<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057539_0001"/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
5hE iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.45-<lb/>
Tuesday, March 1, 1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
SGA Finances<lb/>
Reserve Fund Set Up<lb/>
The SGA Monday night tangled<lb/>
over, and finally passed, the<lb/>
Financial Management Act that<lb/>
will guide the spending of funds<lb/>
for the '8384 school year. The<lb/>
final version of the bill passed by<lb/>
a voice vote.<lb/>
The bill's key clause stipulates<lb/>
that 17.5 percent of SGA expected<lb/>
revenue is to be kept in resere<lb/>
and not appropriated during the<lb/>
SGA annual budgeting process<lb/>
The figure was reached upon after<lb/>
the two oppossing sides, one<lb/>
headed by president Eric Hender-<lb/>
son advocating a 15 percent<lb/>
resere and one headed by<lb/>
legislator Charles Blake ad-<lb/>
vocating 20 percent, compromis-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The bill came to the floor with a<lb/>
15-percent reserve clause and was<lb/>
immediateh amended by Blake to<lb/>
20 percent. Henderson and<lb/>
Speaker of the House Gary<lb/>
Williams spoke against the pro-<lb/>
posed amendment, saying that a<lb/>
15 percent reserve was more than<lb/>
adequate. They also said a large<lb/>
reserve portion would defeat the<lb/>
purpose o' annual budgeting.<lb/>
Blake and other legislators, as<lb/>
in other SGA meetings, said the<lb/>
15 percent reserve would take<lb/>
authority from one legislator and<lb/>
give it to the next.<lb/>
A majority of the legislators<lb/>
agreed with Blake and passed the<lb/>
amendment 20-17. But the<lb/>
20-percent reserve didn't hold out<lb/>
for long. Speaker Williams, after<lb/>
another amendment to the bill<lb/>
failed, immediately re-introduced,<lb/>
through parliamentary procedure.<lb/>
the already-passed 20-percent<lb/>
reserve clause.<lb/>
W illiams this time launched in-<lb/>
to a all-out defensive speech to<lb/>
defeat the amendment. He said<lb/>
the legislature, by holding such a<lb/>
large portion of the money in<lb/>
reserve (as much as $25,000),<lb/>
would destroy all semblance of<lb/>
planning and continuity in the<lb/>
budgeting process.<lb/>
Williams speech seemed to pro-<lb/>
mpt the legislators; they decided<lb/>
to debate the amendment again<lb/>
with a vote of 18-14.<lb/>
Members began to tire, and<lb/>
some even left. The discussion on<lb/>
the reserve clause began again.<lb/>
This time, before debate could get<lb/>
hnted, legislator David Brown in-<lb/>
troduced a friendly amendment to<lb/>
compromise and make the clause<lb/>
17.5 percent. It was readily ac-<lb/>
cepted by all members of the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
The act passed, with the reserve<lb/>
clause at 17.5 percent. It now has<lb/>
to be signed by Henderson.<lb/>
Photo By CiNOY WALL<lb/>
The Student Government Association in its weekly meeting last night passed a new Financial Management<lb/>
Act with a reserve fund of 17.5 percent. The figure was agreed upon after much debate and compromise.<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
Postmen Should Get Sore Feet From East's Mail<lb/>
Only months after being prais-<lb/>
ed for his thriftiness, N.C.<lb/>
Republican Sen. John P. East is<lb/>
taking the heat for spending<lb/>
almost a million dollars of tax-<lb/>
payers' money for his office's<lb/>
mailing cost.<lb/>
East, a former ECU political<lb/>
science professor, spent $961,000<lb/>
to mail out 8.5 million newsletters<lb/>
in 1982. According to a congres-<lb/>
sional report. East's total was the<lb/>
seventh highest among the na-<lb/>
tion's 100 senators.<lb/>
East received praise last year<lb/>
when he announced that he had<lb/>
returned $140,000 to the U.S.<lb/>
Treasury that he saved from staff<lb/>
expenses.<lb/>
With last week's release regar-<lb/>
ding East's newsletter expenses,<lb/>
the praise turned sour. State<lb/>
democratic leaders responded<lb/>
with strong criticism of East for<lb/>
his high mailing cost. Some have<lb/>
charged that East has been using<lb/>
his frequent mailings for political<lb/>
purposes. In the six weeks prior<lb/>
to last fall's elections. East sent<lb/>
out 6.2 million copies of tax-paid<lb/>
newsletters that attacked liberals,<lb/>
national Democratic leaders and<lb/>
the news media.<lb/>
"It is obvious that the newslet-<lb/>
ters that were sent out during that<lb/>
time, just prior to the election,<lb/>
were blatantly political said<lb/>
June E. Milby, communications<lb/>
director for the state Democratic<lb/>
party.<lb/>
The congressional report also<lb/>
said East's mailings averaged 3.89<lb/>
letters for every mail box in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"The purpose of the mailings in<lb/>
a representative democracy is to<lb/>
allow us to communicate with our<lb/>
constituents East said in -1 re-<lb/>
cent Associated Press interview.<lb/>
"Often the local press is unable to<lb/>
cover the range of activities we are<lb/>
involved in<lb/>
East denied that the letters were<lb/>
political or connected with last<lb/>
fall's elections. He pointed out<lb/>
that since he does not face election<lb/>
until 1986, it would require a large<lb/>
leap of faith to say his mailings<lb/>
were tied to the elections.<lb/>
"All citizens find it unfortunate<lb/>
when tax funds are used for pur-<lb/>
poses for which they were not in-<lb/>
tended said Betty Speir, the first<lb/>
vice chairman of the N.C.<lb/>
Democratic Party I feel certain<lb/>
that the franking privilege was in-<lb/>
tended for basic informational<lb/>
purposes for a senator's consti-<lb/>
tuents and not for political pur-<lb/>
poses Speir told The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
Nationally Sen. John Heinz<lb/>
(R-Penn) was the highest free mail<lb/>
spender. Heinz outpaced his<lb/>
senate colleagues by sending out<lb/>
15 million pieces of mail at an<lb/>
estimated cost to tapaers of<lb/>
S2.25 million, according to a<lb/>
senator Rules Committee.<lb/>
Overall, the 100 senators spent<lb/>
$48 million to send out a record<lb/>
234 million pieces of mail. 90 per-<lb/>
cent of which were newsletters<lb/>
MSU Director m<lb/>
To Take ECU<lb/>
A dmission Job<lb/>
Charles F. Seeley, director of<lb/>
admissions and scholarships at<lb/>
Michigan State University, has<lb/>
been named the new director of<lb/>
admissions at ECU and is set to<lb/>
take office in two weeks.<lb/>
Seeley will replace Dr. Susan J.<lb/>
McDaniel. who has been serving<lb/>
as acting director since the<lb/>
resignation of Walter ML Bortz<lb/>
from the post in January of 1982.<lb/>
McDaniel will continue to serve in<lb/>
her position as associate vice<lb/>
chancellor for academic affairs.<lb/>
Seeley, a MSU graduate, has<lb/>
served in recruitment and admis-<lb/>
sions at his alma mater for more<lb/>
than 20 years and has been pro-<lb/>
gram director since 1972. MSU<lb/>
has a student body approximately<lb/>
three times as large as ECU.<lb/>
"I am delighted that Mr. Seeley<lb/>
will be joining us said Vice<lb/>
Chancellor of Academic Affairs<lb/>
Angelo A. Volpe, under whose of-<lb/>
fice the director of admissions<lb/>
serves. "Mr. Seeley brings a solid<lb/>
record of success and extensive ex-<lb/>
perience to this position<lb/>
Volpe said the director of ad-<lb/>
missions is a key figure in ECU's<lb/>
recruitment and retention pro-<lb/>
gram. Seeley, 55, will take office<lb/>
on March 14, a fairly good time of<lb/>
year, according to a<lb/>
spokeswoman for the admisions<lb/>
office, since the most hectic<lb/>
recruiting efforts by the university<lb/>
are over and the majority of in-<lb/>
coming students have made com-<lb/>
mitments to colleges for the fall.<lb/>
Seeley is a Michagan native and<lb/>
has never worked outside the<lb/>
state. He was selected for the<lb/>
ECU post after a nationwide<lb/>
search to fill the position.<lb/>
ECU Business Student<lb/>
Gone Since Wednesday<lb/>
bv DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Pedestrian Pest<lb/>
Recent heavy rains causing mud puddles and wet spots have probably caused more than one pedestrian to<lb/>
be splashed by a passing car such as the one above.<lb/>
Tuition Hikes Suggested For<lb/>
UNC System Non-Residents<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
The weather for today will be<lb/>
partly cloudy with a chance of<lb/>
rain later in the day. The forecast<lb/>
for Korea will be no more war,<lb/>
with an outside chance of a mon-<lb/>
soon heading for Vietnam.<lb/>
Hawkeye and the all guys and<lb/>
gab of the 4077 have finally gone<lb/>
home. We're going to miss them.<lb/>
By JEFF CLONINGER<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
Two bills have been proposed<lb/>
recently in the N.C. General<lb/>
Assembly to increase tuition for<lb/>
out-of-state students, suggesting<lb/>
that students pay a larger portion<lb/>
of the actual cost of their college<lb/>
education and thus cutting state<lb/>
subsidies.<lb/>
The first bill, sponsored by<lb/>
Rep. Howard Coble of<lb/>
Greensboro, would raise tuition in<lb/>
increments of 10 to 18 percent<lb/>
each year for a six-year period,<lb/>
resulting in an increase to about<lb/>
90 percent of the actual cost of a<lb/>
college education. The second<lb/>
bill, proposed by Rep. John Jor-<lb/>
dan of Alamance County, would<lb/>
call for an immediate increase to<lb/>
100 percent of the actual cost and<lb/>
would be put into effect as of Ju-<lb/>
ly, 1983.<lb/>
The tuition students currently<lb/>
pay is only a small part of the ac-<lb/>
tual cost to educate a student in a<lb/>
college or university. State funds<lb/>
pay the majority of the expense.<lb/>
William C. Friday, president of<lb/>
the UNC schools, said if either bill<lb/>
is passed in it's present form, it<lb/>
would deal a "devastating blow to<lb/>
our state's educational institu-<lb/>
tions Friday believes such a hike<lb/>
in tuition would not only "cut off<lb/>
many good students from our<lb/>
campuses" but also "hurt athletic<lb/>
and scholarship programs as<lb/>
well<lb/>
Because of the large number of<lb/>
N.C. students who go to school<lb/>
out of state, Friday fears that<lb/>
other states may follow the pro-<lb/>
posed actions of the General<lb/>
Assembly and raise their out-of-<lb/>
state tuition fees.<lb/>
ECU Chancellor John M.<lb/>
Howell stated the position of the<lb/>
university will be always to at-<lb/>
tempt to keep tuition low since the<lb/>
Constitution states that education<lb/>
should be free if possible. North<lb/>
Carolina has always tried to keep<lb/>
tuition low because the state<lb/>
generally believes that colleges<lb/>
and universities are a good invest-<lb/>
ment of money.<lb/>
"As technology advances more<lb/>
educated people are required than<lb/>
are laborers Howell said. "An<lb/>
increase of tuition would surely<lb/>
UNC President William Friday<lb/>
result in a decrease of students be-<lb/>
ing able to afford higher educa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Out-of-state students com-<lb/>
promise 15 percent of the students<lb/>
at North Carolina's 16 state-<lb/>
supported colleges and univer-<lb/>
sities.<lb/>
The Raleigh Police Department<lb/>
and the Belmont Police Depart-<lb/>
ment in Mecklenburg County<lb/>
have joined ECU campus police<lb/>
and the Greenville Police Depart-<lb/>
ment in the investigation of an<lb/>
ECU student who has been miss-<lb/>
ing since Wednesday.<lb/>
Anne Marie Fredenberg, a<lb/>
sophomore business student, was<lb/>
reported missing Thursday morn-<lb/>
ing by her boyfriend Eric Knight.<lb/>
Knight was the last one reported<lb/>
to see her. Fredenberg, 19, from<lb/>
Charlotte, dropped out of school<lb/>
on Wednesday Feb. 19. She had<lb/>
told her roommate in Clement<lb/>
dorm that she would return for<lb/>
her belongings, but never did.<lb/>
"She hasn't taken anything,<lb/>
said Fredenberg's roomate Shan-<lb/>
non Peak. "I'm real concerned<lb/>
Both Peak and Fredenberg's<lb/>
parents thought it unusual for the<lb/>
young woman not to inform them<lb/>
or Knight of her whereabouts.<lb/>
ECU police detective Gene<lb/>
mcAbee, who is in charge of the<lb/>
Fredenburg case, said Freden-<lb/>
burg's disappearence was clouded<lb/>
bv some "suspicious cir-<lb/>
cumstances" that he could not<lb/>
elaborate on at this time.<lb/>
"The information 1 have would<lb/>
cause you to worry a little<lb/>
McAbee told The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian. "I'm concerned for her<lb/>
safety<lb/>
McAbee said that most of the<lb/>
leads he has received as a result of<lb/>
over a dozen interviews were very<lb/>
sensitive and could not be releas-<lb/>
ed. He added that most of his in-<lb/>
formation was unconfirmed. "It's<lb/>
a strange situation McAbee<lb/>
noted.<lb/>
Fredenburg is 5'8" and weight<lb/>
120 pounds. She has brown<lb/>
shoulder-length hair and brown<lb/>
eyes. She was last seen wearing a<lb/>
striped shirt, blue jeans and<lb/>
cowboy boots, McAbee said.<lb/>
According to McAbee, Freden-<lb/>
burg' s 1980 Chevrolet Chevette is<lb/>
also missing. He described the car<lb/>
color as beige with stripes on both<lb/>
sides. The license plate is RZZ85.<lb/>
Reasons for Fredenburg's<lb/>
withdrawal from ECU are not cer-<lb/>
tain, but Peak believed that she<lb/>
may have quit because she needed<lb/>
some time to be by herself. "She<lb/>
might have just wanted to take a<lb/>
break he said.<lb/>
Peak is not convinced that any<lb/>
foul play is involved in Freden-<lb/>
burg's disappearance. "I don't<lb/>
think she's in danger Peak said.<lb/>
"She just might have run off or<lb/>
something<lb/>
"I won't form an opinion<lb/>
now McAbee said in reference<lb/>
to Fredenburg's safetv. "Were<lb/>
not far enough along on the in-<lb/>
vestigation<lb/>
McAbee has kept in close con-<lb/>
tact with Fredenburg's parents<lb/>
throughout the ordeal. "Thev<lb/>
came up from Charlotte last<lb/>
week McAbee said. He added<lb/>
that he has been maintaining<lb/>
telephone contact with the familv<lb/>
since that visit. McAbee has also<lb/>
remained in contact with both<lb/>
Peak and Knight.<lb/>
McAbee said he had no solid<lb/>
leads about Fredenburg's<lb/>
whereabouts, but that he had<lb/>
received some informaion in-<lb/>
dicating she may have applied for<lb/>
jobs in the Raleigh area since her<lb/>
disappearance. McAbee added<lb/>
that because of the other<lb/>
suspicious circumstances he<lb/>
couldn't be sure if she a-<lb/>
definately safe.<lb/>
"Nobody has seen her at all,<lb/>
that 1 know of. since last W ednes-<lb/>
day morning at nine McAbee<lb/>
added.<lb/>
World News<lb/>
At A Glance<lb/>
Bv United Press International<lb/>
DAKAR, Senegal � Presi-<lb/>
dent Abdou Diouf and his<lb/>
Socialist Party today swept to a<lb/>
commanding lead in Senegal's<lb/>
first national elections since the<lb/>
constitution was liberalized.<lb/>
Early returns from Sunday's<lb/>
presidential and parliamentary<lb/>
elections showed Diouf far<lb/>
ahead of his four challengers.<lb/>
LAS VEGAS, Nev. � Bombs<lb/>
were found at the Stardust and<lb/>
Desert Inn Hotels on the Las<lb/>
Vegas Strip, forcing thousands<lb/>
of tourists to flee today. Both<lb/>
bombs were removed safely<lb/>
The extortion outbreak netted a<lb/>
payoff from a movie theater<lb/>
that received a telephoned<lb/>
bomb threat Sunday night.<lb/>
WASHINGTON � Another<lb/>
leak has been found in the space<lb/>
shuttle Challenger's main<lb/>
engines, forcing an additional<lb/>
delay of up to a week in the<lb/>
See WORLD, Page 3<lb/>
<lb/>
11<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0002"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
THE EAST C AROL INI AN<lb/>
MARCH 1. 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item<lb/>
printed in the announcement<lb/>
column, please type it on an an<lb/>
nouncement form and send it to<lb/>
Tne East Carolinian m care ot<lb/>
the production manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office m the Publications<lb/>
Building Flyers and handwrit<lb/>
�en copy on odd sued paper can<lb/>
not be accepted<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements but spa. e s often<lb/>
I 'ted Therefore we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you<lb/>
want and suggest that you do not<lb/>
rely solely on this column tor<lb/>
Publicity<lb/>
The deadline for an<lb/>
nouncements s 3 p m Monday<lb/>
for the Tuesday paper and 3<lb/>
C m Wednesdayy tor the Thurs<lb/>
day paper No announcements<lb/>
received after these deadlines<lb/>
w.H Be printed<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and<lb/>
departments<lb/>
RESUME<lb/>
PREPARATION<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and<lb/>
Pacement Service m the Btox<lb/>
ton House ts offering the follow<lb/>
ing one hour sessions to help you<lb/>
prepare your own resume<lb/>
March 17. 1983 Thursday 3 00<lb/>
p m. March 2! 1983 Mon<lb/>
day I 00pm Those<lb/>
seniors or graduate students<lb/>
fn.shtng th's year and planning<lb/>
'c register with us are urged to<lb/>
a"end You may come tc 'he<lb/>
B'oxton House at any of the<lb/>
above t mes<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
SKILLS<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Serv.ce n the B'ox<lb/>
ton House is offering these one<lb/>
hour sessions to aid you m<lb/>
developing better nterviewing<lb/>
ss is tor use in your job search<lb/>
March 22 1983 Tuesday<lb/>
4 00pm March 24, 1983<lb/>
Thursday 2 00 p m Afilm<lb/>
and discussion of nter ew<lb/>
through the Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement Service w<lb/>
�area<lb/>
MARKETING FILM<lb/>
SERIES<lb/>
T - e 4er as" Vare'ng<lb/>
Assoc-af'On and ECU Depart<lb/>
nentoi Ma-kef ng will present a<lb/>
Market ng Film Series on<lb/>
March 2 ana 3 n Rawi 130 at<lb/>
3 00 Ail interested East<lb/>
Carolina students are invited to<lb/>
attend The films wn provide<lb/>
ntormation about marketing<lb/>
opportunities and show<lb/>
�eevance of market ng ,n cor<lb/>
porate obiecves and methods<lb/>
of operaons The topics will m<lb/>
 ce Marketing An integral<lb/>
rd" ot Bus ness Operations<lb/>
and Marketing Careers<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will not be a general<lb/>
meeting of the ECU Am<lb/>
oassadors on March 2. 1983<lb/>
They wni. however, meet on<lb/>
yveo March 16.1983 The<lb/>
meeting will be held in the multi<lb/>
Purpose room of Mendenhall at<lb/>
5 00 p rr cive entertainment<lb/>
wM be provided tfhe skit you ve<lb/>
an neara about1' and signup<lb/>
sneets will be available Pries<lb/>
� � y.gh point totals will also be<lb/>
liS ssed This is a meeting you<lb/>
-s' .an no' a'fora to nvss'<lb/>
PHI ETASIGMA<lb/>
'�-? on E'a S gma Na'iona;<lb/>
Freshman Honor Society will<lb/>
-ee' on Tuesday March 1 at 5<lb/>
pm r Room 221 a' the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center All<lb/>
embers are urged 'o a"end<lb/>
NEW PSYC COURSES<lb/>
The Psychology Department<lb/>
has added two courses m fall<lb/>
1983 1) Developmental<lb/>
Psychology PSYC 3304. Section<lb/>
005. 1 00 pm MWF, SP 305 2)<lb/>
Psychology of Adiustment<lb/>
PSYC 3275 Section 005 2 00 pm<lb/>
MWF, SP 211<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
LANGUAGE<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
The international Language<lb/>
Organization will be meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday March 2 at 3 00 The<lb/>
meeting will be held in BC 301<lb/>
The maior topic of the meeting<lb/>
will be finalizing the plans for<lb/>
the Soiree Francaise All<lb/>
members are encouraged to at<lb/>
tend ana interested persons are<lb/>
welcome to attend<lb/>
ECUCIRCLE K<lb/>
Circle K will not be meeting on<lb/>
Tuesday March 2 1983 It you<lb/>
are interested in finding out<lb/>
about Circle k our next meeting<lb/>
is March IS. 1983 Tuesday at 7 00<lb/>
m room 221 of the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Circle k wishes<lb/>
all students a pleasant spring<lb/>
break<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
ACM ECU Chapter invites<lb/>
ev' 'one to learn more about<lb/>
the opportunity co oping Ex<lb/>
perience is something we all<lb/>
need before graduating I The<lb/>
meeting is March 17 at 3 30 m<lb/>
room 132 Austm Please come<lb/>
learn more about this from Ms<lb/>
Caroi Collins<lb/>
ACM<lb/>
Everyone is invited to hear<lb/>
Dr Wirth speak on the Ad<lb/>
language An interesting new<lb/>
language and one not taught at<lb/>
ECU The meeting will be<lb/>
March 3 at 3 30 in Rm 132<lb/>
Austin<lb/>
ADVENTIST FORUM<lb/>
Studies in Dan el a Pro<lb/>
phecy Seminar will be held<lb/>
Thursday at 7 00 p m in the Cot<lb/>
tee House Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Th.s Nationally Popular<lb/>
Semmar s held acrosss<lb/>
A-npa n leading . t.es The<lb/>
�i � week series beflins <lb/>
Thursday MarcH 3 7 oo p m<lb/>
There will be a lecture and intc<lb/>
ma � Prophecy No<lb/>
registration fee s required<lb/>
NOTICE OF MEETING<lb/>
Our ifI D weekly nneeT ng<lb/>
willbeiflon Thursday March<lb/>
3 a? 7 DC 0 m -n MSC rm 244<lb/>
Recentiv �nviTea rusfiee. shou'd<lb/>
bring 'her aues f They haven t<lb/>
paa them already MandaTor,<lb/>
Ticket saies will te collected ana<lb/>
by no means be turned �n laTer<lb/>
Than The next meeting Mew<lb/>
members are v.ceo to continue<lb/>
The GBP spr.t by getting mvolv<lb/>
eo ana help ng our newly elected<lb/>
ott'cers<lb/>
ECU BAHAI CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Bahai Association<lb/>
will meet in 241 Mendenhall<lb/>
each Tuesday from 11 00 till<lb/>
noon Bahai s believe n the<lb/>
elimination of a" forms of pre<lb/>
iudice whether it oe racial,<lb/>
social, economic or religious<lb/>
preiudice You are cordially n<lb/>
vited to share your thoughts<lb/>
with us anyone interested s<lb/>
welcome 'o attend. For more in<lb/>
formation call 752 ii- or<lb/>
752 1018<lb/>
MEDIA BOARD<lb/>
The Media Boa'd is now at<lb/>
ceptmg applications lor I98j 84<lb/>
Media Heads for the tonow ng<lb/>
mediums he East Caroin a-i<lb/>
The Ebon, Her a Rebel Pho'o<lb/>
ab anc AZMB 'aoo station<lb/>
Pick up app'iat.ons in 'he<lb/>
Meda Board off ce oetwee' MM<lb/>
hrs of 8 am 12 pm ana I pf 5<lb/>
pm Deadline tor accept"g ap<lb/>
plications is Marcr 18 at 5 00<lb/>
ASMR 2000<lb/>
Looking for a unique and ex<lb/>
;itmg way to satisfy your<lb/>
General College humanities re<lb/>
quirements Preregister for<lb/>
ASMR 2000. a new inter<lb/>
disciplinary course in Medieval<lb/>
and Renaissance Studies,<lb/>
scheduled tor tall 1983. Mon<lb/>
days, 6 30 9 30 pm The course<lb/>
will survey the basn concepts of<lb/>
Medieval and Renaissance art.<lb/>
history, literature music, and<lb/>
philosophy For more informa<lb/>
tion call or visit Dr McMillan.<lb/>
E nghsh 757 6516 or Dr<lb/>
Nischan History. 757 6956<lb/>
SLC<lb/>
Come on down! Each week<lb/>
the sign language dept otters a<lb/>
s.lent dinner so sign language<lb/>
students and members of the<lb/>
deal community can socialize<lb/>
and practice their skills This<lb/>
week the silent dinner is Aed .<lb/>
March 2 at 6 00 p m The dinner<lb/>
is at the New Deli<lb/>
FILMSERIES<lb/>
The Department of Marketing<lb/>
in the School of Business will<lb/>
present an introductory Film<lb/>
Series on Marketing m March<lb/>
and April The first two films<lb/>
will be shown this week On<lb/>
Wednesday March 2. the film<lb/>
shown will be an Overall View of<lb/>
Marketing on Thursday. March<lb/>
3. the film shown will deal with<lb/>
lOb opportunities m Marketing<lb/>
both films will be shown in Rawi<lb/>
130 at 3 00 Pv any interested<lb/>
student may attend<lb/>
JEWELRY MAKING<lb/>
The Department ot University<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring a Jewelry<lb/>
Making course for members of<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Crafts Center The course will<lb/>
be ofterd on Wednesdays March<lb/>
16 23 30. April 6 13 at 6 00<lb/>
PM 9 00 PM The cost for the<lb/>
membership is $10 00 and all<lb/>
ECU students tacuity staff<lb/>
and their dependents who are<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Members may register m the<lb/>
Crafts Center on the bottom<lb/>
floor ot MSC between the hours<lb/>
ot 3 00 PM 10 00 PM Monday<lb/>
through Fi day and 12 00 noon<lb/>
5 00 PM on Saturday<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
.noa Baraano a" 15'661' exl<lb/>
60 a'tet 5 00 PM caii the Craft<lb/>
entei a I � � 171<lb/>
HISTORY MAJORS<lb/>
The Richard C Todd Phi<lb/>
Alpha Theta Lectures will pre<lb/>
sent Dr John R.ddle ot NCSu<lb/>
with an informative program<lb/>
Dioscorides a"d Early<lb/>
Medicine' This will be a discus<lb/>
sion of the use of herbs for<lb/>
medicinal purposes during the<lb/>
Middle Ages The program will<lb/>
be held Thursday March 3, at<lb/>
7 30 p m in BB 104 Light<lb/>
refreshments wilt be served<lb/>
following this informative<lb/>
presentation The public s n<lb/>
vi ted<lb/>
CO�OP<lb/>
Summer positions are<lb/>
available at North Carolina<lb/>
state parks For example a<lb/>
park attenaent will be hired in<lb/>
Gatesviiie Duties consist of<lb/>
general maintenance ot the park<lb/>
imow grass. eec area clean,<lb/>
etc) Also a naturalist will be<lb/>
hired The naturalist must have<lb/>
(Ofnpor'fd at least three years<lb/>
of college and majored n a<lb/>
natural science Jobs are also<lb/>
available at other state parks<lb/>
such as Cliffs of the Neuse,<lb/>
Hammocks Beach Fort Macon<lb/>
and othe-s 5V e guards<lb/>
 � �� -rPsts and<lb/>
genera aborers will be h.reo<lb/>
Come by Rawi 313<lb/>
SIGMATHETATAU<lb/>
Sigma Thea "aus spr ng<lb/>
business meetng will be held<lb/>
March 3 at 7 30 in room 203 at<lb/>
�he nyrS'hg rxi'iding<lb/>
NEW COURSE<lb/>
ADVANCED SCUBA<lb/>
DIVING<lb/>
A new course will be ottered<lb/>
next tall by the P E Dept called<lb/>
Advanced Scuba Diving<lb/>
Students can pre register now<lb/>
tor the course under PHYE 5278<lb/>
Prequisite is Basic Scuba Div<lb/>
ing (2278) or permission from in<lb/>
structor Will be oflered fall<lb/>
MWF 1 30 3 30 for 3 s h<lb/>
CHEERLEADER<lb/>
TRYOUTS<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Varsity cheerleader tryouts will<lb/>
be held at 7 30 p m on Tuesday,<lb/>
March 29, 1983. on the mam floor<lb/>
of Memorial Gym<lb/>
The first practice session will<lb/>
be held at 5 00 on Wednesday.<lb/>
March 16 at the east end of<lb/>
Mmges Coliseum All guys and<lb/>
girls interested in trying out for<lb/>
the 1983 84 squad should be pre<lb/>
sent at this first practice ses<lb/>
sion<lb/>
BUSINESS<lb/>
ADMISSIONS<lb/>
For those students who do not<lb/>
meet School ot Business admis<lb/>
sion criteria during the<lb/>
February 21 March 4 1983<lb/>
Change of Mator, there will be a<lb/>
one day change ot maior period<lb/>
on July 1, 1983 tor those students<lb/>
who then meet the School of<lb/>
Business admission criteria<lb/>
Those students whe will be on<lb/>
campus on July 1 may request<lb/>
admission to the school of<lb/>
business by following the stan<lb/>
dard procedure<lb/>
Those students who will not be<lb/>
on campus on July 1, 1983, but<lb/>
think they will meet the School<lb/>
of Business admissions re<lb/>
quirements at the end of the cur<lb/>
rent semester may apply to<lb/>
change their maior by following<lb/>
this procedure<lb/>
1 Prior to leaving campus this<lb/>
semester, pick up your tile from<lb/>
your advisor<lb/>
2 Take your file to the depart<lb/>
mental secretary in Accounting<lb/>
Decision Science. Finance.<lb/>
Managempnt or Marketing as<lb/>
appropriate<lb/>
3 While in the departmental<lb/>
office fill out the form to request<lb/>
a change of maior evaluation<lb/>
� .on ireet Schoci of Business<lb/>
requirements you wii be admit<lb/>
'ed on July 1. 1983. and an ad<lb/>
visor will be assigned it you do<lb/>
not meet the requirements your<lb/>
tile will be returned to the<lb/>
General College<lb/>
When you return to school in<lb/>
August check the appropriate<lb/>
departmental bulletin board for<lb/>
your advsor assignment<lb/>
NEED A NEW<lb/>
MAJOR?<lb/>
interested in a health career<lb/>
but don t know which one Want<lb/>
a maior with good employment<lb/>
opportunities Learn more about<lb/>
'he various health professional<lb/>
programs offered at ECU by<lb/>
s gn.ng up tor HPRO 2000<lb/>
Survey of Allied Health Profes<lb/>
sions A different health career<lb/>
will be featured each week and<lb/>
th-s course will give you an op<lb/>
portunity to learn something<lb/>
about each profession as wei' as<lb/>
meet some of the faculty from<lb/>
each department<lb/>
CAREER CHOICE<lb/>
The Strong Campbell Interest<lb/>
Inventory is ottered every Tues<lb/>
day at 4 PM In 305 Wr.ght An<lb/>
nex when school is In session<lb/>
with the exceptions of examina<lb/>
tion penod and registration<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/>
tjation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit Capitalize and<lb/>
nyphenate words properly Leave<lb/>
space at end ot line it word<lb/>
doesn't tit No ads will be ac<lb/>
cepted over the phone We<lb/>
reserve the right to reiect any ad<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
75 per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly' L'se capnal and<lb/>
lowei case letters<lb/>
Return loIHr I ASTAROI.IMAN<lb/>
office bj 3:00 Tuesday before<lb/>
Wednesday publications.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
No lines<lb/>
.t.<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
at 75C per line $.<lb/>
.No insertions.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
1I-��i'<lb/>
�����,<lb/>
��r�<lb/>
1- �-���i<lb/>
-rl��1<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
i ���� . �ih ��<lb/>
� �<lb/>
'TI. . .t<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS<lb/>
The Special Olympics pro<lb/>
gram of Greenville and Pitt<lb/>
County is making preparations<lb/>
for their spring games to be held<lb/>
April 14. 1983 at the East<lb/>
Carolina Track (Bunting Field)<lb/>
Individuals or groups interested<lb/>
in volunteering to help with the<lb/>
Special Olympics should contact<lb/>
Bill Twine at 752 4137 ext 201.<lb/>
Dr Dave Poretta at 752 6441. or<lb/>
plan to attend a committee plan<lb/>
mng meeting Wednesday,<lb/>
March 2 19P3 at the Greenville<lb/>
Park and Recreation Depart<lb/>
ment, Jaycee Park on Cedar<lb/>
Lane at 7 00 p m<lb/>
PAGEANT<lb/>
Miss N C Southern Beauty<lb/>
Pageant' The search is on for<lb/>
contestants. Ages 1 24 years<lb/>
old Each age division is limited<lb/>
and the deadline date April 1.<lb/>
1983 The pageant is scheduled<lb/>
to be held April 29 30. 1983 m<lb/>
High Pomt, N C All young<lb/>
ladies are invited to participate<lb/>
Age divisions are 13 4 6 7 9<lb/>
10 12. 13 16 17 24 State winner<lb/>
m each age Division will receive<lb/>
a cash scholarship crown,<lb/>
trophy oanner ano tlowers also<lb/>
other awa� a be presented<lb/>
F or ntorma'ion send a stamped<lb/>
self addressed iong envelope<lb/>
to Miss N C Southern Beaury<lb/>
pageant PO Box 5432<lb/>
Greensboro N C 27435 0432<lb/>
The phone is 919 294 0295<lb/>
GOODBYE MASH<lb/>
Oh fellow students' The war is<lb/>
over' I What will we do now' We<lb/>
could watch reruns on channel<lb/>
five Or maybe move to Korea<lb/>
and help Sune Lee find ner<lb/>
parents Or maybe go to Marin<lb/>
County and let B J take out our<lb/>
tonsils No. this is ECU let's go<lb/>
to Crab Apple Cove ano get<lb/>
drunk with good oi Hawkeye<lb/>
BEST LEGS<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
Excuse me, excuse me. es i<lb/>
am writing this to you I have<lb/>
seen you around and you nave<lb/>
the best looking legs ever so i<lb/>
iust wanted to let you know that<lb/>
The Best Looking Legs Contest<lb/>
is coming up and you are a sure<lb/>
winner so keep looking tor more<lb/>
details handsome<lb/>
INTER VARSITY<lb/>
We at IVCF would like to e�<lb/>
tend a warm invitation to all of<lb/>
,ou' Come iOin us mil wee. Km<lb/>
a good time of pra.se ano<lb/>
fellowship Our speaker a<lb/>
our staff worker Paul Lear,<lb/>
We will meet Wednesday at 6 X<lb/>
,n Biology Bidg N102 An those<lb/>
who nave iv shirts don I forget<lb/>
to wear them Wednesday I<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Ph, Sigma P s T a . C- -<lb/>
a hold ts �� " .<lb/>
mee' � . fVedi � �� I �. �.����<lb/>
1983 at 5 X p  a' P�j.<lb/>
Barpecue C'n � �<lb/>
 � " � -wes' speaur I<lb/>
meeting ah oro'hers a<lb/>
I iThed<lb/>
' ng la ow " �<lb/>
pledge meel - � <lb/>
The Kast C arolinian<lb/>
St' ;tv ihe t ompta niyinurri:i<lb/>
nnr W <lb/>
Published every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday during the<lb/>
academic year and every<lb/>
Wednesday du'ing the sum<lb/>
mer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the<lb/>
official newspaper ot East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned<lb/>
operated, and published tor<lb/>
and by the students ot Eas'<lb/>
Carolina university<lb/>
Subscription Rate $20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus ot<lb/>
ECU. Greenv.He N C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send ad<lb/>
aress chanoes to The East<lb/>
Carolinian Old South<lb/>
Building ECU Greenville<lb/>
NC 2'834<lb/>
Telephone 757 t34 637<lb/>
"spring BREAK At<lb/>
DAYTONABEACH<lb/>
It's Not Too Lale ' lglHS-<lb/>
To sign up Beach Front om�esiriP<lb/>
Free Parties w cold beverages<lb/>
and live band<lb/>
$110<lb/>
ot. W,<lb/>
i<lb/>
For details call �<lb/>
� -s tttjT Special Discounts I<lb/>
JO-U0 at area bars 1<lb/>
1<lb/>
day<lb/>
Studies in Daniel<lb/>
Prophecy Seminar<lb/>
THURSDAY NIGHTS<lb/>
sfg,�k,g MARCH 3, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
COFf�.HOUSE. M9ndmnh�ll Studmnt Cnfr<lb/>
Questions pmwt�!���� to thm �v�t� of wodd hictory:<lb/>
UOmm ihftu.jjT " . . tunm<lb/>
pfopht�rt tir �� ft � <lb/>
-nbn rvvny ion ,fJ.�w<lb/>
r�.rTr�v Ot C' it� Olvti Crjun<lb/>
�jftrirrx� thai pr�d�rftur� rvudfm;<lb/>
'fw -waw tumw t� aiw . )fnj Him<lb/>
' - if T A.jrltH ��� ih,� btbtaai<lb/>
COpfult fvj � T� r taa tr wv boor<lb/>
OW .world trxlav<lb/>
QacstioAS thai profc ?�� Mtrtl. of lb fwtvr:<lb/>
�� h Dm<lb/>
�-Vs flat i nIJi, wit-ora if<lb/>
Ttufirrs a fUtuft a t�) ntr<lb/>
"Bfnuiajtjng, informal � ntfjon<lb/>
rfvrm.rw) ptoprwt �rv n<lb/>
apiLf�rr to m, v j, Qj u 0<lb/>
- 1J � hfUrsr,<lb/>
7TKt<lb/>
present<lb/>
Attend Thia NaHonwUy Popnlar<lb/>
Prophecy Seaaina � No Registration Fee.<lb/>
1<lb/>
!<lb/>
Tue. Mar. 1,1983 5<lb/>
9:00-1:00 Adm.$1.75j<lb/>
10 Draft for All, <lb/>
All Night Long <lb/>
DRAFT<lb/>
NITE<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
f<lb/>
wjrjirjrjrj srjrjtr.<lb/>
The ALAMO<lb/>
Restaurant &amp; Nightclub<lb/>
Greenville's newest nightspot &amp; eatery.<lb/>
Weds. Membership Party Free hor'duerves<lb/>
with The Fabulous kas-X-12:IK)am<lb/>
Reduced Memberships Prizes pn.Mded b Record Bar<lb/>
All ladies Free all night Happ Hour 5:30-8:00<lb/>
Thurs Membership Party with The Castaways 9-1:00am<lb/>
All Students $2.00 Adm. Happ- Hour 7-10:0Opm<lb/>
 Admission til 8:00<lb/>
FH Direct from Nashville, Tenn. "Hee Haw"<lb/>
One Night Only The Charlie McCoy Show<lb/>
Starring Charlie McCoy and I.aney Hicks<lb/>
with the Hee Haw Band. Two complete floor shows<lb/>
9:00 and 11:00pm. Starring Comedian Uncle I gly.<lb/>
Happy Hour 7:00-10:00<lb/>
free hor'duerves<lb/>
Sat Central Park 9:00-1:00am Happ Hour 7-9pm<lb/>
No Admission till 8:00pm After 8: pm<lb/>
$1.00 off with college l.D.<lb/>
I MM N Mrmurial l�r<lb/>
Xtrnxv from (.rti-nilli irporl<lb/>
Closed Sundays except lor special eenls ymm T574MIS i�r additional MwiHii<lb/>
Pizza Ixm<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
delivery costs in the price -<lb/>
Is YOUR CAR READY FOR<lb/>
THAT BIG TRIP HOME?<lb/>
WE CAN GET<lb/>
YOU THERE!<lb/>
Coggins Car Care S<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
�bllRlClNUB<lb/>
Cliffs Specials<lb/>
past<lb/>
on<lb/>
.ion<lb/>
J rJ J Located 1 mile past<lb/>
 Hastmg's Ford<lb/>
 10th St. extensi<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday<lb/>
&amp; Thursday<lb/>
POPCORN<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
$2�s<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Tossed Salad may be substituted<lb/>
for Slaw35&amp; extra<lb/>
Hunt<lb/>
Supporters of the<lb/>
N C. Nuclear Freeze<lb/>
resolution ere d<lb/>
a serious biow THur-<lb/>
da when Gov James<lb/>
b Hum joinec:<lb/>
� '�� those : to<lb/>
measure During<lb/>
his weeUj news on-<lb/>
ference, Hunt went on<lb/>
for the first<lb/>
time opposing the<lb/>
proposed bi-iatera<lb/>
verifiable freeze w<lb/>
the Soviet Union<lb/>
"I do not supj<lb/>
the nuclear !reee<lb/>
Hunt said in response<lb/>
to a question. He said<lb/>
the United Sta<lb/>
should negotiate arms<lb/>
reduction with the<lb/>
Soviets from a pi<lb/>
tion of strength. Hunt<lb/>
did say he was in<lb/>
favor of nuclear an<lb/>
reduction.<lb/>
Hunt's stater<lb/>
adds to the burden-<lb/>
the freeze resolution<lb/>
supporters, wh<lb/>
eight senate co-<lb/>
sponsors to the<lb/>
measure last wei �<lb/>
State Sen G.<lb/>
Hancock. D-Durh<lb/>
and State Rep J<lb/>
Par,<lb/>
DM -<lb/>
chiet spur<lb/>
nuclear tr<lb/>
tions in<lb/>
and j<lb/>
mained o<lb/>
of<lb/>
ment anc<lb/>
st<lb/>
the<lb/>
rovi<lb/>
saic<lb/>
mea<lb/>
In tl <lb/>
the<lb/>
tati �<lb/>
spor.<lb/>
�<lb/>
one<lb/>
Thur<lb/>
New Bust<lb/>
Gets EC<lb/>
B BOB MORGAN<lb/>
�suff nitr<lb/>
The ECU chapter<lb/>
of the fnn<lb/>
Society for Personnel<lb/>
Administration<lb/>
presented its national<lb/>
charter las: w� �<lb/>
c e r e m �<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Bob Enckson. vice-<lb/>
president of the North<lb/>
Carolina region of<lb/>
ASPA. made the<lb/>
presentation to the<lb/>
n e w 1 y � f o r m e d<lb/>
organization<lb/>
Rer-esenting the na-<lb/>
tional club, he told<lb/>
the ECU members<lb/>
that "this is the<lb/>
largest organization in<lb/>
the field oi pci<lb/>
in the country<lb/>
According<lb/>
organization' presi-<lb/>
dent, senior manage-<lb/>
ment major B<lb/>
wards, it -<lb/>
honor society<lb/>
interest<lb/>
students in<lb/>
min.<lb/>
j<lb/>
fam;<lb/>
with<lb/>
err.p'i-<lb/>
for wher<lb/>
get a lobj<lb/>
wards.<lb/>
The El<lb/>
-iitiall,<lb/>
Mil M<lb/>
:ianaj<lb/>
-<lb/>
t<lb/>
�<lb/>
ferer<lb/>
add'<lb/>
Trash Can<lb/>
To Give E<lb/>
A contest is being<lb/>
sponsored bv the<lb/>
Psychology Depart-<lb/>
ment to improve the<lb/>
appearance oi the<lb/>
ECU campus<lb/>
The contest, which<lb/>
will involve<lb/>
decorating trash bar-<lb/>
rels which vmII be<lb/>
placed around the<lb/>
campus. begins<lb/>
Thursday. X registra<lb/>
tion table will be set<lb/>
up outside the student<lb/>
suppK store. All<lb/>
campus organizations<lb/>
and individual<lb/>
students are eligible to<lb/>
participate<lb/>
The decorated<lb/>
receptacles will be<lb/>
judged on March 22<lb/>
by a panel of ECl<lb/>
facultv members who<lb/>
�v<lb/>
cond<lb/>
- - '�<lb/>
looking rj<lb/>
The<lb/>
Beau<lb/>
test<lb/>
by a si<lb/>
ECl<lb/>
sev eral<lb/>
d e p a r t n<lb/>
eluding<lb/>
allied<lb/>
nes'<lb/>
Green,<lb/>
graduate<lb/>
serving<lb/>
coordina<lb/>
facultv<lb/>
John C<lb/>
the<lb/>
Jepartml<lb/>
Caldwelj<lb/>
ground-l<lb/>
dent, h<lb/>
World Ne-<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
ship's maidJ<lb/>
launch next month. Two earlil<lb/>
leaks had forced a launch delj<lb/>
from Jan. 20 to March 19 or 2C<lb/>
WASHINGTON - Tl<lb/>
Supreme Court voted 6-3 today.<lb/>
uphold the court-ordered break<lb/>
of American Telephone<lb/>
Telegraph Co. The justices<lb/>
firmed the landmark scttleme<lb/>
calling for a widespread changel<lb/>
how telephone services are provf<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
MANILA, Philippines � Pr<lb/>
dent Ferdinand Marcos toJ<lb/>
vowed to crush a "reign of 'j<lb/>
<lb/>
�-<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0003"/><lb/>
PHI SIGMA P<lb/>
� nner<lb/>
�� Marcli �<lb/>
��� ' soMkM in. <lb/>
�-  4 Are<lb/>
� rtw �<lb/>
� to low ��, : ,<lb/>
- .A<lb/>
eakat!<lb/>
BEACHi<lb/>
on the n i ri p<lb/>
its-<lb/>
roni<lb/>
old beverages<lb/>
band<lb/>
<lb/>
OJ<lb/>
00<lb/>
0<lb/>
:<lb/>
lls call<lb/>
76<lb/>
Special Discounts<lb/>
ul arta bars<lb/>
M&amp; Mghtclub<lb/>
kwesl mahrspot &amp; eatprv<lb/>
lPar"u Free hor'duerves<lb/>
PuousKas-�2:IH)a1<lb/>
71,PS pnz� pr uki h Record Bar<lb/>
kihi HappvHMuf 5:30-8:00<lb/>
rHi,h7hrr7s,aHa,s9.l:00.m<lb/>
Happ Mr7-0:00pm<lb/>
Jit mission til -(hi<lb/>
Nk;w�- HeeH.w<lb/>
rhe harlie McCoy ShMV<lb/>
f Mc os and I ane Hicks<lb/>
r,rrUi�mpU,t' ����r shows<lb/>
rrudeigi,<lb/>
-Jianpi HUr jMt-l () � W<lb/>
"T�r7-9pm<lb/>
lege ID.<lb/>
ms<lb/>
d I mile past<lb/>
tasting's Fordon<lb/>
' extension<lb/>
t vednesda<lb/>
hursda<lb/>
CORN<lb/>
RIMP<lb/>
2<lb/>
95<lb/>
s or Baked Potato,<lb/>
may be substituted<lb/>
35&amp; extra<lb/>
IV<lb/>
By<lb/>
T<lb/>
irat<lb/>
ben<lb/>
tron<lb/>
oi<lb/>
ires!<lb/>
vine<lb/>
mitt<lb/>
that<lb/>
Sat!<lb/>
M<lb/>
hail:<lb/>
N.C<lb/>
and<lb/>
the<lb/>
a fi<lb/>
of I<lb/>
Cor<lb/>
:he<lb/>
has<lb/>
mer<lb/>
mee<lb/>
V<lb/>
bega<lb/>
in t!<lb/>
plaj<lb/>
mm<lb/>
i S<lb/>
higl<lb/>
to 1<lb/>
(<lb/>
I<lb/>
II<lb/>
T<lb/>
trac<lb/>
in<lb/>
mee<lb/>
this<lb/>
in t<lb/>
Tri-<lb/>
VA.<lb/>
T<lb/>
the<lb/>
the<lb/>
witl<lb/>
finis<lb/>
and<lb/>
f<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
trad<lb/>
pete<lb/>
nual<lb/>
Ass<lb/>
A ma<lb/>
Ami<lb/>
Tra.<lb/>
Cha<lb/>
Prin<lb/>
ty's<lb/>
nasii<lb/>
and i<lb/>
0<lb/>
best<lb/>
and<lb/>
from<lb/>
pectc<lb/>
Tr<lb/>
undi<lb/>
Marc<lb/>
the<lb/>
petiti<lb/>
then<lb/>
day,<lb/>
a.m.<lb/>
event<lb/>
35-p<lb/>
throv<lb/>
jump<lb/>
duct<lb/>
afteri<lb/>
Hunt<lb/>
lytEASJAROLIMAS<lb/>
MARCH I. 1983<lb/>
Supporters of the<lb/>
N.C. Nuclear Freeze<lb/>
resolution were dealt<lb/>
a serious blow Thurs-<lb/>
day when Gov. James<lb/>
B. Hunt joined forces<lb/>
with those opposed to<lb/>
the measure. During<lb/>
nis weekly news con-<lb/>
ference. Hunt went on<lb/>
record for the first<lb/>
time opposing the<lb/>
proposed bilateral,<lb/>
verifiable freeze with<lb/>
the Soviet Union.<lb/>
"I do not support<lb/>
the nuclear freeze<lb/>
Hunt sa:d in response<lb/>
to a question. He said<lb/>
the United States<lb/>
should negotiate arms<lb/>
reduction with the<lb/>
Soviets from a posi-<lb/>
tion of strength. Hunt<lb/>
did say he was in<lb/>
favor of nuclear arms<lb/>
reduction.<lb/>
Hunt's statement<lb/>
adds to the burdens of<lb/>
the freeze resolution<lb/>
supporters, who lost<lb/>
eight senate co-<lb/>
sponsors to the<lb/>
measure last week.<lb/>
State Sen. W. G.<lb/>
Hancock, D-Durham.<lb/>
and State Rep. J.<lb/>
Parks Helms,<lb/>
D-Meckenburg, the<lb/>
chief sponsors of the<lb/>
nuclear freeze resolu-<lb/>
tions in the Senate<lb/>
and House both re-<lb/>
mained optimistic in<lb/>
light of Hunt's state-<lb/>
ment and said they<lb/>
were still optimistic<lb/>
the freeze would win<lb/>
approval. Hancock<lb/>
said 29 of the senators<lb/>
still were backing the<lb/>
measure.<lb/>
In the House, 63 of<lb/>
the 120 represen-<lb/>
tatives have co-<lb/>
sponsored the freeze<lb/>
resolution while only<lb/>
one has defected,<lb/>
Helms said.<lb/>
During debate on<lb/>
Thursday, both sup-<lb/>
porters and op-<lb/>
ponents of the freeze<lb/>
resolution delivered<lb/>
emotion-charged<lb/>
speeches before two<lb/>
legislative commit-<lb/>
tees.<lb/>
The House Rules<lb/>
Committee and the<lb/>
Senate State Govern-<lb/>
ment Committee are<lb/>
the groups consider-<lb/>
ing the resolutions. If<lb/>
passed, the resolution<lb/>
would be sent to<lb/>
President Reagan,<lb/>
Gov. Hunt and<lb/>
members of the N.C.<lb/>
congressional delega-<lb/>
tion urging them to<lb/>
work for a nuclear<lb/>
weapons freeze with<lb/>
the Soviets.<lb/>
Hunt said he had<lb/>
conferred with several<lb/>
leading national<lb/>
defense experts before<lb/>
making his decision.<lb/>
Hunt named Sen.<lb/>
Sam Nunn, D-Ga a<lb/>
strong proponent of<lb/>
national defense, as<lb/>
one of those he spoke<lb/>
with. "People who I<lb/>
respect at the national<lb/>
level don't think it's<lb/>
(the freeze) a good<lb/>
idea Hunt said.<lb/>
Local nuclear<lb/>
freeze coordinator<lb/>
and ECU English in-<lb/>
structor Edith Web-<lb/>
ber said the nuclear<lb/>
freeze was<lb/>
"reasonable and sen-<lb/>
sible, there's no<lb/>
reason to be against<lb/>
it.<lb/>
"They (politicians)<lb/>
don't realize that our<lb/>
New Business Club<lb/>
Gets ECU Charter<lb/>
By BOB MORGAN<lb/>
SUff U rtlrr<lb/>
The ECU chapter<lb/>
of the American<lb/>
Society for Personnel<lb/>
Administration was<lb/>
presented its national<lb/>
charter last week in a<lb/>
ceremony at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Bob Erickson, vice-<lb/>
president of the North<lb/>
Carolina region of<lb/>
ASPA. made the<lb/>
presentation to the<lb/>
n e w 1 y - f o r m e d<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
Representing the na-<lb/>
tional club, he told<lb/>
the ECU members<lb/>
that "this is the<lb/>
largest organization in<lb/>
the field of personnel<lb/>
in the country<lb/>
According to the<lb/>
organization's presi-<lb/>
dent, senior manage-<lb/>
ment major Brad Ed-<lb/>
wards, it is not an<lb/>
honor society but an<lb/>
interest club for<lb/>
students in the<lb/>
management depart-<lb/>
ment. It emphasizes<lb/>
such areas as human<lb/>
resources and person-<lb/>
nel training in the<lb/>
field of business.<lb/>
Edwards said that<lb/>
not all of the 44<lb/>
members are from the<lb/>
School of Business or<lb/>
plan to pursue careers<lb/>
as personnel ad-<lb/>
ministrators. "Some<lb/>
participate to help<lb/>
familiarize themselves<lb/>
with the things that<lb/>
employees will look<lb/>
for when they try to<lb/>
get a job says Ed-<lb/>
wards.<lb/>
The ECU society<lb/>
was initially organized<lb/>
last fall by marketing<lb/>
and management pro-<lb/>
fessor Joseph<lb/>
Tomkiewicz. The<lb/>
basic function of<lb/>
ASPA is to invite<lb/>
speakers from dif-<lb/>
ferent companies to<lb/>
address club meetings<lb/>
about topics relevant<lb/>
to the field. Lectures<lb/>
have been given bv<lb/>
employees from such<lb/>
companies as Proctor<lb/>
and Gamble and the<lb/>
National Labor Rela-<lb/>
tions Board.<lb/>
Edwards says a cur-<lb/>
rent aim of the club is<lb/>
to interest more<lb/>
freshmen and<lb/>
sophomores in<lb/>
management through<lb/>
the organization.<lb/>
"Even if you aren't<lb/>
going into personnel it<lb/>
is a good way to make<lb/>
contacts with com-<lb/>
panies by meeting<lb/>
employees from their<lb/>
personnel depart-<lb/>
ment he said. "It<lb/>
never hurts if you<lb/>
happen to know the<lb/>
person who is giving<lb/>
you an interview when<lb/>
trying to get a job<lb/>
For more informa-<lb/>
tion about ASPA,<lb/>
students should con-<lb/>
tact faculty advisor<lb/>
Tomkiewicz in room<lb/>
215 B of the Raw<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Trash Can Decoration<lb/>
To Give ECU Facelift<lb/>
A contest is being<lb/>
sponsored by the<lb/>
Psychology Depart-<lb/>
ment to improve the<lb/>
appearance of the<lb/>
ECU campus.<lb/>
The contest, which<lb/>
will involve<lb/>
decorating trash bar-<lb/>
rels which will be<lb/>
placed around the<lb/>
campus, begins<lb/>
Thursday. A registra-<lb/>
tion table will be set<lb/>
up outside the student<lb/>
supply store. All<lb/>
campus organizations<lb/>
and individual<lb/>
students are eligible to<lb/>
participate.<lb/>
The decorated<lb/>
receptacles will be<lb/>
judged on March 22<lb/>
by a panel of ECU<lb/>
faculty members who<lb/>
will award first, se-<lb/>
cond and third place<lb/>
prizes for the best<lb/>
looking barrels.<lb/>
The Campus<lb/>
Beautification Con-<lb/>
test is being directed<lb/>
by a committee of<lb/>
ECU students from<lb/>
several different<lb/>
departments, in-<lb/>
cluding psychology,<lb/>
allied health and<lb/>
business. Margo<lb/>
Green, a psychology<lb/>
graduate student, is<lb/>
serving as project<lb/>
coordinator, and the<lb/>
faculty advisor is Dr.<lb/>
John Cope, also of<lb/>
the psychology<lb/>
department. Doug<lb/>
Caldwell, the ECU<lb/>
grounds superinten-<lb/>
dent, has agreed to<lb/>
cooperate with the<lb/>
project committee to<lb/>
ensure placement of<lb/>
the decorated barrels<lb/>
in highly visable areas<lb/>
around campus.<lb/>
Barrels will be pro-<lb/>
vided to all interested<lb/>
contestants. To<lb/>
register for the contest<lb/>
sign up at the registra-<lb/>
tion table outside the<lb/>
book store or contact<lb/>
Margo Green or Dr.<lb/>
Cope at 757-6214.<lb/>
Registration will con-<lb/>
tinue until the supply<lb/>
of barrels runs out.<lb/>
All campus<lb/>
organizations are urg-<lb/>
ed to participate in the<lb/>
service project to<lb/>
ECU and possibly win<lb/>
valuable prizes.<lb/>
World News In Brief<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
ship's maiden<lb/>
launch next month. Two earlier<lb/>
leaks had forced a launch delay<lb/>
from Jan. 20 to March 19 or 20.<lb/>
WASHINGTON � The<lb/>
Supreme Court voted 6-3 today to<lb/>
uphold the court-ordered breakup<lb/>
of American Telephone '<lb/>
Telegraph Co. The justices af-<lb/>
firmed the landmark settlement<lb/>
calling for a widespread change in<lb/>
how telephone services are provid-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
MANILA, Philippines � Presi-<lb/>
dent Ferdinand Marcos today<lb/>
vowed to crush a "reign of ter-<lb/>
ror" by Maoist guerrillas that has<lb/>
killed more than 90 people this<lb/>
year in the southern Philippines.<lb/>
Marcos cited an escalation of acts<lb/>
of terrorism by the Maoist New<lb/>
People's Army in recent months<lb/>
in the south.<lb/>
PITTSBURGH � The top<lb/>
negotiator for the United<lb/>
Steelworkers told the union's ex-<lb/>
ecutive board today that no con-<lb/>
tract agreement was reached in<lb/>
all-night negotiations. But<lb/>
negotiator Joseph Odorcich said<lb/>
there still was hope to beat an<lb/>
unofficial Tuesday deadline in<lb/>
reaching an agreement.<lb/>
defensive weapons are<lb/>
much more dangerous<lb/>
to us than some ac-<lb/>
commodations with<lb/>
the Soviet Union<lb/>
Webber believes<lb/>
that Hunt's statement<lb/>
will be damaging to<lb/>
the freeze proposal.<lb/>
"Gov. Hunt is a very<lb/>
influential person in<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Webber said. "The<lb/>
fact that he even<lb/>
becomes luke warm<lb/>
(on an issue) is cer-<lb/>
tainly going to hurt<lb/>
the freeze move-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Among the<lb/>
speakers at Thurs-<lb/>
day's public hearings<lb/>
was Eugene B. "Red"<lb/>
McDaniel, the former<lb/>
Vietnam POW who<lb/>
lost a bid for a con-<lb/>
gressional seat last<lb/>
fall. McDaniel in-<lb/>
dicated that he did not<lb/>
doubt the sincerity of<lb/>
the freeze supporters<lb/>
but that unfortunately<lb/>
"the people who<lb/>
march in Washington<lb/>
or Raleigh do not<lb/>
have the same impact<lb/>
on the Kremlin<lb/>
Another speaker,<lb/>
John Caldwell,<lb/>
chancellor emeritus of<lb/>
N.C. State University,<lb/>
spoke in favor of the<lb/>
freeze proposal. "If<lb/>
we win this victory for<lb/>
reason and cons-<lb/>
cience, we gain time<lb/>
and hope for humani-<lb/>
ty. Call a halt to the<lb/>
growing madness and<lb/>
make room for sani-<lb/>
ty, Caldwell said.<lb/>
$<lb/>
graasa-ssa�tttt5asasa?<lb/>
RSS?cSSKSifejSSS�5CH�<lb/>
s�le not JjHgngSSftS o� w�oLEsLEBS<lb/>
ORIGINAL OIL<lb/>
PAINTINGS<lb/>
AI STARVING ARTIST<lb/>
PRiCtS<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Union<lb/>
MON FRI<lb/>
fEB 28-MARCH4<lb/>
9A M 6P M<lb/>
TOUR ft&amp;P COUNTRY STORE<lb/>
COUNTRY STYLE SAVINGS WITH<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
00UBIE TOUR SAVINGS FEB. 27-MARCH 5,19�3<lb/>
FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPFMn wc<lb/>
w,u HffiS I yn&amp;wmmmm<lb/>
EXAMPLE: $10 PURCHASE 3 COUPONS<lb/>
m S20 PURCHASE 6 COUPONS<lb/>
S100 PURCHASE 30 COUPONS; AND SO ON'<lb/>
���� MM�M�<lb/>
ROAST BEEF<lb/>
Tender, Tasteful, Tempting!<lb/>
Lean roast beef piled high on<lb/>
a fresh foot-long roll Mmm.<lb/>
Served hot or cold, the way you<lb/>
like it! Try one today!<lb/>
3UB<lb/>
Famous Foot Long Sandwich<lb/>
We've got more taste.<lb/>
208 5th St.<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
ana 4<lb/>
118 � FIFTH ST<lb/>
lKttN -AMA J �<lb/>
AHl ' f BC : - biff.<lb/>
SERVING HOME-STYLE<lb/>
FOOD AT REASONABLE<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
LUNCH a DINNER SPECIALS I<lb/>
DAILY FOR � 2 68 TAX<lb/>
II am-9 pm DAILY<lb/>
All hntrees art Home Made<lb/>
Tuet. tried f'tsh with crab cake or C Hicken a Pastry<lb/>
tt ed. Barbecued Bee ftibs or t ountry Styie steak<lb/>
Thun. � Stuffedabbage or Raked Chicken<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I OFFER GOOD WHEN USING<lb/>
bring this ad for a<lb/>
FREE WASH<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
A SECOND WASHING<lb/>
MACHINE ALSO<lb/>
"fluff n' fold<lb/>
service available-attendants<lb/>
on duty 7 days a week<lb/>
coupon expires Mar. 9 fl<lb/>
fIWASW<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
10th St. Across from<lb/>
Krispy Kreme (752 6117)<lb/>
14th St. 1 Block from<lb/>
the "Hill" (7529636)<lb/>
�0&amp;�!AR&amp;t<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW RIPE<lb/>
READY-TO-EAT<lb/>
Dole Bananas<lb/>
3.100<lb/>
W only I<lb/>
Dole<lb/>
IMPORTED DIRECTLY FROM CHILE<lb/>
GreenGrapes<lb/>
0<lb/>
SEEDLESS<lb/>
Last Year's ��<lb/>
Price 1.49 ib.1�W<lb/>
II<lb/>
FLAV-O-RICH<lb/>
Homogenized Milk<lb/>
 i89<lb/>
�.tjNRITjfe-<lb/>
M DOWN HOME PRICES W9d<lb/>
P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
Sandwich Bread<lb/>
24 oz. 1<lb/>
loaves m<lb/>
ICE CREAM PARLOR TASTE<lb/>
Sealtest Ice Cream<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
7 gal.<lb/>
carton<lb/>
la"<lb/>
Hi Dri Towels<lb/>
59<lb/>
big<lb/>
roll<lb/>
Clfe? ft m -tf '  . <lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0004"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
A<lb/>
t<lb/>
3Uj� 3Eaat (Earnliman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, ow�uanagrr<lb/>
Mike Hughes, ttmmum &amp;<lb/>
Waverly Merritt, d,c,o, wiiimh Cindy Pleasants. or� m.<lb/>
Scott Lindley. m. m Greg rideout. �� &amp;�<lb/>
Ali Afrashteh. cmh w,�r Steve Bachner, omim saw<lb/>
Stephanie Groon, o. m�� Juliana Fahrbach. g�<lb/>
Clay Thornton, mm sw��w Todd Evans ���� ��w<lb/>
March 1. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Sen. John East<lb/>
Main Miser Mails By The Millions<lb/>
For a man who rants and raves<lb/>
about unnecessary government<lb/>
spending as often and as intensely<lb/>
as he does in public, Sen. John<lb/>
East can certainly exhibit his own<lb/>
spendthrift tendencies with the<lb/>
best of the eccentrics in private.<lb/>
According to a confidential<lb/>
Senate Rules Committee survey<lb/>
conducted last year, East ranked<lb/>
seventh among the 100 senators in<lb/>
what boils down to extravagent<lb/>
misuse of taxpayers' funds.<lb/>
Last fall, in a period of little<lb/>
more than a month, East sent out<lb/>
$961,000 worth � 6.2 million<lb/>
copies � of "free" newsletters to<lb/>
North Carolinians, letters which<lb/>
were merely aimed at attacking<lb/>
liberals, national Democratic<lb/>
leaders and the news media. For<lb/>
1982, East's outgoing bin tallied<lb/>
8.5 million pieces of mail � 3.89<lb/>
newsletters for every mailbox in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
In fact, the Chairman of the<lb/>
Senate Rules Committee Sen.<lb/>
Charles Mathias of Maryland told<lb/>
the Senate last year that he'd<lb/>
received several complaints from<lb/>
East's constituents � one woman<lb/>
from Whiteville, North Carolina,<lb/>
had written him complaining that<lb/>
she'd received nine copies of a<lb/>
single newsletter from East.<lb/>
East has defended himself<lb/>
against arguments that the mail-<lb/>
ings were part of a preliminary<lb/>
election campaign, saying such ac-<lb/>
cusations would require "a large<lb/>
leap of faith since he doesn't<lb/>
face re-election until 1986.<lb/>
But Democrats interpreted the<lb/>
mailings differently, calling East's<lb/>
newsletters "blatantly political<lb/>
The truth is, East's well-<lb/>
published attacks on liberals were<lb/>
little more than a series of pro-<lb/>
pagandized philosophical<lb/>
criticisms, a not-so-well-hidden at-<lb/>
tack against "the liberals in Con-<lb/>
gress .<lb/>
The Senate franking privilege,<lb/>
unlike that of the House of<lb/>
Representatives, does not place a<lb/>
limit on the number of pieces of<lb/>
mail a senator can send out. But<lb/>
Mathias and some other members<lb/>
of the Senate are disturbed at the<lb/>
apparent misuse of the privilege by<lb/>
several of their fellow senators.<lb/>
"The purpose East contends,<lb/>
"of the mailings, in a represen-<lb/>
tative democracy, is to allow us to<lb/>
communicate with our consti-<lb/>
tuents. Often, the local press is<lb/>
unable to cover the range of ac-<lb/>
tivities we are involved in But<lb/>
despite East's contentions, the<lb/>
survey also indicated that only<lb/>
about four percent of the 234<lb/>
million pieces of mail sent out by-<lb/>
senators in 1982 contained any<lb/>
form of response to their consti-<lb/>
tuents' questions. All the rest was<lb/>
used for pure one-sided political<lb/>
combat and to satisfy the senators'<lb/>
personal whims.<lb/>
Sen. East is, indeed, correct in<lb/>
his assertion of the underlying<lb/>
theory of a democratic, represen-<lb/>
tative society. Our "leaders" must<lb/>
stay in contact with their in-<lb/>
dividual constituents if our<lb/>
aforesaid democracy is to<lb/>
persevere.<lb/>
Constituents, however, should<lb/>
not be forced to fork out the big<lb/>
bucks for the costly actions of East<lb/>
and his spendthrift buddies on<lb/>
Capitol Hill. After all, it seems<lb/>
ridiculous to continue the current<lb/>
extravagent mailing practice when<lb/>
nine of 10 North Carolinians pro-<lb/>
bably threw away the newsletters<lb/>
with the rest of their junk-mail<lb/>
anyway.<lb/>
Pointing Out ECU'S 'Real' Funding Problems<lb/>
Budging The Budget<lb/>
Editor's Retraction: Before I start my<lb/>
own column, I would like to publicly<lb/>
apologize to the ECU football team for<lb/>
Stan Landers' outrageous, flagrant<lb/>
criticism of their collective intellect last<lb/>
week. Please be assured, however, that<lb/>
Mr. Landers received 30 lashes for what<lb/>
he thought was merely an innocuous, sen-<lb/>
sible piece of advice to a young female (I<lb/>
hope) from FloridaAnd for the foot-<lb/>
ball player who came to The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian office last week asking for Mr<lb/>
Landers I am especially sorry.<lb/>
� � �<lb/>
Every year, a group of ex-farmboy<lb/>
North Carolina bigwigs get together and<lb/>
determine what, in their minds, con-<lb/>
stitutes a "fair" budget for our school. In<lb/>
MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
-&amp;&amp;<lb/>
it, they include money for all the universi-<lb/>
ty's expenditures they deem "worthy<lb/>
You know, stuff like a few thousand<lb/>
dollars for color-coded encyclopedias for<lb/>
the Phys. Ed. library, new cashing<lb/>
machines and ironing boards for the<lb/>
Home Ec. department that kind of<lb/>
stuff.<lb/>
But in their infinite wisdom, they con-<lb/>
sistently neglect several of the more im-<lb/>
portant issues at hand. Thus being the<lb/>
case, many of the university's most basic<lb/>
needs go unnoticed, hence, unfunded,<lb/>
each year.<lb/>
It is in answer to this recurrent problem<lb/>
that 1 now present a list of proposals for<lb/>
what 1 feel are East Carolina Universitv �<lb/>
direst needs for the near future:<lb/>
First of all, I want to know when the<lb/>
UNC Board of Governors is going to start<lb/>
attacking our serious funding problems.<lb/>
While thev pitter-patter and bicker over i<lb/>
few million dollars for a stupid classroom<lb/>
building, we're stuck here trying to deal<lb/>
with the real problems, problems like il-<lb/>
literate toilet literature.<lb/>
We don't need a multi-million-dollar<lb/>
classroom to take up more space than its<lb/>
worth; what we really need is a central<lb/>
campus bathroom reference librarv, com-<lb/>
plete with dictionaries, thesauri, lymrk<lb/>
anthologies and the like. After all, how<lb/>
good does it look when a visiting dignitary<lb/>
(mavbe even a member of the BOG) stops<lb/>
by the Mendenhall rest room after an im-<lb/>
portant meeting and sees flagrant<lb/>
misspellings, poor word choices and clich-<lb/>
ed themes scratched on the walls? It<lb/>
makes for a poor reflection on ECU. and<lb/>
it comes back to haunt us when budget-<lb/>
come up again.<lb/>
Another pretty big problem on campus<lb/>
is drugs; therefore, my second proposal<lb/>
calls for an upgrade in the university's<lb/>
drug counseling program, possibly the ad-<lb/>
dition of another staff member � a<lb/>
specialist, one who know the ins and out-<lb/>
of drug problems, one who's been there<lb/>
before, one to whom confused students<lb/>
can turn with their questions, and most<lb/>
importantly, one who keeps up with cur-<lb/>
rent drug news and knows where student<lb/>
can get the best deal. We work too hard<lb/>
for our money to keep blowing it on bad<lb/>
shipments and cheap facsimiles<lb/>
My third suggestion concerns an issue<lb/>
that seems, unfortunately, to have died<lb/>
down in recent years. Nevertheless, it is<lb/>
just as important, in my estimation, as my<lb/>
other proposals. And de-r<lb/>
troversv and debate that have - in<lb/>
the issue from its inception. I fe hai the<lb/>
addition of an ECU V-<lb/>
Erotic Dance mav be just wru<lb/>
needs to gain the national<lb/>
deserves<lb/>
I'd also like to see some tta<lb/>
vested in the Mendenhaii bow<lb/>
suggest the construction oi - im<lb/>
w here lane 1 is now . The lar<lb/>
right anvwav. and per-or<lb/>
bowl strikes unless 1 know i pit-<lb/>
cher of beer waiting back ftl tie scon<lb/>
table. Now, 1 realie that - g a �<lb/>
supported school, it wouij<lb/>
sell beer on campus; that's m sqggesi<lb/>
thev give it away. but. of col- . -<lb/>
those bowlers who have respecubis ui<lb/>
dicaps<lb/>
We also need a restaurant oi �<lb/>
where students can go to get an inexp<lb/>
sive. edible meal � a meal the - <lb/>
digest tor good. And space w, <lb/>
pose anv problems here, since we - �<lb/>
build it where the Mendenhall Sna.K Bai<lb/>
now stands.<lb/>
And finally, I suggest an increase i:<lb/>
funding tor administrative office tup<lb/>
plies It's utteriv ridiculous how ol<lb/>
technologv is leaving ECU behind. Wb<lb/>
last week. I had to sit 20 minutes in the<lb/>
chancellor's waiting room and look al t<lb/>
same four coloring books he had K<lb/>
ear And it wasn't a prettv sight<lb/>
Editor's ote: Mike Huahes. wh<lb/>
not a member of the ISC Biw<lb/>
Governors, runs a feed lot and low<lb/>
dromat on the edge of town. He recen<lb/>
turned down several multi-million-a<lb/>
offers from the Bethel Barons i <lb/>
L'SEL to stay in school tor anothc -<lb/>
With<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
and JOE SPEAR<lb/>
WASHINGTON � On Feb. 8, the<lb/>
Soviet Union launched a new missile for<lb/>
the second time in four months. The test<lb/>
launch violated three specific provisions<lb/>
of the SALT II treaty.<lb/>
It is a fact that SALT II has never been<lb/>
ratified. But both the United States and<lb/>
the Soviet Union have informally promis-<lb/>
ed to abide by it. For example, the United<lb/>
States is putting identifying devices on<lb/>
B-52 bombers that carry nuclear cruise<lb/>
missiles. That is on- of SALT IPs re-<lb/>
quirements.<lb/>
But the Russians' missile test blows<lb/>
SALT II sky-high. We can tell you the ex-<lb/>
clusive details of that missile launch. They<lb/>
are in a CIA report that's so tightly<lb/>
classified it makes top-secret look like a<lb/>
letter from Aunt Harriet.<lb/>
The new Soviet missile has been dubbed<lb/>
"PL-5" by U.S. intelligence experts. This<lb/>
is why its launching violated the SALT II<lb/>
treaty:<lb/>
� It is an improved version of the<lb/>
Soviets' SS-16 missile. And the SS-16 was<lb/>
specifically banned by SALT II.<lb/>
� The new Soviet missile violates the<lb/>
SALT 11 clause that allows each country<lb/>
to have only one new land-based missile.<lb/>
The United States is counting the MX<lb/>
missile as its new one. But the Russians<lb/>
already launched a new missile last Oct.<lb/>
26. As it happened, the test was a failure.<lb/>
But still, Soviet Ambassador Anatoly<lb/>
Dobrynin told the State Department it<lb/>
was their one new missile. The one that<lb/>
was launched on Feb. 8, therefore, would<lb/>
be a second missile under SALT II terms.<lb/>
� The third violation involves encoding<lb/>
VflAW �;<lb/>
6EE.� A THREE BEPROOM HOUSE FOR ONLY<lb/>
WriuNPREDBUCKSu,mUTHECrTCH?<lb/>
the radio signals from the missile. This<lb/>
means that U.S. trackers can't read the<lb/>
missile's transmissions to tell if it is in<lb/>
compliance with SALT II.<lb/>
Putting all of a missile's radio signals in<lb/>
code is forbidden by the treaty. In-<lb/>
telligence sources told my associate Dale<lb/>
Van Atta that this is the first time the<lb/>
Soviets have pulled that little trick � at<lb/>
least, it's the first time they've put 100<lb/>
percent of their missile's transmissions in-<lb/>
to code.<lb/>
How the Kremlin's apparent violations<lb/>
of SALT II will be viewed in the White<lb/>
House is not yet clear. But it may mean<lb/>
that President Reagan will no longer insist<lb/>
that the Pentagon observe the provisions<lb/>
of the unratified SALT II treaty.<lb/>
ELDERLY VICTIMS: There is a whole<lb/>
class of Americans who feel particularly<lb/>
vulnerable to the criminal in our midst.<lb/>
They are the elderly, our senior citizens.<lb/>
Older people are tempting target for<lb/>
criminals. They have money � their life<lb/>
savings. Generally, they're physically<lb/>
weak. Some of them are not as sharp<lb/>
mentally as they used to be. And they suf-<lb/>
fer from another disadvantage: They are<lb/>
survivors of an age when life was simpler,<lb/>
when Americans helped one another in-<lb/>
stead of trying to rob and cheat their<lb/>
neighbors.<lb/>
Unfortunately, senior citizens' fears are<lb/>
born out by the statistics. Investigators<lb/>
for Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa asked law-<lb/>
enforcement officials around the country<lb/>
for facts about crimes against the elderly.<lb/>
States and investigators report:<lb/>
"Overall, consumer and economic<lb/>
frauds directed at the elderly are<lb/>
widespread and pervasive, touching near-<lb/>
ly every aspect of senior citizens' lives<lb/>
In fact, more than 80 percent of the<lb/>
law-enforcement experts who responded<lb/>
to the congressional questionnaire said<lb/>
the elderly are more frequently defrauded<lb/>
than the general population.<lb/>
What are the top 10 frauds perpetrated<lb/>
against the elderly? According to the<lb/>
survey, it's appalling but true that<lb/>
quackery and other medical frauds head<lb/>
the list. Obviously, this is an area where<lb/>
older Americans are most vulnerable.<lb/>
HEADLINES AND FOOTNOTES:<lb/>
� The public works system in America is<lb/>
in deep trouble. Highways, bridges.<lb/>
sewers, water-supply and mass-transit<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
systems are suffering from severe<lb/>
disrepair. An unpublished Congress <lb/>
Budget Office report estimates that -<lb/>
billion was spent last yuear to upgrade the<lb/>
ailing framework but that billions more<lb/>
will be needed to salvage it.<lb/>
( rsn�hi. 19?<lb/>
L nurd rcaiurr Svn&amp;satr life.<lb/>
Clock 'Error A Crock<lb/>
I am writing in response to the Feb. 17<lb/>
article by Cindy Pleasants,<lb/>
"Clockkeeping Error Leads To Confu-<lb/>
sion As the official clockkeeper, I<lb/>
would like to clear up the misunderstan-<lb/>
ding of the story.<lb/>
First, the clockkeeper has nothing to<lb/>
do with the scoreboard score. I only<lb/>
operate the clock and the horn (buzzer).<lb/>
Also in the article, there was a reference<lb/>
to a clock malfunction. This reference is<lb/>
totally wrong. There was never a ques-<lb/>
tion about the clock, only about the<lb/>
scoreboard.<lb/>
I agree it was not Woody Peek's<lb/>
(Daily Reflector Sports Editor) fault.<lb/>
But neither was it the clockkeeper's<lb/>
fault. The game was stopped at the time<lb/>
of the confusion, and nothing was<lb/>
changed. There was a mistake in the<lb/>
scoring, and whom to blame is not clear.<lb/>
But one thing is clear; it was not the<lb/>
clockkeeper's error.<lb/>
I think the competency of the writer<lb/>
should be questioned, along with her<lb/>
knowledge of the game of basketball.<lb/>
Thomas Brame<lb/>
Senior, PHYE<lb/>
In Need Of Pen' Pal<lb/>
Please allow me to introduce myself.<lb/>
( I'm a man of wealth Wait a<lb/>
minute: wrong letter.) My name is Ricar-<lb/>
do Sanchez. I am an inmate at the Long<lb/>
Island Correctional Facility here in V�est<lb/>
Brentwood, NY. I am not in contact<lb/>
with my family or friends, and at this<lb/>
time, I have no one to correspond with.<lb/>
It would do me good, both mentalh and<lb/>
physically, to establish a pen-pal rela<lb/>
tionship with any student or facultv<lb/>
member who has a sincere desire to<lb/>
write.<lb/>
It makes no difference if the person is<lb/>
black, white, male, female, voung or<lb/>
old.<lb/>
Thank you very much.<lb/>
Ricardo Sanchez 81A4401 (4-A<lb/>
P.O. Box 1012<lb/>
West Brentwood, NY 1171"<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<lb/>
South Building, across from Jovner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authorfs). Utters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All<lb/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel, and no personal<lb/>
attacks will be permitted<lb/>
��v M naUB<lb/>
Proct<lb/>
B P1KU k Mill <lb/>
I<lb/>
announced -<lb/>
that<lb/>
Daytoh<lb/>
 T I<lb/>
�<lb/>
' j .<lb/>
bible<lb/>
all<lb/>
-<lb/>
eui<lb/>
EVER v<lb/>
ITALI<lb/>
5 PV<lb/>
ALL-YOJ<lb/>
 �SPAGH1<lb/>
' .1 VSAGll<lb/>
RAVIO I<lb/>
Wltf<lb/>
ri.oil<lb/>
Dl'<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0005"/><lb/>
<lb/>
? ��<lb/>
t<lb/>
incline Problems<lb/>
e Budget<lb/>
;<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
v d despite the coo-<lb/>
al have surrounded<lb/>
on, I feel that the<lb/>
S hool of Modern<lb/>
what this school<lb/>
al recognition it<lb/>
mc tate funds in-<lb/>
itial! bowling lanes. I<lb/>
s . of a small bar<lb/>
anc rarely works<lb/>
personally, I can't<lb/>
1 know there's a pit-<lb/>
. back at the score-<lb/>
ilize that being a state-<lb/>
it would be illegal to<lb/>
that's wh I suggest<lb/>
� away, but, oi course, only to<lb/>
have 'expectable han-<lb/>
 . laurant on campus<lb/>
to get an inexpen-<lb/>
a meal they could<lb/>
And space vsouldn't<lb/>
iblems here, since we could<lb/>
.re the Mendenhall Snack Bar<lb/>
. i i ds.<lb/>
univers v . Finally, 1 suggest an increase in<lb/>
trative office sup-<lb/>
itterly i diculous how office<lb/>
leaving ECU behind. Wh,<lb/>
sit 20 minutes in the<lb/>
ting room and look at the<lb/>
coloring hooks he had last<lb/>
asn't a prett) sight.<lb/>
Vfikt Hughes, who is<lb/>
' thi UNC Hoard of<lb/>
a feed lot and laun-<lb/>
f town. He recently<lb/>
i rm mulu-million-dollar<lb/>
Ht Bethel Barons of the<lb/>
for another year.<lb/>
h SALT II<lb/>
�<lb/>
iffering from severe<lb/>
�r. unpublished Congressional<lb/>
rice report estimates that $20<lb/>
h is spent last uear to upgrade the<lb/>
rig framework but that billions more<lb/>
salvage it.<lb/>
�<lb/>
Error' A Crock<lb/>
nothing id<lb/>
eterenc.<lb/>
-er a ques-<lb/>
mt 'he<lb/>
Pet<lb/>
;ult<lb/>
Icxkkeeper's<lb/>
at the time<lb/>
lothing was<lb/>
take in the<lb/>
is not clear.<lb/>
was not the<lb/>
)' the writer<lb/>
ig with her<lb/>
)asketball.<lb/>
loons Brame<lb/>
nior, PHYE<lb/>
Pal<lb/>
luce myself.<lb/>
. Wait a<lb/>
lime is Ricar-<lb/>
at the Long<lb/>
ional Facilit) here in West<lb/>
Nil 1 am not in contact<lb/>
n famil) or friends, and at this<lb/>
tt no one to correspond with.<lb/>
ld do me good, both mentally and<lb/>
ically, to establish a pen-pal rela-<lb/>
lonship with am student or faculty<lb/>
member who has a sincere desire to<lb/>
write.<lb/>
: makes no difference if the person is<lb/>
' white, male, female, young or<lb/>
old<lb/>
Thank you very much.<lb/>
Ricardo Sanchez 81A4401 (4-A)<lb/>
P.O. Box 1012<lb/>
West Hrentwood, NY 11717<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all poinls of view Qf<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old<lb/>
South Building, across from Joyner<lb/>
Library '<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters 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<lb/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty obscenity and libel, and no personal<lb/>
attacks will be permitted<lb/>
IHt l-ASrc AROI IMAS<lb/>
MARCH 1. 1981<lb/>
Procter And Gamble Plant Rehires Workers<lb/>
SuflVkrncr<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL recalling workers who<lb/>
were laid off in<lb/>
November when the<lb/>
company cut back<lb/>
production.<lb/>
Earlier this month,<lb/>
the company began a<lb/>
new line of feminine<lb/>
Procter and Gam-<lb/>
ble's Greenville plant<lb/>
announced last week<lb/>
'hat it has begun<lb/>
protection products<lb/>
for a test market in<lb/>
the Mnneapolis,<lb/>
Minn area. The<lb/>
Greenville plant will<lb/>
be producing the new<lb/>
product.<lb/>
The first 16 workers<lb/>
to be rehired began<lb/>
work Monday. Four<lb/>
more workers are<lb/>
slated to be hired on<lb/>
March 14.<lb/>
According to Pro-<lb/>
cter and Gamble's In-<lb/>
dustrial Relations<lb/>
manager Gene<lb/>
Parker, the plant ex-<lb/>
pects to have hired<lb/>
back all 50 of its laid-<lb/>
off workers by May<lb/>
or June. He indicated<lb/>
that no new hiring<lb/>
would take place.<lb/>
Parker said most<lb/>
former employees<lb/>
were gladly accepting<lb/>
their jobs back.<lb/>
At the time of the<lb/>
layoff, Procter and<lb/>
Gamble was unsure of<lb/>
the employees chances<lb/>
of being rehired. The<lb/>
50 people represented<lb/>
ten precent of the<lb/>
company's<lb/>
employees.<lb/>
The rehirings were<lb/>
not temporary. "We<lb/>
don't expect to bring<lb/>
Daytona Beach Is The Spring Break Hot Spot<lb/>
n A v -r v, . ��<lb/>
DAYTONA<lb/>
BEACH, Fla (UPI)<lb/>
� The spring hot spot<lb/>
in Florida for vaca-<lb/>
tioning college<lb/>
students has shifted<lb/>
from Fort Lauderdale<lb/>
to Daytona Beach, ac-<lb/>
cording to the student<lb/>
"bible" on spring<lb/>
break.<lb/>
"The Rites of Spr-<lb/>
ing an informative<lb/>
but sometimes<lb/>
tongue-in-cheek guide<lb/>
for students on spring<lb/>
break, rates Daytona<lb/>
Beach a hands-down<lb/>
No. 1 and Fort<lb/>
Lauderdale a<lb/>
lukewarm second.<lb/>
Bruce Jacobsen and<lb/>
Rollin Riggs, Yale<lb/>
Class of '82, research-<lb/>
ed the book by<lb/>
visiting and ranking<lb/>
Florida's beach cities<lb/>
during spring.breaks.<lb/>
The book even<lb/>
devotes a section on<lb/>
"How To Get<lb/>
Lucky<lb/>
Fort Lauderdale,<lb/>
according to the<lb/>
book, is "the town<lb/>
for sexual escapades<lb/>
and rip-em-up<lb/>
wildness" and was<lb/>
dubbed "Fort Liquor-<lb/>
dale" by the authors.<lb/>
Fort Lauderdale of-<lb/>
ficials were not amus-<lb/>
ed by the rating or the<lb/>
nickname.<lb/>
Davtona Beach<lb/>
came out on top<lb/>
because of its wide<lb/>
beaches, its relatively<lb/>
tolerant police and<lb/>
because the city<lb/>
"knows how to show<lb/>
her visitors a good<lb/>
time<lb/>
wrote<lb/>
Jacobsen and Riggs.<lb/>
Daytona Beach of-<lb/>
ficials loved it.<lb/>
An estimated<lb/>
300,000 college<lb/>
students are expected<lb/>
in Daytona Beach<lb/>
during March and<lb/>
early April and Terry<lb/>
Kiel, the director of<lb/>
conventions and<lb/>
tourism, said that "a<lb/>
lot of it can be at-<lb/>
tributed to the book<lb/>
Ms. Kiel said<lb/>
several marketing<lb/>
groups surveyed col-<lb/>
lege campuses to learn<lb/>
where the students are<lb/>
going and the surveys<lb/>
showed most are go-<lb/>
ing to Daytona Beach<lb/>
because of the book.<lb/>
"We're thrilled by<lb/>
the book said Ms.<lb/>
Kiel. "It sounds like<lb/>
somebody from the<lb/>
chamber wrote it<lb/>
Jacobsen says<lb/>
that's not the case and<lb/>
added he and Riggs<lb/>
had no idea the book<lb/>
would do so well.<lb/>
Since the book<lb/>
came out last fall,<lb/>
Jacobsen and Riggs<lb/>
have been praised.<lb/>
criticized and inter-<lb/>
viewed.<lb/>
"One TV guy even<lb/>
introduced my part-<lb/>
ner as 'Mr. Spring<lb/>
Break said<lb/>
Jacobsen of Riggs, a<lb/>
freelance<lb/>
photographer in Con-<lb/>
necticut.<lb/>
Jacobsen and Riggs<lb/>
plan to revise the<lb/>
book this spring. And<lb/>
after that?<lb/>
anyone back unless<lb/>
we have a long term<lb/>
job for them Parker<lb/>
told The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian in a telephone in-<lb/>
terview. The company<lb/>
has an expectation<lb/>
"beyond the test<lb/>
market for the new<lb/>
product, said plant<lb/>
manager Robert Grif-<lb/>
fin in a recent inter-<lb/>
view.<lb/>
Last year's lavoffs<lb/>
resulted from a cur-<lb/>
tailment of the com-<lb/>
pany's local produc-<lb/>
tion of Pampers<lb/>
disposable diapers.<lb/>
Pampers production<lb/>
was transferred to in-<lb/>
ternational markets.<lb/>
"We're delighted to<lb/>
have them back. We<lb/>
didn't want to lay<lb/>
them off in the first<lb/>
place Parker said.<lb/>
"We have been doing<lb/>
everything we can to<lb/>
find a way to get them<lb/>
back to work<lb/>
The November<lb/>
layoffs were the first<lb/>
by Procter and Gam<lb/>
ble's Greenville plant<lb/>
in its seven ears of<lb/>
operation.<lb/>
According to Grif-<lb/>
fin and Parker,<lb/>
emplovees were ac-<lb/>
tually laid off No<lb/>
19, but were kept on<lb/>
the payroll until Dec.<lb/>
3 to give them some<lb/>
"free time" in which<lb/>
to find a new job.<lb/>
BON VOYAGE!<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
Teacher i or Student teacher's<lb/>
OFFICE SUPPLIES SCHOOL S JPPUES<lb/>
SOCIAL STATIONERY, GIFTS, GRE TING CARDS<lb/>
422 Aiungton Blvd. (Oppc irte l�tt�" j<lb/>
756-4224<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
E ADVENTURE THAN<lb/>
A BLIND DAI<lb/>
Can vou picture yourself<lb/>
swinging down a din"1 Or<lb/>
shooting the rapids1 Or<lb/>
crossing a river using only<lb/>
a rope and your own two<lb/>
hands'<lb/>
Vou 11 have a chance<lb/>
to do all this and more in<lb/>
Armv ROTC<lb/>
Adventure training like<lb/>
this helps you develop<lb/>
manv oi the qualities vou 11<lb/>
need as an Armv officer<lb/>
Qualities like self-<lb/>
confidence Stamina. And<lb/>
the ability to perform<lb/>
under pressure<lb/>
ARMY ROTC<lb/>
BE ALL YOU CAN B�.<lb/>
I r our free elective Ihis fall: MLSC 1001-<lb/>
 jintroducliontoROTC. There is no obligation<lb/>
to take the courses and it's open to everyone.<lb/>
For more information on Army ROTC<lb/>
contact us in room 324 Erwin Hall<lb/>
r or call 757-6967.<lb/>
H.L. HODGES CO.<lb/>
210 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
How to have class between classes.<lb/>
:oo<lb/>
OFF ANY<lb/>
COMPLETE PAIR OF<lb/>
EYE GLASSES<lb/>
v SOFT sQQ<lb/>
j CONTACTS "<lb/>
JJj BKJUOCSS DAY GUARANTEE<lb/>
&amp; ANDCAREKn<lb/>
PALACE <lb/>
703 oteenvllte Blvt Arro. Fio� Pttl PUaa. N��t To ERA Realty)<lb/>
GaryM Ham, I ,c,ns.d OtcUn Qp 9S0 a m to6 p � Mo, F<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
� SPECIAL<lb/>
FOUR (4) Tacos<lb/>
for just n.39<lb/>
Not Good With Any Other Special<lb/>
, 8:00pm til closing .<lb/>
Tf 15 draft with purchase of 4 tocos <lb/>
Indulge yourself in a warm cu of Cafe Vienna. It's a light and rin-<lb/>
namony touch of class. Ajdjusloneoffivedel.aousjydferentjavors<lb/>
from General Foods "  � m<lb/>
International Coffees.<lb/>
Urhw<lb/>
WW-k.1<lb/>
GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONALCOFFEES<lb/>
AS MUCH A FEELING AS A FLAVOR<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0006"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
y<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Attenborough<lb/>
Calls Gandhi<lb/>
Back To Life<lb/>
B CHRISTIAN WILLIAMS<lb/>
I A. Time � �vhin(loii P.�-i Nt�iVnKt<lb/>
WASHINGTON � It has taken<lb/>
20 years for Richard Aucn<lb/>
borough, the actor and director.<lb/>
to get his life of Mohandas K<lb/>
Gandhi to the screen. Along the<lb/>
way. Attenborough mortgaged a<lb/>
house, rejected several scripts and<lb/>
had to return periodical!) IO<lb/>
movie roles in "terrible crap" to<lb/>
fill the coffers. Finally Gandhi. 3<lb/>
hours and 20 minutes long and<lb/>
budgeted at 120 million, has<lb/>
opened. (In Greenville, the film is<lb/>
at the Buccaneer Theatre.)<lb/>
For the money men, Atten-<lb/>
borough says, "The problem was<lb/>
always the same: Who would go<lb/>
to see a movie about a half-naked<lb/>
man sitting on a pillow with a<lb/>
beanstalk in his hand?"<lb/>
For devotees of Gandhi, the<lb/>
saintlike leader o. India's fight<lb/>
for independence from Great Bri-<lb/>
tain, the problem was that it<lb/>
simply couldn't be done. One In-<lb/>
dian scholar seriously suggested<lb/>
that Gandhi be represented on<lb/>
screen "only as a constant!) mov-<lb/>
ing sphere of light<lb/>
This was a typical reaction to<lb/>
Gandhi, a British-educated<lb/>
lawer who. bj adopting a<lb/>
loincloth and a polic) of non-<lb/>
violent civil disobedience, became<lb/>
the father of Indian nationalism<lb/>
The subject of 400 biographies,<lb/>
the author of 94 volumes, he<lb/>
seemed to filmmakers an unap-<lb/>
proachable subject. Jawaharlal<lb/>
Nehru, writing an introduction to<lb/>
one eight-volume biography,<lb/>
said, "No man can write a real<lb/>
life of Gandhi, unless he is as big<lb/>
as Gandhi<lb/>
Attenborough says, "1 had no<lb/>
more than a schoolboy's<lb/>
knowledge of the man when 1 first<lb/>
read Louis Fischer's biography of<lb/>
him in 1962, hut I was totally<lb/>
bow led over<lb/>
Attenborough already had star-<lb/>
red in more than 20 British<lb/>
movies and The Great Escape, an<lb/>
American production, and was<lb/>
disturbed about the silliness of<lb/>
many of his roles. He wanted to<lb/>
produce and direct, and Gandhi<lb/>
seemed a worthy project.<lb/>
"1 soon found that everyone<lb/>
Gandhi met he bowled over At-<lb/>
tenborough says. "Lord (Louis)<lb/>
Mountbatten said that of all the<lb/>
trillions of people he had met,<lb/>
there was only one who struck as<lb/>
truly great � right up there with<lb/>
Buddha and Jesus � and that was<lb/>
Gandhi<lb/>
The problem was how to bring<lb/>
the Mahatma to the screen as a<lb/>
believable and dramatic<lb/>
character. He was considered a<lb/>
saint, and Attenborough had not<lb/>
dealt with saints: His Ol What a<lb/>
I ovely U ar of 1968 was a plea for<lb/>
pacifism, and A Bridge Too Tar a<lb/>
blood) antiwar film. His previous<lb/>
film biography was Young<lb/>
Winston, a portrait of the early<lb/>
 hurchill which was equal parts<lb/>
blood and thunder and ambition.<lb/>
Gandhi was to be nothing like<lb/>
those. Earl) on. Attenborough<lb/>
determined to let his story be<lb/>
guided b) his subject's frequent<lb/>
admonition that "m life is m<lb/>
message<lb/>
"1 didn't want to make a nnu ie<lb/>
about Gandhi's sexual obses-<lb/>
sions, or about the Party Con-<lb/>
gress or about politics Atten-<lb/>
borough savs. "1 was guided bv<lb/>
Gandhi's example m mv selection<lb/>
of incidents for the movie<lb/>
Thus Gandhi focuses on the<lb/>
passage of a British-educated<lb/>
lawyer in esi and dark suit to<lb/>
beatific heromonk in loincloth<lb/>
and wire-rimmed spectacles.<lb/>
See rWENTY-YEAR, Page 7<lb/>
Pagt<lb/>
! I<lb/>
�Ik<lb/>
V<lb/>
-v<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
Director Richard Attenborough examines star Ben KingsUVs makeup in this scene from Gandhi, now in Greenville.<lb/>
Having A Ball In Greenville<lb/>
Bv PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Sl.fl V�nlrt<lb/>
Where else but in Greenville<lb/>
can a person go to a Saturdav<lb/>
night ball for onl S2 and see the<lb/>
merrymakers dressed in styles<lb/>
that ranged from early hippie to<lb/>
formal gowns and tuxes.<lb/>
It all happened this past<lb/>
weekend at the American Legion<lb/>
Hall where two of Greenvilles<lb/>
legendary hard core entertainers<lb/>
Bill "Shep" Shepard and English<lb/>
grad student Mike Hamer called<lb/>
out their forces to join in the fun<lb/>
of Greenville's first ever "Benefit<lb/>
Ball<lb/>
The evening teatured perfor-<lb/>
mances by three local bands that<lb/>
kept the music humming almost<lb/>
continuously till the wee hours ol<lb/>
the morning. The crowd, which<lb/>
kept dancing 'till the performers<lb/>
were exhausted, was a good mix<lb/>
of present and former ECU's with<lb/>
all three bands bringing their<lb/>
followers with them.<lb/>
The evening featured the<lb/>
premier performance of the<lb/>
Amateurs, followed respectively<lb/>
by the I lghtnin' Wells Blues Band<lb/>
and The Rutabaga Brothers and<lb/>
the lemon Sisters, two of Green-<lb/>
ville's favorites.<lb/>
The gala event was the<lb/>
brainstorm of Mike Hamer (an<lb/>
East Carolinian staff writer<lb/>
himself) Hamer. a bass player<lb/>
and vocalist with two of the<lb/>
bands, was searching for a way to<lb/>
connect his deep personal concern<lb/>
for hungry people and his love for<lb/>
musical entertainment. The<lb/>
Benefit Ball was the answer.<lb/>
Hamer got together with<lb/>
several local and ECU hunger<lb/>
groups to share his idea The<lb/>
response was strong and the<lb/>
volunteers went to work The<lb/>
bands agreed and Hamer called<lb/>
all over town for a hall. The<lb/>
American Legion which usually<lb/>
charges SI50 a night for their<lb/>
facility decided to provide the hail<lb/>
at half price for the worthy cause<lb/>
Posters went up, tickets got<lb/>
printed and the word was spread<lb/>
Apple Records quickly sold-out<lb/>
See NEEDY. Page 7<lb/>
lit 111<lb/>
S-liy' i UL<lb/>
�iu. jam ?� ?<lb/>
Vonnegut's Rudolph Waltz<lb/>
His Latest Voice Of Doom<lb/>
Travel-Adventure Film 'Poland9 Coming To Campus<lb/>
Clockwise from top left: A young girl helps with the harvest on a family farm; near Warsaw's<lb/>
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, a member of the Mountain Guards stands at attention; religious<lb/>
pilgrims pray before the monastery in Czestochowa. The scenes are from Sherilyn and Matthew<lb/>
Mentes' powerful Travel-Adventure film Poland � The Enduring Dream, which will be shown on<lb/>
Tuesday, March 15, at 8 p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center's Hendrix Theatre. For ticket infor-<lb/>
mation, call the Central Ticket Office at 757-6611, eat. 266.<lb/>
B KHACH1GTOLOLYAN<lb/>
V Wag V otn<lb/>
Kl'RT VONNEGUT. By Jtrotm KimkomUi lhr� l K ftfm<lb/>
DEADEYE DICK. n. Kw Voamgm Mhcw Stjmmr Uwwn : IB<lb/>
Kurt Vonnegut began writing in the late '40s,<lb/>
refined his craft in the popular magazines of the<lb/>
'50s, and achieved the peak of his popularity in the<lb/>
'60s, when both the paperback market and the<lb/>
teenage population grew with extraordinary rapidi-<lb/>
ty. The mass audience Vonnegut captured during<lb/>
those years belonged largely to the first generation<lb/>
whose tastes were shaped by television; it demanded<lb/>
simple writing, rapid plot development, abundant<lb/>
dialogue, and quick shifts of scene, and showed a<lb/>
preference for wisdom delivered in conclusive but<lb/>
cool tones (formal characteristics that generally pro-<lb/>
duce TV scripts rather than novels aspiring to the<lb/>
status of art). He owed another part of his success to<lb/>
the content of his work, which overlapped the urgent<lb/>
concerns of '60s studentry; Vonnegut expressed his<lb/>
detestation of war and his distrust of corporate<lb/>
technology in terms both convincingly serious and<lb/>
acceptably hip.<lb/>
In Kurt Vonnegut Jerome Klinkowitz gives a brief<lb/>
but panoramic view of this complex career; it's the<lb/>
best of the several academic works on Vonnegut<lb/>
issued over the past decade. Klinkowitz shows how<lb/>
Vonnegut's refusal to separate morality and inten-<lb/>
tion from action parallels his insistence that ideas be<lb/>
considered together with the forms they take in fic-<lb/>
tion; this stance produced his best books � Cat's<lb/>
Cradle, Mother Sight, Slaughterhouse-Five.<lb/>
Klinkowitz has a tendency to see the whole of Von-<lb/>
negut's work in terms of these, its best moments; I'm<lb/>
not convinced that the total ouput deserves the<lb/>
praise it gets here. But this is a quick, acute account<lb/>
of Vonnegut's dual role as craftsman and socio-<lb/>
literary phenomenon.<lb/>
Like Klinkowitz, I'm tempted to discuss Von-<lb/>
negut's work as pop event rather than literary ar-<lb/>
tifact. This is somewhat unfair to Deadeye Dick, a<lb/>
book that's carefully put together and eager to help<lb/>
the reader along. The narrator is Rudolph Waltz,<lb/>
who tells the story of his life vaguely chronological-<lb/>
ly, in the short installments that are a hallmark of<lb/>
Vonnegut's style; he may strain your tolerance of<lb/>
credulity, but never your attention span. Rudy's<lb/>
voice is mild and confiding, and rarely wavers from<lb/>
the tone established in the opening pages, no matter<lb/>
how grim the details he narrates.<lb/>
And they are grim. The focal points of Rudy's<lb/>
story are two disasters: at 12, he accidentally shoots<lb/>
a pregnant woman. When he is nearly 50 and living<lb/>
in Haiti, his hometown, Midland City, Ohio, is the<lb/>
site of an allegedly accidental neutron bomb explo-<lb/>
sion: Rudy and his brother Felix can actually walk<lb/>
through an intact city of the dead, swept clean of<lb/>
corpses by federal troops. It helps to know<lb/>
something about Vonnegut's past as a survivor of<lb/>
the bombing of Dresden and a publicist for General<lb/>
Electric, where "progress is our most important pro-<lb/>
duct Progress. Vonnegut intimates, is an ugly mid-<lb/>
American city left standing and corpse-free, a<lb/>
technological improvement over the charnelhouse<lb/>
that was Dresden.<lb/>
In it's orientation toward disaster. Deadeye Dick<lb/>
See HE HAS, Page 7<lb/>
Playhouse's 'Custer'<lb/>
About Average Work<lb/>
B ZACK PERKINSON<lb/>
staff WrtMr<lb/>
The ECU Playhouse production of Custer, which<lb/>
finished its run last week at McGinnis Theatre, wasn't<lb/>
the kind of play that knocked you out of your seat.<lb/>
Nor was it a totally boring groaner often typical of<lb/>
senior's college productions. It lay somewhere in bet-<lb/>
ween, like a conversation with an old friend in which<lb/>
the topics are familiar.<lb/>
Doubtless, the original production had more socio-<lb/>
emotional impacts. Around 1970, when old values<lb/>
and beliefs were being questioned, a veritable<lb/>
plethora of plays, books and movies appeared decry-<lb/>
ing the old jingoism and Manifest Destiny. But it<lb/>
would seem by now that everybody knows Custer was<lb/>
a pompous ass (as I believe he is referred to in the<lb/>
script), and that the white man's burden was an ex-<lb/>
cuse for the subjugation of technologically disadvan-<lb/>
taged people.<lb/>
The subject that holds my interest is the possibility<lb/>
(the Indians said "fact") that E troop of the 7th<lb/>
Cavalry committed suicide en masse when surround-<lb/>
ed by the Sioux and Chcyene immediately prior to the<lb/>
battle on the Little Big Horn. When I was in the<lb/>
cavalry we didn't have horses. We didn't have sabers<lb/>
either, but the standing joke (?) was that when all else<lb/>
fails, fall on your saber. Was that some legacy left to<lb/>
us by the old troopers? The sad romanticism of death<lb/>
and a Valhalla for slain warriors is still with us. Any<lb/>
recruit in basic training knows it well.<lb/>
Custer's outstanding performer was Gary<lb/>
Weathersbee, who is as fine an actor as one is likely to<lb/>
sec anywhere. In an electrifying speech in the second<lb/>
act, he, as Major Benteen, defends himself against ac-<lb/>
cusations of cowardi � by Mrs. Custer and sum-<lb/>
marizes the points of the whole play. His elocution<lb/>
and projection seem entirely natural, as if he was<lb/>
born speaking across a valley. Weathersbee had the<lb/>
best lines, best part, and best props; but, he brought<lb/>
something of his own to make it all just a little bit bet-<lb/>
ter. The other players were passing fair at best<lb/>
reciting lines in strained classroom exercise fashion'<lb/>
Sets and lighting were, as always, the best.<lb/>
All in all, it was an enjoyable evening No<lb/>
blockbuster, but I did get to see Gary Weathersbee<lb/>
performance. The drama department needs to t<lb/>
more of him, too. <lb/>
Twenty<lb/>
Continued r rum Pag? t,<lb/>
When<lb/>
wrong, he f�<lb/>
protest; whei soldiers<lb/>
attack his folio wei<lb/>
he encourages them<lb/>
submit to be I<lb/>
gradually in his un.<lb/>
shakable adhert<lb/>
this Christlike po <lb/>
<lb/>
India ralhel<lb/>
him, ar.<lb/>
ble Bn; I<lb/>
has to admj<lb/>
longei<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
of a<lb/>
�<lb/>
He Has Dea<lb/>
( ontinued From Pae f<lb/>
looks back � Slaughterhouse-Five a<lb/>
Cradle Bu<lb/>
made<lb/>
the '60s at<lb/>
ratives. n<lb/>
to the terrair. I<lb/>
is a dist<lb/>
ding in a w<lb/>
militarv me <lb/>
permeaes evet<lb/>
tion to Midland i<lb/>
Whether<lb/>
narrated in the :<lb/>
to the p<lb/>
whims. :<lb/>
are glmost imn<lb/>
depreca' g humor, pui<lb/>
aphorisn<lb/>
trademark ��<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
1 � �e� ��- - j' -<lb/>
App'ts. MaaeDa.s<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1-800-321 0575<lb/>
Ol Car tqec F�1 q��s i"e<lb/>
T-Mirts S tea "9 Bqs<lb/>
?�ckpjc�i CiTBinq Equ'P<lb/>
ment S'�e ?ec it<lb/>
indOfr 'X 3 'trv4 no<lb/>
u�d Itami c?��ac. 8<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
featui<lb/>
Eerv<lb/>
Sered w<lb/>
Potato ol<lb/>
THE WORD IS OUT!<lb/>
ROAD WARRIOR"<lb/>
IS A HIT!<lb/>
Apocalypse POW!<lb/>
Exhilarating<lb/>
entertainment:<lb/>
"A sensational<lb/>
slam-bano end-of-<lb/>
the-world picture<lb/>
-i , v XWSNEE<lb/>
"A smashing good time<lb/>
at the movies .A<lb/>
sizzler. George Milier<lb/>
and company have<lb/>
pulled oft a winner<lb/>
Starring NHL GIBSON<lb/>
Written b TERRY HAES CLORE<lb/>
Producer tM BYRON KENNEDY<lb/>
HUSH<lb/>
I THIS WEDNESDAY NIGHTS<lb/>
M�' - 7 PM. SECOND HI<lb/>
PM. Both Films In Mendenh<lb/>
Theatre. Admission By ID &amp;<lb/>
MSC Membership For Focuf<lb/>
The ECU Student Um<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0007"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
M Ki. H I. 1983 Page<lb/>
� �f "�<lb/>
 I<lb/>
�S�<lb/>
now in dreenville.<lb/>
7 Greenville<lb/>
men<lb/>
?cal and ECU hunger<lb/>
are his idea. The<lb/>
a :rong and the<lb/>
ers went to v�ork. The<lb/>
bam ed and Hamer called<lb/>
for a hall. The<lb/>
v - cai Legion which usually<lb/>
har. S150 a night for their<lb/>
decided to provide the hall<lb/>
ail price for the worthy cause.<lb/>
went up, tickets got<lb/>
printed and the word was spread.<lb/>
Apple Records quickly sold-out<lb/>
Sec NEEDY, Page 7<lb/>
Rudolph Waltz<lb/>
oice Of Doom<lb/>
-  intimates, is an ugly mid-<lb/>
Manding and corpse-free, a<lb/>
over the charnclhouse<lb/>
tster, Deadeye Dick<lb/>
ee MY HAS, Page 7<lb/>
Playhouse's 'Custer'<lb/>
About Average Work<lb/>
B ZA( KPERKINSON<lb/>
Staff Wnlrt<lb/>
roduction of Custer, which<lb/>
 k at McCiinnis Theatre, wasn't<lb/>
:ked you out of your seat,<lb/>
oring groaner often typical of<lb/>
ions. It lay somewhere in bet-<lb/>
n with an old friend in which<lb/>
familiar<lb/>
beii-<lb/>
Miuld<lb/>
 .<lb/>
y -<lb/>
i<lb/>
�<lb/>
Rudy's<lb/>
from<lb/>
5 :he<lb/>
� pio-<lb/>
� walk<lb/>
I<lb/>
know<lb/>
I of<lb/>
(itneral<lb/>
mi nt<lb/>
ginal production had more socio-<lb/>
Around 1970, when old values<lb/>
being questioned, a veritable<lb/>
ks and movies appeared decry-<lb/>
mgoism and Manifest Destiny. But it<lb/>
b now (hat everybody knows Custer was<lb/>
fas believe he is referred to in the<lb/>
'he white man's burden was an ex-<lb/>
ubjugation of technologically disadvan-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
that holds my interest is the possibility<lb/>
said �fact") that E troop of the 7th<lb/>
mimed suicide en masse when surround-<lb/>
ioux andhevene immediately prior to the<lb/>
' Little Big Horn. When I was in the<lb/>
didn't have horses We didn't have sabers<lb/>
standing joke (?) was that when all else<lb/>
fall on ur saber Was that some legacy left to<lb/>
le old rr.�opers� The sad romanticism of death<lb/>
d a alhalla for slain warriors is still with us. Any<lb/>
recruit in bask training knows it well.<lb/>
( Hirer's outstanding performer was Gary<lb/>
W eathersbee, who is as fine an actor as one is likely to<lb/>
see anywhere. In an electrifying speech m the second<lb/>
he. as Major Benteen, defends himself against ac-<lb/>
cusations ot coward by Mrs. Custer and sum-<lb/>
inzes the points of the whole play. His elocution<lb/>
and projection seem entirely natural, as if he was<lb/>
born speaking across a valley. Weathersbee had the<lb/>
best lines, best part, and best props; but, he brought<lb/>
something of his own to make it all just a little bit bet-<lb/>
ter The other players were passing fair at best<lb/>
reciting lines in strained classroom exercise fashion'<lb/>
Sets and lighting were, as always, the best.<lb/>
All in all. it was an enjoyable evening No<lb/>
blockbuster, but 1 did get to see Gary Weathersbee's<lb/>
performance. The drama department needs ro see<lb/>
more ot him, too.<lb/>
( ontinued From Page 6<lb/>
When things go<lb/>
wrong, he fasts in<lb/>
protest; when soldiers<lb/>
attack his followers,<lb/>
he encourages them to<lb/>
submit to be beaten;<lb/>
k:raduallv, jn his un-<lb/>
shakable adherence to<lb/>
this Christlike policy.<lb/>
the fledgling nation of<lb/>
India rallies around<lb/>
him, and the inflexi-<lb/>
ble British raj finally<lb/>
has to admit Gandhi<lb/>
is no longer a man but<lb/>
an idea, and therefore<lb/>
indestructible.<lb/>
Within the confines<lb/>
of a single film, and<lb/>
guided by the messge<lb/>
of Gandhi's public<lb/>
life, has Atten-<lb/>
borough "sanitized"<lb/>
his subject?<lb/>
"Oh no Atten-<lb/>
borough says, "not at<lb/>
all. Yes, it's pretty<lb/>
clear that as a kid,<lb/>
Gandhi was randy as<lb/>
hell. He was married<lb/>
very young, and when<lb/>
he was 16 or 17 years<lb/>
old, his father was dy-<lb/>
ing. Gandhi was sit-<lb/>
ting there, massaging<lb/>
his father's head,<lb/>
when he was over-<lb/>
come with a normal<lb/>
urge. So he called to<lb/>
his uncle, and went to<lb/>
his bedroom and<lb/>
awakened his wife.<lb/>
He Has Dead Eye For Readers<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
looks back to Slaughterhouse-Five and Cat's<lb/>
Cradle But the technical innovations that<lb/>
-lade onnegut an "experimental" writer in<lb/>
he 60s are gone: no Tralfamadorean nar-<lb/>
atives, no intercutting from the land of fact<lb/>
the terrain of science fiction. What remains<lb/>
a distilled sense of the doom alwavs impen-<lb/>
ng in a world dominated by technocrats and<lb/>
tai men, it is palpable on everv page, and<lb/>
neates even events that have no direct rela-<lb/>
to Midland City's bomb factories<lb/>
hether routine or catastrophic, events are<lb/>
nated in the patented Vonnegut style: plain<lb/>
the point of blandness, capable'of large<lb/>
imsv and small expressions of outrage that<lb/>
almost immmediately retracted with self-<lb/>
deprecating humor, punctuated with the little<lb/>
ap! risms that arc his most recognizable<lb/>
tit�a:k. It's a style that Vonnegut seems to<lb/>
think is both stoically moral and, with its<lb/>
jinglelike refrains, appropriate for a mass<lb/>
readership; he uses it to depict a world in<lb/>
which large mistakes, like neutron bombs, are<lb/>
the only thing apt to put an end to the small<lb/>
mistakes that form the grain and pattern of<lb/>
existence. His characters' lives are always<lb/>
shaped bv what they neither expect not plan<lb/>
tor. "It is too easy, when alive, to make<lb/>
perfectly horrible mistakes Rudv says,<lb/>
remembering that his father helped keep<lb/>
young Hitler alive by buying a painting from<lb/>
him when he was a starving artist in Vienna.<lb/>
Variations of this sentiment are everywhere:<lb/>
small decisions balloon into large disasters,<lb/>
and Rudy responds by saying, "this was quite<lb/>
a mistake then, because he is a cook, he<lb/>
gives us a recipe. The book is full of them,<lb/>
presumably on the theory that as formulas go!<lb/>
a recipe is less likely to result in something<lb/>
catastrophic than, sav, Dr. Hoenikker's lce-9<lb/>
in Cat's Cradle.<lb/>
Of<lb/>
He was making love<lb/>
to her for only a few<lb/>
minutes when his un-<lb/>
cle called to him, and<lb/>
Gandhi came tearing<lb/>
down the hall. But<lb/>
before he got there,<lb/>
his father had died.<lb/>
"This incident had<lb/>
a great effect on him,<lb/>
as he says in his<lb/>
autobiography. For<lb/>
the rest of his life he<lb/>
was always trying to<lb/>
rid himself of passion<lb/>
� not just physical<lb/>
passion, but any pas-<lb/>
sion which might lead<lb/>
to anger<lb/>
By Gandhi's own<lb/>
account, he fought a<lb/>
lifelong battle against<lb/>
his own sexuality.<lb/>
When he was in his<lb/>
70s, and deeply<lb/>
depressed over the im-<lb/>
pending partition of<lb/>
Pakistan, he con-<lb/>
tinued to test himself<lb/>
by having women lie<lb/>
next to him in bed and<lb/>
embrace him. After-<lb/>
ward he would ex-<lb/>
plore whether any<lb/>
sensual feeling had<lb/>
been aroused by the<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
IHl t XM t AKOl IS1XN<lb/>
MXKC H 1. 1983<lb/>
These and other of<lb/>
Gandhi's attempts to<lb/>
attain brahmacharya<lb/>
� or spiritual oneness<lb/>
with both sexes �<lb/>
were controversial,<lb/>
even in his own time.<lb/>
Nirmal KumarBose, a<lb/>
former Bengali inter-<lb/>
preter of Gandhi's,<lb/>
told the writer Ved<lb/>
Mehta that "after<lb/>
Gandhi's death<lb/>
everyone wanted to<lb/>
suppress all further<lb/>
discusssion of the<lb/>
brahmacharya ex-<lb/>
periments Bosesaid<lb/>
he published his<lb/>
book. My Days with<lb/>
Gandhi, at his own<lb/>
expense after being<lb/>
advised by the Nava-<lb/>
Jivan Press.<lb/>
"The whole idea<lb/>
that Gandhi led a bor-<lb/>
ing life is ridiculous<lb/>
Attenborough says.<lb/>
On the contrarv, there<lb/>
was so much material<lb/>
that it overwhelmed<lb/>
the limitations "<lb/>
Needy Aren't Only Ones Who Benefit<lb/>
BORTIONS<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
of their first batch of tickets and iocal<lb/>
businesses gave ECU Hunger Coalition<lb/>
member Theresa Dulski over a dozen door<lb/>
prizes.<lb/>
By 9 p.m. on Saturday, people began filing<lb/>
in the ball with coolers on shoulder for the<lb/>
BYOB evening. By 9:30, the parking spaces<lb/>
were scarce. Hamer had hoped optimisticallv<lb/>
for a turnout of 200 to 300 people. Those who<lb/>
were unfamiliar with the organizing skills ot<lb/>
Shep and friends were somewhat less hopeful.<lb/>
Hamer was right, and the room was full. The<lb/>
actual turnout? 300 easy.<lb/>
Hamer, who is also a member of the<lb/>
ECU Greenville Hunger Coalition called on<lb/>
Jennifer Baughan, coordinator of the Hunger<lb/>
Project and several others to get suggestions<lb/>
as to where the benefit monev"should go.<lb/>
It was decided to divide the monev in half<lb/>
with 50 percent going to Oxfam-Amenca. a<lb/>
international agency that funds self-help<lb/>
development projects in poor countries and<lb/>
the other 50 to Greenville's own Church<lb/>
Ministries United, a relief organization sup-<lb/>
ported by eleven local churches which pro-<lb/>
vides tood for iocal poor families<lb/>
"Church Ministries United is delighted to<lb/>
have this help said Liz Wilkerson. chairman<lb/>
of CML's Board of Directors "I; wa- really a<lb/>
great idea Wilkerson added that there have<lb/>
been manv needs among the poorer resident<lb/>
of Greenville this winter We could realK use<lb/>
the extra help<lb/>
The evening's music kicked off nh a set b)<lb/>
the Amateurs. Shep slapped his boneos and<lb/>
bciteu out the tunes, most of which'he had<lb/>
written himself.<lb/>
lightnin' Wells followed with a ve' I<lb/>
Chicago-style blues. Mike Wells did a fan-<lb/>
tastic job on a couple of Howhn' Woll ongs<lb/>
and a spellbinding job on his rendition<lb/>
Screamin' Ja Hawkins "1 Put a Spell Or<lb/>
1 ou<lb/>
M ek terminations<lb/>
App ts Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1-800 32) 0575<lb/>
wtiaged Fa'tque and<lb/>
 �Sh.r ts Sleeping Bags<lb/>
(��"pack Camping Equip<lb/>
�fit S-eei Toed Snoes Dishes<lb/>
RO O.tr '00 Different New and<lb/>
 Used I'ems Cowboy Boots<lb/>
' 3<lb/>
� S<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
I STORE<lb/>
'501 j Eans<lb/>
Street<lb/>
�-8545<lb/>
m<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
featuring USDA choice beef<lb/>
cut fresh dail<lb/>
Every Tuesda in March 1983<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
$1.99 Reg. $3.49<lb/>
Served with King Idaho Baked<lb/>
Potato or F.F. and Texas Toast<lb/>
featuring Prime Rib every<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. Night<lb/>
Now serving 14 oz. T-Bone<lb/>
2 locations to better serve you<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd. 756-0040<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St. 758-2712<lb/>
STUDENT OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
e are looking for girls intc rested in being<lb/>
counselors - activils instructors in a private girb<lb/>
camp located in Henersonsille. VC. Instuctors<lb/>
needed especially in S�immingWSII, Horseback<lb/>
riding. Tennis, Backpacking, Archers. Canoeing.<lb/>
(Amnastics. C rafts, Also Basketball, Dancing, Soc-<lb/>
cer, t heerleading. Drama, Art. Office work, C amp<lb/>
craft. Nature studs. If sour school offers a Summer<lb/>
Internship program v�e will be glad to help. Inquiries<lb/>
- Morgan Hasnes P.O. Box 400c. Trson !S C<lb/>
28782.<lb/>
;04 5fh St<lb/>
uAppfe ofids<lb/>
Greg Kihn Def Leppord Soft Cell<lb/>
Super Tramp Styx De�o<lb/>
Adam Ant Hank Williams Jr.<lb/>
Missing Persons H e Hu i dE Sell l tedLp's.<lb/>
Red Rider c all 75tf- I42h<lb/>
Musical Youth for information<lb/>
Christopher Cross Houn '��-����<lb/>
s<lb/>
THE WORD IS OUT!<lb/>
ROAD WARRIOR<lb/>
IS A HIT!<lb/>
Apocalypse. POW!<lb/>
Exhilarating<lb/>
entertainment<lb/>
A sensational<lb/>
slam-banp end-of-<lb/>
the-world picture<lb/>
A smashing good time<lb/>
at the moviesA<lb/>
sizzler. .George Miller<lb/>
and company have<lb/>
pulled off a winner<lb/>
THE ROAD WARRIOR<lb/>
Starring MEL GIBSON Music by BRIAN MAY<lb/>
Written by TERRY HAYES. GEORGE MILLER with BRIAN HANNANT<lb/>
Produced by BYRON KENNEDY Directed by GEORGE MILLER<lb/>
UIBijja<lb/>
 iiwixi<lb/>
THIS WEDNESDAY NIGHT FIRST SMASH HIT: Mad<lb/>
Max' - 7 PM. SECOND HIT: The Road Warrior' - 9<lb/>
PM. Both Films In Mendonhall Student Center's Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre. Admission By ID &amp; Activity Card For Students,<lb/>
MSC Membership For Faculty And Staff. Sponsored By<lb/>
The ECU Student Union Films Committee.<lb/>
200 West<lb/>
AXA� A0's<lb/>
Happy Hoar<lb/>
Tuesday, March 1<lb/>
Ml IKK)<lb/>
AdmiNioa $1.00<lb/>
Happy Hoar Prices<lb/>
Throughout The Night<lb/>
EGU'i test 200 Wast<lb/>
200 W. 10th St.<lb/>
tems and Prices<lb/>
Efectwe Wed Ma'ch 2<lb/>
Thru Sat Mach 5 1983<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Eacf of these advertised items m re<lb/>
quired to be 'eac . available for<lb/>
sale in eecn Kroger Sav on except<lb/>
as specifically noted m this ed II �e<lb/>
do run out of an item we Mill ot'e'<lb/>
vou your choice of a compargoie<lb/>
item when available reflecting the<lb/>
same savings or a remcheck which<lb/>
win entitle you to purchase the:<lb/>
advertised tem at the advervsed<lb/>
once within 30 davs<lb/>
Open Mon. thru Sat. 8am to Midnight - Sun. 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
12 Lowfat Milk<lb/>
SPOTLIGHT<lb/>
Bean Coffee<lb/>
$4 79<lb/>
ROYAL VIKING<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
Danish Rolls<lb/>
$4 29<lb/>
14-OZ 1<lb/>
FRESH FROM OUR<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
B.B.Q. Chicken<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
139 SAVE<lb/>
30c<lb/>
USDA GOVT<lb/>
INSPECTED<lb/>
QUALITY CONTROLLED<lb/>
Chopped<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
68<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
Upton<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
SANDWICH<lb/>
UPTON<lb/>
CREAM OF CHICKEN<lb/>
TOMATO. VEGETABLE<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
21�9<lb/>
Lvs �<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
FRUIT COCKTAIL<lb/>
OR<lb/>
Peach Halves<lb/>
H09<lb/>
uans<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
��! nni'WtuiIiWIi<lb/>
"PW�IM�)<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THF EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MARCH 1, 1983<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Pirates Nail Down Winning Season<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Sports Mitor<lb/>
With 4,830 spectators looking<lb/>
on, the ECU men's basketball<lb/>
team secured c. winning season in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum Saturday night<lb/>
by gliding past the Wilmington<lb/>
Seahawks, 70-60.<lb/>
"I'm happy for the kids that we<lb/>
got a winning season said Head<lb/>
Coach Charlie Harrison after the<lb/>
game. "Nobody, the magazines<lb/>
or newspapers, thought we had a<lb/>
chance to have a winning<lb/>
season<lb/>
After last week's loss against<lb/>
conference foe James Madison,<lb/>
Harrison described the Pirates'<lb/>
play as "emotionless but that<lb/>
wasn't the case against the<lb/>
Seahawks. "These guys amaze<lb/>
me he said. "I never know how<lb/>
to predict them, but when you<lb/>
look back over, only one or two<lb/>
haven't been played with emo-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Against Wilmington, the Bucs<lb/>
built an eight-point lead by<lb/>
halftime, and gradually pulled<lb/>
ahead by as much as 15 points in<lb/>
the first five minutes of the second<lb/>
period.<lb/>
ECU's Johnny Edwards<lb/>
dominated offensively during the<lb/>
first 10 minutes of the final half,<lb/>
pumping in eight points in the<lb/>
first four minutes. The Bucs made<lb/>
mne-of-10 baskets in eight<lb/>
minutes, while the Seahawks were<lb/>
five-for-10 from the floor.<lb/>
The Seahawks cut the Pirates'<lb/>
lead to, 55-48, with 3:56 remain-<lb/>
ing, but two freethrows each from<lb/>
Bruce Peartree and Barry Wright<lb/>
once again gave the Bucs a solid<lb/>
advantage.<lb/>
In ECU � UNC-W's first clash<lb/>
on Jan. 24, the Pirates played<lb/>
without center Charlie Green,<lb/>
who was out with a separated<lb/>
shoulder. But. as UNC-W coach<lb/>
Mel Gibson predicted, the return-<lb/>
ing of Green would prove to be a<lb/>
major factor in the second con-<lb/>
test. Harrison explained further.<lb/>
"Green gives us more flexibility,<lb/>
more board strength Harrison<lb/>
said. "We're a lot quicker team<lb/>
out there with him in the game<lb/>
The Bucs went up, 47-30, with<lb/>
14:11 remaining, and at this<lb/>
point, Harrison said the Pirates<lb/>
began to relax a little too much.<lb/>
"We got sloppy he said. "We<lb/>
started at the defensive end and it<lb/>
generated to our offense he<lb/>
said. "We weren't very good. We<lb/>
needed to get some momentum<lb/>
going<lb/>
But the Bucs did have enough<lb/>
momentum to pump in 15 of 20<lb/>
shots for a 75-percent shooting<lb/>
average from the floor. Edwards,<lb/>
the leading candidate for the<lb/>
ECAC-South's "Rookie of the<lb/>
Year scored 14 of his 19 points<lb/>
in the second half and led the<lb/>
Pirates in rebounding with eight.<lb/>
Green, who was seven for 12<lb/>
from the floor, followed Edwards<lb/>
with 17 points. Peartree, a<lb/>
sophomore guard from Pantego,<lb/>
added 14 points, making six of<lb/>
eight baskets. Another<lb/>
sophomore, Barry Wright, finish-<lb/>
ed with 12 points to give the team<lb/>
four players scoring in double<lb/>
figures.<lb/>
In field goal percentage, UNC-<lb/>
W shot 41-percent from the game,<lb/>
with Washington native Shawn<lb/>
Williams leading the Seahawks<lb/>
with 16 points. Junior Terry<lb/>
Shiver racked up 12 points, Scott<lb/>
Prudhoe had 11 and Tony Ander-<lb/>
son contributed 10.<lb/>
In the first half, the Pirates<lb/>
jumped out to 7-2 lead, but a slam<lb/>
dunk by junior Carlos Kelly reviv-<lb/>
ed the Seahawks. The Bucs<lb/>
retaliated. Now leading, 11-10,<lb/>
ECU's Edwards sank a four-foot<lb/>
jumpshot and a nailed a fastbreak<lb/>
one-hand dunk to boost the Bucs<lb/>
back up, 15-10.<lb/>
With Wright on the bench with<lb/>
three fouls, Thorn Brown, Green<lb/>
and Edwards were relied on to<lb/>
generate the offense. They did.<lb/>
The threesome combined for 10<lb/>
points during the final minutes,<lb/>
giving the Bucs a 28-22 advantage<lb/>
at the half.<lb/>
The Pirates made 12-of-24<lb/>
shots for a 50-percent shooting<lb/>
average in the first period. The<lb/>
Seahawks had more trouble at the<lb/>
other end of the court, however,<lb/>
making only 30 percent of their<lb/>
field goals.<lb/>
The Seahawks are now 11-14,<lb/>
and were looking for their third<lb/>
straight win in Minges Colieseum.<lb/>
But the Bucs put an end to UNC-<lb/>
W's streak, and will start gearing<lb/>
up for their final game of the<lb/>
regular season against Penn State-<lb/>
Behrend Thursday night in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Now, 14-12, and, 3-7, in the<lb/>
ECAC-South conference, the<lb/>
Bucs will travel to Richmond,<lb/>
Va on March 10-12 to compete<lb/>
in the conference tournament.<lb/>
Among six teams, the Pirates are<lb/>
placed fifth.<lb/>
At Thursday night's home con-<lb/>
test, ECU's Charlie Green and<lb/>
Thorn Brown will be making their<lb/>
final appearance in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum. Both seniors will receive<lb/>
special recognition following the<lb/>
bout.<lb/>
Gametime is 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
r-�CU 10. UNC-WilmiB�ton 60<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Vknghi<lb/>
Brown<lb/>
Edwirdl<lb/>
Robuuon<lb/>
Peartree<lb/>
NicLcod<lb/>
Vanderhorii<lb/>
Green<lb/>
Totak<lb/>
UNC<lb/>
Andtrson<lb/>
Ketly<lb/>
S Prudhoe<lb/>
WUUanu<lb/>
Shrivel<lb/>
Dtckeai<lb/>
M Prudhoe<lb/>
Stegcr<lb/>
MP FG FT<lb/>
Zl<lb/>
19<lb/>
40<lb/>
40<lb/>
32<lb/>
4<lb/>
I<lb/>
M<lb/>
5-7<lb/>
1-2<lb/>
6-11<lb/>
2-3<lb/>
6-<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
712<lb/>
2-2<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
7 9<lb/>
2-3<lb/>
2-2<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
3 3<lb/>
27-44 16-19 25<lb/>
Mf fc n i a r n<lb/>
33<lb/>
29<lb/>
17<lb/>
39<lb/>
36<lb/>
12<lb/>
10<lb/>
2<lb/>
512<lb/>
2-7<lb/>
4-9<lb/>
7-19<lb/>
1-6<lb/>
2-2<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
0-1<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
12<lb/>
3-4 4<lb/>
2-2 12<lb/>
e-� 1<lb/>
04<lb/>
2 2<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
24 U-56 14-16 36 22 6 6<lb/>
UNC-WI<lb/>
Turnover! - ECX 14. UNC-W II<lb/>
TecJuucml fouli - None<lb/>
Of :iaii � Cite. Phipp.<lb/>
Alt - 4.KB<lb/>
21<lb/>
22<lb/>
42<lb/>
n<lb/>
PHote Br GABY PATTtftSON<lb/>
ECU point guard Curt V anderhorst applies defensive pressure on<lb/>
UNC-W's Shawn Williams. The Pirates won their 14th game of the<lb/>
vear to secure a winning season.<lb/>
Lady Bucs' Season Finale This Weekend<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Lady Pirate guard Caren Truske will join Man Denkler and Fran<lb/>
Hooks as seniors who will play their last game in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Saturday night.<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
AaWui Sporti Milor<lb/>
Senior center Mary Denkler<lb/>
scored a career-high 34 points and<lb/>
freshman Sylvia Bragg pulled<lb/>
down a career-high 12 rebounds<lb/>
on Saturday afternoon as the<lb/>
ECU Lady Pirates defeated<lb/>
George Mason, 69-65.<lb/>
After Saturday's game, which<lb/>
was played in Fairfax, Va the<lb/>
Lady Pirates travelled to<lb/>
Washington, D.C. to face George<lb/>
Washington University on Sunday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
This time, ECU came up on the<lb/>
short end of a 79-75 score, due<lb/>
mainly to a 40-point performance<lb/>
by GWU guard Kelly Ballcntine.<lb/>
The loss ended a three-game<lb/>
winning streak which had been the<lb/>
Lady Pirates longest of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Saturday afternoon victory<lb/>
over George Mason was a game of<lb/>
career highs for four ECU<lb/>
players.<lb/>
Besides Denkler and Bragg's<lb/>
performances, seniors Fran<lb/>
Hooks and Caren Truske played<lb/>
well in their next-to-last regular<lb/>
season game for ECU.<lb/>
Hooks grabbed a career-high 11<lb/>
rebounds, while Truske scored a<lb/>
personal-best 10 points.<lb/>
Even with the victory, ECU<lb/>
coach Cathy Andruzzi wasn't<lb/>
satisfied. "We controlled the<lb/>
boards and shot well, but we had<lb/>
too many turnovers (20) she<lb/>
stated. "We allowed them to do<lb/>
what they wanted offensively<lb/>
Andruzzi was especially critical<lb/>
of the Lady Pirate defense in the<lb/>
.loss to George Washington.<lb/>
"We just had a lack of defense<lb/>
throughout the entire game An-<lb/>
druizi commented. "Our defense<lb/>
lost the game for us by not<lb/>
creating our offense<lb/>
Ballentine got her 40 points on<lb/>
17 for 32 shooting from the floor<lb/>
and six of eight free throws at-<lb/>
tempts.<lb/>
Kathy Marshall added 18 points<lb/>
and Anne Feeney contributed 11<lb/>
as George Washington ended its<lb/>
season with a 9-16 record.<lb/>
For the Lady Pirates, Denkler<lb/>
again led the way with 28 points<lb/>
and nine rebounds. Bragg record-<lb/>
ed 15 points and seven assists,<lb/>
while Lisa Squirewell chipped in<lb/>
12 points and eight rebounds.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates were trailing<lb/>
39-30 at halftime, with Ballentine<lb/>
blistering the ECU defense with<lb/>
25 points.<lb/>
ECU rallied to tie the score at<lb/>
45 in the second half but GWU<lb/>
refused to buckle and pulled out<lb/>
the four point victory.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will have a<lb/>
chance for a winning season this<lb/>
Saturday night when they host<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Andruzzi is glad to be in the<lb/>
position for a chance to finish<lb/>
14-12. "We're very pleased with<lb/>
our situation right now she<lb/>
said. "We want them to do the<lb/>
best they can and being 13-12 is a<lb/>
credit to our kids.<lb/>
"We are in a situation in which<lb/>
not many teams have to deal<lb/>
withAndruzzi added. "We've<lb/>
been plagued by injuries and as a<lb/>
result we don't have depth. I'd be<lb/>
more disappointed if we had more<lb/>
talent and depth and were losing.<lb/>
Our kids have done a fine job<lb/>
Saturday night's game will<lb/>
mark the end of the career of<lb/>
three ECU players � Denkler,<lb/>
Hooks and Truske.<lb/>
The three have combined for<lb/>
31.7 points per game and 13.4 re-<lb/>
bounds per game this season while<lb/>
averaging nearly 37 minutes per<lb/>
ballgame.<lb/>
Denkler, the 6-0 all-America<lb/>
from Alexandria, Va has scored<lb/>
1,758 points during her iltustrous<lb/>
four-year career, which pots her<lb/>
at second place on the all time<lb/>
career scoring list behind Rosie<lb/>
Thompson.<lb/>
Denkler has 555 points this<lb/>
year, which puts her in fourth<lb/>
place for the most points in a<lb/>
single season.<lb/>
She has been the mainstay of<lb/>
the Lady Pirate offense this year,<lb/>
scoring in double figures in all but<lb/>
two games.<lb/>
Hooks became a scoring .threar<lb/>
out of necessity this season is she<lb/>
averaged 6.1 points and 4.2 re-<lb/>
bounds per game.<lb/>
The 5-8 Goldsboro native<lb/>
scored a career-high 17 points<lb/>
earlier this year against UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte and pulled down a<lb/>
career-high 11 rebounds this<lb/>
weekend against George Mason.<lb/>
Truske, 5-6 native of Colum-<lb/>
bus, Ohio, set a career-high 10<lb/>
points on four occassions while<lb/>
scoring twice as many points in<lb/>
1982-83 than she did in her<lb/>
previous two seasons.<lb/>
Andruzzi hopes that ECU fans<lb/>
will come out Saturday night and<lb/>
send the seniors off with a fond<lb/>
farewell.<lb/>
"Our seniors have done an<lb/>
outstanding job for us this year<lb/>
she said. "After this one, Mary<lb/>
Denkler will be gone. We hope<lb/>
people will recognize that and<lb/>
come out and support them.<lb/>
Gametime for Saturday's<lb/>
season finale is 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Young Bucs Bat Up For VCU<lb/>
t<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Saom MKM<lb/>
The ECU men's baseball team<lb/>
open the 1983 season this Wednes-<lb/>
day at Harrington Field against<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
With 12 freshmen and<lb/>
sophomores, six juniors and seven<lb/>
seniors, Head Coach Hal Baird<lb/>
will be debuting a young team.<lb/>
"We've got a lot of new<lb/>
players Baird said. "A lot of<lb/>
them will be playing college ball<lb/>
for the first time, so there's no<lb/>
doubt this will be a year of<lb/>
rebuilding for us<lb/>
According to Baird, however,<lb/>
lack of experience is not his<lb/>
nrimary concern at this point.<lb/>
"How well we do depends on how<lb/>
� " our pitchers do he said.<lb/>
Sophomore Bob Davidson,<lb/>
who hails from Fort Bragg, will be<lb/>
the starting pitcher against VCU,<lb/>
Baird said. Last year, Davidson<lb/>
compiled a 5-3 won-loss record<lb/>
and posted a 2.65 ERA.<lb/>
Tony Guzzo, a former assistant<lb/>
coach at ECU, is now VCU's head<lb/>
coach, and Baird knows Guzzo<lb/>
will have his team ready. "We're<lb/>
looking for them to be much im-<lb/>
proved and competitive he said.<lb/>
"We know he likes the running<lb/>
game, and he'll especially have<lb/>
them ready for us<lb/>
VCU is only one of 43 ECU op-<lb/>
ponents this season � a schedule<lb/>
Baird described as the most dif-<lb/>
ficult one the Pirates have yet to<lb/>
face. "We play seven more dif-<lb/>
ferent teams in post-season this<lb/>
year he said. "It's gonna be the<lb/>
toughest schedule we've ever<lb/>
had<lb/>
After last year's overwhelming<lb/>
success, the Bucs certainly have a<lb/>
reputation to live up to. The ECU<lb/>
squad finished with a 34-14 record<lb/>
in 1982, recorded the 30th winn-<lb/>
ing season in 31 years, earned an<lb/>
NCAA playoff berth by sweeping<lb/>
three games in the ECAC-South<lb/>
Conference Championship, and<lb/>
defeated North Carolina for its<lb/>
first NCAA playoff win in 10<lb/>
years. Four players signed in to<lb/>
the professional ranks after the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Following Wednesday's game,<lb/>
the Pirates will play Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College on Thursday,<lb/>
with senior Charlie Smith posi-<lb/>
tioned on the pitcher's mound.<lb/>
Smith, a 6-2, 195-pound Rober-<lb/>
sonville native, finished with a 3-2<lb/>
won-loss record and a 3.00 ERA.<lb/>
In the title game of the ECAC-<lb/>
South Conference tournament,<lb/>
Smith pitched 2.7 innings of one-<lb/>
hit baseball, saving the game for<lb/>
Davidson.<lb/>
On March 4, the Pirates will<lb/>
play their first away game of the<lb/>
season against ACC opponent,<lb/>
N.C. State. Mount Olive junior<lb/>
college transfer Robby Mc-<lb/>
Clanahan, the only left-handed<lb/>
player on the quad, will be pit-<lb/>
ching for the Pirates. The Bucs<lb/>
will again confront the Wolfpack<lb/>
on March 7, with freshman Wln-<lb/>
fred Johnson filling the pitching<lb/>
spot. Johnson, who may possibly<lb/>
be the best power hitter on the<lb/>
squad, was a designated hitter for<lb/>
the Pirates at the end of the fall<lb/>
season. "He may be the only two-<lb/>
way player I've had since I've<lb/>
been here Baird said.<lb/>
Both the Atlantic Christian and<lb/>
N.C. State games will begin at 3<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Swimmers Set Out<lb/>
For Championship<lb/>
By ED MCKLAS<lb/>
Sun Writer<lb/>
The ECU men's and women's<lb/>
swim teams will finish out their<lb/>
1982-83 season when they travel<lb/>
to Syracuse, N.Y. Saturday to<lb/>
compete in the Eastern Inter-<lb/>
collegiate Swimming and Diving<lb/>
Championships.<lb/>
The event, which includes such<lb/>
powerhouses as Pittsburgh,<lb/>
Maryland, West Virginia and<lb/>
Penn State, will be hosted by<lb/>
Syracuse and held at Nottingham<lb/>
High School's elaborate swimm-<lb/>
ing complex.<lb/>
There will be 16 teams com-<lb/>
peting in the event. ECU swim<lb/>
coach Rick Kobe considers ECU<lb/>
to be one of the top eight teams.<lb/>
"It's hard to predict this<lb/>
meet explained Kobe. "Teams<lb/>
usually score most of their points<lb/>
on depth so it depends on how<lb/>
many swimmers we have who get<lb/>
in the finals and score<lb/>
According to Kobe, the event is<lb/>
a good chance for the swimmers<lb/>
to display their skills in their quest<lb/>
to qualify for the Nationals.<lb/>
"We'll probably have some<lb/>
who will make the Nationalswith<lb/>
their times he sara Also, we<lb/>
should set some varsity records<lb/>
After the Eastern meet, Pirate<lb/>
diver Scott Eagle and diving coach<lb/>
Jon Rose will travel to Columbia,<lb/>
S.C where Eagle has qualified<lb/>
for the NCAA regional diving<lb/>
competition, to be held March<lb/>
11-12. If he finishes among the<lb/>
top nine, Eagle then goes to the<lb/>
NCAA finals March 24-26 in In-<lb/>
dianapolis, Ind.<lb/>
The men's team is presently 4-5<lb/>
while the women are 5-5.<lb/>
ECU sealer Jon Riddle lies ap patt carefully Riddle �rlii. ,k.<lb/>
Pirates place 14th among 21 teams at FSU's Seanteofc<lb/>
past weekend.<lb/>
tab<lb/>
McCorkle 'Dai<lb/>
By RANDl MEW<lb/>
vuff Wnier<lb/>
The ECU men's<lb/>
track team has<lb/>
benefited all vear<lb/>
from the performance<lb/>
of its outstanding<lb/>
freshman class, and<lb/>
one of the most p<lb/>
mineni members of<lb/>
that class is sprinter<lb/>
Nathan McCorkle<lb/>
McCorkle. who<lb/>
hails from Newton,<lb/>
N.C runs the 55. 2 �<lb/>
and 400-meter<lb/>
the Pirates. Althc .<lb/>
a fine runner in eacl<lb/>
of these event Mc<lb/>
Corkle specializes in<lb/>
the 55-meter dash and<lb/>
has placed in<lb/>
event at afcnosl �<lb/>
meet<lb/>
McCorkle said I<lb/>
beiian running<lb/>
in the ninth grade. i<lb/>
plaved footbal! in<lb/>
tumor high, and when<lb/>
1 started playing in<lb/>
high school. 1 -<lb/>
to keep �n shape dur<lb/>
�ng the off-seas-<lb/>
i started runnil<lb/>
While runni <lb/>
Newton-ConoJ<lb/>
High. McCorkle<lb/>
high school ��<lb/>
the 100. 200<lb/>
400-rneter ra<lb/>
sem j<lb/>
the 100<lb/>
200- mc-<lb/>
also namec<lb/>
con:<lb/>
er<lb/>
� tand<lb/>
�<lb/>
i<lb/>
 i<lb/>
TTta<lb/>
Golfers Pla<lb/>
The ECU me:<lb/>
golf team beg<lb/>
spring season in Sun-<lb/>
n v Florida 11<lb/>
weekend, placing Itol<lb/>
among 21 teams<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Seminole C lassie<lb/>
During the ih<lb/>
dav tournament. I<lb/>
ECU golfer- I<lb/>
Czaja. Roj<lb/>
Newsom, Jon K j: .<lb/>
David Doolej<lb/>
Kellv Stimart comb<lb/>
ed for 925 stroke<lb/>
place the Pirate-<lb/>
the 14th spot.<lb/>
In team star<lb/>
the University<lb/>
Florida placed<lb/>
with 85. FSL r-<lb/>
second with 882<lb/>
Mississippi St a<lb/>
finished third with<lb/>
886, Clemson shot<lb/>
fc�G for fourth place<lb/>
and Miami nabbed<lb/>
fifth place with 902<lb/>
strokes. UNC-Chapd<lb/>
Hill placed ninth in<lb/>
the tournament.<lb/>
Czaia. a<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
-<lb/>
. is n<lb/>
need "<lb/>
According I<lb/>
Florida wa<lb/>
sunnv either<lb/>
wea:he- in Fl<lb/>
was terrible I<lb/>
� hen we<lb/>
Last Meet O<lb/>
Indoor Seasol<lb/>
B Rands Mews<lb/>
s��fT Wriwr<lb/>
The ECU men's<lb/>
track team competed<lb/>
in their last indk<lb/>
meet of the season<lb/>
this weekend, run!<lb/>
in the George Mason<lb/>
Tri-Meet in Fairfax,<lb/>
VA.<lb/>
The Pirate- too<lb/>
the top two spots in<lb/>
the 55-meter hurdles.<lb/>
ith Craig White<lb/>
Finishing first in 7 M<lb/>
and W alter<lb/>
S .<lb/>
second in " 0<lb/>
In an<lb/>
Dick <lb/>
� �<lb/>
son placed<lb/>
event in 1:5<lb/>
In " j<lb/>
Ruebe:<lb/>
ed third<lb/>
while Edd<lb/>
came in j<lb/>
Mc<lb/>
Pirate Tra<lb/>
� �<lb/>
In Prestigi<lb/>
The ECU men s<lb/>
track team will com-<lb/>
pete in the 62nd An-<lb/>
nual Intercollegiate<lb/>
Association of<lb/>
Amateur Athletes of<lb/>
America Indoor<lb/>
Track and Field<lb/>
Championship at<lb/>
Princeton Universi-<lb/>
ty's Jadwin Gym-<lb/>
nasium on March 4, 5<lb/>
and 6.<lb/>
Over 1,100 of the<lb/>
hest collegiate track<lb/>
and field athletes<lb/>
from the east are ex-<lb/>
I Pected to participate.<lb/>
The meet gets<lb/>
underway Friday,<lb/>
March 4 at noon with<lb/>
the pentathlon com-<lb/>
Petition. The rest of<lb/>
the meet begins Satur-<lb/>
day. March 5 at 11:00<lb/>
��� with trials in 14<lb/>
vnts. Finals in the<lb/>
5-pound weight<lb/>
prow and the long<lb/>
tnp will also be con-<lb/>
lucted Saturday<lb/>
Mternoon. Finals in<lb/>
the remain<lb/>
events will be<lb/>
da. Mat j<lb/>
p m<lb/>
Defend<lb/>
pion Fasrtein<lb/>
son is amonf<lb/>
schools ihat<lb/>
represented<lb/>
prestigious<lb/>
Defending �<lb/>
champions<lb/>
to compete<lb/>
McDermott<lb/>
University ir<lb/>
put. Rodne<lb/>
of Villanova<lb/>
meter hun<lb/>
Yearwood ot<lb/>
State in the �<lb/>
and Leo Wil<lb/>
Navy in tl<lb/>
jump- w il<lb/>
senior. isals(<lb/>
time d<lb/>
NCAA tndt<lb/>
champion<lb/>
of the NC<lb/>
record, 7'5j<lb/>
Other oi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0009"/><lb/>
M Ki H ! 198 ! Pace<lb/>
g Season<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
fciuardurt anderhorst applies defensive pressure on<lb/>
na�n Williams. 1 he Pirates won their 14th game of the<lb/>
lure a winning sessoa.<lb/>
'e This Weekend<lb/>
Denkier has 555 points this<lb/>
ear. hich puts her in fourth<lb/>
place for the most points in a<lb/>
Mngle season.<lb/>
She has been the mainstay of<lb/>
the Lady Pirate offense this year,<lb/>
scoring in double figures in all but<lb/>
two games.<lb/>
Hooks became a scoring thread<lb/>
out of necessity this season "is she<lb/>
:<lb/>
i Minges Col-<lb/>
glad to bein the<lb/>
achance tofinish<lb/>
reery pleased with<lb/>
nright now she<lb/>
it tnem � the<lb/>
�  deal �<lb/>
� . a<lb/>
a<lb/>
eraged 6.1 points and 4.2<lb/>
re-<lb/>
nbined<lb/>
oe and 13.4 rc-<lb/>
:ason a -<lb/>
minutes per<lb/>
a. a<lb/>
red<lb/>
 '<lb/>
the aii time<lb/>
d Rosie<lb/>
bounds per game.<lb/>
The 5-8 Goldsboro native<lb/>
scored a career-high 17 points<lb/>
earlier this year against UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte and pulled down a<lb/>
career-high 11 rebounds this<lb/>
weekend againsi George Mason.<lb/>
Iruske. 5-6 native of Colum-<lb/>
bus, Ohio, set a career-high 10<lb/>
points on four occassions while<lb/>
scoring twice as manv points in<lb/>
1982-83 than she did in her<lb/>
previous two seasons.<lb/>
Andruzzi hopes that ECU fans<lb/>
will come out Saturday night and<lb/>
�end the seniors off with a fond<lb/>
farewell.<lb/>
"Our seniors have done an<lb/>
outstanding job for us this vear "<lb/>
he said. "After this oneMary<lb/>
Denkier will be gone. We hope<lb/>
people will recognize that and<lb/>
come out and support them.<lb/>
Gametime for Saturday's<lb/>
season finale is 7:30 p.m<lb/>
m<lb/>
�'TsemmK<lb/>
Mh<lb/>
 b (Jam V �<lb/>
RMdl. Kn up pun cOTf.ll m �"<lb/>
McCorkle Dashes' Into Track Success<lb/>
THE EAST CARPI IN1AN<lb/>
MARCH I, 1983<lb/>
B RANDY MEWS<lb/>
The ECU men's<lb/>
track team has<lb/>
benefited all year<lb/>
from the performance<lb/>
of its outstanding<lb/>
freshman class, and<lb/>
one of the most pro-<lb/>
minent members of<lb/>
that class is sprinter<lb/>
a:han McCorkle.<lb/>
McCorkle, who<lb/>
haiN from Newton,<lb/>
a. runs the 55, 200<lb/>
and 400-meters for<lb/>
the Pirates Although<lb/>
a fine runner in each<lb/>
of these eents, Mc-<lb/>
Corkle specializes in<lb/>
the 55-meter dash and<lb/>
has placed in that<lb/>
event at almost every<lb/>
meei<lb/>
McCorkk said he<lb/>
began running track<lb/>
in the ninth grade. "1<lb/>
played football in<lb/>
ank� high, and when<lb/>
; sorted playing in<lb/>
high school, 1 wanted<lb/>
to keep in shape dur-<lb/>
so<lb/>
track -��ng<lb/>
While running for<lb/>
Newton-Conover<lb/>
� McCorkle se<lb/>
high school records ,n<lb/>
Jhc 100. 200 anS<lb/>
�W-meter races<lb/>
came from<lb/>
in track<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
McCorkle who<lb/>
stands 5'8 said he<lb/>
chose track over foot-<lb/>
ball because of his<lb/>
size. "In high school<lb/>
you can be small and<lb/>
senior year, McCortu Stl be good' but in<lb/>
ws state chamniJ COege the other 8"Vs<lb/>
�he ioo Pnr) wo"ld be too big for<lb/>
200-meters<lb/>
McCorkle, who is a<lb/>
physical education<lb/>
major, said in his<lb/>
spare time, he likes to<lb/>
bowl or play<lb/>
pong.<lb/>
ping-<lb/>
also<lb/>
and<lb/>
was<lb/>
all-<lb/>
per-<lb/>
and<lb/>
named an<lb/>
conference<lb/>
former.<lb/>
As well as being a<lb/>
'rack stand-out in<lb/>
h'gh school, Mc-<lb/>
Corkle was also star-<lb/>
ting tailback for his<lb/>
ate championship<lb/>
football team. He was<lb/>
named all-conference<lb/>
n football and also<lb/>
tne most valuable<lb/>
P'ayer on his team.<lb/>
Upon graduating<lb/>
irom high school, Mc-<lb/>
Corkle was offered<lb/>
man football<lb/>
scholarships, but his<lb/>
only scholarship offer<lb/>
big for<lb/>
me. I also kept im-<lb/>
proving my times in<lb/>
track each year in<lb/>
nigh school and felt I<lb/>
could compete on the<lb/>
college level<lb/>
McCorkle said he<lb/>
has enjoyed ECU a<lb/>
great deal since com-<lb/>
ing here. "I've met a<lb/>
lot of people, and I'm<lb/>
having fun running on<lb/>
the track team<lb/>
Besides track, Mc-<lb/>
Corkle said he doesn't<lb/>
have a lot of time for<lb/>
anything else. "My<lb/>
classes keep me really<lb/>
busy, and I'm usually<lb/>
studying when I'm<lb/>
not at practice or a<lb/>
meet<lb/>
With the indoor<lb/>
track season already<lb/>
behind him, Mc-<lb/>
Corkle is now prepar-<lb/>
ing for the outdoor<lb/>
season. According to<lb/>
McCorkle, working<lb/>
with head coach Bill<lb/>
Carson has improved<lb/>
his running ability<lb/>
considerably.<lb/>
several first-place<lb/>
finishes under his belt<lb/>
this year, McCorkle's<lb/>
best performance of<lb/>
the season was two<lb/>
weeks ago when he<lb/>
ran the 55-meter race<lb/>
in 6.28 at the Carolina<lb/>
Invitational in Chapel<lb/>
Hill. Although he<lb/>
finished third overall,<lb/>
his time was just .28<lb/>
seconds short of the<lb/>
all-time ECU record<lb/>
which was set back in<lb/>
1976.<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
I0 Greenville Bivd<lb/>
754 3023-24 MRS<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
L-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Complete Automotive<lb/>
Service<lb/>
24 hr. Towing Service<lb/>
larlran Renials ailable<lb/>
Buck's<lb/>
Gulf<lb/>
2704 E 10�h St<lb/>
S8 1033<lb/>
"We've gone to a<lb/>
lot of good meets this<lb/>
year he said, "and<lb/>
Coach Carson has<lb/>
helped me improve by<lb/>
showing me some new<lb/>
techniques<lb/>
Although he has<lb/>
 �� - -<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
McCorkle has been<lb/>
satisfied with his first<lb/>
year at ECU, but one<lb/>
day he hopes to com-<lb/>
pete in the NCAA Na-<lb/>
tional Champion-<lb/>
ships, and with three<lb/>
more years left at<lb/>
ECU, he has plenty of<lb/>
time to accomplish his<lb/>
goal.<lb/>
Ha&amp;ter<lb/>
TWO BACON IEB6 BISCUITS $1.29<lb/>
IVj" proem this 'i4 hi be m-tadrraqc nrou<lb/>
iHK-r xr vimi phase tM.xmT m.rj pj Mn ah - <lb/>
'HnnimH)(,��iinl,TibiuiKin witfi jn mhrriaVr<lb/>
 t� r w . .1 during n. .tnuJ bmfcfaei i� Hirx, �,) j, lht<lb/>
h li minjj tUnk-r s Kt-Mjurano v 11 m . j,x hi<lb/>
Street 29CT I i mh��m i (mmdc<lb/>
N OtergMxlchnxMjiMan 51 i-n <lb/>
Golfers Place 14th<lb/>
rhe ECU men's<lb/>
: team began its<lb/>
ring season in Sun-<lb/>
) Florida this<lb/>
� : placing 14th<lb/>
nong 21 teams in<lb/>
arida State's<lb/>
lelassie.<lb/>
During the three -<lb/>
� ' urnament, five<lb/>
golfers: Chris<lb/>
Roger<lb/>
Am, .hin Riddle,<lb/>
d 11 Klcy and<lb/>
Stimari combtn-<lb/>
" 925 strokes to<lb/>
th Pirates in<lb/>
4tl pot.<lb/>
In team -tandings,<lb/>
the I n versity of<lb/>
F hda placed first<lb/>
� P5. FSU placed<lb/>
-  �ith 882.<lb/>
Mississippi State<lb/>
� third with<lb/>
 CJemson shot<lb/>
��' '� Fowl, place<lb/>
- Man nabbed<lb/>
" place with 902<lb/>
!r� L NC-Chapel<lb/>
raced ninth in<lb/>
: rnament.<lb/>
jja, a<lb/>
Sew<lb/>
pidt<lb/>
�- <lb/>
sophomore from Old<lb/>
Greenwich. Conn<lb/>
shot a consistent<lb/>
76-77-75 to lead the<lb/>
Pirates individually.<lb/>
Newsora, a<lb/>
freshman from Port-<lb/>
smouth. Va follow-<lb/>
ed with scores of<lb/>
76-80-73, for a total<lb/>
of 229 points.<lb/>
First-year coach<lb/>
Jerry Lee said he<lb/>
would hae liked for<lb/>
the team to have done<lb/>
better, but he wasn't<lb/>
really disappointed.<lb/>
'There were<lb/>
schools there that plav<lb/>
year round, and it's<lb/>
hard to compete with<lb/>
them he said. "Our<lb/>
weather has been bad<lb/>
here and we haven't<lb/>
had a chance to prac-<lb/>
tice as much as we<lb/>
need<lb/>
According to Lee,<lb/>
Florida wasn't all that<lb/>
sunny either. "The<lb/>
weather in Florida<lb/>
was terrible he said.<lb/>
'When we teed off<lb/>
Saturday, it was 37<lb/>
degrees and 30 mile-<lb/>
per-hour winds. Sun-<lb/>
day, it was just as<lb/>
bad; plus it rained<lb/>
Other Pirate leaders<lb/>
were Dooley, a<lb/>
freshman who shot<lb/>
78-77-79 for a score of<lb/>
234.<lb/>
Riddle, the only<lb/>
senior on the team<lb/>
shot 80-76-83 for a<lb/>
total of 239 strokes,<lb/>
while Stimart shot<lb/>
84-79-79 for an<lb/>
overall score of 242.<lb/>
In individual stan-<lb/>
dings, tournament<lb/>
leaders were: Jim<lb/>
Shuman (Florida),<lb/>
216; Julian Taylor<lb/>
(CTemson), 217; Steve<lb/>
Keppler (FSU), 219<lb/>
and John Morrow<lb/>
(FSU), 219.<lb/>
On March 4, 5 and<lb/>
6, the Pirates will<lb/>
travel to Fripp Island,<lb/>
S.C for the Fripp<lb/>
Island Invitational.<lb/>
Last Meet Of 1982<lb/>
Indoor Season Over<lb/>
B Randy Mews<lb/>
staff �mr<lb/>
The ECU men's<lb/>
ra team competed<lb/>
: their last indoor<lb/>
meet of the season<lb/>
this weekend, running<lb/>
In the George Mason<lb/>
Tn-Meet in Fairfax,<lb/>
VA.<lb/>
The Pirates took<lb/>
'he top two spots in<lb/>
'he 55-meter hurdles,<lb/>
with Craig White<lb/>
finishing first in 7.36<lb/>
and Walter<lb/>
joutherland taking<lb/>
second in 7.60.<lb/>
In another first-<lb/>
place finish, Ray<lb/>
Dickerson won the<lb/>
800 meters in 1:54.92,<lb/>
while Wayne Richard-<lb/>
son placed third in the<lb/>
event in 1:56.70.<lb/>
In the quarter mile,<lb/>
Rueben Pierce finish-<lb/>
ed third in 49.24,<lb/>
while Eddie Bradly<lb/>
came in fourth in<lb/>
49.50.<lb/>
Sprinters Nathan<lb/>
McCorkle and Henry<lb/>
Williams finished<lb/>
third and fifth respec-<lb/>
tively in the 55-meter<lb/>
dash. McCorkle<lb/>
finished the race in<lb/>
6.39 while Williams<lb/>
came in at 6.41.<lb/>
The mile-relay team<lb/>
of Bradly, Pierce,<lb/>
Wayne Miller and<lb/>
Keith Clarke came in<lb/>
second overall with at<lb/>
time of 3:19.4.<lb/>
The Pirates swept<lb/>
the long jump, taking<lb/>
See BROOKS, Page 10<lb/>
Pirate Tracksters<lb/>
In Prestigious Meet<lb/>
The ECU men's<lb/>
track team will com-<lb/>
pete in the 62nd An-<lb/>
nual Intercollegiate<lb/>
Association of<lb/>
Amateur Athletes of<lb/>
America Indoor<lb/>
Track and Field<lb/>
Championship at<lb/>
Princeton Universi-<lb/>
ty's Jadwin Gym-<lb/>
nasium on March 4, 5<lb/>
and 6.<lb/>
Over 1,100 of the<lb/>
hest collegiate track<lb/>
and field athletes<lb/>
from the east are ex-<lb/>
pected to participate.<lb/>
The meet gets<lb/>
underway Friday,<lb/>
March 4 at noon with<lb/>
tr)e pentathlon com-<lb/>
petition. The rest of<lb/>
the meet begins Satur-<lb/>
day, March 5 at 11:00<lb/>
a m. with trials in 14<lb/>
events. Finals in the<lb/>
35-pound weight<lb/>
throw and the long<lb/>
jump will also be con-<lb/>
ducted Saturday<lb/>
afternoon. Finals in<lb/>
the remaining 16<lb/>
events will begin Sun-<lb/>
day, March 6 at 1:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Defending cham-<lb/>
pion Fairleigh Dickin-<lb/>
son is among the 78<lb/>
schools that will be<lb/>
represented in this<lb/>
prestigious meet.<lb/>
Defending individual<lb/>
champions expected<lb/>
to compete are: Art<lb/>
McDermott of Boston<lb/>
University in the shot<lb/>
put, Rodney Wilson<lb/>
of Villanova in the 55<lb/>
meter hurdles, Ed<lb/>
Yearwood of Morgan<lb/>
State in the 400 meters<lb/>
and Leo Williams of<lb/>
Navy in the high<lb/>
jump. Williams, a<lb/>
senior, is also the two-<lb/>
time defending<lb/>
NCAA indoor jump<lb/>
champion and holder<lb/>
of the NCAA meet<lb/>
record, VS'A<lb/>
Other outstanding<lb/>
individuals expected<lb/>
to highlight the<lb/>
weekend's competi-<lb/>
tion are Harvard's<lb/>
Adam Dixon, the<lb/>
1981 IC4A 1,500<lb/>
meters champ, Dart-<lb/>
mouth's Jim Sapien-<lb/>
za, the 1982 Hep-<lb/>
tagonal cross-country<lb/>
champ, Maryland's<lb/>
Alan Baginski, 1981<lb/>
35-pound weight<lb/>
throw champ,<lb/>
Villanova's John<lb/>
Marshall, Syracuse's<lb/>
Jim O'Connell,<lb/>
Rutgers' Elliott<lb/>
Quow, Richmond's<lb/>
Edwin Koech, Set on<lb/>
Hall's quarter-milers<lb/>
Linval Francis,<lb/>
Washington Njiri and<lb/>
Tommie Nnakwe, and<lb/>
long distance runners<lb/>
Steve Binns and Geoff<lb/>
Smith of Providence,<lb/>
Paul Souza of Penn<lb/>
State, Fraser Hudgins<lb/>
of William and Mary<lb/>
and Bill Reifsnyder of<lb/>
Bucknell.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
WED &amp; THUR<lb/>
� NO <lb/>
VACANCY<lb/>
STUDENTS $1<lb/>
THURS ALL NIGHT<lb/>
ladies free till 10:30: s<lb/>
50CBEV. TILL 11:00<lb/>
A HOT HAM N CHEESE '<lb/>
� �i n. x g, . �j ,n  .nihnrut .n uuh im . hcr , flrr<lb/>
I'Wixrrrt Urn V lA-r.ihrHjKfiM<lb/>
)rCTRA stirDaivERTiF<lb/>
oe<lb/>
u<lb/>
u<lb/>
EXTRA SAUCE-FREE DELIVER V<lb/>
: A D VA NCED TICKE TS SO H ' 2<lb/>
IONS ALE AT BOTH RECORD �<lb/>
�BARS AND A PPLE RECORDS 2<lb/>
m<lb/>
a<lb/>
SAT.<lb/>
DRIVER<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
Tar Linding Seafood,<lb/>
F fUsUarut<lb/>
J IS<lb/>
� IM<lb/>
� 'vvxxxxxv <lb/>
All You Can Eat w g<lb/>
Specials  <lb/>
TuesTrout for $2.99<lb/>
Wed. &amp; Thors. night<lb/>
Shrimp for $5.99<lb/>
105 Airport Road Greenville, N.C<lb/>
752-3861<lb/>
SPECWLS<lb/>
,1403 DICKINSON AVE<lb/>
V<lb/>
ALANO S PIZZA!<lb/>
Look FREE PIZZA<lb/>
Buy Any 16" Pizza or More<lb/>
and I'll give you a 121 item<lb/>
Pizza FREE! Just Call Ahead<lb/>
and pick it up in 10 minutes.<lb/>
($5.25 Value)<lb/>
i<lb/>
c<lb/>
MonThurs. 4 PM to 1 AM<lb/>
Friday 4 PM to 2 AM<lb/>
Sat. 12 Noon to 2 AM<lb/>
Sun. 12 Noon to 12 Midnight<lb/>
Good Anytime<lb/>
No Coupon Necessary<lb/>
Not valid with any other<lb/>
special<lb/>
frrzsr<lb/>
Cheese4.30<lb/>
1 Item5.05<lb/>
2 Items5.80<lb/>
3 Items6.55<lb/>
4 Items7.30<lb/>
5 Items8.05<lb/>
Extra SauceFree<lb/>
Green Pepper Bacon Bits Thick CrustFree<lb/>
Price Per Item 75'<lb/>
Italian Sausage Hot Pepper The above pnces d0 nol loclude 4.c Ux<lb/>
Pineapple Double Cheese 16 ox. Coke PLUS 10 Bottle Deposit<lb/>
Menu:<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Mushroom<lb/>
Onion<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
Canadian Bacon<lb/>
Green Olives<lb/>
Black Olives<lb/>
1C" Lmn<lb/>
6.60<lb/>
7.75<lb/>
8.90<lb/>
10.05<lb/>
10.95<lb/>
12.35<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Free<lb/>
115<lb/>
$2.00 off<lb/>
A 4-ltem or More Pizza<lb/>
4-16 oz. COKES FREE<lb/>
� with the purchase of a Large 16" 4-<lb/>
! Item Pizza or More -One coupon per<lb/>
� nillfl .rncfAiHAr nnuc RaHIa fnl<lb/>
one coupon per Pizzo j"0 "Cus,O�2e0oSlueOle P01"<lb/>
JSJXTM<lb/>
A Large 16" Everything<lb/>
Pizza, (one coupon per pizza)<lb/>
752-3861"<lb/>
$1.00 off<lb/>
A large 3-ltem<lb/>
or More Pizza<lb/>
one coupon per Pizza<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
X<lb/>
c<lb/>
H<lb/>
H<lb/>
<lb/>
C<lb/>
o<lb/>
m<lb/>
r;<lb/>
<lb/>
2? FREE THICK CRUST FREET FREE DELIVERY A SAUCE-FREE DEUVERY FREE m<lb/>
Final Basketball Action<lb/>
of '83 Season<lb/>
Thursday: ECU vs. Penn State-Behrend<lb/>
7:30-Minges Coliseum<lb/>
"Senior Night"<lb/>
Saturday: Lady Pirates vs. U.N.C.<lb/>
�� M las n v Charlotte<lb/>
7:30Minges Coliseum<lb/>
"Senior Night"<lb/>
$200 Money Scramble<lb/>
Watch the Pirates attack,<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0010"/><lb/>
10 THEEASTCAROHNIAN MARCH 1,1981<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
DRP I'VE BEEN 'he craiy fool<lb/>
- not you I with I could turn back<lb/>
time and make things right I hope<lb/>
you'll accept my apology and let<lb/>
me try to make things right I love<lb/>
you. it's been my lots not yourj I<lb/>
am so sorry I hope you will at<lb/>
least forgive me and let me be<lb/>
your friend Love, ALWAYS AND<lb/>
FOREVER. Ml<lb/>
TO THE GIRL WHO KEEPS<lb/>
LEAVING love letters on my car<lb/>
You misspelled STUPID and<lb/>
"UGLY "<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Roanoke. Va<lb/>
or surrounding area for Spring<lb/>
Break Will share expenses Call<lb/>
Julie, alter 5 30 p m at 753 1317<lb/>
Julie is an equal opportunity rider.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED to Washington,<lb/>
D C . area Friday March 4 after 1<lb/>
p m Will split gas expenses Call<lb/>
7SJ 543 and ask for Chip<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST 3 YEAR OLD small black<lb/>
- female dog White markings on<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED chin and paws no tail Answers to<lb/>
3 bedroom apartment Village CLO Please call 7SI 330 alter<lb/>
Green Apartments, sptit rent and 4 00 p m if seen oi found<lb/>
utilities Male or female, call LOST GOLD SIGNET PINKY<lb/>
753 t�3 RING with mtitals "MSA<lb/>
engraved It found please call<lb/>
Marion Slaughter 753 1307<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE, experience quality work.<lb/>
IBM Selectric typewriter Call<lb/>
Lame Shive 75 5301 or GAIL<lb/>
JOYNER 75 103<lb/>
TYPING Term papers, thesis,<lb/>
etc Call Kempie Dunn, 753 �733<lb/>
AUDIO ELECTRONICS SER<lb/>
VICE Complete audio repair call<lb/>
after � p m Mark 753 1J�<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
CAPEHART STEREO lor sale<lb/>
V�0 has four speakers AM FM<lb/>
radio 3 speed BSR turntable and<lb/>
I track tape deck minor repairs<lb/>
needed Call (�l� 75 ??�4 bet<lb/>
ween 10 and 11pm and f I a m<lb/>
Ask for VINCE 34� Umstead<lb/>
'�'� HONDA 400 HAWK excellent<lb/>
condition Asking 5935. 753 1251<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS faculty staff<lb/>
Welcome to our flea market at the<lb/>
Pitt County Fairgrounds located<lb/>
on North Greenville Blvd Open<lb/>
every Saturday and Sunday I til 5<lb/>
Crafts tools furniture books etc<lb/>
Displays oi old postcards buttons,<lb/>
antique pistols and collectors<lb/>
items Real bargains<lb/>
1�7I DATSUN J402 S3 500<lb/>
752 13JJ<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK PARTY In<lb/>
eludes 7 nights and � days on The<lb/>
Strip in sunny Ft Lauderdale<lb/>
Fla various activities within<lb/>
walking distance including a tree<lb/>
keg daily at the Button Occupan<lb/>
cy available at three hotels with<lb/>
range in prices from t'35 00 For<lb/>
further info contact Beth or Lisa<lb/>
at 75 �573 or 757 3�3�<lb/>
HEAD TO THE BEACH Its not<lb/>
too late to spend Spring Break in<lb/>
sunny Daytona Beach I 7 nights<lb/>
beachfront on the strip Free par<lb/>
Ties with live band and unlimited<lb/>
kegs Volleyball T shirt tan.<lb/>
bellytlop and chugging contests<lb/>
Special discounts al the local bars<lb/>
All lor SI 10 00 For more inlorma<lb/>
lion, call 75 707 after 00<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENTS Want to<lb/>
ttrrt extra money from your room<lb/>
at your convenience? Unlimited<lb/>
earnings potential! Start your own<lb/>
business id take it with you<lb/>
wherever you go A unique way to<lb/>
save and make money If in<lb/>
terested call 753 0J0' 4 00<lb/>
p m 00 p m Monday through<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Brooks Earns 1st<lb/>
Cont'd From Pae 10<lb/>
the top four spots.<lb/>
Chris Brook's leap of<lb/>
25'V" earned him<lb/>
first place as well as a<lb/>
trip to the Nationals<lb/>
in Pontiac, Mich.<lb/>
Chris Mcl aughorn<lb/>
was second in the<lb/>
event with a jump of<lb/>
23'7 Donnell<lb/>
Shepard was third<lb/>
with 23 4" and Clif-<lb/>
ton King placed<lb/>
fourth with a leap of<lb/>
22'IOV.<lb/>
In the other field<lb/>
event, Arthur Burke<lb/>
triple-jumped<lb/>
47 91 10 place<lb/>
third, while Clifton<lb/>
King finished fourth,<lb/>
jumping 46'7<lb/>
Despite the Pirates'<lb/>
overall success in the<lb/>
meet, they could have<lb/>
done much better, ac-<lb/>
cording to head coach<lb/>
Bud C arson. "1 think<lb/>
the long ride to Fair-<lb/>
fax affected our per-<lb/>
formance; we arrived<lb/>
late and didn't have<lb/>
time to properly warm<lb/>
up<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN abortion icWf<lb/>
DEPEND ON. stonthol � � aoe easie .<lb/>
�he wcrner ot" �� � �� � ' ; � ��"��' Counselors are<lb/>
available day ana r g- re sv-rr " w i it :��'<lb/>
stand you Your sa'e � ' r 1 : � . 1 . :��-<lb/>
assured Dv �necanng stn" '�� ���� � �  ��<lb/>
SERVICES: � Tuesday -� Saturaav Abortion �'�:<lb/>
pomtmentsB 1st 8 2nd Trimester Abortions up to<lb/>
18 Weeks � free Pregnancy Tes's � ery Early<lb/>
Pregnancy Tes?s � �'� .�. .e Fees � insu'ance<lb/>
Accepted � CALL 761-5550 DAY OR NIGHT �<lb/>
Healthcare counseling tuc ei riJikis-<lb/>
and educat.cn for wo THE FLEMING<lb/>
r-ner of a" ages CENTER<lb/>
Western Steer,<lb/>
Family<lb/>
STS21KK0VSE<lb/>
'<lb/>
Banquet &amp; Party Facilities tor 5<lb/>
to 150 Persons Toke Out Orders<lb/>
3�05 E. lit St GrMfivill Coll 758-8550<lb/>
OowSin�Tliur.H�m-pii� Friday-Saturaay llam-te<lb/>
Win up to<lb/>
100000<lb/>
in FREE groceries!<lb/>
Hundndt of �i�Mrs<lb/>
Details it Feed lit<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Loin<lb/>
25 lb Bit B��f Dry<lb/>
M 00 Off Itbnl<lb/>
Alpo Dog Food<lb/>
289<lb/>
3109<lb/>
89<lb/>
299<lb/>
16 0: Cut Frtneh<lb/>
Del Monte Green Beans tfgfo<lb/>
99<lb/>
42 Ounea<lb/>
17 0 Whole Crttm Style<lb/>
Dei Monte Golden Com Trend Detergent<lb/>
Quart 1 Lb Mar�ar.M Quarters<lb/>
JFC Mayonnaise gj Mrs. Filbert's<lb/>
31<lb/>
iw<lb/>
14 0; Hortitattt Bttf Li�r Caickta<lb/>
tVmti B��f<lb/>
64 Sa. Downy<lb/>
Fabric Softener fe, Alpo Dog Food<lb/>
M Ountt<lb/>
 Del Monte<lb/>
2? Catsup<lb/>
Why Pay 1 19<lb/>
CATSUP<lb/>
A<lb/>
?<lb/>
 - ? �<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0011"/><lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0012"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Presenting High Bias<lb/>
the Ultimate Tape Guarantee<lb/>
Memorex presents High Bias II. a tape so extra-<lb/>
ordinary, we're going to guarantee it foyever.<lb/>
Yfell guarantee life-like sound.<lb/>
Extraordinarily flat frequency response at zero<lb/>
dB recording levels, combined with remarkably<lb/>
low noise levels, means music is captured live.<lb/>
Then Permapass;v our unique oxide-bonding process,<lb/>
'locks each oxide particle-each musical detail-onto<lb/>
the tape. So music stays live. Not just the 1st play<lb/>
Or the 1000th. But forever. i <lb/>
Wll guaraotee the cass<lb/>
We ve engineered every facet of our transport mechanism<lb/>
to protect the tape. Our waved-wafer improves tape-wind.<lb/>
Silicone-treatecfrollersinsureprecise alignment and<lb/>
smooth, safe tape movement. To protect trie tape and<lb/>
mechanism, we've surrounded them with a remarkable<lb/>
cassette housing made rigid and strong by a mold<lb/>
design unique to Memorex. � �<lb/>
Well guarantee them forever.<lb/>
If you ever become dissatisfied with<lb/>
Memorex High Bias II. for any reason,<lb/>
simply mail the tape back and we'll<lb/>
replace it free<lb/>
' y -<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
JBMBMMf<lb/>
IS IT UK,<lb/>
OR IS IT<lb/>
JW-<lb/>
Wife<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0013"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
K<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
eMOVIE<lb/>
M A G A Z 1 N<lb/>
features<lb/>
MONTY PYTHON'S<lb/>
THE MEANING OF TIFF<lb/>
British (. ii :ii (<lb/>
3<lb/>
El. SPFAKS IN MANY<lb/>
LANGUAGES<lb/>
; Of) World Short) Mtiki -<lb/>
! tlol)(ll i HI II i l I, in,<lb/>
PSYCHO II<lb/>
 �ifhmr, l'i i.� - Ui  � �<lb/>
flu St � in nl flii 11 iin<lb/>
PREVIEWS<lb/>
S, m Perm in Bad Boys, k �<lb/>
Doligltls Cf John Si Iiiu iili i in<lb/>
1 i Idle l.ii i hi s Run is l'i ' �<lb/>
C.ate in l'i ivatt S Ih.hI<lb/>
DOCTOR DETROIT<lb/>
Dim krod First S<lb/>
Stdiini It" i<lb/>
6<lb/>
8<lb/>
10<lb/>
14<lb/>
OUR COVER<lb/>
Dun At,ri'ii woopeti around oi <lb/>
 hi;i n. ,i ith mil hi i iit'iI i hii 11 � � i<lb/>
mi Iti word, fi'i  iiilt phi ' i<lb/>
i uilii i I hi. lit li xamh �<lb/>
left<lb/>
e r s<lb/>
MOVIE<lb/>
w <lb/>
I i<lb/>
I I I M s "<lb/>
( 1111<lb/>
I .1 I '<lb/>
I ' I I KM<lb/>
 l i 111 I v<lb/>
S I . I K ! ��<lb/>
I I W I S S<lb/>
  � .  )<lb/>
E<lb/>
si<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0014"/><lb/>
At last! What we've all<lb/>
been waiting for! Monty<lb/>
Pythons The Meaning of Life,<lb/>
in which are answered many<lb/>
meaningful questions, in which<lb/>
we see lots of blood, men in<lb/>
women's clothing, women with very<lb/>
large mammaries, and all the usual<lb/>
tasteful Pythonesque weirdness.<lb/>
IM 1 1 1 () H N S I () I<lb/>
f<lb/>
B<lb/>
,<lb/>
liUHl v.i<lb/>
 i 11 nth<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0015"/><lb/>
left, Palin, (<lb/>
andhapina � eft t<lb/>
 iht. in utnfoi m<lb/>
nisjt,l c ier no<lb/>
bit nf x i ml mal � i r<lb/>
n bit h is luppnst ,7 <lb/>
main us t 11 wi i and<lb/>
(fin asy as da n.<lb/>
���n  !i hi -<lb/>
it la' left, . i �<lb/>
Joiii in di an 'his<lb/>
tunt . in mil i,i his<lb/>
)a: hi ili i , <lb/>
frumpy British<lb/>
huus,  if, l , i, <lb/>
limks spookih liki an<lb/>
i mi in an  I, . isi<lb/>
' t llillnii fie i.<lb/>
Hi Int It It. this is not<lb/>
a scent f � li �r!<lb/>
 � am � I hi U an<lb/>
int" nationu ui<lb/>
March 25<lb/>
The Jensen RE530 travels ina dass<lb/>
by itself.<lb/>
Car audio performance moves much<lb/>
further down the road, with the new Jensen"<lb/>
RE530 electronically tuned stereo cassette<lb/>
receiver. By continuously self-adjusting for<lb/>
signal quality, our Automatic Program Con-<lb/>
trol makesexcellent reception of oofrj local<lb/>
and distant signals possible. And coupled<lb/>
with ou r 4-element tuner and double bal-<lb/>
anced mixer, the RE530delivers the best FM<lb/>
performance on the road<lb/>
The RE530 is packed with other great<lb/>
features, too. Like auto reverse and tape<lb/>
search. Dolby" and Dynamic Noise Reduc-<lb/>
tion systems, and Jensens exclusive<lb/>
Flex-Fader' circuitry that lets you use an<lb/>
external amp while still utilizing the RE530<lb/>
internal amplifier. It s simply the most com-<lb/>
plete package of top sound performance in<lb/>
car audio today. And maybe tomorrow<lb/>
JENSEN<lb/>
CAR AUDIO<lb/>
When it's the sound<lb/>
that moves you.<lb/>
,� Jensen Sound Laboratories 1963 Dolby" and DolbySystem' are the registered trademarks<lb/>
of Dolby Laboratories, Inc DNR is a registered trademark of National Semiconductor Corporation<lb/>
i M I<lb/>
v v -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0016"/><lb/>
sc -<lb/>
1<lb/>
1 <lb/>
 � - N �<lb/>
- .<lb/>
- -<lb/>
t k.l<lb/>
��� - -<lb/>
SUl1 II<lb/>
- <lb/>
 II. IV<lb/>
-<lb/>
IVhili<lb/>
i<lb/>
: sv ; , ' i<lb/>
l � � t � ! �. s m �:<lb/>
� -<lb/>
- ' ' .<lb/>
' It  ,<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
I  ' ' I<lb/>
,<lb/>
-<lb/>
I <lb/>
- -<lb/>
 .<lb/>
���-�-<lb/>
'�� - � . <lb/>
 � ' i<lb/>
' If fVlfNS<lb/>
- �<lb/>
' ' '<lb/>
, ,<lb/>
i<lb/>
�<lb/>
,<lb/>
V� Mi in.l i H.<lb/>
<lb/>
I . ' I 1 . Rtl <lb/>
Ut -<lb/>
,<lb/>
H i ' is<lb/>
I � � �<lb/>
In It ' � ' . � � , .<lb/>
- : I ' ' . �  , , �<lb/>
 ' '  if <lb/>
I tllf f ,S c s<lb/>
� ��� liifxt- Bui<lb/>
it- <lb/>
n<lb/>
,i sum<lb/>
'�'<lb/>
Vi li � Li a U,<lb/>
i-v  ,<lb/>
I tfiiiili<lb/>
nil is. in<lb/>
' - f .inn Inn ,<lb/>
� i in it i w h.it i hi � f.n �<lb/>
 ��a- 1 limit, n, isLfd ihi<lb/>
 . �� -<lb/>
Il' f Sf, ifi It I l,<lb/>
I Hill tfll Mllllfllllf flv Wll.l<lb/>
U s l,<lb/>
I I<lb/>
Part nf tin fun � bring a<lb/>
l'thnn is that you iit to dn n<lb/>
nf in women's clothes. Hard !�<lb/>
till, hut its nut guess that<lb/>
( hafnium is wearing the ifarti i<lb/>
belt, whili urn waves fuini<lb/>
arms about, and tht less said<lb/>
dhiiut tht thud member of thi-<lb/>
ti in. the better.<lb/>
!<lb/>
I vf I '� -v � i  � Ms hi, ,i h,i<lb/>
I 111 �. .1 lltf Is '<lb/>
- - ' ill : �� II1.1II H hi l<lb/>
Hi I l s miiitif i<lb/>
 � � I ' It'll ,llf�l .l! lilt I<lb/>
III '  I in, m .  .  <lb/>
 tit lift H 1st lift'<lb/>
��� � �; Imtlu't ti n� ami stt<lb/>
H ii n is it-f.ilfi! ,n tht- i<lb/>
I i In �<lb/>
1 � � � I 111 till i  i! : � 1)1 till<lb/>
mmit'll . ih.i I have. in 1.1 I.<lb/>
lovftctl Kill It anklv, il mil w<lb/>
IVl II U ill t , 1st . Ml<lb/>
lit I � '� � linvi a! 'i ml !im<lb/>
: s<lb/>
( � � � ti. iu. I'm t.ilkn .<lb/>
itititif 1 iiif.iu, what i i<lb/>
in ihis him. .is inn iniisi u<lb/>
'it i it t . .1 .iiIiiiinnioii. <lb/>
stl Ut tllljJ .t ilt III .ill I lit �<lb/>
tll.lllt Ilfftl t�l Is 11' � vs III (<lb/>
iJaf .i tultilliiii; ami mtlfftl 'It i<lb/>
sii ii ii. il lid .mil it that mii wi<lb/>
i lit' i h f . l .i . num.i seat, el<lb/>
: " ' I M i. . .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0017"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE UNITED WAY<lb/>
ISAGIFTWEGIVE<lb/>
EACH OTHER<lb/>
FOR BEING HUMAN.<lb/>
Sometimes its not easy being human. Medical<lb/>
libraries are filled with diseases of the body and mind.<lb/>
.And, as if that weren't enough, we humans tend<lb/>
to create many of our own problems.<lb/>
Drugs. Child abuse. Family squabbles. The list<lb/>
goes on and on. I<lb/>
Things we don't<lb/>
mean to do, but<lb/>
end up doing<lb/>
to each other and<lb/>
ourselves.<lb/>
It's all pail<lb/>
of being human,<lb/>
and all part of<lb/>
why there's a<lb/>
United Way.<lb/>
The United<lb/>
Way is an organi-<lb/>
zation devoted to<lb/>
making it easier<lb/>
to deed with the<lb/>
problems of being<lb/>
human. An organization dedicated to making humanity<lb/>
more humane.<lb/>
.And since each of us is responsible for keeping<lb/>
the United Way successful, it's like a gift we give to each<lb/>
other for being human.<lb/>
A gift in the best of human traditions:<lb/>
sharing. Thanks to you.<lb/>
m<lb/>
�i<lb/>
Thanks to you It works For all oF us United Way<lb/>
'VV<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0018"/><lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0019"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
wj<lb/>
<lb/>
E.T. Phones Home<lb/>
 Japanese, Portuguese, French, Italian. Spanish<lb/>
(niawc eve)i Russian someday)<lb/>
H PA l' 1 KOS I A<lb/>
i i<lb/>
 f<lb/>
N<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0020"/><lb/>
' t v,i<lb/>
J��Ar<lb/>
-<lb/>
Anthony Perkins Is<lb/>
Long-Awaited Sequel to<lb/>
Hitchcock's 1960 Thriller<lb/>
BY ZAN STEWART<lb/>
n aaute craftsman who<lb/>
possesses abundant re-<lb/>
sources, actor Anthony<lb/>
Perkins has displayed<lb/>
' his talent in all manner<lb/>
i of dramatic and com-<lb/>
 edic roles throughout<lb/>
his distinguished and lengthy film and<lb/>
stage career. On the screen, he's graced<lb/>
�uch diverse works as William Wyler's<lb/>
Friendly Persuasion (1956). where he was<lb/>
Gary Cooper's Quaker son. and Alan<lb/>
Rudolph's sadly neglected Remember My<lb/>
Same (I978K where he performed with his<lb/>
wife, photographer Berry Berenson.<lb/>
Perkins is master of the self-conscious<lb/>
twitch, the nervous, awkward stance of a<lb/>
desperate, misunderstood boyman. He's<lb/>
played a number of weirdos, from Pntty<lb/>
Poisons helpless neurotic to the cold-<lb/>
blooded husband of Sophia Loren in Five<lb/>
Miles to Midnight, the hapless homosexual<lb/>
photographer opposite Diana Ross in<lb/>
Mahogany, and die anxious secretary in<lb/>
Murder on the Orient Express. Throughout<lb/>
these roles Perkins was always appealing �<lb/>
though sometimes perversely so. Most<lb/>
women who watched him believed (and<lb/>
still do) that his characters (and, by exten-<lb/>
sion, Perkins himself) would be just fine<lb/>
and dandy with a little compassion and<lb/>
mothering, some good food (he's so<lb/>
thin ), some love.<lb/>
Among those numerous roles, there's no<lb/>
doubt that Perkins' most memorable, and<lb/>
perhaps most effective, work was done in<lb/>
Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho, the gruesome<lb/>
thriller shot in I960. As Norman Bates, the<lb/>
shy, stuttering and violently repressed<lb/>
owner and sole caretaker of the Bates<lb/>
Motel. Perkins deftly incorporated the<lb/>
elements of sly humor and grisly terror<lb/>
that Hitchcock loved into a performance<lb/>
that kept viewers entranced.<lb/>
Twenty-two years later, it seems few have<lb/>
forgotten PerkinsBates or Psycho, so. by<lb/>
popular demand, we have Psycho II. The<lb/>
sequel is a co-production of Universal Pic-<lb/>
tures and the Oak Media Development<lb/>
Corporation, headed by Bernard<lb/>
Schwartz. Schwartz is the project's execu-<lb/>
tive producer and Hilton Green, who was<lb/>
the first assistant director of the original<lb/>
I mHxtn of the IH�origimmt, the rotmm-<lb/>
tits gkmmity m, VnhxTsmTs<lb/>
 umtmumkk in the spring.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0021"/><lb/>
m I 3, . .<lb/>
rVr� and worked wkh Hkchcock many<lb/>
,7 times, it the producer. Australian<lb/>
filmmaker Richard Franklin, in ha Ameri-<lb/>
script by Tom Holland.<lb/>
Though Perkins' drdiration 10 his craft<lb/>
is unquestioned, he would be the first to<lb/>
admit that his first priority is his family �<lb/>
Berensun and their two children, fmnjod<lb/>
�n. r� , ?'<lb/>
cover of evergreens in the Hollywood<lb/>
Hills. In his living room, where colorful<lb/>
planks of a hardwood floor, the actor re-<lb/>
laxes and talks about the sequel.<lb/>
On the one hand, he mused, who would<lb/>
have thought there was any more to idl,<lb/>
what with Norman safely tucked away m<lb/>
an institution; but, on the other, "Mayf<lb/>
after a twenty-two-year wait he says,<lb/>
makes the storyeasier to perpetuate, to get<lb/>
' 's no good if<lb/>
were quite open about changes. I've found<lb/>
that the bigger the talent, the more that all'<lb/>
concerned are secure with their materials<lb/>
and their talents, then the more likely it is<lb/>
dence in fib own work in the world<lb/>
As does Perkins b FranUm, whose<lb/>
I"1 �"ng Stacy Reach and Jamie Lee<lb/>
Curus. "He seemed ideal for the job the<lb/>
actor comments. "Here's a young guy<lb/>
who's passionately interested in the thriller<lb/>
flew, who's made a couple already, who<lb/>
him very well, and knew all of Hitchcock's<lb/>
films as well, plus he has that sense of<lb/>
humor that Hkchcock had<lb/>
The original Psycho was a (Hack, 30-day<lb/>
�. L niversaTs Studio Cky lot, where the<lb/>
Bates Motel, and Norman's home behind<lb/>
classics of F.W.<lb/>
Hitchcock's as The Loigrt. the 1926<lb/>
about Jack the Ripper that in ways r<lb/>
biesPswa<lb/>
Transferring the Mack<lb/>
says, this was achieved In-<lb/>
deep dark Macks. So often, when<lb/>
seeks to have a black and wain<lb/>
colors will be muted, as wkh the<lb/>
tensky. 1 like to call this process black and<lb/>
color<lb/>
The commercial viability of Put ho It<lb/>
brought out Perkins' observations on die<lb/>
ana some Wueprints. Sett were also ar-<lb/>
ranged as dose to the original as possible.<lb/>
paid oil and Perkins complimented them<lb/>
when he mid that being on the set i<lb/>
 iU 8�ng home Abo making the<lb/>
her role as LUa from the original film.<lb/>
Working wkh Miles. Perkins says, "was<lb/>
very good, better than the first time<lb/>
To achieve the lone and fed of a psycho-<lb/>
logical thriller, cinematographer Dean<lb/>
ter on The Thing, Escape from Sew York and<lb/>
others), and director Franklin studied films<lb/>
of the German Expressionist movement<lb/>
which employed exaggerated sets and<lb/>
this Psycho II, and all that's required b di<lb/>
k be good. This is sort of a throwback j<lb/>
the Forties, when people went to sec pic<lb/>
tures, just as long as they were good.<lb/>
movies or they d id n't, there<lb/>
thing else to spend their ent<lb/>
dollar on.<lb/>
spend inonev on, and Uus means tl<lb/>
and good stories, don't get seen. That's<lb/>
discouraging.<lb/>
-So with Psycho II, the burden<lb/>
made the film. We know there are no<lb/>
cuses for Psycho II not to make k at the box<lb/>
picture simply has to be good<lb/>
as the original which, though gothic and<lb/>
bizarre, was basically a small town story<lb/>
that had its basis in the commonplace in-<lb/>
gredients of our society, like people own-<lb/>
ing motels and operating small hnikwii"<lb/>
Psycho II begins wkh Norman Bates<lb/>
being released from custody and judged fit<lb/>
for society. He returns to Fan-vile and his<lb/>
motd, the operation of which has been<lb/>
casually overseen by a local bank. Norman<lb/>
aho takes a part-time job in a diner, where<lb/>
he meets Mary, played by Meg Tilly. Mary<lb/>
is down on her luck and b suddenly with-<lb/>
out a place to five, so Norman offers her a<lb/>
room at the motd. free of charge.<lb/>
But. and this is a whale of a but, while<lb/>
Norman's been away, the bank has allowed<lb/>
the Bates Motel to operate as an adult<lb/>
moid, catering to one-hour rentals, and<lb/>
Perkins, slipping humorously into charac-<lb/>
ter, adds, "Norman doesn't care for that<lb/>
Recapturing the persona of Bates. Per-<lb/>
ins says, wasn't too hard. "I just got under<lb/>
the skin or the guy Perkins aho had the<lb/>
support of Franklin and Holland, two very<lb/>
cooperative and confident talents.<lb/>
"In a couple of instances Perkins<lb/>
elaborates, "Richard and Tom and I would<lb/>
lalk and I'd say. Well. Norman just<lb/>
wouldn't do something like this and they<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0022"/><lb/>
"<lb/>
Bad Boys<lb/>
li Kill l(Kl s n <lb/>
T<lb/>
-<lb/>
� � "<lb/>
I !i HMI<lb/>
II - �<lb/>
l� ll<lb/>
- In<lb/>
d oj a brumt ,�,�� streak in his private i<lb/>
and the lovabU St,  ,T . P p' �'� vo��� art- s.�� ��,�� ������, � hlllih ,� ,<lb/>
� '� V��  Fasi rimes ai Ridgemonl High turned deadh earnest for his slot in Bad liL<lb/>
-����� i ihen i � � <lb/>
I ��! Ill� 11 V 11 I u , s . 1<lb/>
' ' � ' I - .�: i I) � 11 <lb/>
il<lb/>
�' ' " ' tlll.il y il.r.n<lb/>
i <lb/>
I<lb/>
i lots R( : .<lb/>
I<lb/>
III HI �<lb/>
: tllWl<lb/>
rtii<lb/>
li, -<lb/>
i �<lb/>
: �<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
I If I<lb/>
.<lb/>
11<lb/>
l hi � �<lb/>
i � �<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
S'llll<lb/>
IM'lll<lb/>
W.IN<lb/>
hi 1<lb/>
I hi I <lb/>
! M.<lb/>
li<lb/>
I <lb/>
lllfv � <lb/>
I M � � I I<lb/>
i h.i i<lb/>
- � ' :<lb/>
'  i. I II1.JKC<lb/>
I l.lkt' III '111 I'<lb/>
lliyln � , :<lb/>
' I 'iii-<lb/>
llhoiii  ;<lb/>
i.iirh .inn v ml, m Bui i . .<lb/>
�' ' '  �'� : "  li  i II  i lllll<lb/>
' ' " I  I I I lllH'MI<lb/>
ll !� IllllH flfN<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0023"/><lb/>
yH,<lb/>
kT4<lb/>
Capture the heat of the momentin dazzling, sizzling hot color.<lb/>
No matter how fast it's happening With Kodak film.<lb/>
For sharp, beautiful shots that scream color.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0024"/><lb/>
UiHiurd�-<lb/>
Shod, . can  dim kirk Douglas<lb/>
 -�"� I lauman looking<lb/>
I" squar, h, problems � his pas<lb/>
h a succi ssful manhunt. Ihtue<lb/>
I fuels tddie Vlacons Ru<lb/>
utth a complex, nearh maniacal<lb/>
i hm (a  , r �<lb/>
Eddie<lb/>
Macon's<lb/>
Run<lb/>
,M s I ' I B.4RVH<lb/>
kill<lb/>
� , <lb/>
l� lru,t  ,h, prtckh peat cactm<lb/>
"Hi d lll,s iouth of tht h�r-<lb/>
'� sustains prison . ,�;�, �<lb/>
St hn, �i, , ,� a harsh land 1. r ddu<lb/>
Waron m l),l� VfaconV. K.m. th,<lb/>
'�� tus m almost hi, only �,<lb/>
�<lb/>
' ' i  x<lb/>
'�-<lb/>
H K S . s<lb/>
A<lb/>
 I kl<lb/>
i' , .<lb/>
� t II,<lb/>
�<lb/>
: ii<lb/>
��� . ' � ' �<lb/>
-��ii ' �<lb/>
 - ' -<lb/>
'<lb/>
Him in <lb/>
� ����: �, ; <lb/>
11<lb/>
 � <lb/>
I I<lb/>
' : - -<lb/>
' ' ' � � lll.<lb/>
����<lb/>
� ' I Hill<lb/>
I III -i ' '  <lb/>
l.UI U SI, in<lb/>
I �!(:(<lb/>
k.i , �� nun<lb/>
 L<lb/>
'  will<lb/>
I � �<lb/>
X l III h<lb/>
I Ii I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0025"/><lb/>
Inflation is threatening the evolution<lb/>
of higher education. -00,�<lb/>
Naturalist<lb/>
i 11 k"?0011 nipg everyone struggle harder for survival these days. So why<lb/>
-should we be particularly concerned over what its doing to higher education?<lb/>
�� I rfrl ilfl � I kl I� 1 �� �"�"�' TVliA'i<lb/>
 need? If laboratories don't have all the latest equipment? If courses on subjects<lb/>
 we've never even heard of have to be dropped?If, in fact, a number of colleges<lb/>
actually have to go out of business?<lb/>
Yes, it does matter what happens to<lb/>
higher education. Because higher<lb/>
education is essential to our survival.<lb/>
Our colleges and universities<lb/>
supply most of the basic research<lb/>
upon which technological progress<lb/>
is built. They also educate the<lb/>
young men and women who will<lb/>
guide the course and develop-<lb/>
ment of this technology and give j<lb/>
it humane ends and purposes.<lb/>
Right now we need these<lb/>
young people's ideas more than V<lb/>
ever before. So that we can deal<lb/>
more effectively with the problems<lb/>
of inflation, energy and lagging<lb/>
productivity. So mat we can move<lb/>
a little closer to the establishment<lb/>
of peace and the protection of our<lb/>
environment.<lb/>
So please give generously<lb/>
to the college of your choice.<lb/>
The money you mve could<lb/>
decide a lot more than the future<lb/>
of education.<lb/>
It could help decide the future<lb/>
of life as we know it.<lb/>
Help!<lb/>
Give to the college<lb/>
of your choice.<lb/>
and The Airman Gunol<lb/>
Coundi �� financial Aid n EdwMM. k�c<lb/>
MP fifth Avenue Nrw Yotk. NY hVI�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0026"/><lb/>
doctor Detroit Will SeeYou Now<lb/>
&amp; vice versa<lb/>
BY GENE SIS K E L<lb/>
( hicago hihum moim (iti<lb/>
a xt ArLr unvn tes the firs' 'nkr<lb/>
A rvl JrYrvWi LJ � himseii -what's<lb/>
m m blue and sings alone?" he asks. "Dan tykrovd<lb/>
m W 1 li.it Aykroyd can tell su h .1 joke indicah s lit- has been<lb/>
.ililc iii deal with the death ol Ins best Friend and show<lb/>
business partner, fohn Beiushi.<lb/>
"Mint- than mivsmi; the work we might have done together, I miss<lb/>
him � .1 friend whom I could call any time oi the day or night He was<lb/>
.ilw.is happ to see mo. .md 1 was always happ) id sec him I here vv.is<lb/>
ven lnilc Friction between us. I can't think ol am argument<lb/>
that evei lasted more than 24 hours.<lb/>
li was nnc nl iln- great Friendships ol the decade, it<lb/>
iint the century Aykroyd s.is with ,i big grin, "and it<lb/>
will i;n diiwn .is such, 1 ihmk<lb/>
"John and 1 knew that n wouldn't last Forevei We<lb/>
used in s.n, � 1 'he t.isi die young; leave a good-<lb/>
looking corpse In the bat k ol his he.id he knew<lb/>
thai one d.i he might heat that I had been killed on<lb/>
m hike, .md 1 knew that nnc d.i I might heat that<lb/>
he had gone out through his own physical clumsiness<lb/>
ui the w.i he .u tualh went<lb/>
"Look, we both wmked hard and played hard lioi<lb/>
the Funeral m Fathei told me something He said he<lb/>
had been prepared Foi years to get .1 call saying. Youi<lb/>
si in is in .i box<lb/>
"I itimk dhn and 1 are typical ol out generation<lb/>
he s.is. tn w.i dt bringing the subjeel to .1<lb/>
close "We live life to the Fullest (now). We<lb/>
don't wail cautioush and plan out live<lb/>
Mavbe it we weie Sons ol H.ii.m<lb/>
wed Ik mine cautious, but that's<lb/>
iini whd we are. I ride .i motor-<lb/>
cycle, and it it weren't against the<lb/>
law Id ride without m helmet<lb/>
Win did Beiushi die and k-<lb/>
himI survive? Aykroyd himsell<lb/>
m.n inn have the answer, but to<lb/>
thiiso whd knew Imlh men. the .in<lb/>
swei is obvious. Aykroyd is more<lb/>
dt .i thinkei and .i wrkei than .i<lb/>
Free spit it. Mis humoi is more<lb/>
restrained and cerebral than<lb/>
physical. He h.is ,( machine-like<lb/>
mind thai spits out Fat is. not<lb/>
IihmI mi .i IimmI fight.<lb/>
I vi had some wild times he<lb/>
says "Inn I'm prett) cautious,<lb/>
even though I take i isks I've<lb/>
Ik-cii instructed in m doctoi to<lb/>
stop drinking. He told me to cool<lb/>
ii. because ol some blood indi-<lb/>
(.Hois And I have (in down, but<lb/>
it's awfulh h.ud not to throw back<lb/>
.1 hoer nl iwn "<lb/>
Aykroyd's him and IV careei has<lb/>
not slowed down a hii. He can Ik- seen<lb/>
on an occasional IV special hosted li<lb/>
the hkes ol Steve Martin oi an) othei<lb/>
(oiiiH ol the Saturday Night In, mold<lb/>
And Aykroyd, 33, is receiving top billing<lb/>
m his next movie. Doctor Detroit, a coin-<lb/>
ed) due tin nationwide release M.n ti. it<lb/>
which tykrovd plays a jekyll-and-Hyde<lb/>
iole. a college English profcssoi who<lb/>
masquerades as a ive-talking pimp m<lb/>
an effort to protect a string "I prosti-<lb/>
tutes from getting beaten up.<lb/>
Vvkroyd's charactei is named Chi<lb/>
skndlow. andClifTsspeciah) in Engiisl<lb/>
ti<lb/>
literature is the subjeel ol chivaln One da) while logging down the<lb/>
street,hit bumps into a pimp named Smooth (Howard Hesseman).<lb/>
whd has wiggled his wa) out ol an unpleasant confrontation with local<lb/>
mobsters l blaming his problems on a nonexistent "big, had dude'<lb/>
named Dot tot Detroit<lb/>
Atteihit spends some time m a hot luh wnh Foui nt Smooth's<lb/>
finest women, he agrees to become the fictitious Doctoi Detroit in an<lb/>
effort in s.ne the damsels in distress Chivaln and all thai<lb/>
Exterioi filming on Doctot Detroit took place last summei in Chicago<lb/>
In Chicago Vykroyd is regarded as an honorar) nncn Ik-<lb/>
cause nt Ins friendship wnh home-town lo Beiushi and<lb/>
lecause t hicago was the location ol Vykrovd's greatest<lb/>
film sin (ss. 1 Hlu, - Brothers, w 111 h be ame a snilii<lb/>
am moneymakei despite an outrageous production<lb/>
(iisi and mam negative reviews<lb/>
wkroyd has had leading roles in the movies Ik-Ium-<lb/>
Doctoi Detroit - , Blues Brothers and etghhors - hui<lb/>
Doctoi Detroit represents the lust nine he is being asked tn<lb/>
i ai i a movie without the chemistn and good will guaran<lb/>
u-ed by Beiushi Hollywood executives will Ik- liNikmu to<lb/>
the snss nt Doctot Detroit to see it vvkrovd can Ik liked<lb/>
 an audience � which can be crucial tm a movie siai �<lb/>
as much as he is admired foi his abilities as a mimu<lb/>
Aykroyd knows the issue well, the difference between<lb/>
K-inu liked .md being admired It's the diffei<lb/>
cine between playing the lead charactei oi<lb/>
ns oddball inidiU It's a difference thai<lb/>
can Ik- worth (500,000 a picture<lb/>
I nlike iilm I don i pl.n i h.it ,k<lb/>
his thai the audience (loves) I'm<lb/>
flattered enough that the) jusi<lb/>
want in see me I don'l mind Ik-<lb/>
ing ilu- Frankenstein oi comedy, it<lb/>
that's wh.it .im have It iends<lb/>
v ho h.n e line m I hen heal Is<lb/>
tin me. sn that I don't need In<lb/>
gel thai kind nt response in<lb/>
lei ins nt v, icen idles I'm .i uui<lb/>
( enai � a lined, t onii .n ted<lb/>
agent and I just do m oli.<lb/>
sn. and that's n<lb/>
ktod gives his "es. sn<lb/>
response in a rapid-fire speet h<lb/>
pattern thai sounds a lot like a<lb/>
(loss between his l pm h-<lb/>
inaii on Saturday Sight Live �<lb/>
"Isn't thai amazing � and his<lb/>
mimu i on the same show nl<lb/>
i he nl Ik idiis-w hen i hailenged<lb/>
hmi Snyder.<lb/>
Regardless oi the success ol Doctot I,<lb/>
timt. Aykroyd's movie careei is not going<lb/>
to blow away. I his wintei he was bus)<lb/>
working in New Yoik (in wnh the ted<lb/>
mi Eddie Mm pin on Trading Places<lb/>
(former!) tided Hl,i k and White), a corn-<lb/>
ed) due tm summei release, due, ted b)<lb/>
John Land is (The Blues Brothers)<lb/>
Othet film and television projects writ-<lb/>
ten b) Aykroyd are in the woiks. too. He<lb/>
sas he hkes I V � and llus m.n come as<lb/>
a surprise � lot financial reasons<lb/>
His only previous starring roles<lb/>
(The Blues Brother. Neighbors.<lb/>
and 1941) also starred the late John<lb/>
Beiushi. Will audiences embrace<lb/>
Aykroyd alone as heartily as they<lb/>
did the Aykroyd-Betushi duo?<lb/>
�<lb/>
ii in i t wntK<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0027"/><lb/>
r ����'<lb/>
IBS'<lb/>
ttr<lb/>
tour '<lb/>
rid.<lb/>
shit<lb/>
sttr<lb/>
i m the middle, taking<lb/>
n instead of giumf it<lb/>
iing around uith these<lb/>
, . the food doctor de<lb/>
torn shining, armor and<lb/>
�� from a heasth gang<lb/>
the name of chnalr.<lb/>
of course<lb/>
, i living foi me li <lb/>
,om a salan potnl � �!<lb/>
.  ol ihi gnmt - <lb/>
ducers In I l�'lh<lb/>
I, and r� i uns), ihe<lb/>
� ,nc� .ii fail con �<lb/>
 foi me now rs i"<lb/>
I and rn extend<lb/>
ihai it 1 wan! t" pack H<lb/>
1 in<lb/>
Vvkrovd realh p k<lb/>
, . , v .i ditha ui' man<lb/>
 U , - IkII � .llif<lb/>
? � �. Man ol .i I hou<lb/>
 � a�d the Man in<lb/>
. , ,N, Born m Klaw i<lb/>
: aised in Hu<lb/>
  Edward Vvkrovd<lb/>
la ui. ni KI natured<lb/>
(.ii i<lb/>
,� Oll-l 111<lb/>
v l.ltll. I I<lb/>
. , ,1 i anadian govern-<lb/>
;�,1 I.III. HI I 'III' ial<lb/>
Bo, an .in In- voungei<lb/>
�� M. look �he corned <lb/>
, �h11iii. with Petei � �<lb/>
. �. -i ihe Se� ond t it' in<lb/>
� iroup in IbriMiti i w ben<lb/>
111 in- big break<lb/>
 , who pul un. It�- M a<lb/>
 nli Vvkrovd once told<lb/>
�. . magaine was mv<lb/>
lave Benoii I love him<lb/>
� ,� � i, -  low, i Li� men hanl<lb/>
 In In- own ailiiu�I<lb/>
Mild<lb/>
Chf<lb/>
romn<lb/>
pimp<lb/>
centi<lb/>
with<lb/>
Ifcrj<lb/>
rmer<lb/>
Jrfcy<lb/>
fmti<lb/>
dipt<lb/>
nercd MHWTSafj professor<lb/>
lion, a timid chluh o) a<lb/>
left i. encounters the i<lb/>
,oth (Houard Hesseman.<lb/>
rid ends up in that hot tub<lb/>
of Smooth's -emplosees"<lb/>
Doctor Detroit Sir Hde<lb/>
'rom Dr. Skridlou Dr.<lb/>
dthough in several dis-<lb/>
�ne of them a Southern<lb/>
i right i.<lb/>
He turned me on to m � '<lb/>
smtike mv first jotnt. mirod<lb/>
 � had i litiU ihmg<lb/>
wuhwhen 1 was H �' ' wakened<lb/>
me '�� the hip - - � � � '� ' <lb/>
Ottawa. ih� whok rworld<lb/>
ncvei knew existed I decided I<lb/>
 dropping ou. �� I vt nevei<lb/>
looked bai k<lb/>
Vvkrovd turned his back on the<lb/>
setmnarv education his father<lb/>
wanted as well as an nment ol<lb/>
j� jobs His .nvolvemen. a.<lb/>
S, i(,n led to taking up with<lb/>
H! Belush.  the origin. I<lb/>
Mima mate, ol Mort Sahk M.k<lb/>
Nuholn.iHn. Mav) Both.o<lb/>
tourse.wer, selected astwo.<lb/>
orlg,nal So. Readv f�� lu<lb/>
rime Havers on S V <lb/>
 . where Vvkrovd developed his<lb/>
nuked impersonations ol Ibm<lb/>
Snvder. Jimmv I artet and Richard<lb/>
 KtM He abocreated �ih '1U1<lb/>
Ion, Davis th- much loved t one-<lb/>
heads and with Sieve Martm he<lb/>
devekiped those wild and era<lb/>
( �h Brothers<lb/>
i atchmg Vvkrovd in a pensive<lb/>
���  not easv I hat rapkl-hre<lb/>
pace appears to be most constant.<lb/>
� feast while he b at work on a<lb/>
movie Bui he does reveal a.side of<lb/>
himsell m response to that oW<lb/>
chestnut ot an interviewers ques<lb/>
uon. "What do vou know toi sure<lb/>
about lit<lb/>
What do 1 know toi surer, he<lb/>
savs, hakmgh "Welk tw come a<lb/>
this planet, voure bora alone and<lb/>
vou die alone Us a solo journey<lb/>
Sure, vou can give love and lake<lb/>
love, but l.a-ualU life ba solo trip<lb/>
Vou can Ik- a receiving dish foi all<lb/>
sorts ot data, but ukimateh the<lb/>
place to tm.l all vout answers i-<lb/>
wkhin voursetf. Nou have to pro-<lb/>
vide vout own solace 1 know thai<lb/>
�- not vers original bui 1 do be-<lb/>
lieve it 1 realh do<lb/>
<lb/>
W-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0028"/><lb/>
Private School<lb/>
f Kil I S I K I <lb/>
o<lb/>
.1<lb/>
�  I <lb/>
H,i H . .<lb/>
� � V: . Ill v,<lb/>
.1. I .<lb/>
.1 n lit Mi<lb/>
. ilrii �  � i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
K<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0029"/><lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0030"/><lb/>
If colors tickle your fancy, capture them with Kodak film.<lb/>
For sharp, beautiful pictures of your most colorful fantasies<lb/>
<pb facs="00057539_0031"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>