb/>
SGA and receive their own money<lb/>
from student funds. But, he said,<lb/>
they are planning to purchase new<lb/>
buses collectively priced at $63,000<lb/>
and need help to construct the<lb/>
shelters.<lb/>
If the College Hill site is not ap-<lb/>
proved by the trustees at their<lb/>
March 4, meeting, the bill calls for<lb/>
construction of the shelter in front<lb/>
of the Speight building on Filth<lb/>
Street. The site on Fifth street has<lb/>
already been approved.<lb/>
The $4,000 is the cost of the<lb/>
materials. The labor is to be provid-<lb/>
ed by the Industrial Tech Majors<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
One legislator did point out that<lb/>
many students don't use the bus ser-<lb/>
vice, and therefore, he thought the<lb/>
bill should be defeated. He seemed<lb/>
to be alone in his opinion of the bill.<lb/>
Most of the other legislators<lb/>
thought that the benefits for all<lb/>
students outweighed the disadvan-<lb/>
tages, pointing to the fact that the<lb/>
system is overused at present.<lb/>
Construction of the shelter will<lb/>
begin after approval of the site by<lb/>
the trustees in March.<lb/>
Residence Life has announced<lb/>
that it will present a Reggie Swinson<lb/>
Service Award in mid-April, to<lb/>
honor a student staff member who<lb/>
has contributed most to serving<lb/>
residence life and the ECU campus<lb/>
during his or her tenure.<lb/>
The award, which will be<lb/>
presented annually, is a memorial to<lb/>
former student staff member Swin-<lb/>
son, who died last August from in-<lb/>
juries suffered in an auto accident.<lb/>
The recipient of the award will be<lb/>
chosen by a selection committee<lb/>
composed of two residence life ad-<lb/>
ministrators, an area coordinator,<lb/>
and two resident advisors.<lb/>
The award process begins with<lb/>
students and staff filling out<lb/>
nomination data sheets, which can<lb/>
be obtained from individual<lb/>
residence hall offices. The nomina-<lb/>
tion deadline is March 3.<lb/>
The committee will narrow the list<lb/>
to three or five nominees, who will<lb/>
in turn partake in an interview pro-<lb/>
cess to determine the award reci-<lb/>
pient.<lb/>
The award, although in part a<lb/>
tribute to Swinson and his qualities,<lb/>
involves other criteria. The nominee<lb/>
must have a grade point average of<lb/>
2.5 or above, have completed a full<lb/>
year of service, have demonstrated<lb/>
involvement in residence hall and<lb/>
campus organizations and met the<lb/>
selection process qualifications.<lb/>
"We felt we needed to create<lb/>
some sort of honor and recognition<lb/>
for those who go above and beyond<lb/>
the call of duty said Susan Ken-<lb/>
nedy, who is the residence director<lb/>
in Fletcher Hall and also chairing<lb/>
the committee. .<lb/>
The idea for an award originated<lb/>
when certain College Hill staff<lb/>
members last August had talked<lb/>
about giving out some type of an<lb/>
award in memory of Swinson, who<lb/>
was very popular among the stall<lb/>
and students during his employment<lb/>
at Ay cock Hall. ,<lb/>
"Reggie was energetic, involved<lb/>
in campus activities (he was an ECL<lb/>
ambaasador), an all-around type<lb/>
person and respected by many.<lb/>
Kennedy said. "So, it was a good<lb/>
chance to show our appreciation of<lb/>
the tudent staff as well as provide<lb/>
for an award in memory ot Reg-<lb/>
gie.<lb/>
Sleeping On The Job<lb/>
?, CIMOY WALL<lb/>
Osmosis and digestion may be popular methods of study, bat most pro-<lb/>
ZZZTJ report cards will testify that they are no. the ?ostefteetiv. study<lb/>
habits. Sleeping works as well on homework as it does oa class lectures.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0003"/><lb/>
THE EASTC AROl INIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY J5, 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
It you or your organuation<lb/>
would like 'o Have an item printed<lb/>
in the announcement column,<lb/>
please type it on an announcement<lb/>
form and send it t0 Tne East<lb/>
Carolinian in care of the produc<lb/>
tion manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications Building<lb/>
Flyers ano handwritten copy on<lb/>
odd sued 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/>
ment will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest that you do not rely<lb/>
sofely on this column tor publicity<lb/>
The deadline tor announcements<lb/>
?s 3 p m Monday tor the Tuesday<lb/>
paper and 3pm Wednesdayy for<lb/>
the Thursday paper No ar<lb/>
nouncements received after these<lb/>
deadlines will be printed<lb/>
This space is available to an<lb/>
campus organizations and depart<lb/>
ments<lb/>
ULTIMAX<lb/>
TOURNAMENT<lb/>
Ultimax '83 is coming! On<lb/>
ivVarcn 16 and 27 the ECU I Rates<lb/>
will Most their first ultimate tour<lb/>
nament Make plans to see some of<lb/>
the best ultimate to be played on<lb/>
the east coast this year The irates<lb/>
are planning a road trip to<lb/>
Gainsville, Fla over Spr ng Break<lb/>
to piay in a tournament and catch<lb/>
some rays too1 Club meetings are<lb/>
Moo nights. 8 00 rm 248 MSC<lb/>
Anyone interested is welcome<lb/>
KARATE<lb/>
On Thursday January 20 the<lb/>
East Carolina Karate Club will<lb/>
hold a belt test for its students m<lb/>
the rst floor of Memorial Gym a'<lb/>
J 00 p.m. Club instructor Bill Mac<lb/>
donald invites the public to atteno<lb/>
and observe some of tne finest<lb/>
Md'tial Arts performance m the<lb/>
south<lb/>
NURSING<lb/>
School of Nursing prereg'Stra<lb/>
t.on for summer session and fall<lb/>
semester. 1983 will occur during<lb/>
daytime office hours of faculty ac<lb/>
visors. February 28 through<lb/>
March 4 To expedite th s process<lb/>
a sign up sheet will be posted on<lb/>
the office door of each faculty ad<lb/>
vlSOr On foCiary 14 1983<lb/>
Students are reijues'ed to indicate<lb/>
or tnat sheet before February 26<lb/>
their preferred conference time<lb/>
Students nc expect to meet all<lb/>
requirements for accep'ance mo<lb/>
scprvmore leve clin ? rHiri '??<lb/>
Our?es ? ' ? s<lb/>
secure ar informal on sheet arc<lb/>
ar 'ntent to Enroll form in<lb/>
NB 1S2 Failure to subm.t tne form<lb/>
will result in the student s name<lb/>
being placed on ar alternate list<lb/>
for admission nte tnose conical<lb/>
nursing courses<lb/>
ECU SCIENCE<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
ECU Science Education Club<lb/>
will present Bill Crews Fossil<lb/>
Collecting in Eastern NC' on<lb/>
February 15 at 4 00 p m m<lb/>
Flanagan 303<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
The Fountain of Life Christian<lb/>
Fellowship meets every Wednes<lb/>
day night at 7 00 p.m in the<lb/>
Ledoma Wright Cultural Center<lb/>
vou are invited to come out tor a<lb/>
time of fun, telloship and Bible<lb/>
Study<lb/>
ASH WEDNESDAY<lb/>
The 5 00 p m Mass for Ash<lb/>
Wednesday. February 16th will be<lb/>
held in the Library Science<lb/>
Auditorium on the second floor of<lb/>
the Library Science Building<lb/>
Mass will NOT be m the Biology<lb/>
building<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
The international Language<lb/>
Organiiation will be meeting<lb/>
Wednesday February 16 1983 at<lb/>
3 00 The meeting will be held in<lb/>
Brewster, C wing room 301 All old<lb/>
members are encouraged to at<lb/>
tend this meeting If you are not a<lb/>
member but are mtersted in other<lb/>
cultures you are .nvited to come to<lb/>
our meeting You do not have to be<lb/>
a Foreign Language maior or<lb/>
m-nor to idn<lb/>
ASPA<lb/>
American Society tor Personnel<lb/>
Administrators will meet<lb/>
February 16 at 3 p m in Room 206<lb/>
Rawls Featured speaxer will be<lb/>
Rodne, Maddox Esq from NC<lb/>
Dept ot LaDor. Ths is open to all<lb/>
.nterstcd individuals ASPA<lb/>
members do not forget our initia<lb/>
tion dinner February 24<lb/>
COUNSELING<lb/>
A two part mini series offered at<lb/>
no cost bv the university Counsel<lb/>
? ng Center entitled How to Sue<lb/>
ceed in College and Still Have<lb/>
Fun on Monday. February 21.<lb/>
1983 The other one is "How to<lb/>
Avoid Test Anxiety on Tuesday.<lb/>
February 22 1983 Both sesso.ns<lb/>
wii be conducted form 3PM 4PM<lb/>
in 305 Wright inrex TSJ 6661 No<lb/>
advance registration necessary<lb/>
SILENT DINNER<lb/>
rite S gn language Dept offers<lb/>
B i ni . rner each week so the<lb/>
  mmutify and Sign<lb/>
angcage s'o-jents can socialize<lb/>
and practice their skills This<lb/>
e?'x tne Silent dinner wll be at<lb/>
?? na Roma on Wednesday. Feb 16<lb/>
a' ? 00 p "<lb/>
CAREER CHOICE<lb/>
The Strong Campbe" interest<lb/>
inventory is ottered every Tues<lb/>
da. at 4 PV in 305 Wr.ght Annex<lb/>
when school is in session with the<lb/>
exceptions of examination period<lb/>
ant: registration day This is<lb/>
avanable to an students at no cost<lb/>
No formal registration is required<lb/>
WOMEN'S AWARENESS<lb/>
MONTH<lb/>
The la'es' X me s'og'ams tor<lb/>
West Area s Women s Awareness<lb/>
Month vyn be on Wednesday<lb/>
February 16 a 30 pm ,n the Cie<lb/>
ment nan wObby This week s pro<lb/>
gram will be a discussion given by<lb/>
an ECU student concerning the<lb/>
traumas and emotions of rape vie<lb/>
tims All who wish to attend are<lb/>
very welcome<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
A follow up pledge meeting<lb/>
followed by Phi Sigma Pi's mon<lb/>
thly business meeting will be held<lb/>
at 5 00 pm in Rawl 130 on<lb/>
Wednesday. February 16. 1983 All<lb/>
interested persons who receive<lb/>
bids and all brothers of Tau<lb/>
Chapter are uroed to attend<lb/>
A smoker for invited guests will<lb/>
be given by Phi Sigma Pi National<lb/>
Honor Fraternity Tuesday,<lb/>
February 15, 1983 at 7 00 p m in<lb/>
Room 103 of the Biology Building<lb/>
Dress is semi formal The<lb/>
brothers of Phi Sigma Pi cordially<lb/>
invite all persons who receive bids<lb/>
to attend the smoker<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Our next bi weekly meeting will<lb/>
be held on Tursday, Feb 17 m<lb/>
Mendenhall's multi purpose room<lb/>
at 7 p m Members are expectd to<lb/>
attend Recently invited persons<lb/>
are urged to attend as well a any<lb/>
persons wishing to ioin A<lb/>
minimum GPA of 3 0 is required<lb/>
for membership<lb/>
SIGMA TAU DELTA<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta will meet on<lb/>
Thursday, February 17 at 7 30<lb/>
p m m the Mendenhall Cot<lb/>
teehouse A poetry reading will be<lb/>
given by Julie Fay and Peter<lb/>
Makuck William Hallberg will<lb/>
give a fiction reading Free pony<lb/>
keg No admission All members<lb/>
ano their guests are encouraged to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
WINTERFEST!<lb/>
Sign Language Club members<lb/>
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW for<lb/>
WINTERFEST This an day gala<lb/>
event will feature German foods<lb/>
and dancing Transportation will<lb/>
be provided to and from Raleigh<lb/>
Advance tickets are S5 00 Sign up<lb/>
in BA 114 Don't miss it' it's Sat<lb/>
Feb ?<lb/>
YHDL<lb/>
Young Home Designer s League<lb/>
meets Tuesday. February 15th at<lb/>
5 00 in the Van Landmgham room<lb/>
BINGOICE CREAM<lb/>
There will be a BINGO. ICE<lb/>
CREAM PARTY on Tuesday. Feb<lb/>
15. 1983 at 7 00pm In the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Mult'<lb/>
Purpose Room All ECU students<lb/>
faulty, staff and their dependents<lb/>
are welcome Admission is 2SThe<lb/>
prizes this month will include<lb/>
tree passes to Bowling Billiards<lb/>
Table Tennis, free tickets to the<lb/>
Michael iceburg concert, a ticket<lb/>
to Elly Ameling s concert, aria a<lb/>
ticket to the Dinner Theatre Come<lb/>
join n on the tun of Bngo and en<lb/>
,oy the delicious ice cream Bring<lb/>
a friend1<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
PREREGISTRATION<lb/>
General College students should<lb/>
contact their advisers the week<lb/>
prior to February 21. 1983 to ar<lb/>
range for preregistration<lb/>
ABA<lb/>
Alpha Beta Alpha, the library<lb/>
science fraternity will be holding a<lb/>
pledging ceremony February 22 at<lb/>
5 30 pm in room 219 Library<lb/>
science department All persons<lb/>
interested in Librarianship are<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ<lb/>
presents Prime Time Every<lb/>
Thursday nite at 7 9pm in Biology<lb/>
Building Room 103 A time of fun<lb/>
fellowship and training m how to<lb/>
live a victorious Christian life<lb/>
ARCHERY<lb/>
interested m Archery or Bow<lb/>
Hunting if so there is a new sports<lb/>
club forming iust for you<lb/>
Members do not have to have any<lb/>
skill whatsoever iust the desire to<lb/>
learn the exacting sport of archer<lb/>
First meeting Feb 17. at 7 00pm<lb/>
m Room 102 Memorial Gym For<lb/>
more information call Gene<lb/>
Taylor at 752 0062<lb/>
ALPHAOMICRON PI<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi cordially m<lb/>
v.tes yuou to attend Spring Rush<lb/>
Wednesday. Feb 16. skating 7 9<lb/>
Monday, Feb 21 Dinner at 5 00<lb/>
rides or information call<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use th form at right or<lb/>
use a separate sheet of paper if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line. Each letter, punc-<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line If word<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will be ac-<lb/>
cepted over the phone. We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
7S per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
Return to THE EAST CAROUNIAN<lb/>
office b 3:00 Tuesday before<lb/>
Wednesday assbfceatfoaa.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CitySute.<lb/>
No. lines <lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
.Phone.<lb/>
.at 75 per line S.<lb/>
.No. insertions.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
????t?r??,<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
??tr?l1? f?<lb/>
T1I1?A?'<lb/>
?<lb/>
H?<lb/>
i?1<lb/>
<lb/>
iI1 I,<lb/>
For<lb/>
7 58 4290<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
Mr John S Childers, Director,<lb/>
ECU Testing Center announced<lb/>
that the new Meoicai College Ad<lb/>
mission Test MCAT application<lb/>
packets have arrived in the<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight 105 The<lb/>
test dates for 19S3 are Apr,i 9 1983.<lb/>
arid<lb/>
rtooer 1 1983 The deadline date<lb/>
for April 9 test is March 11. 1983<lb/>
and the deadline date tor submit<lb/>
ting app'Cation for the October 1<lb/>
1983 test is September 2 1983<lb/>
PHYSICAL EDUCATION<lb/>
MAJORSCLUB<lb/>
t(if P E MaiOrs C'uD s<lb/>
avaiabie to donate time and ser<lb/>
vices to any organizations or tune<lb/>
t.ons on campus or m Greenville<lb/>
who ned help with good cause<lb/>
efforts that benefit peopie and the<lb/>
commnity in general Char.ataC'e<lb/>
organizations, numa" service<lb/>
groups and other benevloents or<lb/>
philanthropic groups are en<lb/>
courage to contact tne club for any<lb/>
assistance they may be able to<lb/>
provide<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
LANGUAGE<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
will be meeting Wednesday<lb/>
February 16. 19?3 at 3 X The<lb/>
meeting w.H be held n Brewster.<lb/>
C Wmg room 301 All old members<lb/>
are encouraged to attend this<lb/>
meefng it you are not a memer<lb/>
but are interested W other cu'tures<lb/>
you are invited to erne to our<lb/>
meeting You do not hav e to be a<lb/>
Fore gn nguage maor or mmor<lb/>
to 0,n<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
The ECU Circle K dub will be<lb/>
meefmg Tuesday February 15,<lb/>
1983 at 7 00 in Mendenhall rm 221<lb/>
This meeting is a dosed meeting<lb/>
tor member only There will be a<lb/>
spaghetti dinner afterwards<lb/>
Members nave to supply their own<lb/>
beverage nonalcoholic, If you<lb/>
are not a member<lb/>
terested Ml Circle K<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
The Brothers of Kappa Sigma<lb/>
would like to congradulate and<lb/>
welcome the new Brothers into our<lb/>
fraternity They consist of Ivan<lb/>
Washburn. Steve Reavis, Steve<lb/>
Edwards, Mike Sanoba Mike<lb/>
Smith, Trey West Paul McArthur.<lb/>
Dwayne Wiseman Greg Taylor,<lb/>
Mark Hana, Greg Wyatl. Scott<lb/>
Smith, Tony Mills. David<lb/>
Sadlowski, Jason "PAIN" Davis.<lb/>
Tony Carrea. David Feinbaum.<lb/>
Chipper McDowell, and Dallas<lb/>
PARTY Drake<lb/>
INTER VARSITY<lb/>
We would like to invite you to<lb/>
share with us m the excitement<lb/>
and ioy of serving our Lord Jesus<lb/>
Christ' Our speaker this week will<lb/>
be Mr Furnev James Wt meet<lb/>
each Wednesday at 6 30 m the<lb/>
Biology Bldg<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
There will be a general meeting<lb/>
on Thursday February 17th at 00<lb/>
p m The meeting will be held at<lb/>
he nternaitona! house on E 9th<lb/>
Street All members and in<lb/>
terested persons are urged to at<lb/>
tend An persons who signed up for<lb/>
soccer please get m tough with<lb/>
Luis Ovares at 752 206<lb/>
If<lb/>
and are m<lb/>
come to our<lb/>
next meeting Tuesday February<lb/>
27. 19S3 m Mendenhall rmJ21 at<lb/>
7 0 0<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
The Soc.ety tor the Advance<lb/>
ment of Management will meet<lb/>
Tuesday February 15, in Rawl<lb/>
104 Mr Daiton D Bright of<lb/>
Hooker Buchanan insurance<lb/>
Agency of Greenville will be the<lb/>
guest speaker Mr Bright will<lb/>
speak on the a'terna've careers in<lb/>
management and insurance<lb/>
Everyone s invted to attend The<lb/>
meeting wd' be held a' 4 ?<lb/>
SPECIAL ISSUE<lb/>
ECU stuoenfs oe or tne lookout for<lb/>
the an campus preregistration<lb/>
issue The hst of all class<lb/>
schedules will hit the newsstand<lb/>
on Wednesday Staff members of<lb/>
The East Carolinian would like<lb/>
everyone to sign up<lb/>
FILM<lb/>
The film entitled "Burning<lb/>
Hell" will be shown Wednes4lay.<lb/>
February 73. ISM at the Ledonia<lb/>
Wright Cultural Center at 7 00<lb/>
p m Everyone is invited to attend<lb/>
IFC<lb/>
The inter fraternal council will<lb/>
not meet this week but will hold a<lb/>
meeting next Tuesday at 5 30<lb/>
GRADUATION<lb/>
Graduation announcements are<lb/>
available in the Student Supply<lb/>
Store They are S2 tor a pack of 5<lb/>
and are located at the Jeweiry<lb/>
counter<lb/>
Remember to pick up your cap<lb/>
and gown before leaving school<lb/>
These keepsake gowns are yours<lb/>
to keep providing that the gradua<lb/>
tion f?? has been paid For those<lb/>
receiving a Masters degree, the<lb/>
fee pays for the cap and gown but<lb/>
there is an extra tee of Sll 75 for<lb/>
the hood<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING<lb/>
The Outdoor Recreation Center<lb/>
is sponsoring horseback riding<lb/>
trips to Jarman's Stables Reser<lb/>
vetions and payment for the<lb/>
Thursday afternoon trips are due<lb/>
by 100 PM each Thursday Rates<lb/>
era IS 00 par 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 7J79U<lb/>
Hours Monday and Friday 1 00<lb/>
PM 5 00 PM Tuesday. Wednes<lb/>
day. Thursday 2 00 PM 4 00 PM<lb/>
PHIALPHATHETA<lb/>
Phi Alplha Theta i present<lb/>
Or Mary L'ndermann of UNC<lb/>
Wilmington with an intormaf ve<lb/>
program entitled MEDICAL<lb/>
NEMESIS IN HISTORICAL<lb/>
PERSPECTIVE Or Lndemanr<lb/>
will discuss eighteenth ?nd nine<lb/>
teenth centvry criticisms of pro<lb/>
fessionai medicine The prog'am<lb/>
will begin at 7 30 p m m Brewster<lb/>
Bldg BS 104 Light refreshment<lb/>
will be served following this<lb/>
presentation The public is invited<lb/>
HISTORY MAJORS<lb/>
Phi Alpha Thets, the interne<lb/>
honal History Honor Society ,s<lb/>
now accepting appicat.ons for<lb/>
membership Participation m this<lb/>
organization s an asset o a<lb/>
students of History especially<lb/>
those planning to attend graduate<lb/>
school Applications may oe oe<lb/>
tamed in the History Office BA 316<lb/>
ano win be accepted tnrough<lb/>
February 18 Our next mee'ing<lb/>
will be February 15 at 2 00 p m in<lb/>
the Richard C Todd Room All in<lb/>
terested persons are mv ted to at<lb/>
fend For more information call<lb/>
756 Sa95 after 9 00 p m<lb/>
RECRUITING<lb/>
Representatives of the Norm<lb/>
Caroina State Highway Patroi<lb/>
wll be recruiting qualified m<lb/>
dviduais tor the pos't-on of<lb/>
Trooper on February 17. '983 n<lb/>
the Lobby of Ben Bu Q ng a ec<lb/>
Health from 9 00 am ur'i noon<lb/>
The pafrol s particular1, H<lb/>
terested in recruiting women ano<lb/>
a! women students are encourag<lb/>
ed tc stop by ano see w-at s oe ?s<lb/>
offered oeheve you will be<lb/>
pleasantly surpr sed about salary<lb/>
and fringe benefits<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
PREREGISTRATION<lb/>
General College students shou'd<lb/>
contact their advisers ne wee?<lb/>
prior to February 2' '9S3 to ar<lb/>
range for prereg'Stret on<lb/>
FEDERAL SUMMER<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
The Coop off ce n 313 Rawi<lb/>
currently has a iStmg of eoe'a'<lb/>
summer iobs nteres'ed suoen?s<lb/>
shou'C V'Si he Cc op Off ce Ss app<lb/>
I i,<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
Psi Ctv presents Mr Va'<lb/>
McGuire from he Campos<lb/>
Alcohol and Drug Program on<lb/>
Feb 22 Meeting wi be at 7 x<lb/>
p m in Room 179 Speight Topic<lb/>
will be on effects acohc has on<lb/>
people around you and what c dc<lb/>
about ,t open to all Psi Chi<lb/>
members do not forget about two<lb/>
scholarships available to you<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
FLASH Persons nterested "<lb/>
fihng tor SGA Revew Board<lb/>
piease do so In Room 778 of<lb/>
Menoennaii Student Center Five<lb/>
post.ons st'U open<lb/>
FANTASY<lb/>
The Student Residence Assoc a<lb/>
ton presents Fantasy A sen?<lb/>
tormai dance wll be at the moii<lb/>
day nn Mo'dome on February<lb/>
26th from 9 1 There win be foun<lb/>
?am or nks ou?ets and a cesnoer<lb/>
Music will be provided by the E bo<lb/>
room T,cxe?s are on sale for S5 00<lb/>
a couple, an S R A card s re<lb/>
quired They may be crcaiec<lb/>
from any v.ce P-es den' of a<lb/>
residence nan or tie S R A otf-ce<lb/>
.n ?he iobbv of Greene Ha" "or<lb/>
2 4 Monday tnroug" T"iS04?<lb/>
CAMPUS ALCOHOL<lb/>
AND<lb/>
DRUG<lb/>
Attention an members Nonmna<lb/>
tions win be made for Vice<lb/>
President and for Secretary The<lb/>
meeting will be on Thursday<lb/>
February 17 m Mendenhall Cot<lb/>
teehouse at 4 15 For more nfor<lb/>
matron coll 757 STO or come by<lb/>
Erwin Hall room 303<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
Spring break March a 17. dive<lb/>
the Bahamas From Ft tau?'<lb/>
dale tS40 00 includes meals oog<lb/>
? ng and divng aco-c the 65' dve<lb/>
boat The Bo"cm T.me ' "ert<lb/>
are ? im -umber of pieces<lb/>
aaat ano rssssrwat cms a'e v<lb/>
MM ? -s' come bass For "for ? a<lb/>
Hot! anc 'eg i"i' or ca' or vs I<lb/>
Ray Schart Di'ec'or of Aquatics<lb/>
V es acu?- ; Ceer W 6W<lb/>
The hast C arolinian<lb/>
-f r J? ? ?<lb/>
- <lb/>
Pj5 snec; r.f. "esca. and<lb/>
soa. aut ng "e acaoe-r -<lb/>
year anc every yved-esda. dtar<lb/>
mg 'ne s IHIWSf<lb/>
Tne Has- Ca - ?' Stan :?<lb/>
t c a -ewscace- at Ess'<lb/>
Cam -a  t'5  -?-<lb/>
opera'ed ac pwtl sre: I<lb/>
by 'I s'uden-s o? Eas- Zf: -?<lb/>
 - .e'Sr<lb/>
Subscription Rate SIC ear , The East Caroim.an oM cfi are ioea,ed n ? cue ScBuilding cm tne tingvl ? EC. Green, ue N C<lb/>
v - " ? a-ges 'c Tne t as" .e Z r. South B- 3 "g EC . e NC 834adores  re -  ! ; S'ee- '<lb/>
Teiepnorvr ;? ?;?? 04" ?ic<lb/>
PE MAJORS<lb/>
The nex -it' "J 0' 'he<lb/>
ds :i Educe'ic" Ma or s Club<lb/>
ariU be ha c 'jtvjn February '5<lb/>
at 5 15 TS mee ng w concer-<lb/>
spec'a' se'v ces o e Spec 1<lb/>
O't-np'CS<lb/>
SAB<lb/>
There wll oe ? SAB mee- ng<lb/>
?on.ghf in Room 212 of Menoennan<lb/>
at 5 X Ah members ar asked to<lb/>
br rig a friend H possible<lb/>
SLPHA EPSILON<lb/>
DELTA<lb/>
e'e ? oe a- A ra E.<lb/>
De 'a meet ng O" Aecnesc.<lb/>
- g Fet-jar. M a- ' X c -<lb/>
F anavar- R ?' nn BMMJ<lb/>
speaxer be ? Jrm Ge o?.<lb/>
or he AspeCS c Fa? - a<lb/>
'?ce r w 1. be a c ear<lb/>
mee' -g a"v: an exec ve ?ee" ng<lb/>
?? t 0C a eres'ec a'f  ??<lb/>
?o attend<lb/>
ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
A one aoce a pha sor  hj ?<lb/>
socmsor a caxe sa'e cec lamina<lb/>
100C. si "ve s'uoer" spo? SSSWS<lb/>
-ea yOurse ? c a  ?r- . ? ? 1<lb/>
3ewee- asss<lb/>
LDS INSTITUTE OF<lb/>
RELIGION<lb/>
The aer :a. Sa NaSWM<lb/>
Assoc a' or  'es . -x. Si I<lb/>
weex s Ml ?? c ass ?- . - pre<lb/>
? ses 'c oe in e?i "ne s.r<lb/>
?ec' w me aSSMStaHl  jesus<lb/>
C s and M s .?i at . -s- .? ?<lb/>
Me C ass?ee's an ?-sce.s<lb/>
from 6X1:? - B-ews'e-<lb/>
room 203B it Uta Mas'er ? gf<lb/>
say t ne wee here we sa.<lb/>
Come and See<lb/>
Canon<lb/>
w n?n<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
Pro3rammed AutorTVition<lb/>
Plus Shutter-Priority Sistication<lb/>
stern Intratioa<lb/>
Canon s AE-1 PROGRAM is the sophisticated SLR that s<lb/>
so simple to use Just focus and shoot Shutter speed and ap-<lb/>
erture settings are done automatically<lb/>
? PROGRAMMED<lb/>
AUTOMATlON-iuM<lb/>
focus and shoot'<lb/>
? SHUTTER PRIORITY<lb/>
AUTOMATION<lb/>
? Fully automatic dash<lb/>
photography with op<lb/>
tionai Speedlite 188A<lb/>
? New splitmicropnsm<lb/>
laser matte anti-<lb/>
blackout viewfinder<lb/>
screen stanriard-<lb/>
1 5X brighter<lb/>
Total ot 8 user inter-<lb/>
changeable tocusmg<lb/>
screens (optional)<lb/>
? Optional Power<lb/>
Winder A2 A and<lb/>
Motor Drive MA ava<lb/>
able for rapid se<lb/>
guence shooting<lb/>
? LED readout in view<lb/>
finder<lb/>
? Manual mode tor<lb/>
creative photography<lb/>
? Lightweight compact<lb/>
and easy to use<lb/>
? Includes Canon<lb/>
USA inc one-<lb/>
year limited<lb/>
warrantyregistration<lb/>
card<lb/>
? Canon<lb/>
The first computerized,<lb/>
shutter-priority automatic SLR.<lb/>
It changed the course of<lb/>
fine photography<lb/>
Canon s AE-1 is the world s favorite SLR camera And no<lb/>
wonder1 It has automatic exposure ana s backed ud by an<lb/>
incredible system ot lenses flash units and even a power<lb/>
winder<lb/>
2 29.95<lb/>
ioeedine 'MtAar<lb/>
P jwer W rioef K2 sriown OOl'onai<lb/>
Shutte' priority auto-<lb/>
matic exposure SLR<lb/>
Incredibly light-<lb/>
weight compact and<lb/>
easy to use<lb/>
Instant response<lb/>
sensitive silicon ex-<lb/>
posure metering<lb/>
i<lb/>
? Accepts an optional<lb/>
Canon Dedicated<lb/>
Speedi'tes tc fully<lb/>
automatic flash<lb/>
? Accepts more man<lb/>
SO Canon FD wde<lb/>
angle teiephot; jod<lb/>
zoom lenses<lb/>
? Optional Data Back A<lb/>
available<lb/>
? Includes Canon<lb/>
USA Inc one year<lb/>
limited warranty'<lb/>
registration card<lb/>
189.95<lb/>
Speedt?te 'SSA ana<lb/>
Powef Atioe' SfKMrf<lb/>
art 4 coaerc. hop<lb/>
 r- 1 o cr4L ? ? W ??. ?-sr a- xrs <lb/>
518 South Cotanche Street<lb/>
Greenville. N.C 27834<lb/>
752-0688<lb/>
c<lb/>
Wed Thurs Fri Sat Feb. 16-19<lb/>
tOALSp.<lb/>
V<lb/>
20<lb/>
OFF ALL ART SUPPLIES<lb/>
Canon AE-1 With 50mm 11.8 Canon Lenss 189.95<lb/>
Canon AE-1 With 35-70mm f4.0 Canon Zoom Lenss249.95<lb/>
Canon AE-1 Program With 50mm fl.8 Canon Lenss229.46<lb/>
Canon AE-1 Program With 35-70mm f4.0 Canon Zoom Lenss269.96<lb/>
Canon Sureshot107.96<lb/>
Canon Super Sureshot 152.96<lb/>
Canon Snappy 2096<lb/>
Canon Snappy 50 nK<lb/>
All Canon Lenses10 off<lb/>
All Canon Accessories10off<lb/>
While Supplies Last<lb/>
No Rain Checks<lb/>
OftCQBCfQ<lb/>
V 518 South Cotanche Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
752-0688<lb/>
All Tasco<lb/>
&amp; ?<lb/>
Bushnell<lb/>
Binoculars<lb/>
12<lb/>
Regusar Price<lb/>
20<lb/>
Ooff<lb/>
Our Regular<lb/>
Price On All<lb/>
Kodak Cameras<lb/>
&amp; Projectors<lb/>
All StaedtlerMars<lb/>
And Rapiograph<lb/>
Pens, Points, And<lb/>
Pen Sets<lb/>
30 OH<lb/>
Regular Price<lb/>
All Silk Screen<lb/>
Inks, Liquid<lb/>
&amp; Silk Screen<lb/>
Supplies<lb/>
Minolta<lb/>
Weathermatic<lb/>
110 Camera<lb/>
10 Off Our Regular Price<lb/>
On All Nikon &amp; Canon<lb/>
Cameras &amp; Lenses<lb/>
20 Off On All<lb/>
Nikon &amp;<lb/>
Canon<lb/>
Accessories<lb/>
ZAj O Off On<lb/>
Kodak Photo Finishing<lb/>
Brought In Feb. 16-19<lb/>
40<lb/>
Off<lb/>
20o?<lb/>
On All<lb/>
80200mm<lb/>
&amp; 28-80mm<lb/>
Zoom Lenses<lb/>
Polaroid<lb/>
One Step<lb/>
Priso<lb/>
Several EC L<lb/>
:cnis. staff and<lb/>
faculty ere among a<lb/>
! -p of peopie ra-r<lb/>
anng in an five<lb/>
hour stuvlv session on<lb/>
natives to in-<lb/>
on Thursdav<lb/>
The session focused<lb/>
on the revommenda-<lb/>
made by the<lb/>
ens C<lb/>
on Alternatives to !r.<lb/>
oration in a<lb/>
LSed report The<lb/>
-<lb/>
Durham-based<lb/>
and Jail Projec<lb/>
worked on<lb/>
n of<lb/>
eras (<lb/>
21 memba<lb/>
- - j ti w??<lb/>
11 a - s<lb/>
s C Court r -rr<lb/>
Judge ru v<lb/>
-<lb/>
The Prison ar<lb/>
Project is ?<lb/>
funded oi <lb/>
thai<lb/>
??? ? <lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
Pauhg sa - rn asi<lb/>
convinced that<lb/>
pr is f stem<lb/>
During he-<lb/>
Pau. .<lb/>
i d<lb/>
the ? pagi<lb/>
. .<lb/>
uatisrksi ? pt rt ha<lb/>
claim tha<lb/>
N Pr<lb/>
"Tc<lb/>
- . v: e m is<lb/>
ma it<lb/>
violence. Pj - -<lb/>
More1<lb/>
Steps<lb/>
? CPSi ? M?<lb/>
College, an a.<lb/>
all-black insl tul<lb/>
about ZilOO stttdt<lb/>
doesn't mind p a <lb/>
second fiddle to<lb/>
L niver-<lb/>
harmonv either<lb/>
- - Yafc -<lb/>
equest bj '?<lb/>
Departmen'<lb/>
Polish So<lb/>
s i<lb/>
rmeric<lb/>
cast Mor <lb/>
dent H (<lb/>
 o I u n I e e<lb/>
scac 4s -<lb/>
record the song<lb/>
ale Pres<lb/>
Bart let i G j<lb/>
eo down the v f<lb/>
Department req I<lb/>
because of the ? j<lb/>
pohev ac <lb/>
ting "one <lb/>
cause<lb/>
matter how.<lb/>
the a?<lb/>
But Morehc<lb/>
president d<lb/>
request in quite<lb/>
same cootexl<lb/>
tormed joverBBB<lb/>
and Vo?  Mnerf<lb/>
officials that his sew<lb/>
Survey<lb/>
Librar<lb/>
BsM.hr HXMVl<lb/>
Studen<lb/>
naires concerning<lb/>
use Of Jovner Lit<lb/>
anH be distn"<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Croatan. the S<lb/>
Supply Store am<lb/>
library Tuev3av<lb/>
Wednesday of<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Maury Vork.<lb/>
curator of<lb/>
manuscript coii<lb/>
at ECU, said abo<lb/>
questionnaire,<lb/>
dealing vsih the 1<lb/>
Evaluation ComJ<lb/>
which is charge<lb/>
making a foul<lb/>
- <lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0004"/><lb/>
JHEEAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 15. 1983<lb/>
.Phone.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
1??Ir<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?r<lb/>
<lb/>
 1<lb/>
<lb/>
I 1 I 1 I 1<lb/>
I hf K avt t aroliniun<lb/>
tesoa? ana<lb/>
Mv 3ur<lb/>
Eas-<lb/>
? ? V"a<lb/>
irol -a<lb/>
nan oHices<lb/>
In Old South<lb/>
 ;jmp Ol E CU<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
SLPHA EPSILON<lb/>
DELTA<lb/>
 ?S ?'? ? 't-saav<lb/>
" ? t a ' X r ? -<lb/>
"??" ? ?,?<lb/>
prakci wii be D w ?a oa.<lb/>
?tn Asoe -s  ??- , P'SC<lb/>
TT??f aril se a r age<lb/>
V<lb/>
?nexei<lb/>
ALPHAKAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
?  r? Alpha so) ? ?. <lb/>
? bake a - ? ?<lb/>
'  s'uae" supply store<lb/>
Tral coursed ha a .?r s ,<lb/>
between asses<lb/>
LDS INSTITUTE OF<lb/>
RELIGION<lb/>
The ,a"e- day -a -?<lb/>
 ? ' '  s rov T ?- ?<lb/>
?? ? ' ? ? ? - pro<lb/>
. ? e" -g "le sot<lb/>
- ? ? ?-? ai mmenl s4 ?, s<lb/>
?' ?- ? ? jsi land<lb/>
sc??s<lb/>
? 08 P tr - Brewster<lb/>
OB L ka Itie vas'e m gi"<lb/>
?.a. ? - ware -e-e we sa.<lb/>
- ? ? and i?<lb/>
hop<lb/>
v<lb/>
G<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
PPLIES<lb/>
Silk Screen<lb/>
iks, Liquid<lb/>
Silk Screen<lb/>
Supplies<lb/>
olaroid<lb/>
ne Step<lb/>
2<lb/>
95<lb/>
Prison Situation Studied<lb/>
Several ECU<lb/>
students, staff and<lb/>
faculty were among a<lb/>
group of people par-<lb/>
ticipating in an five-<lb/>
hour study session on<lb/>
alternatives to in-<lb/>
carceration Thursday.<lb/>
The session focused<lb/>
on the recommenda-<lb/>
tions made by the<lb/>
Citizens Commission<lb/>
on Alternatives to In-<lb/>
carceration in a recent-<lb/>
! released report. The<lb/>
group was led by<lb/>
Kristin Paulig, a staff<lb/>
member with the<lb/>
Durham-based Prison<lb/>
and Jail Project, who<lb/>
also worked on the<lb/>
preparation of the<lb/>
document.<lb/>
The Citizens Com-<lb/>
mission was made up of<lb/>
21 members including<lb/>
lawyers, judges,<lb/>
legislators, ex-<lb/>
offenders and clerics.<lb/>
N.C. Court of Appeals<lb/>
Judge Willis Whichard<lb/>
chaired the two-year<lb/>
project.<lb/>
The Prison and Jail<lb/>
Project is a privately-<lb/>
funded organization<lb/>
that lobbies to reduce<lb/>
the number of people<lb/>
sent to prison. "We ad-<lb/>
vocate de-carceration<lb/>
of the prison system<lb/>
Paulig said. "I'm just<lb/>
convinced that the<lb/>
prison system just<lb/>
doesn't work<lb/>
During her presenta-<lb/>
tion, Paulig led the<lb/>
group in a discussion of<lb/>
the 140-page report.<lb/>
She cited a number of<lb/>
statistics to support her<lb/>
claim that dramatic<lb/>
changes are needed in<lb/>
the N.C. Prison<lb/>
System.<lb/>
"To me the prison<lb/>
system is institu-<lb/>
tionalized state<lb/>
violence Paulig said.<lb/>
"Prisons are as<lb/>
destructive to the<lb/>
keepers as they are to<lb/>
the kept<lb/>
Paulig said N.C.<lb/>
prisons are extremely<lb/>
over-crowded when the<lb/>
number of inmates per<lb/>
square foot is<lb/>
calculated. The N.C.<lb/>
Department of Correc-<lb/>
tions overcrowded<lb/>
figure is 15 percent.<lb/>
Paulig said the first<lb/>
step to reducing the<lb/>
prison population is to<lb/>
educate the public. She<lb/>
also stressed a need to<lb/>
personalize the process<lb/>
of sending people to<lb/>
prison.<lb/>
Paulig said there was<lb/>
a need for involvement<lb/>
of the victim and of-<lb/>
fender in regards to<lb/>
prosecution. She said<lb/>
most crimes are non-<lb/>
violent property of-<lb/>
fenses. Paulig feels they<lb/>
could be dealt with at<lb/>
the community level.<lb/>
The Whichard Report<lb/>
promoted "community<lb/>
based treatment" as<lb/>
one of its major<lb/>
remedies to the higher<lb/>
crime rates.<lb/>
ECU corrections stu-<lb/>
dent Mary Shiels at-<lb/>
tended the study ses-<lb/>
sion to gain more in-<lb/>
sight into the solutions<lb/>
of the current prison<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
"If we're interested<lb/>
in rehabilitation rather<lb/>
than punishment<lb/>
Shiels said, "it is<lb/>
necessary to try alter-<lb/>
native ways of dealing<lb/>
with the criminal of-<lb/>
fender<lb/>
Paulig said that<lb/>
because of prejudice<lb/>
and racism, blacks and<lb/>
other minorities were<lb/>
more likely to be sent to<lb/>
prison for a crime than<lb/>
white people. "A lot<lb/>
of people say black<lb/>
people commit more<lb/>
crimes ? that's not<lb/>
true Paulig said.<lb/>
"Black people just go<lb/>
to prison more. There's<lb/>
racism in the whole<lb/>
system from the begin-<lb/>
ning to the end<lb/>
Shiels said that facts<lb/>
support her claims of<lb/>
prejudice in the<lb/>
criminal justice pro-<lb/>
cess. "It's just pre-<lb/>
judice, punitive at-<lb/>
titudes and myths that<lb/>
are putting up<lb/>
resistance to alternative<lb/>
ways of dealing with<lb/>
the offenders<lb/>
Both Paulig and<lb/>
Shiels agree that prison<lb/>
is needed for certain<lb/>
violent offenders.<lb/>
Paulig said there was<lb/>
a strong correlation<lb/>
between a person's<lb/>
economic status and<lb/>
the likelihood he would<lb/>
be sent to prison. She<lb/>
said people who can't<lb/>
afford bail are much<lb/>
more likely to be sent to<lb/>
prison. "If you can't<lb/>
afford bail, there is no<lb/>
justice. You got to go<lb/>
to jail Paulig said.<lb/>
Paulig pointed out<lb/>
statistics in the report<lb/>
which showed that fun-<lb/>
ding for prisons was<lb/>
North Carolina's third<lb/>
highest budget priority<lb/>
($163 million). It costs<lb/>
$16,000 per year to<lb/>
keep a person in prison.<lb/>
"On any given day,<lb/>
55 percent of the in-<lb/>
mates in N.C. prisons<lb/>
are there for non-<lb/>
violent crimes Paulig<lb/>
said. Fifty-nine percent<lb/>
of N.C. inmates had no<lb/>
prior criminal record.<lb/>
Shiels agreed with<lb/>
Paulig that the prison<lb/>
system is a failure<lb/>
because "rehabilitation<lb/>
is not a priority<lb/>
Besides community<lb/>
based treatment, Paulig<lb/>
also mentioned two<lb/>
alternatives: pre-trial<lb/>
releases and client<lb/>
specific planning.<lb/>
Pre-trial release,<lb/>
which has been used ef-<lb/>
fectively throughout<lb/>
the country, would in-<lb/>
volve asking the accus-<lb/>
ed offender a series of<lb/>
questions to determine<lb/>
his or her eligibility for<lb/>
personal recognizance<lb/>
release.<lb/>
Client-specific plann-<lb/>
ing would be a specific<lb/>
sentencing plan tailored<lb/>
to each offender. This<lb/>
plan would outline a<lb/>
series of recommenda-<lb/>
tions for the offender<lb/>
to follow and, would<lb/>
keep the person out of<lb/>
jail.<lb/>
AOVERTISEO<lb/>
TOM ROLiC y<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
?It Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
754-3023 ? 24 HRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
L-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
PLAYHOUSE<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
Morehouse College<lb/>
Steps In For Yale<lb/>
?ftjOW<lb/>
KOU bTTUUENTS<lb/>
(1ENERAL rVUJLU-<lb/>
(CPS) ? Morehouse<lb/>
College, an all-male,<lb/>
all-black institution of<lb/>
about 2000 students,<lb/>
doesn't mind playing<lb/>
second fiddle to Yale<lb/>
University, or second<lb/>
harmony either.<lb/>
After Yale's glee club<lb/>
turned down a recent<lb/>
request by the State<lb/>
Department to sing the<lb/>
Polish Solidarity theme<lb/>
song on an interna-<lb/>
tional Voice of<lb/>
America radio broad-<lb/>
cast, Morehouse Presi-<lb/>
dent Hugh Gloucester<lb/>
volunteered his<lb/>
school's glee club to<lb/>
record the song.<lb/>
Yale President A.<lb/>
Bartlett Giamatti turn-<lb/>
ed down the State<lb/>
Department request<lb/>
because of the school<lb/>
policy against suppor-<lb/>
ting "one political<lb/>
cause or another no<lb/>
matier how compelling<lb/>
the cause may be<lb/>
But Morehouse's<lb/>
president didn't see the<lb/>
request in quite the<lb/>
same context, and in-<lb/>
formed government<lb/>
and Voice of America<lb/>
0t?- u that his school<lb/>
would be glad to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the Dec. 13<lb/>
radio broadcast honor-<lb/>
ing Solidarity and com-<lb/>
memorating the institu-<lb/>
tion of martial law in<lb/>
Poland two years ago.<lb/>
President<lb/>
Gloucester read that<lb/>
Yale had refused to<lb/>
(record the song), and<lb/>
he felt inspired to offer<lb/>
to do it explains<lb/>
Wend all Whalen,<lb/>
Morehouse Glee Club<lb/>
director.<lb/>
"I think it was main-<lb/>
ly a matter of compas-<lb/>
sion for what the peo-<lb/>
ple in Poland have been<lb/>
through Whalen says<lb/>
of the decision to<lb/>
record the labor<lb/>
union's theme song.<lb/>
"In any black com-<lb/>
munity like<lb/>
Morehouse, where we<lb/>
have had our share of<lb/>
experience with op-<lb/>
pressed people, it's not<lb/>
hard to understand<lb/>
what the Polish people<lb/>
are going through<lb/>
Indeed, Morehouse's<lb/>
glee club has often par-<lb/>
ticipated in political<lb/>
events.<lb/>
The group has sung<lb/>
at Jimmy Carter's in-<lb/>
auguration in 1976 at<lb/>
the funeral of Dr. Mar-<lb/>
tin Luther King in<lb/>
1968, Whalen says.<lb/>
CALL 757-6330<lb/>
You May<lb/>
Be Qualified<lb/>
To Enroll<lb/>
In One Of The<lb/>
Prestigious<lb/>
Colleges<lb/>
Of Chiropractic<lb/>
In The Nation<lb/>
Survey Studies<lb/>
Library Trouble<lb/>
By MIKEHAMER<lb/>
Staff WriMi<lb/>
Student question-<lb/>
naires concerning the<lb/>
use of Joyner Library<lb/>
will be distributed at<lb/>
Mendenhall, the<lb/>
Croatan, the Student<lb/>
Supply Store and the<lb/>
library Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday of next<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Maury York, the<lb/>
curator of the<lb/>
manuscript collection<lb/>
at ECU, said about the<lb/>
questionnaire, "We're<lb/>
dealing with the library<lb/>
Evaluation Committee<lb/>
which is charged with<lb/>
making a four-year<lb/>
evaluation of the<lb/>
library. The two ways<lb/>
we're doing this is by<lb/>
using questionnaires ?<lb/>
one for students and<lb/>
one for faculty. The<lb/>
faculty questionnaire<lb/>
has come back and<lb/>
we're evaluating it<lb/>
now.<lb/>
"We're trying to get<lb/>
a response from the<lb/>
general student popula-<lb/>
tion York said.<lb/>
"We're trying to find<lb/>
out why nonusers do<lb/>
not use the library.<lb/>
Choosing a wide spec-<lb/>
trum of the student<lb/>
population is important<lb/>
to our survey<lb/>
NORTHWESTERN COLLEGE<lb/>
OF CHIROPRACTIC<lb/>
Loflee credits you've already earned may well qualify you for enroll-<lb/>
ment at Northwestern College, one of the highly regarded chiropractic<lb/>
training centers in the nation.<lb/>
If you are motivated by a desire to help your fellow man. and desire the<lb/>
prestige and security afforded by a career in the health care field. North-<lb/>
western College of Chiropractic can help you achieve your goals.<lb/>
For more information, complete the coupon below and mail to North-<lb/>
western College of Chiropractic. Enrollment is limited, so do it today!<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
Please send me information on Sorthwestern College of Chiropractic.<lb/>
OR Call collect at (612) 690-1735 and ask for Admissions.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
State<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
Current level of Education<lb/>
Send to:<lb/>
Admissions Office, Northwestern College of Chiropractic, 1834 South<lb/>
Mississippi Boulevard, St. Paul, MN 55116,<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. FEB. MATA&amp;PM m n C<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVA.LAbYe TO OTHfTlSilJ<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is i<lb/>
I be<lb/>
'E THRU SAT cm m ITZIZZZ ITS??<lb/>
DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
ID<lb/>
Between now and Feb 19. we will<lb/>
redeem all national manufactur-<lb/>
er s cents-off coupons up to 50"<lb/>
for double their value Offer good<lb/>
on national manufacturers cents-<lb/>
off coupons only (Food retailer<lb/>
coupons not acceptedCus-<lb/>
tomer must purchase coupon<lb/>
product in specified size Ex-<lb/>
pired coupons will not be hon-<lb/>
ored. One coupon per customer<lb/>
per item No coupons accepted<lb/>
for free merchandise Offer does<lb/>
not apply to AA.P or other store<lb/>
coupons whether manufacturer<lb/>
is mentioned or not When the<lb/>
value of the coupon exceeds 50<lb/>
or the retail of the item, this offer<lb/>
is limited to the retail price<lb/>
w$&amp;<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
Savings!<lb/>
Clip the Manufacturers' Cants Off<lb/>
Coupons from your mail, newspapers<lb/>
end magazines then bring them to<lb/>
your AbP Food Store<lb/>
Savings are Gnat with A&amp;P s<lb/>
double smm C0UP0HS!<lb/>
?arcs<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
COUPON A<lb/>
COUPON B<lb/>
COUPONC<lb/>
COUPOND<lb/>
CENTS OFF<lb/>
AAP AOOCD TOTAL COUPON<lb/>
CENTS OFF AT AAP<lb/>
J25?<lb/>
If<lb/>
50?<lb/>
75?<lb/>
18?<lb/>
36<lb/>
5f<lb/>
25?<lb/>
Box-O-Chicken<lb/>
U.S.D.A.<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
Four<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
45<lb/>
c<lb/>
TRIM COUNTRY<lb/>
FARM<lb/>
50?<lb/>
$100<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Pork Chops<lb/>
JL ? -<lb/>
Economy Package<lb/>
8 lbs. or more Equal<lb/>
Number of Loin &amp; Rib Chops<lb/>
rE FARV<lb/>
EASTERN GROWN<lb/>
(jsssxsr 2W? -tors<lb/>
 Temple Oranges White Potatoes<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
REGULAR<lb/>
AV<lb/>
SAVE $1.00 ON<lb/>
Eight 0'Clock SS1<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, FEB. 19 AT A&amp;R LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
rCEB<lb/>
SELF-RISING<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON You Pay Only<lb/>
Southern save 20- on<lb/>
Biscuit Flour 5<lb/>
POn) You Pay Only<lb/>
bag S 0<lb/>
AP<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. FEB 19 AT A&amp;R LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
0!<lb/>
I<lb/>
601 I<lb/>
I<lb/>
-l<lb/>
CEB<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON 1 "You PayCJnIy<lb/>
20 OFF LABEL<lb/>
SAVE 20e ON<lb/>
Mazola Corn Oil<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
btl.<lb/>
49<lb/>
I<lb/>
602 <lb/>
APP<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT. FEB. 19 AT A&amp;R LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
SAVE 20? ON<lb/>
FAMILY SIZE<lb/>
Luzianne Tea Bags<lb/>
You Pay<lb/>
Only<lb/>
24 ct.<lb/>
Pg.<lb/>
1"<lb/>
603<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT FEB 19 AT A4P<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
CEB<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
SAVE 20 ON<lb/>
A&amp;P FROZEN<lb/>
French Fried Potatoes<lb/>
? Regular -J 21b<lb/>
? Crinkle Cut ? y<lb/>
pg<lb/>
99<lb/>
615<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT. FEB 19 AT A?P<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER<lb/>
cm<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
SAVE 10 ON<lb/>
REGULAR FROZEN<lb/>
A&amp;P Pie Shells<lb/>
You Pay<lb/>
Only<lb/>
2ct.<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
55<lb/>
617<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT FEB. 19 AT A4P.<lb/>
LIMfT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7 50 ORDER<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
You Pay<lb/>
Only<lb/>
SAVE 20 ON<lb/>
DISH LIQUID<lb/>
Dermassage<lb/>
"139<lb/>
9<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
Ml.<lb/>
612<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT. FEB. IB AT MR<lb/>
Ua?T ONE WITH COUPON AMD 7 SO ORDER<lb/>
CT<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
You Pay<lb/>
Only<lb/>
SAVE 10' ON<lb/>
LUNCHEON MEAT<lb/>
Hormel Spam<lb/>
129<lb/>
?r<lb/>
12 OX a<lb/>
can I 604<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT FEB 19 AT AJ<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7 50 ORDER ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
CT<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
?<lb/>
SAVE 20? ON<lb/>
ANN PAGE FROZEN<lb/>
Handi Whip<lb/>
Dessert<lb/>
You Pay<lb/>
Only<lb/>
12 oz.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
65<lb/>
'616<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT FEB 19 AT AAF<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AMD 7 50 ORDER<lb/>
"I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
-J<lb/>
CPU<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
SAVE 50 ON<lb/>
RATION DOG FOOD<lb/>
Field Trial<lb/>
n<lb/>
You Pay<lb/>
Only<lb/>
2510.<lb/>
tag<lb/>
3<lb/>
10<lb/>
I<lb/>
GOOO THRU SAT FEB It AT AAR<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7 JO ORDER.<lb/>
607 <lb/>
I<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
SAVE 20 ON<lb/>
FOR YOUR LAUNDRY<lb/>
Punch Detergent<lb/>
<lb/>
You Pay<lb/>
Only<lb/>
42 oz.<lb/>
box<lb/>
GOOD THRU BAT. FEB 19 AT AP<lb/>
UMTT ONE WON COUPON AMD T M<lb/>
99<lb/>
614<lb/>
 " ' v <lb/>
?<lb/>
???<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0005"/><lb/>
3t?e East (Ear0ltnfan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, Gmmimm<lb/>
Mike Hughes, ???tduor<lb/>
Vv'AVERLY MERR1TT. ammtttMmUm ClNDY PLEASANTS, sporu Ed.ior<lb/>
Scott Lindley. mm ,??? Greg Rideout. ? &amp;??-<lb/>
Al l AFRASHTEH. Cm Ha-unrr STEVE BACHNER. Ena.nmtn, Editor<lb/>
Stephanie Groon. oom. Juliana Fahrbach. ???"<lb/>
Ci ay Thornton, uckmcd Todd Evans, ??? uger<lb/>
Lehruar 15. ls83<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Financial Aid<lb/>
Cuts Spur Short-Term Solutions<lb/>
As the belt of federal financial aid "Colleges are coming up with all<lb/>
resources tightens on the nation's kinds of ways to replace money they<lb/>
colleges and universities, several have lost from funding decreases<lb/>
schools around the country are tur- says U.S. Department of Education<lb/>
ning to new methods of producing spokesman Duncan Helmrich. Such<lb/>
much-needed educational funds: creativity, he adds, is "proving that<lb/>
Georgetown University, for ex- a lot can be done, as President<lb/>
ample, is going into the energy Reagan said, when you put your<lb/>
business. Brown has jumped into mind to it<lb/>
the mail-order business, peddling And at this point in time, with the<lb/>
gifts ranging from $10 to $10,000 in record federal deficit looming<lb/>
a special "pull-out gift catalogue" overhead, such belt-tightening<lb/>
alumni newsletter. St. Andrew's measures are a necessary first step in<lb/>
Presbyterian College has leased out evening the federal keel, so to<lb/>
10 acres of land to a shopping speak. And, indeed, since necessity<lb/>
center, sold 40 to a hospital and is is the mother of invention, most<lb/>
readying more land for sale to schools are finding 1983 a tough<lb/>
private residential developers. Stan- year ? but not an impossible one.<lb/>
ford, Princeton and the University But even those administrators<lb/>
of Dallas have also sold land to who have wilfully made concessions<lb/>
JHt<lb/>
Hunt's DUI Crackdown Leaves Loopholes<lb/>
generate income. The University of<lb/>
San Francisco is building a<lb/>
"windmill farm" to save energy,<lb/>
while Dakota Wesleyan fired<lb/>
salaried support workers and hired years to come.<lb/>
to keep their respective institutions<lb/>
in operation admit that at its present<lb/>
rate of decline, federal financial aid<lb/>
will pose major problems in the<lb/>
cheaper student workers to take<lb/>
their places. Texas Wesleyan is try-<lb/>
ing to attract donations through<lb/>
celebrity golf tournaments, and<lb/>
Texas Christian works toward the<lb/>
same end with "phone-a-thons<lb/>
All this ingenuity has the Reagan<lb/>
boasting<lb/>
"All of our efforts are to offset<lb/>
losses says Joseph McAleer,<lb/>
public relations officer at Spr-<lb/>
ingfield College. "Obviously, we<lb/>
won't have the resources to offset<lb/>
the government funding cuts<lb/>
forever. I just hope we don't have to<lb/>
find out when that is<lb/>
administration boasting success<lb/>
What To Do When Life Bites The Big One<lb/>
B PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
Very few of us would deny that drunken<lb/>
driving is a serious problem in our country.<lb/>
Each year, approximately 25,000 people<lb/>
are killed on U.S. roadways, and countless<lb/>
others are injured as a result of accidents<lb/>
involving drunk drivers. Although this is<lb/>
not a new problem, it has only been in the<lb/>
last few years that the public has decided to<lb/>
take action to reduce the number of DUI<lb/>
offences.<lb/>
People are angry, and they hae a right<lb/>
to be. Almost everyone has had the per-<lb/>
sonal experience of knowing someone who<lb/>
has died or been injured in an accident<lb/>
with a drunk driver. Something must be<lb/>
done, but the answer will not be found in<lb/>
any of the major recommendations of the<lb/>
Governor's Task Force on Drunken Driv-<lb/>
ing, which are now before the General<lb/>
Assembly.<lb/>
Hunt's plan will not work because it<lb/>
fails to go to the root of the problem of<lb/>
why Americans need to drink in order to<lb/>
have a good time. The plan also misses the<lb/>
mark in several other ways. It's ridiculous<lb/>
to think that raising the minimum drinking<lb/>
age will actually reduce the number of peo-<lb/>
ple who drink. First of all, almost everyone<lb/>
I know who drinks alcohol began to do so<lb/>
in the early teenage years. As Dr. Jerry<lb/>
Lotterhos, director of the campus alcohol<lb/>
abuse program, said in a recent interview,<lb/>
"If the law at age 18 is not working, why<lb/>
do we assume the law at age (19,20 or) 21<lb/>
will work?"<lb/>
As a civil libertarian, I also cannot agree<lb/>
with the proposal to raise the drinking age.<lb/>
At 18, I can be ordered to fight in a war,<lb/>
and I am allowed to vote for the leaders of<lb/>
my state and nation, but I cannot be<lb/>
trusted to make a responsible decision<lb/>
regarding my drinking habits?<lb/>
Tom Haines, owner of the Attic night<lb/>
club, points out that raising the drinking<lb/>
age will, in actuality, increase the number<lb/>
of drunken drivers. "They won't stop<lb/>
drinking he said. "They'll just change<lb/>
the way they drink<lb/>
Haines also makes the point that<lb/>
because the new law will be so difficult to<lb/>
enforce, it will only increase the amount of<lb/>
time that police officers will have to spend<lb/>
on enforcement.<lb/>
Tony Simeone, another alcoholism<lb/>
counselor in Washington, N.C points out<lb/>
that the new laws regarding drunk driving<lb/>
will only serve to increase the number of<lb/>
people who are being sent to North<lb/>
Carolina's already overcrowded prisons<lb/>
and jails.<lb/>
Considering that the number of<lb/>
Americans estimated to be suffering from<lb/>
alcoholism is close to 15 percent, it seems<lb/>
to me that jail is a bad option. What these<lb/>
people really need is treatment, counseling<lb/>
and rehabilitation.<lb/>
Another consideration of raising the age<lb/>
law is the impact it would have on the<lb/>
economy of our state. Many<lb/>
establishments that serve alcohol will pro-<lb/>
bably be forced to shut down, putting<lb/>
many people out of work.<lb/>
1 must confess that I have driven down<lb/>
the road many a night keeping a sharp eye<lb/>
out for drunk drivers. I'm just as anxious<lb/>
as anyone else to get these people off the<lb/>
roads. That's why I'm opposed to the<lb/>
governor's plan. I say we should enforce<lb/>
the laws we already have regarding DLTs.<lb/>
In my opinion, a person convicted of<lb/>
drunken driving should get his or her<lb/>
license revoked for an extensive period of<lb/>
time and should be sentenced to perform<lb/>
community service If they're addicted,<lb/>
they should get help; if they refuse, thev<lb/>
shouldn't be allowed to drive. That's that<lb/>
Finally, I must agree with both Lot-<lb/>
terhos' and Haines' suggestions that young<lb/>
people in America begin to be taught what<lb/>
responsible drinking means so that what<lb/>
Lotterhos calls "the legacy of<lb/>
misconstrued notions about booze" can be<lb/>
dispelled.<lb/>
Words (For Morons) To Live By<lb/>
Here are some answers to my most asked<lb/>
questions:<lb/>
Dear Stan Landers: I am a 20-year<lb/>
native of Greenville. But, believe it or not,<lb/>
that's the least oj my problems It all<lb/>
started last week, when I was fired from<lb/>
my promising career as a Weiner King<lb/>
manager trianee for spitting in the relish<lb/>
bin. Everyone else did it, but I was the one<lb/>
who got caught And as if that's not<lb/>
enough, my girlfriend, Agnes, left me last<lb/>
week for a muffler specialist at the K-Mart<lb/>
Auto Center. Said she was moving up in<lb/>
the world 1 had a beautiful house out in<lb/>
the country, but without a job, I was three<lb/>
months late on the payments, and they<lb/>
came and towed it away Then, the fami-<lb/>
ly doctor informed me that Myrna, my<lb/>
bloodhound, needed a $2,000 operation to<lb/>
correct her unsightly skin condition. She<lb/>
knew damn good and well that I couldn't<lb/>
afford it, but she set up an appointment<lb/>
anyway. We had a terrible argument, and<lb/>
she wouldn't talk to me for days<lb/>
STAN LANDERS<lb/>
Advice For Schleps<lb/>
Maybe you can discuss your problems with<lb/>
your cellmates. (The blimp may be your<lb/>
best bet since the status of the Latino is<lb/>
questionable.) And think about the real<lb/>
questions: Can you live without a job? A<lb/>
house? A car? A dog? A girl? My bet is<lb/>
you probably can't But then again,<lb/>
what do I know? Good luck.<lb/>
Dear Stan Landers: Like the guy in the<lb/>
letter above, I'm writing as a last-ditch ef-<lb/>
fort. I have a terrible problem. My hus-<lb/>
band of 12 years, Mel, whom I love dearly,<lb/>
came home last week with mascara<lb/>
smeared on his lapel and smelling of cheap<lb/>
perfume. Twice again this week, the same<lb/>
thing, except I found lipstick on his cheek<lb/>
as well. He doesn V come home until 2 or 3<lb/>
in the morning and is always too tired to<lb/>
talk to me. I really can't imagine what he<lb/>
could be doing all these nights out. What<lb/>
should I tell the kids? Should I leave him?<lb/>
ETHEL FROM BETHEL<lb/>
Dear BETHEL: First of all, don't<lb/>
apologize for writing me as a last resort.<lb/>
To tell the truth, the only reason I'm prin-<lb/>
ting your letter is because no one else wrote<lb/>
in this week, and I have to take up a certain<lb/>
amount of space. So, you see, we're ac-<lb/>
tually in the same boat.<lb/>
Now, about your problem. I suppose<lb/>
you have already prepared yourself for the<lb/>
worst, the inevitable. I mean, don't be so<lb/>
naive, Ethel. Put two and two together.<lb/>
It's not that difficult. Mel comes home at 3<lb/>
a.m. spotted with mascara and lipstick,<lb/>
reeking of cheap perfume. He won't tell<lb/>
you where he's been And you can't<lb/>
figure it out? Ethel, pardon my<lb/>
straightforwardness, but you, my dear, are<lb/>
a moron. It's no wonder that he's out<lb/>
looking around. After 12 years with you,<lb/>
he's probably wondering whether or not<lb/>
there is, indeed, intelligent life on Earth.<lb/>
And personally, I couldn't care less what<lb/>
you tell the kids. But write back soon, and<lb/>
let me know how things turn out!<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes, great grand-<lb/>
son of Yassir Abdulla Hughes, a famous<lb/>
Arab chief tan, enjoys life's simple<lb/>
pleasures: a quiet walk along the beach,<lb/>
the loyalty of a fine dog and target spit-<lb/>
ting. He drinks Lite Beer from Miller<lb/>
because it's got a third less calories than<lb/>
their regular beer.<lb/>
Anyway, I went downtown to file for<lb/>
unemployment insurance (which, they told<lb/>
me, I'm not eligible for because I didn't<lb/>
have a real job in the first place), and my<lb/>
car got towed while I was inside. So, I sold<lb/>
Myrna to get some quick cash, but when I<lb/>
went to reclaim my car from Ned's Exxon,<lb/>
Herb, the brake man, informed me that it<lb/>
had been stolen from the lot. All my per-<lb/>
sonal belongings gone, I called the police,<lb/>
who came two hours later and arrested me<lb/>
for having 23 outstanding parking tickets.<lb/>
So, here I am, writing as a last-ditch effort<lb/>
from a jail cell I'm sharing with a Puerto<lb/>
Rican child molestor, a 300-pound used-<lb/>
car salesman and two pyromaniacs who<lb/>
like to smoke in bed. (I also think they're<lb/>
secret lovers.) I should get out soon, but I<lb/>
really don't have a lot to live for. What<lb/>
should I do? ON THE BRINK<lb/>
Dear BRINK: Sounds to me like you're<lb/>
getting too much caffeine. Have you<lb/>
thought about suicide? Ha, ha, only kid-<lb/>
ding. But seriously, there is something I<lb/>
need to know before anything else: Is your<lb/>
child molestor roomy of Puerto Rican<lb/>
ancestry or does he only molest Puerto<lb/>
Rican children? This distinction may play<lb/>
a key role in your eventual recovery.<lb/>
Anyway, you certainly do have a lot pro-<lb/>
blems on your hands. Therefore, my ad-<lb/>
vice, here as always, is for you to assess the<lb/>
situation from a more objective point of<lb/>
view. Take time to think about things.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
U.S. Selective Service Is 'Selective Indeed'<lb/>
In last Thursday's PointCounter-<lb/>
point, Mike Hughes missed a few very<lb/>
basic, but overwhelmingly important,<lb/>
points.<lb/>
(1) To say that many men have followed<lb/>
their consciences and then to equate the<lb/>
life and actions of a man such as Martin<lb/>
Luther King with one like Adolph Hitler<lb/>
is ludicrous to say the least. I believe<lb/>
what Mr. Hughes failed to realize is that<lb/>
men like King and Ghandi followed their<lb/>
consciences in a nonviolent manner, just<lb/>
as men like Russell Ford are attempting<lb/>
to do, while Hitler and Khomeini were<lb/>
anything but nonviolent.<lb/>
(2) Mr. Hughes, the Selective Service is<lb/>
selective indeed. At this time, the only<lb/>
men who are being prosecuted are those<lb/>
who make their resistance public.<lb/>
Thousands of men who have not<lb/>
registered are being neither prosecuted<lb/>
nor persecuted. To the best of my<lb/>
knowledge, the purpose of the draft is to<lb/>
provide a fair way of choosing men to go<lb/>
to war. This seems anything but fair.<lb/>
(3) Whether  all draft registrations<lb/>
have been followed by an actual draft<lb/>
and sooner or later a war as Steve<lb/>
Dear stated, or  past draft<lb/>
resurgences were subsequent actions<lb/>
to meet the demands of existing wars<lb/>
as Mr. Hughes believes, seems unimpor-<lb/>
tant. What is important is the fact that<lb/>
war, especially nuclear war, is a form of<lb/>
mass murder, and to comply unques-<lb/>
tioningly with a system preparing for<lb/>
war seems to me both unconscienceable<lb/>
and immoral.<lb/>
Mary Rider<lb/>
Senior, Comp. Sci.<lb/>
Editor's Note: The purpose, Miss Rider,<lb/>
of "comparing" the likes of Khomeini<lb/>
with the likes of Ghandi was to illustrate<lb/>
the ironies inherent in the "supreme<lb/>
conscience argument not merely to<lb/>
restate the obvious.<lb/>
Furthermore, you maintain that the<lb/>
purpose of draft registration is "to pro-<lb/>
vide a fair way of choosing men to go to<lb/>
war I agree wholeheartedly. But it<lb/>
seems somehow strange that you should<lb/>
bring up this point as some sort of<lb/>
defense for registration resisters, who<lb/>
have failed to comply in the first place.<lb/>
Perhaps you forget that in a system such<lb/>
as ours, rules and regulations are no less<lb/>
than a necessity for maintaining order.<lb/>
So, you speak of fairness? Well, how<lb/>
fair is it for those young men who have<lb/>
complied with the law? I think I speak<lb/>
for a majority of those who have<lb/>
registered when I say that very, very few<lb/>
of us want to go to war. However, we,<lb/>
unlike some, are able to comprehend the<lb/>
distinction between going to war and<lb/>
draft registration.<lb/>
Countering The Point<lb/>
In the February 10 issue of The East<lb/>
Carolinian, Steve Dear said that the only<lb/>
thing that draft registration resister<lb/>
Russell Ford did was follow his cons-<lb/>
cience in his refusal to register. Since<lb/>
when did conscience-following make<lb/>
breaking a law right? If John Hinckley<lb/>
had said that he was following his cons-<lb/>
cience when he shot President Reagan,<lb/>
would that have made him innocent?<lb/>
Can a person break into someone else's<lb/>
house just because, in his heart, he knew<lb/>
it was right? Be realistic.<lb/>
The simple matter is that Ford was<lb/>
breaking the law. And in this country,<lb/>
most people think that law breakers<lb/>
should go to jail.<lb/>
By the way, Mr. Dear, even if history<lb/>
has shown us that a war followed every<lb/>
peacetime draft, it has also shown us<lb/>
that the U.S. has not started any wars.<lb/>
We started the registration because con-<lb/>
ditions in the world have dictated that<lb/>
we have a force ready in case war were to<lb/>
start. Adolph Hitler didn't attack<lb/>
Poland because we had a peacetime<lb/>
draft. The Japanese didn't attack us for<lb/>
that reason either. As a matter of fact,<lb/>
the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor to<lb/>
knock us out of the Pacific. Luckily,<lb/>
they failed.<lb/>
Finally, just because seven percent of<lb/>
the people eligible for the draft sign-up<lb/>
don't agree with it doesn't mean that it<lb/>
should be abolished. After ail, that<lb/>
means that 93 percent do support it.<lb/>
And in this country, the majority rules.<lb/>
David Payne<lb/>
Freshman, Drama<lb/>
Playbo.<lb/>
For A<lb/>
It seems to happen<lb/>
everytime thev do<lb/>
and the Atlantic<lb/>
Conference i- m<lb/>
fere p Playboy<lb/>
ied to spotlight<lb/>
"Girls of the <lb/>
Coast Conferer ?<lb/>
Ba ?<lb/>
Carr; issue<lb/>
controversarv be?<lb/>
? a runn' -<lb/>
in its Tuesdav ed<lb/>
John Drescher, ec<lb/>
Of UNC'S laih Tar<lb/>
Heel as paid c<lb/>
an irate <lb/>
- :ien studen-<lb/>
. lie ad wa<lb/>
v .<lb/>
Todd Jon?<lb/>
rtj n<lb/>
( hromcle<lb/>
pus ne-<lb/>
e.imed to l<lb/>
Playboy ad J<lb/>
- ught the<lb/>
exist ni<lb/>
pori<lb/>
?<lb/>
?1<lb/>
Legisla<lb/>
Safe R<lb/>
RALEIGH<lb/>
The two eg i<lb/>
most re<lb/>
handling (<lb/>
B. Hum -<lb/>
drunl <lb/>
package prepai<lb/>
da<lb/>
p sal quick ?<lb/>
.r Gene .<lb/>
committees this wee.<lb/>
The Senate Judicial<lb/>
111 Committee a'<lb/>
peared to have<lb/>
ii . struggle oer<lb/>
most controversial pai<lb/>
of the bill when a su<lb/>
committee last v?e<lb/>
agreed to corr<lb/>
language on the "draral<lb/>
shop" proposal I<lb/>
section m a ?. t i<lb/>
bartenders<lb/>
salesmen lega<lb/>
for civil damage<lb/>
thev sell liqu<lb/>
u jerage cr<lb/>
person i<lb/>
late: causes<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Barnes. D-Wa<lb/>
committee cl l<lb/>
said the odds i<lb/>
"prerv<lb/>
committee wil app j<lb/>
the entire 72 p<lb/>
Tuesdav a A<lb/>
mend it ?<lb/>
Senate- <lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
dav<lb/>
Hunt's<lb/>
Glide<lb/>
Raleigh iL PI<lb/>
After mon:<lb/>
painstaking -<lb/>
Gov James B Hu:<lb/>
Jrs proposed<lb/>
tion to combat drunk<lb/>
drivers ap? cl<lb/>
move more quickl<lb/>
through the Ge j<lb/>
AssembK this ?W<lb/>
Sen. HettSOE Baml<lb/>
and Rep Ma I<lb/>
caster, chairmen r<lb/>
two coaaaaittees ei<lb/>
amining the mea<lb/>
said Mondav thev<lb/>
pect their panels ?<lb/>
recommend - <lb/>
altered versions dut<lb/>
the next few davs a<lb/>
send them to the<lb/>
House and Senate<lb/>
Despite the appar<lb/>
speedup. Hunt's<lb/>
Roads Act still ml<lb/>
make many more st<lb/>
before it becomes<lb/>
and lobbyists al<lb/>
legislators are likely<lb/>
propose many ml<lb/>
changes.<lb/>
But one major<lb/>
of consensus was rea<lb/>
ed late last week H<lb/>
Senate Judiciary<lb/>
subcommittee 1<lb/>
tatively endorsee<lb/>
compromise to<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0006"/><lb/>
IHEEAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 15, 1983<lb/>
BY THE<lb/>
LEBANESE<lb/>
CHRISTIAN<lb/>
MILITIA,<lb/>
oopholes<lb/>
sc to 15 percent, it seems<lb/>
is a had option What these<lb/>
etil need is treatment, counseling<lb/>
anon<lb/>
nsideration or raising the age<lb/>
I : ;mpac: il would hae on the<lb/>
ouI  a t e . Many<lb/>
e alcohol will pro-<lb/>
shul down, putting<lb/>
 ,1 work.<lb/>
al 1 have driven down<lb/>
ghl keeping a sharp eye<lb/>
Jinn .<lb/>
le else<lb/>
pi<lb/>
x<lb/>
I'm just as anxious<lb/>
these people off the<lb/>
I'm opposed to the<lb/>
a we should enforce<lb/>
hae regarding DUIs.<lb/>
person convicted of<lb/>
ould get his or her<lb/>
'? ? an extensive period of<lb/>
uld he sentenced to perform<lb/>
rvice It they're addicted,<lb/>
' they refuse, they<lb/>
dme. That's that.<lb/>
I must agree with both Lot-<lb/>
ggestions that young<lb/>
begin to he taught what<lb/>
i mg means so that what<lb/>
jos calls "the legacy of<lb/>
Irued notions about booze" can be<lb/>
deed'<lb/>
jst because, in his heart, he knew<lb/>
ight? Be realistic.<lb/>
Is'mple matter is that Ford was<lb/>
lg the law And in this country,<lb/>
eople think that law breakers<lb/>
 to jail.<lb/>
le way. Mr Dear, even if history<lb/>
wn us that a war followed every<lb/>
ie draft, it has also shown us<lb/>
U.S. has not started any wars.<lb/>
ted the registration because con-<lb/>
in the world have dictated that<lb/>
I a force ready in case war were to<lb/>
Adolph Hitler didn't attack<lb/>
because we had a peacetime<lb/>
he Japanese didn't attack us for<lb/>
son either. As a matter of fact,<lb/>
anese attacked Pearl Harbor to<lb/>
is out of the Pacific. Luckily,<lb/>
lied<lb/>
py, just because seven percent of<lb/>
jle eligible for the draft sign-up<lb/>
jree with it doesn't mean that it<lb/>
be abolished. After all, that<lb/>
that 93 percent do support it.<lb/>
this country, the majority rules.<lb/>
David Payne<lb/>
Freshman, Drama<lb/>
Playboy Ads Look<lb/>
For A CC Women<lb/>
It seems to happen<lb/>
everytime they do it,<lb/>
and the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference was no dif-<lb/>
ferent. Playboy has<lb/>
decided to spotlight<lb/>
"Girls of the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference" in<lb/>
their fall "Back to<lb/>
Campus" issue. The<lb/>
controversary began.<lb/>
After running the ad<lb/>
in its Tuesday editions,<lb/>
John Drescher, editor<lb/>
of UNC's Daily Tar<lb/>
Heel was paid a visit by<lb/>
an irate group of<lb/>
women students claim-<lb/>
ing the ad was sexist.<lb/>
At Duke University,<lb/>
Todd Jones, advertis-<lb/>
ing manager for the<lb/>
Chronicle, Duke's cam-<lb/>
pus newspaper had first<lb/>
declined to run the<lb/>
Playboy ad. Jones said<lb/>
he thought the ad was<lb/>
"sexist in nature" and<lb/>
portrayed women in a<lb/>
"meat market" sense.<lb/>
Late last week,<lb/>
Jones' decision was<lb/>
overridden in a closed-<lb/>
staff vote, and if<lb/>
Playboy was still in-<lb/>
terested, the ad would<lb/>
run. The ad has also<lb/>
been run in the campus<lb/>
newspapers at N.C.<lb/>
State and Wake Forest<lb/>
Universities.<lb/>
Reid Barker, adver-<lb/>
tising manager for the<lb/>
Technician at N.C.<lb/>
State, expressed sur-<lb/>
prise at the response of<lb/>
the UNC women. At<lb/>
Wake Forest, there was<lb/>
a different kind of con-<lb/>
cern for the Playboy<lb/>
ad. Student emploveers<lb/>
of the Old Black and<lb/>
Gold were concerned at<lb/>
what reaction they<lb/>
might get from the ad-<lb/>
ministration of the<lb/>
Baptist-run school.<lb/>
"Six or seven women<lb/>
(from the Association<lb/>
of Women Students)<lb/>
came into my office,<lb/>
and we sat around and<lb/>
taiked about the ad<lb/>
Drescher told The East<lb/>
Carolinian. The women<lb/>
claimed that the ad<lb/>
itself was sexist, and we<lb/>
should not run j. for<lb/>
that reason.<lb/>
T he women<lb/>
students also objected<lb/>
to a Tar Heel editorial<lb/>
which Drescher said<lb/>
took "a light hearted<lb/>
look at the whole<lb/>
thing<lb/>
"I didn't think the<lb/>
editorial was sexist<lb/>
Drescher added.<lb/>
He quoted a section<lb/>
of the editorial that<lb/>
said: "This paper, in its ?,<lb/>
great tradition of<lb/>
defending equality, can<lb/>
only say that it eagerly<lb/>
awaits an ad from<lb/>
Playgirl seeking "Guys<lb/>
of the ACC<lb/>
Drescher has<lb/>
welcomed and received<lb/>
letters to the editor and<lb/>
opinion columns on<lb/>
both sides of the issue.<lb/>
In a more recent opi-<lb/>
nion, Drescher said<lb/>
that the "women at<lb/>
UNC are old enough to<lb/>
make up their own<lb/>
minds without this<lb/>
paper censoring ads<lb/>
directed at them<lb/>
Legislators Set For<lb/>
Safe Roads Proposal<lb/>
i<lb/>
RALEIGH (UPI) -<lb/>
The two legislators<lb/>
most responsible for<lb/>
handling Gov. James<lb/>
B. Hunt Jrs ami<lb/>
drunken driving<lb/>
package prepared Mon-<lb/>
day to push the pro-<lb/>
posal quickly through<lb/>
their General Assembly<lb/>
committees this week.<lb/>
The Senate Judiciary<lb/>
111 Committee ap-<lb/>
peared to have ended<lb/>
ls struggle over the<lb/>
most controversial part<lb/>
of the bill when a sub-<lb/>
committee last week<lb/>
agreed to compromise<lb/>
language on the "dram<lb/>
shop" proposal. That<lb/>
section makes<lb/>
bartenders and<lb/>
salesmen legally liable<lb/>
for civil damages if<lb/>
they sell liquor to an<lb/>
underage or drunken<lb/>
person and that person<lb/>
later causes an acci-<lb/>
dent. Sen. Henson<lb/>
Barnes, D-Wayne and<lb/>
committee chairman,<lb/>
said the odds are<lb/>
"pretty good" the<lb/>
committee will approve<lb/>
the entire 72-page bill<lb/>
Tuesday and recom-<lb/>
mend it for the full<lb/>
Senate's consideration<lb/>
Wednesday or Thurs-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
But Rep. Martin<lb/>
Lancaster, D-Wayne<lb/>
and chairman of the<lb/>
House Judiciary III<lb/>
Committee, isn't going<lb/>
to wait for the full<lb/>
Senate to act before his<lb/>
panel begins consider-<lb/>
ing the Senate's ideas.<lb/>
He said he hopes to ap-<lb/>
point a subcommittee<lb/>
Tuesday to examine the<lb/>
governor's dram shop<lb/>
proposal and consider<lb/>
the Senate subcommit-<lb/>
tee's compromise.<lb/>
"There is no need for<lb/>
us to struggle with our<lb/>
own compromise<lb/>
without having to take<lb/>
into account what the<lb/>
Senate has done he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Lancaster's commit-<lb/>
tee has lagged behind<lb/>
the Senate in its<lb/>
analysis of the entire<lb/>
package, and it has yet<lb/>
to discuss the dram<lb/>
shop provision, which<lb/>
is the last major section<lb/>
of the bill.<lb/>
But the Goldsboro<lb/>
attorney said he hopes<lb/>
the full committee will<lb/>
be able to finish work<lb/>
on the committee this<lb/>
week, have it con-<lb/>
sidered in the Finance<lb/>
Committee next week<lb/>
and then see it moved<lb/>
quickly to the House<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
Hunt has urged<lb/>
General Assembly<lb/>
members to make his<lb/>
"Safe Roads Act" the<lb/>
first major piece of<lb/>
legislation they pass<lb/>
this session.<lb/>
In other legislative<lb/>
developments:<lb/>
Sen. William Staton,<lb/>
D-Lee filed a bill that<lb/>
would make it impossi-<lb/>
ble for courts to ex-<lb/>
punge major crimes<lb/>
from the records of<lb/>
juvenile offenders.<lb/>
Staton said that<lb/>
when offcndrs now<lb/>
turn 16, they can ask<lb/>
that their records be<lb/>
cleared so that they<lb/>
won't have those<lb/>
crimes staining their<lb/>
adult life. But Staton's<lb/>
bills would make cer-<lb/>
tain that all major<lb/>
felonies would stay on<lb/>
a person's record for<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Staton also introduc-<lb/>
ed a bill that would<lb/>
force state counselors<lb/>
to take a juvenile's case<lb/>
to court if he were ac-<lb/>
cused of a first-or<lb/>
second-degree sex of-<lb/>
fense.<lb/>
Both bills are ex-<lb/>
pected to be referred<lb/>
Hunt's Proposals Should<lb/>
Glide Through Assembly<lb/>
Raleigh (UPI) ?<lb/>
After months of<lb/>
painstaking scrutiny,<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt<lb/>
Jrs proposed legisla-<lb/>
tion to combat drunken<lb/>
drivers appears likely to<lb/>
move more quickly<lb/>
through the General<lb/>
Assembly this week.<lb/>
Sen. Henson Barnes<lb/>
and Rep. Martin Lan-<lb/>
caster, chairmen of the<lb/>
two committees ex-<lb/>
amining the measure,<lb/>
said Monday they ex-<lb/>
pect their panels will<lb/>
recommend slightly<lb/>
altered versions during<lb/>
the next few days and<lb/>
send them to the full<lb/>
House and Senate.<lb/>
Despite the apparent<lb/>
speedup. Hunt's Safe<lb/>
Roads Act still must<lb/>
make many more stops<lb/>
before it becomes law,<lb/>
and lobbyists and<lb/>
legislators are likely to<lb/>
propose many more<lb/>
changes.<lb/>
But one major sign<lb/>
of consensus was reach-<lb/>
ed late last week when a<lb/>
Senate Judiciary III<lb/>
subcommittee ten-<lb/>
tatively endorsed a<lb/>
compromise to the<lb/>
"dram shop" pro-<lb/>
posal. That section<lb/>
would make bartenders<lb/>
and salesmen liable for<lb/>
civil damages if they<lb/>
sell liquor to an<lb/>
underage or drunken<lb/>
person and that person<lb/>
later causes an acci-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Sen. Henson Barnes,<lb/>
D-Wayne, said now<lb/>
that the compromise<lb/>
has been reached the<lb/>
odds are "pretty good"<lb/>
the full committee<lb/>
would approve the en-<lb/>
tire 72-page bill today.<lb/>
ECU Grad Given<lb/>
Award To Seminar<lb/>
ECU graduate stu-<lb/>
dent Don Blanchard<lb/>
recently won a full-<lb/>
tuition scholarship to a<lb/>
5-day intensive Direct<lb/>
Marketing Educational<lb/>
Foundation seminar at<lb/>
the Danbury Hilton in<lb/>
Danbury, Conn.<lb/>
Blanchard, whose<lb/>
home is in Greenville,<lb/>
has been employed by<lb/>
Overton's Competition<lb/>
Skis. He has completed<lb/>
work as a graduate<lb/>
assistant to the chair-<lb/>
man of the Department<lb/>
of Marketing.<lb/>
One of 30 students<lb/>
selected from over 230<lb/>
applicants, he obtained<lb/>
a pratical introduction<lb/>
to basic direct<lb/>
marketingmail-order<lb/>
techniques under the<lb/>
personal guidance of 12<lb/>
top industry executives<lb/>
from the fast-growing<lb/>
S125-billion direct<lb/>
marketing industry.<lb/>
After being selected<lb/>
by their universities,<lb/>
students are then<lb/>
selected by a panel of<lb/>
direct marketing ex-<lb/>
ecutives based on facul-<lb/>
ty recommendations,<lb/>
academic standing, in-<lb/>
terest in advertising and<lb/>
marketing, their record<lb/>
of extra-curricular,<lb/>
school-related activities<lb/>
and employment.<lb/>
Scholarships cover all<lb/>
tuition fees, room and<lb/>
board.<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
tfi<lb/>
118 E. FIFTH ST<lb/>
iBE'WEEN PANAMA JACKS<lb/>
a: thc 9C3? SAfn,<lb/>
SERVING HOME - STYLE<lb/>
FOOD AT REASONABLE<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
LUNCH a DINNER SPECIALS<lb/>
DAILY FOR 2 88 TAX<lb/>
Mom-9 pm DAILY<lb/>
AH t ntrees are Home Made<lb/>
ALPHA OMICRON PI<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
aaRUSH<lb/>
Tues-Stuffed Cabbage or Barbequed Chicken<lb/>
Hed-Country Style Steak or Stuffed Baked Potatoe<lb/>
Thurs-Hot Roast Pork Sandwich or Baked Chicken<lb/>
MONDAY, FEB. 14<lb/>
Ice Cream 7-8.30<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 16<lb/>
Skating 7-9<lb/>
MONDAY, FEB. 21<lb/>
Dinner 5:00<lb/>
fir ?vr<lb/>
;ob in trie world - njwy<lb/>
a' op? <lb/>
tee you a seat in<lb/>
"v "ost prestigious fltgM , -<lb/>
1' .m?ere . At tK  ?<lb/>
you will f the NJs ht?pl .  i.c?:f<lb/>
aircraft.<lb/>
Qualifications ?re<lb/>
lacre'ors degree<lb/>
less tia" 28 1'? years old<lb/>
1 uncorrected vision<lb/>
i?ce' lent nealtr<lb/>
U.S. Citwen<lb/>
If jou think you can qualify ir?i ?oiJj<lb/>
like tc earn starting salary of<lb/>
$18,000 altli $28,000 in fou' years,<lb/>
send a letter of ua 1 ifuations to.<lb/>
NELSON SKINNER<lb/>
1001 fttvaho Or.<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 7609<lb/>
Or call l-800-66?-7?Jl<lb/>
Haa-?pu, NonFri.<lb/>
805 JOHNSTON ST.<lb/>
Aonl<lb/>
lohnston<lb/>
4th<lb/>
L<lb/>
5th Street<lb/>
FOR RIDES OR INFORMATION CALL 758-4290<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
KROGER WHITE<lb/>
White Bread<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed Feto 18.<lb/>
thru Set Feb 19. 1963<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised Items Is re-<lb/>
quired to be readily available for<lb/>
sale In each Kroger Sav-on, except<lb/>
aa specifically noted in this ad. It we<lb/>
do run out of an Item we will otter<lb/>
you your choice ot e comparable<lb/>
item when eveilatole. reflecting the<lb/>
same savings or e relnchecfc wtitcrt<lb/>
wtu entitle you to purchaae the<lb/>
advertised item et the advertised<lb/>
price within 30 days<lb/>
Open Mon. thru Sat. 8am to Midnight - Sun. 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
?-7<lb/>
Vfe-Gal.<lb/>
Ctn<lb/>
FROM THE DELI<lb/>
Extra Lean<lb/>
Roast Beef<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
90<lb/>
WHITE TISSUES<lb/>
Scotties<lb/>
6V2-OZ<lb/>
Can<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
Chunk<lb/>
Light Tuna<lb/>
69<lb/>
200'<lb/>
Ct.<lb/>
Box<lb/>
HELLMANN'S<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
FRENCH'S<lb/>
CHEESE SCALLOPED<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
LACHOY<lb/>
BI-PACK<lb/>
5HQV.<lb/>
42-Oz.<lb/>
Can<lb/>
niein<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST r ABOI INIAN FEBRUARY IS, 1983<lb/>
Is There 'Hair' Without Nudity? Only In Iowa<lb/>
(CPS) ? Is there<lb/>
Hair without nudity?<lb/>
There was at Iowa<lb/>
State when the curtains<lb/>
went up on a student<lb/>
production of the fam-<lb/>
ed musical that wowed<lb/>
New York with a brief<lb/>
nude scene when it<lb/>
opened off-Broadway<lb/>
in 1967.<lb/>
The performers at<lb/>
Iowa State kept their<lb/>
clothes on, although<lb/>
they'd wanted to strip.<lb/>
About nine of the 16<lb/>
cast members in the<lb/>
nude scene had agreed<lb/>
to appear naked,<lb/>
generally saying they'd<lb/>
do it "for art's sake<lb/>
But the nudity for<lb/>
art's sake was scratched<lb/>
for the sake of keeping<lb/>
the university's liquor<lb/>
license.<lb/>
"They're just stifling<lb/>
our artistic freedom<lb/>
complains cast member<lb/>
Gina Zaffarana.<lb/>
The play was staged<lb/>
at the Student<lb/>
Memorial Union, but<lb/>
an Iowa obscenity law<lb/>
makes public nudity il-<lb/>
legal in places holding<lb/>
liquor licenses.<lb/>
Scott Smith, manag-<lb/>
ing director of the<lb/>
Union Board Theatre,<lb/>
decided the cast would<lb/>
remain clothed to keep<lb/>
from risking losing the<lb/>
license.<lb/>
The county attorney<lb/>
and a representative of<lb/>
the Iowa Beer and Li-<lb/>
quor Control Board<lb/>
"said we were in a very,<lb/>
Venereal Disease Frequency Up In Pitt County<lb/>
According to a<lb/>
spokesman of the Pitt<lb/>
County Health Depart-<lb/>
ment, there has been a<lb/>
signifigant increase in<lb/>
the number venereal<lb/>
disease cases being<lb/>
reported in Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty. The increase has<lb/>
been most apparent<lb/>
among Greenville's<lb/>
male gay community.<lb/>
James Cox, the com-<lb/>
municable disease in-<lb/>
spector with the health<lb/>
department, said 34<lb/>
cases of syphilis were<lb/>
reported to his office in<lb/>
1982 compared to only<lb/>
10 cases reported in<lb/>
1981 and 14 in 1980.<lb/>
"Seventy-five percent<lb/>
of that figure was in the<lb/>
gay community Cox<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Dr. James H. Mc-<lb/>
Callum, director of<lb/>
ECU's Student Health<lb/>
Center, said that<lb/>
although he was aware<lb/>
there were "rumored<lb/>
increases" of venereal<lb/>
disease nationwide,<lb/>
that there was not a<lb/>
"noticeable increase"<lb/>
at ECU. He added that<lb/>
there ws absolutely no<lb/>
reason for students to<lb/>
panic about the campus<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Cox pointed out that<lb/>
syphilis has an incuba-<lb/>
tion period of between<lb/>
10 and 90 days with an<lb/>
average incubation<lb/>
period of 21-28 days. A<lb/>
person who contracts<lb/>
the disease will pro-<lb/>
bably not know it until<lb/>
the incubation period is<lb/>
over. The disease is also<lb/>
not contagious during<lb/>
the incubation period.<lb/>
Cox said that after<lb/>
the incubation period,<lb/>
the disease enters the<lb/>
"primary stage" dur-<lb/>
ing which the male vic-<lb/>
tim may notice signs of<lb/>
the disease such as a<lb/>
sore on the penis.<lb/>
"If you really want<lb/>
to treat it (syphilis),<lb/>
your best prevention<lb/>
time is in the first six<lb/>
months Cox said.<lb/>
Cox said there was a<lb/>
less alarming, but<lb/>
substantial increase in<lb/>
the number of cases of<lb/>
gonorrhea that were<lb/>
reported in 1982.<lb/>
The health depart-<lb/>
ment treated 898 cases<lb/>
of gonorrhea in 1982,<lb/>
749 cases in 1982 and<lb/>
only 688 in 1980. Cox<lb/>
pointed out that gonor-<lb/>
rhea has only a 3-15<lb/>
day incubation period.<lb/>
"As a public health in-<lb/>
vestigator, you're not<lb/>
going to do a whole lot<lb/>
of prevention because<lb/>
gonorrhea has such a<lb/>
short incubation<lb/>
period Cox added.<lb/>
As is the case with<lb/>
syphilis, symptoms<lb/>
associated with gonor-<lb/>
rhea are more likely to<lb/>
appear among men.<lb/>
"Eighty percent of the<lb/>
males get symptoms;<lb/>
Eighty percent of the<lb/>
females don't Cox<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Both Cox and Mc-<lb/>
Callum stressed that<lb/>
anyone noticing the<lb/>
symptoms of venereal<lb/>
disease to come in for<lb/>
treatment immediately.<lb/>
Treatment is generally<lb/>
done with penicillin in-<lb/>
jections and is basically<lb/>
simple.<lb/>
McCallum noted that<lb/>
no records of the<lb/>
number of students<lb/>
contracting venereal<lb/>
disease are kept and<lb/>
that all information is<lb/>
"absolutely confiden-<lb/>
tial<lb/>
"I think students are<lb/>
aware of the symp-<lb/>
toms McCallum said.<lb/>
"Many of them have<lb/>
been made aware<lb/>
through their health<lb/>
education classes or<lb/>
from the Student<lb/>
Health Center's<lb/>
outreach efforts<lb/>
very sticky situation,<lb/>
and a potentially illegal<lb/>
situation, " Smith said.<lb/>
When the cast heard<lb/>
the hair-raising news<lb/>
two weeks before open-<lb/>
ing night, they staged a<lb/>
demonstration featur-<lb/>
ing placards proclaim-<lb/>
ing "Bodies Are<lb/>
Beautiful" and "The<lb/>
End Is Near, Lets See<lb/>
It<lb/>
Although the<lb/>
demonstration didn't<lb/>
help the cast's cause, it<lb/>
did boost ticket sales,<lb/>
Smith says. The initial<lb/>
Thursday night perfor-<lb/>
mance was almost sold<lb/>
out.<lb/>
"We weren't going<lb/>
to throw it in the au-<lb/>
dience's face says<lb/>
cast member Bill<lb/>
Heyser. "It would have<lb/>
been very distasteful<lb/>
"Audience reaction<lb/>
was really good" even<lb/>
to the clothed scene,<lb/>
which occurs at the end<lb/>
of the first act, Smith<lb/>
reports.<lb/>
The scene, he adds,<lb/>
was designed to present<lb/>
the vulnerability and<lb/>
confusion of the<lb/>
characters.<lb/>
"I think it's a very<lb/>
effective scene, but 1<lb/>
don't think their<lb/>
vulnerability comes<lb/>
through with the scene<lb/>
now<lb/>
Heyser agrees,<lb/>
believing nudity would<lb/>
have added a different<lb/>
mood to the scene. "It<lb/>
would have put the ic-<lb/>
ing on the cake<lb/>
Happy Valentine's Day y<lb/>
? I 4 f om S?'?<lb/>
Owl PL M?j<lb/>
LAI TARHS JEWELERS<lb/>
ESTAPL'HtO 1912<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N C<lb/>
?? our. ts - Custoa Design - Repair<lb/>
kV. iforl Do!M or Premises<lb/>
w5tnst.<lb/>
Jppte c?ocofids<lb/>
SoKC?M 1?MM (MLappard Hoiwck?tTriwmpfc CHriilophf C? MMotWofk Goriand Mt?T?<lb/>
Phil Collins Might Ro?9rHank William If.<lb/>
DtveHttm ustd Albums Cmtlfor<lb/>
BMMBIW-MI7<lb/>
200 West<lb/>
AXA &amp;EEE<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb. 8<lb/>
9:00-1:00<lb/>
Admission $1.00<lb/>
Happy Hour Prices<lb/>
Throughout The Night<lb/>
ECU's Best 200 West<lb/>
200 W. 10th St.<lb/>
A<lb/>
TWestem Steer<lb/>
Family<lb/>
STEAKHOVSE<lb/>
Banquet &amp; Party<lb/>
Facilities for 15<lb/>
to 150 Persons<lb/>
Take Out Orders<lb/>
Call 758-8550<lb/>
3005 E. 10th St Greenville<lb/>
Open SunThur. llam-fpm<lb/>
Fnday-Saturday llam-lOpm<lb/>
OIL CHANGE<lb/>
LUBE AND<lb/>
FILTER<lb/>
Maior Brand Multiqrade Oil Up To 5 Ots<lb/>
EXPIRES 2-30<lb/>
? m m m m COUPON ????!<lb/>
FRONT DISK<lb/>
BRAKES<lb/>
$49.88<lb/>
EXPIRES 2-3C<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
WGOpPYEARl<lb/>
??????TIRE ' CEnJTERMBHHI<lb/>
OFFICIAL NC INSPECTION STATION<lb/>
DOWNTOWN WEST END<lb/>
7M DICKINSON AVE SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
7524417<lb/>
756-9371<lb/>
Treat the crew<lb/>
r?r<lb/>
T?<lb/>
 M<lb/>
Zr<lb/>
and well treat you<lb/>
 ?r . -?<lb/>
 - <lb/>
?<lb/>
' ??<lb/>
Y-<lb/>
.<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
No Coupon NKHMry<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
Every Monday and Tuesday night, every week<lb/>
of the year, order any large 2 or rxxe topp-g<lb/>
pizza tor the crew, ask for the "Family Night Special'<lb/>
ana we'll treat you to your own small pma with rne same<lb/>
number of toppings FREE, ?nd delivered free. In our<lb/>
serv.ee zone, 30 minutes or less<lb/>
Or pick up two pizzas in 15 minutes<lb/>
two pizzas for the price of one  now that s a treat vou can t beat!<lb/>
When it comesto f pizza, pta comes to vou<lb/>
Not good witn any otrierspecia. <lb/>
8 ??? ??????????????????????-?<lb/>
Busy? Don't Forget Your Cor!<lb/>
4-A78x13 Powor Streak Block Tiros SI 46.10 total<lb/>
All taxes Included, Mounted, Computer Balance,<lb/>
New Valve Stems, No Other Charge<lb/>
I<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS AT<lb/>
Famous Foot Long Sandwiches<lb/>
MON.<lb/>
SNAK BMT (HAM, PEPPERONI, GENOA, BOLOGNA)<lb/>
ft CHIPS AND A SMALL SODA FOR $2.09<lb/>
TUES<lb/>
SNAK ROAST BEEF, BAG OF CHIPS, AND A SMALL<lb/>
SODA FOR $2.09<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
SNAK MEATBAcL. BAG OF CHIPS, AND A SMALL SODA<lb/>
FOR $1.59<lb/>
THURS.<lb/>
SNAK HAM, BAG OF CHIPS AND A SMALL SODA<lb/>
FOR $1.89<lb/>
FRI.<lb/>
SNAK ALASKAN KING CRAB, BAG OF CHIPS, AND<lb/>
A SMALL SODA FOR $2.39<lb/>
SPECIALS RUN FROM 11 AM. UNTIL 2 P.M. DAILY.<lb/>
ECU Buccaneer<lb/>
present<lb/>
The Men of ECU<lb/>
Wed. Feb. 16, 1983 8:30-1:00am.<lb/>
The debut of ECU's Award Winning<lb/>
Male Calendar Models<lb/>
Ladies Lockout til 10:00<lb/>
Ladies Free &amp; 5- draft while it lasts.<lb/>
Hump Nite Specials too! (45 A 504 cans)<lb/>
Ladies Come Early and Meet<lb/>
ECUs Finest Males in Person<lb/>
&amp; pick up calendar<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
?<lb/>
!<lb/>
Ne<lb/>
Ge<lb/>
So<lb/>
Bv vTr<lb/>
tj<lb/>
Yeai<lb/>
tkmystei<lb/>
Tract -<lb/>
laic she a'<lb/>
tions - :S<lb/>
' " I<lb/>
intentior i<lb/>
B- -<lb/>
knon<lb/>
tion of the m<lb/>
- - ?<lb/>
Trace<lb/>
Gree-<lb/>
doesr ' :<lb/>
something e;<lb/>
Cana-<lb/>
: -<lb/>
<lb/>
PBS <lb/>
- - <lb/>
n<lb/>
I-d 199<lb/>
whicr i<lb/>
Large I<lb/>
the ?ct<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
not - e -<lb/>
-<lb/>
same -<lb/>
-<lb/>
He'<lb/>
sic <lb/>
W - ?:<lb/>
-PVSVw<lb/>
.1<lb/>
St<lb/>
Vi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0008"/><lb/>
n Iowa<lb/>
BKJ situation,<lb/>
Itentiallv illegal<lb/>
Smith said<lb/>
te cast heard<lb/>
raising news<lb/>
s before open<lb/>
-hey staged a<lb/>
ition featur-<lb/>
rds proclaim-<lb/>
lodies Are<lb/>
and "The<lb/>
ear. Lets See<lb/>
,h the<lb/>
ion didn't<lb/>
t's cause, it<lb/>
icket sales.<lb/>
is The initial<lb/>
r ght perfor-<lb/>
almost sold<lb/>
eren"t going<lb/>
in the au-<lb/>
ce savs<lb/>
lb e r Bill<lb/>
Heyser. "It would have<lb/>
been very distasteful<lb/>
"Audience reaction<lb/>
was really good" even<lb/>
to the clothed scene,<lb/>
which occurs at the end<lb/>
of the first act, Smith<lb/>
reports.<lb/>
The scene, he adds,<lb/>
was designed to present<lb/>
the vulnerability and<lb/>
confusion of the<lb/>
characters.<lb/>
"I think it's<lb/>
effective scene,<lb/>
don't think<lb/>
vulnerability<lb/>
a very<lb/>
but I<lb/>
their<lb/>
comes<lb/>
through with the scene<lb/>
now<lb/>
Hevser agrees,<lb/>
believing nudity would<lb/>
have added a different<lb/>
mood to the scene. "It<lb/>
would have put the ic-<lb/>
ing on the cake<lb/>
fjNTLN<lb/>
X<lb/>
ell treat you<lb/>
r '<lb/>
Z$<lb/>
sday<lb/>
light<lb/>
ever? week<lb/>
norm topping<lb/>
Famuv Night Special<lb/>
limaii ciia witti np sae<lb/>
I -e'lverea fre in our<lb/>
'pc<lb/>
?at you can t beat'<lb/>
r ' ;ou.<lb/>
aneer<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
-1:00am.<lb/>
d Winning<lb/>
lets<lb/>
0:00<lb/>
it lasts.<lb/>
&amp; 504 cans)<lb/>
id Meet<lb/>
Person<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
New Film May<lb/>
Get Nelligan<lb/>
Some Notice<lb/>
FEBRUARY 15. 1983 pMe 7<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
EarrtaiBBmi Mitoi<lb/>
Years from now, a disquieting lit-<lb/>
tle mysterythriller called Without a<lb/>
Trace will pop up on the network<lb/>
late show and commercial interup-<lb/>
tions will make it impossible to<lb/>
watch. Since the film is sometimes<lb/>
intentionaJly erratic in tone anyway,<lb/>
t requires an even concentration!<lb/>
But by then, most people will pro-<lb/>
bably stick with it because of its<lb/>
star, an actress who, for the time, is<lb/>
known only to a relatively small sec-<lb/>
tion of the movie-going population<lb/>
m the United States. If Without a<lb/>
Trace (which opened Fridav at<lb/>
Greenville's Buccaneer Theatre)<lb/>
doesn't do it for Kate Nelligan, then<lb/>
something else very soon will.<lb/>
Canadian-born Nelligan is well<lb/>
established in England where she<lb/>
has acted in many plays on the Lon-<lb/>
don stage and worked in BBC and<lb/>
PBS television productions. Her<lb/>
best known American films thus far<lb/>
have been Richard Marquand's<lb/>
1981 Eye of the eedle and the up-<lb/>
dated 1979 version of Dracula in<lb/>
which she played opposite Frank<lb/>
Langella. There is no question that<lb/>
the versatile Nelligan could master<lb/>
any number of characters; her<lb/>
choices v?,il determine whether or<lb/>
not she will eventually become, in<lb/>
this country, an actress with the<lb/>
sanv marketability as Meryl Streep<lb/>
or ihe slow-blooming Jessica Lange.<lb/>
Her performance in Without a<lb/>
Trace allows her to rise above occa-<lb/>
sionally banal material.<lb/>
Beth Gutcheon's screenplav, bas-<lb/>
ed on her novel Still Missing, is<lb/>
perhaps a little broader in scope<lb/>
than it might have been. It is the<lb/>
story of Susan Selky (Nelligan), a<lb/>
professor of English at Columbia<lb/>
University in New York, whose six-<lb/>
year-old son (played by newcomer<lb/>
Danny Corkill) mysteriously disap-<lb/>
peares one morning on his way to<lb/>
school. The police are called in, but<lb/>
fail initially to make any progress.<lb/>
No ransom is demanded and all but<lb/>
one lead goes nowhere.<lb/>
Fact-based explanations are<lb/>
sprinkled about but the real focus of<lb/>
the film, right up until its inex-<lb/>
plicably incongruous finale, is on<lb/>
Susan Selky. Producerdirector<lb/>
Stanley Jaffe wisely allows the hor-<lb/>
ror of the event to grow out of the<lb/>
psychological trauma of the<lb/>
mother. Nelligan's Selky is rigid, in-<lb/>
tellectual; the loss of her son coupl-<lb/>
ed with her estranged husband's in-<lb/>
fidelity force her to become cold,<lb/>
withdrawn and tough. When she<lb/>
finally does break down (while<lb/>
bathing), it becomes an intensely<lb/>
personal and uncomfortable spec-<lb/>
tacle.<lb/>
Other performers are fine-<lb/>
notably, Judd Hirsch as an<lb/>
understanding detective and<lb/>
Stockard Channing as a close<lb/>
friend. But it is Nelligan's film.<lb/>
As a deliberately-paced thriller.<lb/>
Without a Trace works pretty well!<lb/>
As a psychological horror storv and<lb/>
a character study, the film works<lb/>
much better. The surprise wrap-up<lb/>
and feel-good conclusion (i.e. An<lb/>
Officer and a Gentleman) are added<lb/>
for commercial purposes. One<lb/>
wishes that they too would disap-<lb/>
pear without a trace.<lb/>
k nh ?, ? co ,?. ?,? frora Mw mmmtmm, wmm A Tnct The nm sttn m Hinck<lb/>
Will The Real Sting Please .<lb/>
By DEAN JOHNSON<lb/>
mnwml<lb/>
BOSTON ? So who is this fellow<lb/>
born Gordon Sumnera and now bet-<lb/>
ter known simply as Sting? Is he the<lb/>
hard-working bassist for the police<lb/>
who affects a spartan pose when on<lb/>
tour, shunning all temptations of<lb/>
the flesh (and otherwise), keeping<lb/>
regular hours (for a musician, that<lb/>
is), reading voraciously and so on<lb/>
and so forth? Or is he more like the<lb/>
fellow who sued his music<lb/>
publishers, then during the trial, put<lb/>
on a display of bonhomie with his<lb/>
fW<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? 1<lb/>
1 Y<lb/>
New Band Rod And The Reals Coming To The Attic<lb/>
Rod and the Reals, a new Raleigh-based band led by former ArroganceGlass Moon guitarist Rod<lb/>
Abernethy, will perform this Sunday night, Feb. 20, at Greenville's Attic nightclub. The band<lb/>
plays mostly original material as well as old favorites like "Satisfaction" and "I Fought the Law<lb/>
Described as "a modern, danceable rock ? roll group the foursome also includes former Brice<lb/>
Street members Jack Atchison (drums) and Barry Webb (keyboardsguitar), and also former No<lb/>
Vacancy bass player Bobby Patterson.<lb/>
Persona<lb/>
estranged wife? Is Sting the bassist<lb/>
the same Sting who, following an<lb/>
out-of-court settlement of the<lb/>
aforementioned suit, jetted off to<lb/>
the Riviera with a new lady friend to<lb/>
attend a party thrown by Saudi arms<lb/>
dealer Adnan Kashoggi? The same<lb/>
Sting who, upon returning to the<lb/>
U.S scuffled with the paparazzi on<lb/>
hand to record he and his travelling<lb/>
companion's arrival?<lb/>
The blonde-haired bassist doesn't<lb/>
tackle such issues head on, but sug-<lb/>
gests his starring role in Richard<lb/>
Loncraine's Film Brimstone and<lb/>
Treacle might be rife with clues as to<lb/>
the exact nature of his personality.<lb/>
In the film. Sting portrays Martin<lb/>
Taylor, an odious vagrant with a<lb/>
Jekyll-Hyde streak, whose<lb/>
malevolence is on a par with that of<lb/>
Malcolm McDowell's Alex in A<lb/>
Clockwork Orange. In real life.<lb/>
Sting appreciates having Taylor<lb/>
muddy up his image a bit more.<lb/>
Says Sting: "I think that by doing<lb/>
tangential things like Brimstone and<lb/>
Treacle I will offset that very<lb/>
natural process where they love you<lb/>
one minute and want to destroy you<lb/>
the next. By throwing curves at peo-<lb/>
ple, like this movie, they'll get con-<lb/>
fused. That's a deliberate policy on<lb/>
my part so that I don't paint myself<lb/>
into a corner, in effect. People<lb/>
won't say, 'Oh, yeah, the sex god<lb/>
or horseshit like that<lb/>
The role of Martin Taylor,<lb/>
though, has deeper, more personal<lb/>
resonances for Sting. In Tavlor, he<lb/>
sees a reflection of his darker im-<lb/>
pulses ? and remember, this is a<lb/>
character who one minute mouths<lb/>
wimpoid homilies on the order of "I<lb/>
love housework; it's such a peaceful<lb/>
art' and next ravishes a<lb/>
quadriplegic young girl (played bv<lb/>
Suzanna Hamilton) when no one is<lb/>
looking. "I feel well-cast Sting<lb/>
observes, without cracking a smile.<lb/>
T find it quite easy to be Martin<lb/>
Taylor in that I feel he is an exag-<lb/>
geration of m own ambiguities.<lb/>
What interests me about Taylor is<lb/>
that he is actually nice sometimes.<lb/>
He's kind and generous. He's also a<lb/>
shit. That polarity is his character is<lb/>
just fascinating. Reality is like<lb/>
Brimstone and Treacle People are<lb/>
good and bad They have the facUu.<lb/>
to be totally evil or quite gocJ. I<lb/>
think it's important to realize that<lb/>
any of us can be Hitler or the<lb/>
Boston Strangier. or St. Francis of<lb/>
Assisi<lb/>
But a strong identification with<lb/>
the part wasn't enough to carry the<lb/>
day for Sting, a fledgling actor<lb/>
whose screen appearances include<lb/>
minor roles in the Sex Pistols' Rock<lb/>
'A" Roll Swindle, Quadrophenia<lb/>
(showing on campus as a late show<lb/>
this spring). Secret Policeman's<lb/>
Other Ball, and a quirky BBC<lb/>
thriller entitled Artemus '81. For<lb/>
one, co-stars Denholm Elliott<lb/>
(whose film credits include The<lb/>
Boys From Brazil, King Rat and<lb/>
Raiders of the Lost Ark) and Joan<lb/>
Plowright (aka Mrs. Laurence<lb/>
Olivier) are hardly thespian light<lb/>
weights; their presence tested Sting,<lb/>
whose competitiveness stopped<lb/>
short of one-upsmanship.<lb/>
"The demand to be on a par with<lb/>
actors of that caliber was not in-<lb/>
timidating, but challenging he in-<lb/>
sists. "I realized I had to prove<lb/>
myself to them every day and work<lb/>
harder. I came into the movie as a<lb/>
learner, and I made it very clear to<lb/>
them from the start that I was there<lb/>
to learn. I wasn't an upstart or a big<lb/>
star. I was an apprentice<lb/>
And for Sting the apprentice, in-<lb/>
terpreting Martin Taylor's dual per-<lb/>
sonality proved a demanding chore.<lb/>
"1 had to act and be seen to be ac-<lb/>
ting by the audience Sting ex<lb/>
plains. "So in a sense I had to be<lb/>
convincing enough to convince the<lb/>
other characters, but not the au-<lb/>
dience. I've spoken to other actors<lb/>
since I did the part, and they tell me<lb/>
- it's one of (he mot difficult roles<lb/>
for a young man to take on. Where<lb/>
do you pitch the performance? Are<lb/>
you real or not? 1 picked quite an<lb/>
elusive part, and I'm glad 1 did<lb/>
Where does all this activity leave<lb/>
the Police? In addition to Sling's<lb/>
solo performances in Brimstone,<lb/>
Andy Summers has released a<lb/>
critically-acclaimed collaboration<lb/>
with Robert Fripp Advance<lb/>
Masked), and Stewart Copdand's<lb/>
working on the soundtrack for<lb/>
Francis Ford Coppolla's<lb/>
Rumble fish film. According to<lb/>
Sting, these outside projects are<lb/>
vital, but momentary, distractions<lb/>
from the band's work.<lb/>
"We've been together for six<lb/>
years, and we need a break from<lb/>
each other he says straighfor<lb/>
wardly. "What I do in my spare<lb/>
time is make movies, and what they<lb/>
do is their own business. There are<lb/>
no conflicts, reallv<lb/>
Bands Abounding<lb/>
Ball Should Benefit The Needy<lb/>
By JOHN HOWARTH<lb/>
Staff Writa<lb/>
The ECU Hunger Coalition and Pitt Co. Hunger Pro-<lb/>
ject are sponsoring a Benefit Ball on Saturday night,<lb/>
Feb. 26, from 9 till 1 a.m. at the American Legion Hall<lb/>
which is located near the Beef Barn. The dance will<lb/>
feature three local bands who have donated their ser-<lb/>
vices.<lb/>
Proceeds from the Ball will be divided evenly between<lb/>
Oxfam American and Greenville Church Ministries<lb/>
United.<lb/>
"We chose Oxfam America because they have been<lb/>
identified as being one of the relief agencies that spends<lb/>
the least on administrative costs said Mike Hamer,<lb/>
one of the organizers of the event. "Also, the Hunger<lb/>
coalition favors Oxfam America because they deal with<lb/>
self-help projects<lb/>
Lenore Olmstead is Senior Coordinator at the Oxfam<lb/>
America offices in Boston. She described one of the<lb/>
organization's emergency projects which is takir g place<lb/>
in the town of Khian in Lebanon:<lb/>
"Basically, the town has been completely<lb/>
devastated she said. "We're providing emergency<lb/>
repairs for housing, and we're also setting up an outpa-<lb/>
tient clinic there. It's an area that people are starting to<lb/>
rebuild. They have very few materials to work with.<lb/>
"Ail of our projects in India are centered around<lb/>
women's self-help projects. There is a women's group<lb/>
of lacemakers called 'Godavarai The Irish mis-<lb/>
sionaries introduced lacemaking in the area. These<lb/>
women make $.65 for every 2,615 yards of lace which<lb/>
they crochet; that comes out to about $. 10 a day. This is<lb/>
the same rate that they made 40 years ago. Through our<lb/>
help, the women have learned how to put the pieces<lb/>
together, and they've figured out how to market the lace<lb/>
and raise their wages. Thus they've helped to sustain<lb/>
their families<lb/>
Greenville Church Ministries United will be receiving<lb/>
50 percent of the monies raised. This organization func-<lb/>
tions as a clearinghouse for funds which are then chan-<lb/>
neled to the Salvation Army, Catholic Social Services,<lb/>
Real Crisis Center and the Department of Social Ser-<lb/>
vices.<lb/>
"The most urgent needs that are surfacing in this area<lb/>
are for food, medication, rent and utilities said Liz<lb/>
Wilkerson, a volunteer working with GreenviUe Church<lb/>
Ministries. "The needs have increased dramatically dur-<lb/>
ing these winter months<lb/>
The three bands who will be playing for the Benefit<lb/>
are The Lemon Sisters and The Rutabaga Brothers, The<lb/>
Lightning Weils Blues Band, and The Amateurs.<lb/>
The Lemon Sisters and Rutabaga Brothers play a<lb/>
mixture of swing, rhythm and blues and soul music.<lb/>
They have recently been drawing large crowds at the<lb/>
New Deli and at the Rathskeller.<lb/>
The Lightning Wells Blues Band plays mainly<lb/>
Chicago-style blues, rhythm and blues, and rockabilly.<lb/>
The band has been playing in eastern N.C. and in<lb/>
Raleigh over the past 3 years.<lb/>
The Amateurs play original music in a variety of con-<lb/>
temporary styles. All three bands feature seasoned<lb/>
Greenville musicians who have played in several bands<lb/>
over the years.<lb/>
Setups will be sold at the Benefit. Persons are urged<lb/>
to bring their own alcoholic beverages. Advance tickets<lb/>
are on sale for $2 at Apple Records. Tickets at the door<lb/>
will sell for $2.50 apiece.<lb/>
'  ??-j v? kV r t,? ?? <lb/>
<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
HE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 15. 1983<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
Responsible male or female wanted to<lb/>
share three bedroom duplex with working<lb/>
ECU student Within walking distance of<lb/>
campus. Call Charles at 752 4935 or<lb/>
756 8865.<lb/>
SUN TANNERY<lb/>
Get Ready For That Florida Trip<lb/>
15 Visits -$22.50 10 Visits 15.00<lb/>
Also other exexcl?e SpGCldlS ?<lb/>
Call NOW!<lb/>
UNITED FIGURE SALON<lb/>
ipm tr? :$ ??'<lb/>
? :?.<lb/>
French Thriller 'Diva'At Hendrix Theatre Tomorrow Night<lb/>
Frederic Andrei stars as a young mailman whose passion is opera in the<lb/>
acclaimed French thriller Ohm, directed hy Jean-Jacques Beineix. The<lb/>
film Hill be shown tomorrow evening at 8 in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center's Hendrix Theatre. Admission to the ECU Student I nion<lb/>
Wednesday Special Films Series is by in and activity card for students<lb/>
and MSC membership for faculty and staff. Upcoming spring semester<lb/>
Special Films include Mad Max and Road Warrior (March 2). Oblomov<lb/>
(March 16), Juliet of the Spirits and Satyricon (April 6) and Best Foreign<lb/>
Film winner Mephisto (April 20).<lb/>
Hall And Oates Quest May Be Over<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
Bv MARK MEHLEB<lb/>
Rrrord<lb/>
NEW YORK ? Time passes, as is its wont,<lb/>
but Daryl Hall and John Oates cling to the status<lb/>
quo. Since 19" they've been on an ascending<lb/>
curve of popularity that took a big leap in 1980<lb/>
when the duo's Voices L P produced multiple hit<lb/>
singles. The following year. Private Eyes went to<lb/>
the well time and again for hit singles, and their<lb/>
latest. Hfi, is an odds-on favorite to repeat its<lb/>
predecessors' achievements.<lb/>
In fact, Hall and Oates' life is so stable in so<lb/>
many respects that they've even maintained the<lb/>
image problem that's dogged them throughout a<lb/>
checkered career spanning thirteen years, four-<lb/>
teen albums, a (figurative) death and a rebirth.<lb/>
You know, everybody recognizes the name and<lb/>
the sound, but who knows from the guys? They<lb/>
aren't distinctive personalities; they don't show<lb/>
up on TV very often, they're not associated with<lb/>
political or social issues; loo many photographs<lb/>
find them affecting chillingly-detached pretty<lb/>
boy poses.<lb/>
So what's new with Hall and Oates this time<lb/>
around? Mainly that they've recognized the<lb/>
distance between their own, the public's and, yes,<lb/>
the press' perception of Hall and Oates. Oates,<lb/>
the diminutive, swarthy, slightly menacing half<lb/>
of the duo, admits he and his partner "had to<lb/>
learn how important image is in pop music.<lb/>
Things we didn't take seriously because we were<lb/>
naive or young or just stupid, people looked at<lb/>
and went, 'Ooooh, look at the perversion<lb/>
Specifically, Oates is referring to the metallic<lb/>
silver cover of their 1977 LP, Daryl Hall and<lb/>
John Oates, on which a dolled-up H&amp;O could be<lb/>
figured for having something more than a<lb/>
musical relationship. (An H&amp;O discography.<lb/>
issued by RCA in 1980, is jocular and derisive in<lb/>
citing the notable aspects of this album. To wit:<lb/>
"Daryl and John move to the West Village with<lb/>
Sara Smile thereby proving their heterosexuali-<lb/>
ty and "on the album cover Daryl Hall por-<lb/>
trays the girl he would most like to meet) "It<lb/>
was all part of losing control of our act Oates<lb/>
says. "Not just us. but our managers, too ? we<lb/>
all made mistakes. That happens when you start<lb/>
out<lb/>
"We got so tired of people not knowing what<lb/>
the fuck we were about Hall says of the confu-<lb/>
sion surrounding the duo "But I'll tell you this,<lb/>
people are definitely seeing it now. There's only<lb/>
one image we ever wanted: two musicians who<lb/>
play rock and soul music<lb/>
An admirable goal, but one, in this case, not<lb/>
easily attained. Before Hall and Oates could<lb/>
separate fact from fantasy in the image-making<lb/>
department, they had to "break down and then<lb/>
rebuild as Oates puts it, on the business side.<lb/>
"We were never really in control Hall states.<lb/>
"Not of the music, nor of the presentation of it.<lb/>
Our career was a circus. But we've come to grips<lb/>
with the world<lb/>
Oates, speaking in something approaching<lb/>
second-degree psychobabble, points to his and<lb/>
Hall's music as a major source of inspiration for<lb/>
their hard-won victories in the realm of<lb/>
marketing and merchandising. "The theme of<lb/>
self-determination has been a major one in our<lb/>
work he says. "Doing what you believe is<lb/>
right, as opposed to what others tell you. Taking<lb/>
control of your life; not following the masses<lb/>
As artists, Hall and Oate have helped bring<lb/>
order to a disorderly world by not only writing<lb/>
and arranging their material, but by producing<lb/>
themselves as well. Earlier in their career, Hall<lb/>
notes, recording was little short of a hanowing<lb/>
experience. "I see our career going straight from<lb/>
Abandoned I uncheonette (their critically-<lb/>
acclaimed second album, released in 1973) to<lb/>
yokes, with everything in-between just a bunch<lb/>
of good songs that needed a lot more work. 1 love<lb/>
a lot of songs on those mid-period albums, but<lb/>
the producers screwed up most of them. Other<lb/>
than David Foster (who produced Along the Red<lb/>
ledge) and Anf Mardin (uncheonette) ? good<lb/>
musicians who stayed out of the way ? every<lb/>
other producer we ever worked with tried to do<lb/>
things to the music without the slightest<lb/>
understanding of what we were<lb/>
Believing in the importance of the individual<lb/>
song ? particularly their individual songs ?<lb/>
Hall and Oates took to producing themselves on<lb/>
Voices, followed in 1981 by Private Eyes, in both<lb/>
cases, the results, as noted at the outset, were as-<lb/>
tounding. HjO mines the same rich vein of<lb/>
memorable pop hooks, well-tempered melodies,<lb/>
and soaring harmonies.<lb/>
Thematically. Hfi is also of a piece with its im-<lb/>
mediate predecesors, dealing as it does with the<lb/>
daily flotsam and jetsam of emotional life; little<lb/>
murders, tiny betrayals, white lies, "the failure<lb/>
of ideals<lb/>
"It's an emotional record, perhaps the most<lb/>
angst-filled IP we've ever done Hall says "1<lb/>
don't think you can call it negative, but. let's face<lb/>
See H&amp;O, Page 9<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
delivery costs in the price-<lb/>
PIZZA INN has changed<lb/>
all that<lb/>
We sell our delivery<lb/>
pizzas at Menu Prices!<lb/>
No Surcharge. We also<lb/>
give FREE Drinks with<lb/>
our large and giant<lb/>
pizzas.TRY USTODAY!<lb/>
CALL 758 6266 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(i<lb/>
"They're here.<lb/>
" .<lb/>
jaatehpumps<lb/>
theamostats<lb/>
Iheater repairs<lb/>
PHONE 756-5566<lb/>
VVacdeer<lb/>
TWO BACON S EBB BISCUITS $1.29<lb/>
I Vj pri-v ni thiM i n m hcli ?t rt1nnn i nc ci Hif  r r '<lb/>
Rmcr.pervBH.plaa wtOMB mir-i pjv jm sjto.ux llu-<lb/>
?ur" ? K"1 'n I nibiruu? n irti an iht-r ittt r<lb/>
 Jtttr k i ilunng n iniul iMeaaM hi kip. i inl ji ih?<lb/>
Uowtag Hafdec RcSaunaB 'Mix n.irHhc <lb/>
sircvt tk 290' 1 lOril xnxi Gfccnvdk .<lb/>
( ()acr(?thniuKhVU II I'JH<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
"We like 'em Hot"<lb/>
HEMBY'S RADIATOR SHOP<lb/>
REPAIRS ANO REC0RES<lb/>
Open All Day Saturday!<lb/>
C. &amp; BOB HEMBY<lb/>
2240 A OiCKinson Avenue!<lb/>
Greenville. S C 27ft341<lb/>
SJWOWICH.RffiUUK HUES<lb/>
ft MEDIUM StJFT MINK 1.79i<lb/>
Hc-anc prrM-ni (hiMiiurxmbrtmv onJrnnu ()nci.in?i per I<lb/>
(.usjumrr prr vimc plcawumiimt-r mi4 pan w laloux Thocou <lb/>
pn nK p?xi inninihiruiion uith im ochcrofltr <lb/>
kr Kixnl itu-r lit VI AM Ouh imlv it thr billowing HinJrcs RrMauranLs 910 I<lb/>
ih- Vnrct A .??rr 10 Sircri (rfrcmilk- (Jflrr jjood through May 1 j<lb/>
I<lb/>
Hacdeer<lb/>
STl DENT OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
We are looking for girls interested in being<lb/>
counselors - activity instructors in a private girls<lb/>
camp located in Henersonville, N.C. Instuctors<lb/>
needed especially in SwimmingWSI. Horseback<lb/>
riding. Tennis. Backpacking. Archery. Canoeing.<lb/>
Gymnastics. Crafts. Also Basketball. Dancing, Soc-<lb/>
cer, Cheerteading. Drama. Art. Office work. Camp<lb/>
craft, Nature study. If your school offers a Summer<lb/>
Internship program we will be glad to help. Inquiries<lb/>
- Morgan Haynes P.O. Box 400c. Try on, N.C.<lb/>
28782.<lb/>
V"<lb/>
teven Spielberg has fascinated, mystified<lb/>
and scared audiences with JAWS.<lb/>
(lOSt I N (HMI KSOf I HE THIRD<lb/>
KIM) and RAID! RS Or THE LOST Rk<lb/>
Now. he takes ?u into a world irf lerrifving<lb/>
forces that detv reason and turn the<lb/>
once peaceful lives of an ordinary American<lb/>
family into something that must be experienced<lb/>
to be believed<lb/>
i?iiTi?@iwi<lb/>
 knows what scares you.<lb/>
1 Jkf -i :?kf .t-mML Jitt ?:JI &amp;J 'VS ?&amp;?"?.???-<lb/>
??C ?. U; M  ?fe : r. i .as 1 JMfcjSmSrWHl" xm- NftH, HO Mi. Wn?<lb/>
aKB. S ?.??? ?eM ??M JM ? WM IX)<lb/>
NK.M LA<lb/>
THURSDAY 7 PM, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 5,7:15,9:30 PM<lb/>
HENDRIX THEATRE, MSC ADMISSION BY ID &amp; ACTIVITY CARD<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE STUDENT UNION FILMS COMMITTEE<lb/>
ImSitnmmmiiiiiiiiiiiii111111111111M1111 Ml 111II11111111 f M11IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllltlllllHHIIHIIUIIIIIIIllIINIIIIHIIIIIWimilHNINHHmilMNHlB<lb/>
home style<lb/>
WASH DAY<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
"I<lb/>
"Free Wed-So?"<lb/>
DRY FOR ONLY 35"<lb/>
Just for trying our New Step.<lb/>
Saver laundry islands<lb/>
? Maytag Washers ith<lb/>
matching dryers USt Uke<lb/>
a home laundry room<lb/>
? Oper- 8 00 a m until<lb/>
900 p m<lb/>
? Laund'N aripnrtanr rr<lb/>
duty at an times<lb/>
? Drop ot service<lb/>
(This Date Only)<lb/>
E3<lb/>
MAYTAG<lb/>
home<lb/>
style<lb/>
LAUNDRY<lb/>
South Pork Shopping C?ntr<lb/>
11S Radbemhs Rood Hut to Sondwicii Game<lb/>
Hours 7am 10pm Opening W?dn??oay<lb/>
?I<lb/>
iliiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiimiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiHiiiii<lb/>
liinmtiiiii<lb/>
fr<lb/>
I<lb/>
?1<lb/>
'Custer<lb/>
(.?rv Utaihti<lb/>
ind (tftj.<lb/>
N I premier<lb/>
formed reb<lb/>
Theatre k-<lb/>
( uler. Hia!<lb/>
teen and M.ij<lb/>
their version<lb/>
Bighorn Rte<lb/>
757-43<lb/>
H&amp;<lb/>
A G<lb/>
Pop<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
the tm<lb/>
one<lb/>
"Ba- C I<lb/>
cqun ?<lb/>
rhthm <lb/>
the other en?j-<lb/>
shared wiih Frit<lb/>
four or five giu<lb/>
the ri in<lb/>
"II<lb/>
 .<lb/>
"At rcas<lb/>
macfaiDc<lb/>
the song, - <lb/>
sor.k<lb/>
ed ihe<lb/>
That's ??'<lb/>
fee ,<lb/>
in h gi ?:<lb/>
pd types I<lb/>
marine- I<lb/>
quai ' - <lb/>
pre <lb/>
state.<lb/>
whence the cat<lb/>
p ? 5 fc<lb/>
in Phi lad -<lb/>
tmues.<lb/>
? you It's<lb/>
the essence s<lb/>
pa I of the r i<lb/>
oure .N<lb/>
tn it or it's 1<lb/>
In sur I<lb/>
order, the<lb/>
their firs: perr<lb/>
guitar; Cl j<lb/>
"T-Bone" W A<lb/>
drums ? l<lb/>
ed. Frankh.<lb/>
anvbodN Ood<lb/>
atwasrs came<lb/>
sidemen; the<lb/>
The gu ?,e<lb/>
from the ea: a<lb/>
soul roots. Th<lb/>
them our dem<lb/>
the left, and<lb/>
That's how wel<lb/>
What were!<lb/>
band. Last M<lb/>
grinding ear<lb/>
closeted awa<lb/>
writing twent<lb/>
sessions for H?<lb/>
of U.S. televiN<lb/>
a tour of Japai<lb/>
pletely sold-oi<lb/>
mg Reaganomj<lb/>
record industrj<lb/>
handful of acts<lb/>
ing the recess'j<lb/>
Hall shrugs<lb/>
drome he saj<lb/>
when it's impq<lb/>
in 1978 what<lb/>
taalking about<lb/>
Now they carel<lb/>
money to buy<lb/>
them off the rl<lb/>
Having tak<lb/>
solving their<lb/>
their professio<lb/>
afield Hall ai<lb/>
that audience<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0010"/><lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
female wanted to<lb/>
ex with working<lb/>
diking distance of<lb/>
t at 752 4935 or<lb/>
NNERY<lb/>
lat Florida Trip<lb/>
I 10Visits-S15 00<lb/>
pecials<lb/>
m<lb/>
RE SALON<lb/>
JLOXll<lb/>
I Pizzas Are<lb/>
livered!<lb/>
so<lb/>
Kitn<lb/>
d<lb/>
? w<lb/>
ed. mystified<lb/>
IAWS.<lb/>
Hfc THIRD<lb/>
1 LOST ARK<lb/>
arid of terrifying<lb/>
urn the<lb/>
iry American<lb/>
? be experienced<lb/>
res you.<lb/>
KSnMiiiSIHMniKHMHaEkWIi.o<lb/>
DAY S,7 15,9 30 PM<lb/>
?N BY ID &amp; ACTIVITY CARD<lb/>
FILMS COMMITTEE<lb/>
lllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllliillllllllllllllllllllll<lb/>
ee Wed-Sat"<lb/>
:ORONLY35C"<lb/>
lew Step.<lb/>
Ids<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
LAUNDRY<lb/>
?j Center<lb/>
Sandwich Gome<lb/>
tng Wednesday<lb/>
"Custer ? Brought To Stage<lb/>
Gary Weathersbee (foreground). Robert Willie<lb/>
and Gregory Watkins star in the ECU Playhouse<lb/>
N.C. premier production of Custer, to be per-<lb/>
formed Feb 17-22 at 8:15 p.m. in McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre. Robert Ingham's drama sets General<lb/>
Custer, Elizabeth Custer, Colonel William Ben-<lb/>
teen and Major Marcus Reno in limbo telling<lb/>
the.r versions of that fateful dav at the Little<lb/>
TShSii Resera,ions can m?de by calling<lb/>
H&amp;Os ?H20'<lb/>
A Genuine<lb/>
Pop Triumph<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
it, this is what the world is like and we'll have to<lb/>
live in it. John and 1 are still trying to figure out<lb/>
where all the angst comes from. We didn't see<lb/>
any recurring theme of betraval until we sat<lb/>
down and analyzed the lyrics. It must be in our<lb/>
lives; both of us have done a lot of bumping up<lb/>
against the rotten part of the world<lb/>
When it's pointed out the As high-gloss pop<lb/>
sheen comes dangerously close to undercutting<lb/>
the emotion in their material. Hall and Oates go<lb/>
to pains to point out that the album is, in fact,<lb/>
one of their least intricate studio recordings!<lb/>
"Basically, it's a rhythm ection, or its<lb/>
equivalent, and a couple of instruments on top "<lb/>
Hall notes. "On 'Open All Night you've got'a<lb/>
rhythm section with a string thing on it in one<lb/>
ti'U-TV and itpertronic. Synergy pattern on<lb/>
Sf- i" un ?ne of the thin8 I've always<lb/>
shared with Fnpp is a belief that vou don't need<lb/>
four or five guitars to flesh out song, if you pick<lb/>
the right part in the precise tonal range<lb/>
"If I had to pick out a dominant instrument, it<lb/>
would be the drum adds Oates. "On a tune like<lb/>
'At Tension for example, we tuned a drum<lb/>
machine to correspond to each chord change in<lb/>
the song, so we were able to construct the entire<lb/>
song harmonically with the drums before we add-<lb/>
ed the chords. The whole thing is integrated.<lb/>
That's where the intense, depressing military<lb/>
feeling comes from<lb/>
Yet Hfi also has a feeling of triumph, of artists<lb/>
in high spirits, at the peak of their craft. Some<lb/>
rigid types have scoffed at their blue-eyed soul<lb/>
mannerisms as being calculated enough to<lb/>
qualify as racist, but Hall says that if HjO<lb/>
presents he and his partner in a more possesed<lb/>
state, it's because they've not forgotten from<lb/>
whence they came. "All this fighting about us co-<lb/>
pying blacks Hall complains. "If you grew up<lb/>
in Philadelphia like John and I did, singing doo-<lb/>
wop ? his voice trails off. "Man he con-<lb/>
tinues, "if you ever lose that, something's wrong<lb/>
with you. It's not the technique of the thing, it's<lb/>
the essence. Soul isn't color; it's the important<lb/>
part of the music ? whatever kind of music<lb/>
you're doing ? and every song's got to have soul<lb/>
in it or it's not a good song<lb/>
In surveying a career that suddenly seems in<lb/>
order, the two musicians cite the formation of<lb/>
their first permanent band ? G.E. Smith on lead<lb/>
guitar; Charlie Dechant on saxophone; Tom<lb/>
"T-Bone" Wolk on bass; and Mickey Curry on<lb/>
drums ? as further evidence that H&amp;O has jell-<lb/>
ed. "Frankly says Hall, "we never found<lb/>
anybody good enough to keep. Their limitations<lb/>
always came up. It happens that way with<lb/>
sidemen; they do some things and not others.<lb/>
The guys we have now are versatile. They're<lb/>
from the east coast, and they've got our rock and<lb/>
soul roots. They came into the studio, we played<lb/>
them our demos, we did one or two takes, and<lb/>
they left, and John and I did our little overdubs.<lb/>
That's how we want to make records<lb/>
What we're talking about here is a working<lb/>
band. Last May, Hall and Oates completed a<lb/>
grinding year-long tour, then spent two months<lb/>
closeted away in their New York apartments,<lb/>
writing twenty new songs in advance of July's<lb/>
sessions for Hfi. In September they made a series<lb/>
of U.S. television appearances, and embarked on<lb/>
a tour of Japan. They've already started a com-<lb/>
pletely sold-out three-month U.S. tour. In defy-<lb/>
ing Reaganomics and the sagging fortunes of the<lb/>
record industry, H&amp;O has become one of only a<lb/>
handful of acts to have been given a new life dur-<lb/>
ing the recession.<lb/>
Hall shrugs. "It's the Hall and Oates luck syn-<lb/>
drome he says with a slight laugh. "We get big<lb/>
when it's impossible to get big. If we were doing<lb/>
in 1978 what we're doing now ? what am I<lb/>
taalking about? We tried that and nobody cared?<lb/>
Now they care like crazy, except nobody has any<lb/>
money to buy records, or else they're busy taping<lb/>
them off the radio<lb/>
Having taken some profound steps towards<lb/>
solving their image problem and restructuring<lb/>
their professional lives, one wonders just how far<lb/>
afield Hall and Oates would be willing to take<lb/>
that audience of theirs that "cares like crazy<lb/>
?L?A?AJ!OIJNIAN-FEBRUARY 15. 1983 9<lb/>
Win up to<lb/>
With a Food Lion<lb/>
Bumper Sticker<lb/>
100000<lb/>
in FREE groceries!<lb/>
Hundreds of winners<lb/>
Details at Food Lion<lb/>
Bttf Uia<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, February 19, 1983<lb/>
ruary 1983 AWMmM<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USM Cfcaiaa B??f Raaai - Fill Cat ? ????Utt<lb/>
Round<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
CSM e.?i? t.?f Uta<lb/>
T-Bom Steak u 24i<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Frtta<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
Picnics<lb/>
eSM Cfcaiaa ? FaaaUy ?Mfc<lb/>
Cube Steak u 2"<lb/>
Beech<lb/>
?????<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Broccoli<lb/>
Pk?. of 6 - 12 Oz. Cam<lb/>
fk. of 6 12 Oz. Cm<lb/>
2 Litar<lb/>
750 Ml. - Uaabrasea. Rosata Biaaeo<lb/>
CelU<lb/>
Oaart<lb/>
<lb/>
Why Pay9 Each<lb/>
?? CiLt.efcaaiTaai.il Oil<lb/>
tffcy ftf M.tt<lb/>
1<lb/>
fctfcf Ny M.Of<lb/>
St Oaaea<lb/>
399.<lb/>
Pel Monte Catsup B Pork &amp; Scene<lb/>
79.<lb/>
4 Path ? CattamllkSvMttailk<lb/>
Food Town Biscuits<lb/>
79.<lb/>
4 M Nat -1 Fly<lb/>
Eden Toilet Tissue<lb/>
44 Ct. - ?a?ay fciMl<lb/>
Fabric Softener<lb/>
IS Oz. - Ufarttaatflab t Cblafcaa<lb/>
Cat Fad<lb/>
Puce It Booh<lb/>
j??-<lb/>
14 Of. ? ?Waaiaaat'B??ftlvar CtUkaa<lb/>
Poo. Food<lb/>
289.<lb/>
17 Oz. ? tffcaUCmaa Sfyia<lb/>
fci Moat CoMu Cora<lb/>
7 5 0; F;ad To?n<lb/>
Quarters<lb/>
W, Pa, 47 ?,c<lb/>
r&amp;m9l<lb/>
Macaroni<lb/>
r &amp; Cheese IIS<lb/>
 Mr. P. 1 L 1 <lb/>
Wh, P?, 2 61<lb/>
lllflMltlllltllltlMIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItittiiiiiai<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
MWiTnrm"iii? ????? ? <lb/>
- ?. ? ???,? m0 mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
iWl<lb/>
FEWl K 15. iJ p"f <lb/>
Lady Wolves Capture Tourney Title<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Aabuil Sporti i4Utx<lb/>
The Cheyney State Lady Wolves<lb/>
used the hot shooting of tournament<lb/>
MVP Rosetta Guilford to capture<lb/>
this weekend's Converse Lady<lb/>
Pirate Classic.<lb/>
Guilford scored 33 points in Sun-<lb/>
da) night's championship game to<lb/>
lead the Lady Wolves to a 85-57 vic-<lb/>
tory over the host Lady Pirates.<lb/>
Cheyney State, the 5th ranked<lb/>
team in the nation, improved its<lb/>
record to 19-1 while the Lady<lb/>
Pirates' mark evened at 10-10.<lb/>
Guilford was the runaway choice<lb/>
for MVP, ar her smooth jump shot<lb/>
resulted in 63 points for the two<lb/>
rounds. The 5-10 junior hit 29 of 44<lb/>
shots from the field to lead the<lb/>
powerful Lady Wolves.<lb/>
Both Cheyney State and ECU<lb/>
made it to the championship game<lb/>
as the result of strong first-round<lb/>
performances on Saturday night.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates defeated Clem-<lb/>
son 05-51, and the Lady Wolves<lb/>
turned back Detroit 80-61 to set up<lb/>
the final contest.<lb/>
ECU jumped out to a 4-2 lead<lb/>
during the first two minutes, thanks<lb/>
to a pair of jump shots by Darlene<lb/>
Chancy.<lb/>
But from then on, it was all<lb/>
Cheyney State. During the next 12<lb/>
"linutes, the Lady Wolves outscored<lb/>
Lv.l 24-8.<lb/>
The visitors from Cheney, Pa. us-<lb/>
ed a tenacious 2-3 zone to take ad-<lb/>
vantage of the height differential.<lb/>
The Lady Wolves started a front<lb/>
line of 5-11 Yolanda Laney, 6-1<lb/>
Deborah Thomas, and 6-4 Sharon<lb/>
Taylor.<lb/>
The score at halftime was 43-24,<lb/>
but the two teams traded baskets in<lb/>
the second half until an 8-0 streak at<lb/>
the 12:00 mark put the game out of<lb/>
reach.<lb/>
Three Cheyney State players ?<lb/>
Guilford, Taylor, and Laney ?<lb/>
made the all-tournament team.<lb/>
Rounding out the squad was ECU's<lb/>
Mary Denkler and Clemson's Janet<lb/>
Knight.<lb/>
Denkler was ECU's main force in<lb/>
Sunday night's title game. The 6-0<lb/>
senior scored 26 points against the<lb/>
tight Cheyney State zone.<lb/>
A pair of freshmen, Sylvia Bragg<lb/>
and Lisa Squirewell, were also in-<lb/>
strumental in the Lady Pirates' ef-<lb/>
fort.<lb/>
Bragg contributed 11 points while<lb/>
Squirewell added nine points and a<lb/>
team-high 10 rebounds.<lb/>
Besides Guilford's effective pro-<lb/>
duction, the Lady Wolves were<lb/>
boosted by 19 points from Laney<lb/>
and an eight-point, 13-rebound per-<lb/>
formance from Taylor.<lb/>
Cheyney State's height advantage<lb/>
was apparent by the final margin in<lb/>
rebounding ? 50-29. The Lady<lb/>
Pirates were unable to off more<lb/>
than one shot against their shifting<lb/>
zone.<lb/>
The Lady Wolves also held an ad-<lb/>
vantage in field goal percentage,<lb/>
55.9 percent as compared with 43.3<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
Neither team was effective at the<lb/>
free throw line, as ECU made five<lb/>
of 13 and Cheyney State converted<lb/>
on nine of 19.<lb/>
ECU head coach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
stated after the game that one pre-<lb/>
game strategy was to force the Lady<lb/>
Wolves to foul.<lb/>
"We tried to get the ball inside<lb/>
and draw some fouls Andruzzi<lb/>
said. "But our free throw shooting<lb/>
was poor<lb/>
This weekend's tournament was<lb/>
the second annuaJ Converse Lady<lb/>
Pirate Classic. Last year's event was<lb/>
won by the ECU squad.<lb/>
"We were certainly pleased with<lb/>
the tournament Andruzzi com-<lb/>
mented. "There was a lot of en-<lb/>
thusiasm from all of the teams par-<lb/>
ticipating<lb/>
Andruzzi was disappointed in the<lb/>
outcome of the final game, but<lb/>
realized that Cheyney State was pro-<lb/>
bably ECU's toughest opponent of<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
"They are an excellent team,<lb/>
from top to bottom she said. "We<lb/>
knew that we were going to have to<lb/>
stop their perimeter shooting, but<lb/>
they shot right over us<lb/>
The fifth-year coach was pleased<lb/>
with her squad's effort, even though<lb/>
they came out on the short end of a<lb/>
lopsided score.<lb/>
"Hey, we scored 57 points against<lb/>
a very good team Andruzzi<lb/>
responded. "We took some pretty<lb/>
good shots, but they just wouldn't<lb/>
go in. The same shots were falling<lb/>
last night<lb/>
In the consolation game, the<lb/>
Clemson Lady Tigers took third<lb/>
place with a 83-58 drubbing of the<lb/>
University of Detroit.<lb/>
The Lady Tigers were led by all-<lb/>
tournament selectee Janet Knight,<lb/>
who finished with 23 points and 12<lb/>
rebounds. Clemson is now 9-13,<lb/>
while the Lady Titans from "the<lb/>
Motor City" are 6-16.<lb/>
This weekend's tournament was<lb/>
the latest installment of the "new<lb/>
five With injuries to backcourt<lb/>
starters Loraine Foster and<lb/>
Delphine Mabry, ECU has been<lb/>
forced to play with a new lineup and<lb/>
a depleted roster.<lb/>
"Our kids showed a lot of intensi-<lb/>
ty out there Andruzzi responded.<lb/>
"They played another good game<lb/>
from the heart. The game was never<lb/>
out of reach in our kids' eyes<lb/>
The Lady Pirates return to aciton<lb/>
this Thursday night when they host<lb/>
the Morehead State Lady Eagles.<lb/>
Gametime is 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Pt?e? ft. JA?Y PATTC?SO<lb/>
ECU Fran Hooks in action during this weekend's tournament. The<lb/>
I.adv Pirates finished second out of a field of four teams.<lb/>
Green Returns to Action<lb/>
Vengeful Pirates Crush Baptist Buccaneers<lb/>
The Pirates may have<lb/>
underestimated Baptist College in<lb/>
their last meeting, but they certainly<lb/>
were prepared for Saturday night's<lb/>
second confrontation.<lb/>
With sophomore forward Barry-<lb/>
Wright pumping in a season-high 25<lb/>
points and Johnny Edwards racking<lb/>
up 24, the Bucs came away with a<lb/>
73-59 victory.<lb/>
Unlike the first contest, the<lb/>
Pirates had Charlie Green moving<lb/>
msidc in the second half, which also<lb/>
secured the win. Green, who return-<lb/>
ed alter suffering a separated<lb/>
shoulder, pumped in 10 points, hit-<lb/>
: g three of three from the floor<lb/>
ai . I )ui of six from the foul line.<lb/>
?Getting Charlie Green back<lb/>
helped us a great deal said head<lb/>
coach Charlie Harrison. "He is so<lb/>
quick and he allows us to do other<lb/>
things both offensively and defen-<lb/>
sively. He really helps us on the in-<lb/>
side defensively and he provides us<lb/>
with more rebounding and inside<lb/>
power<lb/>
"The Pirates were down 37-35 at<lb/>
halftime, but came back and<lb/>
outscored Baptist, 12-4, in the first<lb/>
five minutes to pull ahead 47-41.<lb/>
Baptist cut the lead to three points<lb/>
twice, however, ECU outscored<lb/>
Baptists, 14-2, during the next four<lb/>
minutes to give them a 64-51 advan-<lb/>
tage with 3:01 remaining.<lb/>
The Pirates, avenging a previous<lb/>
64-56 loss against Baptist, are now<lb/>
11-11 and ended a two-game losing<lb/>
streak.<lb/>
Harrison was especially pleased<lb/>
with the Bucs' play in the second<lb/>
period. "In the second half, I<lb/>
thought we had better perimeter<lb/>
defense he said. "In the first half,<lb/>
we went after every ball fake, but in<lb/>
the second half we staved down bet-<lb/>
ter on defense.<lb/>
"We saw a play in the first half<lb/>
that we could pick on but the shots<lb/>
didn't fall in the first half. They did<lb/>
the second half<lb/>
The Pirates finished with a 51.2<lb/>
percent shooting average from the<lb/>
floor. Baptist did even better<lb/>
though, hitting 52.3 percent. Each<lb/>
team had 15 turnovers. The dif-<lb/>
ference for the Pirates proved to be<lb/>
on the free throw line. ECU made<lb/>
31 of 38 free throws to Baptist's 13<lb/>
of 17.<lb/>
ECU barely outrebounded the<lb/>
Buccaneers, 26-25. Edwards had<lb/>
nine, while Barcus Beasley grabbed<lb/>
five for Baptist.<lb/>
Wright, who scored 15 of his 25<lb/>
points in the last 20 minutes of the<lb/>
game, hit nine of 10 field goals and<lb/>
seven of nine from the free throw<lb/>
line.<lb/>
Edwards shot 100 percent from<lb/>
the free throw line, sinking 12<lb/>
baskets. From the floor, he was six<lb/>
for 16.<lb/>
Baptist's Reggie Walker, who led<lb/>
the Buccaneers with 16 points, did<lb/>
not play against the Pirates in their<lb/>
first meeting.<lb/>
In the firsl half. Baptist jumped<lb/>
out to a 9-4 lead after scoring five<lb/>
straight points. But the Pirates<lb/>
retaliated and tied the game, 13-13.<lb/>
with less that 13 minutes remaining.<lb/>
?HI TJ<lb/>
H I<lb/>
- <lb/>
- -<lb/>
-<lb/>
 i-Jr - ?<lb/>
k -rrr<lb/>
look<lb/>
tiu w<lb/>
mmi. n i u r<lb/>
Emory Announces 16<lb/>
More Early Recruits<lb/>
East Carolina University head<lb/>
football coach Ed Emory announc-<lb/>
ed last week that 16 more players<lb/>
have signed grants-in-aid to attend<lb/>
ECU next season. That brings the<lb/>
total to 26 who have said they will<lb/>
continue their careers at ECU.<lb/>
Heading the list is Anthony Simp-<lb/>
son, a 5-10, 210-pound full-back<lb/>
from Brooklyn, NY and Thomas<lb/>
Jefferson High School. Simpson, a<lb/>
linebacker throughout his high<lb/>
school career, was switched to<lb/>
fullback during his senior season<lb/>
after intercepting a pass and return-<lb/>
ing it for a touchdown. He was im-<lb/>
mediately moved to the backfield<lb/>
and proceeded to gain over 900<lb/>
yards in a wishbone offense. Many,<lb/>
including Simpson's high school<lb/>
coach, believe that he is the most<lb/>
physical back to come out of Jeffer-<lb/>
son High since John Brockington<lb/>
(Ohio State-Green Bay packers).<lb/>
Many believe that Simpson is better.<lb/>
Simpson made the "Big 44 the<lb/>
top 44 players in the city of New<lb/>
York and was all-Scholastic twice by<lb/>
the New York Daily New Simpson<lb/>
is a June nominee for the Iron<lb/>
Horse Award, presented annually to<lb/>
the finest high school football<lb/>
player in the city of New York.<lb/>
Simpson joins teammate Joe<lb/>
Grinage with the Pirates, who was<lb/>
released yesterday. Simpson chose<lb/>
East Carolina over Michigan and<lb/>
Syracuse.<lb/>
Also leading the group is Leon<lb/>
Hall, a 6-5, 240-pound defensive<lb/>
tackle from Bayside High School in<lb/>
Flushing, NY. Hall, also a track<lb/>
standout, was listed by Blue Chips<lb/>
Magazine as one of the best defen-<lb/>
sive linemen in the country.<lb/>
Other defensive linemen signed<lb/>
include Joe Grinage, a 6-3,<lb/>
235-pounder from Brooklyn, NY<lb/>
and Thomas Jefferson High School.<lb/>
Grinage, captain of the New York<lb/>
Senior Bowl and all-City offensive<lb/>
line, was named to the "Big 44<lb/>
the top 44 players in the City of New<lb/>
York. Another NY linesman is<lb/>
Henry Ferraro, a 6-4, 220-pound<lb/>
tackle from Inwood, NY and<lb/>
Lawrence High School. Ferraro was<lb/>
all-Long Island, all-County,<lb/>
Hicksville MVP, MVP of the Farm-<lb/>
ingdale Championship game and led<lb/>
his squad to four 1A Conference<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
Offensive linemen include Dave<lb/>
Skenadore, a 6-3, 260-pounder from<lb/>
Granby High School in Granby, VA<lb/>
and Rom Lundy, a 6-15,<lb/>
235-pounder from Havelock High<lb/>
School in Havelock, NC. Skenadore<lb/>
was first-team Eastern Region, all-<lb/>
Tidewater and honorable mention<lb/>
all-State. Lundy was all-East<lb/>
honorable mention, team captain<lb/>
and all 3A Conference.<lb/>
Three linebackers were also sign-<lb/>
ed: Essray Taliafero, a 6-0,<lb/>
200-pounder from Smithfield High<lb/>
School in Smithfield, VA, Vinson<lb/>
Smith, a 6-1, 210-pounder from<lb/>
Statesville High School in<lb/>
Stsatesville, NC, and Glenn Geist, a<lb/>
6-4, 222-pounder from North<lb/>
Schuykill High School in Ashland,<lb/>
PA. Taliafero was all-District and<lb/>
MVP of his squad while Smith earn-<lb/>
ed all-State, all-Piedmont, all-<lb/>
Conference and team MVP honors.<lb/>
Smith was also a pre-season all-<lb/>
America. Geist was named to the<lb/>
all-East squad, and to the all-<lb/>
Anthracite and all-County teams.<lb/>
Walker then pumped in two<lb/>
jumpshots as Baptist sparked an<lb/>
8-point spurt.<lb/>
Now up, 21-16. ECU narraowed<lb/>
the lead to three but Walker scored<lb/>
six points to keep the Buccaneers<lb/>
up, 29-22<lb/>
Edwards made two baskets to cut<lb/>
the lead to four, but Baptist rallied<lb/>
for six points to go up. 3-29 ?<lb/>
their biggest lead in the first period<lb/>
The Pirates m11 pd confer.<lb/>
foe Richmond this Wednesday, night<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum Gametime is<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
? 2 0 1 10<lb/>
I l? ? -3<lb/>
MP ?(. FT ? t 1 Fi<lb/>
SVr?W-<lb/>
- ? a<lb/>
 .<lb/>
S A <lb/>
v ?<lb/>
loub<lb/>
-<lb/>
Bucs Dump Detroit<lb/>
ECU forward Charles Green returned to acton Saturday night after<lb/>
missing four weeks due to a separated shoulder.<lb/>
He participated in the Two-County<lb/>
all-Star game.<lb/>
The Pirates inked highly-recruited<lb/>
Ron Jones, a 5-10, 180-pound<lb/>
quarterback from Portsmouth, Va<lb/>
and Norcom High School. Jones<lb/>
was second-team all-State as well as<lb/>
the Portsmouth Sports Club<lb/>
"Player of the Year Jones also<lb/>
made all-Tidewater and first-team<lb/>
all-Eastern Region.<lb/>
Several junior college players will<lb/>
transfer to ECU. Among them arc<lb/>
Tyrone Johnson, a 6-0, 230-pound<lb/>
linebacker from Hines Junior Col-<lb/>
lege, Greg Sokoklohorsky, a 6-5,<lb/>
290-pound offensive lineman from<lb/>
West Chester Junior College, and<lb/>
Ricky Hilburn, a 6-5, 273-pound of-<lb/>
fensive lineman from Chowan<lb/>
Junior Cololege. Johnson was an<lb/>
honorable mention junior college<lb/>
all-America and played in the<lb/>
Mississippi Junior College all-Star<lb/>
game. He was all-State and all-<lb/>
Region and led Hines in tackles in<lb/>
1982. Johnson was all-Warren<lb/>
County, all-Delta Zone and all-Cap<lb/>
Eight Conference for Vicksburg<lb/>
High School. Sokolohorsky, a<lb/>
massive offensive lineman, was an<lb/>
all-League choice in 1980 while win-<lb/>
ning the coaches Award.<lb/>
Sokolohorsky was also all-League<lb/>
for the North Rockland High<lb/>
School lacrosse team in Garnerville,<lb/>
NY. Hilburn, a Chadbourn, NC<lb/>
native, was an honorable mention<lb/>
Junior College all-America and par-<lb/>
ticipated in the Coastal Junior Col-<lb/>
lege all-Star game. Hilburn was all-<lb/>
Region and all-Conference and<lb/>
Most Valuable Offensive Lineman<lb/>
for Chowan.<lb/>
Also signed is Henry Williams, a<lb/>
5-6, 176-pound wide receiver-punt<lb/>
returner from Northwest Junior<lb/>
College in Senatobia, Mississiplpi,<lb/>
and Ed Varnes, a 6-0, 192-pound<lb/>
defensive back standout from Lecs-<lb/>
McCrae Junior College. Williams,<lb/>
currently running track for the<lb/>
Pirates, led Northwest to the Na-<lb/>
tional Junior College Championship<lb/>
game in which they defeated Ferrum<lb/>
Junior College. Williams was a<lb/>
member of the National Junior Col-<lb/>
lege all-Star team and was MVP of<lb/>
the Northwest track squad. He<lb/>
holds the Mississippi state juco<lb/>
See TOP, Page 11<lb/>
In the opening contest ot the<lb/>
Ladv Pirate Converse Classic, the<lb/>
Bucs advanced to the championship<lb/>
game by a resounding win over<lb/>
Detroit, 95-51.<lb/>
Leading. 39-26, at halftime. the<lb/>
Bucs blew the second period wide<lb/>
open with five players winding up in<lb/>
double figures.<lb/>
ECU's Mary Denkler was<lb/>
10-for-18 from trie floor to score 24<lb/>
points, putting her over the<lb/>
1600-point mark in her career (See<lb/>
Related Article). Denkler also pull-<lb/>
ed down 15 rebounds.<lb/>
Sylvia Bragg, who had just four<lb/>
points at halftime, nailed six field<lb/>
goals in the final period, with four<lb/>
during the first three minutes of the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
Sophomore forward Darlene<lb/>
Chaney added 18 points and grabb-<lb/>
ed nine rebounds while her team-<lb/>
mate, senior Fran Hooks, followed<lb/>
with 16. Freshman Lisa Squirewell<lb/>
scored 10 points during her 16<lb/>
minutes of play and made six of<lb/>
eight freethrows.<lb/>
The Pirates broke two of<lb/>
Detroit's single game records. The<lb/>
95-point total edged out ODU's<lb/>
90-point win in 1979, and the<lb/>
44-point margin surpassed Kansas<lb/>
State's 35-point advantage in 1981.<lb/>
Overall, the Lady Pirates shot 53<lb/>
percent from the floor, including<lb/>
65.5 percent in the second half.<lb/>
Detroit, on the other hand shot a<lb/>
low 35 percent for the game.<lb/>
Every player on the team had the<lb/>
chance to score and Head Basket-<lb/>
ball Coach Cathy Andruzzi was<lb/>
more satisfied than she's been all<lb/>
season about their performance.<lb/>
"I think the girls played the best<lb/>
game they've played all season<lb/>
she said. "They played mroc<lb/>
unified, and they played smart<lb/>
basketball.<lb/>
"Everybody was a player tonight.<lb/>
They played with a great deal of<lb/>
heart and intensity<lb/>
Andruzzi commended Hooks for<lb/>
her efforts aga'nst Detroit. "She did<lb/>
a tremendous job out there in con-<lb/>
trolling the ball she said. "I knew<lb/>
thev'd come at us with a full court<lb/>
press and we broke it. We played to<lb/>
win and we played to win as a<lb/>
team<lb/>
The starting five who are now<lb/>
Sylvia Bragg, Darlene Chanev.<lb/>
Mary Denkler. Fran Hooks and<lb/>
Karen Trusk were impressive as a<lb/>
team and Andruzzi was glad to see<lb/>
the players looking for each other<lb/>
on the court. "They are just now<lb/>
seeing their potential. They're still<lb/>
young, but anything's possible.<lb/>
They needed this for themselves.<lb/>
They won as a team with a lot of<lb/>
consistency.<lb/>
The Bucs got into a fast break<lb/>
several times against Detroit ?<lb/>
something Andruzzi has been wan-<lb/>
ting to see more of. "That's the firsl<lb/>
time this year she said. "We ran<lb/>
the ball well, got good shots or<lb/>
brought it back outside<lb/>
One reason for the team's im-<lb/>
proved play is because of Chanev's<lb/>
outstanding performances and the<lb/>
leadership she's exemplified out on<lb/>
the court. "Chaney has made the<lb/>
whole difference in our team An-<lb/>
druzzi said.<lb/>
Against Detroit, the Pirates caus-<lb/>
ed the Lady Titans to make 19 tur-<lb/>
novers, while ECU had six. Andruz-<lb/>
zi credited her assistant, Beth Burns,<lb/>
for her thorough scouting job. "We<lb/>
knew their strengths and<lb/>
weaknesses Andruzzi sard. "We<lb/>
knew where our advantages were<lb/>
In rebounding, the Bucs pulled<lb/>
down 45 to Detroit's 31. Bragg led<lb/>
the team in assists with five.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, making 14 of<lb/>
18 shots, built a 71-36 lead in the<lb/>
first nine minutes of the second<lb/>
half. But the Titans onlv made five<lb/>
of 13 baskets in the stretch.<lb/>
In the last 10 minutes, the Bucs<lb/>
maintained their marginal lead over<lb/>
the Titans, and surpassed the<lb/>
90-point marks after Riu Simmons<lb/>
Tmske and Bra?g combined for<lb/>
nine freethrows in the final thr<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
J<lb/>
I ad Pirate fon?i<lb/>
Pirate (. lassie<lb/>
State<lb/>
Recn<lb/>
RALEIGH<lb/>
(UPI) ? 1<lb/>
!<lb/>
Ca' a S L nl<lb/>
l<lb/>
lie dui<lb/>
N 82<lb/>
North Cat<lb/>
Co CI a i<lb/>
Jenkins sa d Mq<lb/>
As. v. (<lb/>
Rober: lantM j<lb/>
ur. j<lb/>
the v oe<lb/>
7-C to rep<lb/>
The rer <lb/>
?<lb/>
NCAA coe<lb/>
pro jmg<lb/>
than the -<lb/>
number ol<lb/>
c<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ftti<lb/>
v<lb/>
.<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Brin<lb/>
Ha<lb/>
T<lb/>
1<lb/>
Ki????m<lb/>
'??-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0012"/><lb/>
IMfc tASl IAKOI INIAN<lb/>
KtBRLARY 15. I9?3<lb/>
11<lb/>
Title<lb/>
1<lb/>
kend s tournament I he<lb/>
.irriN<lb/>
wneers<lb/>
MP ? v y pi<lb/>
I :<lb/>
IV-41 MM : 1? ?J<lb/>
vif h, n r t n<lb/>
Detroit<lb/>
Ilev'd .ome a:<lb/>
I)<lb/>
enk.<lb/>
I<lb/>
"Thev art<lb/>
otemia I<lb/>
anything<lb/>
?<lb/>
 trier<lb/>
?<lb/>
l ' -<lb/>
Vs ed to<lb/>
i<lb/>
who arc now<lb/>
mev,<lb/>
? and<lb/>
as a<lb/>
see<lb/>
i ther<lb/>
now<lb/>
still<lb/>
? ble.<lb/>
?<lb/>
ved<lb/>
i rasi<lb/>
: i i ' Detroit <lb/>
i  ? .en wan-<lb/>
see more of "That<lb/>
lid<lb/>
or<lb/>
t bach outside.1<lb/>
the team's im-<lb/>
mse of Chaney's<lb/>
performances and the<lb/>
18 exemplified out on<lb/>
haney has made the<lb/>
lole c e in our team An-<lb/>
aid.<lb/>
gainst Detroit, the Pirates caus-<lb/>
the Lad Titans to make 19 tur-<lb/>
ners, while ECL had six. Andruz-<lb/>
-redited her assistant. Beth Burns.<lb/>
jr her thorough scouting job. "We<lb/>
Few their strengths and<lb/>
eaknesses Andruzzi said. "We<lb/>
m where our advantages were "<lb/>
n rebounding, the Bucs pulled<lb/>
n 45 to Detroit's 31 Bragg led<lb/>
ffe team in assists with five.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, making U of<lb/>
hots, built a 71-36 lead in the<lb/>
st nine minutes of the second<lb/>
If. But the Titans only made five<lb/>
13 baskets in the stretch.<lb/>
In the last 10 minutes, the Bucs<lb/>
laintained their marginal lead over<lb/>
le Titans, and surpassed the<lb/>
-point marks after Rha Simmons<lb/>
fuske and Bragg combined for<lb/>
Se freethrows m the final thr<lb/>
knutes.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Razorbacks Defeat<lb/>
Duke In Tourney<lb/>
NORTH LITTLE<lb/>
ROCK, Ark. (UPI) -<lb/>
Arkansas tennis coach<lb/>
Tom Pucci said his<lb/>
Razorbacks played<lb/>
with intensity and con-<lb/>
sistency in downing<lb/>
Duke University 8-1<lb/>
and winning the sixth<lb/>
Wal-Mart Collegiate<lb/>
Classic tennis tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Arkansas, which lost<lb/>
6-3 to Wichita State in<lb/>
its first team defeat of<lb/>
the season on Friday,<lb/>
posted a team total of<lb/>
32 Sunday to win the<lb/>
five-day tournament at<lb/>
Burns Park Tennis<lb/>
Center in North Little<lb/>
Rock.<lb/>
Southern Ulinois-<lb/>
Edwardsville, finished<lb/>
second in the tourna-<lb/>
ment with 27 points,<lb/>
followed by Wichita<lb/>
State with 26, Duke<lb/>
and Michigan with 16<lb/>
each and Oklahoma<lb/>
State with 15.<lb/>
Arkansas opened the<lb/>
tournament with 8-1<lb/>
wins in its first two<lb/>
matches against<lb/>
Michigan and<lb/>
Oklahoma State. After<lb/>
falling to Wichita State<lb/>
Friday, the Razorbacks<lb/>
slipped past SIU-<lb/>
Edwardsville 5-4 on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
In the match against<lb/>
Duke on Sunday, the<lb/>
Razorbacks won each<lb/>
match against the Blue<lb/>
Devils except for No. 1<lb/>
singles, where Duke's<lb/>
Marc Flur downed<lb/>
Arkansas' Peter<lb/>
Doohan 6-4 6-3.<lb/>
In other matches<lb/>
Sunday, Wichita State<lb/>
defeated Michigan 6-3,<lb/>
and SIU-Edwardsville<lb/>
downed Oklahoma<lb/>
State 5-1, with the<lb/>
doubles matches<lb/>
cancelled.<lb/>
Top Players<lb/>
Decide To<lb/>
Play At ECU<lb/>
Continued From Page 10<lb/>
record in the 220 in<lb/>
20.6 and placed third at<lb/>
the juco nationals in<lb/>
20.9. He also holds the<lb/>
Mississippi state high<lb/>
school long jump<lb/>
record of 24'5<lb/>
Varnes is an all-Region<lb/>
and all-Conference<lb/>
selection from Lees<lb/>
McCrae. He played in<lb/>
the Coastal Juco all-<lb/>
Star game. Varnes is<lb/>
from Lake Butler, FL.<lb/>
Cornell Brockington,<lb/>
a 5-11, 188-pound<lb/>
fullback from<lb/>
Elizabeth High School<lb/>
in Elizabeth, NJ is<lb/>
another recruit stan-<lb/>
dout. Brockington<lb/>
played in the New<lb/>
Jersey state all-Star<lb/>
game and was all-<lb/>
County, all-Conference<lb/>
and all-metropolitan<lb/>
Area. Brockington is<lb/>
the 26th player signed<lb/>
by East Carolina.<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ITALIAN FEAS'<lb/>
5P.M9P.M.<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
1 ?SPAGHETTKChoice WITH<lb/>
A 'LASAGNA of 3 L<lb/>
dL'RAVIOLA S"11") can<lb/>
jO.with Garlic Bread ?Ay<lb/>
Yn<lb/>
Pftf<lb/>
<lb/>
mm! "rat;<lb/>
ALL-YOl-CAN-EAT<lb/>
FLOUNDER - <lb/>
DINNER 3.W<lb/>
Lad Pirate forward Darlene Chaney pulls down a rebound in Saturda nigh<lb/>
Pirate Classic.<lb/>
State Charged With<lb/>
Recruiting Violations<lb/>
Photo by GABY PATTERSON<lb/>
t's opening round of the Converse Ladv<lb/>
Complete Automotive<lb/>
Service<lb/>
24 hr. Towing Service<lb/>
Jarlran Rentals Available<lb/>
Buck's<lb/>
Gulf<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
205<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Blvd.<lb/>
2704 E. 10th St<lb/>
758 1033<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C.<lb/>
(UPI) ? The Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference has<lb/>
issued a public repri-<lb/>
mand to North<lb/>
Carolina State Univer-<lb/>
sity for recruiting viola-<lb/>
tions during the<lb/>
1981-82 school year.<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
Counsel Clauston<lb/>
Jenkins said Monday<lb/>
ACC Commissioner<lb/>
Robert James told the<lb/>
university by letter that<lb/>
the conference voted<lb/>
7-0 to reprimand it.<lb/>
The reprimand was<lb/>
"for violations of the<lb/>
NCAA contact rule and<lb/>
for providing more<lb/>
than the allowable<lb/>
number of campus<lb/>
visits to a prospective<lb/>
student-athlete<lb/>
Jenkins said.<lb/>
He said the universi-<lb/>
ty would not comment<lb/>
further on the matter<lb/>
because North Carolina<lb/>
State must appear later<lb/>
this month before the<lb/>
NCAA's Committee on<lb/>
Infractions.<lb/>
Jenkins said North<lb/>
Carolina State's own<lb/>
investigation indicated<lb/>
the school violated the<lb/>
rules in the recruitment<lb/>
of one player. Former<lb/>
football coach Monte<lb/>
Kiffin has identified<lb/>
that player as Reggie<lb/>
Singletary, a defensive<lb/>
tackle from the<lb/>
Whiteville area.<lb/>
James said the con-<lb/>
ference voted for the<lb/>
reprimand last Friday<lb/>
during its meeting in<lb/>
Florida. North<lb/>
Carolina State did not<lb/>
participate in the<lb/>
voting, he said.<lb/>
He said the con-<lb/>
ference decided to act<lb/>
independently of the<lb/>
NCAA because "there<lb/>
should be some<lb/>
acknowledgement" of<lb/>
the publicity attendant<lb/>
to the alleged viola-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
He said the con-<lb/>
ference members made<lb/>
their decision based on<lb/>
the information North<lb/>
Carolina State sent to<lb/>
the NCAA.<lb/>
1$k<lb/>
We Are Now Open 11:00 a.m.<lb/>
to9:00p.m.<lb/>
arcs<lb/>
FINE<lb/>
FOODS<lb/>
Located in Georgetown Shoppes<lb/>
Across From the Highrise Dorms.<lb/>
We are now serving<lb/>
genuine homemade Italian<lb/>
spagetti and lasagna dinners.<lb/>
We have a 31 item salad bar that nicely complements our<lb/>
new Italian dinners.<lb/>
Come on down and<lb/>
give us a try.<lb/>
You'll Love It!<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
AOir<lb/>
Big Brothers<lb/>
present<lb/>
Lonely Hearts<lb/>
Club Night<lb/>
For All the Lonely Hearts after<lb/>
Valentine's Day<lb/>
Tue. Feb. IS, 1983 9:00-l:00am<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR PRICES<lb/>
Adm. $.50<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
Aitch.<lb/>
Hair Styling<lb/>
?M<lb/>
s<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
756-3050<lb/>
2 For 1 Coupons From Pizza Transit Authority!<lb/>
Wednesday, when ECU PLAYS RICHMOND<lb/>
in Minges Colisuem at 7:30.<lb/>
Bring A Friend Special<lb/>
2 Haircuts<lb/>
for the price of 1<lb/>
Haircuts Regular $4.00<lb/>
Tuesday-Saturday<lb/>
L Ad I Vi MA IN WE to sign up for Budweiser beer case<lb/>
stacking contest! Must sign up by 5:00pm Wednesday<lb/>
for round one on Thursday when the LADY<lb/>
PIRATES PLAY MOREHEAD STATE<lb/>
at 7:30pm.<lb/>
WIN TRIP TO DALLAS ?mw<lb/>
Saturday when ECU PLAYS NAVY 7:30pm.<lb/>
Given by Delta Airlines and Greenville Travel Center.<lb/>
Watch the Pirates attack.<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
??MtoMpMHt0HfMt-l<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0013"/><lb/>
ntie<lb/>
aneers<lb/>
Detroit<lb/>
?<lb/>
B<lb/>
r e n g 11 :<lb/>
-<lb/>
 I ad P rates mal g 14 ol<lb/>
id in the<lb/>
nine minutes of the second<lb/>
But the Titans onlv made five<lb/>
l kets in the stretch<lb/>
1st 10 minutes, the Bucs<lb/>
ed their marginal lead over<lb/>
Titans, and surpassed the<lb/>
marks after Rita Simmons<lb/>
ske and Bragg combined tor<lb/>
: treethrows m the final thr?<lb/>
i tes<lb/>
I Ht 1AM V AKII INIA<lb/>
FhHKl ARY IV IVfO<lb/>
11<lb/>
Razorbacks Defeat<lb/>
Duke In Tourney<lb/>
NORTH LITTLE<lb/>
ROCK, Ark. (UPI) ?<lb/>
Arkansas tennis coach<lb/>
Tom Pucci said his<lb/>
Razorbacks played<lb/>
with intensity and con-<lb/>
sistency in downing<lb/>
Duke University 8-1<lb/>
and winning the sixth<lb/>
Wal-Mart Collegiate<lb/>
Classic tennis tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Arkansas, which lost<lb/>
6-3 to Wichita State in<lb/>
its first team defeat of<lb/>
the season on Friday,<lb/>
posted a team total of<lb/>
32 Sunday to win the<lb/>
five-day tournament at<lb/>
Burns Park Tennis<lb/>
Center in North Little<lb/>
Rock.<lb/>
Southern Illinois-<lb/>
Edwardsville, finished<lb/>
second in the tourna-<lb/>
ment with 27 points,<lb/>
followed by Wichita<lb/>
State with 26, Duke<lb/>
and Michigan with 16<lb/>
each and Oklahoma<lb/>
State with 15<lb/>
Arkansas opened the<lb/>
tournament with 8-1<lb/>
wins in its first two<lb/>
matches against<lb/>
Michigan and<lb/>
Oklahoma State. After<lb/>
fall:ng to Wichita State<lb/>
Friday, the Razorbacks<lb/>
slipped past SIU -<lb/>
Edwardsville 5-4 on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
In the match against<lb/>
Duke on Sunday, the<lb/>
Razorbacks won each<lb/>
match against the Blue<lb/>
Devils except for No 1<lb/>
singles, where Duke's<lb/>
Marc Flur downed<lb/>
Arkansas' Peter<lb/>
Doohan 6-4 6-3<lb/>
In other matches<lb/>
Sunday, Wichita State<lb/>
defeated Michigan 6-3,<lb/>
and SILEdwardsviile<lb/>
downed Oklahoma<lb/>
State 5-1, with the<lb/>
doubles matches<lb/>
cancelled.<lb/>
Top Players<lb/>
Decide To<lb/>
Play At ECU<lb/>
Continued From Page 10<lb/>
record in the 220 in<lb/>
20.6 and placed third at<lb/>
the juco nationals in<lb/>
20.9. He also holds the<lb/>
Mississippi state high<lb/>
school long jump<lb/>
record of 24'5<lb/>
Varnes is an all-Region<lb/>
and all-Conference<lb/>
selection from Lees<lb/>
McCrae. He played in<lb/>
the Coastal Juco all-<lb/>
Star game. Varnes is<lb/>
from Lake Butler, FL.<lb/>
Cornell Brockington,<lb/>
a 5-11, 188-pound<lb/>
fullback from<lb/>
Elizabeth High School<lb/>
in Elizabeth, NJ is<lb/>
another recruit stan-<lb/>
dout. Brockington<lb/>
played in the New<lb/>
Jersey state all-Star<lb/>
game and was all-<lb/>
County, all-Conference<lb/>
and all-metropolitan<lb/>
Area. Brockington is<lb/>
the 26th player signed<lb/>
by East Carolina.<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ITALIAN FEAS<lb/>
5P.M9P.M.<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
J, ?SPAGHETTI(Choice W,TH<lb/>
' ?LASAGNA of 3 J.<lb/>
?RAVIOLA Sauces) JJj<lb/>
ith Garlic Bread cat<lb/>
Photo By GAR PATTERSON<lb/>
I ad Pirate forward Darlenehane pulls down a rebound in Saturdav night's opening round of the Converse I ad<lb/>
Piratelassie.<lb/>
Complete Automotive<lb/>
Service<lb/>
24 hr. Towing Sen ice<lb/>
Jarlran Reniah Available<lb/>
liOi E. '0th St<lb/>
758 1033<lb/>
Buck's<lb/>
Gulf<lb/>
AIX YOl-t AN EAT<lb/>
FLOUNDER - <lb/>
DINNER 3.VV<lb/>
6H0NEYS<lb/>
205<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Blvd.<lb/>
State Charged With<lb/>
Recruiting Violations<lb/>
RAl EIGH, N.C.<lb/>
(UPI) The Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference has<lb/>
issued a public repri-<lb/>
mand to North<lb/>
Carolina State Univer-<lb/>
sity for recruiting viola-<lb/>
tions during the<lb/>
1981-82 school year.<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
Counsel Clauston<lb/>
Jenkins said Monda<lb/>
ACC Commissioner<lb/>
Robert James told the<lb/>
university b letter that<lb/>
the conference voted<lb/>
7-0 to reprimand it.<lb/>
The reprimand was<lb/>
"for violations of the<lb/>
NCAA contact rule and<lb/>
for providing more<lb/>
than the allowable<lb/>
visits to a prospective<lb/>
student-athlete,1<lb/>
Jenkins said.<lb/>
He said the universi-<lb/>
ty would not comment<lb/>
further on the matter<lb/>
because North Carolina<lb/>
State must appear later<lb/>
this month before the<lb/>
NCAA's Committee on<lb/>
Infractions.<lb/>
Jenkins said North<lb/>
Carolina State's own<lb/>
investigation indicated<lb/>
the school violated the<lb/>
rules in the recruitment<lb/>
of one plaver former<lb/>
football coach Monte<lb/>
Kiffin has identified<lb/>
that player as Reggie<lb/>
Singletary, a defensive<lb/>
tackle from the<lb/>
James said the con-<lb/>
ference voted for the<lb/>
reprimand last Fndav<lb/>
during its meeting in<lb/>
Florida. North<lb/>
Carolina State did not<lb/>
participate in the<lb/>
voting, he said.<lb/>
He said the con-<lb/>
ference decided to act<lb/>
independently o the<lb/>
NCAA because there<lb/>
should be some<lb/>
acknowledgement" o<lb/>
the publicity attendant<lb/>
to the alleged viola-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
He said the con-<lb/>
ference members made<lb/>
their decision based on<lb/>
the information North<lb/>
Carolina State sent to<lb/>
the NCAA.<lb/>
We Are Now Open 11:00 a.m.<lb/>
to 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
aros<lb/>
FINE<lb/>
FOODS<lb/>
Located in Georgetown Shoppes<lb/>
Across From the Highrise Dorms.<lb/>
We are now serving<lb/>
genuine homemade Italian<lb/>
spagetti and lasagna dinners.<lb/>
We have a 31 item salad bar that nicely complements our<lb/>
new Italian dinners.<lb/>
Come on down and<lb/>
give.usa try.<lb/>
You'll Love It!<lb/>
AOTT<lb/>
Big Brothers<lb/>
present<lb/>
Lonely Hearts<lb/>
Club Night<lb/>
For All the Lonely Hearts after<lb/>
Valentine's Day<lb/>
Tue. Feb. IS, 1983 9:00- 1:00am<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR PRICES<lb/>
Adm. $.50<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
number of campus Whiteville area.<lb/>
<lb/>
H<lb/>
V.<lb/>
Bring A Friend Special<lb/>
<lb/>
it<lb/>
<lb/>
S <lb/>
 V<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Han Styling<lb/>
756-3050<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
2 For 1 Coupons From Pizza Transit Authority!<lb/>
Wednesday, when ECU PLAYS RICHMOND<lb/>
in Minges Colisuem at 7:30.<lb/>
LAj I WllVNIWt to sign up for Budweiser beer case<lb/>
stacking contest! Must sign up by 5:00pm Wednesday<lb/>
for round one on Thursday when the LADY<lb/>
PIRATES PLAY MOREHEAD STATE<lb/>
2 Haircuts J<lb/>
<lb/>
for the price of 1 <lb/>
<lb/>
Haircuts Regular $4.00 ?<lb/>
<lb/>
Tuesday-Saturday <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
at 7:30pm.<lb/>
WIN TRIP TO DALLAS ???<lb/>
Saturday when ECU PLAYS NAVY 7:30pm.<lb/>
Given by Delta Airlines and Greenville Travel Center.<lb/>
Watch the Pirates attack.<lb/>
XI<lb/>
V h :<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0014"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 15. 1983<lb/>
Denkler Adds Needed Stability<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Staff WrtMr<lb/>
ECU'S second all-<lb/>
time leading scorer<lb/>
Mary Denlker has once<lb/>
more become the stabl-<lb/>
ing force on the Lady<lb/>
Pirates basketball<lb/>
team. Despite changes<lb/>
in the starting lineup,<lb/>
Denkler, a 6-0 forward,<lb/>
has maintained a 21.6<lb/>
point scoring and 7.1<lb/>
rebounds per game<lb/>
average.<lb/>
The Street and Smith<lb/>
preseason All-America<lb/>
candidate is connecting<lb/>
on 53.5 percent of her<lb/>
field goal attempts and<lb/>
is shooting nearly 80<lb/>
percent from the free<lb/>
throw line.<lb/>
Last year, Denkler<lb/>
was named to the<lb/>
Women's Basketball<lb/>
News Service All-<lb/>
America team, as well<lb/>
as making several all-<lb/>
tournament teams. She<lb/>
has ranked as high as<lb/>
fourth in the nation in<lb/>
scoring this year, and<lb/>
has scored in double<lb/>
figures 66 of the last 70<lb/>
games in which she has<lb/>
played.<lb/>
Denkler said she<lb/>
became interested in<lb/>
playing basketball<lb/>
because of her three<lb/>
older brothers. "They<lb/>
used to shoot around<lb/>
all the time, and the<lb/>
more I played with<lb/>
them, the more I began<lb/>
to like the game<lb/>
Denkler began playing<lb/>
organized ball in<lb/>
seventh grade for her<lb/>
school team.<lb/>
Denkler, from Arl-<lb/>
ington. Virginia, at-<lb/>
tended Bishop<lb/>
O'Connell High<lb/>
School Since she<lb/>
plaved for a private<lb/>
school, she didn't get<lb/>
that much exposure<lb/>
and wasn't heavily<lb/>
recruited.<lb/>
Denkler decided to<lb/>
attend George<lb/>
Washington University<lb/>
and had even signed<lb/>
with them, but then she<lb/>
and Phil Mueller met.<lb/>
Meuller, a former<lb/>
wrestling Ail-American<lb/>
from ECU, began<lb/>
coaching at Denkler's<lb/>
high school her senior<lb/>
year. Mueller saw<lb/>
Denlker play and ar-<lb/>
ranged a meeting bet-<lb/>
ween her and Lady<lb/>
Pirate head coach<lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi.<lb/>
Denkler liked the ECU<lb/>
campus and decided to<lb/>
come here instead.<lb/>
Adjusting to college<lb/>
life wasn't that hard for<lb/>
Denkler. "At first I<lb/>
didn't like being that<lb/>
far away from home,<lb/>
but I adapted pretty<lb/>
quickly. As for playing<lb/>
basketball, the only dif-<lb/>
ference from high<lb/>
school is that you have<lb/>
to be more intense and<lb/>
be mentally ready for<lb/>
every game<lb/>
As a freshman,<lb/>
Denkler was one of the<lb/>
first people off the<lb/>
bench, and she moved<lb/>
into a starting role her<lb/>
sophomore year.<lb/>
"Mary has gradually<lb/>
improved each year in-<lb/>
to one of the greatest<lb/>
players in ECU<lb/>
history said Coach<lb/>
Andruzzi.<lb/>
Denkler, who has a<lb/>
career average of 15.0<lb/>
points and 7.0 re-<lb/>
bounds per game, has<lb/>
been praised by coaches<lb/>
across the country.<lb/>
"Mary Denkler is one<lb/>
of the finest offensive<lb/>
players we've faced.<lb/>
She is as creative as anv<lb/>
forward in the country,<lb/>
and is an absolute<lb/>
scorer who will burn<lb/>
you outside, inside or<lb/>
off :he drive said<lb/>
Georgia head basket-<lb/>
ball coach A n d <lb/>
Landers.<lb/>
Notre Dame coach<lb/>
Mary Distdanisalo<lb/>
stated, "Mary Denkler<lb/>
has made the most of<lb/>
her talent. That's a<lb/>
coach's dream. She's<lb/>
tenacious, aggressive<lb/>
and is the kind of<lb/>
player who always goes<lb/>
that extra mile<lb/>
Denkler just recently<lb/>
became the second<lb/>
leading scorer in ECU<lb/>
history, and now has<lb/>
1,634 points; but she<lb/>
said that wasn't one of<lb/>
her goals at the beginn-<lb/>
ing of the season. "My<lb/>
goal is to do the best 1<lb/>
can every time 1 play. 1<lb/>
get as many rebounds<lb/>
as 1 can, play tough<lb/>
defense and just try to<lb/>
have an all around<lb/>
good game<lb/>
"Mary Denkler is<lb/>
one of the finest players<lb/>
I've worked with said<lb/>
Andruzzi. "She has graduate after the se-<lb/>
great intensity on the cond semester of sum-<lb/>
floor, and always puts<lb/>
forth a tremendous ef-<lb/>
fort<lb/>
Denkler, who is call-<lb/>
ed "Denk" by her<lb/>
teammates and friends,<lb/>
said she picked up that<lb/>
nickname in high<lb/>
school. "That's what<lb/>
everyone used to call<lb/>
my brothers, so when I<lb/>
entered high school<lb/>
people just started call-<lb/>
ing me that. The name<lb/>
carried over to college<lb/>
and now everyone here<lb/>
at ECU calls me<lb/>
"Denk<lb/>
Denkler, who is an<lb/>
Urban Planning major,<lb/>
carries a 3.0 grade<lb/>
point average. She will<lb/>
mer school, and she<lb/>
hopes to enter graduate<lb/>
school in the fall.<lb/>
Denkler does not talk<lb/>
about this year's season<lb/>
with disappointment.<lb/>
"We've had injuries to<lb/>
a few key people, and<lb/>
the freshmen have had<lb/>
to come right in and be<lb/>
expected to contribute.<lb/>
We've played a very<lb/>
tough schedule, and<lb/>
have lost a couple of<lb/>
close games we should<lb/>
have won<lb/>
When talking of<lb/>
Mary Denkler, Coach<lb/>
Andruzzi has nothing<lb/>
but praise to offer.<lb/>
"I've known Mary for<lb/>
four years and 1 have a<lb/>
great deal of respect for<lb/>
her. She is a fine<lb/>
student-athlete who has<lb/>
set good goals for<lb/>
herself. If each person<lb/>
on the team would give<lb/>
a little of what Mary<lb/>
Denkler has con-<lb/>
tributed to ECU. Pirate<lb/>
basketball will go a<lb/>
long way<lb/>
??<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Mary Denkler<lb/>
flj THE I OS<lb/>
cv<lb/>
V:<lb/>
DIET<lb/>
CENTER-<lb/>
B.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
to<lb/>
LIGHTNING J<lb/>
?<lb/>
attic<lb/>
752 () 7303<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
Will be available<lb/>
at your favorite retailor<lb/>
on March 10th<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
WELLS<lb/>
SH<lb/>
JOE<lb/>
ALITY<lb/>
E REPAIR<lb/>
S l) <lb/>
MIDI Kl l? UK<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758 1228<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
LEFTY<lb/>
!?????!<lb/>
 students<lb/>
SI.00 udmissiiin<lb/>
THUR.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 We are looking forward <lb/>
to serving you.<lb/>
?<lb/>
 I Ki KCMMM UniTS ?<lb/>
GRADUATE<lb/>
TO GOLD<lb/>
AND<lb/>
DIAMONDS!<lb/>
With a Diamond College Ring<lb/>
from ArtCarved.<lb/>
Your ArtCarved Representative<lb/>
s here now With the beautifully aflord-<lb/>
able Designer Diamond Collection An<lb/>
ArtCarved exclusive Exquisitely crafted designs, all set with genuine<lb/>
diamonds, in 10K or 14K gold Or. choose the elegant diamond-substitute<lb/>
Cubic Zirconia<lb/>
Let your ArtCarved Representative show you this beautiful class ring<lb/>
collection today Gold and diamonds its the only way to go1<lb/>
Feb. 16,17, 18<lb/>
I Wednesday-Thursday-<lb/>
 Friday 9-4<lb/>
I OATE<lb/>
IRK7IRVED<lb/>
V. CLASS RINGS INC<lb/>
Student Supply Store Lobby<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
Deposit Required MasterCard or Visa Accepted<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
Nothing else feels like real gold<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Taylor Beverage Co.<lb/>
103 E. North Carolina St.<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?????????????????????????????ft<lb/>
How to make peace withTblstoy.<lb/>
If the academic wars are Retting vou downT <lb/>
with a rich and chocolatev cupot Suisse Wh, i? a " Tak a break<lb/>
different flavors from fJrffFgSli mm ? tlVe dehoousl<lb/>
General Foods fe.2p fcrf w ?<lb/>
International Coffees.<lb/>
GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONM auttr,<lb/>
AS MUCH A FEH INC AS'a FLAVORT S<lb/>
rg'1fi3<lb/>
?????- m KCP<lb/>
Cld<lb/>
PrrW<lb/>
?<lb/>
MEG<lb/>
 i s s' ?<lb/>
-? -<lb/>
e ? . ?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
-? ? - -<lb/>
1<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? I<lb/>
"v.<lb/>
 <lb/>
s " L<lb/>
"I<lb/>
 ?? <lb/>
HI ' ' <lb/>
f-<lb/>
- - r'<lb/>
0 ? k<lb/>
a ? ? I <lb/>
Si<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
j<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0015"/><lb/>
N SPAIN<lb/>
?i<lb/>
ODiG<lb/>
eraqe Co.<lb/>
 H i " "JI<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
yrward <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
w?<lb/>
? <lb/>
ttw i-rrr<lb/>
I HI t hS ! M' ,1 IM AN<lb/>
HMKI AKi<lb/>
13<lb/>
IX Is Herb GUcfcrisf Mt-v up the referei<lb/>
b recent game against theamphdl arnrK<lb/>
The Piratei are nm H-11 -nd will br ,i<lb/>
templing an earlier 12-point loss auamsi ih?<lb/>
I niersit of Richmond Wednesdu night ?i<lb/>
7:30 at Minge oliseum I he splfj?rN ar?<lb/>
also 11-11 and 2-4 in the EX Nouthon<lb/>
ference. making the matchup a ke game tr<lb/>
both clubs. ome out and support Ih-<lb/>
Piratev (Photo b (,H P A II 1 KsiiSi<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN ajowiON<lb/>
DEPEND ON<lb/>
StSTViCES ?<lb/>
I ? '<lb/>
.??. ? Free ?<lb/>
? ? ??? - ?<lb/>
? CAj. ??? S5SC DA- "t N  ?<lb/>
 ' . : - THE FLEMING<lb/>
? ? ? CENTER<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PKKM)NM<lb/>
R ' - m a pp . . a <lb/>
GREG<lb/>
? i ?? ?<lb/>
m a? ' pood ?<lb/>
.?<lb/>
ANN<lb/>
????<lb/>
boy ma ice o <lb/>
- ? r<lb/>
my<lb/>
' a . . Nl<lb/>
h t t Hot -???<lb/>
Bum! ? ?? r ? -<lb/>
- y - Dnifi i rh<lb/>
?bit<lb/>
I Party, ?<lb/>
ilti i<lb/>
WAMKI)<lb/>
KSELORS tor co vd sun mi<lb/>
the n<lb/>
' koom mf a<lb/>
i?iry ?nd tnv( 1 i E?<lb/>
 nee essa' ? ti'<lb/>
?q and 0' k i"q '<lb/>
,r Qn!? ? non<lb/>
? j conege utefil'i ne?i ap<lb/>
Fo ?pf) ?' " '?<lb/>
- ? ? lack<lb/>
F? - H 1<lb/>
, ? ?<lb/>
DC N<lb/>
nan nno 4<lb/>
who hj<lb/>
I A<lb/>
<lb/>
Dr<lb/>
 h at<lb/>
ay SIC<lb/>
. <lb/>
mm s<lb/>
motr call L A D I B U G<lb/>
LIMITED ?or details JiS 2S4J o<lb/>
?6 i)<lb/>
SPRING BREAK PARTY In<lb/>
c ludes n.qhts and 6 day s on Tru-<lb/>
Sti.p ,n iuin? Ft Lauderdale<lb/>
Fia various activities ith.n<lb/>
walking distance including a Irec<lb/>
eg 3a . a' lha Button Occupan<lb/>
. a.a aDU a' three hotels ith<lb/>
-4 in pnees Irom J'iSOO For<lb/>
Iner into contact Beth or Lisa<lb/>
a' 'i? ?i '3 or 'S- 112<lb/>
CHARTER BUS TO FORT<lb/>
LAUDERDALE FLA Round<lb/>
trip motor coach to Ft Lauderdair<lb/>
V89 oc plus tai Contact Beth or<lb/>
T Y Ping T pap Ihests<lb/>
etc Call Kemp,)- Djbh s; e"J3<lb/>
EXCELLENT TYPIST<lb/>
-  abii<lb/>
171 after 4pm<lb/>
AUDIO ElfcCTROMICS SER<lb/>
VICE Complete aud<lb/>
a'tcr spm Ma? '53 ?<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
M ABL<lb/>
h q A <lb/>
gr am n<lb/>
esp?r?<lb/>
.1<lb/>
f SPANOl '<lb/>
iaDie in Spa<lb/>
A' AQ con<lb/>
not lul<lb/>
' ? afure<lb/>
S A ' '<lb/>
FOUND GOLD CHARM DKP ROOMMATE WANTED Kings<lb/>
engraved on one side : . a: taj Row Apartments 2tedroom<lb/>
tnqra-ed on opposite side In split utilities and rent Contact<lb/>
? - Cashier s Ottice Jan ;si oitt<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
ikt:T<lb/>
S15?? OFVANV<lb/>
COMPLETE PAIR OF<lb/>
EYE GLASSES<lb/>
I Prr?nt c ouport tot di-Mir- Si i<lb/>
?Mh other advertised p-i iasi<lb/>
dlOPTICAL<lb/>
BJLkIia<lb/>
SOFT qg<lb/>
comac rs <lb/>
S . H ' ?<lb/>
PALACE<lb/>
<lb/>
U I scros f-i am r'm lla;a N, ?? - ?<lb/>
iis V Hi<lb/>
?<lb/>
' t'e y 10 a n<lb/>
sa at<lb/>
Se ?s'<lb/>
m )?:?<lb/>
<lb/>
n Breali<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
rVE B - N<lb/>
- VlENl ? ? c ?<lb/>
SPRING B?t AK<lb/>
m being taken tot<lb/>
? ytona Btarr! Hound<lb/>
ir.p b , Ian - Hi KfcGS F nights<lb/>
accomodatton at Kings Inn<lb/>
 ? ? . 'h live<lb/>
band a - Pi tceis<lb/>
V - - " 'y c?( ept<lb/>
- or details<lb/>
 p rn L iti tted spa<lb/>
 a '<lb/>
S N G .A.rNTINE<lb/>
t ? ? make n.s vo<lb/>
 truly<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
??? CAMARO E?cellent condi<lb/>
tion b;5 i38' alter ? p m ?3 S00<lb/>
DORM SIZE REFRIGERATOR<lb/>
?6i Can Til :o0 Ask tor JAN<lb/>
?? DATSUN ?0 2 'ST' '322<lb/>
FOR SALE Ladv s 10 speed<lb/>
Ross 2! inch frame e cellent con<lb/>
dition call '52 0141 after 5 OC<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE experience quality work<lb/>
IBM Selectnc typewriter Can<lb/>
Lame Shive ? ?? S301 or GAIL<lb/>
JO Y NER 7S4 1042<lb/>
IfSCO<lb/>
CIO<lb/>
1<lb/>
WEDNESDAY $<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
?<lb/>
264 By PcSS,<lb/>
Next Door to<lb/>
iyoTa hast<lb/>
1<lb/>
FOUR (4) Tacos<lb/>
J<lb/>
Catch The Pirate Attack<lb/>
Against<lb/>
The University of Richmond<lb/>
Wednesday Night at AAinges Coliseum<lb/>
Gametime 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
for just s1.39<lb/>
Not Good With Any Other Special<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN'<lb/>
Steakbouse<lb/>
TUESDAY SPECIAL<lb/>
4 oz. Sirloin $2.49<lb/>
with Salad Bar $3.49<lb/>
?oKi?mncnaas?<lb/>
yy- &amp;<lb/>
VXNVNXNN.NVXNX.NN.NiXNNNSVXVV NiXN<lb/>
WEDNESDAY SPECIAL<lb/>
Chop Sirloin $2.79<lb/>
with Salad Bar $3.79<lb/>
TakeOutServ.ee 2903 E 10th St.<lb/>
264 By Pass 7Se0040<lb/>
HcHiri 11 00 m tOOOpm -?Ao? Thor?<lb/>
10 00? m 11 OOP "i Fr. Sun<lb/>
Cliffs cpeciols<lb/>
a jM Located 1 mile past<lb/>
Hasting's Ford on<lb/>
10th St extension<lb/>
Tuesda, W ednesdav<lb/>
&amp; I hursday<lb/>
POPCORN<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
$295<lb/>
4<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Tossed Salad may be substituted<lb/>
for Slaw35&amp; extra<lb/>
123 E. 5th Str<lb/>
Tuei. Pizia and Pasta $2.99<lb/>
t?u can La -<lb/>
mmm.i???????????i?m?mw?iiti?wWBn<lb/>
Lodies Nit wet<lb/>
Mike Edwards<lb/>
Lodies Admitted FREE Free draft tor the Lodies<lb/>
W?dSolod Bar Special 52.15 trl k c?r 9<lb/>
Thursday Spaghetti Special $2.49 s romcwEc -<lb/>
Coming Fridoy ond Soturdoy Ntght<lb/>
Bruce Frye<lb/>
,xoem check. oU our ne? MENU ?<lb/>
Watch For Our Daily Luncheon Specials<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0016"/><lb/>
14 THE EAST CAROLON1AN FEBRUARY 15, 1983<lb/>
516 9. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
c&amp;&amp;<lb/>
?? <lb/>
Three Cheers for U.B.E.S BIGGEST Coupon Sale EVER!<lb/>
Out tfam outf &amp;Ut$t6entdMvH,f Save money, f<lb/>
i r<lb/>
-i r<lb/>
Regular $10 95<lb/>
Hooded Pullovers<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
Regular $6 95<lb/>
Sweat Pants<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
gf off with coupon<lb/>
a<lb/>
$!?<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
i r<lb/>
Regular $6 95 10 95<lb/>
Crewnecks<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
J L.<lb/>
J L<lb/>
Regular $11 95<lb/>
?<lb/>
Zippered<lb/>
Sweatshirts<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
i<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
J k<lb/>
-i r<lb/>
Regular $3 99-7 95<lb/>
Gym Shorts<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
y off with coupon<lb/>
i<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
1 r<lb/>
-i r<lb/>
Regular $6 95-9 95<lb/>
Kids<lb/>
Sweatshirts<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
J L<lb/>
Regular $10 95 28 95<lb/>
1<lb/>
Kids Baseball fi .<lb/>
and j<lb/>
9 Nylon Jackets ! !<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
1 r<lb/>
Regular $2 95 7 95<lb/>
T-Shirts<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
f<lb/>
Regular $12 95-29 95<lb/>
Adult B-Ball<lb/>
and<lb/>
Nylon Jackets<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
<lb/>
I I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
off with coupon <lb/>
Expires 21983 I I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
J i.<lb/>
Regular SI 3 95<lb/>
; Coaches Shorts<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
Expires 2 19'83<lb/>
4<lb/>
n ? r<lb/>
Regular $6 95<lb/>
Long Sleeve<lb/>
T-Shirts<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
Regular $6 95<lb/>
?<lb/>
Baseball Shirts<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
a<lb/>
J L<lb/>
<lb/>
Expires 2 1983<lb/>
f<lb/>
Regular $9.95-16.95<lb/>
Sports Shirts<lb/>
$3.00<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
i r<lb/>
4<lb/>
"l r<lb/>
i r?<lb/>
Regular $16.95-42.95<lb/>
Caribou Packs<lb/>
20<lb/>
off with coupon<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
J L<lb/>
Regular $3 50<lb/>
Tanktops<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
V off with coupon<lb/>
4<lb/>
Expires 21983<lb/>
J k<lb/>
Selected<lb/>
Sweatshirts<lb/>
Vz price<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
Expires 2 19 83<lb/>
Purple,GoldWhite ,Navy,Gray, Royal,Maroon,Kel ly,Light blue, Bu tterJPink CRed<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
?m ? ?  ii hi mil i ?<lb/>
" IW??MMBHMW<lb/>
<pb facs="00057534_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>