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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057536_0001"/>
?he SaHt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 Nott<lb/>
Thursday, February 17,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
C irculation 10.000<lb/>
Reference<lb/>
LIBRARIAN<lb/>
ondkfyt<lb/>
Hpb-Ttm 8i fy<lb/>
fVkfay Gm-b?m<lb/>
Saturday Skw-Spw<lb/>
Library Vandalism<lb/>
Costly Books Damaged By Careless Users<lb/>
l?h?to By CIMDV WALL<lb/>
 librarian shows a page torn in an expensive library text. Librarians have noticed frequent damage to books<lb/>
and periodicals bv students who tear out pages instead of having them photo-copied. The vandalism causes m-<lb/>
conenience to students needing the resources as well as expense and trouble for the library.<lb/>
World News At A Glance<lb/>
United Press International<lb/>
SAl I 1 AKE CITY ? Artificial heart patient<lb/>
Barney Clark was hack in intensive care today<lb/>
because of "lung and kidney insufficiency A<lb/>
University of Utah Medical Center spokesman said<lb/>
Clark was using a respirator, but his condition still<lb/>
was listed as fair.<lb/>
JERUSALEM ? The Israeli parliament today<lb/>
defeated three no-confidence motions demanding<lb/>
that Prime Minister Menachem Begin's government<lb/>
step down because of the Beirut massacre commis-<lb/>
sion report. The Knesset voted 64-56 along party<lb/>
lines to defeat the challenges to Begin's ruling coah-<lb/>
'?WASHINGTON - The House Budget Committee<lb/>
chairman eluded the administration today tor claim-<lb/>
ing that cutbacks in the military budget would under-<lb/>
mine national security. Rep. James Jones. D-Okla<lb/>
urged Defense beoeiaiy Caspar Weinberger to<lb/>
"participate positively" in paring spending.<lb/>
ADELAIDE, Australia - Roaring brush fires<lb/>
swept southeastern Australia today, killing Hi peo-<lb/>
ple injuring hundreds and destroying at least 100<lb/>
homes The fires were whipped by 50 mph winds and<lb/>
burned hundreds of square miles.<lb/>
NFW DEI HI. India - Three policemen were ac-<lb/>
cidentally shot to death by fellow officers today dur<lb/>
ng noting in the northeastern state of Assam. Their<lb/>
deaths brought to 277 the number of people killed ?n<lb/>
election violence this month.<lb/>
WASHINGTON - There was a sharp improve-<lb/>
ment in the nation's factory production last month<lb/>
Most analysts consider that to be the best sign yet the<lb/>
recession is ending.  ,<lb/>
NEW YORK -Stock prices moved higher in early<lb/>
trading on Wall Street today. The Dow Jones in-<lb/>
dustnai average .as challenging the 1.100 level tor<lb/>
the second consecutive session.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? The government will appeal a<lb/>
court order barring clinics from telling parents their<lb/>
teenage daughters are getting birth control pills or<lb/>
devices. U.S. District Judge Henry Werker blocked<lb/>
enforcement of a regulation covering health clinics<lb/>
receiving federal funds until a trial is held.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? Whistle-blower Hugh Kauf-<lb/>
man savs an Environmental Protection Agency pro-<lb/>
gram to clean up toxic waste sites is hampered by of-<lb/>
ficials giving polluters "sweetheart deals He charg-<lb/>
ed today that some polluters have asked the White<lb/>
House to stop his accusations.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? Secretary of State George<lb/>
Shultz says the government's $14.5 billion foreign<lb/>
economic and military aid request is an investment in<lb/>
world stability. He told a House committee the funds<lb/>
can help create conditions in less developed countries<lb/>
that will reduce the need for military forces.<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA ? The Philadelphia 76ers com-<lb/>
pleted a shakeup in their roster for the National<lb/>
Basketball Association's stretch run. They traded<lb/>
rookie forward Russ Schoene to the Indiana Pacers<lb/>
for veteran forward-center Clemon Johnson.<lb/>
GREENVILLE ? Chancellor John Howell an-<lb/>
nounced Tuesday that Janice H. Faulkner has been<lb/>
named director of the ECU Regional Development<lb/>
Institute. Faulkner has been acting director since<lb/>
A long time faculty member in the English depart-<lb/>
ment Faulkner was chosen from among 130 ap-<lb/>
plicants to head the organization which works to pro-<lb/>
mote economic and cultural projects in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.  e <lb/>
Faulkner has served as assistant director of the<lb/>
organization since September, when she returned<lb/>
from an 18-month stint as exective director of the<lb/>
N.C. Democratic Party. Howell said the institute is<lb/>
apolitical.<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
S if) "Aritfr<lb/>
Librarians at Joyner I ibrary have<lb/>
seen an increase in the number of<lb/>
books and periodicals vandalized by<lb/>
readers who, according to some<lb/>
library employees, are apparently<lb/>
too lazy to make copies of the pages<lb/>
they need.<lb/>
"1 don't see how they have the<lb/>
nerve to do it said Ruth Katz,<lb/>
associate director of the library.<lb/>
"It's hard for me to believe that<lb/>
somebodv wouldn't go and spend a<lb/>
dime Katz said several librarians<lb/>
have reported an increase in damag-<lb/>
ed librarv books.<lb/>
Last week, an ECU student was<lb/>
caught cutting pictures out of<lb/>
magazines to paste onto a collage,<lb/>
Katz said. The student was told to<lb/>
repay the library for the cost of the<lb/>
periodicals he destroyed. "The next<lb/>
week, he came back to the library<lb/>
and something was torn out of a<lb/>
book he needed<lb/>
Katz said she didn't want to ban<lb/>
the student from using the library,<lb/>
but she wanted to impress upon all<lb/>
people that it was not right or per-<lb/>
missible to destroy library materials.<lb/>
In the library's reference section,<lb/>
the problem with vandalism is much<lb/>
more serious.<lb/>
A student who was presumably<lb/>
working on a finance class project<lb/>
tore a page out of a new book that<lb/>
belonged to a seven-volume set<lb/>
worth over S700. According to<lb/>
reference librarian Ralph Scott, the<lb/>
page was from a book commonly<lb/>
used by business students titled hey<lb/>
Business Ratios.<lb/>
Although the library ha- no proof<lb/>
of who tore the page out of the<lb/>
book, they did know the specific<lb/>
classes working on the project. Katz<lb/>
contacted the business school and<lb/>
requested instructors to remind heir<lb/>
students of the illegality of such ac-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"I feel sorry tor the next stu-<lb/>
dentsaid Martha I apas, is head ol<lb/>
the Joyner reference department.<lb/>
"I've been blowing my stack<lb/>
everytime I find another damaged<lb/>
book. Some people pa their tuition<lb/>
and thev think it entitles them to a<lb/>
free copv of anvthing thev want<lb/>
Lapas believes those people who<lb/>
are vandalizing the library arc a<lb/>
minority. She said she didn't view<lb/>
the destruction as a tally<lb/>
malacious act<lb/>
I apas attributed most of the van<lb/>
dalization to thoughtlessness and<lb/>
carelessness. The real people hurt bv<lb/>
the acts. I apas said, are the student-<lb/>
who are denied use of the materials<lb/>
When a book is vandalized<lb/>
creates problems for the librarian-<lb/>
too, said assistant professor in the<lb/>
reference section Artemis Kares.<lb/>
To repair the damaged books<lb/>
Jovner employees have to make a<lb/>
request to the inter-librarv loan<lb/>
system for a copv of the missing<lb/>
pages, which then must be glued<lb/>
back into the book bindings. The<lb/>
library sometimes replaces damaged<lb/>
periodicals with microfilm.<lb/>
Incidents of vandalw the<lb/>
library occur about once a eek.<lb/>
Lapas said.<lb/>
"We try to emphasiK I in<lb/>
Enelish 1200 classes 1 apas added<lb/>
Katz challenged students to rut peer<lb/>
pressure on students thev saw<lb/>
destroying library propertv<lb/>
Katz also noted that beside 'ne ac-<lb/>
tual cost of replacing or repa<lb/>
the vandalized item, the librae<lb/>
to spend a lot of time tra ?<lb/>
down, processing and ordering new<lb/>
materials.<lb/>
Slay, Clement Cutting Corners<lb/>
For Energy Contest's Top Spot<lb/>
Slay and Clement Residence Halls<lb/>
are locked in a battle for first place<lb/>
as the Student Residence Associa<lb/>
tion's Energy Contest nears its half<lb/>
way pouil.<lb/>
As the contest entered its si sin<lb/>
week. Slay, with a 14.73 percent<lb/>
savings, held a slight lead over Cle-<lb/>
ment dorm which stood at 14.26<lb/>
percent. Scott hall, second overall<lb/>
last year, is presently in third with a<lb/>
12.05 percent savings.<lb/>
"1 feel it's (the contest) been go-<lb/>
ing very well, but it could be bet-<lb/>
ter said Mark Niewald. vice presi-<lb/>
dent of the SRA and chairman ot<lb/>
the energy committee. "I'd like to<lb/>
see more dorms putting in more ef-<lb/>
fort<lb/>
A 30-week base was used to deter-<lb/>
mine the dorms electrical use sav-<lb/>
ings. Because these figures include<lb/>
the nine-week totals from last year's<lb/>
contest. Niewald expects this sear's<lb/>
winners to actual!) have small<lb/>
percentage totals<lb/>
"It's harder for them to save as<lb/>
much mi ci. Nkwatri ?aul. l m<lb/>
year's contest will span 11 weeks ex-<lb/>
cluding the week of spring break.<lb/>
The hall finishing with the highest<lb/>
percentage of electricity saved will<lb/>
win a cash prize of S250. The<lb/>
runner-up hall receives S200 and<lb/>
SI50 goes to the third place finisher.<lb/>
In addition, any residence hall that<lb/>
saves a total of five percent or more<lb/>
will receive a$H? pria<lb/>
There is currently a special con-<lb/>
test that will award a $50 prize to the<lb/>
residence hall which ha the highest<lb/>
percentage saved for the two week<lb/>
period ending Tuesday. Slav hall<lb/>
with a total percentage of 19.19 sav-<lb/>
ed during last week has, a strong lead<lb/>
over Clement and Fletcher which<lb/>
have one week totals of 15 19 tnd<lb/>
 .41 respectively<lb/>
Total possible pne money from<lb/>
the SRA contest is S2.250 Ntne<lb/>
tnousanu aoiuu in electrical emt<lb/>
was saved during last year's contest<lb/>
Niewald said that electrical ap<lb/>
phances, such as ovens and hair<lb/>
dryers, use a major portion of elec<lb/>
tricky in a dorm. He suggested that<lb/>
students shut off appliances as soon<lb/>
as they've finished using them.<lb/>
Fletcher with a total percentage<lb/>
savings of 10.17 is in fourth place<lb/>
overall. Scott with a 9.14 percent<lb/>
and Tyler with a 8.79 percent round<lb/>
out the top six. Jones Hall with a<lb/>
nine week total of 21 6 percent sav<lb/>
ed was the winner of last year's con-<lb/>
test. Scott with 20.38 percent was se<lb/>
cond and Slay was third with 15.60<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
Colleges Put A Halt To<lb/>
Fraternity House Pranks<lb/>
<lb/>
TUCSON, AZ (CPS) University of<lb/>
Arizona officials"just coulun't stand<lb/>
it anvmore Over the last five<lb/>
years, Sigma Nu fraternity members<lb/>
had done everything from driving<lb/>
golf balls off the roof of their frat<lb/>
house occasionally hitting cars,<lb/>
windows and bystanders - to dum-<lb/>
ping trash on parked cars and even<lb/>
throwing oranges and other objects<lb/>
at campus police.<lb/>
But then officials at the nearby<lb/>
campus hospital discovered bullet<lb/>
holes in an office window, and a .22<lb/>
caliber bullet lodged inches from<lb/>
where a hospital worker normally<lb/>
sat Police traced the angle of fire to<lb/>
a third floor window of the Sigma<lb/>
Nu house.<lb/>
"That was the straw that broke<lb/>
the camel's back recalls Dean of<lb/>
Students Robert S. Svob of the<lb/>
shooting incident. "We finally had<lb/>
to get tough<lb/>
Less than a month later, on Jan.<lb/>
10 1983, one Sigma Nu member<lb/>
was facing charges of illegal<lb/>
firearms possession, and the re-<lb/>
maining 69 members of the fraterni-<lb/>
ty ? which had been on campus<lb/>
since 1918 ? were ordered to vacate<lb/>
the house indefinitely.<lb/>
There are, in fact, increasing<lb/>
numbers of homeless brothers like<lb/>
Arizona's Sigma Nu. Scores of<lb/>
fraternity chapters around the coun-<lb/>
try are being disciplined and<lb/>
suspended in a new, nationwide get-<lb/>
tough administrative crackdown.<lb/>
It's the first time many colleges have<lb/>
actually disciplined their frater-<lb/>
nities.<lb/>
A few schools are even toying<lb/>
with the idea of banning the greek<lb/>
organizations altogether. For the<lb/>
first time in 20 years, for example,<lb/>
the University of Georgia last spring<lb/>
abolished a fraternity-Chi Phi<lb/>
because of alleged hazing and drug<lb/>
use. Alabama A&amp;M permanently<lb/>
banned Omega Phi Psi last semester<lb/>
for repeated disorderly conduct over<lb/>
the last two years. The final straw:<lb/>
members abducted a student and<lb/>
threw him over a cliff. The Universi-<lb/>
ty of Arkansas-Pine Bluff suspend-<lb/>
ed two houses last semester for<lb/>
beating pledges, one of whom was<lb/>
hospitalized for internal bleeding<lb/>
after his brothers-to-be severely<lb/>
paddled him.<lb/>
Dozens of lesser penalties have<lb/>
been handed out recently for similar<lb/>
behavior. "The idea of excusing all<lb/>
extremes of fraternity behavior<lb/>
under the notion the 'boys will be<lb/>
boys' just isn't the case anymore<lb/>
observes Eileen Stevens, founder of<lb/>
the Committee to Halt Useless Cam-<lb/>
pus Killings (CHUCK), a citizens'<lb/>
group working to stop fraternity<lb/>
violence. Noise, litter, catcalling<lb/>
and even violence aren't all that new<lb/>
along college greek rows, she says.<lb/>
What's new is the reaction against<lb/>
il- A<lb/>
"College administrators and na-<lb/>
tional offices of fraternities aren't<lb/>
tolerating the antics and pranks<lb/>
anymoreshe notes. "There's real-<lb/>
ly a pendulum effect involved<lb/>
here says Jonathan Brant, presi-<lb/>
dent' of the National Interfraternity<lb/>
Conference. "Fifteen years ago<lb/>
most schools kept a closer watch on<lb/>
fraternities. Then, for about ten<lb/>
Variations On A Theme<lb/>
 cimot w?u-<lb/>
S? SUPPORT, P?ge 3<lb/>
, ?.? 10 ttk, .dvu of ,?!??? mild ?mp.r.l?r?. Soooy ?ki? .??11. m?c.r,<lb/>
Reserve Board<lb/>
i Sets Policy To<lb/>
Maintain Trend<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPD <lb/>
Federal Reserve Chairman Paul<lb/>
Volcker todav detailed new mones<lb/>
supply targets for 198?. targets that<lb/>
keep the Fed on about the ame<lb/>
policy course it has been following<lb/>
The new targets contain ad<lb/>
justments for changed Cir<lb/>
cumstances in the banking world.<lb/>
but Fed officials said thev are in et<lb/>
feet about the same as those of Us.<lb/>
vear. <lb/>
' But since actual growth of the na-<lb/>
tion's money supply exceeded last<lb/>
vear's targets, the new targets, it<lb/>
achieved, would involve shnw ac-<lb/>
tual growth of the money supply<lb/>
this year than last.<lb/>
That is consistent with the bed s<lb/>
long-range policy of gradually slow-<lb/>
ing money growth to curb ????<lb/>
Volcker told the Senate Banking<lb/>
Committee the new targets are aim<lb/>
ed at providing enough money for<lb/>
the economy to recover but not so<lb/>
much that inflation is rekindled.<lb/>
The Fed left unchanged last year s<lb/>
target of 6.5 percent to 9.5 percent<lb/>
growth for the very broad measure<lb/>
of the nation's money supply,<lb/>
known as M-3.<lb/>
For M-2 ? a somewhat less broad<lb/>
measure that includes many of the<lb/>
new money market deposit accounts<lb/>
that have changed banking figures<lb/>
? it set a target of 7 percent to 10<lb/>
percent growth for this year<lb/>
Fed officials said that when ad<lb/>
justments are made for these new<lb/>
accounts, into which the public has<lb/>
been pouring hundreds of billions of<lb/>
dollars, this amounts to roughly the<lb/>
same as last year's M-2 target of 6<lb/>
percent to 9 percent.<lb/>
J<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057536_0002"/><lb/>
THFEASTl AROI INI AN<lb/>
FI BRl AlO 1 198<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
FILM<lb/>
Th film entitled Burning<lb/>
Meir wiH be snown Aednesdav<lb/>
February 23 1??2 at the Ledon.a<lb/>
Wrigm Cultural Centei at 7 00<lb/>
pm Everyone is mvited toattcnd<lb/>
ULTIMAX<lb/>
TOURNAMENT<lb/>
Ultima 83 s com.ng On<lb/>
March 26 and 7 the ECU iRa'es<lb/>
will hov their tust ult.ma'e tou'<lb/>
nament Make plans to see some ot<lb/>
the best ultimate to be piayed on<lb/>
the east coast this year Theirjtes<lb/>
are planning a road tr,p to<lb/>
Gatnsv.ile. Fia over Spr 'ig Break<lb/>
to pi a v m a ?oui namii ,ia catch<lb/>
some rays 'oo' Club meeTnqs are<lb/>
SAon n-ghts(V rm 24fl VSC<lb/>
Anyone neres'ed s f imp<lb/>
REVIEW BOARD<lb/>
Persons interested in Ming tor<lb/>
SGA Rev ew Board please do so in<lb/>
Room 228 o Menoenhaii Student<lb/>
Center F.ve positions st,n open<lb/>
TAXES<lb/>
volunteers trom the ECU A<lb/>
counting Soc e'v ano the National<lb/>
Association ot Accountants will be<lb/>
in the ma1 lobby ot Mendenhal<lb/>
Student Cente' fo neip no vduais<lb/>
prepare tax returns trom 4 to 7 pm<lb/>
eai" Tuesfla. anr Thursday "<lb/>
Feb' oar ea. h Tjesaa. n<lb/>
SAa'vh ano Tuesdays ana<lb/>
Thursdays in April through April<lb/>
15<lb/>
TKE BOXING<lb/>
TK E Boxer Regist-at.or .s go<lb/>
ng on now at Vemor.a' G 'rom<lb/>
5 30 to 7 00 pm ?onaay through<lb/>
Thursday until February 24th All<lb/>
amateur boxers welcome 8th An<lb/>
p.uai Tournament takes piace on<lb/>
March 15 16 17 at M nges C01<lb/>
seum Th.s odx ng event is sane<lb/>
t.oneo by the American Boxing<lb/>
Federation<lb/>
CO OP<lb/>
Positions 'Of le guards<lb/>
historians naturalists and clerk<lb/>
typists are available a Nortt<lb/>
Carolina state parks th.s sui,r<lb/>
Locations iiK ude c ort Macon<lb/>
Hammocks Beach ano Hanging<lb/>
Rock among others A SO ? "<lb/>
County yv-ii hire three people tor<lb/>
summer receaton pes '<lb/>
Come by Raw 313 c' "e<lb/>
'5' iVi I tor cie'a 5 Hurry<lb/>
DELTASIGMA THETA<lb/>
? t vou re go-no o be n town  s<lb/>
wcekrno   havi ? n ' ike<lb/>
??me out from studying and par<lb/>
w.th Delta Sjma Theta Fnoar<lb/>
mght Iron- 10 0C 2 00 A' the<lb/>
edon. a A gt ' ' ' entei<lb/>
The cos' ' ' r5 tor students<lb/>
and V 00 'o- nor si ? ?  -?'? ?? 1<lb/>
mere<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
ice V' he "OS's tne<lb/>
E ecyrk Rainbow Radio Show '<lb/>
AZVB Fr-aa. atternoons from 3<lb/>
to 6 pm and Sal ? ? ? ? ? Bhts ?? rr -<lb/>
13 mideiiotil ' the incredible <lb/>
-1 ? irr Album spe ins a'e area<lb/>
a'4p- and 7-1" Fi layttiealbum<lb/>
specai s by the group Demon and<lb/>
 P ?? T i- ?pecTec<lb/>
Guest Sa'urda. 'he album<lb/>
soecia z. the Scorp.ans aio s<lb/>
entitled ho' and "eav. Wan'<lb/>
su'e you- o.a' is set to oi 3 a' ev<lb/>
?rres thank you<lb/>
ZBT HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
Ze'a Be'a Tau Fraternity ar:<lb/>
Pantaoa Bob s are having a Map<lb/>
py Hour ana d'aw ng tor pr.zes on<lb/>
 cxe's can be<lb/>
jr from one Ot<lb/>
? K enl aonaton<lb/>
- ,? rnt ? ? ?" New '<lb/>
GRADUATING<lb/>
ACM ECU Chapter invites you<lb/>
to 10m us on Thursday Feb 17 at<lb/>
3 30 tor a look at Resumes Jim<lb/>
Westmoreland will be speaking on<lb/>
how to create an effective resume<lb/>
Meetings held in Austin Rm 132<lb/>
Seniors are encouraged to attend<lb/>
YARDSALE<lb/>
Alpha X. Delta sorority will<lb/>
have a yard sale Saturday Feb 26<lb/>
start ng at 8 00 a m Clothes odds<lb/>
ana ends anything and<lb/>
everything1 508 E 11th street<lb/>
Watch tor the signs1<lb/>
PHI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
Fo prospective members o Phi<lb/>
Kappa Phi Honor Society if you<lb/>
yOU are a Jonior with a J 8 &amp;PA or<lb/>
a Senior with a 3 6 GPA oe on The<lb/>
aiert tor a invitation ot member<lb/>
sh.p The letters are being sent to<lb/>
the student s permament ad<lb/>
iieress Reply mus be made by<lb/>
March 1 i?83<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
Aant to know what 'he state ana<lb/>
national governments are getting<lb/>
nto? Get ,nto NCSL the North<lb/>
Caro'na Student Legislature<lb/>
where we nc out wna s new ' We<lb/>
discover what s new w th ruies<lb/>
ano regulations on safety the<lb/>
economy defense ana other<lb/>
tun -ssues Cnme on by for<lb/>
yourself and tna what s new w th<lb/>
NCSl every Monaay night at 7 pm<lb/>
in room 212 Menaenrtan ve.an<lb/>
promise ntr.gue tHjl we can tr ! !<lb/>
ABA<lb/>
Alpha Beta Alpha the library<lb/>
sc lence fraternity will be holding a<lb/>
pledging ceremony February 22 aT<lb/>
5 30 pm in room 219 Library<lb/>
science department An persons<lb/>
nterested in L.brarianship are<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
There will be a genera) meeting<lb/>
n T hvrsdav cebf uary IJffi at 6 00<lb/>
p ii The meel ??- ? be he'd at<lb/>
he ipternatonai house on E 'th<lb/>
Sftef' ? i- m&amp;er s and in<lb/>
tere.e pesofs are urged to at<lb/>
fpnd All persons who signed up tor<lb/>
soccer cleave ge n 'ough wth<lb/>
u'S Ovares at J$2 ?<lb/>
CAREER CHOICE<lb/>
? hp Strong Cannptoetl n'eres'<lb/>
inventory s ottered ever, Tues<lb/>
:a, a' a PV p J05 yr-ght Annex<lb/>
when SChOO! S ' s?-vs ?n wth the<lb/>
? ? i ptiOftS ot eam naon period<lb/>
and registration t- h-s is<lb/>
tva abe tc an students a no cost<lb/>
No formal reg.strat-or srequired<lb/>
COUNSELING<lb/>
A twc? pa't rr.n. ser es ottered a<lb/>
no cost Cy the ijn.ye'S t. Counsel<lb/>
.ng Center entitled How to Sue<lb/>
ceed in College ano Still Have<lb/>
Fun Oil Monda. February 21<lb/>
  -?hpr one<lb/>
 Test Anxiety<lb/>
February 22 1983 B<lb/>
will be conducte ? ? I<lb/>
. 5 Ar.ght Anne?<lb/>
s Mow tc<lb/>
I " tsoar<lb/>
'h sessoihs<lb/>
? V 4PM<lb/>
SJ 6?i Nr<lb/>
"uesoay Fee<lb/>
oba ned a' ttie r7or<lb/>
the brothe<lb/>
ne by a<lb/>
On The Bioc?<lb/>
acace regisat.on nee essar,<lb/>
PHI ALPHA THETA<lb/>
Pn. Alpha Theta win present Dr<lb/>
Mary l ndemann of UNC A with<lb/>
an tnforrnative prograrn intftted<lb/>
Medical Nemesis in H stor ca<lb/>
Perspective Or Lindemann will<lb/>
j s.j5 eghteen?r and<lb/>
nmetheenth century criticisms of<lb/>
protessonaf medicine The pro<lb/>
gram will be Thurscay Feb 17 at<lb/>
7 30 p m in Brewster B 104 L gh<lb/>
refreshments wi" be served<lb/>
Cow?ng he presetT on The<lb/>
Puoi'C s im led<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/>
tor membership<lb/>
WINTERFEST!<lb/>
Sign Language Club members<lb/>
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW for<lb/>
MNTERFEST" This all day gala<lb/>
event will feature German foods<lb/>
and dancing Transportation will<lb/>
re provided to and trom Raleigh<lb/>
Advance tickets are 15 00 Signup<lb/>
in BA IW Don't miss it1 it's Sat<lb/>
Feb 19<lb/>
SIGMATAU DELTA<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta will meet on<lb/>
Thursday. February 17 at 7 30<lb/>
p m in the Mendenhall Cot<lb/>
leehouse 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/>
keq No admission All members<lb/>
and their guests are encouraged to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
RECRUITING<lb/>
Representatives of the North<lb/>
Carolina State Highway Patrol<lb/>
will be recruiting qualified in<lb/>
dividuais for the position ot<lb/>
Trooper on February 17, 1983 -rx<lb/>
tne Lobby of Betk Building Ali.ed<lb/>
Health; from v 00 a m until noon<lb/>
The patrol 'S particularly ;n<lb/>
terested in recruiting women and<lb/>
ati women students are encourag<lb/>
ed to stop by and see what is beng<lb/>
ottered i believe you will be<lb/>
pleasantly surprised about salary<lb/>
ano fringe benefits<lb/>
ARCHERY<lb/>
I nterested m Archery or Bow<lb/>
-?- nting it so there is a new sports<lb/>
i lub forming iust for you<lb/>
Members do not have to have ar<lb/>
Skill whatsoever iust the desire to<lb/>
learn the exacting sport of archer<lb/>
First meeting Feb 17, at 7 00pm<lb/>
in Room 103 Memorial Gym For<lb/>
more information call Gene<lb/>
Taylor at 752 0062<lb/>
IFC<lb/>
The fraternities of ECU would<lb/>
liKe to congratulate coach Ed<lb/>
Emory on his excellent recruiting<lb/>
season and wish the entire P.rate<lb/>
'earn good luck during their<lb/>
163 84 season<lb/>
FAITH HOPE AND<lb/>
LOVE<lb/>
- ; th Mope and Love, a Chris<lb/>
1 an fellowship founded on the<lb/>
A or- of God meets each Friday<lb/>
nrgm at 7 30 m Jenkins Art<lb/>
I ng Auditorium Learn how<lb/>
o live victoriously in Christ and<lb/>
a'was know that Yov are Loved'<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS<lb/>
T s sers of Alpha X- Delta<lb/>
would 'ike to congratuidde our<lb/>
new spring pledges Kim<lb/>
liodte'ter Kim Dudley Karen<lb/>
Pr dgen l sa Spares JOy Wnkins<lb/>
arc Sharon Winfield Good luck<lb/>
gins' You're in for a terrific<lb/>
semester <lb/>
PHYSICAL EDUCATION<lb/>
MAJORS CLUB<lb/>
The PE fvaiOrs Ciub s<lb/>
available to donate time ano ser<lb/>
vn.es to any organizations or tune<lb/>
tions on campus or n Greenville<lb/>
who need help with 'good cause"<lb/>
efforts that benefit people and fhe<lb/>
commnity in general Cnanatabie<lb/>
organizations, human service<lb/>
groups and other benev loents or<lb/>
philanthropic groups are en<lb/>
c our age to contact the club for any<lb/>
ass.stance they may be able to<lb/>
provde<lb/>
NURSING<lb/>
School ot Nursing preregistra<lb/>
tion tor summer session and fall<lb/>
semester, 19S3 will occur during<lb/>
daytime office hours of faculty ad<lb/>
visors. February 28 through<lb/>
March 4 To expedite this process,<lb/>
a sign up sheet will be posted on<lb/>
the office door of each faculty ad<lb/>
visor on February 14. 1983<lb/>
Students are requested to indicate<lb/>
on that sheet before February 26<lb/>
their preferred conference time<lb/>
Students who expect to meet all<lb/>
requirements for acceptance into<lb/>
sophomore level clinical nursing<lb/>
courses, fall semester, must<lb/>
secure an information sheet and<lb/>
an "Intent to Enroll" form in<lb/>
NB 152 Failure to submit the form<lb/>
will result m fhe student's name<lb/>
being placed on an alternate list<lb/>
for admission into those clinical<lb/>
nursing courses<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 ot fun<lb/>
fellowship and training in how to<lb/>
live a victorious Christian hfe<lb/>
WOMEN'S AWARENESS<lb/>
MONTH<lb/>
The f'nai program for vVest<lb/>
Area's Women's Awareness<lb/>
Vonth will be a film and discus<lb/>
sion given by Dr Ken vVilson, of<lb/>
the Sociology Department concer<lb/>
ning Sexual Harassment Ttvspro<lb/>
gram will be held in the Garrett<lb/>
Hall Lobby on Tuesday February<lb/>
22 at 7 00 p m All ECU students<lb/>
are very welcome to attend<lb/>
PHI ALPHATHETA<lb/>
Phi Alpiha Theta will present<lb/>
Dr Mary Lmdermann of UNC<lb/>
Wilmington with an informative<lb/>
program entitled MEDICAL<lb/>
NEMESIS IN HISTORICAL<lb/>
PtRSPECTivE Dr Lindemann<lb/>
will discuss eighteenth and nine<lb/>
teenth century criticisms of pro<lb/>
tessional medic me The program<lb/>
will begin at 7 30 p m in Brewster<lb/>
Bidg BB 104 Light refreshments<lb/>
will be served following this<lb/>
presentation The public is invited<lb/>
Program .s on Thursday Feb 17<lb/>
SABMEETING<lb/>
The Student Athletic Board will<lb/>
meet Tuesday. Feb 22. 183 at 5 30<lb/>
in Room 212 Of Mendenhall<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
Mr jOhn 5 Chiiders. Director<lb/>
ECU Testing Center announced<lb/>
that the new Med'tai College Ad<lb/>
mission Test MCAT application<lb/>
packets have arr.ved in the<lb/>
Testing Center Speight 105 The<lb/>
test dates for 1983 are Apm 9 1983<lb/>
and<lb/>
ttooer 1 1983 The deadline date<lb/>
tor Apr.i 9 est 'S Marcn n 1983<lb/>
ana the deadline date tor submit<lb/>
' ng apP'cation for the October 1<lb/>
1983 test s September 2. 1983<lb/>
LDS INSTITUTE OF<lb/>
RELIGION<lb/>
The Latter oay Sant student<lb/>
Association inv.tes you to this<lb/>
week s Institute class which pro<lb/>
mises to be enlightening The sub<lb/>
tect w.n the Atonment of jesus<lb/>
Chr.st and His Laws of Justice and<lb/>
Merc? Oassmeefs on Thursdays<lb/>
trom 6 30 8 00 p m in Brewster<lb/>
room 203B Like the Master m.ght<lb/>
say if he were here we say<lb/>
"Come and See '<lb/>
NEED A JOB?<lb/>
Freshmen and Sophomores if<lb/>
roc need a tub and can type at<lb/>
least 60 words a mnute with few<lb/>
mistakes contact the Productions<lb/>
Manager at the East Carolinian<lb/>
between 3 00 and 6 00 757 6166<lb/>
6367 6309<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use the form at right or<lb/>
use a separate sheet of paper if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line Each letter, punc<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit Capitalize and<lb/>
nyphenate words properly Leave<lb/>
space at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't fit No ads will be at<lb/>
cepted over the phone We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
75 per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case leilers.<lb/>
Return to THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
office b 3:00 Tuesdat before<lb/>
Wednesday publication<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
No lines <lb/>
.?p.<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
at 75C per line $.<lb/>
No insertions.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
1<lb/>
. 1<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
1 L u . JII  J<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian<lb/>
Serving rn?' oonnu communtty<lb/>
smu- 1925<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during The acarnic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ng tne summer<lb/>
The fcast Carolinian is the of<lb/>
 t c i a i newspaper ot fcas'<lb/>
Carolina University, owned<lb/>
operated and published tor and<lb/>
by the students ot Eas' Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate (20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus ot ECU<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
PO S T MA S T E K bend addr ess<lb/>
hanqes To Tne East Carolinian<lb/>
Old Soutn Building ECU Green<lb/>
v.lle NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone ?S7 63e6 637 6J0<lb/>
STARTS<lb/>
TOMORROW<lb/>
plaza ?a<lb/>
cinema V2-3<lb/>
PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS<lb/>
The Brothers and Little Sisters<lb/>
ot Pi Kappa Phi would like to con<lb/>
gratuiate our new pledges tor their<lb/>
excellent progress They rate<lb/>
been working hard and learn.nq<lb/>
much They consist ot Scott<lb/>
Berr, Barry Deans Elv, for<lb/>
rest Joe Franc .s Pett- Giynn<lb/>
Chip Hachmeister j.mmr<lb/>
Hardee Mike Holloman Thomas<lb/>
Hopper Carl Krai: Jett iuedeke<lb/>
Phiihp Moore. Todd PoMard Alan<lb/>
Poweii johnn, kainey Greg<lb/>
Umsteao ana Ed Aaida Keep up<lb/>
the good work<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There win be a general meting<lb/>
ol the ECU Amoassaaors on Wed<lb/>
Feb 23 The meeting will begin at<lb/>
5 00 In the MSC mult, purpose<lb/>
room we nae lots oi sign up<lb/>
sheets to till Please make plans to<lb/>
attend this meeting<lb/>
ECU BAHA'I CLUB<lb/>
Tne ECU Baha i Assentation a II<lb/>
meet in 241 Mendenhan eac h T ues<lb/>
da? trom 11 unTii noon Baha ? s<lb/>
beneve m The oneness ot God. The<lb/>
Unity of Mankind and that the<lb/>
maior world religions stem from<lb/>
the same Creator Anyone in<lb/>
terested s welcome to come anc<lb/>
share your thoughts with us For<lb/>
more information call 752 4483 or<lb/>
752 1018<lb/>
AHEA<lb/>
vrn meet Monda Feb 2' at<lb/>
5 00 m 'he Vanlandingham Room<lb/>
We will work on the Scrapboofc<lb/>
MemoeS are encouraged To at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
tm<lb/>
iw<lb/>
oliVof'<lb/>
MrtitKicfcJwyn-liayer pmb<lb/>
A McElroy Mcf boy Production<lb/>
A Peter Weir Film<lb/>
MEL SIGOURMEY<lb/>
GIBSON WEAVER<lb/>
The Year of Living Ddiigeroifcly<lb/>
BiUNerT Michaelfroriv Lindarlunt Ptaeirema<lb/>
I<lb/>
MON -FRI SAT &amp; SUN<lb/>
3-7 9 05 O 2 50- 55-7-9 05<lb/>
PG ?MOTti 9MK<lb/>
??? f I .1<lb/>
ECU DISCOUNT<lb/>
on all prescription<lb/>
eyeglasses<lb/>
Selected Art Supplies<lb/>
and Weaving Apparel<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
EAMIMG<lb/>
Sale begins<lb/>
MondayFeb. 21 and<lb/>
ends FriFeb. 25.<lb/>
 i<lb/>
4 6<lb/>
t 9<lb/>
V.<lb/>
Come on in and mop up<lb/>
on the great bargains!<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Owned and operated by East Carolina University Wright Building<lb/>
?<lb/>
Supp<lb/>
 ontinurd From Y<lb/>
-<lb/>
adults, and ou<lb/>
N<lb/>
mo-<lb/>
I ' i<lb/>
? -<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
Series O<lb/>
By Dept<lb/>
Bv (,KM. KIDrOl I<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
!<lb/>
-<lb/>
SI<lb/>
wel<lb/>
rented<lb/>
401 S. EVANSl<lb/>
-ARVONY HOI.<lb/>
"VQUR PROFEJ<lb/>
1<lb/>
8t<lb/>
ANN<lb/>
R<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
- 1<lb/>
w ' f ' '<lb/>
<pb facs="00057536_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
I-EBRL'ARY 17, 9?3<lb/>
Support Increases For Control Of Fraternities<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
:<lb/>
OoWw yn-Mayer praots<lb/>
ray ft ntiEhoy Production<lb/>
A Peter Weir film<lb/>
SKKXJRNEY<lb/>
3W WEAVER <lb/>
tear of Living Dangerously<lb/>
LindaHunt Mod<lb/>
p; ?Miri. imuc Mtirci ?<lb/>
l:<lb/>
mop up<lb/>
largains!<lb/>
RE<lb/>
it Building<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
years we got away from<lb/>
that, and adopted the<lb/>
attitude that 'you're all<lb/>
adults, and you can<lb/>
supervise yourselves<lb/>
But Brant adds,<lb/>
"Now we're seeing<lb/>
more interest and con-<lb/>
cern and better supervi-<lb/>
sion. Man schools are<lb/>
bringing onboard so-<lb/>
meone specifically to<lb/>
supervise fraternity<lb/>
members and to work<lb/>
with them<lb/>
Brant attributes the<lb/>
crackdoun on fraterni-<lb/>
ty violence and pro-<lb/>
blem behavior to "a<lb/>
higher caliber of<lb/>
awareness" among ad-<lb/>
ministrators and<lb/>
students. Others at-<lb/>
tribute it to the growing<lb/>
number of lawsuits<lb/>
against fraternities and<lb/>
the colleges themselves.<lb/>
Last semester, a<lb/>
Virginia court found<lb/>
the Phi Kappa Sigma<lb/>
fraternity at the<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
liable for $125,000 in<lb/>
damages after a student<lb/>
was hit in the head with<lb/>
a beer can by one of the<lb/>
fraternity members.<lb/>
And a University of<lb/>
Delaware student is<lb/>
currently suing both his<lb/>
fraternity and the<lb/>
university for injuries<lb/>
he suffered during an<lb/>
intiation ritual two<lb/>
years ago. At that time,<lb/>
a member of the Sigma<lb/>
Phi Epsilon fraternity<lb/>
poured lye-based<lb/>
cleaner over the stu-<lb/>
dent, causing second-<lb/>
and third degree burns<lb/>
on the pleage's face.<lb/>
head and chest.<lb/>
"I think one of the<lb/>
main reasons schools<lb/>
and national chapters<lb/>
are getting increasingly<lb/>
concerned over frater-<lb/>
nity problems are<lb/>
because of just such<lb/>
lawsuits and the<lb/>
damages they've had<lb/>
to pay notes CHUCK<lb/>
founder Stevens, who<lb/>
herself sued Alfred<lb/>
University and the Klan<lb/>
Alpine fraternity after<lb/>
her son died in a 1978<lb/>
hazing incident there.<lb/>
Moreover, she<lb/>
saysstudents<lb/>
themselves are bringing<lb/>
about changes on some<lb/>
campuses. Now<lb/>
students are coming in<lb/>
much more aware that<lb/>
they don't have to par-<lb/>
ticipate in dangerou;<lb/>
rituals, and they are<lb/>
Series Of Films Given<lb/>
By Dept. Of Marketing<lb/>
B GREG RIDEOl T<lb/>
St?? EdHat<lb/>
The Department of<lb/>
Marketing in the<lb/>
School of Business will<lb/>
present an introductory<lb/>
film series on<lb/>
Marketing in March<lb/>
and April. The six dif-<lb/>
ferent movies on<lb/>
various topics will be<lb/>
shown in room 130 of<lb/>
Rawl Building. Anyone<lb/>
interested can attend.<lb/>
Cheryl Parker, a lec-<lb/>
turer in the marketing<lb/>
department, will coor-<lb/>
dinate the film series.<lb/>
She said the project was<lb/>
being undertaken to e<lb/>
pose business and<lb/>
marketing students, as<lb/>
well as other interested<lb/>
people, to the field oi<lb/>
marketing.<lb/>
I he films are being<lb/>
rented from different<lb/>
schools across the<lb/>
country, Parker said.<lb/>
The first film, to be<lb/>
shown on March 2, is<lb/>
an overall view of<lb/>
marketing. All films<lb/>
will be shown at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Dr. Edward Wheatley,<lb/>
chairman of the<lb/>
marketing department,<lb/>
will speak and be<lb/>
available for questions<lb/>
at this film.<lb/>
The next film, on<lb/>
March 3, will be in-<lb/>
troduced b James<lb/>
Furnev, career plann-<lb/>
ing director at ECU. It<lb/>
will cover opportunities<lb/>
for jobs in marketing.<lb/>
On March 23 and<lb/>
March 24. films ex-<lb/>
plaining the promo-<lb/>
tional aspects of<lb/>
marketing will be<lb/>
shown. The first film<lb/>
will be on advertising<lb/>
and the second on sales<lb/>
management.<lb/>
The final two films<lb/>
of the series will be on<lb/>
marketing research and<lb/>
retailing. They will be<lb/>
shown on April 13 and<lb/>
April 14.<lb/>
Dr. Wheatley sug-<lb/>
gested that students<lb/>
come to the first film to<lb/>
get an overall view of<lb/>
marketing, and then<lb/>
pick out an area of in-<lb/>
terest and come to the<lb/>
see the film on that sub-<lb/>
ject.<lb/>
The funding for the<lb/>
film series is coming<lb/>
from an SGA grant.<lb/>
Parker said the Stu-<lb/>
dent Marketing<lb/>
Association is also<lb/>
helping in setting up the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
WE PAY IMMEDIATE CASH FOR:<lb/>
CLASS RINGS WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
ALL GOLD SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CHINA &amp; CRYSTAL<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
olH &amp; RINC Ml<lb/>
401 S.EVANS ST.<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHON E 7523866<lb/>
"VQUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT PEALER<lb/>
Introducing<lb/>
Tbe<lb/>
"Luanda Chi Alpha<lb/>
little sisters"<lb/>
I 1 M <lb/>
I ill II I<lb/>
at<lb/>
200 West<lb/>
i m inuavs<lb/>
8th<lb/>
ANNUAL TKE Boxing<lb/>
REGISTRATION<lb/>
beginning to question<lb/>
the need for having on-<lb/>
ly greek organizations<lb/>
at all on campus.<lb/>
About 500 students<lb/>
at Stephen F. Austin<lb/>
University recently<lb/>
showed up to par-<lb/>
ticipate in a debate on<lb/>
whether the entire<lb/>
DATES<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
TIME:<lb/>
. Feb.2 Th- Feb.25<lb/>
MEMORIAL GYM<lb/>
onE.CU.CAMPUS<lb/>
5:30 ?o 7:00<lb/>
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY<lb/>
TOURNAMENT DATES MARCH 15th, 16th,17th<lb/>
u . h a Tmateurboxingstanding to b? abk to box<lb/>
greek system there<lb/>
should be abolished.<lb/>
And a faculty-student<lb/>
committee at Trinity<lb/>
College in Connecticut<lb/>
last semester recom-<lb/>
mended that the<lb/>
school's six fraternities<lb/>
and two sororities be<lb/>
abolished permanently.<lb/>
"The committee<lb/>
simply concluded that<lb/>
the fraternities had<lb/>
outlived their<lb/>
usefulness says Trini-<lb/>
ty spokeswoman Kathy<lb/>
Frederick. Among<lb/>
other things, the com-<lb/>
mittee said the greek<lb/>
svstem was so<lb/>
"inherently divisive<lb/>
that it fostered<lb/>
"exclusionary practices<lb/>
based on secret codes<lb/>
and agreements It<lb/>
concluded that, "in<lb/>
short, no need exists"<lb/>
for them.<lb/>
Sometimes off-<lb/>
campus authorities take<lb/>
a similar view. The<lb/>
Davis, Calf, city coun-<lb/>
cil is pondering new<lb/>
laws punishing noise<lb/>
and litter oftenders<lb/>
along Cal-Davis'<lb/>
fraternity row. UC-<lb/>
Davis, moreover, is<lb/>
ready to "initiate<lb/>
disciplinary pro-<lb/>
cedures" against Sigma<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon and<lb/>
Sigma Nu if members<lb/>
again harass certain<lb/>
campus women'v<lb/>
groups. Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Studeni<lb/>
Affairs Tom Dutton<lb/>
warns.<lb/>
8th<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
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PASSING THE SAVINGS ON TO YOU.<lb/>
PITT PLAZACAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057536_0004"/><lb/>
?tf? Safit Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, g? <lb/>
Mike Hughes, stawgEduor<lb/>
w v midditt  Cindy Pleasants, sports ?diw<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT, Dvrctor of Advrrtuing v ?"<lb/>
SCOTT LINDLEY. ?. ? REG R.DEOUT, ta ?<lb/>
All AFRASHTEH. o- ?- STEVE BaCHNER' ??? ?-<lb/>
STEPHANIE GROON. ??. ??- JULIANA FAHRBACH, W ?<lb/>
CLAY THORNTON. MM ? T?DD EVANS' uf ?"<lb/>
February 17, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
The Vandals<lb/>
Joyner's Books Getting The Axe<lb/>
Employees of Joyner Library<lb/>
recently expressed their anger and<lb/>
distress at the growing number of<lb/>
incidents of vandalism occurring<lb/>
there. Books and magazines are all<lb/>
too commonly found with pages<lb/>
torn out, partially torn or scribbled<lb/>
on. Estimates on the extent of<lb/>
damage at present are, of course, in-<lb/>
conclusive, but considering the fact<lb/>
that the problem is ongoing, un-<lb/>
doubtedly the toll runs into<lb/>
thousands of dollars.<lb/>
Perhaps some students simply<lb/>
don't realize what reference<lb/>
materials cost nowadays. (For in-<lb/>
stance, one recently vandalized<lb/>
reference book was but a single<lb/>
volume in an extensive set valued at<lb/>
more than $700.) And worse yet,<lb/>
those same students may not com-<lb/>
prehend the problems that arise as a<lb/>
result of their self-centered<lb/>
carelessness.<lb/>
It's downright sad that something<lb/>
like this has to be written in the first<lb/>
place, but it seems there are a few<lb/>
among us who could definitely<lb/>
benefit from a little "parental" pep<lb/>
talk. After all, children will be<lb/>
children.<lb/>
So, you little kiddies who like to<lb/>
color in Joyner's books or tear out<lb/>
the pages to make a pretty collage to<lb/>
cover up the bare space on your wall<lb/>
next to the Micke Mouse poster,<lb/>
listen up: Coloring on or tearing out<lb/>
pages of books that don't belong to<lb/>
you is wrong. It's bad, bad, bad.<lb/>
Sure, all the other kids may be do-<lb/>
ing it, but we all know that doesn't<lb/>
make it right, don't we? Come on,<lb/>
kiddies, we're in college. Twelve<lb/>
years is plenty of time to outgrow<lb/>
those nasty habits you acquired in<lb/>
kindergarten.<lb/>
In this paper's opinion, the direc-<lb/>
tors of Joyner Library would be<lb/>
well within their rights to revoke<lb/>
library privileges of those students<lb/>
who fancy themselves artists and<lb/>
editors at the library's expense.<lb/>
Other, stiffer penalties ? fines,<lb/>
suspension or perhaps tooth extrac-<lb/>
tions could also be enforced with<lb/>
no abridgement of justice.<lb/>
Penalties, however, are not the<lb/>
real problem. Without imposing on<lb/>
the library a virtual Nazi state, cat-<lb/>
ching students in the act is next to<lb/>
impossible. Hence, you students<lb/>
who wish to misuse library books<lb/>
and magazines are at an obvious ad-<lb/>
vantage. It's practically guaranteed<lb/>
that you won't be caught. So, the<lb/>
ball's in your court<lb/>
But before you tear out or scrib-<lb/>
ble on a page from a library book,<lb/>
consider just two more things: Con-<lb/>
sider yourself in the position of the<lb/>
next person who wishes to use the<lb/>
reference. How would you feel if<lb/>
you opened a book ? say, one you<lb/>
needed for a research paper ? and<lb/>
after a half hour of index scanning<lb/>
for your topic, you found page 898<lb/>
facing page 901? Would you be able<lb/>
to laugh it off? Would you<lb/>
"understand?" Hardly.<lb/>
And finally, one last request:<lb/>
Consider the cost of the damage you<lb/>
propose to do to the book. That<lb/>
figure will undoubtedly be con-<lb/>
siderably less than the lowly dime it<lb/>
takes to operate a copy machine.<lb/>
NIV jp<lb/>
I HEAR HE WAS HORSE OF THE YEAR UNTIL HE JOINED HIS<lb/>
KIDNAPPERS AMP CHAW HIS NAME TO TANYA<lb/>
Washington's Answer To The Gas Glut<lb/>
Ongoing Circle Of Heat<lb/>
B JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
and JOE SPEAR<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? If you heat your<lb/>
home with gas, you don't need to be told<lb/>
that the price of natural gas is<lb/>
skyrocketing. Some American families are<lb/>
paying as much as 70 percent more to heat<lb/>
their homes this year than they did last<lb/>
winter.<lb/>
Who is to blame? Congress, the gas pro-<lb/>
ducers and President Reagan.<lb/>
In 1978. Congress passed a truly terrible<lb/>
law that regulated natural-gas prices. It<lb/>
was a time of natural-gas shortages, and<lb/>
Congress wanted to encourage producers<lb/>
to drill for "deep-well" gas. So they allow-<lb/>
ed producers to charge more for deep gas<lb/>
than for shallow gas.<lb/>
Now there is a natural-gas glut. So, pro-<lb/>
ducers are selling their deep gas and<lb/>
holding back on the shallow gas. It earns<lb/>
them more profit.<lb/>
Congress tried to prevent this kind of<lb/>
gouging in the 1978 law bv requiring the<lb/>
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to<lb/>
protect consumers from ripoffs. The com-<lb/>
mission was given the power to prohibit<lb/>
natural-gas contracts that were excessive,<lb/>
fraudulent or abusive.<lb/>
This is where President Reagan comes<lb/>
in He appointed energy commissioners<lb/>
who are more interested in the gas pro-<lb/>
ducers than their customers.<lb/>
The Reagan appointees have interpreted<lb/>
their authoritv very narrowly. They have<lb/>
decided thev can prohibit a natural-gas<lb/>
contract only if it contains outright<lb/>
falsehoods.<lb/>
In effect, an open season has been<lb/>
declared on gas customers. The producers<lb/>
can gouge you all they want, as long as<lb/>
tHe don't lie to you.<lb/>
Now things are right back where they<lb/>
started ? in Congress. A move is under-<lb/>
way to rewrite the 1978 law to prevent<lb/>
price-gouging by natural-gas producers.<lb/>
POWER STRUGGLE: The En-<lb/>
vironmental Protection Agency is beginn-<lb/>
ing to look like the OK Corral.<lb/>
Bureaucratic bodies are littering the land-<lb/>
scape.<lb/>
Last week, President Reagan fired the<lb/>
head of the EPA's hazardous waste sec-<lb/>
tion, Rita Lavelle. and two of her top<lb/>
assistants. Our sources say as many as 10<lb/>
more EPA officials may also be dismissed.<lb/>
Protection of the environment has hard-<lb/>
ly been at the top of the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration's list of priorities. So why all<lb/>
the bloodletting at EPA?<lb/>
It wasn't the result of any deep<lb/>
ideological differences of opinion. It was<lb/>
simply a bureaucratic power struggle bet-<lb/>
ween Lavelle and another top EPA of-<lb/>
ficial. Here are the details:<lb/>
Lavelle was an old Reagan friend from<lb/>
California, but she had made some serious<lb/>
mistakes. And the White House was wor-<lb/>
ried about its fight with Congress over the<lb/>
contempt citation voted against EPA chief<lb/>
Anne Gorsuch.<lb/>
So Lavelle got the sack. Firing her made<lb/>
it look as if the White House was finally<lb/>
doing some housecleaning at EPA, but it<lb/>
also protected Gorsuch.<lb/>
Lavelle's most serious mistake was lying<lb/>
to Congress about a conflict of interest.<lb/>
She used to work for Aerojet-General, and<lb/>
Aerojet-General used to dump toxic wastes<lb/>
at the Stringfellow Acid Pits in California.<lb/>
The Stringfellow dump is one of the<lb/>
government's highest-priority cleanup pro-<lb/>
jects. Lavelle promised Congress she<lb/>
would have nothing to do with the pr<lb/>
because of her past connection ?<lb/>
Aerojet-General.<lb/>
But a congressional committee obta:<lb/>
a document which showed that vhe<lb/>
been working on the Stringfellow ma<lb/>
She not only was implicated in a conflict<lb/>
interest, but she broke her promise to Con-<lb/>
gress about it.<lb/>
Lavelle also had a scrape with Rober<lb/>
Perry, the EPA's enforcement chief I:<lb/>
seems that Lavelle had offered lo settle a<lb/>
waste-dumping cae with Monsanto<lb/>
Chemical Company, but she neglected to<lb/>
tell Perry that she had cut the deal. He<lb/>
later turned down the settlement.<lb/>
Monsanto was furious because the<lb/>
tlement had already been agreed U<lb/>
Perrv was furious because he hadn beer,<lb/>
told about the agreement.<lb/>
Lavelle wa dose to President Reag-<lb/>
top assistant. Ed Meese. and expected him<lb/>
to stick up for her when push came<lb/>
shove. But she apparently overestimated<lb/>
her influence and now is out o a<lb/>
HEADLINES AND FOOTNOTES:<lb/>
Federal law enforcement agencie- arc<lb/>
feuding over the right to bear arms. The<lb/>
labor department's inspector general wants<lb/>
permission for its agents to carry guns. The<lb/>
justice department agents are worried, thei<lb/>
say, because they are required to in-<lb/>
vestigate mobsters and cannot defend<lb/>
themselves without weapons<lb/>
? Both the United States and the Soviel<lb/>
Union are quietly courting tiny isolat:<lb/>
Albania. The reason: Albania's ai.<lb/>
Adriatic ports would give Moscow -<lb/>
foothold on the Mediterranean and p<lb/>
threat to the U.S. Sixth Fleet.<lb/>
 qpqp p H3<lb/>
United Feature $ -<lb/>
Soviets Finding Afghans Unyielding<lb/>
A Valuable Lesson In Expansionism<lb/>
By GREGORY RIDEOLT<lb/>
The visit last Wednesday of three former<lb/>
Afghan freedom fighters was a stark<lb/>
reminder to ECU of Soviet realpolmk. The<lb/>
story the trio told is vivid testimony to the<lb/>
Soviet Union's expansionist brand ot<lb/>
foreign policy. .<lb/>
Ever since the Bolshevik Revolution of<lb/>
1917 the Soviets have dealt with other na-<lb/>
tions to the Soviets' advantage They have<lb/>
often come to the bargaining table in what<lb/>
we and the rest of the world thought was<lb/>
good faith, and then ignored the treaty<lb/>
Terms they had just signed. An example<lb/>
would be the Soviet Union's agreement at<lb/>
the end of WWII to provide for free elec-<lb/>
tions in Poland. The elections were never<lb/>
held, and a communist government was<lb/>
forced upon the Polish people.<lb/>
The Soviets invaded Afghanistan<lb/>
because the nationalist communist regime<lb/>
of Hafizullah Amin was becoming too in-<lb/>
dependent of mother Russia. The boys in<lb/>
the Kremlin needed a puppet in Kabul in<lb/>
order to control their interests on the Per-<lb/>
sian Gulf, so they engraved their own in-<lb/>
vitation and sent 80,000 troops over the<lb/>
border.<lb/>
By Dec. 27, 1979, Amin was dead, and<lb/>
Babrak Karmal was placed into power by<lb/>
the Soviets. The Soviet Union, under the<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Class Cut-Ups Cut Low<lb/>
mm&amp; A PLAN WE W WASHINGTON ON LIVE WITH<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
Today in class, a few students were<lb/>
"cutting up and the instructor, who is<lb/>
foreign, asked them what was going on<lb/>
One student repliedShe's laughing at<lb/>
the way you speak<lb/>
As 1 glanced around the room, most<lb/>
of the students had a look of shock and<lb/>
disbelief at what this student had said<lb/>
The instructor, who is a very competent<lb/>
teacher, expressed his negative reaction<lb/>
to the rudeness of the few students. 1<lb/>
can't believe the audacity of these<lb/>
students and others who are so<lb/>
disrespectful of instructors. If they can t<lb/>
behave as mature college students, why<lb/>
don't they go back to high school, or<lb/>
better yet-kindergarten? wiechman<lb/>
Lonely Prisoner<lb/>
I am a prisoner on death row at the<lb/>
Arizona State Prison, and I was wonder-<lb/>
ing if you could do me a favor. I have<lb/>
been here for quite a while, and I don't<lb/>
have any family or friends on the outside<lb/>
to write to. I know that you are not a<lb/>
pen-pal club or anything like that, but I<lb/>
would really appreciate it if you could<lb/>
help me.<lb/>
I am 35 years old and simply desire<lb/>
correspondence with either male or<lb/>
female college students. I want to form<lb/>
some kind of friendly type relationship<lb/>
and more or less just exchange past ex-<lb/>
periences and ideas. Will answer all let-<lb/>
ters and exchange pictures.<lb/>
Jim Jeffers<lb/>
Box B-38604<lb/>
Florence, AR. 85232<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. <lb/>
so-called Brezhnev Doctrine, claims tt ha<lb/>
the right to intervene in any socialist coun-<lb/>
try if the existence of communism is<lb/>
threatened. The use of the doctrine in<lb/>
Afghanistan was pure power politics and<lb/>
in no wav was meant to help the country<lb/>
But the small country of 17-mfflion peo-<lb/>
ple was determined not to be another jewel<lb/>
in the Russians' growing crown. Men land<lb/>
bovs) like the Afghans who spoke here<lb/>
took to the hills to protect their nation s<lb/>
sovereignty. Today. 80 percent ot their<lb/>
country is free of communist control but<lb/>
the official government in Kabul is still run<lb/>
bv the Soviets.<lb/>
'There was a time when it was good<lb/>
politics to stop communist aggression;<lb/>
Korea, and then Vietnam. have since<lb/>
soured the American people on the idea ol<lb/>
containment and direct military invorve-<lb/>
ment. So, todav, in an effort to thran the<lb/>
Soviet's expansionist tendencies, we<lb/>
publicly condemn the action and impose<lb/>
economic sanctions. But, privately we are<lb/>
helping.<lb/>
The freedom fighters are using stolen<lb/>
Russian-made guns in their fight for<lb/>
freedom; when a gun needs a spare part,<lb/>
there are none. Obviously, we can't send<lb/>
them parts, but we do indirectly "send<lb/>
the Afghan rebels weapons through<lb/>
Pakistan.<lb/>
The experts say the Soviet Union is plan-<lb/>
ning to withdraw from Afghanistan in an<lb/>
effort to somehow save face. New Soviet<lb/>
leader Yuri Andropov is more liberal and<lb/>
more open to new ideas. Maybe the<lb/>
Soviets, after realizing they can't win, will<lb/>
leave Afghanistan; yet that doesn't mean<lb/>
they won't try again when their dominance<lb/>
of the communist world is challenged.<lb/>
The United States and the free world<lb/>
must always be attentive to the lessons<lb/>
history has taught us about the Soviet<lb/>
Union. Although the Marxist Leninist<lb/>
principle of an all-communist world has<lb/>
been abandoned in the face of political<lb/>
reality, we must still be watchful of the<lb/>
power plays of a highly-militarized super<lb/>
power.<lb/>
Afghanistan could be the place at which<lb/>
Soviet foreign policy is derailed and put on<lb/>
a different track, but maybe it won't be.<lb/>
Fern<lb/>
B PATRK K<lb/>
0 SHI I<lb/>
The two dozei<lb/>
en ho gatTM<lb/>
lobby of Gar re" Hd<lb/>
Wednesday e-<lb/>
probably net<lb/>
ed Rebec.a .z<lb/>
c on lh<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Ne?s C ommfnian<lb/>
v a s h : N<lb/>
? 1 pi<lb/>
-<lb/>
ernal R-?<lb/>
and<lb/>
? '<lb/>
The IS<lb/>
taxpayei<lb/>
the food<lb/>
I<lb/>
be<lb/>
Re:<lb/>
em<lb/>
WOMEN SHL<lb/>
CAREYC. CAT<lb/>
DEPEND ON<lb/>
StBVC?<lb/>
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KJuCOP<lb/>
208 fl<lb/>
SNAK BM'<lb/>
&amp; CHIPS<lb/>
SNAK RO-<lb/>
SODA FOI<lb/>
SNAK MEAT<lb/>
FOR S1 -5r<lb/>
SNAK Hi<lb/>
FOR $1 ?1<lb/>
SNAK Al<lb/>
ASMALI<lb/>
SPECIAI<lb/>
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HI<lb/>
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M<lb/>
IHEEASTCAROUNIAN FBWUAKY 17, IV83<lb/>
NEIN?,<lb/>
Heat<lb/>
 th the project<lb/>
onnection with<lb/>
committee obtained<lb/>
- h sh tcd thai -he had<lb/>
 matter.<lb/>
a conflict of<lb/>
e to Con-<lb/>
scrape with Robert<lb/>
emeni<lb/>
lef. It<lb/>
had ff -(tie a<lb/>
!onanto<lb/>
eglected to<lb/>
deal. He<lb/>
a ise the set-<lb/>
tg fed upon;<lb/>
idn'l been<lb/>
Reagan's<lb/>
id Meese, and expected him<lb/>
came to<lb/>
estimated<lb/>
? a job.<lb/>
S ND F(X)TNOTI S<lb/>
ment agencies are<lb/>
to bear arms. The<lb/>
inspector general wants<lb/>
to carry guns. The<lb/>
 ??' ?  they<lb/>
. . red to<lb/>
the Soviet<lb/>
lationist<lb/>
lbania - valuable<lb/>
e Moscow a<lb/>
ean and pose a<lb/>
ielding<lb/>
me Doctrine, claims it has<lb/>
em any socialist coun-<lb/>
e of communism is<lb/>
ise of the doctrine in<lb/>
ire power politics and<lb/>
ant to help the country.<lb/>
lall country of 17-million peo-<lb/>
br mined not to be another jewel<lb/>
fens' growing crown. Men (and<lb/>
fghan poke here<lb/>
? protect their nation's<lb/>
percent of their<lb/>
ommun I titrol, but<lb/>
ernment in Kabul is still run<lb/>
i a time when it was good<lb/>
mmunist aggression;<lb/>
then Vietnam. hae since<lb/>
an people on the idea of<lb/>
and direct militar involve-<lb/>
. ?? ? i ? irt to thrawrt the<lb/>
tendencies, we<lb/>
demn the action and impose<lb/>
But, privately we are<lb/>
mi fighters are using stolen<lb/>
le guns in their fight for<lb/>
ten a gun needs a spare part,<lb/>
)ne. Obviously, we can't send<lb/>
but we do indirectly "send"<lb/>
rebeis weapons through<lb/>
Its say the Soviet Union is plan-<lb/>
)draw from Afghanistan in an<lb/>
lehow save face. New Soviet<lb/>
JAndropov is more liberal and<lb/>
to new ideas. Maybe the<lb/>
lr realizing the can't win. will<lb/>
pistan; yet that doesn't mean<lb/>
r again when their dominance<lb/>
lunist world is challenged.<lb/>
Ed States and the free world<lb/>
be attentive to the lessons<lb/>
taught us about the Soviet<lb/>
lough the MarxistLeninist<lb/>
in all-communist world has<lb/>
?ned in the face of political<lb/>
rust still be watchful of the<lb/>
4 a highly-militarized super<lb/>
in could be the place at which<lb/>
In policy is derailed and put on<lb/>
rack, but maybe it won't be.<lb/>
Female Student Talks From The Heart On Rape<lb/>
By PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
Si.ff Wricfr<lb/>
The two dozen<lb/>
women who gathered in<lb/>
?obby of Garrett Hall<lb/>
Wednesday evening<lb/>
probably never ex-<lb/>
pected Rebecca Hales<lb/>
lecture on the "feelings<lb/>
and traumas of rape<lb/>
victims" to be quite so<lb/>
honest or quite so<lb/>
graphic.<lb/>
Hales, 20. a ECU<lb/>
surgical technology stu-<lb/>
dent recounted each<lb/>
detail of what she call-<lb/>
ed an "extra-ordinary<lb/>
violent" rape that hap-<lb/>
pened to her when she<lb/>
was 16 years-old.<lb/>
Hales was invited to<lb/>
speak, by west campus<lb/>
coordinator Janet<lb/>
Johnson and west area<lb/>
programing assistants<lb/>
Lorianne Templeton<lb/>
and Laurie Caret, as<lb/>
part of the west campus<lb/>
Women's Awareness<lb/>
Month program.<lb/>
During her attack,<lb/>
Hales was seriously in-<lb/>
jured both physically<lb/>
and mentally. She was<lb/>
beaten severely and<lb/>
received several knife<lb/>
wounds from her<lb/>
assailant, who was<lb/>
never apprehended.<lb/>
During a three week-<lb/>
period after the attack,<lb/>
her weight dropped<lb/>
from 128 lbs. to 89 lbs.<lb/>
Because of the trauma<lb/>
she was feeling, Hales<lb/>
told only her best<lb/>
friend about the attack<lb/>
and kept it from her<lb/>
IRS Over Reaching Into Waiters9 Pav<lb/>
News Commentary  ,i .u <lb/>
? Part claim th? ihc n?i? ni? ,u?. .i .? .<lb/>
family by making up<lb/>
lies about her facial in-<lb/>
juries.<lb/>
Her friend eventually<lb/>
told guidance officials<lb/>
at their high school and<lb/>
Hales was told she had<lb/>
to report for medical<lb/>
attention. She was ad-<lb/>
mitted to the hospital<lb/>
News Commentary<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(UPI) - The long arm<lb/>
?f the law, as<lb/>
represented by the In-<lb/>
ternal Revenue Service,<lb/>
is trying to reach out<lb/>
and touch waiters, bar-<lb/>
maids and other<lb/>
restaurant workers like-<lb/>
ly to collect tips.<lb/>
The IRS says manv<lb/>
taxpayers who toil in<lb/>
the food industry have<lb/>
serious memory lapses<lb/>
when it comes to listing<lb/>
tips on their Forms<lb/>
1040. So eight percent<lb/>
of their total sales has<lb/>
been made<lb/>
automatically subject<lb/>
to taxation.<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
employees for their<lb/>
part claim the the new<lb/>
law is causing<lb/>
"crippling disrup-<lb/>
tions" in their business.<lb/>
That I can readily<lb/>
believe.<lb/>
Any customer who<lb/>
only leaves an eight<lb/>
percent gratuity is like-<lb/>
ly to find that service at<lb/>
his table has been crip-<lb/>
plingly disrupted.<lb/>
Nevertheless, some<lb/>
waiters and waitresses<lb/>
complain they rarelv<lb/>
serve the last of the big<lb/>
spenders. When their<lb/>
tips don't add up to the<lb/>
minimum percentage,<lb/>
they say, the sales totals<lb/>
their bosses report to<lb/>
the IRS are misleading.<lb/>
I don't necessarily<lb/>
quarrel with the princi-<lb/>
ple that the IRS is en<lb/>
titled to extract a<lb/>
pound of flesh for<lb/>
every beefsteak coming<lb/>
out of a restaurant kit-<lb/>
chen. What I question<lb/>
is the fairness of singl-<lb/>
ing out waiters when so<lb/>
many other potential<lb/>
taxpayers get away with<lb/>
not reporting huge<lb/>
chunks of income.<lb/>
Someone once sent<lb/>
me a copy of "a special<lb/>
message to taxpayers"<lb/>
prepared by the<lb/>
Massachusetts revenue<lb/>
department. It remind-<lb/>
ed Bay State residents<lb/>
they were liable for<lb/>
taxes on income deriv-<lb/>
ed from kickbacks,<lb/>
stealing, drugs, cash<lb/>
skimming and other il-<lb/>
legal activities.<lb/>
"Not reporting such<lb/>
income can lead to pro-<lb/>
secution for perjury<lb/>
and fraud it solemnly<lb/>
and straight-facedly<lb/>
warned.<lb/>
I commend that ap-<lb/>
proach to President<lb/>
Reagan and Congress<lb/>
as they struggle to<lb/>
reduce the federal<lb/>
deficit.<lb/>
As things now stand,<lb/>
the entire budgetary<lb/>
burden is borne by<lb/>
those of us who have<lb/>
only legitimate sources<lb/>
of income. So how<lb/>
about tightening collec-<lb/>
tion procedures on the<lb/>
millions of dollars in il-<lb/>
licit revenue that goe<lb/>
unreported each year?<lb/>
How long has it been<lb/>
since kidnappers paid<lb/>
taxes on ransoms? How<lb/>
long since hostage-<lb/>
takers forked over to<lb/>
the government the in-<lb/>
dicated portion of cash<lb/>
and valuables received<lb/>
i? exchange<lb/>
agreements? How long<lb/>
since airline hijackers<lb/>
were soaked by the IRS<lb/>
for transportation<lb/>
benefits?<lb/>
I don't know exactly<lb/>
how much in taxes<lb/>
thieves, prostitutes and<lb/>
drug dealers avoid pay-<lb/>
ing each year. It might<lb/>
might turn that, with<lb/>
all the deductions they<lb/>
could claim, they<lb/>
would owe little or<lb/>
nothing. Income<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
?U5 00 Pregnancy Test B.rth<lb/>
Control ana Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling For<lb/>
further inlormation call<lb/>
832 OS35 (Toil Free Number<lb/>
800 221 256) between 1 AM<lb/>
nd 5 P M Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGHS WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
?17 West v-rgan St<lb/>
Raleigi<lb/>
earners in these fields<lb/>
have heavy business ex-<lb/>
penses, you know.<lb/>
Even in these days of<lb/>
declining gasoline<lb/>
prices, keeping the<lb/>
motor running in a<lb/>
getaway car must be<lb/>
frightfully expensive.<lb/>
But most bank rob-<lb/>
bers, narcotics traf-<lb/>
fickers and the like file<lb/>
no returns at all. Worse<lb/>
yet, they obviously can<lb/>
afford to leave big tips<lb/>
when they eat out.<lb/>
These are the tax<lb/>
evaders the government<lb/>
should be going after.<lb/>
Another new law ex-<lb/>
tending the withholding<lb/>
system to ill-gotten<lb/>
gains could put the<lb/>
budget in the bUck.<lb/>
suffering from fatigue<lb/>
and malnutrition.<lb/>
Hales went on to<lb/>
discuss the subsequent<lb/>
social alienation she<lb/>
had to face from her<lb/>
family, friends and<lb/>
church after the truth<lb/>
became known. She re-<lb/>
counted the ridicule<lb/>
that her schoolmates<lb/>
put her through.<lb/>
Sometimes the ridicule<lb/>
and alienation were so<lb/>
severe that Hales<lb/>
sought psychiatric<lb/>
counseling.<lb/>
Even today, four<lb/>
years later, Hales<lb/>
claims that the impact<lb/>
of the attack is still pro-<lb/>
nounced. She said peo-<lb/>
ple in her hometown<lb/>
still treat her differently<lb/>
at times.<lb/>
It was three years<lb/>
before Hales was able<lb/>
to date again. She said<lb/>
she no longer has a<lb/>
desire to be involved in<lb/>
a relationship with a<lb/>
man.<lb/>
During her lecture,<lb/>
Hales discussed her<lb/>
more recent experience<lb/>
of working with a rape<lb/>
crisis center. She spoke<lb/>
of a justice system<lb/>
which doesn't protect<lb/>
the victim and rarely<lb/>
convicts a rapist. "A<lb/>
lot of people say it's<lb/>
(rape) a crime of pas-<lb/>
sion, but it's not. It's a<lb/>
crime of violence<lb/>
Hales said.<lb/>
Besides recounting<lb/>
her tragic story, Hale<lb/>
also had words of war-<lb/>
ning for the students<lb/>
who listened attentively<lb/>
for over an hour.<lb/>
"Prevention" is the<lb/>
most important work,<lb/>
she said, and part of<lb/>
prevention is the pro-<lb/>
spective victims ability<lb/>
to physically thrawrt an<lb/>
attacker. Hales<lb/>
demonstrated a series<lb/>
of self-defense tactics<lb/>
she had learned from a<lb/>
karate class she's taken<lb/>
since the attack.<lb/>
"I'm scared said<lb/>
sophomore Amy Lund,<lb/>
who listened to Hales<lb/>
lecture. "She's<lb/>
definitely put some fear<lb/>
in me. The more and<lb/>
more I hear about<lb/>
rape she continued,<lb/>
"the more I think I<lb/>
realh need to protect<lb/>
myself. It really brings<lb/>
out awareness Lund<lb/>
added.<lb/>
"Basically, we tried<lb/>
to choose topics that we<lb/>
thought would be of in-<lb/>
terest to female ECU<lb/>
students said Garet.<lb/>
"Our major goal for<lb/>
these programs is to<lb/>
make students more<lb/>
aware of problems that<lb/>
women are facing in the<lb/>
1980s added<lb/>
Templeton. Both<lb/>
women were very pleas-<lb/>
ed with Hales program.<lb/>
Hales, who also<lb/>
spoke about her attack<lb/>
to several social science<lb/>
classes at different<lb/>
times, was urged to do<lb/>
so by one of her<lb/>
freshmen professors.<lb/>
"It's therapeutic to<lb/>
talk said Hales. "It's<lb/>
helping me get things<lb/>
off my chest<lb/>
The final program<lb/>
scheduled during<lb/>
Women's Awareness<lb/>
Month will be on sexual<lb/>
harassment as it per-<lb/>
tains to women in the<lb/>
work force. Dr. Ken<lb/>
Wilson w,n be<lb/>
leading the program<lb/>
slated for Tuesday,<lb/>
Feb. 22, at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
lobby of Garrett.<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN abobtio ? ,<lb/>
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SCBVICE5 ? "escJay ? Safuraav Aoortion Ap<lb/>
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18 Weeks ? free Pregnancy tests ? ery I or.<lb/>
Pregnancy Tests A Inc is  ?? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
Accepted ? CALL 781-5550 DAY OB NIGH! ?<lb/>
Healthcare counseling THF p. pM,M<lb/>
ana education tor wo- ' r,C TLCIVIirV?<lb/>
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OFFICE SUPPLIES. SCHOOL SUPPUES<lb/>
SOCIAL STATIONERY, GIFTS, GREETING CARDS<lb/>
422 Arlington Blvd. (Opposite Htt Man)<lb/>
756-4224<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C.<lb/>
-Jfe. .M.rMf ??<lb/>
? Would like to Welcome Cindy<lb/>
to the Shop<lb/>
Let Cindy tend to your hair care needs<lb/>
?recieve SI.00 off with this coupon.<lb/>
This introductory coupon expires March 20th<lb/>
758-6190 riiBiinHii. n.c. 27854<lb/>
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Thurs is<lb/>
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Nite<lb/>
All cans 45C<lb/>
til 11:00 p.m.<lb/>
70C til 1:00 a.m.<lb/>
Adm.n.00<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS AT<lb/>
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208 E. 5th St. 758-7979<lb/>
MON.<lb/>
SNAK BMT (HAM, PEPPERONI, GENOA, BOLOGNA)<lb/>
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TUES<lb/>
SNAK ROAST BEEF, BAG OF CHIPS, AND A SMALL<lb/>
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WED.<lb/>
SNAK MEATBALL, BAG OF CHIPS, AND A SMALL SODA<lb/>
FOR $159<lb/>
THURS.<lb/>
SNAK HAM, BAG OF CHIPS AND A SMALL SODA<lb/>
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FRI.<lb/>
SNAK ALASKAN KING CRAB, BAG OF CHIPS, AND<lb/>
A SMALL SODA FOR $2.39<lb/>
SPECIALS RUN FROM 11 A.M. UNTIL 2 P.M. DAILY.<lb/>
The ALAMO<lb/>
Restaurant &amp; Nightclub<lb/>
Greenville's newest nightspot &amp; eatery.<lb/>
Thurs Dance limited -Mobile Sand?light Show<lb/>
Free admission till 9:00 Doors open at 7:00<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
The Breeze Band with Clifford Cum<lb/>
9-1:00am<lb/>
Happy Hour 7- 10:00pm<lb/>
Free till 9 with college I.D.<lb/>
After 9 $1.00 off wjth College I.D.<lb/>
Hot, heavy hor'duerves<lb/>
Sat The Royal Kings 9-l:00am<lb/>
Happy Hour 7-9pm<lb/>
$1.00 off with college l.D.<lb/>
Admission free from 7-8:00 pm<lb/>
I KM V Memorial Or<lb/>
ai? Irom (.rrrnnllr Xtrport<lb/>
Closed Nundas except (or special e?enls phorw -two5 for idduionai lalnrniaiion<lb/>
HAVING PROBLEMS<lb/>
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? Freshly Scrambled Eggs ? Homemade Buttermilk Biscuits ? Bacon<lb/>
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Homemade Muffins ? Link and Patty Sausage ? A Choice of<lb/>
"Shoneys" Own Special Fruit Toppings ? Grated American Cheese ?<lb/>
PLUS The Fruit Bar featuring a variety of fresh fruit and tomatoes<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
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71<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
i"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057536_0006"/><lb/>
THE HAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
KH1RIIARY17. 1983<lb/>
More<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(UPI) President<lb/>
Reagan is embarking<lb/>
on a selling campaign<lb/>
to promote support for<lb/>
the building of the MX<lb/>
missile, his military<lb/>
spending increases and<lb/>
his foreign policy.<lb/>
On all three fronts,<lb/>
he still must convince<lb/>
Congress and the<lb/>
public that he is on the<lb/>
right track.<lb/>
As a result, he is call-<lb/>
ing in some old pros to<lb/>
help launch a drive to<lb/>
improve understanding<lb/>
of his policies and to<lb/>
win backing for them at<lb/>
home and abroad.<lb/>
He has tapped Max<lb/>
Friedersdorf, his<lb/>
former chief lobbyist<lb/>
on Capitol Hill, to<lb/>
return from his<lb/>
diplomatic sojourn in<lb/>
the Bahamas to lend a<lb/>
hand in selling the need<lb/>
for production and<lb/>
deployment of the con-<lb/>
trovrsial MX missile.<lb/>
In the foreign policy<lb/>
field, his administra-<lb/>
tion has committed $65<lb/>
million to a program to<lb/>
support democratic in-<lb/>
stitutions throughout<lb/>
the world through stu-<lb/>
dent and leader ex-<lb/>
change programs, and<lb/>
aid to foreign educa-<lb/>
tion and broadcast<lb/>
outlets.<lb/>
News Analysis<lb/>
Reagan also recently<lb/>
dispatched Vice Presi-<lb/>
dent George Bush to<lb/>
Europe to shore up sag-<lb/>
ging support among<lb/>
European leaders for<lb/>
his "zero-zero" nuclear<lb/>
arms proposal to the<lb/>
Soviets. Many of the<lb/>
leaders are urging a<lb/>
more flexible policy<lb/>
than the U.S. proposal<lb/>
that calls for the<lb/>
elminination of all<lb/>
intermediate-range<lb/>
missiles on the conti-<lb/>
nent.<lb/>
And he sent<lb/>
Lecture Discusses Nuclear Threat<lb/>
The final program of<lb/>
the FCU School of<lb/>
Medicine's winter<lb/>
"Prospectives" lecture<lb/>
series will take place<lb/>
Monday with a pro-<lb/>
gram entitled "The<lb/>
Last Epidemic: Medical<lb/>
Consequences of<lb/>
Nuclear Weapons and<lb/>
Nuclear War The<lb/>
noontime lecture will<lb/>
be moderated by John<lb/>
C. Moskop, assistant<lb/>
professor in the<lb/>
medical humanities<lb/>
program of the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine.<lb/>
This is the fourth<lb/>
program in the<lb/>
"Prospectives" series<lb/>
and was developed by<lb/>
Todd Savitt and<lb/>
Wilhelm Firsell, Loret-<lb/>
ta Kopelman, docdtors<lb/>
in the medical school's<lb/>
humanities program.<lb/>
Kopelman is the head<lb/>
of the program.<lb/>
Savitt. an historian<lb/>
of medicine, began a<lb/>
successful informal lec-<lb/>
ture series at the<lb/>
University of Florida.<lb/>
He became involved in<lb/>
a similar project at<lb/>
ECU and he claims the<lb/>
response so far has<lb/>
been "very nice<lb/>
The "Prospectives"<lb/>
series kicked off last<lb/>
fall with a four-lecture<lb/>
program and another<lb/>
series in planned for the<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
"1 wanted to give<lb/>
people a chance to<lb/>
think about things<lb/>
other than the everyday<lb/>
concerns of clinical and<lb/>
basic science Savitt<lb/>
told The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian. "What we were<lb/>
concerned about were<lb/>
the ways that the rest of<lb/>
the world impinges on<lb/>
the world of<lb/>
medicine<lb/>
Moskop's program<lb/>
Monday will begin with<lb/>
a half-hour film presen-<lb/>
tation of a conference<lb/>
that discussed the con<lb/>
sequences of a nuclear<lb/>
explosion and the more<lb/>
general consequences<lb/>
of nuclear war. The<lb/>
film titled "The Last<lb/>
Epidemic" was loaned<lb/>
to Moskop from the<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Triangle Chapter of<lb/>
Physicians for Social<lb/>
Responsibility.<lb/>
The film features ex-<lb/>
perts in physics,<lb/>
medicine and the<lb/>
military delivering<lb/>
papers on several topics<lb/>
related to nuclear<lb/>
weapons and nuclear<lb/>
wars. Moskop said the<lb/>
film centers on a<lb/>
discussion of what<lb/>
could happen if a<lb/>
nuclear explosion took<lb/>
place in San Fransisco.<lb/>
It also show original<lb/>
footage of the after ef-<lb/>
fects of the first atomic<lb/>
weapon the United<lb/>
States dropped on<lb/>
Hiroshima in 1945.<lb/>
film include: the effects<lb/>
that a nuclear explosion<lb/>
sould have on the ear-<lb/>
th's ecological system,<lb/>
the immediate blast ef-<lb/>
fects, the feasibility of<lb/>
civil defense, the<lb/>
dangers of a launch on<lb/>
warning policy and the<lb/>
prospects for survival.<lb/>
Moskop said he<lb/>
chose this topic out of a<lb/>
special personal in-<lb/>
terest. "I'm very con-<lb/>
cerned about the<lb/>
danger of nuclear war<lb/>
and the need to inform<lb/>
people about the<lb/>
almost unimaginable<lb/>
devastation that it<lb/>
would cause he said.<lb/>
Savitt and Moskop<lb/>
welcomed students to<lb/>
attend the<lb/>
"Prospectives" lec-<lb/>
tures. Savitt said a stu<lb/>
and will be held in the<lb/>
upstairs conference<lb/>
room of the hospital<lb/>
cafeteria.<lb/>
Secretary of State<lb/>
George Shultz to China<lb/>
to mend fences in a<lb/>
continuing dispute over<lb/>
the U.S. relationship to<lb/>
Taiwan. Shultz also<lb/>
stopped in Japan where<lb/>
relations between the<lb/>
two countries are<lb/>
strained over trade and<lb/>
Japan's contribution to<lb/>
Asian defense.<lb/>
At home, Reagan<lb/>
makes no bones about<lb/>
the fact that he is<lb/>
bothered by critics who<lb/>
think he is spending too<lb/>
much money on<lb/>
military programs and<lb/>
taking away from the<lb/>
poor.<lb/>
He has brought in<lb/>
William Greener, one<lb/>
of the spokesman for<lb/>
the White House and<lb/>
the Pentagon in the<lb/>
Ford administration, to<lb/>
advise on making a bet-<lb/>
ter case for the $30<lb/>
billion increase in the<lb/>
defense budget, and<lb/>
improving understan-<lb/>
ding of the need for a<lb/>
buildup.<lb/>
"1 know there's been<lb/>
a constant drumbeat<lb/>
about defense spending<lb/>
as if that's responsible<lb/>
for all our ills<lb/>
Reagan told a business<lb/>
gathering earlier in the<lb/>
week.<lb/>
In the near future,<lb/>
Reagan plans to deliver<lb/>
a major address on his<lb/>
foreign policv and on<lb/>
defense needs. Aides<lb/>
are counting on his<lb/>
considerable powers as<lb/>
a super salesman to<lb/>
turn around the public<lb/>
opinion polls that have<lb/>
shown a dramatic drop<lb/>
in support for the<lb/>
trillion-plus increases in<lb/>
defense during a five-<lb/>
year period.<lb/>
Also under way at<lb/>
the White House is a<lb/>
review of Reagan's<lb/>
media and public rela-<lb/>
tions offices to deter-<lb/>
mine how well thev are<lb/>
working. The president<lb/>
has been holding a<lb/>
series of sessions with<lb/>
out-of-town cor-<lb/>
respondents and broad-<lb/>
casters who have are<lb/>
briefed on his budget<lb/>
and are given a chance<lb/>
to question him on a<lb/>
range of subjects.<lb/>
At midterm, the need<lb/>
for selling his policies is<lb/>
obvious. The Western<lb/>
allies appear to be pull-<lb/>
ing in another direc-<lb/>
tion, and Reagan has<lb/>
yet to establish himself<lb/>
as the leader in the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
If the selling cam-<lb/>
paign succeeds, it will<lb/>
be because Reagan has<lb/>
managed to persuade<lb/>
Americans that the<lb/>
must stav ahead of the<lb/>
Soviets and convince<lb/>
Europeans that he of-<lb/>
fers the best hope for a<lb/>
peaceful better world<lb/>
SRA Plans Benefit<lb/>
For Heart Charities<lb/>
0NS0U DATED<lb/>
rADULTS $2.00 TIL 5:30 g0J)<lb/>
HEATRES<lb/>
"BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
lit 3391 ? Gr??nll? S?u?.? Shopp.n, C?nt.<lb/>
Moskop said that the<lb/>
topics discussed in the<lb/>
jhe Student<lb/>
Residence Association<lb/>
announced it will be<lb/>
conducting a fundraiser<lb/>
for the Heart Fund<lb/>
Wednesday on campus.<lb/>
Lindsey Williams,<lb/>
SRA publicity chair-<lb/>
man, said that each<lb/>
residence hall vice<lb/>
president will set up a<lb/>
collection table in his<lb/>
dorm. There will also<lb/>
be people collecting<lb/>
contributions at the<lb/>
Student Supply Store.<lb/>
dent bus was available Each group will collec<lb/>
to bring students to the money from 9 a.m. to 4<lb/>
lectures. The lectures p.m.<lb/>
are open to the public The SRA will be giv-<lb/>
ing away free balloons<lb/>
to those people who<lb/>
donate money.<lb/>
The American<lb/>
Health Association is a<lb/>
non-profit, volunteer<lb/>
organization that raises<lb/>
funds for heart and cir-<lb/>
culatory ailment<lb/>
research.<lb/>
A spokesman for the<lb/>
Pitt County chapter of<lb/>
the organization said<lb/>
heart disease causes 54<lb/>
percent of all deaths in<lb/>
the United States. The<lb/>
SRA feels the project is<lb/>
a worthy one from both<lb/>
a community and cam-<lb/>
pus perspective<lb/>
???-?????;?<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed Feb 16.<lb/>
thru Sat Feb 19 1983<lb/>
Open Mon. thru Sat. Sam to Midnight - Sun. 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
tv<lb/>
AOVEBTISEDITEM POLICY<lb/>
E?cr of these advertised items is re<lb/>
Suired to be reed-iy available 'or<lb/>
Ml. in MCh Kroger Savon jxc.pt<lb/>
u ?IHClllfWy not! m hit ad Vh?<lb/>
So runout of an Mm we ??. offer<lb/>
vou your choice of a comparable<lb/>
rmwhen mm ?Kfii. c<lb/>
Mm. Mv.ngs or a r?,ncJh n.<lb/>
advertised item at n?<lb/>
price within 30 days<lb/>
jLimimiiiinmiuiimumiimiiiimmmmimmmmi.miimmi.im?m.mmi.?mimim.mimimuie<lb/>
CLfiAftAttClT<lb/>
FROM THE DELI<lb/>
Extra Lean<lb/>
Roast Beef<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
399<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
90c<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
Chunk<lb/>
Light Tuna<lb/>
69<lb/>
FRENCH'S<lb/>
CHEESE SCALLOPED<lb/>
Wed. Feb. 16 thru Sat. Feb. 19<lb/>
ECU Students will<lb/>
receive an additional 10?? off<lb/>
the sale price<lb/>
Excluding Todd 1 Worm-Ups<lb/>
which are already Vi price.<lb/>
-<lb/>
Great Savings<lb/>
Adidas on<lb/>
Nike Herman Survivor Hiking Boots<lb/>
New Balance Abel Raincoats<lb/>
Pony Russell Baseball Undershirts<lb/>
Adidas &amp; x Jodd <lb/>
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210 E-WTH ST. GREENVILLE<lb/>
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theFC M<lb/>
cur:<lb/>
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corr ?<lb/>
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him H-<lb/>
lur<lb/>
noon. .<lb/>
and a . -<lb/>
Hamer<lb/>
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Ianpuv<lb/>
k.i -<lb/>
dc.<lb/>
De:<lb/>
 .<lb/>
qiK<lb/>
cha ? i<lb/>
the<lb/>
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it ? ?-<lb/>
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qu?ed lo<lb/>
everybody<lb/>
caJavc- -<lb/>
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Vargas s<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
u<lb/>
hav<lb/>
<lb/>
at)<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
. <lb/>
1 '<lb/>
<pb facs="00057536_0007"/><lb/>
jort<lb/>
? efed on his budget<lb/>
and arc given a chance<lb/>
on him on a<lb/>
ibjects.<lb/>
 n dterm, the need<lb/>
celling his policies is<lb/>
obvious The Western<lb/>
ippeai to be pull-<lb/>
another direc-<lb/>
d Reagan has<lb/>
;tablish himself<lb/>
in the<lb/>
celling cam-<lb/>
iccecds, it will<lb/>
Reagan has<lb/>
aged to persuade<lb/>
v that thev<lb/>
a lead of the<lb/>
d convince<lb/>
that he of-<lb/>
pe tor a<lb/>
tx tei world.<lb/>
5:30 ??? su)<lb/>
f 'ir;<lb/>
xomming<lb/>
Soon<lb/>
I he Rollins stones<lb/>
I et's spend the J<lb/>
ight Together<lb/>
flHi li<lb/>
r<lb/>
I UllllillMIII1<lb/>
illltlllllllllllllllillli<lb/>
Sot. Feb. 19<lb/>
its will i<lb/>
:ional 10?- off I<lb/>
price <lb/>
1 Warm-Ups j<lb/>
ody Vi price.<lb/>
javings<lb/>
'vivor Hiking Boots<lb/>
Abel Raincoats<lb/>
iseball Undershirts<lb/>
Toddl<lb/>
Warm-Ups<lb/>
GESCO. 1<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
limiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiMiiiiiiiiHiitiiiiiiiiiiHiiiie<lb/>
I HE I SI CAROt 1NIAN'<lb/>
Style<lb/>
FEBRUARY 17. 1983 Page 1<lb/>
Med School's Dean Laupus<lb/>
Doesn t Only Play Doctor<lb/>
By MIKE HAMKR<lb/>
SUM Wrtlr<lb/>
Softspoken, congenial Dr.<lb/>
William E. Lanpus has been dean of<lb/>
the ECU Med School since 1975. He<lb/>
currently heads up a Med School<lb/>
with 201 students, 166 faculty, 209<lb/>
community physicians, and 425<lb/>
staff persons. I went to the Brody<lb/>
building last week to speak with<lb/>
him. He hadn't had a chance to eat<lb/>
lunch yet, though it was late after-<lb/>
noon, and so he snacked on nabs<lb/>
and a coke while we talked.<lb/>
Hamer: Did you have any reserva-<lb/>
tions about coming to Greenville?<lb/>
Lanpus: The only reservation I had<lb/>
was whether I had made the right<lb/>
decision. I was the chairman of the<lb/>
Department at the University of<lb/>
Virginia Medical School. It's a<lb/>
question of whether you take a new<lb/>
challenge. I'd had a lot of interest in<lb/>
the ECU Med School, but it was an<lb/>
obvious challenge to come here. My<lb/>
wife is from eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, and so I was familiar with<lb/>
the area.<lb/>
Hamer: Could you tell me a little bit<lb/>
about where you grew up and where<lb/>
you've lived before coming to East<lb/>
Carolina?<lb/>
l.anpus: 1 grew up in Sevmour, In-<lb/>
diana, and I attended the local<lb/>
public school system there. Then 1<lb/>
went to Yale on a scholarship and<lb/>
after that I went to the Yale Med<lb/>
School. 1 did my residency at New<lb/>
York Hospital ? Cornel Medical<lb/>
Center. I've practised in New York;<lb/>
Marion, Indiana; Detroit; Augusta,<lb/>
Georgia; Richmond, and now I'm<lb/>
in Greenville. Most of my profes-<lb/>
sional career has been in pediatrics.<lb/>
Hamer: What are some of the needs<lb/>
in the field of medicine in this part<lb/>
of the state that you have observed?<lb/>
Lanpus: Well, you could say that in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina there is a<lb/>
general need remaining to upgrade<lb/>
the health care. We've been working<lb/>
in such areas as pediatrics, high-risk<lb/>
obstetrics, genetic evaluation,<lb/>
hematology-oncology and allergy-<lb/>
immunology. We also have the<lb/>
Neonatal Intensive and In-<lb/>
termediate Care Unit over at the<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
Hamer: Have logistics been a pro-<lb/>
blem for some of the counties in the<lb/>
eastern part of the state?<lb/>
Lanpus Sure, the greatest part of<lb/>
our population comes from a 60<lb/>
mile radius of Greenville. The pa-<lb/>
tients beyond that find it difficult to<lb/>
get anywhereo When you have<lb/>
more than an hour's travel.<lb/>
Hamer: Does the Med School have<lb/>
any plans to set up any family prac-<lb/>
tice centers beside the one in Bethel?<lb/>
Lanpus: We don't have any active<lb/>
plans. This is neither a plan to do or<lb/>
not to do. At this point in time the<lb/>
Family Practice Center here and the<lb/>
Bethel Center provide the ap-<lb/>
propriate experience for our<lb/>
students. I would not exclude that<lb/>
as a possibility, but our role is more<lb/>
in teaching in that sense than<lb/>
necessarily in providing local ser-<lb/>
vices. We have a necessity to pro-<lb/>
vide local services of the nature I've<lb/>
described, but we tend to prefer to<lb/>
assist the local communities in<lb/>
recruiting physicians.<lb/>
Hamer: Are most of the Med<lb/>
students from the eastern part of the<lb/>
state?<lb/>
Lanpus: Oh, as things break down<lb/>
in any given class, I guess about a<lb/>
third are from this eastern area of<lb/>
the state. Another third are from<lb/>
the Piedmont, simplly because of<lb/>
the concentration of its plopulation,<lb/>
and about a third are from the<lb/>
western part of North Carolina. We<lb/>
really have sdtudents from across<lb/>
the length and breadth of the state.<lb/>
Hamer: Are any med students from<lb/>
out-of-state?<lb/>
Lanpus: We have a couple of<lb/>
transfers from out of state, but they<lb/>
had in-state connections. They're<lb/>
hybrids rather than purly out-of-<lb/>
staters.<lb/>
Hamer: Are there any plans to get<lb/>
more residents at the med school?<lb/>
Laupus: The residency program is<lb/>
gradually expanding. We have, I<lb/>
believe, 94 residents at the present<lb/>
time. Our residents are in six major<lb/>
disciplines: family medicine, inter-<lb/>
nal medicine, pediatrics, psychiatry,<lb/>
obstetrics and gynecology, and<lb/>
surgery. By July, we'll have<lb/>
residents in emergency medicine,<lb/>
and we'll have residents in<lb/>
rehabilitation medicine sometime in<lb/>
1984-85. So, we'll keep adding<lb/>
residents gradually. Emergency<lb/>
medicine is real special. We are con-<lb/>
sidering residency in pathology,<lb/>
also.<lb/>
Hamer: In your eyes, what makes<lb/>
the ECU Med School different from<lb/>
the other medical schools in the<lb/>
state, or from other med schools<lb/>
that you've been acquainted with?<lb/>
Laupus: Well, in a great sense,<lb/>
medical schools are more alike than<lb/>
they are different. They all have to<lb/>
meet the same general standards.<lb/>
They differ in their locations and in<lb/>
See LAUPUS Page 8<lb/>
ECU'S Dean of the School of Medicine. William E. Laupus<lb/>
Nude Modeling A Pretty Revealing Pastime<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
M?ff Wriirr<lb/>
ECU art is cool. ECU art students, running a gamut<lb/>
in stvle from clones of Greenwich Village Bohemians<lb/>
circa 1969 to Paris new-wave 1983. are cool too. Usual-<lb/>
ly bv choice,they tend to stand out in a crowd of<lb/>
business majors. Even their curriculum is cool. Take<lb/>
required courses for instance. A journalism student<lb/>
must endure such donkey-work as legal problems in<lb/>
mass communication; in contrast, art students are re-<lb/>
quired to draw naked people ? often of the opposite<lb/>
sex ? or the same sex. There's something for<lb/>
everybody. Next to freshman med students cutting on<lb/>
cadavers, the esoteric goings on in these closed studios<lb/>
on the second floor of Jenkins are probably the most<lb/>
intriguing classrooms on campus to outsiders.<lb/>
Pedestrians walking down Fifth Street are often seen<lb/>
glancing toward Jenkin's studio windows hoping for an<lb/>
opening in the curtains that screen the figure drawing<lb/>
classes from the outside world.<lb/>
I was ready to cancel my subscription to Playboy and<lb/>
put mv free electives to good use learning to draw the<lb/>
Vargas stvle girls that I imagined awaited me in Art<lb/>
1030. Then Wess Crawley, an ECU art professor whose<lb/>
name is synonymous here with figure drawing, explain-<lb/>
ed that the classes are restricted, with rare exceptions,<lb/>
to art students. To get into a figure drawing class I'd<lb/>
have to pass six hours of foundation courses in color<lb/>
and design and show a real flair for drawing rocks and<lb/>
other dead things.<lb/>
At this point Wes gave me a mini-lecture on how we<lb/>
learn to draw, very little of which 1 understood. It was<lb/>
about training both hemispheres of the brain; learning<lb/>
to see seeing is learned; conceptual knowledge;<lb/>
geometryanatomy; breaking the percept down into<lb/>
stimuli; seeing lines, direction; logic assembled into<lb/>
space. Then he explained why figure drawing is impor-<lb/>
tant to the artist.<lb/>
"For example he said, "if you're drawing rocks, I<lb/>
may never have seen vour rock, so I can't say 'Bump<lb/>
number three is too large But if the pec is too big ?<lb/>
the pectoral ? I can say 'Hey, that pec is too big.<lb/>
Make a limb on a tree three inches too long and nobody<lb/>
minds. Make a nose three inches too long and<lb/>
everybody cries. So that's the why of figure drawing,<lb/>
and boy is it important. It's your basic language<lb/>
Somehow this didn't fit my idea of what firgure<lb/>
drawing was all about. 1 had imagined standing at an<lb/>
easel, perhaps wearing a beret and French sunglasses,<lb/>
with perfect nude coeds lounging on beanbags before<lb/>
me. Confused but still intrigued, I talked toTran<lb/>
Gordley. Tran, lik Wes, came to the ECU art school in<lb/>
1959 and seemed a logical source for information about<lb/>
the figure drawing classes.<lb/>
"There was figure drawing here when 1 first came<lb/>
he said. "But the models weren't nude. They wore<lb/>
bathing suits or tights<lb/>
Gordley explained that the switch to nude models oc-<lb/>
curred in the mid-60s about the time the art school<lb/>
began expanding.<lb/>
"When Wes and I first came, there were only five<lb/>
faculty members. We started adding two and three a<lb/>
vear after that and it really started growing. Then we<lb/>
updated the curriculum an addded the BFA. There was<lb/>
no professional degree program when I first came<lb/>
I asked Gordley if there had ever been any problems<lb/>
from groups inside or outside the university that oppos-<lb/>
ed nudity in a classroom.<lb/>
"No. It's always been handled professionally here.<lb/>
Figure drawing classes are not open for visitors of<lb/>
course. Crawley is the one responsible for it (nude<lb/>
models). He got permission. We investigated with the<lb/>
attorney general in Raleigh to make sure there was no<lb/>
law forbidding it before we started<lb/>
Gordley noted that the inhibitions of student models<lb/>
are no longer as great as they once were.<lb/>
"In the beginning it was always easier to get girls to<lb/>
model than boys. I remember one girl told me, 'We're<lb/>
used to showing off all the time Now boys are no<lb/>
more inhibited than girls Then he laughs. "Today<lb/>
everyone is willing to take their clothes off. But overall,<lb/>
I think the attitudes of today's students about things<lb/>
like nudity are healthier than they were twenty years<lb/>
age Gordley recalled that some of his first female<lb/>
models wouldn't pose in bikinis. "Bikinis were con-<lb/>
sidered shocking at the time (1960). None of the local<lb/>
stores even sold them. I had to order them from<lb/>
Frederick's of Hollywood<lb/>
I asked Gordley what the requirements were for a<lb/>
good nude model.<lb/>
"Well naturally, good physical proportions and<lb/>
development, both in male and female. And then, in<lb/>
addition, a certaing kind of poise and grace about their<lb/>
movements, which some people innately have and<lb/>
others don't.Sometimes training, as in dance, can<lb/>
enhance that. Sometimes it becomes a handicap<lb/>
Somehow Gordley's description of drawing nude<lb/>
figures wasn't quite as erotic or exciting as I had im-<lb/>
agined.<lb/>
"For one thing he said, "you are so busy trying to<lb/>
learn how to draw and about art and all, that you don't<lb/>
have much time for erotic impulses. I'm not saying<lb/>
that's not there, because that's always a part of art,<lb/>
even if it's not the nude figure. There's a certain sen-<lb/>
sual quality that's imperative in all the arts<lb/>
It seemed logical that seasoned instructors would<lb/>
have no qualms about working with nude models. But<lb/>
what about art students? For the Bohemian like fine<lb/>
arts students majoring in painting or drawing, a nude<lb/>
figure is about as exciting as a new set of acrylics.<lb/>
They're looking at nudes constantly. Perhaps the<lb/>
students in the design department, compelled to take<lb/>
figure drawing only as a foundation course, would<lb/>
have different notions.<lb/>
Ten Cates is a junior pursuing a degree in commer-<lb/>
cial art. Tall, lithe and blonde, she's prettv enough to<lb/>
model for Playboy 1 wondered how she reacted to<lb/>
figure drawing classes.<lb/>
Did vou know before starting into art that you would<lb/>
have to draw nudes as a part of the art curriculum1<lb/>
"Yes. 1 sure did<lb/>
So it didn't frighten you?<lb/>
"Well, 1 wondered what my reaction would be and<lb/>
how I'd feel in class she said. "1 wasn't really afraid<lb/>
of it though. I knew it was a part oi art school<lb/>
"So the first time you had to draw a nude model, it<lb/>
didn't phase you?<lb/>
"No. The reason why was because everybody was in<lb/>
there to learn to draw. The first reaction of everyone is<lb/>
that they don't want to show it if they're embarrassed,<lb/>
because they're in the class trying to become profes-<lb/>
sional people<lb/>
"Was the class worthwhile for commercial art pur-<lb/>
poses?<lb/>
"Oh yeah. Even in commercial art vou're going to<lb/>
have to draw the human bodv.and its probablv one of<lb/>
the most complex things to draw. It trains your eve very<lb/>
well, learning to see all the muscles and structure<lb/>
See NUDE, Page 9<lb/>
'More Media' Exhibit Opening On Sunday<lb/>
r  ? the Student Union Art Exhibition Committee opens its first show for spring<lb/>
This Sunday, February 20, tne ? The Qne pefson ghow m&amp;g ,More Meda, and lts<lb/>
semester in Mendenhall s an gamj member Roxanne Reep (pictured above). The show<lb/>
featured artist and creator is sen may manjpuljted by the wearer)<lb/>
will include mixed riJaZ received from ECU. The show is running through March 4, with an<lb/>
from Reep's masters thesis' "h,5" d from 3 until 5 p.m. The public is invited to turn out.<lb/>
opening reception to be held tnis 3unu,y<lb/>
Keyboardist<lb/>
Iceberg<lb/>
Performing<lb/>
Michael Iceberg, a Julliad train-<lb/>
ed, one man multi-keyboard<lb/>
showman who has been performing<lb/>
continously to enthusiastic crowds<lb/>
at Walt Disney World for seven<lb/>
years, will bring his astonishing<lb/>
show to East Carolina University's<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre, in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, Monday, February<lb/>
21, 1983, at 8 p.m. Tickets for this<lb/>
Student Union Special Events Com-<lb/>
mittee program go on sale February<lb/>
7 at the Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center and are<lb/>
SI. for ECU students, and $3. for<lb/>
ECU faculty, staff, and the public.<lb/>
Youth (age 14 and under) may pur-<lb/>
chase ticket for $2. and all tickets<lb/>
are $3. at the door. Tickets may be<lb/>
purchased Monday ? Friday, 10.00<lb/>
a.m ? 4:00 p.m. after February 7.<lb/>
The concert begins with a center<lb/>
stage view of a seven-foot copper<lb/>
pyramid, bathed in a rosy, gold<lb/>
wash of light. As errie strains of<lb/>
music begin to emanate from the<lb/>
structure, the apex slowly rises<lb/>
revealing Michael Iceberg and the<lb/>
Iceberg Machine, already inside the<lb/>
pyramid, and playing. At the same<lb/>
time, smoke is seen to be seeping up<lb/>
from beneath the pyramid, which<lb/>
soon billows into clouds, engulfing<lb/>
the entire set. What follows is a<lb/>
totally engrossing musical program<lb/>
for a most unique nature, with<lb/>
selections ranging from Rock to<lb/>
Classical to original works.<lb/>
The Icebeg Machine is the result<lb/>
of more than thirteen years worth of<lb/>
research by Michael Iceberg to<lb/>
See ICEBERG, Page <lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
ir<lb/>
'Custer Opening Tonight<lb/>
Gary Weathersbee (foreground), Robert Willie and Gregory<lb/>
Watkins star in the ECU Playhouse N.C. premier production of<lb/>
Caster, to be performed tonight through Feb. 22 at 8:15 p.m. in<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre. Robert Ingham's drama sets General Custer,<lb/>
Elizabeth Caster, Colonel William Benteen and Major Marcus<lb/>
Reno in limbo telling their versions of that fateful day at the Lit-<lb/>
tle Bighorn. Reservations can be made by calling 757-6390.<lb/>
.  ?<lb/>
?tH<lb/>
.? '?.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057536_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
TH! ! s<lb/>
1S1 AN<lb/>
il lik <lb/>
! g(f ?<lb/>
Laupus' Med School A Well-Oiled Machine<lb/>
Nude<lb/>
( Mill<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
their numbers of<lb/>
students Oui classes<lb/>
are smaii We have<lb/>
about 60 students in a<lb/>
class, while Chapel Hill<lb/>
has 160 in a class W e<lb/>
think that the number<lb/>
ot students that we<lb/>
have is about i ighi 1 he<lb/>
students in the program<lb/>
are able to have close<lb/>
contact i t h I h e<lb/>
teachers l Ik la gc i<lb/>
classes lend to lose his<lb/>
closeness, and t he<lb/>
students gel<lb/>
much benefil from the<lb/>
teachers.<lb/>
The second<lb/>
consider is the ta.<lb/>
itsclt ()ur facutl) tends<lb/>
to be a blend of m<lb/>
dividuals in the basic<lb/>
sciences 1 think that<lb/>
the close relationship<lb/>
with the students ex-<lb/>
tends over to the<lb/>
residency naming pro<lb/>
gram as well. It's a<lb/>
i losei relationship than<lb/>
in the large schools<lb/>
I he ommunity in<lb/>
?hich the live is om<lb/>
Portable . ireenv ille :1.1s<lb/>
a ven nice, comfoi<lb/>
table atmosphere where<lb/>
students can go about<lb/>
theii business l he rela-<lb/>
tions bet w een the<lb/>
students and the<lb/>
townspeople is quite<lb/>
good. 1 think bv know<lb/>
ing the student better<lb/>
we tend to feel more<lb/>
responsible to them and<lb/>
the maximum of educa-<lb/>
tional opportunity is<lb/>
provided to them. The<lb/>
truth 01 the matter is ?<lb/>
med schools are more<lb/>
and more like each<lb/>
othet As the standards<lb/>
become higher and<lb/>
higher. the necessity of<lb/>
conforming to them<lb/>
tends to make pro-<lb/>
grams more like each<lb/>
other<lb/>
Hamer: How do you<lb/>
feel about the med<lb/>
school library'7 Is it<lb/>
adequate<lb/>
laupus Well, this<lb/>
library has been grow<lb/>
ing for the last 12 years,<lb/>
and it's a very ade<lb/>
quate library. The<lb/>
library staff is superb;<lb/>
they're always very<lb/>
helpful. The students<lb/>
feel comfortable with<lb/>
the staff and the at-<lb/>
mosphere is congenial.<lb/>
We have close relation-<lb/>
ships with other<lb/>
libraries; we can go to<lb/>
them, and they call on<lb/>
us, too.<lb/>
Hamer: A lot of people<lb/>
complain about the<lb/>
cost of medicine. Do<lb/>
you find that the med<lb/>
students talk about<lb/>
this-1 or do the faculty?<lb/>
Or is this really an<lb/>
issue?<lb/>
I aupus Oh, 1 think it's<lb/>
an issue. The issue is<lb/>
not really clear in some<lb/>
ways. The public<lb/>
spends a large part of<lb/>
its income, on heart<lb/>
care either voluntarily<lb/>
or not, because of the<lb/>
cost of the system. In<lb/>
one way or another,<lb/>
people need to get the<lb/>
best medical care. I he<lb/>
poor and near poor<lb/>
always have it more dif-<lb/>
ficult. In North<lb/>
Carolina there is a pret<lb/>
tv good set-up - 'he<lb/>
poor as well as the<lb/>
more well off hae<lb/>
good access to care.<lb/>
Modern technology is<lb/>
here to stav and it's mst<lb/>
a part ol a lot ol things<lb/>
that contribute to the<lb/>
cost It's hard to know<lb/>
just where to start to<lb/>
cut down on costs<lb/>
Physicians tees are<lb/>
about 19 pei cent of<lb/>
health aie costs.<lb/>
llamer What kinds of<lb/>
research are going on<lb/>
here0<lb/>
laupus loo main to<lb/>
list all of them We're<lb/>
very excited about our<lb/>
research in transplanta-<lb/>
tion 1 mmunology ,<lb/>
specifically related to<lb/>
kidney transplants<lb/>
Drs. Frank and lud<lb/>
1 homas have been do<lb/>
ing this research In<lb/>
pediatrics, resean hen<lb/>
any<lb/>
yes,<lb/>
ha v e bee n making<lb/>
studie of human milk<lb/>
and vaious kinds of<lb/>
t hemk al contaminents<lb/>
thai are ingested bv the<lb/>
mothei<lb/>
Hamer Have<lb/>
come up with<lb/>
results s. 1 fai '<lb/>
laupus Well,<lb/>
we're pan oi a national<lb/>
studv on this<lb/>
Hamer li.v.j a<lb/>
elusions been reached'<lb/>
laupus Well,<lb/>
know. there are a lot of<lb/>
P U i around W<lb/>
immune to the<lb/>
chemicals in the en-<lb/>
 ironment<lb/>
Hamer How does<lb/>
dine ' Med<lb/>
?<lb/>
 I<lb/>
I aupU'<lb/>
Iaupus<lb/>
legi ??<lb/>
provide<lb/>
education ev<lb/>
sears Wc<lb/>
everytl Hamer<lb/>
hut I think the.<lb/>
committed<lb/>
?ill<lb/>
Hamer 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
'<lb/>
student<lb/>
I knov<lb/>
Med -<lb/>
Iaupus<lb/>
thinl<lb/>
know<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
met '<lb/>
? <lb/>
 ?<lb/>
:<lb/>
? ? ? ? ? ? "lr X ???????<lb/>
Monday, February 21,1983<lb/>
8:00pm Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
tickets-$1.00 ECU Students<lb/>
$3.00 Faculty ,StaH and Public<lb/>
$2.00 Youth tickets<lb/>
All tickets at door $3.00<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
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Nude Modeling Revealing<lb/>
! I! I t -X - !<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
v mild you considei<lb/>
modeling nude tor a<lb/>
class?<lb/>
I sure would.<lb/>
espev iall) aftei being in<lb/>
a :ass know in: how<lb/>
artist looks at the<lb/>
model lt not in a pio-<lb/>
 acativ e w a .as a sex<lb/>
siukl I here's a tjii<lb/>
ference between nude<lb/>
and naked<lb/>
nd what ol the<lb/>
models themselves? All<lb/>
models at the I t. I<lb/>
school o t art are<lb/>
students Mans are an<lb/>
students, but the in-<lb/>
structors are receptive<lb/>
other students as<lb/>
Models are paid<lb/>
V (Z an hour. one-<lb/>
and a halt times the<lb/>
minimum wage that all<lb/>
other campus work<lb/>
and it is alwas a hit<lb/>
traumatic<lb/>
v. ho's moi e unconi<lb/>
fortable, them oi you '<lb/>
" 1 hem But the ver<lb/>
lust time 1 ever did it. I<lb/>
was petrified, panii<lb/>
stricken But 1 r<lb/>
( raw le introduced me<lb/>
and was ver nice and<lb/>
complimentary he's<lb/>
u'n ea s on his<lb/>
models' he respects<lb/>
them and all And then<lb/>
the aci ol taking ofl<lb/>
your robe, .uki then<lb/>
faces, and o u i<lb/>
face . It's prett) in<lb/>
tense But aftei two oi<lb/>
three minutes, you stai I<lb/>
getting used to it<lb/>
So you're no lonj<lb/>
o ei K sell conscience '<lb/>
" on ha<lb/>
? h<lb/>
ae a<lb/>
stlKIS<lb/>
?bs pa<lb/>
But<lb/>
what sort ot stud<lb/>
would pose nude<lb/>
 bonal ide geek<lb/>
I figured<lb/>
I talked to s firistine<lb/>
c amp, w ho has model-<lb/>
. ularh over the<lb/>
pa si two eai s foi the<lb/>
art sc h i She is a 26<lb/>
i eai old student ma<lb/>
nj tabrn design.<lb/>
he looks<lb/>
ew hat like a former<lb/>
.mnasl n use alar but<lb/>
no tongei stripped<lb/>
tireh I natural bod<lb/>
II a ?? e v o u e '? .<lb/>
Chrisl deled I<lb/>
?<lb/>
health attitude ab<lb/>
your bod rhat's the<lb/>
important tl i<lb/>
E ou don't<lb/>
? have anythinj<lb/>
hide I ike I w<lb/>
through ;he wI<lb/>
ise ol beinj<lb/>
chested when I was<lb/>
youngei and be<lb/>
const ious about it Bui<lb/>
I overcame thai and<lb/>
the bod looks in real<lb/>
life. And people are not<lb/>
all pei feet. But a lot ol<lb/>
students really enjoy<lb/>
t he moi e robust,<lb/>
Rubinesque i pe<lb/>
Ar'Omen oi men It's<lb/>
very boring io iiist<lb/>
draw the (heesecake<lb/>
girl oi athletic male<lb/>
Bui sometimes, you<lb/>
know, when you've<lb/>
gamed a tew pounds<lb/>
and everyone draws<lb/>
you a little fat, it at<lb/>
fects ou<lb/>
1 las modeling taught<lb/>
you patience?<lb/>
' 'Oh, en or mou s<lb/>
amounts I sell<lb/>
control, sell<lb/>
disc ipline.l ike w hen<lb/>
in itch righi<lb/>
in 11 .i voui<lb/>
I, and you're in tins<lb/>
?<lb/>
? -all it. you'll<lb/>
v id<lb/>
? . ui model<lb/>
 t i r s i<lb/>
nn parents have no<lb/>
qualms. But some peo<lb/>
pie give me a rough<lb/>
time about it like Mrs.<lb/>
Fisher, m weaving<lb/>
techei. Shi al i s talks<lb/>
about when she was in<lb/>
Ohio, and they had<lb/>
th( se girls that were<lb/>
models. And th . <lb/>
come in ofl the street<lb/>
I hev really had sail<lb/>
gn Is?<lb/>
"Yeah, they really<lb/>
had some sleaze bags<lb/>
Seems like thai<lb/>
would have been ex-<lb/>
pensive? Bui i guess<lb/>
they didn'i pay'em<lb/>
their rates<lb/>
"No rhey jusl<lb/>
them modeling i ?<lb/>
But all the people in<lb/>
w eav ing a i I fabric<lb/>
design sal 'I his; rj<lb/>
see how<lb/>
that?"<lb/>
Well, foi . .<lb/>
working as a :<lb/>
del beats . ?<lb/>
McDonalds<lb/>
'Bv<lb/>
j,<lb/>
.<lb/>
'leas<lb/>
?<lb/>
"PI<lb/>
wa I<lb/>
body. It's a<lb/>
g<lb/>
v il : ? mode! il<lb/>
- ere ?<lb/>
tha<lb/>
"I hav<lb/>
I fi I ked<lb/>
ing I:<lb/>
us a i<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
No,<lb/>
I worl Ki<lb/>
couldn't stai<lb/>
nothing to d<lb/>
ai :areer. <lb/>
U thing about il<lb/>
i<lb/>
e v e i v <lb/>
 en tea<lb/>
r level<lb/>
?<lb/>
w hal I had learned into<lb/>
practice<lb/>
Is the nude modeling<lb/>
here anything like pis<lb/>
ing foi photographs in<lb/>
 girlie magazine?<lb/>
"()h. there's no com<lb/>
parison. N one '<lb/>
(Reflects) Now I have<lb/>
taken - ome poses that I<lb/>
iidei to be quite<lb/>
sensual. I here is a sen<lb/>
suousness in the bodv<lb/>
is inherent, am!<lb/>
I'm noi afraid ol that,<lb/>
but it's not my main in<lb/>
to be verv<lb/>
demure. ond never<lb/>
see me posing in<lb/>
? omething like a centei<lb/>
told shot "<lb/>
'i ou seem to be an<lb/>
honest pei son<lb/>
"I'm extremely<lb/>
honest I iust come<lb/>
righl out with<lb/>
everything. 1 have pro-<lb/>
blems sometimes with<lb/>
that<lb/>
lo yo i think tr al<lb/>
modeling is a<lb/>
manifestation ol your<lb/>
"Yes ? I! I<lb/>
lid see<lb/>
ildn'i handle<lb/>
it<lb/>
! h i n k<lb/>
entious person with<lb/>
ould<lb/>
eve' ti ai<lb/>
'<lb/>
" N I r: e ? ' t<lb/>
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takes an open, hoi si<lb/>
i<lb/>
? rimt ' ' be<lb/>
? ?? ??- . -?.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057536_0010"/><lb/>
1 Ht EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Fl BKl -k1 n ??<lb/>
Pirates Sting Spiders In 2nd Overtime<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
sptl t dic.r<lb/>
The Pirates celebrated their se-<lb/>
cond conference win of the season<lb/>
Wednesday night by edging out<lb/>
sharp-shooting University of Rich-<lb/>
mond, 79-75, after a double<lb/>
overtime showdown.<lb/>
With the second overtime just<lb/>
underway, ECU's Charles Green,<lb/>
who just recently returned after a<lb/>
four-week layoff with a separated<lb/>
shoulder, made a tip-in to give the<lb/>
Pirates a 75-73 lead with 4:49 re-<lb/>
maining.<lb/>
UR's Andy Hehrer then made a<lb/>
basket underneath to put the<lb/>
Spiders back up by one. But ECU's<lb/>
Barry Wright, who has been sick<lb/>
with the flu this week, came in and<lb/>
iced two freethrows to boost the<lb/>
Bucs ahead, 77-75, with :57 left on<lb/>
the clock.<lb/>
Richmond had a chance to score<lb/>
but missed three shots under the<lb/>
basket. Regaining possession, the<lb/>
Bucs held the ball and Peartree was<lb/>
fouled. The Pantego native sank<lb/>
both freethrows with :04 on the<lb/>
clock to give the Pirates a 79-75 win.<lb/>
"This is a hell of a win for our<lb/>
kids said Head Coach Charlie<lb/>
Harrison after the game. "We did<lb/>
some awfully unintelligeni things<lb/>
out there, but there were times when<lb/>
they did some good things.<lb/>
"Richmond played completely<lb/>
different than thev did at Rich-<lb/>
mond. They decided to pick up their<lb/>
tempo and they damn sure did it<lb/>
The Bucs lost to the Spiders,<lb/>
68-56, in Richmond on Jan. 15.<lb/>
Peartree hit a 30-foot jumpshot at<lb/>
the buzzer in the regulation period<lb/>
to put the Pirates into overtime.<lb/>
Tied 69-69, the two teams battled to<lb/>
break the lead, with Richmond go-<lb/>
ing up first when Guard Kelvin<lb/>
Johnson made two freethrows.<lb/>
Peartree, however, came back and<lb/>
scored two from the freethrow line<lb/>
to tie the score, 71-71, with 3:38 re-<lb/>
maining in the first overtime.<lb/>
Wright and Edwards' single<lb/>
freethrows and a jumpshot by<lb/>
Johnson tied the score again, 73-73,<lb/>
with 1:17 on the clock. The Spiders<lb/>
held the ball, but guard Tom<lb/>
Bethea's shot at the buzzer didn't<lb/>
fall, putting the teams in a second<lb/>
overtime.<lb/>
The Bucs have only played one<lb/>
double-overtime game this season<lb/>
(against George Mason), and Har-<lb/>
rison commented after the one-<lb/>
point loss that the 50-minute contest<lb/>
took a toll on the Bucs. But with<lb/>
more fouls being called and a cons-<lb/>
tant rotation of guards, the Pirates<lb/>
kept up a steady attack throughout<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Losing 41-34 at the half, the<lb/>
Pirates struggled to catch up after<lb/>
Richmond shot 70.8 percent from<lb/>
the floor in the first half to keep a<lb/>
solid lead during the first 20 minutes<lb/>
of play.<lb/>
With 13:29 remaining in the se-<lb/>
cond period, ECU cut the Spiders<lb/>
lead to 53-49. UR's outside<lb/>
shooting, however, put the Spiders<lb/>
up, 61-52. with less than seven<lb/>
minutes left in the game.<lb/>
That's when all the controversy<lb/>
began. According to the clock<lb/>
keepers, the score clock began<lb/>
malfunctioning, with both team's<lb/>
scores appearing wrong on the<lb/>
clock.<lb/>
Richmond's John Newman,<lb/>
meanwhile, was standing on the<lb/>
freethrow line after being fouled by<lb/>
Green. He made his first throw, giv-<lb/>
ing the Spiders a 62-54 lead.<lb/>
As ECU's official scorebook<lb/>
keeper listened to the clock keepers<lb/>
and coaches veiling about the clock.<lb/>
Newman sank another freethrow,<lb/>
but the freethrow was not credited<lb/>
on the scoreboard or the the official<lb/>
scorebook. The game was stopped,<lb/>
but resumed after a momentary<lb/>
Clockkeeping Error ?<lb/>
Leads To Confusion<lb/>
If anyone should be questioned<lb/>
about the scoring error in Wednes-<lb/>
day night's ECl-Richmond game.<lb/>
it should be the clock keepers.<lb/>
With 6:17 remaining in the second<lb/>
period of the contest, the clock<lb/>
keepers claimed the clock was<lb/>
malfunctioning and was failing to<lb/>
keep the points scored correctly.<lb/>
Both team's scores were appearing<lb/>
wrong on the scoreboard<lb/>
During all the confusion, Rich-<lb/>
mond's John Newman shot two<lb/>
Cind Pleasants<lb/>
 look Inside<lb/>
freethrows and was only credited<lb/>
?? h one on the scoreboard. ECU's<lb/>
fficial scorebook keeper. Wood)<lb/>
Peele, who was listening to the<lb/>
shouting of the clockkeepers and the<lb/>
coaches, did not record Newman's<lb/>
final freethrow. The score on the<lb/>
board was, 62-54, but should have<lb/>
been, 63-54.<lb/>
Before Newman shot the<lb/>
freethrows, the game was only<lb/>
delayed for a few seconds before<lb/>
starting again, and nothing on the<lb/>
scoreelock was changed.<lb/>
?lter the game, some were blam-<lb/>
ing the official scorebook keeper for<lb/>
the mistake. But anyone who knows<lb/>
Woody Peele also knows that if an<lb/>
error was made, it certainly was not<lb/>
intentional one.<lb/>
Especially Head Coach Charlie<lb/>
Harrison. "I don't think anyone<lb/>
who knows Woody Peele could<lb/>
question his integrity he said. "If<lb/>
a mistake was made, it was an<lb/>
honest mistake<lb/>
According to Harrison, am ques-<lb/>
tions about the score should have<lb/>
been raised at that moment oi at the<lb/>
end of the regulation period.<lb/>
"Something like that should have<lb/>
been corrected as soon as possible,<lb/>
or something should have been said<lb/>
at the end of the regulation period.<lb/>
"The kids think they won the<lb/>
game, and as far as we're concern-<lb/>
ed, they did<lb/>
If anyone on the Richmond bench<lb/>
did indeed have reservations about<lb/>
the score appearing on the clock,<lb/>
they should have confronted the<lb/>
scorekeeping box much sooner than<lb/>
thev did. preferablv at the moment<lb/>
the mistake was made. But thev<lb/>
didn't.<lb/>
It there were was am slight con-<lb/>
fusion about the correct ssore, the<lb/>
game should have been stopped un-<lb/>
til everything was cleared up. But it<lb/>
wasn't.<lb/>
Pointing an accusing finger at the<lb/>
scorebook keeper will not change<lb/>
anything, and questioning Woody<lb/>
Peele's integrity is not only unfair, it<lb/>
is preposterous.<lb/>
In fact, there's really only one<lb/>
question that needs to be answered.<lb/>
If the scoreelock was malfunction-<lb/>
ing, then no one is to blame. But it it<lb/>
wasn't, the competency, mind vou,<lb/>
not the integrity, of the clock<lb/>
keepers should be examined.<lb/>
The men and women's track teams<lb/>
will compete in the Tar Heel Invita-<lb/>
tional this Saturday in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
delav.<lb/>
When asked about the confusion,<lb/>
Harrison said he had no idea what<lb/>
the score was. "The score kept shit<lb/>
ting so much. I don't know what the<lb/>
score was he said. "If there was a<lb/>
mistake, it's unfortunate, but 111<lb/>
tell you this, the man who takes care<lb/>
of the books (Wood) Peele) is as<lb/>
honest as Abe Lincoln It he'd do<lb/>
anything, he'd go the other wav<lb/>
Harrison added that the game<lb/>
reallv didn't make that much Jit<lb/>
ference as far as the ECAC-South<lb/>
tournament is concerned "We're<lb/>
not gonna get a bve because we won<lb/>
this game and we're gonna be up<lb/>
against the same teams he said<lb/>
The onlv wav the game sould<lb/>
have an effect on the tournament is<lb/>
in the seeding ol each team. Lhe<lb/>
Pirates were in last (sixth) place in<lb/>
the conference league, while Rich-<lb/>
mond is placed fifth. "We're<lb/>
fighting our asses oft to get out of<lb/>
the basement Harrison said.<lb/>
"That's all we're trving to do<lb/>
The Pirates are now 2-6 and Rich-<lb/>
mond is 2- in the conference<lb/>
Overall, the Buo shot 45 re-<lb/>
cent from the floor and 69.7 percent<lb/>
from the freethrow line. Richn<lb/>
had an outstanding shooting night,<lb/>
making 30 oi 47 field g ah tor a<lb/>
63 B percent shooting iv<lb/>
From the line, the Spid t 65.2<lb/>
percent<lb/>
Edwards, EC! si<lb/>
turn, led the Pirati<lb/>
26 points and pulled . <lb/>
bounds Green, wh<lb/>
during the last 23<lb/>
game, scored 15 :<lb/>
team in rebounding <lb/>
was reported!)<lb/>
alter his tail ai<lb/>
experience a sell ? ?<lb/>
Peartree followed in<lb/>
12. V ' ?<lb/>
 anderhor<lb/>
For the S<lb/>
Tom Be" I <lb/>
for the ?' I New<lb/>
was eighi I i<lb/>
Johnson. : ?<lb/>
shots, finished <lb/>
ed the 5<lb/>
and said thev (the tea<lb/>
ff?<lb/>
trouble from n<lb/>
ad <lb/>
Ihe Pirates ?<lb/>
nferei<lb/>
i the) play. Navy i<lb/>
s u  da ? i 7 !<lb/>
?? 2<lb/>
: ? ??<lb/>
? i H ? ii<lb/>
Virginian Added To<lb/>
ECU Football Squad<lb/>
EC I "s<lb/>
Kt(hi a<lb/>
? ?COTT LARSON<lb/>
!n Robinson (left! and Curl Nanderhnrxl trap Richmond's Lorn<lb/>
in last nighl's double overtime thriller.<lb/>
Head I ootball coach Ed 1 m n<lb/>
announced Ve<lb/>
I ondon, a 6-3, 190-pound sti<lb/>
safet) from Hampton, .i . will be<lb/>
attending I (. I on a<lb/>
schola 11 sea<lb/>
I ondon is the one ?f 27 <lb/>
sign with the Pirates<lb/>
I ondon. a set i<lb/>
choice as a tight end a<lb/>
end. hail n B<lb/>
I ion was a first-tean i R<lb/>
? !<lb/>
Robinson Supplies Leadership<lb/>
Bv kr B() ION<lb/>
In football, the quarterback is ex-<lb/>
pected to provide guidance and<lb/>
leadership. These same attributes<lb/>
are expected on the basketball court<lb/>
from the point guard position.<lb/>
ECU point guard Ton) Robinson<lb/>
IS a true quarterback on the basket-<lb/>
ball floor. A starter in ever) game<lb/>
thus far this season. Robinson is<lb/>
called on mostl) for his ball handl-<lb/>
ing and passing skills.<lb/>
Ihe 6-1, 1 "2-pound junior leads<lb/>
the Pirates in assists with 65, and is<lb/>
also third on the team in steals.<lb/>
Robinson is currentl) averaging<lb/>
5.7 points per game, a figure which<lb/>
could be higher it needed be.<lb/>
"I'm not reallv a scorer said the<lb/>
smooth-playing Goldsboro native.<lb/>
"M main responsibility is to plav<lb/>
smart, play good defense, and keep<lb/>
the flow of the game going at the<lb/>
right lempo<lb/>
After living the first eight years ol<lb/>
his life in Goldsboro, Robinson<lb/>
mmed to the cold weather and<lb/>
asphalt courts ol the Northeast.<lb/>
Robinson lettered three times al<lb/>
Brighton High School in Hyde<lb/>
Park, Maryland. After high school,<lb/>
he decided to attend Jamestown<lb/>
Communit) College, where his team<lb/>
went to the National JUCO I ourna-<lb/>
ment championships to sears run-<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
Alter completing his two years al<lb/>
Jamestown. Robinson was one oi<lb/>
the top junior college recruits in the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
He decided to attend ECL) in<lb/>
order to be close to his family and to<lb/>
take advantage oi the warm climate.<lb/>
After arriving at ECU, Robinson<lb/>
qui kly I<lb/>
between playing m juni i<lb/>
and pla. ng I a four-yeai sc!<lb/>
"In junior colk.<lb/>
run-and-shooi game R<lb/>
responded "Here, the playei<lb/>
lot bigger and vou have to al<lb/>
time and work tor a good ?<lb/>
With players like Johnn) Ed<lb/>
wards, Barrv Wrighl and B<lb/>
Peartree. Robinson realizes whal his<lb/>
job is and doesn't mind :<lb/>
scoring opportunities<lb/>
"I'd rather get the assisl<lb/>
time he commented. "M)<lb/>
job is to set things up and Keep<lb/>
evcrybod) calmed down<lb/>
With the recent return ol senior<lb/>
forward Charles Green, the Pirai<lb/>
have set their sights on three weeks<lb/>
<lb/>
VI <lb/>
NC <lb/>
a - .<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
-  '<lb/>
R<lb/>
S? PIRATES Page 11<lb/>
Diver Makes A Splash<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Staff ? riler<lb/>
With two very successful seasons<lb/>
already behind him on the ECU<lb/>
swim team, diver Scott Eagle is<lb/>
pointing towards this year's NCAA<lb/>
Regionals.<lb/>
As a freshman, Eagle set marks in<lb/>
both the one and three-meter diving<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Eagle, who had never dived off a<lb/>
three-meter board before coming to<lb/>
ECU, said it was hard for him to ad-<lb/>
just.<lb/>
"Last year on the high board I<lb/>
just wanted to survive the dive and I<lb/>
wasn't concentrating on my form or<lb/>
anything like that he said.<lb/>
Eagle did well enough his<lb/>
freshman season to earn himself a<lb/>
trip to the NCAA Eastern Regionals<lb/>
and finish a respectable eighth<lb/>
place. "I was pretty nervous going<lb/>
in Eagle stated. "There was a big<lb/>
crowd and the meet was televised. I<lb/>
didn't dive as well as I think I could<lb/>
have<lb/>
Eagle was hampered by numerous<lb/>
injuries for most of last year. At one<lb/>
point in the season, he had ten-<lb/>
donitis in both knees, but this year<lb/>
the Pirate diver has remained<lb/>
healthy.<lb/>
"Aside from a little back strain<lb/>
that bothers me once in a while, I'm<lb/>
completely over all my injuries<lb/>
commented Eagle.<lb/>
Eagle also feels he has improved a<lb/>
great deal from last year. "It's<lb/>
unbelievable how much better I am<lb/>
this year. I'm doing dives now I<lb/>
never dreamed I could have done<lb/>
before<lb/>
Scott Eagle<lb/>
Eagle only uses one dive from the<lb/>
high board that he used last year.<lb/>
Eagle came to ECU from R.J.<lb/>
Reynolds High School in Winsdton-<lb/>
Salem, N.C. As a sophomore at<lb/>
Reynolds, Eagle finished third in the<lb/>
state in diving competition, and his<lb/>
junior and senior years he was state<lb/>
champion.<lb/>
Eagle became interested in diving<lb/>
by competing in summer leagues<lb/>
during his junior high days. Then<lb/>
one day at the pool, an AAU coach<lb/>
suggested that he go to a diving<lb/>
camp. "1 went to N.C. State's camp<lb/>
for two summers, and then I started<lb/>
diving competitively my sophomore<lb/>
year in high school explained<lb/>
Eagle.<lb/>
This year Eagle has once again<lb/>
qualified for the Eastern Regionals.<lb/>
In a meet last month against UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte, he broke two varsity div-<lb/>
ing records that had stood since<lb/>
1973. In six dives, he scored 335<lb/>
points on the three-meter board,<lb/>
and scored 320 points on the one-<lb/>
meter board. One week earlier, he<lb/>
broke the one-meter diving mark for<lb/>
11 dives, scoring 490 points.<lb/>
Scott Eagle is one of the best, if<lb/>
not the best diver ECU has ever<lb/>
had exclaimed ECU diving coach<lb/>
Jon Rose. "He has tremendous<lb/>
potential, and what makes him so<lb/>
good is that he has a great attitude<lb/>
Although a great diver, Eagle is<lb/>
also a fine artist. In fact, he's atten-<lb/>
ding ECU on an academic scholar-<lb/>
ship in art. "I've been taking art<lb/>
lessons since I was seven said<lb/>
Eagle, "and while in high school, I<lb/>
took a lot of college-level art<lb/>
classes<lb/>
See ECU, Page 11<lb/>
East Carolina Baseball<lb/>
Pirate Baseball 1983<lb/>
fl<lb/>
V<lb/>
? 1982 NCAA Playoff Participant<lb/>
? 1982 ECAC-South Conference Cham-<lb/>
pion<lb/>
? 1982 Won-Loss Record of 34-14<lb/>
? 1982 Pitching Staff Ranked 6th Na-<lb/>
tionally<lb/>
I 9oxDen7ifexlla,lked 9th Na?onallv<lb/>
? 1982: 30th Winning Season in 31<lb/>
Years<lb/>
vfars01"1 NCAA Play?ff Ber,h in Three<lb/>
Mar. 2<lb/>
Mar. 3<lb/>
Mar. 4<lb/>
Mar. 7<lb/>
Mar. 8<lb/>
Mar. 10<lb/>
Mar. 11<lb/>
Mar. 12<lb/>
Mar. 13<lb/>
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15<lb/>
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18<lb/>
Va. Commonwealth Univ<lb/>
Atlantic Christian<lb/>
N.C. State Univ.<lb/>
N.C. State Univ.<lb/>
N.C. State Univ.<lb/>
Va. Commonwealth Univ.<lb/>
Va. Commonwealth Univ.<lb/>
Univ. of Connecticut<lb/>
Univ. of Connecticut<lb/>
Fan field Univ.<lb/>
Farifield Univ.<lb/>
Clemson Univ.<lb/>
George Mason Univ.<lb/>
George Mason Univ.<lb/>
N.C. State Univ.<lb/>
Campbell Univ.<lb/>
Ohio Univ.<lb/>
Ohio Univ.<lb/>
James Madison Univ.<lb/>
Baptist College<lb/>
Baptist College<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
2:00<lb/>
2:00<lb/>
2:00<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
3.00<lb/>
2:00<lb/>
1:30<lb/>
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Apr.<lb/>
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Apr.<lb/>
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Apr.<lb/>
Apr. 14<lb/>
Apr. 15<lb/>
Apr.<lb/>
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Apr<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
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8<lb/>
10<lb/>
11<lb/>
12<lb/>
I VWilmington<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Old Oominion I niv.<lb/>
Va. Weslevan<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
I niv of Richmond<lb/>
N.C. Weslevan<lb/>
N.C. Weslevan<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
American I niv (tent.) (2)<lb/>
William and Marv<lb/>
Univ. of Richmond<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
Campbell I ni.<lb/>
Campbell I niv.<lb/>
Atlantic Christian<lb/>
Baptist College<lb/>
Baptist College<lb/>
Atlantic Christian (2)<lb/>
Head Coach .Hal Baird<lb/>
Coach: Gary Overton<lb/>
iB hold type.<lb/>
Apr<lb/>
Apr<lb/>
Apr.<lb/>
Apr.<lb/>
Apr.<lb/>
Apr.<lb/>
May 1<lb/>
16<lb/>
17<lb/>
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25<lb/>
29<lb/>
30<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
7 W<lb/>
7C<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
1:30<lb/>
7:30<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
1:00<lb/>
: oo<lb/>
3 KM)<lb/>
7:30<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
2:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
1:00<lb/>
1:00<lb/>
?F,<lb/>
A<lb/>
s<lb/>
I<lb/>
20<lb/>
bv 1<lb/>
-I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057536_0011"/><lb/>
I HE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 17, 9l<lb/>
11<lb/>
rtime<lb/>
 s freshman sensa-<lb/>
irates in scoring with<lb/>
pulled down nine re-<lb/>
. w ru ?a re-injured<lb/>
25 seconds of the<lb/>
5 points and led the<lb/>
mnuing w '<lb/>
u k<lb/>
? <lb/>
10. Green<lb/>
condition<lb/>
upected to<lb/>
Ming with<lb/>
and Curt<lb/>
- ders, senioi guard<lb/>
veni seven tor 11<lb/>
Newman, who<lb/>
? " ed 1 S points<lb/>
i s i e ol e en<lb/>
Harrison<lb/>
iheii plav<lb/>
and coaches)<lb/>
- a ds to be<lb/>
ed "We had<lb/>
P ayers offen-<lb/>
pated he<lb/>
rel another<lb/>
- Saturday<lb/>
Minges on<lb/>
Navy, who<lb/>
"orenee. is<lb/>
-U S ith's stan-<lb/>
is 13-8<lb/>
ided To<lb/>
11 Squad<lb/>
'cam all-<lb/>
civ and<lb/>
was the Most<lb/>
District tor<lb/>
I  will also<lb/>
a State High<lb/>
Mike was<lb/>
R  mond for<lb/>
it Easl Carolina<lb/>
rta State and<lb/>
rship<lb/>
: ? al is the<lb/>
E -C-South<lb/>
ird to<lb/>
i a sc-<lb/>
. 20-year old<lb/>
B: A. "But our<lb/>
i? right now is Navv<lb/>
l 'S oppcnent Saturdav night in<lb/>
?es)<lb/>
winn : the tournament<lb/>
 an automatic bid to the<lb/>
. tournament, an opportunity<lb/>
obinson has alwavs dreamed<lb/>
l would be a big step for me to<lb/>
in the toui Robinson<lb/>
?d 'The exposure could open a<lb/>
see PIRAihs paVje 11<lb/>
m<lb/>
!<lb/>
<lb/>
 -<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 M<lb/>
! s v<lb/>
&amp;Jt) r-3<lb/>
lington3:00<lb/>
lina7:00<lb/>
ion I ni.7:00<lb/>
an7:00<lb/>
lison3:00<lb/>
chmond1:30<lb/>
:van7:30<lb/>
ryan7:00<lb/>
jlina7:00<lb/>
L niv (ten:(2j1:00<lb/>
d Mary2:00<lb/>
ichmond3:00<lb/>
mngton- JO<lb/>
liinnton7:00<lb/>
I niv.7:00<lb/>
l niv.2:00<lb/>
hristian7:00<lb/>
liege7:00<lb/>
left1:00<lb/>
K-istian(2) d1:00<lb/>
rerton<lb/>
Ivpe.<lb/>
Sneaker Sam Sez<lb/>
Sport Club Action<lb/>
Various sport clubs<lb/>
will be in action this<lb/>
weekend on the ECU<lb/>
campus. The team<lb/>
handball club will host<lb/>
Washington, D.C. in<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Games<lb/>
Saturday will begin at<lb/>
6:00 p.m. for the men<lb/>
and 8:00 p.m. for the<lb/>
women. On Sunday<lb/>
morning, the men start<lb/>
at 10:00 a.m. with the<lb/>
women's game at 11:45<lb/>
a.m.<lb/>
The women's rugby<lb/>
club will go against<lb/>
Reedy Creek Saturday<lb/>
at 1:00 p m. on the<lb/>
Allied Health field.<lb/>
The women's soccer<lb/>
club will see action at<lb/>
2:00p.m. on Sunday in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium as thev<lb/>
play N.C. State.<lb/>
Strongest Sur-<lb/>
ev en<lb/>
sights<lb/>
The<lb/>
vive<lb/>
On Saturday<lb/>
ing, it was the<lb/>
and sounds of physical<lb/>
strain as eyes bulged<lb/>
and veins rose to the<lb/>
surface at the finals of<lb/>
the Intramural-<lb/>
Budweiser Arm Wrestl-<lb/>
ing Tournament. The<lb/>
intersitv was high as the<lb/>
finalists gave their best<lb/>
shots to become a<lb/>
strong arm champion.<lb/>
Congratulations to the<lb/>
champions, and thanlo<lb/>
to Budweiser and all<lb/>
who participated.<lb/>
Men's champs are: 150<lb/>
lbs. and under - Ben<lb/>
Strickland; 151-175 lbs<lb/>
- Curtis Sendek;<lb/>
176-199 - Mark<lb/>
Williams; and 200 lbs.<lb/>
and over - Mike Grant.<lb/>
Women's champs are:<lb/>
1351bs. and under -<lb/>
Laura Quisenberry;<lb/>
and 136 lbs. and over -<lb/>
Lori Greene.<lb/>
Basket Excitement<lb/>
As the last week of<lb/>
the regular season in in-<lb/>
tramural basketball ap-<lb/>
proaches, the real ex-<lb/>
citement is about to<lb/>
begin. Playoffs will<lb/>
start February 27 for all<lb/>
teams which have a 50<lb/>
?7o or better win-loss<lb/>
record. Playoff<lb/>
brackets will be posted<lb/>
by Friday, February 25<lb/>
outside 204 Memorial<lb/>
Gym.<lb/>
A Slapshooting Af-<lb/>
fair<lb/>
The wild and crazy<lb/>
sport of roller hockey<lb/>
will finish its regular<lb/>
season today Several<lb/>
of the co-rev teams<lb/>
have already received<lb/>
plav off bids. These<lb/>
teams include: Night<lb/>
Cruisers, El I oco<lb/>
Flyers, Rolla Doobie,<lb/>
True Pros, H.R.S,<lb/>
Puckers, lambda<lb/>
Alpha kappa, and<lb/>
Magic Carpet Ride.<lb/>
Playoff action will<lb/>
begin on Monday,<lb/>
February 21 at Sport-<lb/>
sworld. Catch a glimp-<lb/>
se of this slapshooting<lb/>
attair!<lb/>
Weight Lifting Meet<lb/>
If you haven't<lb/>
started training for the<lb/>
weight lifting meet,<lb/>
time is running short!<lb/>
You have until Tues-<lb/>
day, February 22 to<lb/>
sign up. The meet will<lb/>
be held on February 23<lb/>
at 6:00 p.m in the ECU<lb/>
Strength Complex.<lb/>
Events will include<lb/>
Squat, Dead Lift, and<lb/>
Bench Press with the<lb/>
weight classifications<lb/>
for men: 130 and<lb/>
under, 131-150,<lb/>
151-170, 171-190,<lb/>
191-210, 211 230, and<lb/>
231 and under. Weight<lb/>
classifications for<lb/>
women are: 115 and<lb/>
under, 116-135,<lb/>
136-155, and 156 and<lb/>
above. If you are not<lb/>
participating come<lb/>
spectate ? it's sure to<lb/>
be a powerful event!<lb/>
Wrestling<lb/>
Registration for<lb/>
wrestling begins Mon-<lb/>
day, February 21 and<lb/>
continues through<lb/>
Thursday, February 24.<lb/>
Matches start February<lb/>
28 at 5:00 p.m. in room<lb/>
102, Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Matches are scheduled<lb/>
for Monday through<lb/>
Thursday with a single<lb/>
elimination tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Ride Like the Wind<lb/>
The Intramural<lb/>
Department, in<lb/>
cooperation with Kitty<lb/>
Hawk Kites, is offering<lb/>
a hang gliding trip to<lb/>
Nags Head, N.C. on<lb/>
March 26, 1983. Flights<lb/>
and instruction will<lb/>
take place on Jockey's<lb/>
Ridge, the highest (13<lb/>
stories tall) sand dune<lb/>
in the East. Payment<lb/>
must accompany<lb/>
registration which will<lb/>
be taken at the Outdoor<lb/>
Recreation Center (113<lb/>
Memorial Gym)<lb/>
through March 17,<lb/>
1983. For $41.40 a<lb/>
three-hour course is of-<lb/>
fered. An advance<lb/>
course is also offered<lb/>
for those with proof of<lb/>
previous participation<lb/>
in a beginning course.<lb/>
For more information,<lb/>
a short film presenta-<lb/>
tion will be provided by<lb/>
the staff of Kitty Hawk<lb/>
Kites on February 23 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
C-103.<lb/>
Handball Teams Face<lb/>
the Germans<lb/>
The Men's In-<lb/>
tramural Handball<lb/>
team will play the Ger-<lb/>
man Air Foice from<lb/>
Washington, D. C. this<lb/>
weekend at Memorial<lb/>
Gym. The two teams<lb/>
will meet Saturday at 6<lb/>
p.m and Sunday and<lb/>
10 a.m. The women's<lb/>
sqad will take on the<lb/>
Washington Club team<lb/>
on Saturday at 8 pm,<lb/>
and Sunday at 11:45<lb/>
am. The Washington<lb/>
Club is made up of<lb/>
daughters of foreign<lb/>
ambassadors.<lb/>
ECU Diver Shows<lb/>
Off Sharp Physique<lb/>
Coot. From Page 10<lb/>
To maintain his art<lb/>
scholarship, Eagle must<lb/>
keep his grade-point<lb/>
average above a 3.0.<lb/>
Currently he carries a<lb/>
3.5 average.<lb/>
With a full range of<lb/>
activities which include<lb/>
weight training, diving<lb/>
practice and working<lb/>
on his art projects,<lb/>
Eagle has found time to<lb/>
pose for the "Men of<lb/>
ECU" calender.<lb/>
"That was<lb/>
something my<lb/>
girlfriend talked me in-<lb/>
to he said. "It was<lb/>
quite an experience<lb/>
Eagle is also hoping<lb/>
to encounter another<lb/>
experience this season.<lb/>
His ultimate goal is to<lb/>
make it to the NCAA<lb/>
National Finals, and<lb/>
with five school records<lb/>
already under his belt,<lb/>
he's certainly off to a<lb/>
good start.<lb/>
tUH v OARV FATTHSON<lb/>
ECU head coach Cathy Andruzzi will lead the Lady Pirates against<lb/>
Morebead State tonight in Minges at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Pirates' Floor General Calls The Signals<lb/>
Cont. From Page 10<lb/>
a lot of doors for me.<lb/>
tions. But he maintains<lb/>
a realistic attitude and<lb/>
The pinnacle of any doesn't rely on lofty<lb/>
basketball player's ambitions,<lb/>
career is to play in the "I would like to play<lb/>
NBA, and Robinson pro ball, but it's not the<lb/>
shares these aspira- biggest goal in my<lb/>
life Robinson com-<lb/>
mented. "The biggest<lb/>
thing for me right now<lb/>
is to get an education<lb/>
Aside from setting<lb/>
up other players.<lb/>
Robinson is also<lb/>
responsible for calling<lb/>
offensive plays and<lb/>
designating the defen-<lb/>
sive alignment.<lb/>
As Tony Robinson's<lb/>
first season at ECU<lb/>
winds down, the Pirate<lb/>
floor general continues<lb/>
to prove to ECU fans<lb/>
that football isn't the<lb/>
only sport where a<lb/>
signal-caller can prove<lb/>
his worth.<lb/>
yPLllNG !<lb/>
.ssin&amp;I<lb/>
puWWG<lb/>
!<lb/>
? 200WEST ;<lb/>
Thur. Ladies Lock In<lb/>
with the Condo Kid<lb/>
Doors open 8:30<lb/>
Adm. 50C<lb/>
Guvs admitted at 10:00<lb/>
Lambda Chi Happy Hour<lb/>
Doors open 4:00-7:00<lb/>
50CAdm.<lb/>
nite<lb/>
G! Cimoulla9ed Fatigues ?rtd<lb/>
T Shirts Sleeping Bags.<lb/>
Backpacks Camping Equip<lb/>
men' Steel Toed Shoes Dishes<lb/>
ana Over 700 Different New ana<lb/>
Usea Items Cowboy Boots<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
150' i Evans<lb/>
Street<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
Sorority Night<lb/>
Doors Re-Open at 9:00<lb/>
Adm.50C<lb/>
200 W. 10th St.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
John Moore's Beach Party<lb/>
4:00-7:00pm<lb/>
ECU?Greenville's Best 200 West<lb/>
fmmkmmmaMmammMKMma&amp;Ks<lb/>
3<lb/>
THE GREAT POKER SHOOTOUT<lb/>
HERE'S THE 3RD AND 4TH SET OF CLUES IN THE BUSCH BEER CONTEST<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
i 74 week terminations<lb/>
App ts Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1 800 321 0575<lb/>
NO BS<lb/>
Jewelry Repair<lb/>
tcustom crafting fair<lb/>
Prices<lb/>
guaranteed rk)<lb/>
BriiiK this ad for<lb/>
20 ' f f 14k chain repairs<lb/>
b LKSJKWKLRY<lb/>
not. HI Vf. 72H-2127<lb/>
10-S lut Sat.<lb/>
CARPET SALE<lb/>
average roll is o 12,all colors j<lb/>
sizes at Alpha Phi parking lot i<lb/>
I<lb/>
?Tues. the 22nd-25th ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
LvxMNVVVV?<lb/>
?50- Bev for Ladies Till 11:00<lb/>
FRI.&amp;SAT.<lb/>
? THE WHEELS ? <lb/>
VWWWS(PANIC)VVWWWV'<lb/>
Sun Rod and Hie Reals<lb/>
Rod Abernethy of Arrogence<lb/>
Bob Patterson of No Vacancy<lb/>
Barry Webb of Brice Street<lb/>
Jack Atchison of Brice Street<lb/>
A.VMWWVWWWWWfW<lb/>
 HEAD FOB THE MOUNTAINS<lb/>
BUSCH<lb/>
?????????????<lb/>
mmmn<lb/>
fc<lb/>
You were saymg said<lb/>
Ramdance that the cards in<lb/>
each player s hand add up<lb/>
to the same number Sounds<lb/>
a mite odd to me<lb/>
Nothm odd about it<lb/>
said the BUSCH Cassidy<lb/>
Course I ain't telliri what that number is but<lb/>
anybody who s seen that big poster should be<lb/>
able to find it - if they let their eyes roam '<lb/>
A barmaid came by with ice-cold glasses of<lb/>
BUSCH Beer for all the players and onlookers<lb/>
Once again BUSCH CassiOy raised his glass to<lb/>
Diamond Li' ?his time bowing from the waist<lb/>
You got something goin on with her<lb/>
inquired the Kid<lb/>
Now, Cdssidy laughed it s sort of a private<lb/>
joke Diamond Lil tells everybody she s<lb/>
descended from royalty but there am t a speck of<lb/>
truth in it Sure shesholdm one of the two aces<lb/>
that s been dealt but they re of minor importance<lb/>
You haven t saia much about Black Bart the<lb/>
Kid said<lb/>
Nothm much to say. cept he s always<lb/>
wearing black suits when he plays Thinks it gives<lb/>
him class<lb/>
Golly saia Ramdance you got most<lb/>
everybody sized up But you am t mentioned Doc<lb/>
riQUida.<lb/>
"later, said Cassidy<lb/>
You were asmn me<lb/>
about Doc Hoiiiday said<lb/>
BUSCH Cdssidy as he and<lb/>
the Kid watchea the big<lb/>
poker game m the Last<lb/>
Chance Saloon<lb/>
Yeah said the Kid He<lb/>
keeps geftm up from the 'able ana 'hen comm<lb/>
back weann a different outfit<lb/>
True indeed saidCassiay Doc hes<lb/>
superstitious ana he thinks changm clothes will<lb/>
bring him luck That s why he s always got four suits<lb/>
with him<lb/>
doaedare said Rdmdance i surety am<lb/>
impressed with your know-how And that deserves<lb/>
another ice-coid BUSCH<lb/>
The Kid and Cassidy downed the mellow<lb/>
brew then returned to observe the action at the<lb/>
taoie<lb/>
This hefe game is right interests observed<lb/>
BUSCH Cassidy<lb/>
How SO<lb/>
Aei there s only one King dealt ana iust five<lb/>
hearts And l iust now remembered<lb/>
somethm aDout Wyatt Earp<lb/>
Would you care to share that<lb/>
information asked tne Kid<lb/>
Later said Cassidy<lb/>
( Look lor me 5th<lb/>
and final set ol<lb/>
clues in this space<lb/>
next week ;<lb/>
WiJ MMMrtMCk Inc SI LoulvM063H?Pnn??ainUSA<lb/>
rewre?tttt?ttirew??<lb/>
QUALITY<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
fe<lb/>
7<lb/>
ss<lb/>
MH)r RKPAIK<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758 U28<lb/>
STl DENT OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
We are looking for girls interested in being<lb/>
counselors - artivit instructors in a private girts<lb/>
camp located in Henersonville, N.C. Instuctors<lb/>
needed especiall in Swimming(WSI), Horseback<lb/>
riding. Tennis. Backpacking, Archer, Canoeing,<lb/>
(.tmnaslics. Crafts. Also Basketball. Dancing, Soc-<lb/>
cer. Cheerteading, Drama. Art, Office work. Camp<lb/>
craft. Nature stud). If ?our school offers a Summer<lb/>
Internship program we will be glad to help. Inquiries<lb/>
- Morgan Hasncs P.O. Box 400c, In.on. N.C.<lb/>
28782.<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
<lb/>
Til<lb/>
HTHEIOS,<lb/>
DIET<lb/>
CENTER-<lb/>
swing INTO<lb/>
118 E FIFTH ST<lb/>
an: m boon stRN<lb/>
SERVING HOME - STYLE<lb/>
FOOD AT REASONABLE<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
LUNCH a DINNER SPECIALS<lb/>
DAILY FOR 2 88 TAX<lb/>
II am-9 pm DAILY<lb/>
411 hntrtei an Unmt Wadi<lb/>
TONIGHT, The Lady Pirates vs Morehead State<lb/>
7:30pm-Minges Coliseum<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
ECU vs. NAVY<lb/>
7:30pm-Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Delta Airlines and Greenville Travel Center to give trip for two to<lb/>
Dallas,TX. Air fare free from Raleigh to Dallas, with free motel<lb/>
accomodations at the Mandalay Four Seasons in Dallas. Your Student<lb/>
ticket stub good for drawing,or register in advance at Greenville<lb/>
Travel Center or the athletic ticket off ice. Delta is ready when<lb/>
you are,now with non-stop service from RaleighDurham to Dallas<lb/>
Fort Worth.<lb/>
Lady Pirates vs Boston U.<lb/>
3:00pm-Minges Coliseum<lb/>
SUNDAY,<lb/>
Watch the Pirates attack.<lb/>
44?4???WWt40<lb/>
1MBMHHP<lb/>
m <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057536_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 17, 1983<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEAR TAM KYPU and Map?V<lb/>
Birthday.<lb/>
EAT MORE BEANS<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
EXCELLENT TYPIST.<lb/>
Reasonable rates. All papers Call<lb/>
7171171 attar a.m.<lb/>
AUDIO ELECTRONICS SER-<lb/>
VICE : Complete audio repair call<lb/>
attar 4 a.m. Marie 7I1-IW.<lb/>
MABLA ESFANOLT II not. tatar<lb/>
mo available In Spanitfi literature<lb/>
grammar and convariatlaa No<lb/>
espere hatla i ultima minulai<lb/>
Call M7HI batara l.U p.m.<lb/>
FOR PROFESSIONAL FLIGHT<lb/>
INSTRUCTION, call JOE,<lb/>
rtte42.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Kln?s<lb/>
Raw Aparlmants; 2 Bedroom,<lb/>
split utilities and rant Contact<lb/>
Jan, 73241M.<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TTPINO SER<lb/>
VICE, aKparianca. quality wart,<lb/>
IBM Selactric tyaawrltar. Call<lb/>
Lania Shiva 75a-SJ?l or OAIL<lb/>
JOYNER 7J 101 <lb/>
TYPING: Tarm papers. Ifcasls,<lb/>
ale. Call Kampta Dunn, 751-47M.<lb/>
PRESENTLY<lb/>
RESEARCH an aaallal<lb/>
Naad la Interview a maM and a<lb/>
tamai who hava me mfect.o<lb/>
(separata intarvlawt). Cantidan<lb/>
tiai.ty guaranteed aa names r?-<lb/>
quirad II interested, call Or<lb/>
Chanawalh at MJ-eMl (ECU) ar<lb/>
7M-UI7 (attar I p.m.) WIM pay ?<lb/>
lor 4S minute) mtarviaw.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
COUNSELORS tor ca-ad summer<lb/>
camp in tha mountains of North<lb/>
Carolina Raom, maals, laundry,<lb/>
salary and traval allowanca. Ex-<lb/>
parianca not nacassary but must<lb/>
enjoy livinf and working with<lb/>
childran. Only clean cut, non-<lb/>
smoklnf coiia-o stvdonts naad ap-<lb/>
ply. For application brochure.<lb/>
wrlta: Jack Lavlna, Camp<lb/>
Pinowood, 1e4et HE. 10 Avanua.<lb/>
North Miami Baach, Florida<lb/>
mil.<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Arkansas or<lb/>
along I- Wast, Spring Braak<lb/>
Call Pam, 737 uu<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
WE BUY USED MUSICAL IN<lb/>
STRUMENTS: CALL 7Sa-oT77.<lb/>
FLORIDAII SPRINO BREAK.<lb/>
?enervations naw being takan tar<lb/>
a trip to Daytana Baach. Bound<lb/>
trip bus lara with KEOS. 7 nights<lb/>
accomodatlon at King's Inn<lb/>
Baachtront. Fraa partias with liv<lb/>
band and unlimited brew Pricois<lb/>
JUS SO lor everything aacapt<lb/>
doing maa<lb/>
h) CaH f?-??, lar datails<lb/>
altar a a.m. Lhmitad spaca. sa<lb/>
don't wait<lb/>
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