<?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="00057543_0001"/>
(Bhe lEaat (Earnltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.4- 5<lb/>
Thursday, March 17, 1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Morgan, Jenkins Get First Honorary Degrees<lb/>
By MILLIE WHITE<lb/>
M?ff W filer<lb/>
The first honorary degrees<lb/>
awarded by ECU, the doctorate<lb/>
of letters, will be given to<lb/>
Chancellor Emeritus Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins and former U.S. Senator<lb/>
Robert B. Morgan on Mav 6.<lb/>
Chancellor John M. Howeil in-<lb/>
vited Morgan to be the speaker at<lb/>
the 74th annual ECU commence-<lb/>
ment. Many institutions ask an<lb/>
honoree to gie the commence-<lb/>
ment address.<lb/>
Howeil, announcing approval<lb/>
by the Board of Trustees of the<lb/>
honorary degree awards, said, "It<lb/>
is indeed heartening to me that we<lb/>
have initiated this practice with<lb/>
two persons so well qualified and<lb/>
deserving<lb/>
Jenkins, as president and<lb/>
chancellor, and Morgan, as chair-<lb/>
man o the trustees, fought<lb/>
political battles in the 1960s and<lb/>
I9"0s which shaped ECU's role as<lb/>
a uniersity. ECU changed from a<lb/>
college to a u liversity during<lb/>
Jenkin's tenure in 1967.<lb/>
An honorary degree committee,<lb/>
established by the board of<lb/>
trustees last year, recommended<lb/>
conferring the degrees upon<lb/>
Jenkins and Morgan. Both men<lb/>
were nominated by ECU graduate<lb/>
C. Ralph Kinsey, Jr. current<lb/>
chairman of the ECU trustees.<lb/>
In formal letters of nomination,<lb/>
Kinsey commented on Jenkins'<lb/>
31-year service to the university.<lb/>
"Unprecedented growth occurred<lb/>
during more than three decades of<lb/>
leadership by Leo Jenkins. In this<lb/>
period, approximately 85 percent<lb/>
of the alumni graduated<lb/>
Kinsey said "enrollment was<lb/>
1.600 students when Jenkins ar-<lb/>
rived in 1947. This number had<lb/>
grown to more than 12,(XX) when<lb/>
he retired in 1978<lb/>
Since his retirement as<lb/>
chancellor, Jenkins has served as<lb/>
special assistant to Gov. James B.<lb/>
Hunt, Jr. for economic develop-<lb/>
ment and other projects.<lb/>
"Dr. Leo Jenkins had great vi-<lb/>
sions of increasing the service of<lb/>
East Carolina to the people of this<lb/>
region and state Kinsey said.<lb/>
"His goal was to transform a<lb/>
small teachers college into a maior<lb/>
multi-purpose university<lb/>
Anouncing Morgan's nomina-<lb/>
tion, Kinsey said he "is totally<lb/>
devoted to the advancement of<lb/>
higher education He added that<lb/>
Morgan "is among East Carolina<lb/>
University's most distinguished<lb/>
graduates. He has maintained a<lb/>
close relationship with this institu-<lb/>
tion for almost 30 years and has<lb/>
given vital support and leadership<lb/>
during an era of unprecedented<lb/>
growth<lb/>
Morgan received a BS degree<lb/>
from ECU in 1947. As a state<lb/>
senator for five terms in the 1950s<lb/>
and 1960, Morgan spearheaded<lb/>
the lengthy legislative fight that<lb/>
won university status for ECU<lb/>
In 1968 Morgan was elected At-<lb/>
torney General of North Carolina<lb/>
and served as the state's highest<lb/>
legal officer until his successful<lb/>
campaign for the U.S. Senate in<lb/>
1974.<lb/>
When contacted at his Harnett<lb/>
County law office, Morgan said<lb/>
he is grateful to have been chosen,<lb/>
along with Dr. Jenkins, to receive<lb/>
the honor.<lb/>
"I'm very much appreciative<lb/>
and the fact that I feel like I don't<lb/>
deserve it makes the honor even<lb/>
greater he said. Morgan said he<lb/>
is proud to receive the honor from<lb/>
such a great institution and that<lb/>
he "couldn't covet a greater<lb/>
honor<lb/>
Former L.SSen. Robert Morgan and former EClhancellor Leo Jenkins, seen here at a university func-<lb/>
tion, were selected a the first people to receive honorary degrees from ECU. The ceremony will take place<lb/>
at the end of this semester,and Morgan will give the university's commencement address.<lb/>
N.C. Senate Passes Hunt's Drunken Driving Bill<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt<lb/>
Minority Aid<lb/>
Down; Funds<lb/>
Up To Whites<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
A slightly amended version o<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt's drunken<lb/>
driving bill sailed through the<lb/>
State Senate Tuesday. The new<lb/>
bill, which calls for raising the<lb/>
minimum drinking age for beer<lb/>
and wine products from 18 to 19.<lb/>
is also expected to be passed by<lb/>
the House ;n similar form possibly<lb/>
by next week.<lb/>
"The people of North Carolina<lb/>
have cause to be proud of their<lb/>
state Senate for its overwhelming<lb/>
vote Tuesday the Governor said<lb/>
in a prepared statement late Tues-<lb/>
day. Hunt added that the drunken<lb/>
driving bill, if passed in the<lb/>
House, would give North<lb/>
Carolina the "toughest and most<lb/>
comprehensive drunk driving law<lb/>
in the nation<lb/>
The Senate version of the bill<lb/>
also contains an amendment that<lb/>
would ban any open beer or wine<lb/>
containers in most cars and small<lb/>
trucks. Some Senate members are<lb/>
concerned that the amendment<lb/>
could delay passage of the<lb/>
measure in the House.<lb/>
Besides raising the minimum<lb/>
drinking age, the legislation will<lb/>
abolish plea bargaining in<lb/>
drunken driving cases, impose<lb/>
mandatory seven to 14 day jail<lb/>
sentences for serious violations<lb/>
and toughen the sentences and<lb/>
fines for less serious cases. It also<lb/>
creates a two-stage trial where the<lb/>
sentence would follow the convic-<lb/>
tion after other factors were con-<lb/>
sidered by the judge.<lb/>
An amendment to exclude a<lb/>
rule imposing a automatic 10-day<lb/>
driver's license suspension for<lb/>
anyone registering above .10 per-<lb/>
cent blood alcohol content or<lb/>
refusing to take the Breathalyzer<lb/>
test was defeated by a lopsided<lb/>
40-8 vote.<lb/>
Hunt said he was "particularly<lb/>
gratified" that the amendment<lb/>
was voted down.<lb/>
The defeated amendment was<lb/>
introduced by Sen. Dennis J.<lb/>
Winner, D-Buncombe, because he<lb/>
believed the 10-day suspension<lb/>
would violate the principle that a<lb/>
person is presumed innocent until<lb/>
convicted in a court of law. "This<lb/>
absolutely flies in the face of our<lb/>
most basic liberty-saving princi-<lb/>
ple Winner said.<lb/>
The section of the Hunt legisla-<lb/>
tion which calls for raising the<lb/>
minimum drinking age to 19 has<lb/>
met some resistance from ECU<lb/>
administrators, security officers<lb/>
and students.<lb/>
Director of Campus Public<lb/>
Safety Joe Calder claimed that the<lb/>
new minimum-age law will be<lb/>
hard to enforce and create addi-<lb/>
tional work for police officers.<lb/>
Dr. Jerry Lotterhos, director<lb/>
of ECU's alcohol training pro-<lb/>
gram, has also criticized the Hunt<lb/>
bill as being unenforceable. Lot-<lb/>
terhos said the bill fails to deal<lb/>
with some of the basic questions<lb/>
concerning the reasons alcohol is<lb/>
not used responsibly by<lb/>
Americans.<lb/>
Tom Haines, owner of Green-<lb/>
ville's Attic Nightclub and a<lb/>
spokesman for the Greenville<lb/>
Nightclub Association, has also<lb/>
been highly critical of the Hunt<lb/>
measure. Haines claims that the<lb/>
new legislation will actually in-<lb/>
crease drunken driving because it<lb/>
will force more 18-year-olds to<lb/>
consume alcohol in uncontrolled<lb/>
environments.<lb/>
State Sen. Vernon White,<lb/>
D-Pitt, who voted for the Hunt<lb/>
bill, said he believes the new age<lb/>
requirement will help to remove<lb/>
drinking from the high schools by<lb/>
limiting the access to beer and<lb/>
wine for many 18-year-old<lb/>
students. T was very pleased with<lb/>
the bill White said. "1 think it's<lb/>
a very good bin<lb/>
Perhaps the most controversial<lb/>
proposal is the dramshop provi-<lb/>
sion which would have held places<lb/>
that serve alcohol responsible for<lb/>
their customers' actions after<lb/>
leaving an establishment. It was<lb/>
amended after heavy lobbying by<lb/>
opponents. The amended pro-<lb/>
posal would hold retail outlets<lb/>
liable for civil damage suits if they<lb/>
sold alcoholic beverages to minors<lb/>
later involved in accidents.<lb/>
It<lb/>
(CPS) ? Middle-income white<lb/>
students got more financial aid<lb/>
last year than did eight years ago,<lb/>
while low-income minority-<lb/>
students got less, according to a<lb/>
study just released by the National<lb/>
Commission on Student Financial<lb/>
Assistance.<lb/>
Students whose parents earned<lb/>
more than $12,000 a year were<lb/>
more likely to get a grant than<lb/>
they were in 1974 ? when a<lb/>
similar study was done ? and the<lb/>
amount of that award was larger,<lb/>
according to the study.<lb/>
At the same time, low-income<lb/>
students had about the same<lb/>
chance of getting aid as they did<lb/>
eight years ago, the study found,<lb/>
but the amount of that award has<lb/>
shrunk since 1974.<lb/>
Black students, while still more<lb/>
likely to get an award than white<lb/>
students, were also likely to<lb/>
receive a much smaller amount<lb/>
than white students.<lb/>
Inflation, apparently, is the<lb/>
culprit.<lb/>
"The federal government just<lb/>
has not increased the maximum<lb/>
award sizes to keep up with infla-<lb/>
tion explains John Lee, director<lb/>
of the Human Resources Division<lb/>
of the Applied Systems Institute,<lb/>
the Washington, D.C consulting<lb/>
firm which prepared the study.<lb/>
For example, he says, a 1974<lb/>
award of $1000 would have had to<lb/>
increase to $1800 by 1981 in order<lb/>
to keep pace with inflation.<lb/>
Middle class students have<lb/>
come out ahead, he notes, because<lb/>
of a series of new programs in-<lb/>
troduced in 1978 to increase aid to<lb/>
those students.<lb/>
And blacks and other<lb/>
minorities, he adds, have seen the<lb/>
value of their Financial aid erode<lb/>
the most "because those kids, due<lb/>
to the maldistribution of wealth<lb/>
by race, are more likely to be in<lb/>
the lower income category than<lb/>
white students<lb/>
"Also Lee says, "low-income<lb/>
kids are more likely to go to a<lb/>
lower-cost of going to college ?<lb/>
that kind of limits the size of the<lb/>
awards low-income students<lb/>
receive<lb/>
Computers On Campus<lb/>
Prove To Be Hot Items<lb/>
To Enterprising Thieves<lb/>
Photo By CINDY WALL<lb/>
Now Let's See<lb/>
That'll be four hamburgers, two hotdogs (hold the chili), three large fries, chocolate shake and a coke. Is<lb/>
that for here or to go?<lb/>
UNC Girls Line Up For 'Playboy'<lb/>
Despite Protest By Some Feminists<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
SUtt W hl?<lb/>
More than 100 University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb/>
students showed up for a photo<lb/>
session conducted by Playboy<lb/>
photographer David Chan. The<lb/>
preliminary photos were being<lb/>
shot in preparation for the<lb/>
magazine's feature on "Girls of<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Conference"<lb/>
next fall.<lb/>
Despite efforts by several<lb/>
women's groups to stop the pro-<lb/>
posed feature, the First stop on<lb/>
Chan's eight-school schedule was<lb/>
full of willing girls.<lb/>
The controvers y began last<lb/>
month when Playboy began to<lb/>
purchase ads in several ACC stu-<lb/>
dent newspapers. The ads were<lb/>
called sexist by some because of<lb/>
what Duke University's school<lb/>
paper's advertising manager term-<lb/>
ed "meat marketing<lb/>
At UNC, the Daily Tar Heel,<lb/>
despite strong objection from a<lb/>
feminist group on campus, ran the<lb/>
ads.<lb/>
Tuesday's turnout included<lb/>
women in two categories. Many<lb/>
were interested in possible model-<lb/>
ing careers; while others hoped to<lb/>
make some money. Playboy is<lb/>
paying $75 for clothed models,<lb/>
$150 for semi-nude and $300 for<lb/>
nude to the women who are<lb/>
choosen for the spread. The<lb/>
magazine will select six women<lb/>
from each ACC school toi the<lb/>
final photo sessions.<lb/>
The initial photo sessions con-<lb/>
ducted by Chan, who spent<lb/>
Wednesday snaping the women of<lb/>
N.C. State, are basically facial<lb/>
shots. The more provocative,<lb/>
seductive poses will come later.<lb/>
Since 1977, Playboy has been<lb/>
doing features for its September<lb/>
issue featuring women attending<lb/>
schools in various athletic con-<lb/>
ferences, and every year the<lb/>
magazine causes a great deal of<lb/>
controversy from the feature.<lb/>
(CPS) ? Despite the heralded<lb/>
advances that microcomputers are<lb/>
bringing to the college campus<lb/>
these days, the proliferation of the<lb/>
compact, lightweight and easily-<lb/>
transported mechanical marvels is<lb/>
causing a growing problem with<lb/>
campus law enforcement agen-<lb/>
cies: they're too easy to steal.<lb/>
"We're getting a lot more<lb/>
microcumputers on campuses<lb/>
these days in engineering depart-<lb/>
ments; computer programming<lb/>
departments, for administrative<lb/>
use; in faculty offices and in com-<lb/>
puter centers and dormitories<lb/>
explains Dan Keller, director of<lb/>
Campus Crime Prevention Pro-<lb/>
grams and security chief at the<lb/>
University of Louisville.<lb/>
"And as they became more and<lb/>
more popular on campus he<lb/>
said, "micorcomputers are also<lb/>
becoming popular consumer items<lb/>
for the public. Now there's a<lb/>
reason to steal them<lb/>
Consequently,<lb/>
"microcomputers are becoming<lb/>
the CBs of the eighties" as<lb/>
popular items to steal.<lb/>
At Louisville. Keller says, "we<lb/>
didn't have any problems with<lb/>
computer thefts three years ago.<lb/>
Now it's a monthly occurrence<lb/>
Campus law enforcement direc-<lb/>
tors across the country echo his<lb/>
concerns.<lb/>
Microcomputers, they say,<lb/>
along with hardware such as<lb/>
phone modems and disk drives,<lb/>
are slowly becoming hot items for<lb/>
thieves.<lb/>
Most ofFicials agree the pro-<lb/>
blem can only get worse.<lb/>
"We have a large number of<lb/>
personal computers on campus<lb/>
and, at this point, have already<lb/>
lost two or three over the last<lb/>
year reports Iowa State Security<lb/>
Officer David Stormer.<lb/>
Iowa State has recently had "a<lb/>
number of component parts<lb/>
stolen too.<lb/>
There's a developing market for<lb/>
used microcomputers. They're<lb/>
readily resalable, and very dif-<lb/>
ficult to trace when they are<lb/>
stolen Stormer says.<lb/>
"They're easier to steal than a<lb/>
typewriter concurs Illinois<lb/>
State's Lt. Don Knappl. Theft of<lb/>
micorcomputers, he says, will<lb/>
"undoubtably" become a major<lb/>
crime problem for colleges.<lb/>
Drexel hasn't had any serious<lb/>
computer theft problems yet,<lb/>
Smith says, but when all entering<lb/>
freshmen will be required to have<lb/>
a microcomputer this fall, his<lb/>
department will "make every<lb/>
available effort to see that they're<lb/>
secure<lb/>
Among other things, he plans<lb/>
to register the serial number of<lb/>
each micro with the FBI's Na-<lb/>
tional Crime Information Center,<lb/>
and have a special logo etched on<lb/>
every machine.<lb/>
Campus security directors<lb/>
across the country are frantically<lb/>
working to register, label and bolt<lb/>
down thousands of microcom-<lb/>
puters.<lb/>
Carnegie Mellon, which will re-<lb/>
quire all entering freshmen to<lb/>
have their own micros within the<lb/>
next two years, is already plann-<lb/>
ing a massive "Operation LD<lb/>
program to register and identify<lb/>
the machines.<lb/>
At Iowa State, "everyone who<lb/>
has access to a computer is briefed<lb/>
on recommended security pro-<lb/>
cedures Stormer says. "We<lb/>
recommend every computer be<lb/>
secured behind locked doors, and<lb/>
physically attached to a wall or<lb/>
table<lb/>
T<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0002"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17, 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
It you or your organization<lb/>
would tike to have an item<lb/>
prnted in the anftbuncemen<lb/>
column, please type it on an an<lb/>
nouncement form and send it to<lb/>
The East Carolinian in care of<lb/>
the production manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
oMice m the Publications<lb/>
Budding Flyers and handwrit<lb/>
ten copy on odd aieO paper can<lb/>
not be accepted<lb/>
There is no charge for an<lb/>
nouncements but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
mem will run as long as you<lb/>
want ana suggest that you do not<lb/>
rely solely on th.s column for<lb/>
publicity<lb/>
T he deadline tor an<lb/>
nouncements is 3 p m Monday<lb/>
tor the Tuesday paper and 3<lb/>
p m Wednesdayy tor the Thurs<lb/>
day paper No announcements<lb/>
receded after these deadlines<lb/>
will be printed<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and<lb/>
departments<lb/>
SRA ELECTIONS<lb/>
SRA will have elections on<lb/>
April 6. 1983 Filing dates are<lb/>
March 18 through the 28 Can<lb/>
didates meet'ng ,s March 29<lb/>
Please ydur residence director<lb/>
tor more information<lb/>
CAR WASH<lb/>
When was the last time you<lb/>
saw the original color of your<lb/>
car? By letting the Spring<lb/>
Pledge ciass of Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sorority wash your car<lb/>
'or a donation of $2 00 you can<lb/>
help a paralyzed foster child<lb/>
and increase your gas mileage<lb/>
by removing the lag of all that<lb/>
extra weight" it will be open<lb/>
March 26 from 10 am to 4 pm at<lb/>
the Bypass Shell station on 101<lb/>
W Greenville Rd<lb/>
DATING<lb/>
Are you 'nterested in the<lb/>
Christian view of DATING'<lb/>
Come iom the Faith, Hope, and<lb/>
Love fellowship this Friday<lb/>
n.ght at 7 30 r m in Jenkins Art<lb/>
Bu idmg Auditorium Know that<lb/>
vou are ioved' Come iOin the<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
PEACE COMMITTEE<lb/>
Low brutally humiliated and<lb/>
destroyed a world of stagnant<lb/>
possibilities created by the false<lb/>
la'he'S who built and tolerated<lb/>
'he Auschweitz s and Vietnams<lb/>
rjl n oory those who have par<lb/>
ca'ed in the torture<lb/>
chambers of the ecclesiastical<lb/>
"Ol'S tions and then forgotten<lb/>
a 'houT remorse 'his is the<lb/>
i'e of affairs that cries out to<lb/>
us 'hat piagues our consciences<lb/>
aid demands to be challenged<lb/>
it you are ready to make a com<lb/>
m rnent to iustice it you are<lb/>
'eady to begin building a new<lb/>
k nd of socety free of violence<lb/>
DOverfy and alienation we need<lb/>
vou Come to the meeting of the<lb/>
Greenville Peace Committee at<lb/>
610 S Elm St at 7 00 Fnoay<lb/>
n.ght or phone 748 4906 for more<lb/>
nformation<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
CAMP JOBS<lb/>
Tf?ow8'?r safety ???trjc tors<lb/>
a N and Arts and Crafts Direc<lb/>
tor For information write Ed<lb/>
Mara M Hooges Jr 215 E 1lfh<lb/>
S1 .ashington NC 27889<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
The Society for the Advance<lb/>
menf of Management will meet<lb/>
on Thursday. March 17, in Rawi<lb/>
10 at 4 00 Guest speaker will be<lb/>
Mr Don Barham ytce president<lb/>
ot personnel wth National Spin<lb/>
ning in Washington. D C Mr<lb/>
Barham will speak on quality<lb/>
Circles in management<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
The Electric Rainbow radio<lb/>
Show hosted by Keith Mitchell is<lb/>
on WZMB on Fridays and Satur<lb/>
days from 3 pm to 6 pm and 12<lb/>
midnight to 6 am respectively<lb/>
A'bum specials this week are to<lb/>
be F riday 4 pm<lb/>
Vandenberg Saturday 2am<lb/>
Riot's Fire Down Under<lb/>
Please tune n to WZMB at these<lb/>
times and adiust the volume ac<lb/>
cordingly<lb/>
DORM RESIDENTS<lb/>
The Student Housing Depart<lb/>
ment will be conduction a<lb/>
survey concerning a proposed<lb/>
quiet study dorm The SGA Stu<lb/>
dent Welfare Committee made<lb/>
this proposal but its success<lb/>
hinges on adequate student sup<lb/>
port if you would liKe to live in a<lb/>
quiet or study residence hall<lb/>
than make this indication on the<lb/>
survey form, which will be<lb/>
available dur.ng room reserva<lb/>
tions March 21 25 Note A study<lb/>
dorm is one m which the<lb/>
residents formulate a set of<lb/>
quiet hours and agree to enforce<lb/>
them If mere are any student<lb/>
suggestions or recommenda<lb/>
tions contact the Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee<lb/>
INTER VARSITY<lb/>
So your planning next weeks<lb/>
schedule. Just remember to put<lb/>
inter varsity down tor Wednes<lb/>
day night at 6 30 m Biology 102<lb/>
What better way tos pend a<lb/>
Wednesday n.ght than in Chris<lb/>
tian Fellowship and teaching<lb/>
AMBASSADOR<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
The Past President s dub ot<lb/>
the ECU Alumni Association is<lb/>
offering a scholarship to an Am<lb/>
bassador m order to express<lb/>
their deep appreciation for the<lb/>
vast amount of volunteer ser<lb/>
vice that the ECU Ambassadors<lb/>
contribute to the progress and<lb/>
welfare ot East Carolina Univer<lb/>
Sity The recipient must be an<lb/>
ECU student who is a member in<lb/>
good standing of the ECU Am<lb/>
bassadors and must be of such<lb/>
classification as to be a senior in<lb/>
the tali semester of 1983 m the<lb/>
Taylor Slaughter Aiumm<lb/>
Center Applications should ?<lb/>
completed and turned in by<lb/>
Apr,I 1 1983<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
HEARING SCREEN<lb/>
Free hearing screen for r<lb/>
people who were in close prox<lb/>
imify to the explosion aT v'Mage<lb/>
Gren Apartments on Martri 2<lb/>
1983 Contact Speech Pathology<lb/>
and AudiOiogy Department<lb/>
Regional Rehabilitation Centet<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hosp-tai<lb/>
tor appointment '?" 4448<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
NEEDSMEMBERS<lb/>
1 you like vaff't entertain<lb/>
ment and ant a challenge<lb/>
become a member on me Stu<lb/>
dent Un.on Coffee house Com<lb/>
mittee For more information.<lb/>
contact the Student unon<lb/>
Room 234) at 757 6611. ext 210<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
There will be a meeting in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Thursday at 4 15. Room 221 It is<lb/>
importan that an memrjers at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
TOKILL A<lb/>
MOCKINGBIRD<lb/>
? To Kill A Mockingbird" will<lb/>
be shown on Thursday Marcn 17,<lb/>
at the Methodist Student Center<lb/>
at 8 00 p m as part of the conti<lb/>
numg Thursday Night Fucks<lb/>
program A discussion will<lb/>
follow the movie and<lb/>
refreshments will be served<lb/>
FINANCIAL<lb/>
AIDCONFERENCES<lb/>
March 22 and 23 are the two<lb/>
days scheduled for make uo<lb/>
NDSL and Nursing Loan Bor<lb/>
rower Conferences The March<lb/>
22, 1983 makekp up conferences<lb/>
will start at I 2 3 and (pm in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Room 242 If you borrowed<lb/>
either NDSL or Nursding Loan<lb/>
and nave not attended a bor<lb/>
rowers conference, you are re<lb/>
quired to attend one ot the make<lb/>
up conferences<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
Welcome back, hope that<lb/>
everyone had a great spring<lb/>
break The Brothers and Little<lb/>
Sisters of Pi Kappa Phi would<lb/>
like to thank the students and<lb/>
the university ot ECU Your sup<lb/>
port and help after the Village<lb/>
Green explosion that took the<lb/>
lite of one of our brothers and<lb/>
put tour others in the hospital<lb/>
has been very heart warming A<lb/>
memorial service for our<lb/>
brother David B Martin. Jr will<lb/>
be held on Monday larcrt 21 at<lb/>
4 30 p m at Mendenhall student<lb/>
Center on the patio Also the<lb/>
Bro'hers really appreciate all<lb/>
the work and support that our<lb/>
little Sisters have given to us<lb/>
MASSAGE CLINIC<lb/>
Need a muscle relaxer to help<lb/>
you get back into the swing ot<lb/>
things? It you do then come to<lb/>
the massage clinic that the<lb/>
Physical Therapy club s having<lb/>
on Wednesday. March 23 The<lb/>
clinic will begin at 6 30 pm ano<lb/>
last until 9 30 pm it will ue held<lb/>
at the Belk Bilding in the<lb/>
Physical Therapy Lab room on<lb/>
thefirstfioor The cost s Jl 00 so<lb/>
come on over and relax and en<lb/>
Oy '<lb/>
BAHA'I CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Baha i Club will<lb/>
meet in 241 Mendenhall TuesoaT<lb/>
March 22 from 11 until noon The<lb/>
Baha ' Fath teaches the con<lb/>
cept of Progressive Revelation<lb/>
This means that .n earn per.oc<lb/>
of history Goo sends a<lb/>
Messenger 'o guide Mankind<lb/>
Baha. s believe that<lb/>
Bahai u'Hah The Gior, of God '<lb/>
v Go " ? v ? :? ? ?<lb/>
vou are cordially mvited to<lb/>
fl? and sn,r e .01 ? Hi<lb/>
HISTORY<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
The Department ot History<lb/>
would like to call attention to<lb/>
scholarships which are offered<lb/>
in the Department of History for<lb/>
1983 84<lb/>
The Richard Cecil Todd<lb/>
Scholarship Awards tor<lb/>
members of Lambda Eta<lb/>
Chapter of Phi Alpha Theta are<lb/>
awarded annually to members<lb/>
enrolled full time at East<lb/>
Carolina University and who<lb/>
demonstrated outstanding ser<lb/>
vice to Lambda Eta Chapter of<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta, the History<lb/>
Department and the University<lb/>
The award is open to both<lb/>
undergraduates ano graduates<lb/>
who are members of Phi Alpha<lb/>
Theta A maximum of two S5O0<lb/>
awards may be granted each<lb/>
academic year<lb/>
Qualified members may apply<lb/>
at the History Department office<lb/>
in Brewster A 316<lb/>
Applications must be submit<lb/>
ted by April 15, 1983<lb/>
The Joseph E and Catherine<lb/>
E Hirsch Memorial Award in<lb/>
History is awarded annoaiy to a<lb/>
maior in the Department ot<lb/>
History who is considered the<lb/>
most promising iunior based<lb/>
upon the following criteria<lb/>
Scholarship to be<lb/>
measured in terms ot the overall<lb/>
quality of their work .n the study<lb/>
ot history<lb/>
Promise to be measured in<lb/>
terms ot their positive atitudes<lb/>
towards themselves and their<lb/>
academic discipline,<lb/>
Motivation to learn and im<lb/>
prove and their general future<lb/>
potential both as an individual<lb/>
and as a student of history<lb/>
The purpose of this award is to<lb/>
provide the recipients with a<lb/>
sum of money with which to buy<lb/>
textbooks and any other books<lb/>
related to h.s academic courses<lb/>
of sdtudy it is hoped that said<lb/>
books will become a part ot a<lb/>
permanent collection, either n<lb/>
the recipient's personal library<lb/>
or in some other established<lb/>
library<lb/>
Qualified students may apply<lb/>
tor the Hirsch Memorial Awara<lb/>
at the Office of the History<lb/>
SUMMER SCHOOL 1983<lb/>
ROOM RESERVATION<lb/>
Residence hall room deposits<lb/>
tor Summe- Schoni 1983 will be<lb/>
accepted in the Cash.or s Offe<lb/>
Room 105 Sp.lman Building<lb/>
beginn.ng Apr ; 5 Room<lb/>
ass.gnmen's will be made ,n the<lb/>
respective residence nan offices<lb/>
on Apr,I 7 and Apr,l 8<lb/>
Thereafter they n be ma<lb/>
the O'tice ot Housing Opera<lb/>
Room 201 A h , c h a r d<lb/>
Building ' I. rent for a term of<lb/>
Hmmei ? s 1120 tor a<lb/>
private room and SI60 for a<lb/>
private room Add,t.onai ren' n<lb/>
the amount ot S20 ,s required for<lb/>
Jarvis Han<lb/>
Students who wish to reserve<lb/>
rooms they presently occupy<lb/>
provided such rooms are to be in<lb/>
use this summer, are to make<lb/>
reservations on Thursday April<lb/>
7 AH other studen's may<lb/>
reserve rooms on a first come,<lb/>
t.rst serve basis on Friday<lb/>
April 8<lb/>
Residence halls to be used for<lb/>
women are Greene Slav I rst<lb/>
floor for mob-lity impa.rec<lb/>
students) and Jarvis Men w II<lb/>
be housed m Fletcher Slav<lb/>
i first floor tor mobility ,mr i re<lb/>
students and Jarvis Halls<lb/>
YDHL<lb/>
Young Home Designer s<lb/>
League meets March 22nd at<lb/>
5 00 m the VanLand,ngham<lb/>
room<lb/>
Gl Camouflaged Fatigues and<lb/>
T Shirts, Sleeping Bags<lb/>
Backpacks Camping Equip<lb/>
ment Steel Toed Shoes, Dishes<lb/>
and Over 700 Different New and<lb/>
Used Items Cowboy Boots<lb/>
111 9 5<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
1501 S Evans<lb/>
Street<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
1 24 week terminations<lb/>
App'ts. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
1-800-321 0575<lb/>
 NOBS ,<lb/>
I Jewlery Repair <lb/>
custom crofting<lb/>
tutvmttted work<lb/>
Briai This Ad for<lb/>
20OFF<lb/>
14K Caaia Repairs<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I by Les. Jewlery J<lb/>
? 1291 5th Street. 7S-2U7 <lb/>
 10-5 Tues.Set. I<lb/>
! imam4<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN abortion a difficult dec.<lb/>
DEPEND ON. s at s made easier fcv<lb/>
?hewomer rhe ?errlQ Center Counselors are<lb/>
avaiiaoie day and n.gnt to support and under<lb/>
stana vou vour safety cnnfort and privacy are<lb/>
assured py trie caring staff of the Hemmg Center<lb/>
SERVICES: ? Tuesday - Saturday Aportion Ap-<lb/>
pointments ? 1st &amp; 2nd Trimester ADortions up to<lb/>
16 WeeKS ? f-ree Pregnancy Tests ? very Early<lb/>
Pregnancy Tests ? An inclusive Pees ? insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CALL 781-5550 DAY OB NIGHT ?<lb/>
Heaitncare counseling THE FLEMING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
and education for wo-<lb/>
men of a" ages<lb/>
Pre Easter Special<lb/>
20OFF<lb/>
All new Spring and Summer Shoes<lb/>
Styles by: Nine-West,Naturalizer,<lb/>
Bees by Beacon Buskens and More.<lb/>
IPitt Plaza<lb/>
(Shopping;<lb/>
Center<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use the form at right or<lb/>
use a separate sheet of paper if<lb/>
you need more lines. There are 33<lb/>
units per line. Each letter, punc<lb/>
tuation mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
nyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't fit No ads will be ac<lb/>
cepted over the phone We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
75f per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters<lb/>
Return to THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
office b) 3:00 Tuesday before<lb/>
wedaesday awMicattoM.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
No lines <lb/>
.ZiP.<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
at 7S per line S.<lb/>
.No. insertions.<lb/>
?.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
1 1 1 1???<lb/>
1 1 1 1 14???j ??<lb/>
1 1 1 1 1 1 1.??i??1 r1 ?1?-11  ? i ? 4??1 ,?<lb/>
Department<lb/>
Deadline 'c<lb/>
April 1 ,?b -<lb/>
Brester A 316<lb/>
applications is<lb/>
' .? - ?  i ec Toad<lb/>
?  ? . (or<lb/>
? . . ? ??? i scholar s m<lb/>
History ai c? grantee tor me<lb/>
academic year 83 84 ah ap<lb/>
Dcants must De students enroll<lb/>
eo tuii lime at East Carolina<lb/>
University ana De declared<lb/>
nistory majors who are in their<lb/>
iunior or senior year Recipients<lb/>
will be considered on trie basis ot<lb/>
scholarship citijensfiip ana<lb/>
nerd<lb/>
Eden award will be tor the<lb/>
amount o SSCO 00 per year In<lb/>
teresteQ students ma apply tor<lb/>
trie scholarship at the H,story<lb/>
Department Brewster A 316<lb/>
Deadl ne is Apr.i IS 1983<lb/>
TONIGHT<lb/>
The public is inyited to near a<lb/>
lecture on Alternatives to un<lb/>
carceration ton.ghi at the A,Ins<lb/>
Building 7 30 p mN C Judge<lb/>
Willis Whichard. chairman ot<lb/>
the citizens commission on Ater<lb/>
natives to incarceration will be<lb/>
the teaturea speaker<lb/>
IFC<lb/>
The day Of t??e Mrs iFCBeau<lb/>
?y Pageant is approaching<lb/>
quicniy and all Greeks should be<lb/>
considering which gorgeous girl<lb/>
will represent them in this<lb/>
auspicous event More ntorma<lb/>
tion will be given at a later date<lb/>
EVER DREAMEDOF<lb/>
FLYING?<lb/>
Make theat dream come true<lb/>
The Department ot intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services with the<lb/>
cooperation ot Kitty Hawk Kites<lb/>
will be offering a hang gliding<lb/>
trip to Nags Head, NC on March<lb/>
26 A beginning instruction class<lb/>
will be offered as well as an ad<lb/>
vanced class<lb/>
Registration for the trip will<lb/>
taken at the Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center (113) Memorial Gym<lb/>
Through March 17 Payment<lb/>
must accompany registration<lb/>
All equiptment and transporta<lb/>
tion will be provided<lb/>
The beginning course will cost<lb/>
HI 40 with an additional S2v 00<lb/>
charge tor the advanced course<lb/>
if you elect to take it For more<lb/>
information concerning the trip<lb/>
call or stop by the center or<lb/>
phone 757 6911 Hours 1 00 5 00<lb/>
Monday and Friday ana 2 00<lb/>
4 00 Tuesday Wednesday and<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
1983 CANOE TRIP<lb/>
The Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center tor the Department of<lb/>
intramural Recreational Ser<lb/>
vices is sponsoring a Canoe Trip<lb/>
on Wednesday Varcn 23 1983<lb/>
The trip is suitab.e tor beginning<lb/>
or eipenenceo canoers<lb/>
Tnp participants will meet<lb/>
behind Memorial Gym at 3 00<lb/>
p m on Wednesday tor a leisure<lb/>
ly paddle down the Tar River<lb/>
lasting approx mately 2 hourS<lb/>
Participants should arive back<lb/>
at memorial Gym by 6 00 p m<lb/>
Advance registration and pay<lb/>
ment i3 00 per person! is due by<lb/>
4 00 p m on Tuesday March 22,<lb/>
1983 Groups are welcome For<lb/>
registration or more informa<lb/>
tion can or stop by room 113<lb/>
Memorial Gym (757 6911 or<lb/>
757 6387)<lb/>
AKA CAR WASH<lb/>
The members of Alpha Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Sorority will nate a car<lb/>
wash Saturday March 19 from<lb/>
10 30 2 30 p m at Shell Service<lb/>
Station at me corner of Evans<lb/>
and Greenville Blvd<lb/>
ILO<lb/>
The international Language<lb/>
Organization will be showing the<lb/>
foihowing two films are<lb/>
ugetsu ana Mr HulotsHoli<lb/>
day The first film will be<lb/>
shown at 7 30 Admission to the<lb/>
films is stuoent id and activity<lb/>
card or Menaenhall Faculty and<lb/>
Staff ID<lb/>
NSSLNA<lb/>
Presenting the 13th Annual<lb/>
Speech Language and Hearing<lb/>
Symposium entitled<lb/>
Phonology' A contemporary<lb/>
view of Art.culation The pur<lb/>
pose of this meeting is to aid pro<lb/>
fessionals m learning methoas<lb/>
tor helping children with com<lb/>
munication problems Speakers<lb/>
will be Or John Locke, Dr<lb/>
Richard Shine and Or Salvatore<lb/>
DeMarco It will be held March<lb/>
24 and 25 For more information<lb/>
contact the ECU Speech and<lb/>
hearing clinic<lb/>
COMPUTERS<lb/>
The East Carolina Microcom<lb/>
purer users Group (ECMUG)<lb/>
will meet Thursday, March 17,<lb/>
at 7 30pm, Mendenhall student<lb/>
Center. Multipurpose Room On<lb/>
the agenda are a magazine ex<lb/>
change (bring your old com<lb/>
purer mags to exchange or give<lb/>
away) demonstration of the<lb/>
Lobo Max R, and question and<lb/>
answer time You do not need to<lb/>
nave a micro to attend<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
LEGISLATURE<lb/>
Attention all NCSL<lb/>
members1' The election nave<lb/>
been heia wth one still waiting<lb/>
?or official confirmation and the<lb/>
results are coming m! if<lb/>
cur.ousify is killing you iust<lb/>
figuring out who Our new<lb/>
Delegation Chairperson, Vice<lb/>
Chairperson, Secretary, ana<lb/>
Treasure are members of the<lb/>
North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature aon 1 wait until<lb/>
after session We ?ill announce<lb/>
the results Monaay night at 7<lb/>
p m at Menoenhaii, room 212 so<lb/>
please attend1 And for those go<lb/>
? ng to Raleigh next week for Ses<lb/>
s-on please attena this meeting<lb/>
to prepare yourselves for the<lb/>
craz'ness ahead at Session (the<lb/>
bills stupid)' Do not forget ney.<lb/>
is that nr F again ?!<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
LANGUAGE<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
The Internation Language<lb/>
Organization will be showing the<lb/>
following two films in Hendrix<lb/>
theater on Tuesday March 22.<lb/>
1983 The f.ims are UGETSU<lb/>
and Mr HULOT'S HOLIDAY<lb/>
The first film will be shown at<lb/>
7 30 Admission to the films is<lb/>
student id ana activity card or<lb/>
Menoenhaii Faculty and Staff<lb/>
ID<lb/>
ECU IRATES<lb/>
ECU iRates will host their<lb/>
first ultimate tournament<lb/>
Natural Light uitimax March<lb/>
26 ana 27 Come out ana see<lb/>
some of the best ultimate frisbee<lb/>
to be played on the east coast<lb/>
this year The dub participated<lb/>
m a tournament at Florida State<lb/>
University over spring break<lb/>
We had some discouraging<lb/>
moments on the field, but are<lb/>
better ultimate players tor it<lb/>
Scoring a bg 3 points against<lb/>
Duke was a highlight of the<lb/>
weekena Keep it up I rates<lb/>
INTERNAL AUDITING<lb/>
LECTURE SERIES<lb/>
Guest speakers from the<lb/>
Raleigh Durham Chapter of the<lb/>
Institute of internal AuO'tors<lb/>
will be on our campus as n<lb/>
dicated below An faculty ana<lb/>
students are welcome to atteno<lb/>
The lecture series is scheduled<lb/>
to be held m Ha 339 at 6 30<lb/>
p m on the aates naicated<lb/>
March 17 Foundations tor in<lb/>
ternal Auditing instructor Roe<lb/>
Barry CPA MCM Corporation<lb/>
Occidental Lite of NC<lb/>
CHEERLEADER<lb/>
TRY OUTS<lb/>
The East Caronna universe.<lb/>
Varsity Cheerleader tryouts <lb/>
be "e'a at 7 30 p m on Tuesaar<lb/>
March 29, 193 on the mam floor<lb/>
of Memor.ai Gym<lb/>
The first practice sessor <lb/>
be heia at 5 00 on wednesdai<lb/>
March 16 at the east end of<lb/>
M-nges Coliseum An guys and<lb/>
girls interested n trvng out tor<lb/>
the !9?3 84 squad should be pre<lb/>
sent at th.s first pract.ee ses<lb/>
Sion<lb/>
MOVE ATHON<lb/>
Gamma Befa Ph. presents the<lb/>
secona annual Move A Thon on<lb/>
Saturday March 26 from 9 am 5<lb/>
pm All proceeds go to the 'he<lb/>
North Caronna Burn Center n<lb/>
Chapel Hill You can noe a bike<lb/>
roller skate, walk, or iog To oo<lb/>
tain a sponsor sheet or informa<lb/>
tion call Lisa or Amy 752 7338<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
Applications art now being ac<lb/>
cepted tor the 1983 Stuoent<lb/>
Homecoming Committee<lb/>
Chairperson Applications can<lb/>
be picked up at either the<lb/>
Menoenhaii information Center<lb/>
or the Aiumm Center The<lb/>
deadline tor applying for Ms<lb/>
position n Friday March 18<lb/>
1983<lb/>
ABORT IONS UP<lb/>
lO 12th W?rK<lb/>
OF- PREGNANCY<lb/>
S185 00 Pregnancy Test Birthlj<lb/>
Control and Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
832 0535 (Toll Free Number<lb/>
800 221 2568) between 1 AM<lb/>
and 5PM Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGHS WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West M-rgan St<lb/>
Raleigl<lb/>
FAMOUS<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
321 E.TenthSt.<lb/>
One Week Special<lb/>
Lasagna $2.99<lb/>
Small Pepperoni Pizza<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
not for delivery j<lb/>
Happy Hour 2pm-closing<lb/>
Pitchers Beer $2.25<lb/>
Mugs 58C<lb/>
CALL FOR FAST,FREE!<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
758-5982 758-5616<lb/>
Custom Designed<lb/>
Perms<lb/>
that only look expensivel<lb/>
Our professional stylists know that to custom perm your hair the way you want, they must<lb/>
listen to what you want That's why at Great Expectations you'll leave with the style you had<lb/>
m mind at a pnee you can afford<lb/>
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED <lb/>
i SAVE S10.00<lb/>
on any<lb/>
1 Great "X" Perm<lb/>
(guaranteed 30 days)<lb/>
t with coupon<lb/>
J Offer expires 33113<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
This biweekly meetirvg nas<lb/>
Qen set aside entirely for the<lb/>
purpose of inducting new<lb/>
members anc nstan.ng rvew of<lb/>
ticers it win be held on Thurs<lb/>
day March 17 Ml room !u MSC<lb/>
As was noticed at the asf<lb/>
meeting seat ng .s t,gn and cmi?<lb/>
members are invited Fam.hes<lb/>
taking pictures should do so<lb/>
after tne meeting at hictt time<lb/>
there w'H ne a reception r<lb/>
cake and drinks provided<lb/>
SGA POSITIONS STILL<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
The SGA currently nas me<lb/>
following openings for Dor m<lb/>
representative (J; Wh.te<lb/>
Jones tl) Fletcher and 1<lb/>
Tyler If interested in a ot tne<lb/>
positions call tfrk Shelley a'<lb/>
756 402s1 or app;? n tr sga of<lb/>
f.ce<lb/>
REVIVAL<lb/>
Open<lb/>
10 AM-6 PM<lb/>
MoriSat.<lb/>
10 AM-9 PM<lb/>
Fri Only<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
756-6088<lb/>
ADDRESS<lb/>
Oflly WeOfe- T WleJ ? ? meafB'jfJBiajaVttjW<lb/>
UMCJlTliW<lb/>
cwccnimns<lb/>
NO<lb/>
APPOINTMENT<lb/>
NECESSARY<lb/>
PRECISION HARCUTTERS<lb/>
Featuring our exclusive line of premium twir care products<lb/>
Great Expectations is an international franchise ? inquiries vveicome <lb/>
The Fountain of Lite Cnsa-<lb/>
Feiiowsn.p here at ECU will be<lb/>
having the-r annual Spr rig<lb/>
Revival tnis wee beginning on<lb/>
Tonight all 00 pm This revival<lb/>
will be he'd in jenn "s<lb/>
Auditor,um nightly unt.i Sa'ur<lb/>
day l?th! The puoi'C s nvited<lb/>
to come out each n.ght to nave a<lb/>
gior.ous time Hi the name of me<lb/>
iord<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
Attention rnere w oe a<lb/>
gene'a! mee' ng ?h s Sa'j'aa?<lb/>
the 19'n a' 6 DO p m -e<lb/>
meetng w ii oe ne'd ae -er<lb/>
nat ona Mouse on E ???? St<lb/>
Mempe's are urged o a"enc<lb/>
PUT A LITTLE HEART<lb/>
IN YOUR SOUL<lb/>
The twelfth annuai Aaik tor<lb/>
Mumah'ty is coming up soon<lb/>
The waik will take place on Apru<lb/>
16 begnn.ng at Green Spr rvgs<lb/>
park ' I X j Anyone n<lb/>
terestec in helping come to the<lb/>
Hunotr Coalition meetings on<lb/>
Thursday nights at 7 00 p m at<lb/>
the Newman Center ?S3 E?t<lb/>
Tenth Street, or call 7S2 421-<lb/>
STUOENTS FOR<lb/>
CHRIST<lb/>
Lefs get back to the B'Die' in<lb/>
formal group Bide discussoos<lb/>
Mens HO Belk Tuesday 7 30<lb/>
pm 'Women 2 tj Mence I<lb/>
Thursday t 30 p m Everyone s<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Servitf V campus cor- -<lb/>
ji?t 1925<lb/>
Published every "rmca,<lb/>
?nd Thursday Our ng ??<lb/>
academ.c year ana eve'i<lb/>
Wednesday dur ng 'he s ?<lb/>
met<lb/>
The East Carolinian is ?<lb/>
ofticai newspaper of Eas'<lb/>
Carolina un.vers-ty o?ie:<lb/>
operated ana pubiisnec 'v<lb/>
and by me students of Eas-<lb/>
Carolina U" ver$ity<lb/>
Subscription Rate IHiti' .<lb/>
The East Carolinian st'ices<lb/>
are located m the Old Soutti<lb/>
Building on the campus o'<lb/>
ECU. Greenville. H C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Sena a;<lb/>
dress changes tc The Eas"<lb/>
Caro' ,n.ar- Od Soutr<lb/>
Bu'ding, ECU Green, r<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
??<lb/>
Telephone 757-4J4 4J??<lb/>
BEST LEGS<lb/>
if s here th.s s rou' ance "c<lb/>
show off 'hose ?h ghs scc<lb/>
yOur organia'ion a"K3 w - ?<lb/>
ritic pr zes Pno'og'ac" ? re-<lb/>
taken Marcf '5 31 For mci -<lb/>
formation ca'i the AOi h,?<lb/>
Today'<lb/>
MARKETING<lb/>
FILM SERIES<lb/>
The An-e- a- Vjit' <lb/>
Assoc a'on anc 'ne Deear'?<lb/>
of Mare' ng prese Pa" r ?? j<lb/>
Vj'lf ng p. m Se' es<lb/>
? s prov oe ?Orma Br<lb/>
about mjrKeting oppor'uni es<lb/>
and w snow -e'evance &amp;?<lb/>
m ?e' "?g tc corpora'e oc ec<lb/>
? ves ano memoes of ope'a' tr<lb/>
"ne se' es w te scw - Raja<lb/>
130 a 3 X Ml Ma'c- D a-c<lb/>
Top'Cswii noude ?a.f' s ?;<lb/>
anj promote on he 23'J a"d<lb/>
Sales Management or ?r<lb/>
24th All n'eres'ec s'udes a'e<lb/>
? nvited to a"eno<lb/>
NATURAL LIGHT<lb/>
ULTIMAX<lb/>
Marcn M 27 is but a week<lb/>
?way ana me Irate are settino<lb/>
mew first ultimate Kmrwawnn<lb/>
togemer' Come Out ?ne see ??<lb/>
best eas' coast teams compete<lb/>
in ultimate The irafes practice<lb/>
every Tues ? Thurs a' me bot<lb/>
torn of tne n.li at 4 OB Club<lb/>
mee' ngs are Mon nights ? X<lb/>
Ri 248 MSC Anyone e'es'ed<lb/>
ce<lb/>
North (Mm Cpwc<lb/>
T?? RfVIIItND JOH<lb/>
Advert:sir. :?pr '<lb/>
TTe aa?t rc;rr Student ? S" <lb/>
t. C. <lb/>
Gr?nv:l:e. NC ?76 -<lb/>
jrtetvs<lb/>
T?-  -???<lb/>
c s?s -? ve latotwrnti By ?c- :? r. tad ?t ?? tottoa  m<lb/>
rletsr acat Utful?tiol mt - ?C "?"? '?? -? "?"r -r P<lb/>
preper t<lb/>
?e vcus Ilk M r-j t? : teem,v. - U ran v ?. y.?r:r <lb/>
j-4irtr- 2ft. :r tttla nc? pc?!ll?. er. U z.osr :c ttMaa tmXmm<lb/>
pcasi-le. If ttotrt :r? ,?n?. .? :? Doliect <lb/>
p.n? bill -? fcr tt.u nice, ??? ? - "?v dona tf :r.<lb/>
,jvwU ' ajkakts.<lb/>
n n<lb/>
Students<lb/>
K PSi ? "Pm no!<lb/>
reall worried about<lb/>
finding a summer<lb/>
shrugv Steve Thoma<lb/>
a L m ersit <lb/>
Florida freshm<lb/>
"Pm pre -are I'll<lb/>
get something<lb/>
'I'm<lb/>
something ?-<lb/>
up ?. Marl<lb/>
Greener<lb/>
IHF freshra<lb/>
are higher<lb/>
than summer<lb/>
right nov like :rvmg<lb/>
to get throu.<lb/>
W i t h L S.<lb/>
unemplc.men' ate<lb/>
.A around 10 p<lb/>
cent, a ;ng<lb/>
number ot<lb/>
remain unw I<lb/>
il be ar i<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
The noncha<lb/>
rropnai<lb/>
howe. er<lb/>
Sumn<lb/>
ment ? ? I<lb/>
idcni<lb/>
prt ?<lb/>
pla.<lb/>
"Tb<lb/>
one<lb/>
Ca:riic K<lb/>
?<lb/>
SRA To Dona<lb/>
To Village Gn<lb/>
In a late Wedr-<lb/>
afternoon ote. the<lb/>
Student Residence<lb/>
ssodation app'oved<lb/>
 :00 donation to the<lb/>
ECU Village Green<lb/>
Emergency Fund<lb/>
aid the victims<lb/>
explosion that ocx<lb/>
red a: the apa<lb/>
omplex Mar 1<lb/>
In a 20 to one<lb/>
the SRA. act .<lb/>
suggestion made<lb/>
SRA public<lb/>
chairperson Lindse<lb/>
Williams, aprro.e<lb/>
the gift to the fund,<lb/>
which now tola<lb/>
to $2,500.<lb/>
"We felt that it wa<lb/>
a tragic event tor our<lb/>
fellow student  <lb/>
SRA Vice President<lb/>
wherevet -<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? e ?<lb/>
our -<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
Pre<lb/>
-<lb/>
P<lb/>
 '<lb/>
N<lb/>
an<lb/>
rathe:<lb/>
<lb/>
i SRA<lb/>
I<lb/>
m o<lb/>
E.i<lb/>
ONSOLlDATtD<lb/>
HtATRtS<lb/>
?<lb/>
ADULTS SLOO<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
Starts Tomorrow<lb/>
The Sequal to one of the most<lb/>
: : : -  "  - <lb/>
7iSSores<lb/>
Jus:  "<lb/>
Wmm<lb/>
<lb/>
. t?<lb/>
,s-r-<lb/>
,<lb/>
k<lb/>
 -? ?<lb/>
BREAKFAST BAR<lb/>
? FraMy Scra??bl8jd Egg ? Homml<lb/>
? mmWmtm ?W? Of ? Mom? FrHKJI<lb/>
Homtfnidt MufHna ? Link and<lb/>
.jpn.y o?m S?ai?? Fn.lt Toppl<lb/>
PLUS THa Ff?il Mr laatentvg ? v?<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
A<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0003"/><lb/>
I HI UM( AlROI INIAN<lb/>
MRCH 17, 183<lb/>
.Phone.<lb/>
.enclosed<lb/>
! I I 1 I<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
? ? -<lb/>
.<lb/>
4-t<lb/>
4<lb/>
ffl<lb/>
i<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
SGA POSITIONS STILL<lb/>
Av AlLABLE<lb/>
REVIVAL<lb/>
I he Fast Carolinian<lb/>
 if cvmpui ? ommumti<lb/>
i -t. ? uesoay<lb/>
-?d, dur ng the<lb/>
?car ana every<lb/>
la ? Hiring rre sum<lb/>
mer<lb/>
?st Caro n a n i s r he<lb/>
'Askdp?' 04 East<lb/>
vers  owned.<lb/>
i W Dobshea tor<lb/>
"X s?uaen's of East<lb/>
ha n .ps ?v<lb/>
Subscription R?te 120 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian otticei<lb/>
are locateo in the Old South<lb/>
Building, on the campu5 0f<lb/>
ECU Greenville N C<lb/>
" I R Send aa<lb/>
? tn ' "ne East<lb/>
' 0 a South<lb/>
Greenv.iie<lb/>
N ilt<lb/>
Telephone 7 57 3? ?37<lb/>
BEST LEGS<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
S EBSONAL<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
ASSOr li'iniu<lb/>
LE HEART<lb/>
R SOUL<lb/>
Eas'<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR<lb/>
CHRIST<lb/>
"ante to<lb/>
SDoor<lb/>
- ? - win ter<lb/>
iphs wih te<lb/>
? ? more in<lb/>
"? ?'? noose<lb/>
MARKETING<lb/>
FILM SERIES<lb/>
he a net a" Va-hetng<lb/>
and ne Depar?men<lb/>
? v. keting present Part 2 o a<lb/>
? . ? rig f nrt Ser es Tne<lb/>
ns a provae "toi-mation<lb/>
? ? 'f hfl (X rtunitHM<lb/>
 A show relevance ot<lb/>
? ?-  'rpora'e oCiec<lb/>
? " Bas 01 oorraon<lb/>
 series w Be sh  n Raw!<lb/>
v ?3 ana<lb/>
 Je Adverting<lb/>
notion' on -he IJra az<lb/>
? es Management on the<lb/>
.??? i ?? fec s'jaents are<lb/>
?eno<lb/>
NATURAL LIGHT<lb/>
ULTIMAX<lb/>
March 26-27 s But a w?k<lb/>
away ana 'he irates are gen,n,<lb/>
"e.r t.rst ultimate iournameniv<lb/>
?ogeter come Ot aio see tne<lb/>
Ses ias' oas' teams compete<lb/>
?  -nf ? aes pract.ee<lb/>
? ? ? ' es ' THrs a 'he bo'<lb/>
?  - a' 4 00 Club<lb/>
neetingj ?? v - - gnts 8 00<lb/>
K ? .4 v a -e '??e'es'ec<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
TheUmktkUA&amp;Ckmd<lb/>
 I KM ?o <lb/>
 es ;s<lb/>
o- UJ<lb/>
? ? 5 a<lb/>
? 5 ??<lb/>
2 uj O<lb/>
May<lb/>
(CPS) - "I'm not<lb/>
really worried" about<lb/>
finding a summer job,<lb/>
shrugs Steve Thomas<lb/>
a University of<lb/>
Florida freshman.<lb/>
"I'm pretty sure I'll<lb/>
get something<lb/>
m sure<lb/>
something will turn<lb/>
up agrees Mark<lb/>
Greenspan, another<lb/>
UF freshman. "There<lb/>
are higher priorities<lb/>
than summer jobs<lb/>
right now, like trving<lb/>
to get through the<lb/>
semester<lb/>
With U.S.<lb/>
unemployment rates<lb/>
stuck around 10 per-<lb/>
cent, a surprising<lb/>
number of students<lb/>
remain un worried<lb/>
they'll be able to find<lb/>
summer jobs this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The nonchalance<lb/>
may be inappropriate,<lb/>
however.<lb/>
Summer employ-<lb/>
ment for college<lb/>
students doesn't look<lb/>
promising in most<lb/>
parts of the country,<lb/>
placement officials<lb/>
report.<lb/>
"This is probably<lb/>
one of the worst<lb/>
years observes<lb/>
Camille Kozlowski of<lb/>
Portland (Ore.) Com-<lb/>
munity College's<lb/>
placement office. "It<lb/>
is an employer's<lb/>
market<lb/>
Summer job offers<lb/>
are down 10 percent<lb/>
at the University of<lb/>
New Mexico. Florida<lb/>
job counselor<lb/>
Maurice Mayberry<lb/>
asserts "the bulk of<lb/>
plum jobs have<lb/>
already been taken<lb/>
If you don't have a<lb/>
summer job lined up<lb/>
already, he says, you<lb/>
probably won't be<lb/>
able to line up<lb/>
anything that pays<lb/>
better than the<lb/>
minimum wage.<lb/>
Others suggest<lb/>
students will be lucky<lb/>
to find minimum<lb/>
wage jobs. "It's not<lb/>
real, real encourag-<lb/>
ing says Mary Jo<lb/>
SRA To Donate $200<lb/>
To Village Green Fund<lb/>
In a late Wednsday<lb/>
afternoon ote, the<lb/>
Student Residence<lb/>
Association approved<lb/>
a S200 donation to the<lb/>
ECU Village Green<lb/>
Emergency Fund to<lb/>
aid the victims of the<lb/>
explosion that occur-<lb/>
red at the apartment<lb/>
complex March 2.<lb/>
In a 20 to one ote<lb/>
the SRA, acting on a<lb/>
suggestion made by<lb/>
SRA publicity<lb/>
chairperson Lindsey<lb/>
Williams, approved<lb/>
the gift to the hind,<lb/>
which now totals close<lb/>
to $2,500.<lb/>
"We felt that it was<lb/>
a tragic event for our<lb/>
fellow students said<lb/>
SRA Vice President<lb/>
Mark Niewaldand<lb/>
wherever we can help,<lb/>
we'd like to<lb/>
"We're extending<lb/>
our hand to help those<lb/>
who suffered from<lb/>
this tragic accident<lb/>
said SRA President<lb/>
Tory R u sso. ' We<lb/>
wanted to provide<lb/>
relief, to help them<lb/>
out<lb/>
Niewald pointed<lb/>
out that the SRA does<lb/>
not see itself purely as<lb/>
an organization that<lb/>
provides service to<lb/>
dorm residents, but<lb/>
rather as an organiza-<lb/>
tion for all students.<lb/>
The SRA raised<lb/>
S3 40 earlier this<lb/>
month for Hospice of<lb/>
Fast Carolina, an in-<lb/>
ternational volunteer<lb/>
organization which<lb/>
helps families of<lb/>
cancer patients and<lb/>
the terminally ill. The<lb/>
SRA raised the money<lb/>
by donating one day's<lb/>
proceeds from their<lb/>
gameroom arcade.<lb/>
SRA has also agreed<lb/>
to donate a day's pro-<lb/>
ceeds from their<lb/>
gameroom to Hospice<lb/>
each month<lb/>
throughout the school<lb/>
year. "That is just a<lb/>
wonderful thing<lb/>
said Dr. Mary Ann<lb/>
Rose, assistant pro-<lb/>
fessor in the ECU<lb/>
School of Nursing,<lb/>
who volunteers with<lb/>
the local Hospice<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
HEATRES<lb/>
"?<lb/>
ADULTS $Z00 TIL 5:30 ?<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
ANT-riatr<lb/>
IT3)<lb/>
'y ntr ? r<lb/>
WWiUhi.iiiiu iii.yi<lb/>
Starts Tomorrow! Exclusion!<lb/>
The Sequal to one of the most popular A dult films ever!<lb/>
Don 7 Miss it!<lb/>
1:211.3:20,5:20. 7:20. 9:20<lb/>
 <lb/>
s.<lb/>
A?<lb/>
evu<lb/>
'gWss'JormPzrtii SSSu,<lb/>
A Romantic Comedy ADMITTED<lb/>
Just for the Hell of it!<lb/>
IvT:<lb/>
f .<lb/>
V<lb/>
I BREAKFAST BAR OFFERINGS!<lb/>
? Freshly Scrambled Egg ? Homemade Buttermilk Biscuits ? Bacon<lb/>
? Country Milk Gravy ? Horn Fried Potatoes ? Southern Style Grits ?<lb/>
Homemade Muffins ? Link and Patty Sausage ? A Choice ot<lb/>
Shoneys Own Special Fruit Toppings ? Grated American Cheeae ?<lb/>
PLUS The Frutt Bar featuring a variety of freah fruit and tomatoes<lb/>
SHONEYo<lb/>
MONDAY-FRIDAY<lb/>
6-00 A.M11:00 A.M.<lb/>
SATURDAY-SUNDAY<lb/>
A HOLIDAYS<lb/>
6:00 A.M2:00 P.M.<lb/>
Dohr of Manpower,<lb/>
Inc the nationwide<lb/>
temporary help firm.<lb/>
Manpower's latest<lb/>
survey of employers<lb/>
found 15 percent plan<lb/>
to decrease staff pos-<lb/>
tions from last year's<lb/>
levels.<lb/>
Manpower placed<lb/>
50,000 students in<lb/>
summer jobs last<lb/>
year, and Dohr hopes<lb/>
the company will be<lb/>
able to do as well this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Ohio State Finan-<lb/>
cial Aid Director<lb/>
Weldon Milbourne<lb/>
also hopes to be able<lb/>
to do as well as last<lb/>
year, but isn't sure<lb/>
he'll be able to equal<lb/>
the number of work-<lb/>
study jobs he found<lb/>
then.<lb/>
Full-time summer<lb/>
jobs, he speculates,<lb/>
will be even harder to<lb/>
find. Even intern<lb/>
jobs, which tend to be<lb/>
unpaid, are expected<lb/>
to hold at last year's<lb/>
levels, at best.<lb/>
The World Bank in<lb/>
Washington, D.C is<lb/>
currently sifting<lb/>
through over 2000 ap-<lb/>
plications from<lb/>
economics, finance<lb/>
and computer science<lb/>
students who applied<lb/>
for internships. But a<lb/>
World Bank<lb/>
spokeswoman says<lb/>
there will probably be<lb/>
only about 140 posi-<lb/>
tions open, the same<lb/>
as in 1982.<lb/>
There are signs of<lb/>
hope. The College<lb/>
Placement Council's<lb/>
November, 1982<lb/>
survey of employers'<lb/>
intentions indicated<lb/>
businesses expected to<lb/>
loosen hiring practices<lb/>
around this May, but<lb/>
a CPC spokeswoman<lb/>
says relief doesn't<lb/>
look like it'll come in<lb/>
time to help summer<lb/>
hiring.<lb/>
Fort Hays (Kans.)<lb/>
State University<lb/>
placement chief<lb/>
Robert Jenkins<lb/>
"really thinks that, in<lb/>
Fort Hays, any stu-<lb/>
dent who wants sum-<lb/>
mer employment and<lb/>
is geographically flex-<lb/>
ible can get it<lb/>
Jenkins says he's<lb/>
gotten job orders<lb/>
from Yellowstone Na-<lb/>
tional Park, far-flung<lb/>
resorts, various<lb/>
overseas firms and<lb/>
summer camps<lb/>
Florida's<lb/>
pessimistic Mayberrv<lb/>
thinks his students'<lb/>
last, best hope may be<lb/>
with Southwest<lb/>
Publishing Co which<lb/>
annually recruits UF<lb/>
students, transports<lb/>
them to faraway<lb/>
Nashville, trains<lb/>
them, and then sends<lb/>
them around the<lb/>
country to sell books<lb/>
during the summers.<lb/>
I I junior Hal Red-<lb/>
dick, for example,<lb/>
claims to have made<lb/>
$9000 selling books in<lb/>
Indiana last summer,<lb/>
though after expenses<lb/>
he banked a relativelv<lb/>
modest S1600.<lb/>
"The amazing<lb/>
thing that happens is<lb/>
that some of the<lb/>
students come back<lb/>
driving Mercedes<lb/>
Mayberrv says.<lb/>
Less spectacularly,<lb/>
McDonalds says it'll<lb/>
probably be hiring a<lb/>
normal number of<lb/>
student workers this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
"Our business has<lb/>
been extremely good,<lb/>
and it looks like the<lb/>
summer months of<lb/>
1983 will remain<lb/>
good reports Steve<lb/>
Lerov ot the fast food<lb/>
company. McDonalds<lb/>
will hire during the<lb/>
summer because<lb/>
many of ns stores are<lb/>
locally owned and<lb/>
operated<lb/>
But m Portland,<lb/>
Kozlowski estimates<lb/>
there are as many as<lb/>
2000 applications out<lb/>
for every local<lb/>
restaurant job.<lb/>
To land any sum-<lb/>
mer job, she suggests<lb/>
students be ready to<lb/>
work "junk hours"<lb/>
and be flexible.<lb/>
Summer Jobs<lb/>
for<lb/>
Tryon Company Inc.<lb/>
Interviews will be held at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
at the Coffee House<lb/>
Monday March 21<lb/>
at 10 am to 2:30 pm and<lb/>
4pm-7pm<lb/>
Job will involve approximately 14 weeks<lb/>
work in Charlotte N.C. $800 monthly<lb/>
plus bonuses<lb/>
call 704-525-0572<lb/>
if you can't make it.<lb/>
Right Bros.<lb/>
Bike Sho<lb/>
207 B East Fifth St.<lb/>
phone 752-6181<lb/>
"Quality Repair Work At<lb/>
reasonable Prices<lb/>
Good For $10.00 Discount<lb/>
On Any New Bicycle Or<lb/>
10 Discount<lb/>
On<lb/>
Accessories &amp; Parts<lb/>
? ? Coupon?<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
6 E - - '<lb/>
<lb/>
 - . <lb/>
se.  home - :? E<lb/>
UUNCH a : ss? SPEC i<lb/>
Zi VI C0B 2 98 - "4<lb/>
HPP HoiHIUMHU?<lb/>
am - 9pm DA v<lb/>
i<lb/>
- . ? - (?-<lb/>
- - ? - fii - . .f<lb/>
?<lb/>
: ' ? ? ? ? -<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed March 16<lb/>
thru Sat March 19 193<lb/>
ITEM<lb/>
Open Mon. thru Sat. 8am to Midnight - Sun. 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
ADVEBT,SED<lb/>
POliO<lb/>
Eacfi ot ??sese advef<lb/>
'?sea tems s re<lb/>
quired to te reacj.iy<lb/>
a?aiab'e tor sate m<lb/>
eacfi Kroger Sa? on<lb/>
eiceo as speo'icaii<lb/>
"ote3 mi this ad II e<lb/>
do 'u" out ot a" 'tem<lb/>
e will ot'er ,0m ru.<lb/>
co?c? of a com<lb/>
parable item ?h?n<lb/>
available reflecting<lb/>
tie same savmgs or a<lb/>
ramchec which will<lb/>
entitle you to pur<lb/>
chase the advertised<lb/>
? tern at the advertised<lb/>
price within 30 days<lb/>
ASSORTED TOPPINGS<lb/>
Fox Deluxe<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
10-O2.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
SPRINGDALE<lb/>
HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
Whole Milk<lb/>
ANHEUSER BUSCH<lb/>
Natural Light<lb/>
COST CUTTER FROZEN<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Can<lb/>
HI-DRI<lb/>
Jumbo<lb/>
Roll<lb/>
MT. DEW OR<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
8449<lb/>
6-Oz. ?<lb/>
16-Oz. <lb/>
Ret. ?<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
DEPOSIT<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
Brevet's<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
$<lb/>
Vz-Gal.<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED<lb/>
STORE GROUND OR<lb/>
CHUB PAK<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Beef<lb/>
i<lb/>
.f.<lb/>
"U<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
LIMIT 5-LBS.<lb/>
FRESH CHEESE OR<lb/>
Sausage Pizza<lb/>
2 $5so<lb/>
AMERICAN OR<lb/>
MUSTARD<lb/>
FRESH FRIED<lb/>
DAILY<lb/>
Potato Salad Glazed Donuts<lb/>
$4 79<lb/>
Lb m -qur 002. I<lb/>
MKS<lb/>
I<lb/>
mm h ? mW<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0004"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Sire East (Earoltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, awiimmr<lb/>
Mike Hughes. mw?rmtm<lb/>
WAVFRLY MERR1TT. bm tf ?? ClNDY PLEASANTS. $?ra EM<lb/>
Scott Lindley. m. ???? Greg Rideout. v? e?<lb/>
At 1 AFRASHTEH. cm Mmm? STEVE BaCHNER, to.?m,?, ??<lb/>
Stephanie Groon. a?? m Juliana Fahrbach. $, e<lb/>
Ct ay Thornton, iktaw???? Todd Evans, ,???. ????<lb/>
March 17, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Hunt's Plan A Winner<lb/>
Senate Balances Drunken Driving Package<lb/>
On Tuesday, the state Senate<lb/>
passed Gov. Jim Hunt's drunken<lb/>
driving bill and sent it to the<lb/>
House with one amendment: a<lb/>
proposed ban on possession of<lb/>
open beer and wine containers in<lb/>
most cars and light trucks in the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Since drunk driving in North<lb/>
Carolina constitutes one of, if not<lb/>
neglect to amend that law. After<lb/>
all, it seems obvious that one of the<lb/>
best ways to keep drunk drivers off<lb/>
the road is to keep alcohol out of<lb/>
the cars. But perhaps that's too ob-<lb/>
vious.<lb/>
Fortunately, the state Senate<lb/>
recognized this inconsistency and<lb/>
amended the Hunt package ap-<lb/>
propriately. As the bill stands now,<lb/>
the, worst problem in the state, it is it would make it illegal for drivers<lb/>
both refreshing and encouraging or passengers in vehicles traveling<lb/>
that the legislature at least appears on North Carolina roads to have<lb/>
to be taking a decisive stand. open alcoholic beverage containers<lb/>
Under Hunt's original bill were of any sort in their possession,<lb/>
several drastic changes, changes That seemingly logical amend-<lb/>
which the governor said would give ment, however, is expected to<lb/>
North Carolina "the toughest and cause problems in the House,<lb/>
most comprehensive drunk driving which will be considering similar<lb/>
law in the nation legislation over the next few days.<lb/>
He proposed eliminating plea Members of the House rejected a<lb/>
bargaining in drunken driving similar proposal in 1981, corn-<lb/>
cases bv abolishing existing DUI plaining that the bill would prevent<lb/>
laws and lesser offenses, replacing drinking on buses headed for<lb/>
them with a single driving-while- athletic events,<lb/>
impaired statute.<lb/>
His bill also calls for mandatory It's certainly good to know that<lb/>
seven- to 14-day jail sentences for our entrusted representatives have<lb/>
serious violations and increased their priorities in order<lb/>
ECU Students Exploited From All Sides<lb/>
 A in't Just Landlords<lb/>
fines and sentences for less serious<lb/>
cases, not to mention a raise in the<lb/>
minimum drinking age for beer<lb/>
and wine from 18 to 19.<lb/>
But whereas these are, indeed, a<lb/>
few steps in the right direction,<lb/>
Hunt, nevertheless, overlooked<lb/>
one of the most obvious flaws in<lb/>
the state's current legislation. In<lb/>
All petty gripes aside, though,<lb/>
Hunt's drunken driving package<lb/>
may well be the best piece of<lb/>
legislation the state has seen in a<lb/>
long time. It's a plan whose time<lb/>
has come. But it's also a plan<lb/>
which will require a tremendous<lb/>
co-operative enforcement effort,<lb/>
another fact that Hunt has pretty<lb/>
effect what he proposed, although much overlooked in the past<lb/>
self-dubbed as the "toughest<lb/>
was a mere mockery of the word.<lb/>
If Hunt's original bill had pass-<lb/>
ed unamended, it would have re-<lb/>
mained legal in North Carolina for<lb/>
passengers to have open beer or<lb/>
wine containers in a moving vehi-<lb/>
cle.<lb/>
It is somehow ironic that an all-<lb/>
out "crackdown" on drunken<lb/>
driving on the state's roads would<lb/>
He concentrates totally on revis-<lb/>
ing legislation, a good start but on-<lb/>
ly half the problem. Sure, his plan<lb/>
may well be aimed at improving<lb/>
law-enforcement conditions<lb/>
(making the law "easier" for<lb/>
authorities to enforce). But the<lb/>
success of his package depends not<lb/>
only on its passage in the House<lb/>
but on its eventual, meaningful ex-<lb/>
ecution.<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
It was exhilirating to read the letter by<lb/>
Richard A. Freund in "Campus<lb/>
Forum" on Tuesday. This is because<lb/>
while the Village Green tragedy was sad,<lb/>
depressing and horrible, Mr. Freund was<lb/>
finally able to articulate the frustration<lb/>
and anger that many of us felt in relation<lb/>
to the event and to analyze the underly-<lb/>
ing causes.<lb/>
Yes, it is all too clear that the student<lb/>
population of ECU is the victim of ex-<lb/>
ploitation. Negligent landlords, greedy<lb/>
employers and a utilities commission<lb/>
that gives the students no vote in deci-<lb/>
sions that are made which affect us. To<lb/>
top it all off, the registrars in Greenville<lb/>
discourage students from even register-<lb/>
ing to vote because, they say, we are a<lb/>
transient population that will not have<lb/>
to live with the consequences of the<lb/>
legislation we vote on.<lb/>
Nevertheless, there will always be a<lb/>
constant student population of 13,000 or<lb/>
more whose collective voice deserves 10<lb/>
be heard. In effect, we are politically<lb/>
disenfranchised. In addition, our<lb/>
employers often pay us lousy wages and<lb/>
practice an authoritarian form of<lb/>
management which relegates employees<lb/>
to the status of submissive serfs, who<lb/>
despise their jobs while living in fear of<lb/>
losing them and being unable to pay<lb/>
their bills.<lb/>
Female student-employees are fre-<lb/>
quently sexually harrassed on the job,<lb/>
and they are expected to behave as<lb/>
though they're flattered by the<lb/>
patronage.<lb/>
Indeed, the grumble of discontent is<lb/>
frequent and often loud, but seldom is it<lb/>
organized. And not until the student<lb/>
community is solidly organized can we<lb/>
expect a change in our status and reform<lb/>
on the part of those who profit from our<lb/>
current state of disenfranchisement and<lb/>
weakness.<lb/>
There are many possibilities. First, to<lb/>
deal with the landlord problem, the SGA<lb/>
should form a grievance committee to<lb/>
hear and investigate complaints against<lb/>
negligent landlords. If a landlord is<lb/>
found to be negligent, then the SGA<lb/>
should intervene on behalf of the stu-<lb/>
dent by threatening the landlord with<lb/>
legal action, a student boycott, picketing<lb/>
and bad press. In short, the SGA should<lb/>
begin to protect the students from ex-<lb/>
ploitation, and it should let landlords in<lb/>
Greenville know that students have the<lb/>
political clout to take action against<lb/>
them if they are negligent.<lb/>
Second. to deal with the<lb/>
employer employee relationship in this<lb/>
town, students must organize. This is a<lb/>
difficult problem because of the limita-<lb/>
tions of time, yet it is not an insurmoun-<lb/>
table one. A student-employee off-<lb/>
campus union should be formed. It<lb/>
could be funded in pan by the SGA and<lb/>
in part by membership dues. Businesses<lb/>
that exploit emplovees would be boycot-<lb/>
ted, picketed and given bad press. In ef-<lb/>
fect, we would shut them down.<lb/>
For businesses that have a monopoly<lb/>
in town and who are particularly intran-<lb/>
sigent in meeting our demands. Ntudent-<lb/>
run cooperatives could be started to<lb/>
compete with them and. with student<lb/>
support, drive them out of business. The<lb/>
monev for this venture could come from<lb/>
Ins And Outs Of Spring<lb/>
DEAR STAN LANDERS: Spring has<lb/>
arrived, and once again, I have a big pro-<lb/>
blem. Since the weather is nice outside,<lb/>
most of my friends spend their free time<lb/>
out on the lawn basking in the sun. They<lb/>
always ask me to go with them, but I just<lb/>
can't. You see, I have an outie belly but-<lb/>
ton. .<lb/>
Now, I realize a lot of other successful<lb/>
people have outies. but mine isn't just<lb/>
vour average outie. It's downright big.<lb/>
Case in point: I remember swimming in a<lb/>
pond with my cousin last summer, and a<lb/>
little sunfish came up and started nibbling<lb/>
on it. Stan, he thought it was a worm!<lb/>
I've tried everything: one-piece bathing<lb/>
suits, T-shirts, electrical tape, but nothing<lb/>
seems to work. But Stan, the worst thing<lb/>
is it simplv won 7 tan.<lb/>
I realize that you probably get hundreds<lb/>
of letters like this every week but would<lb/>
appreciate any and all advice you may of-<lb/>
fer. Until then. I remain<lb/>
STAN LANDERS<lb/>
On Love And Stuff<lb/>
INDOOR OUTIE FROM GRIFTON<lb/>
DEAR OUTIE: Wow! I'll bet you look<lb/>
funny as hell! But seriously, OUTIE, the<lb/>
First thing you should remember is that<lb/>
God created your unsightly appendage for<lb/>
a reason. Obviously, he has a purpose for<lb/>
you and yours. So, let me ask you this,<lb/>
have you ever thought of joining the cir-<lb/>
cus and doing a couple of shows a day?<lb/>
After all, since you've tried "everything"<lb/>
else to no avail, you might as well make<lb/>
the most of the situation, right?<lb/>
But if show biz isn't for you, then you<lb/>
might want to consider the advantages of<lb/>
a strategically-placed ornament. A<lb/>
tasteful piece of costume jewelry, for ex-<lb/>
ample, to accent your natural beauty<lb/>
while downplaying your ill-shaped<lb/>
midsection. Certainly, when faced with a<lb/>
crisis like this one, monetary cost is not a<lb/>
factor. But it may be comforting to know<lb/>
that most jewelry stores will fit you for a<lb/>
ring at no charge.<lb/>
DEAR STAN LANDERS: Boy, that<lb/>
lady sure has problems, huh? Fortunate-<lb/>
ly, mine is nothing compared to that!<lb/>
Nevertheless, it runs along those same<lb/>
lines.<lb/>
I recently attended a Slim Whitman<lb/>
song festival in Bethel, at which time, I<lb/>
met the girl of my dreams. She had long,<lb/>
stringy red hair, wonderful eyes (one<lb/>
green, one brown) and beautiful orange<lb/>
and black freckles all over her shapely<lb/>
190-pound frame.<lb/>
She was chowing down on a dripping<lb/>
tuna burrito and sweating profusely when<lb/>
she caught the corner of my eye. And<lb/>
needless to say, it was love at first sight.<lb/>
We ended up spending the rest of the<lb/>
weekend together, yodelling, laughing,<lb/>
sweating profusely and eating. It was<lb/>
wonderful.<lb/>
But like all good things, my weekend<lb/>
with Eunice came to an end. We parted<lb/>
after a long goodbye bearhug. making all<lb/>
the usual promises to keep in touch. But<lb/>
the problem. Stan, is that it's been two<lb/>
weeks since the festival, and I haven't<lb/>
heard a thing from her. I know she's<lb/>
received my letters ? I've written eight. I<lb/>
guess I'm just not good enough for her<lb/>
I don't know what to do.<lb/>
LONEL Y IN LIZA RD LICK<lb/>
DEAR LIZ: The girl of your dreams,<lb/>
huh? Well, I'd certainly hate to catch<lb/>
your version of a nightmare! But serious-<lb/>
ly, Liz, I must admit, it sounds like you've<lb/>
got yourself a real winner. Tell me this, is<lb/>
she also a competition belcher? Does she<lb/>
play rugby or ride in a rodeo? If so, you<lb/>
may be right in your analysis: You're just<lb/>
not good enough for her. My advice,<lb/>
then, is for you to forget about your little<lb/>
raisin in the sun and find yourself so-<lb/>
meone with a little less to look forward to<lb/>
in life. Don't aim so high next time.<lb/>
UXMJOIJjm SOS WAITER MATTHAUS 5ARA6?<lb/>
-Campus Forum<lb/>
the federal co-op bank, which was giver<lb/>
increased funding and power under t!<lb/>
Carter administration, or perhaps ever<lb/>
from the university's endowment fund,<lb/>
since it would be, in essence, a loan A<lb/>
student-run co-op could maintain a<lb/>
many as 30 to 50 stockholders who run<lb/>
the business with a minimum experv<lb/>
diture of time and who sell or give their<lb/>
share of stock to another student wher.<lb/>
thev graduate.<lb/>
Third, to deal with the problem ot a<lb/>
Greenville Utilities Commission which<lb/>
has decided to form a municipal utilities<lb/>
corporation and buy part ownership ol<lb/>
nuclear and coal-fired power facilities in<lb/>
the state, we must demand student<lb/>
representation. The GUC took an action<lb/>
that was not in the interest of the citizens<lb/>
of Greenville, much less the students of<lb/>
ECU. An alternative proposal which en-<lb/>
couraged a more solar and conservation-<lb/>
oriented approach was submitted and<lb/>
summarily rejected.<lb/>
The student community never knew<lb/>
about the public hearing on the matter<lb/>
and never had the power to cast a vote<lb/>
on the Utilities Commission itself.<lb/>
Students should push for proportional<lb/>
representation on the Utilities Commis-<lb/>
sion. In other words, if students com-<lb/>
prise one-third of the population of<lb/>
Greenville, then one-third of the com-<lb/>
missioners on the GUC board should be<lb/>
elected by students. These represen-<lb/>
tatives should have voting power and<lb/>
not just a right to sit on the board;<lb/>
otherwise, it would be a purely cosmetic<lb/>
gesture. Only when we have our own<lb/>
representatives can we expect our in-<lb/>
terests to be represented.<lb/>
Fourth, we should form alliances with<lb/>
the rest of the exploited in the city ? the<lb/>
people in west Greenville. After all, they<lb/>
have an interest in lower utiity rates too.<lb/>
There are also organizations in the state<lb/>
like PIRG and Carolina Action that can<lb/>
give us valuable assistance and instruc-<lb/>
tion. We should ask for their help in<lb/>
learning how to organize against the<lb/>
vested interests that perpetuate the pre-<lb/>
sent intolerable state of affairs.<lb/>
Finally, there is the question of who<lb/>
will take these initiatives. Ideally, the<lb/>
SGA should do so since they are the<lb/>
political representatives of the universi-<lb/>
ty. But often, initiatives begin outside<lb/>
the svstem with activist-oriented in-<lb/>
dividuals. In the end, to say that it<lb/>
should be done is not to say that it will<lb/>
be done. What is needed is the will to get<lb/>
it done.<lb/>
Campus Escort Service Is Still A vailable<lb/>
Because of recent events, I would<lb/>
like to take this opportunity to remind<lb/>
the female students of ECU that Pirate<lb/>
Walk operates from 6 p.m. until mid-<lb/>
night on Sunday through Thursday<lb/>
nights. If a female needs an escort, she<lb/>
should dial the Pirate Walk number,<lb/>
757-6616, and an escort will be sent to<lb/>
her location. We have escorts on dif-<lb/>
ferent parts of the campus so that it<lb/>
will not take much time for the escort<lb/>
to arrive. Also, if a girl has a night<lb/>
class, she can call ahead of time, and<lb/>
an escort will be waiting for her when<lb/>
she gets out of her class. I would stress<lb/>
again that all of these escorts have been<lb/>
thoroughly screened.<lb/>
As of March 3, Pirate Walk had log-<lb/>
Again, Pirate Walk operates from 6<lb/>
p.m. until midnight, Sunday through<lb/>
Thursday. I urge all female students to<lb/>
use this service and not take chances.<lb/>
Paul Summrell<lb/>
Director. Pirate Walk<lb/>
ECAC's Top-Dog<lb/>
John Edwards was clearly the best<lb/>
newcomer and top rookie in the<lb/>
ECAC-South this past winter. It's a<lb/>
strange paradox that the ECAC-South,<lb/>
a conference hungry for credibility as<lb/>
ged more than '400 calls from girls well as respectability would not try to<lb/>
gcu iiiuis "??" -Tw n,m cIiautcp 9 t!) pnt wch as Edwards.<lb/>
we are vitally interested. There are a<lb/>
handful of universities which also ac-<lb/>
cept A.S.L. as an option in the foreign<lb/>
language requirement. The University<lb/>
of Texas, the University of California<lb/>
system. Catholic University, American<lb/>
University, Northeastern University.<lb/>
New York University and Boston<lb/>
University, among others.<lb/>
We appreciate your support in<lb/>
acknowledging American Sign<lb/>
Language as more than a communica-<lb/>
tion system but representing a language<lb/>
and culture of its own.<lb/>
Leonard M. Ernest, Director<lb/>
Barbara Howlett, Ed. Specialist<lb/>
Kathy Beetham, Interpreter<lb/>
Patricia Wilson, Instructor<lb/>
Editor's Note: Stan Landers, Green-<lb/>
ville's best-known advice columnist, took<lb/>
the Charles Atlas body-building cor-<lb/>
respondence course last spring and got rid<lb/>
of his unsightly outie belly button. He is<lb/>
now 103 pounds of solid steel and no<lb/>
longer has to worry about getting sand<lb/>
kicked in his face.<lb/>
needing escorts, and we have more<lb/>
than 60 active male escorts in our ser-<lb/>
vice. All these escorts are dedicated to<lb/>
our service and cause. All of these<lb/>
escorts are volunteers who give up their<lb/>
spare time to help.<lb/>
If there are any questions, or if there<lb/>
have been any problems with Pirate<lb/>
Walk, please let us know. Also, if there<lb/>
is any group or organization that<lb/>
would like for us to come and talk with<lb/>
them, please contact us. jFOUjjB<lb/>
during the day, ask for the SGA office<lb/>
and leave a message, and we will return<lb/>
your call.<lb/>
showcase a talent such as Edwards.<lb/>
Jerry O'Keeffe<lb/>
Junior, Business<lb/>
'Sign' Of The Times<lb/>
We at the Program for Hearing Im-<lb/>
paired Students were very pleased to<lb/>
your editorial "The Computer Age<lb/>
which mentioned the acceptance of<lb/>
American Sign Language as a foreign<lb/>
language at the University of<lb/>
Washington. This is an area in which<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 Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
For put poses of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authoris). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed.<lb/>
Landfi<lb/>
Althou<lb/>
sure. Debor.ir. <lb/>
'hinks ?<lb/>
band hj - ar-<lb/>
.<lb/>
and twelve I<lb/>
civil disot<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
haardou -<lb/>
I<lb/>
? ra Wai<lb/>
Ken i<lb/>
M<lb/>
Farr Tail<lb/>
M ii<lb/>
Cosi<lb/>
?? t<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
A<lb/>
1-arr <lb/>
I<lb/>
 a 1 <lb/>
S C H<lb/>
Hci ' p<lb/>
"Fro m I<lb/>
Mufi<lb/>
I act<lb/>
Path to W<lb/>
Teaching<lb/>
Educatio<lb/>
Te reat<lb/>
tectivene<lb/>
tee of the "r<lb/>
Ser<lb/>
sene- -<lb/>
wofl<lb/>
imprc ' -<lb/>
teaching<lb/>
series run<lb/>
next week<lb/>
aiions or. the t<lb/>
ampu and<lb/>
orVhop<lb/>
argc range i p?<lb/>
related<lb/>
arid t rencf her Frig<lb/>
contact b e t w <lb/>
teachers and stud<lb/>
or assisting rj in<lb/>
more effeel<lb/>
I<lb/>
15<lb/>
ECU DIS<lb/>
on all ore:<lb/>
eyegia<lb/>
315 Pjk - ?<lb/>
Acrovs fr- C<lb/>
752 11<lb/>
iciai<lb/>
STur<lb/>
FU<lb/>
Student<lb/>
are allo1<lb/>
1983-84<lb/>
spring <lb/>
submitti<lb/>
March<lb/>
IN AL1<lb/>
ACCOl<lb/>
AND<lb/>
Copies ol<lb/>
are avail<lb/>
When thef<lb/>
available<lb/>
Budgets<lb/>
by the A<lb/>
Leg?slat<lb/>
No Fun<lb/>
months<lb/>
special el<lb/>
executN<lb/>
A<lb/>
. s? . -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0005"/><lb/>
II Sides<lb/>
Op<lb/>
5fl<lb/>
andlords<lb/>
p uank. uhich was given<lb/>
g and power under the<lb/>
? perhaps even<lb/>
frsity's endowment fund,<lb/>
m essence, a loan. A<lb/>
could maintain as<lb/>
tockholders who run<lb/>
nh a minimum expen-<lb/>
: ?' id or give their<lb/>
ther student when<lb/>
dea with the problem of a<lb/>
tilitics Commission which<lb/>
rm a municipal utilities<lb/>
? part ownership of<lb/>
:oal fired power facilities in<lb/>
A musl demand student<lb/>
I he Gl C took an action<lb/>
merest of the citizens<lb/>
less the students of<lb/>
i' ?? proposal which en-<lb/>
??' and conservation-<lb/>
was submitted and<lb/>
l communit) never knew<lb/>
he public hearing on the matter<lb/>
i never had the power to cast a vote<lb/>
an the Utilities Commission itself<lb/>
Students should push for proportional<lb/>
n rhe Utilities Commis-<lb/>
words, if students com-<lb/>
f rhe population of<lb/>
one-third of the com-<lb/>
Gl C board should be<lb/>
These represen-<lb/>
- e voting power and<lb/>
811 so sit on the board;<lb/>
 lid be a purely cosmetic<lb/>
A hen we have our own<lb/>
.an we expect our in-<lb/>
represented.<lb/>
. we should form alliances with<lb/>
? the exploited in the city ? the<lb/>
vest Greenville. After all, they<lb/>
in interest in lower utiity rates too<lb/>
wre are i ? .anizations in the state<lb/>
riKtj andarolirm Action that can<lb/>
iance and instruc-<lb/>
ask for their help in<lb/>
? to organize against the<lb/>
ts that perpetuate the pre-<lb/>
mie state of affairs,<lb/>
nere is the question of who<lb/>
? these initiatives. Ideallv, the<lb/>
?io so since thev are the<lb/>
?caJ r tatives of the universi-<lb/>
 ? ten, initiatives begin outside<lb/>
with activist-oriented in-<lb/>
end, to sav that it<lb/>
not to say that it will<lb/>
needed is the w,to get<lb/>
till A vailable<lb/>
are vitally interested. There are a<lb/>
nandhilI of un.vers.ties which also ac-<lb/>
A VL. as an option in the foreign<lb/>
guage requirement. The University<lb/>
? lexas the University of California<lb/>
Catholic University, American<lb/>
Northeastern University,<lb/>
? University and Boston<lb/>
among others.<lb/>
:ec.ate vour support in<lb/>
knowledging American Sign<lb/>
Unguaf asmorethanacommunica-<lb/>
em but representing a language<lb/>
and culture of its own<lb/>
Leonard M. trnest. Director<lb/>
kharRHrletEd -Specialist<lb/>
Kathy Beetham. Interpreter<lb/>
Patricia Wilson, Instructor<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
'JrfJ C?rolman comes letters<lb/>
inn H? I PO,m ?f ?? Mail or<lb/>
hTJ' our ?ff'ce  ? Old<lb/>
thran ,  from <lb/>
Xtatlrn, de the name' maJ?r ?d<lb/>
IndsZT' a1dress- number<lb/>
ouble-spaced or JLT??<lb/>
I ' ,WI ?r atly printed.<lb/>
<lb/>
IHtJE AST CAROL I MAN<lb/>
MARCH I ivsi<lb/>
???5 Sparks Recor Of Civil Disobedience<lb/>
- Deborah fanK. h0 Z  ?. PCB ?? ltat ,a?i?a,cd Pr   , X<lb/>
Although she's not<lb/>
sure. Deborah Ferruc-<lb/>
cio thinks her hus-<lb/>
band has been ar-<lb/>
rested between nine<lb/>
and twelve times for<lb/>
civil disobedience pro-<lb/>
tests at the PCB<lb/>
hazardous waste land-<lb/>
fill near their home in<lb/>
rural Warren County<lb/>
Kenneth Ferruc-<lb/>
cio's last arrest on<lb/>
March 3 was probablv<lb/>
nis most serious. For<lb/>
?he last 13 days Fer-<lb/>
ruccio has been held<lb/>
in the Warren County<lb/>
jail refusing to post<lb/>
$4,000 bond for<lb/>
felonious larceny and<lb/>
trespassing. He has<lb/>
also refused to eat anv<lb/>
food or drink<lb/>
anything other than<lb/>
water since his arrest.<lb/>
On Tuesday, Fer-<lb/>
ruccio was brought to<lb/>
Warren County<lb/>
General Hospital for<lb/>
tests and returned to<lb/>
the jail.<lb/>
At the root of Fer-<lb/>
ruccio's resistance<lb/>
was the decision by<lb/>
state and EPA of-<lb/>
ficials to locate a<lb/>
landfill in Afton,<lb/>
N.C to store hazar-<lb/>
dous PCB waste that<lb/>
was removed from<lb/>
200 miles N.C. road-<lb/>
side last fall.<lb/>
Ferruccio, who is<lb/>
head of a group called<lb/>
Warren County<lb/>
Citizens Concerned<lb/>
About PCB's, has<lb/>
been the leader in the<lb/>
drive to close down<lb/>
the landfill and<lb/>
relocate the con-<lb/>
taninated PCB-laced<lb/>
soil elsewhere.<lb/>
More than 500 peo-<lb/>
ple ? many of them<lb/>
repeater offenders<lb/>
like Ferruccio ? have<lb/>
been arrested for pro-<lb/>
tests over the dump<lb/>
site. Most protestors<lb/>
have been local people<lb/>
like Ferruccio, though<lb/>
others such as District<lb/>
of Columbia Congres<lb/>
Fan Talks On Women 9s History<lb/>
Maria T r-<lb/>
Mane T. Farr,<lb/>
assistant dean of the<lb/>
College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences, will be the<lb/>
featured speaker at<lb/>
Thursday evening's<lb/>
' Women As<lb/>
Pathfinders" seminar<lb/>
at the Willis building.<lb/>
Farr will be speak-<lb/>
ing as part of the<lb/>
celebration of Na-<lb/>
tional Women's<lb/>
History Week and<lb/>
N.C. History Month.<lb/>
Her topic is titled<lb/>
"From little Miss<lb/>
Muffel toCagnev and<lb/>
Lacey: The Changing<lb/>
Path to Women's<lb/>
Careers.<lb/>
"I'm delighted to<lb/>
know that there is a<lb/>
group of very<lb/>
dedicated women in<lb/>
Greenville who are in-<lb/>
terested in encourag-<lb/>
ing women to learn<lb/>
about their ac-<lb/>
complishments in the<lb/>
past and interested<lb/>
also in encouraging<lb/>
women to pursue<lb/>
future ac-<lb/>
complishments Farr<lb/>
aid speaking of the<lb/>
members of the<lb/>
I cague of Women<lb/>
Voters, the Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty Council on the<lb/>
statue of Women and<lb/>
the Women's Ad-<lb/>
visory Council for<lb/>
Pitt Community Col-<lb/>
lege, the sponsors of<lb/>
the seminar.<lb/>
Farr's lecture will<lb/>
focus on what she<lb/>
calls "the change of<lb/>
gender roles" for<lb/>
women, a kind of<lb/>
"how to" for women<lb/>
who are trying to<lb/>
adapt to their new<lb/>
roles and set new<lb/>
goals for living in to-<lb/>
day's world.<lb/>
In the past. Farr<lb/>
has done other<lb/>
presentations on<lb/>
women in administra-<lb/>
tion, career planning,<lb/>
images of women in<lb/>
the media and student<lb/>
evaluation of teaching<lb/>
to various campuses<lb/>
and community<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
Besides Farr's lec-<lb/>
ture, the seminar will<lb/>
also include two<lb/>
discusssions titled<lb/>
"Assets: Take Stock<lb/>
of Your Professional<lb/>
Assets" with Terry<lb/>
Shank facilitating and<lb/>
"Goals: Planning<lb/>
and Implementing<lb/>
Your Goals" with<lb/>
Dr. Karen<lb/>
facilitator.<lb/>
Kale as<lb/>
Gov. James B.<lb/>
Hunt signed a pro-<lb/>
clamation the first of<lb/>
the month for the<lb/>
observance of Na-<lb/>
tional Women's<lb/>
History Week in<lb/>
North Carolina. The<lb/>
program will begin at<lb/>
7 p.m. with a wine<lb/>
and cheese social<lb/>
prior to the program.<lb/>
The seminar is open<lb/>
to the public and cost<lb/>
of $3 per person. The<lb/>
deadline for register-<lb/>
ing is March 20.<lb/>
sional Delegate<lb/>
Walter Fauntroy have<lb/>
taken a stance against<lb/>
the dump.<lb/>
Ferruccio's recent<lb/>
arrest was a result of<lb/>
his decision to<lb/>
"move" ? not steal,<lb/>
claims Mrs. Ferruccio<lb/>
? a water pump<lb/>
which is to be used to<lb/>
pump thousands of<lb/>
gallons of water in the<lb/>
bottom of the landfill<lb/>
into a nearby creek.<lb/>
"Ken and two others<lb/>
(Ruffin Harris and<lb/>
Trish Hubbard) pick-<lb/>
ed up the pump and<lb/>
moved it over Mrs.<lb/>
Ferruccio told The<lb/>
East Carolinian. She<lb/>
said those arrested<lb/>
were not planning to<lb/>
steal the pump and<lb/>
they never removed<lb/>
the pump from state<lb/>
property.<lb/>
Both Harris and<lb/>
Hubbard have posted<lb/>
bail in their cases. All<lb/>
three are slated for<lb/>
trial next Wednesday<lb/>
at which time it is<lb/>
assumed Ferroccio,<lb/>
who has been study-<lb/>
ing the life of Gandhi<lb/>
since his involvement<lb/>
in the landfill issues,<lb/>
will end his fast.<lb/>
Mrs. Ferruccio<lb/>
predicts Warren<lb/>
County PCB story<lb/>
will become a much<lb/>
bigger political and<lb/>
health issue as more<lb/>
facts concerning the<lb/>
dangers of the dump-<lb/>
ing are brought out.<lb/>
On Monday a na-<lb/>
tional news report<lb/>
claimed the emerging<lb/>
consensus of many ex-<lb/>
perts is that the bury-<lb/>
ing of hazardous<lb/>
wastes in landfill<lb/>
might be the least safe<lb/>
method of disposal<lb/>
for such wastes. A<lb/>
three-year study<lb/>
released Wednesdav<lb/>
by<lb/>
At the Warren<lb/>
County site there have<lb/>
been two major pro-<lb/>
blems which are, ac-<lb/>
cording to Ferruccio,<lb/>
already are posing a<lb/>
helath threat to local<lb/>
residents. Water in<lb/>
the lining of the War<lb/>
ren landfill site is<lb/>
causing an<lb/>
enormous extra<lb/>
weight" and could<lb/>
burst through the lin-<lb/>
ing causing seepage of<lb/>
contaminated water<lb/>
into the surrounding<lb/>
area.<lb/>
The other problem<lb/>
has been the build-up<lb/>
of PCB-laced gas<lb/>
under the plastic<lb/>
cover of the waste<lb/>
site. Mrs. Ferruccio<lb/>
claims officials<lb/>
workers have been<lb/>
popping holes in the<lb/>
cover to release the<lb/>
Teaching Effectiveness Committee Has<lb/>
Educational Seminars For ECU Faculty<lb/>
the Congressional<lb/>
Office of Technology dangerous gas into the<lb/>
Assessment is ex- atmosphere<lb/>
pected to cast still fur- The Hunt ad-<lb/>
ther doubt on the ministration had<lb/>
safety of hazardous earlier refused to meet<lb/>
x ?StC dfiIiS With ?PP?nents of the<lb/>
landfill site until the<lb/>
dumping was com-<lb/>
pleted and since then<lb/>
little office response<lb/>
from Raleigh has been<lb/>
made.<lb/>
Ferruccio has<lb/>
a!readv referred to the<lb/>
Governor's Waste<lb/>
Management Act as<lb/>
an act "which<lb/>
prempts all civil,<lb/>
human and en-<lb/>
? vironmental rights<lb/>
In a statement<lb/>
released from jail,<lb/>
Ferruccio said, "what<lb/>
have I to say to (those<lb/>
who approved) the<lb/>
Warren County site,<lb/>
not because it was<lb/>
safe, but because it<lb/>
was legal?" He went<lb/>
on to say that "what<lb/>
Hitler did to the Jews<lb/>
was legal and what is<lb/>
happening in Warren<lb/>
County is Hitlensm at<lb/>
home<lb/>
"It is a civil rights<lb/>
issue and a human<lb/>
nghts issue Mr<lb/>
Ferruccio said<lb/>
200WEST<lb/>
The Teaching Ef<lb/>
fectiveness Commit-<lb/>
tee of the Faculty<lb/>
Senate is sponsoring a<lb/>
series of talks and<lb/>
workshops aimed at<lb/>
improving classroom<lb/>
teaching skills. The<lb/>
series runs through<lb/>
next week a! various<lb/>
locations on the ECU<lb/>
campus and the<lb/>
workshops cover a<lb/>
large range of topics<lb/>
related1 to establishing<lb/>
arid strengthening<lb/>
contact between<lb/>
teachers and students<lb/>
or assisting faculty in<lb/>
more effective<lb/>
organization and<lb/>
presentation of class<lb/>
material<lb/>
No preregistration<lb/>
is required, and the<lb/>
sessions are open to<lb/>
all faculty. Lectures<lb/>
and workshop<lb/>
moderators are facul-<lb/>
ty volunteers who<lb/>
responded to a com-<lb/>
mittee questionnaire.<lb/>
The current com-<lb/>
mittee chairwoman.<lb/>
Madge McGrath of<lb/>
the School of Allied<lb/>
Health Professions,<lb/>
hopes that a large<lb/>
number of interested<lb/>
persons will turn out<lb/>
for each of the<lb/>
scheduled programs<lb/>
and allow an ex-<lb/>
change of informa-<lb/>
tion relevant to all<lb/>
teaching problems.<lb/>
She added that the<lb/>
talks and workshops<lb/>
will be informal and<lb/>
the audience will be<lb/>
free to come and leave<lb/>
as their schedules re-<lb/>
quire.<lb/>
The program of ses-<lb/>
sions is as follows:<lb/>
March 17: Lectur-<lb/>
ing For Cognitive<lb/>
Learning, at noon in<lb/>
Brewster C303. Use of<lb/>
Visuals In Large Lec-<lb/>
ture Classes, 3 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster D202.<lb/>
March 22: Interna-<lb/>
tionalizing The Cur-<lb/>
riculum, noon in<lb/>
Mendenhall 221.<lb/>
Stress Control And<lb/>
Teaching Burnout, 1<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
D306. Improving<lb/>
Didactic Skills, 3:30<lb/>
p.m. (Place to be an-<lb/>
nounced.) Videotape<lb/>
In The Classroom, 4<lb/>
p.m. in Joyner<lb/>
Library 225.<lb/>
March 23: Student<lb/>
Advising, at noon in<lb/>
Mendenhall 221.<lb/>
Discussion, 3 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B303. Lear-<lb/>
ning And Teaching In<lb/>
1983, 3 p.m. in<lb/>
Speight 301. Short-<lb/>
Answer Testing: Con-<lb/>
struction And Validi-<lb/>
ty, 3 p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
D305.<lb/>
March 24:<lb/>
Videotape In the<lb/>
Classroom, 11:00 in<lb/>
Joyner Library 225.<lb/>
Discussion. An Active<lb/>
Way Of Learning, 3<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster<lb/>
B30 A.V. Material<lb/>
For Classroom Use In<lb/>
The Health Profes-<lb/>
sions, 4 p.m. in Belk<lb/>
Building 216.<lb/>
Thm. Ladies Lock In<lb/>
Doors open 8:30<lb/>
Adm. 50C<lb/>
Guys admitted at 10:00<lb/>
Lambda Chi Happy Hour<lb/>
Doors open 4:00-7:00<lb/>
50CAdm.<lb/>
bring this ad for a<lb/>
FREE WASH<lb/>
OFFER GOOD WHEN USING<lb/>
 SECOXD WASHING<lb/>
MACHIEALSO<lb/>
"fluff n' fold<lb/>
service available-attendants<lb/>
on duty 7 days a week<lb/>
Fri. nite<lb/>
Sorority Night<lb/>
Doors Re-Open at 9:00<lb/>
Adm.50c<lb/>
coupon expires<lb/>
? March 73<lb/>
l<lb/>
15<lb/>
ECU DISCOUNT<lb/>
on all prescription<lb/>
eyeglasses<lb/>
315 Park View Commons<lb/>
Across from Doctors Park<lb/>
Open? 5:30<lb/>
Mon Fri.<lb/>
752-144a<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Announcing<lb/>
KWIK-STITCH<lb/>
?' ourKwik 1 Day Full Service A Iterations Shop' <lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
We Do All Minor &amp; Major Alterations<lb/>
(Unconditional Guarantee)<lb/>
Plus Dry Cleaning Service A Monograraming<lb/>
'cei<lb/>
plicians<lb/>
I Located At<lb/>
I j Colonial Height Shopping Center<lb/>
 opposite end of Villa Roma<lb/>
 2741 E.10th St.<lb/>
 NOW OPEN<lb/>
I Phone: 758-68S8 MonFrl. 84, Sot. 8-21<lb/>
-?-0-?-eM?-)-e?e-o-e?B)??.().eMe)B?-o?B?f<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
REQUESTING<lb/>
FUNDS FROM THE S.G.A.<lb/>
Student groups desiring Funds from the SGA<lb/>
are allowed to submit a budget request for the<lb/>
1983-84 school year for consideration by this<lb/>
spring's SGA Legislature.The deadline for<lb/>
submitting budgets is 5:00p.m. Monday,<lb/>
March 21,1983.<lb/>
IN ALL CASES BUDGETS MUST BE SUBMITTED<lb/>
ACCORDING TO STATE LINE-ITEM CODES<lb/>
AND MUST MEET SGA APPROPRIATIONS<lb/>
GUIDELINES.<lb/>
Copies of line-item codes and SGA appropriations<lb/>
guidelines<lb/>
are available on request in the SGA Office.<lb/>
When the budget is reviewed and approved,funds will be<lb/>
available at the beginning of the fiscal year (July 1 1983)<lb/>
Budgets not submitted by March 21 will not be reviewed<lb/>
by the Appropriations Committee nor considered by the<lb/>
Legislature until the Fall Semester<lb/>
No Funds will be appropriated over the summer<lb/>
months except for summer projects or cases with<lb/>
special circumstances as determined by the summer<lb/>
executive officers.<lb/>
Sun?00 W-10th St"<lb/>
John Moore's Beach Party<lb/>
4:00-7:00pm<lb/>
ECU?Greenville's Best 200 West?<lb/>
????<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
lOth St Across from<lb/>
Krispy K ?me (s ?t;)<lb/>
1 h S Block t om<lb/>
? he "HiM- (752 963?)<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
BOND'S<lb/>
H.L.HODGES CO<lb/>
TO YOU<lb/>
I<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
I HI lM( AKOl INIAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
MARCH 17. 1983 p<lb/>
Virtuoso Serkin<lb/>
Piano Prodigy Coming Soon<lb/>
Peter Serkin. "the finest pianist this countrv has et produced will he on campus in March.<lb/>
Peter Serkin, an established<lb/>
pianist whose musical sympathies<lb/>
are broader than those of virtually<lb/>
any young musician in recent<lb/>
memory, will appear in Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre, Thursday, March 24,<lb/>
1983, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Serkin, "One of the supreme<lb/>
musicians of our time studied<lb/>
at the Curtis Institute of Music<lb/>
with lee 1 uvisi, Miecyslaw<lb/>
Horsowski. and his father.<lb/>
Rudolf Serkin. He continues to<lb/>
study piano and music in general<lb/>
with Mr. Horszowski, Karl Ulnch<lb/>
Schnabel, Marcel Moyse, and he<lb/>
also worked with the late Ernest<lb/>
Oster. Serkin made his first public-<lb/>
appearance in 1959 at the age of<lb/>
twelve in a preformance of the<lb/>
Haydn Concerto in D major con-<lb/>
ducted by Alexander Schneider at<lb/>
the Marlboro Music Festival. This<lb/>
concerto was repeated that fall tor<lb/>
his New York debut. He has since<lb/>
appeared with most of the world's<lb/>
major symphony orchestras.<lb/>
Serkin's thoughtful individuali-<lb/>
ty, enabling him to bring<lb/>
something new to all he plavs. is<lb/>
perhaps what prompted New<lb/>
York Magazine to call him "the<lb/>
finest pianist this country ha yet<lb/>
produced " He plays with an<lb/>
enormous vitalitv that becomes<lb/>
both creative and recreative and<lb/>
there are no apparent limits to his<lb/>
technique.<lb/>
This is the last concert of the<lb/>
1982-18? ECU Unions Artists<lb/>
Series season, and it promises to<lb/>
be certainly not the least but one<lb/>
of the finest musical presentations<lb/>
of the year. Tickets for the con-<lb/>
cert are $2.50 for ECU students.<lb/>
and $7.50 for ECU faculty, staff,<lb/>
and the public. All tickets sold at<lb/>
the door will be $7.50. Tickets arc-<lb/>
on saL- at the Central Ticket Oi<lb/>
fice. Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Telephone (919) 757-6611, ext<lb/>
266. The Ticket Office is open<lb/>
Monday-Friday, 10 a.m4 p.m.<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Notes<lb/>
An "Art in Europe" program<lb/>
featuring three weeks oi travel in<lb/>
Italy, Switzerland, Germany and<lb/>
Holland is being offered bv the<lb/>
East Carolina University School<lb/>
of Art this summer.<lb/>
The program, designed for in-<lb/>
terested students, teachers, and<lb/>
persons in the community, is be-<lb/>
ing co-sponsored by the Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education and<lb/>
Eben Tilly Associates. Credit and<lb/>
non-credit options are available.<lb/>
Dr. Richard Faing and faculty<lb/>
member Michael Voors along<lb/>
with professional tour guides will<lb/>
accompany the group.<lb/>
Visits will be made to maior<lb/>
hisdtoric sues, museums, and<lb/>
galleries in Rome. Siena.<lb/>
Florence, Venice, Milan. I ugano,<lb/>
Basle. Heidelberg. Cologne, and<lb/>
Amsterdam. The tour will depart<lb/>
N.Y on July 27th.<lb/>
Persons interested in the tour<lb/>
may attend special meetings<lb/>
scheduled every Thursday evening<lb/>
at 7 P.M. in the Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center Auditorium or contact the<lb/>
School of Art.<lb/>
Foi turther information contact<lb/>
Michael Voors at 757-6785 or<lb/>
Dear. 1 aing at 757-6665<lb/>
Poel Marilyn Hacker will visit<lb/>
Easl Carolina University later this<lb/>
month, to read from her work<lb/>
and conduct a discussion critique<lb/>
session for local poets m the area<lb/>
Her reading is set for this even-<lb/>
ing at 8 p.m in the Nursing<lb/>
Building Auditorium (Room 1011<lb/>
On Friday, March IS, she will<lb/>
lead a critique workshop from<lb/>
noon to 1:30 in the Brewter<lb/>
Building, room R-103.<lb/>
Both events are open to the<lb/>
public. Persons wishing to have<lb/>
their poems critiqued at the<lb/>
workshop should bring along at<lb/>
least 20 copies of each poem<lb/>
Hacker is the author of three<lb/>
poetry collections, published bv<lb/>
Viking and Knopf. Her collection<lb/>
Presentation Piece was a I amonl<lb/>
Poetry Selection of the Academv<lb/>
of American Poets and received<lb/>
the National Book Award tor<lb/>
Poetry in 1975.<lb/>
She is a native and current resi-<lb/>
dent of New York City, having<lb/>
spent several vears in San Fran-<lb/>
cisco and London Her other<lb/>
nors include a Creative rtists<lb/>
1' tblic service Crant and a Gug-<lb/>
genheim Fellowship<lb/>
Epilepsy ? identification.<lb/>
therapy and treatment, social and<lb/>
psychological implications ? will<lb/>
be discussed in detail at a March<lb/>
25-26 symposium at ECU<lb/>
The symposium, to be held at<lb/>
ee EPILEPSY, Page 7<lb/>
??????????h??????i?i?<lb/>
Toiler's Latest Raises Some Key Questions<lb/>
Bv EMU CASE<lb/>
M?ft vVnlrl<lb/>
1 have been reviewing books long enough for you<lb/>
now to have sufficient credibility to share the follow-<lb/>
ing with vou.<lb/>
Reviewing Alvin Toner's The Third Have calls for<lb/>
some reflections on the medium of book reviewing in<lb/>
general. What, if any, is the purpose of reviews? Is it<lb/>
to provide the reader with an outline so that he may<lb/>
talk intelligently, or unintelligently, depending on the<lb/>
review (about a book he hasn't read1 Or to persuade<lb/>
him to read or not read, depending on the opinion<lb/>
given) I believe the latter is the more desirable goal,<lb/>
and that being the case, 1 will try to inspire you to<lb/>
rush to the nearest library to check this book out.<lb/>
Admittedly, this is a dangerous precedent for you<lb/>
may open this paper to this page some dav to find on-<lb/>
ly a cryptic command, as: "read this book or "do<lb/>
everything in your power to avoid reading this<lb/>
book But 1 promise I will not resort to such a solu-<lb/>
tion unless 1 am pressed by conflicting deadlines.<lb/>
What follows is a review that will tell vou little about<lb/>
the book, which you will have to read for yourself if I<lb/>
am sufficiently persuasive.<lb/>
If you are a representative sample oi the public at<lb/>
large, you are probably at this very moment sitting at<lb/>
home trving to make sense out of a world which<lb/>
seems increasingly devoid of it. And if all the confu-<lb/>
sion and strife and uncertainty is depressing you, if<lb/>
all the signs of dissolution of social institutions, the<lb/>
statistics of crime, reports of civil disorder and<lb/>
revolutionary uprisings, prophecies of economic<lb/>
doom and gloomy predictions of impending Ar-<lb/>
mageddon are getting you stuck in hopelessness, then<lb/>
you are, as I was, ready for this book. The Third<lb/>
Wave is optimistic.lt will renew your faith in the<lb/>
future, make you laugh in the face of your evening<lb/>
news report and cause you to cancel your subscrip-<lb/>
tion to your daily newspaper in favor of the Tar-<lb/>
rytown Newsletter. It may be nothing more than an<lb/>
elegant intellectual exercise or it may be a manual for<lb/>
the twentv-first century. You'll have to read it and<lb/>
make up vour own mind.<lb/>
Toiler makes an exhaustivelv supported argument<lb/>
for the new paradigm. He. with a growing number of<lb/>
creative-edge intellectuals in other fields, interpret all<lb/>
the signs of disintegration as things getting worse<lb/>
before they get better. This gives him and the others a<lb/>
definite edge over the rest of us as it allows them to<lb/>
follow their own interests in relative calm while chaos<lb/>
and confusion surround them. This is an edge which<lb/>
vou should not disregard an opportunity to acquire.<lb/>
Religious rebirth might give you such an edge, but at<lb/>
what cost?<lb/>
Tofler's thesis is that we are in the midst of a 'third<lb/>
wave" of human development. A jump from the In-<lb/>
dustrial Age (the second wave) into an age whose title<lb/>
has not yet been univesally agreed on becauseit has<lb/>
not vet been universally perceived. But it is here. And<lb/>
just as chaos accompanied the earlier transitions<lb/>
from nomadic to sedentary agriculture and then to<lb/>
industry sc does it now accompany this transition<lb/>
resisted as it is by all who have a state in the status<lb/>
quo that is to av. all of us. I he tamihar, the<lb/>
habitual, the customary, the tried and true, the way<lb/>
its always been, the don't mess with it if it works all<lb/>
get in the wav when we are confronted with the un-<lb/>
tried, the untested, the u nfamiliar, the alien. Change<lb/>
is inherently painful. It is threatening; it is frighten-<lb/>
ing; it might not work. We might not be able to ad-<lb/>
just to it. V e mav not be as well fitted in the new<lb/>
order.<lb/>
A microcosm of the thesis of The Third Wave can<lb/>
be seen to operate in the change from the avoirdupois<lb/>
system of measure to the metric. Our children will<lb/>
have no dificulty with it. But for us, used as we are<lb/>
and comfortable with 2 4's and inch and 3 8th the<lb/>
metric system is a monumental pain in the grits. The<lb/>
metric system is part of the Third Wave, of the new<lb/>
paradigm. We must embrace it without a backward<lb/>
glance or else suffer much pain.<lb/>
Read this book.<lb/>
Gardening Student<lb/>
Doesn 't Need Firm<lb/>
Roots At School<lb/>
By MIKE HAMER<lb/>
Sia!i Writer<lb/>
My garden will never make me<lb/>
famous, I'm a horticultural ig-<lb/>
noramus, I can 7 tell a stnngbean<lb/>
from a soybean, or even a girl<lb/>
bean from a boy bean. ? Ogden<lb/>
Nash<lb/>
Whether one is a horticultural<lb/>
ignoramus like Ogden Nash is<lb/>
talking about, or a gardening ad-<lb/>
dict, this is the time of the year<lb/>
when we think about spinach<lb/>
salads, watermelons, and tomato<lb/>
sandwiches. In short, it's garden-<lb/>
ing time again.<lb/>
One unique problem that we are<lb/>
dealing with is the fact that most<lb/>
students will be leaving in seven or<lb/>
eight weeks, which is when most<lb/>
of the early vegetables would be<lb/>
ready to eat.<lb/>
According to Sam Uzell, the<lb/>
Pitt County Argicultural Exten-<lb/>
sion agent, some of the crops that<lb/>
could be harvested before the end<lb/>
of school are beet greens, salad<lb/>
greens, kohlrabi, leaf lettuce,<lb/>
spinach, early Alaska peas,<lb/>
garden cress, onions, and, of<lb/>
course, radishes. Any of these<lb/>
should be planted as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Those students and faculty who<lb/>
will be around through the end of<lb/>
first summer session, or<lb/>
throughout the summer, don't<lb/>
have to worry about reaping the<lb/>
harvest. According to Norma<lb/>
Everett at Van's Hardware, most<lb/>
people are planting potatoes,<lb/>
onions, beets, carrots, mustard,<lb/>
kale, and spinach now. She also<lb/>
added that this is a good time to<lb/>
put in cauliflower, broccoli,<lb/>
brussels sprouts, cabbage, lettuce,<lb/>
and spinach plants. If you are<lb/>
transplanting, be sure to water the<lb/>
plants generously for two to five<lb/>
days.<lb/>
The Organic Hardening<lb/>
magazine recommends planting<lb/>
swiss chard and Jerusalem ar-<lb/>
tichokes, besides the vegetables<lb/>
already mentioned. Those garden-<lb/>
ing to get a jump on the warm<lb/>
weather crops could start<lb/>
cucumbers, eggplant, melons,<lb/>
okra, peppers, and tomatoes in-<lb/>
doors at this time.<lb/>
It's basically a bit early for<lb/>
those persons who are flower<lb/>
gardeners. Organic Gardening<lb/>
recommended planting sweet peas<lb/>
at this time. Plant and See<lb/>
Nursery recommended trying can-<lb/>
See GARDENING, Page 7<lb/>
???? ?? CINDY WALL<lb/>
That's Right, It's Gardening Time Again In The Green City<lb/>
ECU sophomore Karen Hildreth is one of many students who tries<lb/>
her hand t Greenville gardening during the spring and summer<lb/>
months. Gardening tips can be obtained by calling Extension<lb/>
Teletip, a service of the N.C. Agricultural Extension Service, at<lb/>
1-800-662-7301. They also have ? booklet. Quick Reference Home<lb/>
Vegetable Gardening Guide, available upon request.<lb/>
i <lb/>
-?,<lb/>
Karen does the hot down in ih<lb/>
Epilepsy Sy<lb/>
Collaborat<lb/>
Continued From Page h<lb/>
the Brody M<lb/>
building<lb/>
chaptei<lb/>
honor society ii<lb/>
the Comprehen<lb/>
gra"<lb/>
oi Medic n<lb/>
Medicine, the Beld<lb/>
tion and the EC<lb/>
Goverr.merv. <lb/>
The Friday. M i<lb/>
featuring a presentation<lb/>
Ross Shuping. Greens<lb/>
neurologist, b<lb/>
sons wuh epilepsy<lb/>
families sr.d fr<lb/>
Dr. S " . p ' -<lb/>
"Epilepsv D ii j<lb/>
ment Hi presentai<lb/>
followed bv a<lb/>
First Aid for Seizjurt<lb/>
question-anwer session.<lb/>
Friday afternoon and Sa I<lb/>
sessions are designed I i <lb/>
health professiona<lb/>
V<lb/>
The htr<lb/>
in Tom n<lb/>
LUNCH BUFFET Mon<lb/>
?y EVENING BUFFET Mor<lb/>
SPAGHETTI Wed ail vou cai<lb/>
ft.<lb/>
Spogtr Eer<lb/>
Just like eating i<lb/>
All vou can i<lb/>
"i - C' - V<lb/>
PI K A<lb/>
The<lb/>
Al<lb/>
pr<lb/>
DIA<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
Prices<lb/>
? FRIDAY<lb/>
4:3<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0007"/><lb/>
ItCl fi<lb/>
lerkin<lb/>
oming Soon<lb/>
ther information contact<lb/>
Voors at 757-6785 or<lb/>
ai 757-6665.<lb/>
M yn Hacker w ill visit<lb/>
a University later this<lb/>
read from her works<lb/>
discussion critique<lb/>
ocal poets in the area.<lb/>
g is sel for this even-<lb/>
8 p m in the Nursine<lb/>
 id torium (Room 101).<lb/>
March IS, she will<lb/>
workshop from<lb/>
m the Breuster<lb/>
? R 103<lb/>
s are open to the<lb/>
Persons wishing to have<lb/>
jued at the<lb/>
?uld brine along at<lb/>
2 each poem.<lb/>
5 the author of three<lb/>
c llections, published bv<lb/>
 and Knopl Her collection<lb/>
ration Piece was a I amont<lb/>
v ection of the Academy<lb/>
 ? Poets and received<lb/>
Book Award for<lb/>
itive and current resi-<lb/>
? New " ork C it, having<lb/>
? ears in San Fran-<lb/>
1 ondon. Her other<lb/>
i v reative Artiste<lb/>
Grant and a Gug-<lb/>
Fellowship.<lb/>
dentification,<lb/>
ment, social and<lb/>
. cal implications ? will<lb/>
 tail at a March<lb/>
. n at I Cl<lb/>
im, to be held at<lb/>
See EPILEPSY, Pajje 7<lb/>
I llllllllltl! IMlllllHlllllilllllKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII<lb/>
estions<lb/>
i fie lamiliar, the<lb/>
? e : and true, the way<lb/>
with it if it works all<lb/>
nted with the un-<lb/>
ilien. Change<lb/>
itening; it is fnghten-<lb/>
?  ' not he able to ad-<lb/>
il fitted in the new<lb/>
I he Third H ave can<lb/>
- ' m the avoirdupois<lb/>
metric ' )ur children will<lb/>
. ued as we are<lb/>
ri2x4 md nch and 3 8th the<lb/>
tal pain in the grits. The<lb/>
the Third Wave, of the new<lb/>
it without a backward<lb/>
-<lb/>
to<lb/>
2sl :<lb/>
Pt?oto By CINDY WALL<lb/>
rreen City<lb/>
C. Agricultural Extension Service, at<lb/>
lave a booklet. Quick Reference Home<lb/>
available upon request.<lb/>
? -?- i , ??  vr ?. jjT. ?? jHAjL 71<lb/>
aBBBHP1 - ? ? wJsj - . "aB " m<lb/>
TJlPT?flai j?l i . t ? a ? ?<lb/>
mi- - bcii - . S'tV<lb/>
V j ?  ? ? ? i P??oto By CINDY WALL<lb/>
Karen does the hoe down in the privacy of her back yard.<lb/>
Epilepsy Symposium A<lb/>
Collaborative Effort<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
the Brody Medical Sciences<lb/>
building, is sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
chapter of Alpha Epsilon Delta<lb/>
honor society in conjunction with<lb/>
the Comprehension Epilepsy pro-<lb/>
gram at the Bowman Gray School<lb/>
of Medicine, the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine, the Beld-Tyler Founda-<lb/>
tion and the ECU Student<lb/>
Government Association.<lb/>
The Friday, March 25, session,<lb/>
featuring a presentation by Dr.<lb/>
Ross Shuping, Greenville<lb/>
neurologist, is designed for per-<lb/>
sons with epilepsy and their<lb/>
Tamili- and friends.<lb/>
Dr. Shuping's topic is<lb/>
"Epilepsy: Diagnosis and Treat-<lb/>
ment His presentation will be<lb/>
followed by a screening of a film.<lb/>
First Aid for Seizures and a<lb/>
question-answer session.<lb/>
Friday afternoon and Saturday<lb/>
sessions are designed for allied<lb/>
health professionals and physi-<lb/>
cians.<lb/>
Speakers include five physi-<lb/>
cians: Dr. Fritz Dreifuss of<lb/>
University of Virginia, Drs.<lb/>
Jerome Haller and Early<lb/>
Trevathan of ECU, Dr. J. Scott<lb/>
Luther of Duke University and<lb/>
Dr. Kiffin Penry of Bowman<lb/>
Gray.<lb/>
Other presenters are counselors<lb/>
Gay Anderson of Mocksville, Jeff<lb/>
Campbell of the Epilepsy Associa-<lb/>
tion of N.C. (Charlotte), Louise<lb/>
Denmark of the N.C. Department<lb/>
of Health Services, Pat Gibson of<lb/>
Bowman Gray, Jim Keene of the<lb/>
Department of Human Resources<lb/>
and Scott Luce of the Pitt County<lb/>
Mental Health Center; Carol<lb/>
Rados of the Vocational<lb/>
Rehabilitation Center, Greenville<lb/>
nurse Laura Wall of Bowman<lb/>
Gray; Mary Stephens of the High<lb/>
Point Memorial Hospital EEG<lb/>
Laboratory and Dr. Ken Kudley<lb/>
of UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Gardening 9s<lb/>
New Lure<lb/>
THhhASl CAKOl 1NIAN MARCH 17. 1983<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
dy tuff and pansies,<lb/>
while Kittrell's<lb/>
Greenhouse recom-<lb/>
mened pansies and<lb/>
alyssum. They also<lb/>
recommended that<lb/>
this would be a good<lb/>
time to plant such<lb/>
herbs as parsley,<lb/>
rosemary, and dill.<lb/>
There are a number<lb/>
of good gardening<lb/>
books on the market,<lb/>
but one that I would<lb/>
endorse for gardeners<lb/>
who are starting out<lb/>
and who would be in-<lb/>
terested in gardening<lb/>
in a small space is<lb/>
called How to Grow<lb/>
More Vegetables<lb/>
Than You Ever<lb/>
Thought Possible on<lb/>
Less Land Than You<lb/>
Can Imagine by John<lb/>
Jeanons. Jeavone<lb/>
makes the claim that a<lb/>
person can grow<lb/>
enough vegetables for<lb/>
himself year round in<lb/>
a garden space total-<lb/>
ing only 100 square<lb/>
feet provided there<lb/>
was a four to six<lb/>
month growing<lb/>
season which this area<lb/>
does have.<lb/>
Jeavon urges the<lb/>
tender of a small<lb/>
garden to begin with<lb/>
raised beds. An area 2<lb/>
feet wide by 5-6 feet<lb/>
long is a good size to<lb/>
begin with. Here are a<lb/>
few steps that Jeavons<lb/>
suggests for getting a<lb/>
garden bed started:<lb/>
1. Loosen the soil 12<lb/>
inches deep with a<lb/>
spading fork ? a<lb/>
straight spading<lb/>
shovel will do.<lb/>
2. Remove the weeds.<lb/>
3. Let the soil rest for<lb/>
one day.<lb/>
4. Add a 3 inch layer<lb/>
of compost.<lb/>
5. Use a hoe or a fork<lb/>
and loosen the soil.<lb/>
6. Add wood ashes<lb/>
and bone meal or<lb/>
blood meal.<lb/>
7. Prepare a lip<lb/>
around the upper<lb/>
edge of the bed so<lb/>
that rainfall will not<lb/>
wash off the bed but<lb/>
will be contained in<lb/>
the space.<lb/>
8. Plant your seeds<lb/>
and hope for the best.<lb/>
If this is your first<lb/>
garden 1 would<lb/>
recommend that you<lb/>
start with one bed and<lb/>
plant onion sets,<lb/>
spinach, lettuce, and<lb/>
raddishes. A first-<lb/>
time gardener should<lb/>
always plant radishes!<lb/>
Potatoes are usually a<lb/>
sure bet, also. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Uzell,<lb/>
students using com-<lb/>
mercial fertizer would<lb/>
do well to use 8-8-8.<lb/>
Students living in<lb/>
the dorms will have a<lb/>
much more difficult<lb/>
time in getting a crop<lb/>
of food growin, but<lb/>
certain vegetable can<lb/>
be grown in con-<lb/>
tainers.<lb/>
Containers should<lb/>
have good sterile pot-<lb/>
ting soil, good<lb/>
drainage, besides a<lb/>
location where they<lb/>
can get maximum<lb/>
sunlight while they<lb/>
are growing to<lb/>
maturity. Lettuce or<lb/>
spinach would not<lb/>
need direct sunlight,<lb/>
but tomato or pepper<lb/>
plants should get lots<lb/>
of full sun.<lb/>
More information<lb/>
on gardening can be<lb/>
obtained by calling<lb/>
"Extension Teletip<lb/>
a service of the North<lb/>
Carolina Argicultural<lb/>
Extension Service.<lb/>
Happy gardening!<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
Transit<lb/>
Authority.<lb/>
2 FOR<lb/>
THE PRICE OF<lb/>
ONE<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON<lb/>
CaltUa Now! 757-1955<lb/>
We Deliver'<lb/>
FREE COKES TOO<lb/>
Now Available ? Diet Coke<lb/>
BUV ANY LARGE 2-OR MORE<lb/>
INGREDIENT PIZZA AND GET<lb/>
ANOTHER SMALL 2 OR MORE<lb/>
INGREDIENT PIZZA<lb/>
ABSOLUTELY FREE<lb/>
NOT VALID KV'AN OTHER COUPON<lb/>
GOOO THROUGH 15 83<lb/>
I GREENVILLE Ti: 1 ?4S<lb/>
Pizza Transit Authority<lb/>
REAL DEAL!<lb/>
FREE COKES TOO<lb/>
Now Available ? Diet Coke<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
$1.00 OFF SMALL 2-OR-MORE INGREDIENT PIZZA or<lb/>
$2.00 OFF LARGE 2-OR-MORE INGREDIENT PIZZA or<lb/>
$2.00 OFF ANY PIZZA LITE - ? mm<lb/>
fcxPIRES 5-1-83<lb/>
??????????<lb/>
Uptown Clothing Company<lb/>
Register tor Our Free Drawing To Fie Held Each Monrh<lb/>
Men's &amp; Women's Designer Fashions<lb/>
Hl?1iHj $BH'&amp;&amp; ZmMl 7tn Thru ,9th<lb/>
? " - ? . <lb/>
V -i -$24- : aie<lb/>
&amp;44S20C : .<lb/>
s ?-$20? - ?-?<lb/>
j ?$22<lb/>
s ?:S21C e. - : :<lb/>
x ? "$20Boy Pa<lb/>
1 Z$21 . .<lb/>
 ?$19<lb/>
Live Remote On WRQR<lb/>
11 a.m. To 2p.m. March 19th<lb/>
Greenville Square Shop( r g Center<lb/>
(In The Corner. At Greenville Square)<lb/>
756-95C9<lb/>
? G L ' "?  V '<lb/>
" TR0N' is f an-tastic. magical for<lb/>
kids and grown-ups, extraordinary.<lb/>
.may aone SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE<lb/>
-CHICAGO SUN-TIMES<lb/>
r<lb/>
sensational and brainy,<lb/>
stylish and fun!<lb/>
;l?jAnsen NEWSWEEK:<lb/>
TR0N is about to take<lb/>
you somewhere you ve<lb/>
never been<lb/>
Vemon Scott UPI:<lb/>
Utterly new. vividly<lb/>
exciting a trip and a half<lb/>
R world inside<lb/>
the computer<lb/>
inhere man<lb/>
has never been.<lb/>
Never before noun.<lb/>
Geneve CHICAGO TRIBUNE<lb/>
TRON'isatrip. and a<lb/>
terrifically entertaining<lb/>
one at that.<lb/>
FUcftaraScrucM TIME<lb/>
TR0N a vision of the<lb/>
movies future<lb/>
jane-Mas NEW YORK TIMES<lb/>
It is beautiful -<lb/>
spectacularly so<lb/>
a wonder to behold<lb/>
-mepE1<lb/>
'atmwt0<lb/>
Oil i<lb/>
TRON A LlSBERGcR KUSmNER PRODUCTION<lb/>
JEFF BRIDGES BRUCE BOXLElTNER OAviO UJARNER CINDY MORGAN BARNARD HuGrES<lb/>
RONMILCER - WENDY CARLOS STEVEN LISBERGER - BONNIE MACB'RO<lb/>
 STEVEN LISBERGER OONAlD KUSHNER STEVEN LISBERGER<lb/>
JOURNEY -WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS ?s .  s pg .??,c.??-v ?<lb/>
COPYRIGHT 1982 SWANK MOTION PICTURES. INC ALL RIGHTS RESERVED<lb/>
Date Morch 17.18,19 Jime 7 PM 5,7, 9 PM<lb/>
Place Hendrix Theatre Admission IP &amp; Activity Cord<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
tm ?,<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0008"/><lb/>
1Mb fcASTC AROl 1NIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MARCH 17, 1983<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Pirates Capture Baird's 100th Win<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Aniiuai Sporti Idiior<lb/>
ECU head coach Hal Baird<lb/>
celebrated his 100th career victory<lb/>
Tuesday afternoon with a 8-4 vic-<lb/>
tory over Fairfield University.<lb/>
Freshman Daniel Boone and<lb/>
senior Mike Williams drove in<lb/>
three runs each in leading the<lb/>
Pirates to their eighth victory in a<lb/>
row.<lb/>
ECU, now 10-2, opened the<lb/>
scoring with a run in the first inn-<lb/>
ing when first baseman Todd<lb/>
Evans drove in shortstop Kelly<lb/>
Robinette, who had doubled to<lb/>
lead off the game.<lb/>
Freshman Winfred Johnson,<lb/>
who had a three-run homer deep<lb/>
to center field in Monday after-<lb/>
noon's victory, started on the<lb/>
mound for the Pirates and pitched<lb/>
the first five innings.<lb/>
The muscular first-year player<lb/>
from Elizabethtown, N.C. ran his<lb/>
record to 4-0 on the year.<lb/>
Sophomore reliever Chubby<lb/>
Butler came on in the sixth inning<lb/>
in relief of Johnson to pick up the<lb/>
save.<lb/>
After the game, Baird pointed<lb/>
out the pitching staff for another<lb/>
impressive performance.<lb/>
"Winfred threw well and Chub-<lb/>
by came in and had a real good<lb/>
outing again Baird said. "1 was<lb/>
glad to see it so we could rest some<lb/>
arms<lb/>
The Pirates' big inning came in<lb/>
the fourth when they scored three<lb/>
runs on two hits and an error.<lb/>
Right fielder David Wells open-<lb/>
ed the inning with a single to left<lb/>
field. After Robert Wells sacrific-<lb/>
ed him to second, left fielder<lb/>
David Home reached on an error<lb/>
by Fairfield second baseman John<lb/>
Martin.<lb/>
With men on first and third,<lb/>
Boone lifted a fly ball into right<lb/>
field that kept carrying until it<lb/>
dropped on the other side of the<lb/>
fence to give the Pirates a 4-0<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
Boone's home run was the first<lb/>
collegiate base hit for the<lb/>
freshman from Fuquay Varina.<lb/>
Boone missed most of fall prac-<lb/>
tice after he suffered a hairline<lb/>
fracture on the first day of fall<lb/>
practice. Good things are ex-<lb/>
pected from Boone, who earned<lb/>
13 letters at Fuquay Varina High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
Fairfield came back to score<lb/>
three runs in the sixth inning after<lb/>
an RBI single by Joe Charno and<lb/>
two-run double by Steve Carlotto.<lb/>
After Carlotto's double, Butler<lb/>
came in with no outs and a runner<lb/>
on third, and didn't allow the run<lb/>
to score.<lb/>
Mike DellaVecchia grounded to<lb/>
Robinette at short and Ton Rear-<lb/>
dan lofted a ball to center field<lb/>
that Robert Wells relayed home to<lb/>
keep Carlotto from scoring.<lb/>
Well's throw was a perfect<lb/>
strike to catcher Jack Curlings,<lb/>
and was what Baird referred to as<lb/>
"probably the key play of the<lb/>
game<lb/>
The Pirates added four more<lb/>
runs in the seventh when Evans<lb/>
and David Wells reached on er-<lb/>
rors and Robert Wells loaded the<lb/>
bases with a fielder's-choice<lb/>
grounder.<lb/>
Williams then greeted Fairfield<lb/>
starter Dave Caseria with a slicing<lb/>
triple to right field to drive in<lb/>
three runs.<lb/>
After Boone reached on an in-<lb/>
field single, second baseman Tony<lb/>
Salmond drove in Williams with a<lb/>
fielder's-choice grounder.<lb/>
Fairfield scored the game's<lb/>
final run in the ninth inning when<lb/>
Martin hit a two-out home run to<lb/>
left field.<lb/>
Baird has been impressed with<lb/>
his first-year players so far,<lb/>
especially Johnson, Boone and<lb/>
Home.<lb/>
"All of our freshman have<lb/>
looked good so far Baird com-<lb/>
mented. "We're trying to use<lb/>
more players now<lb/>
With their 10-2 record ? the<lb/>
earliest that Baird can remember<lb/>
winning 10 games ? the Pirates<lb/>
have three key games in the re-<lb/>
maining week.<lb/>
Thursday afternoon at 3:00<lb/>
p.m the Pirates host Clemson<lb/>
University, a team that beat ECU<lb/>
twice last season.<lb/>
On Friday and Saturday, the<lb/>
Pirates open defense of their<lb/>
ECAC-South Championship with<lb/>
a pair of conference games against<lb/>
George Mason University.<lb/>
Friday's game is scheduled for<lb/>
3:00 p.m and Saturday's contest<lb/>
is set for 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Long Causes 'Strong' Looks<lb/>
BvEDNICKI.AS<lb/>
Staff Wnlrr<lb/>
When Terry Long walks into a<lb/>
room, heads turn.<lb/>
It's not his boyish smile, or his<lb/>
friendly disposition, or the fact<lb/>
that he made honorable mention<lb/>
all-America offensive guard in<lb/>
football last year.<lb/>
Terry Long turns heads because<lb/>
he is 290 pounds of solid, defined<lb/>
muscle, with rock-like upper arms<lb/>
the size of most people's thighs.<lb/>
Long, however, was not always<lb/>
the hulk that he is now. In fact,<lb/>
when he first started lifting while<lb/>
serving in the special forces of the<lb/>
Army in 1978, he weighed a mere<lb/>
160 pounds and could bench press<lb/>
only 135 pounds ? almost an<lb/>
unbelievable thought when one<lb/>
looks at Long today.<lb/>
Five years after lifting three-<lb/>
and-one-half hours a day, he is<lb/>
considered the third strongest in<lb/>
the world in total lifting. Just<lb/>
recently. Long captured first place<lb/>
in the State Power Lifting Con-<lb/>
test, benching 501 pounds,<lb/>
squating 837, and deadlifting 865.<lb/>
Long, who is 22 pounds away<lb/>
from the world record in powerlif-<lb/>
ting, uses weightlifting to better<lb/>
his football playing ability as well<lb/>
as to his enjoyment. "Being so<lb/>
short, it has helped as far as my<lb/>
speed goes he said. "When<lb/>
you're playing against guys who<lb/>
are 6-5 or taller, it helps to have<lb/>
an edge. Also, when you're<lb/>
strong, you're less likely to have<lb/>
injuries.<lb/>
"Hopefully Long continued,<lb/>
"I can intimidate the people I<lb/>
play against. If I at least in-<lb/>
timidate them a little, it helps me a<lb/>
lot<lb/>
Long said that having the<lb/>
reputation as an intimidator can<lb/>
be beneficial in more ways than<lb/>
one. "Like coach (Ed) Emory<lb/>
said, I'm a marked man out on<lb/>
the field; everybody will be look-<lb/>
ing for me. It just makes me want<lb/>
to play harder<lb/>
Besides using weightlifting to<lb/>
improve his football skills, Long<lb/>
also gets aesthetic satisfaction<lb/>
from pumping iron. "Coming ou:<lb/>
o the weightlifting room he<lb/>
said, pressing his chin against his<lb/>
large fist, "is like coming out of<lb/>
church ? vou have a good feel-<lb/>
ing. It's a good way to spend your<lb/>
time. I relieve some of my hostili-<lb/>
ty when 1 lift<lb/>
Long is the leading enthusiast<lb/>
of a dedicated weightlifting pro-<lb/>
gram at ECU. Although other<lb/>
schools might not admit it. Long<lb/>
feels that the Pirates' football<lb/>
squad is probably one of the 10<lb/>
strongest in the nation. "We em-<lb/>
phasize weightlifting a great deal<lb/>
at ECU he said. "We have a<lb/>
very strong team, oven though<lb/>
other schools might not think so.<lb/>
We challenged Wake Forest and<lb/>
North Carolina State to a<lb/>
weightlifting contest and they<lb/>
backed out. I don't think they<lb/>
want to admit we are stronger<lb/>
With spring football starting<lb/>
Friday, Long, a junior from Col-<lb/>
umbia. S.C has other goals<lb/>
besides those related to weightlif-<lb/>
ting. "My primary goal, now that<lb/>
the contest is over, is to make all-<lb/>
America again. I would like to<lb/>
make first or second team next<lb/>
year<lb/>
Long has the desire and ability<lb/>
to play professional football, but<lb/>
he realizes that he can fall back on<lb/>
a sport that gives him a tremen-<lb/>
dous amount of satisfaction<lb/>
weightlifting. "If it ends up that<lb/>
way, I'll play pro ball. If not, I'll<lb/>
go into lifting. I'm only 150<lb/>
pounds off the world record in<lb/>
power lifting<lb/>
World's record? That would be<lb/>
quite an accomplishment for so-<lb/>
meone who was benching less<lb/>
than his body weight only five<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
East Carolina Faces 'Outsider' Image<lb/>
Without a doubt, the ECU<lb/>
men's basketball team ex-<lb/>
emplified "Pirate Pride" to the<lb/>
fullest this past weekend at the<lb/>
ECAC-South conference tourna-<lb/>
ment in Richmond, Va.<lb/>
But before finally dismissing<lb/>
the tourney, two disturbing issues<lb/>
need to be discussed.<lb/>
Of the six teams making up the<lb/>
conference, East Carolina, in the<lb/>
eyes of some, has acquired a<lb/>
tainted reputation. In Sunday's<lb/>
edition of the Richmond Times-<lb/>
Dispatch Sports Columnist<lb/>
Jerry Lindquist stated: In<lb/>
fact, there is a prevailing negative<lb/>
opinion about the ECU athletic<lb/>
program in the conference. The<lb/>
Pirate have been cast as villains<lb/>
Another title, however, seems<lb/>
more appropriate for the Pirates<lb/>
in the Virginia-dominated con-<lb/>
ference: "Outsiders<lb/>
Four teams: George Mason,<lb/>
James Madison, Richmond and<lb/>
William &amp; Mary are all located<lb/>
somewhere in Virginia, leaving<lb/>
East Carolina and Navy as the on-<lb/>
ly out-of-state teams.<lb/>
No one really seemed to care<lb/>
how many Virginia teams were in<lb/>
the conference until tournament<lb/>
time. That's when you started<lb/>
hearing coaches from the Virginia<lb/>
teams commenting that the<lb/>
"ECAC-South conference is a<lb/>
fine example of just how good<lb/>
Virginia basketball is<lb/>
CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
A Look Inside<lb/>
Every coach in the conference<lb/>
will unquestionably agree that the<lb/>
ECAC-South is indeed a good<lb/>
league, but the "snobbiness" of<lb/>
some of the Virginia teams sure<lb/>
doesn't help a conference that is<lb/>
already on shaky ground.<lb/>
And though ECU and Navy do<lb/>
not exist in 'Good Ole Virginny<lb/>
they surely held their own in the<lb/>
conference playoffs. The Pirates<lb/>
ousted George Mason, and Navy<lb/>
left Richmond behind, giving the<lb/>
"Outsiders a chance to go up<lb/>
against the conference's top-<lb/>
ranked teams.<lb/>
Hopefully, next year, if all six<lb/>
teams do remain in the con-<lb/>
ference, ECU won't be given<lb/>
labels or the cold shoulder<lb/>
because of shallow accusations<lb/>
made by the press and the<lb/>
coaches.<lb/>
Fans Don V Show<lb/>
It truly is a shame that only a<lb/>
few dedicated fans were on hand<lb/>
for the Pirates' season finale in<lb/>
Richmond, Va.<lb/>
Probably the most pathetic<lb/>
sight in the tournament was when<lb/>
the James Madison cheerleaders,<lb/>
band and fan section had to lead<lb/>
the cheering for ECU. The Duke<lb/>
fans, however, weren't yelling out<lb/>
of the goodness of their heart.<lb/>
ECU was playing number one<lb/>
seed William &amp; Mary, and JMU<lb/>
was to meet the winner of the<lb/>
semifinal contest, obviously<lb/>
thinking East Carolina would pro-<lb/>
ve much easier to handle.<lb/>
Spring break does come once a<lb/>
year but so does the ECAC tour-<lb/>
nament. And ECU wasn't the on-<lb/>
ly unversity enjoying a week-long<lb/>
study break, yet their section ap-<lb/>
peared to be the least filled (except<lb/>
Navy, of course).<lb/>
ECU junior Offensive Guard Terry Long is considered the third strongest power lifter in the world. Long<lb/>
bench presses 501 pounds and deadlifts 865 pounds.<lb/>
PHO'0 tit GA?s PATTERSON<lb/>
ECU Third Baseman John Hallow takes time out to talk to Pitcher<lb/>
Brian Peterson. The Bucs pla Clemson todav at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Swimmers Go West<lb/>
B RANDY MEWS<lb/>
staff Wnlft<lb/>
Ten members of the EC1<lb/>
women's swim team headed for<lb/>
the west coast Monday morning<lb/>
to compete in the NCAA<lb/>
Women's Swimming and Diving<lb/>
Championships.<lb/>
The event will take place<lb/>
March 16-19, in long Beach.<lb/>
California. Head coach, Rick<lb/>
Kobe, Jon Rose and Dannv<lb/>
Michalove made the trip as the<lb/>
Pirate coaches.<lb/>
Kobe really doesn't know<lb/>
w hat to expect from the meet. " I<lb/>
don't have any idea of who will<lb/>
be there. It's a mystery. When<lb/>
we get there we'll find out who's<lb/>
come and who are the<lb/>
favorites<lb/>
In 1982, ECU took rune swim-<lb/>
mers to the Nationals, and<lb/>
qualified for 20 events. This year<lb/>
the Pirates have qualified 3" in-<lb/>
dividual and relay events.<lb/>
"I feel prettv good about t?e<lb/>
meet said Kobe "We have the<lb/>
same number of people going a<lb/>
last year, but we're in almost<lb/>
twice as many events. We ought<lb/>
to get some All-Americans and<lb/>
even one or two national cham-<lb/>
pions out of it<lb/>
Three ECU swimmers: Nancy<lb/>
Ludwig, Kaky Wilson an Joanne<lb/>
McCulIev qualified for four<lb/>
events each. Ludwig will swim<lb/>
the 50. 100, and 200-meter but-<lb/>
terflv. while McCulIev will swim<lb/>
the 50. 100, and 200-meter<lb/>
breakstroke Wilson will com-<lb/>
pete in the 50 and 100 fly as well<lb/>
as the 200 breakstroke. They all<lb/>
swim the individual medSev<lb/>
event.<lb/>
The other swimmers on the<lb/>
team will all compete in three<lb/>
events each. They include<lb/>
freestylers Nancy Rogers and<lb/>
Nan George, breakstroke:<lb/>
Jessica Feinberg and butterflyer<lb/>
Sharon Holt. Abbey Schultz will<lb/>
compete in the breakstroke and<lb/>
butterflv. while Nancy James<lb/>
will swim the butterfly and<lb/>
freestyle.<lb/>
Rene Seech will dive for the<lb/>
Pirates off the one and three<lb/>
meter boards.<lb/>
F ?e relav teams qualified for<lb/>
the meet and they will be made<lb/>
up trom the nine swimmers com-<lb/>
peting. Thev include the 200,<lb/>
400 and 800-meter freestyle<lb/>
team. as well as the 200 and<lb/>
400-meter medley teams.<lb/>
The Pirates return from Long<lb/>
Beach Sunday night, and with<lb/>
each swimmer competing in at<lb/>
least three events. ECU should<lb/>
finish up their season m grand<lb/>
stvle.<lb/>
Frosh In NCAA<lb/>
You would never know that<lb/>
East Carolina has the second<lb/>
largest student population out of<lb/>
the conference league, which is<lb/>
even more of an embarrassment.<lb/>
Not to mention that probably<lb/>
75-percent of the fans present<lb/>
were ECU alumnae.<lb/>
True, the support has been<lb/>
greater this season than in years<lb/>
past, but once again, the Pirate<lb/>
fans didn't come through when<lb/>
the players needed them the most.<lb/>
A tournament is the highlight<lb/>
of a season and, if ever, the<lb/>
greatest level of spirit and en-<lb/>
thusiasm by the fans should be<lb/>
demonstrated then.<lb/>
For years, fans have complain-<lb/>
ed because they didn't have a<lb/>
team to watch. Well, this year you<lb/>
did, and next year should be even<lb/>
more promising.<lb/>
But in able to truly succeed,<lb/>
whether it be in Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
or Minges Coliseum, ECU fans<lb/>
are going to have to come through<lb/>
or settle for a limited athletic pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
After all, what you put into a<lb/>
program determines what you get<lb/>
out of it.<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
staff nxrr<lb/>
Two members of the ECU track<lb/>
team participated in the NCAA<lb/>
Track and Field Indoor Cham-<lb/>
pionships this weekend in Pon-<lb/>
tiac, Mich.<lb/>
The two tracksters are the<lb/>
fabulous freshmen duo of long<lb/>
jumper Chris Brooks and hurdler<lb/>
Craig White. Both qualified for<lb/>
the National Championships by<lb/>
mid-season and have been perfor-<lb/>
ming as if they were seasoned<lb/>
veterans all year long.<lb/>
Both turned in reputable per-<lb/>
formances this weekend;<lb/>
however, both suffered minor set-<lb/>
backs. Brooks came with the<lb/>
wrong pair of shoes, which<lb/>
ultimately cost him a difference of<lb/>
more than a foot on each of his<lb/>
jumps.<lb/>
Coach Bill Carson had not been<lb/>
to the Nationals in several years,<lb/>
and was unaware the take-off<lb/>
board on the long jump was made<lb/>
of plastic.<lb/>
The tips of Brook's shoes are<lb/>
also plastic, and this caused him<lb/>
to slip whenever he hit the board.<lb/>
As a result, Brooks was never able<lb/>
to properly execute his jump.<lb/>
Brooks qualified for the na-<lb/>
tionals with a leap of 25' 6 3?, but<lb/>
was never able to surpass the<lb/>
24-foot mark the entire meet. "If<lb/>
I had the right shoes, I'm pretty<lb/>
sure I would've placed in the top<lb/>
five Brooks stated.<lb/>
"I was unaware he came with<lb/>
the wrong shoes said Carson<lb/>
but Chris still jumped very well<lb/>
under the circumstances<lb/>
White mishap occurred in the<lb/>
semi-finals of the 55-meter high<lb/>
hurdles. He finished sixth in his<lb/>
heat, but had the opportunity to<lb/>
finish in the top three. Going over<lb/>
the last hurdle. White jumped too<lb/>
high, and three people passed him<lb/>
in the last five meters of the race.<lb/>
"Craig was in good shape near<lb/>
the end Carson explained, "but<lb/>
he "sailed' the last hurdle and<lb/>
three people slipped under him.<lb/>
It's important to barely clear the<lb/>
last hurdle so you can explode to<lb/>
the finish line<lb/>
Although White could have<lb/>
done better, he was pleased with<lb/>
his performance and enjoyed<lb/>
competing in the most prestigious<lb/>
collegiate track and field event. "I<lb/>
felt pretty confident going in, and<lb/>
I gained a lot of experience from<lb/>
the meet<lb/>
Although problems did arise,<lb/>
Carson was pleased with the per-<lb/>
formance of his freshmen.<lb/>
Brooks and White even did well<lb/>
enough for representatives from<lb/>
Adidas to take notice. The com-<lb/>
pany will sponsor the two athletes<lb/>
for the rest of their collegiate<lb/>
careers.<lb/>
Soccer A wards<lb/>
On March 1, the ECU soccer<lb/>
team held its award banquet at<lb/>
Four Seasons Restaurant and<lb/>
presented various awards.<lb/>
Brian Winchell received the<lb/>
'Most Valuable Player' award,<lb/>
while Steve Brody was presented<lb/>
the 'Coach's Award<lb/>
Senior plaques were given to<lb/>
Tom Lawrence, Duane<lb/>
Degaetano, Dennis Elwell, Stan<lb/>
Gnff, Brian Winchell and Steve<lb/>
Brody.<lb/>
 hmp<lb/>
Sneaker<lb/>
Old Veterans I)?, It<lb/>
Again<lb/>
Before the<lb/>
tramural ba il<lb/>
season<lb/>
evervone wa tall<lb/>
about the J .v I<lb/>
and the<lb/>
break a <lb/>
six week sc<lb/>
to a close oi ?<lb/>
these :w<lb/>
champn<lb/>
proved<lb/>
was all al<lb/>
Eight. -<lb/>
Men <lb/>
Divisior.<lb/>
third<lb/>
Camp .<lb/>
?<lb/>
Residence Ha<lb/>
pion Belk<lb/>
The Ba: dil<lb/>
to the A ?<lb/>
elm<lb/>
Fru'<lb/>
P: PI I<lb/>
won '<lb/>
"B" Divis r.<lb/>
kapr<lb/>
The He<lb/>
who<lb/>
. I<lb/>
worn.<lb/>
?c<lb/>
Chan<lb/>
the top Vs<lb/>
Reside-<lb/>
the 1<lb/>
<lb/>
Pi ?<lb/>
D<lb/>
Fletchei<lb/>
??<lb/>
pi.<lb/>
Congra . a<lb/>
t h i<lb/>
V re i<lb/>
Daugherty<lb/>
UNC Prep<lb/>
For Tourr<lb/>
chpe: h<lb/>
N.C. .1 Pit<lb/>
L'mve:s ol N<lb/>
Carolina frcshn<lb/>
center B'd Daugr<lb/>
ty misses h -<lb/>
straight da <lb/>
tice Wee: . ?<lb/>
because of<lb/>
splints.<lb/>
Daughertv. a<lb/>
startci ?<lb/>
Heels, is in the LSi.<lb/>
mfirmarv but tc<lb/>
ph- cian Joseph<lb/>
DeWalt sac t - con-<lb/>
fident Dauce ?<lb/>
<lb/>
S<lb/>
-<lb/>
SI<lb/>
HA<lb/>
8:31<lb/>
EVE<lb/>
COV<lb/>
Mei<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Guest<lb/>
Guest<lb/>
Members!<lb/>
F<lb/>
BE<lb/>
AL<lb/>
L<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0009"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
the east Carolinian;<lb/>
MARCH 17, 1983<lb/>
V VR H 17 1983 Page 8<lb/>
th Win<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
n John Hallow lakes time out to talk to Pitcher<lb/>
Bucs plalemsnn toda at 3 p.m.<lb/>
ners Go West<lb/>
w<lb/>
 <lb/>
- ?<lb/>
ie meet. "I<lb/>
t who vmII<lb/>
Istery When<lb/>
our who's<lb/>
the<lb/>
Aim-<lb/>
s c ' Li ? h i<lb/>
and<lb/>
ne<lb/>
- each. Luduig swim<lb/>
50, 100, and 200-meter but-<lb/>
vhile McCulley will swim<lb/>
100, and 200-meter<lb/>
breakstroke. Wilson will com-<lb/>
pe ie 50 and 100 fly as well<lb/>
as the 200 breakstroke. They all<lb/>
? n the individual medley<lb/>
I other swimmers on the<lb/>
will all compete in three<lb/>
ts each. They include<lb/>
rs Nanc Rogers and<lb/>
Nan George, breakstroker<lb/>
Jessica Feinberg and butterflyer<lb/>
Sharon Holt. Abbey Schultz will<lb/>
compete in the breakstroke and<lb/>
hutterfU. while Nancy James<lb/>
will swim the butterfly and<lb/>
freestyle.<lb/>
Rene Seech will dive for the<lb/>
Pirates off the one and three<lb/>
meter boards.<lb/>
e rela teams qualified for<lb/>
neet and they will be made<lb/>
m the nine swimmers com-<lb/>
ting They include the 200,<lb/>
400 and 800-meter freestyle<lb/>
uns, as well as the 200 and<lb/>
400-meter medley teams.<lb/>
The Pirates return from Long<lb/>
Beach Sunday night, and with<lb/>
-h swimmer competing in at<lb/>
least three events, ECU should<lb/>
finish up their season in grand<lb/>
style.<lb/>
In NCAA<lb/>
IWs<lb/>
V<lb/>
? long<lb/>
;rdler<lb/>
J :ied for<lb/>
ponships bv<lb/>
?een perfor-<lb/>
able per-<lb/>
weekend;<lb/>
minor set<lb/>
ith the<lb/>
?es. which<lb/>
i' renceof<lb/>
:h of his<lb/>
ad not been<lb/>
? eral years,<lb/>
ie take<lb/>
as made<lb/>
shoes are<lb/>
ed him<lb/>
tne board<lb/>
never able<lb/>
jump.<lb/>
the na-<lb/>
16 ' . but<lb/>
irpass the<lb/>
meet. "If<lb/>
I'm pretty<lb/>
in the top<lb/>
vdine with<lb/>
Carson<lb/>
very well<lb/>
rred in the<lb/>
heter high<lb/>
Ixth in his<lb/>
heat, but had the opportunity to<lb/>
finish in the top three. Going over<lb/>
the last hurdle. White jumped too<lb/>
high, and three people passed him<lb/>
in the last five meters of the race.<lb/>
"Craig was in good shape near<lb/>
the end Carson explained, "but<lb/>
he -sailed' the last hurdle and<lb/>
three people slipped under him.<lb/>
l important to barely clear the<lb/>
last hurdle so you can explode to<lb/>
the finish line<lb/>
Although White could have<lb/>
done better, he was pleased with<lb/>
his performance and enjoyed<lb/>
competing in the most prestigious<lb/>
collegiate track and field event. "I<lb/>
felt pretty confident going in, and<lb/>
I gained a lot of experience from<lb/>
the meet<lb/>
hough problems did arise,<lb/>
on was pleased with the per-<lb/>
formance of his freshmen.<lb/>
Brooks and White even did well<lb/>
enough for representatives from<lb/>
Adidas to take notice. The com-<lb/>
pany will sponsor the two athletes<lb/>
for the rest of their collegiate<lb/>
careers.<lb/>
Soccer A wards<lb/>
On March 1, the ECU soccer<lb/>
team held its award banquet at<lb/>
??our Seasons Restaurant and<lb/>
presented various awards<lb/>
Brian Winchell received the<lb/>
Most Valuable Player' award,<lb/>
while Steve Brody was presented<lb/>
tne Coach's Award<lb/>
Senior plaques were given to<lb/>
jom Lawrence, Duane<lb/>
Jgaetano. Dennis Elwell. Stan<lb/>
Brod Winchell and Steve<lb/>
I<lb/>
Sneaker Sam Sez<lb/>
Old Veterans Do It<lb/>
Again<lb/>
Before the in-<lb/>
tramural basketball<lb/>
season started,<lb/>
everyone was talking<lb/>
about the Joint Eight<lb/>
and the Heart-<lb/>
breakers, and as the<lb/>
six week season came<lb/>
to a close on March 3,<lb/>
these two veteran<lb/>
championship teams<lb/>
proved what the talk<lb/>
was all about. Joint<lb/>
Eight, who won the<lb/>
Men's Independent<lb/>
Division, took their<lb/>
third straight All-<lb/>
Campus victory be<lb/>
defeating the<lb/>
Residence Hall Cham-<lb/>
pion Belk Bandits.<lb/>
The Bandits advance<lb/>
to the A-C finals by<lb/>
eliminating the top<lb/>
Fraternity, Beta Theta<lb/>
Pi. Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
won the Fraternity<lb/>
"B" Division over Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi.<lb/>
The Heartbreakers.<lb/>
who are the<lb/>
dominating force in<lb/>
women's intramurals,<lb/>
won the All Campus<lb/>
Championship over<lb/>
the top Women'<lb/>
Residence Hall team,<lb/>
the Fletcher Sharp-<lb/>
shooters. Alpha Delta<lb/>
the Sorority<lb/>
but lost to<lb/>
in their bid<lb/>
AC Cham-<lb/>
the Joint Eight, the<lb/>
Heartbreakers and all<lb/>
of the divisional<lb/>
champions.<lb/>
Champions of the<lb/>
Rink<lb/>
El Loco Flyers and<lb/>
Rolla Doobie, the top<lb/>
two slapshooting<lb/>
teams, took to the<lb/>
rink on March 3 to<lb/>
decide the champion<lb/>
of Co-Rec Roller<lb/>
Hockey. Very few<lb/>
goals were scored in<lb/>
this final game as<lb/>
both teams excelled<lb/>
defensively. When the<lb/>
final horn sounded,<lb/>
El Loco had edged<lb/>
out Rolla Doobie by a<lb/>
2-1 margin, and earn-<lb/>
ed the title as<lb/>
"Champions of the<lb/>
Rink<lb/>
Pi won<lb/>
Division<lb/>
Fletcher<lb/>
for the<lb/>
pionship.<lb/>
Congratulations<lb/>
to<lb/>
Championship<lb/>
Wrestling <lb/>
A packed crowd<lb/>
watched as the ex-<lb/>
citing finals of the in-<lb/>
tramural wrestling<lb/>
tournament got<lb/>
underway on March<lb/>
3. Congratulations to<lb/>
the following cham-<lb/>
pions in their<lb/>
respected weight divi-<lb/>
sions: 126, Kent<lb/>
Smothers; 134, Mike<lb/>
Morris; 142, Dave<lb/>
Terry; 150, Dan<lb/>
Keene; 158, Andy<lb/>
Gross; 167, Lee Cox;<lb/>
177, Tom Robinson;<lb/>
190, Phil Hagen; and<lb/>
unlimited, David<lb/>
Twisdale.<lb/>
Upcoming Events <lb/>
With warm weather<lb/>
here, it's time to get<lb/>
the racket out of the<lb/>
closet, brush the<lb/>
leaves off the court<lb/>
and play tennis. Entry<lb/>
dates for tennis<lb/>
doubles and co-rec<lb/>
(mixed) doubles is<lb/>
March 21-24 with<lb/>
matches beginning<lb/>
March 28. Round up<lb/>
a partner and start<lb/>
practicing that power-<lb/>
ful serve today.<lb/>
You have one more<lb/>
chance to play basket-<lb/>
ball but this time it's<lb/>
co-rec style. Teams<lb/>
are made up of three<lb/>
women and two men<lb/>
with specialized rules.<lb/>
Entry dates are March<lb/>
28-30 with games<lb/>
beginning on April 5.<lb/>
Mix-up a team and<lb/>
sign up!<lb/>
Entry dates for co-<lb/>
rec inner-tube water<lb/>
polo are March 21-24<lb/>
with the splashing<lb/>
event beginning<lb/>
March 28. Join in on<lb/>
the fun and make<lb/>
some waves!<lb/>
Advisory Council Ap-<lb/>
plications Being Ac-<lb/>
cepted <lb/>
Now's your chance<lb/>
to recommend<lb/>
policies, suggest new<lb/>
activities or pro-<lb/>
grams, and become<lb/>
involved with the<lb/>
operation of your<lb/>
Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services<lb/>
program! Applica-<lb/>
tions are being ac-<lb/>
cepted through April<lb/>
8 for the positions of<lb/>
council president and<lb/>
council represen-<lb/>
tatives. The Advisory<lb/>
Council includes a<lb/>
representative from<lb/>
each of the participa-<lb/>
tion divisions: frater-<lb/>
nity, sorority,<lb/>
residence hall (one<lb/>
from each campus<lb/>
Central, West and<lb/>
College Hill), club-<lb/>
department, and<lb/>
indepenent-off-<lb/>
campus. Principal<lb/>
duties of the Advisory<lb/>
Council include<lb/>
recommendation of<lb/>
policies and pro-<lb/>
cedures for the IRS<lb/>
programs-services,<lb/>
reviewing disciplinary<lb/>
matters, and advising<lb/>
the IRS staff of stu-<lb/>
dent concerns.<lb/>
Application forms<lb/>
are available in 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym. All<lb/>
interested students are<lb/>
encouraged to apply,<lb/>
no later than the April<lb/>
8 deadline.<lb/>
Lefty Refuses To Q<lb/>
HOUSTON (UPI)<lb/>
? There may be<lb/>
demands for Lefty<lb/>
DrieselPs resignation<lb/>
and his team may be<lb/>
in the midst of a swirl-<lb/>
ing controversy, but<lb/>
the veteran of 28<lb/>
coaching seasons in-<lb/>
sists he feels no<lb/>
pressure.<lb/>
"I'm too dumb to<lb/>
feel any pressure<lb/>
said the coach of the<lb/>
Maryland Terrapins.<lb/>
"I'm too dumb to get<lb/>
out of coaching.<lb/>
"This has been a<lb/>
rewarding season for<lb/>
me. It's been a great<lb/>
season<lb/>
Driesell has come<lb/>
under fire from<lb/>
several sources since a<lb/>
Maryland coed con-<lb/>
tended the Terps<lb/>
coach tried to con-<lb/>
vince her she should<lb/>
drop a sexual harass-<lb/>
ment complaint<lb/>
against 6-6 forwaid<lb/>
Herman Veal.<lb/>
"I'm not going to<lb/>
say anything about<lb/>
that (the Veal inci-<lb/>
dent) Driesell said<lb/>
Wednesday on the eve<lb/>
of his team's first<lb/>
round NCAA tourna-<lb/>
ment game against<lb/>
Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga. "It has<lb/>
had no effect on the<lb/>
team. We don't make<lb/>
excuses when we lose<lb/>
at Maryland. Like I<lb/>
said, I'm too dump to<lb/>
be affected<lb/>
The Terrapins are<lb/>
one of four Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference<lb/>
teams to have made it<lb/>
into the NCAA tour-<lb/>
nament and Driesell<lb/>
said he feels his team<lb/>
is capable of advanc-<lb/>
ing a lot farther into<lb/>
the tourney than some<lb/>
people think.<lb/>
"We think we can<lb/>
beat any team in the<lb/>
country right now<lb/>
said Driesell. "But no<lb/>
we have to prove it.<lb/>
"We may not beat<lb/>
Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga, but if<lb/>
they are going to beat<lb/>
us they are going to<lb/>
have to play hard<lb/>
because we are going<lb/>
to play awfuily<lb/>
hard<lb/>
Maryland's season<lb/>
began with an<lb/>
18-point loss to Penn<lb/>
State and at that point<lb/>
of the year Driesell<lb/>
didn't think his team<lb/>
was capable of<lb/>
beating anybody.<lb/>
"I was ready to<lb/>
pack in it he said.<lb/>
"I didn't think we<lb/>
would win two games.<lb/>
But we beat UCLA<lb/>
and we beat North<lb/>
Carolina. People<lb/>
started out by saying<lb/>
we were no good, then<lb/>
ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss?.<lb/>
they came back and<lb/>
said maybe we were<lb/>
sort of good. Now we<lb/>
have to go out tomor-<lb/>
row night and show<lb/>
how good we are.<lb/>
If Maryland does<lb/>
beat the Moccasins<lb/>
Thursday night, the<lb/>
Terrapins will take on<lb/>
the No. 1 ranked team<lb/>
in the country ? the<lb/>
Houston Cougars.<lb/>
"But my players<lb/>
aren't looking for-<lb/>
ward to Houston he<lb/>
said. "If they are they<lb/>
are foolish. They<lb/>
might have been look-<lb/>
ing forward to playing<lb/>
Virginia in the ACC<lb/>
"We are the under-<lb/>
dog in this game as far<lb/>
as I'm concerned. I<lb/>
pick up the poll and<lb/>
see that Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga is rank-<lb/>
ed and we aren't.<lb/>
That makes them the<lb/>
favorite.<lb/>
"But I like that. I<lb/>
like it when we are<lb/>
playing teams we<lb/>
aren't supposed to<lb/>
beat.<lb/>
tournament and we<lb/>
got beat by Georgia<lb/>
Tech in the first<lb/>
round.<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
if<lb/>
?w,??xw?ww?www ;?ii i.<lb/>
Daugherty Out;<lb/>
UNC Prepares<lb/>
For Tourney<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
We Are Now Open 11:00 a.m.<lb/>
to9:00p.m.<lb/>
aros<lb/>
FINE<lb/>
FOODS<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL.<lb/>
NX. (UPI)<lb/>
University of North<lb/>
Carolina freshman<lb/>
center Brad Daugher-<lb/>
ty missed his second<lb/>
straight day of prac-<lb/>
tice Wednesday<lb/>
because of shin<lb/>
splints.<lb/>
Daugherty, a<lb/>
starter for the Tar<lb/>
Heels, is in the UNC<lb/>
infirmary but team<lb/>
physician Joseph<lb/>
DeW'alt said he is con-<lb/>
fident Daugherty will<lb/>
be ready<lb/>
Saturdav.<lb/>
to play<lb/>
North Carolina's<lb/>
first game in the<lb/>
NCAA Tournament is<lb/>
Saturday against the<lb/>
winner of Thursday-<lb/>
night's West Virginia-<lb/>
James Madison game.<lb/>
North Carolina is the<lb/>
defending national<lb/>
champion.<lb/>
Daugherty is<lb/>
averaging 8.1 points<lb/>
and 5.1 rebounds a<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Friday Super Happy Hour<lb/>
4:00-6:00<lb/>
35C draught<lb/>
$1.00 Wine Coolers<lb/>
75C Glass of Wine<lb/>
Regular Happy Hour<lb/>
from 6:00-8:00p.m.<lb/>
Come on out ? enjoy<lb/>
our patio<lb/>
Located in Georgetown Shoppes<lb/>
Across From The Highrise Dorms.<lb/>
For Take Out Call 752 4761<lb/>
All You Con Eat<lb/>
Spec<lb/>
Shrimp all you can eat<lb/>
Special for only $5.99<lb/>
Thurs.Night Only<lb/>
1105 Airport Roa Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Jazz Loft<lb/>
' 'It 'sjust a step above<lb/>
PAUL TARDIFF<lb/>
QUARTET<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
Ray Codrington on Trumpet<lb/>
and Flugal Horn.<lb/>
Robbie Link on Bass<lb/>
David Via on Drums<lb/>
Paul Tardiff on Piano<lb/>
original and jazz standards<lb/>
Plus music by<lb/>
Charlie Parker<lb/>
Sonny Rollins<lb/>
Theoloninius Monk<lb/>
Friday?Sat.<lb/>
March 18th and 19th<lb/>
9p B. until<lb/>
Beef Barn<lb/>
?400 St. Andrews Drive 756-1161<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
ECU STUDENTFACULTY DAY<lb/>
APRIL 16,1983<lb/>
'a<lb/>
r<lb/>
SIGEP<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
8:30 to 1:00<lb/>
EVERY SUNDAY<lb/>
COVER CHARGE:<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
XJ,TdngsqXwninion<lb/>
i2H3-<lb/>
Jon ? for fuarvcilrmcal ind make tkriw.r<lb/>
TW MadcM I aioa Tra.d Coaajtlc a spoasoriat ? ?n? u kia ? Doauaioa<lb/>
Tfckets m?.oi?kiilW Central Ticket Offlre.Mearftafe.fl St??al Cealer<lb/>
Foe sort taforaaOoa.co.tarl the Cealral Ticket Office ? 7yi 1 eit 2M<lb/>
Members $3.00<lb/>
Member Gentlemen $3.50<lb/>
Guest Ladies $4.00<lb/>
Guest Gentlemen $4.50<lb/>
Memberships Will Be Available<lb/>
At The Door<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
BEVERAGE<lb/>
ALLNIGHT<lb/>
LONG<lb/>
IMMMMMM5SSISS1<lb/>
Wilber<lb/>
OLD FASHIONED<lb/>
HOT DOGS-BURGERS<lb/>
5?AFOOD<lb/>
FRIED CHICK?li<lb/>
DRIVE THRU<lb/>
fe3<lb/>
?<lb/>
BREAKFAST<lb/>
GRAND OPENING<lb/>
OF<lb/>
WILBER'S<lb/>
FAMILY FAVORITES<lb/>
480 North Greene Street ? 752-8611<lb/>
(Across From Casablanca)<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
6 AM until 11PM<lb/>
OLr biscuits are made from scratch and<lb/>
branded with our name!<lb/>
?SPECIALS?<lb/>
?Two Scrambled Eggs ftft<lb/>
Hash brown, biscuit. jl!y ft coffsoonly99<lb/>
?Two Ham Biscuitsontyl .19<lb/>
?Two Sausage Biscuitsomyl .19<lb/>
?Econo-Pack Chicken A 0ft<lb/>
Two ptocat chicken, biscuit, honsyonly 1.29<lb/>
?Snack Pack Chicken . fi<lb/>
Twopfc?cwctw:kfw,Wuitfr?f?ftlrw?,J?orwy only 1.59<lb/>
?Old Fashion Hot Dogson?y59c<lb/>
?Trout Dinnersomyl .99<lb/>
?Featuring<lb/>
Chicken Filet Sandwiches, Trout Sandwiches<lb/>
Hamburgers, Shrimp Dinners, Buckets<lb/>
ot Chicken, Drive-Thru Window<lb/>
r.<lb/>
r <lb/>
.all you can<lb/>
?PLAY Everyday<lb/>
? to 6:00p.m. &amp;<lb/>
K $3M : Open<lb/>
 ' 12 Noon<lb/>
wiiimiini.ni.f.r,lrT<lb/>
?<lb/>
piB'inttpQDw<lb/>
<lb/>
pnnmanmni<lb/>
'4<lb/>
 .<lb/>
Daily .J;<lb/>
i - i ? 11<lb/>
10th St.Ext. by Papa Katz 758-1820<lb/>
8 Tokens for $1.00 (2.00 LIMIT)<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
Expires 5-15-83<lb/>
Your 1st scoop of Ice Cream4 price<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
Expires 5-15-83<lb/>
Receive a FREE<lb/>
2 Game ticket when you purchase<lb/>
a 2 Game ticket at the regular<lb/>
price ($3.00)with this<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
Expires 5-15-83<lb/>
A<lb/>
  4 '<lb/>
wmwjin w ne ?<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0010"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 17, 1983<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
)th Win<lb/>
Pho'o 6v 04BV PATTERSON<lb/>
 i John Hallow takt time out to talk to Pitcher<lb/>
I lt'm?on toda at 3 p.m.<lb/>
ners Go West<lb/>
W S<lb/>
v m<lb/>
I udwig will swim<lb/>
50, : ? i id 200-meter but-<lb/>
hi ? McCullej will swim<lb/>
. K), and 200-meter<lb/>
ke Wilson will com-<lb/>
0 and 100 fly as well<lb/>
? breakstroke. They all<lb/>
the individual medlev<lb/>
? I<lb/>
ho will<lb/>
' who's<lb/>
swimmers on the<lb/>
compete in three<lb/>
i. The include<lb/>
ers Nanc) Rogers and<lb/>
Nan George, breakstroker<lb/>
ica Feinberg and buiterflyer<lb/>
Sharon Holt. Abbey Schultz will<lb/>
compete in the breakstroke and<lb/>
butterfly, while Nancy James<lb/>
will suim the butterfly and<lb/>
freestyle.<lb/>
Rene Seech will dive for the<lb/>
rates oft the one and three<lb/>
ter boards.<lb/>
a teams qualified for<lb/>
: the will be made<lb/>
he nine swimmers com-<lb/>
peting They include the 200,<lb/>
400 and 800-meter freestyle<lb/>
as well as the 200 and<lb/>
400-meter medley teams.<lb/>
The Pirates return from Long<lb/>
Beach Sunday night, and with<lb/>
:h swimmer competing in at<lb/>
ree events, ECU should<lb/>
inish ip their season in grand<lb/>
t v le.<lb/>
In NCAA<lb/>
IUv<lb/>
II<lb/>
II<lb/>
;r set<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
:ra<lb/>
? iki<lb/>
are<lb/>
i ised him<lb/>
ird<lb/>
able<lb/>
ump.<lb/>
the na-<lb/>
6 , but<lb/>
irpass the<lb/>
meet "If<lb/>
i m pretty<lb/>
in the top<lb/>
came with<lb/>
arson<lb/>
?er well<lb/>
rred in the<lb/>
teter high<lb/>
Ixth in his<lb/>
but had the opportunity to<lb/>
sh in the top three. Going over<lb/>
' hurdle. White jumped too<lb/>
ind three people passed him<lb/>
as; five meters of the race.<lb/>
"Craig was in good shape near<lb/>
Carson explained, "but<lb/>
mailed the last hurdle and<lb/>
three people slipped under him.<lb/>
'tan: to barely clear the<lb/>
hurdle so you can explode to<lb/>
the finish line<lb/>
Although White could have<lb/>
done better, he was pleased with<lb/>
performance and enjoyed<lb/>
ng in the most prestigious<lb/>
collegiate trak and field event. "1<lb/>
felt pretty confident going in, and<lb/>
lined a lot of experience from<lb/>
a eel "<lb/>
ough problems did arise,<lb/>
was pleased with the per-<lb/>
ince of his freshmen.<lb/>
? and White even did well<lb/>
igh for representatives from<lb/>
Adidas to take notice. The com-<lb/>
? will sponsor the two athletes<lb/>
' ' the rest of their collegiate<lb/>
.areers<lb/>
Soccer A wards<lb/>
On March 1, the ECU soccer<lb/>
team held its award banquet at<lb/>
?ur Seasons Restaurant and<lb/>
Presented various awards<lb/>
Brian Wmchell received the<lb/>
Most Valuable Player' award,<lb/>
white Steve Brody was presented<lb/>
ine Coach's Award<lb/>
Senior plaques were given to<lb/>
r, Lawrence, Duane<lb/>
Degaetano. Dennis Elwell, Stan<lb/>
Brod " W,nchdl an Steve<lb/>
1<lb/>
Sneaker Sam Sez<lb/>
Old Veterans Do It<lb/>
Again<lb/>
Before the in-<lb/>
tramural basketball<lb/>
season started,<lb/>
everyone was talking<lb/>
about the Joint Eight<lb/>
and the Heart-<lb/>
breakers, and as the<lb/>
six week season came<lb/>
to a close on March 3,<lb/>
these two veteran<lb/>
championship teams<lb/>
proved what the talk<lb/>
was all about. Joint<lb/>
Fight, who won the<lb/>
Men's Independent<lb/>
Division, took their<lb/>
third straight All-<lb/>
Campus victory be<lb/>
defeating the<lb/>
Residence Hall Cham-<lb/>
pion Belk Bandits.<lb/>
The Bandits advance<lb/>
to the A-C finals by<lb/>
eliminating the top<lb/>
Fraternity, Beta Theta<lb/>
Pi. Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
won the Fraternity<lb/>
"B" Division over Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi.<lb/>
The Heartbreakers,<lb/>
who are the<lb/>
dominating force in<lb/>
women's intramurals,<lb/>
won the All Campus<lb/>
Championship over<lb/>
the top Women's<lb/>
Residence Hall team,<lb/>
the Fletcher Sharp-<lb/>
shooters. Alpha Delta<lb/>
Pi won the Sorority<lb/>
Division but lost to<lb/>
Fletcher in their bid<lb/>
for the A-C Cham-<lb/>
pionship.<lb/>
Congratulations to<lb/>
the Joint Eight, the<lb/>
Heartbreakers and all<lb/>
of the divisional<lb/>
champions.<lb/>
Champions of the<lb/>
Rink<lb/>
El Loco Flyers and<lb/>
Rolla Doobie, the top<lb/>
two slapshooting<lb/>
teams, took to the<lb/>
rink on March 3 to<lb/>
decide the champion<lb/>
of Co-Rec Roller<lb/>
Hockey. Very few<lb/>
goals were scored in<lb/>
this final game as<lb/>
both teams excelled<lb/>
defensively. When the<lb/>
final horn sounded.<lb/>
El Loco had edged<lb/>
out Rolla Doobie by a<lb/>
2-1 margin, and earn-<lb/>
ed the title as<lb/>
"Champions of the<lb/>
Rink<lb/>
Championship<lb/>
Wrestling <lb/>
A packed crowd<lb/>
watched as the ex-<lb/>
citing finals of the in-<lb/>
tramural wrestling<lb/>
tournament got<lb/>
underway on March<lb/>
3. Congratulations to<lb/>
the following cham-<lb/>
pions in their<lb/>
respected weight divi-<lb/>
sions: 126, Kent<lb/>
Smothers; 134, Mike<lb/>
Morris; 142, Dave<lb/>
Terry; 150, Dan<lb/>
Keene; 158, Andv<lb/>
Gross; 167, Lee Cox;<lb/>
177, Tom Robinson;<lb/>
190, Phil Hagen; and<lb/>
unlimited, David<lb/>
Twisdale.<lb/>
Upcoming Events <lb/>
With warm weather<lb/>
here, it's time to get<lb/>
the racket out of the<lb/>
closet, brush the<lb/>
leaves off the court<lb/>
and play tennis. Entry<lb/>
dates for tennis<lb/>
doubles and co-rec<lb/>
(mixed) doubles is<lb/>
March 21-24 with<lb/>
matches beginning<lb/>
March 28. Round up<lb/>
a partner and start<lb/>
practicing that power-<lb/>
ful serve today.<lb/>
You have one more<lb/>
chance to play basket-<lb/>
ball but this time it's<lb/>
co-rec style. Teams<lb/>
are made up of three<lb/>
women and two men<lb/>
with specialized rules.<lb/>
Entry dates are March<lb/>
28-30 with games<lb/>
beginning on April 5.<lb/>
Mix-up a team and<lb/>
sign up!<lb/>
Entry dates for co-<lb/>
rec inner-tube water<lb/>
polo are March 21-24<lb/>
with the splashing<lb/>
event beginning<lb/>
March 28. Join in on<lb/>
the fun and make<lb/>
some waves!<lb/>
Advisory Council Ap-<lb/>
plications Being Ac-<lb/>
cepted <lb/>
Now's your chance<lb/>
to recommend<lb/>
policies, suggest new<lb/>
activities or pro-<lb/>
grams, and become<lb/>
involved with the<lb/>
operation of your<lb/>
Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services<lb/>
program! Applica-<lb/>
tions are being ac-<lb/>
cepted through April<lb/>
8 for the positions of<lb/>
council president and<lb/>
council represen-<lb/>
tatives. The Advisory<lb/>
Council includes a<lb/>
representative from<lb/>
each of the participa-<lb/>
tion divisions: frater-<lb/>
nity, sorority,<lb/>
residence hall (one<lb/>
from each campus<lb/>
Central, West and<lb/>
College Hill), club-<lb/>
department, and<lb/>
indepenent-off-<lb/>
campus. Principal<lb/>
duties of the Advisory<lb/>
Council include<lb/>
recommendation of<lb/>
policies and pro-<lb/>
cedures for the IRS<lb/>
programs-services,<lb/>
reviewing disciplinary<lb/>
matters, and advising<lb/>
the IRS staff of stu-<lb/>
dent concerns.<lb/>
Application forms<lb/>
are available in 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym. All<lb/>
interested students are<lb/>
encouraged to apply,<lb/>
no iater than the April<lb/>
8 deadline.<lb/>
ifty Refuses To Q<lb/>
HOUSTON (UPI)<lb/>
? There may be<lb/>
demands for Lefty<lb/>
Driesell's resignation<lb/>
and his team may be<lb/>
in the midst of a swirl-<lb/>
ing controversy, but<lb/>
the veteran of 28<lb/>
coaching seasons in-<lb/>
sists he feels no<lb/>
pressure.<lb/>
"I'm too dumb to<lb/>
feel any pressure<lb/>
said the coach of the<lb/>
Maryland Terrapins.<lb/>
"I'm too dumb to get<lb/>
out of coaching.<lb/>
"This has been a<lb/>
rewarding season for<lb/>
me. It's been a great<lb/>
season<lb/>
Driesell has come<lb/>
under fire from<lb/>
several sources since a<lb/>
Maryland coed con-<lb/>
tended the Terps<lb/>
coach tried to con-<lb/>
vince her she should<lb/>
drop a sexual harass-<lb/>
ment complaint<lb/>
against 6-6 forwaid<lb/>
Herman Veal.<lb/>
"I'm not going to<lb/>
say anything about<lb/>
that (the Veal inci-<lb/>
dent) Driesell said<lb/>
Wednesday on the eve<lb/>
of his team's First<lb/>
round NCAA tourna-<lb/>
ment game against<lb/>
Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga. "It has<lb/>
had no effect on the<lb/>
team. We don't make<lb/>
excuses when we lose<lb/>
at Maryland. Like I<lb/>
said, I'm too dump to<lb/>
be affected<lb/>
The Terrapins are<lb/>
one of four Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference<lb/>
teams to have made it<lb/>
into the NCAA tour-<lb/>
nament and Driesell<lb/>
said he feels his team<lb/>
is capable of advanc-<lb/>
ing a lot farther into<lb/>
the tourney than some<lb/>
people think.<lb/>
"We think we can<lb/>
beat any team in the<lb/>
country right now<lb/>
said Driesell. "But no<lb/>
we have to prove it.<lb/>
"We may not beat<lb/>
Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga, but if<lb/>
they are going to beat<lb/>
us they are going to<lb/>
have to play hard<lb/>
because we are going<lb/>
to play awfuily<lb/>
hard<lb/>
Maryland's season<lb/>
began with an<lb/>
18-point loss to Penn<lb/>
State and at that point<lb/>
of the year Driesell<lb/>
didn't think his team<lb/>
was capable of<lb/>
beating anybody.<lb/>
"I was ready to<lb/>
pack in it he said.<lb/>
"I didn't think we<lb/>
would win two games.<lb/>
But we beat UCLA<lb/>
and we beat North<lb/>
Carolina. People<lb/>
started out by saying<lb/>
we were no good, then<lb/>
sssssssssssssssssssssssssss<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
0k<lb/>
they came back and<lb/>
said maybe we were<lb/>
sort of good. Now we<lb/>
have to go out tomor-<lb/>
row night and show<lb/>
how good we are.<lb/>
If Maryland does<lb/>
beat the Moccasins<lb/>
Thursday night, the<lb/>
Terrapins will take on<lb/>
the No. 1 ranked team<lb/>
in the country ? the<lb/>
Houston Cougars.<lb/>
"But my players<lb/>
aren't looking for-<lb/>
ward to Houston he<lb/>
said. "If they are they<lb/>
are foolish. They<lb/>
might have been look-<lb/>
ing forward to playing<lb/>
Virginia in the ACC<lb/>
"We are the under-<lb/>
dog in this game as far<lb/>
as I'm concerned. I<lb/>
pick up the poll and<lb/>
see that Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga is rank-<lb/>
ed and we aren't.<lb/>
That makes them the<lb/>
favorite.<lb/>
"But I like that. I<lb/>
like it when we are<lb/>
playing teams we<lb/>
aren't supposed to<lb/>
beat.<lb/>
tournament and we<lb/>
got beat by Georgia<lb/>
Tech in the first<lb/>
round.<lb/>
Daugherty Out;<lb/>
UNC Prepares<lb/>
For Tourney<lb/>
?$<lb/>
We Are Now Open 11:00 a.m.<lb/>
to9:00 p.m.<lb/>
aros<lb/>
fine<lb/>
FOODS<lb/>
All You Con Eot<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
Shrimp all you can eat<lb/>
Special for only $5.99<lb/>
Thnrs.Night Only<lb/>
 105 Airport Roat Greenville, N.C<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL,<lb/>
N.C. (UPI) ?<lb/>
University of North<lb/>
Carolina freshman<lb/>
center Brad Daugher-<lb/>
ty missed his second<lb/>
straight day of prac-<lb/>
tice Wednesdav<lb/>
because of shin<lb/>
splints.<lb/>
Daugherty, a<lb/>
starter for the Tar<lb/>
Heels, is in the UNC<lb/>
infirmary but team<lb/>
physician Joseph<lb/>
DeWalt said he is con-<lb/>
fident Daugherty will<lb/>
be ready<lb/>
Saturdav.<lb/>
to play<lb/>
North Carolina's<lb/>
first game in the<lb/>
NCAA Tournament is<lb/>
Saturday against the<lb/>
winner of Thursday<lb/>
night's West Virginia-<lb/>
James Madison game.<lb/>
North Carolina is the<lb/>
defending national<lb/>
champion.<lb/>
Daugherty is<lb/>
averaging 8.1 points<lb/>
and 5.1 rebounds a<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Friday Super Happy Hour<lb/>
4:00-6:00<lb/>
35$ draught<lb/>
$1.00 Wine Coolers<lb/>
75c Glass of Wine<lb/>
Regular Happy Hour<lb/>
from 6:00-8:00p.m<lb/>
Come on out ? enjoy<lb/>
our patio<lb/>
Located in Georgetown Shoppes<lb/>
Across From the Highrise Dorms.<lb/>
For Take Out Call 752 4761<lb/>
Jazz Loft<lb/>
' 'It 'sjust a step a bo ve<lb/>
PAUL TARDIFF<lb/>
QUARTET<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
Ray Codrington on Trumpet<lb/>
and Flugal Horn.<lb/>
Robbie Link on Bass<lb/>
David Via on Drums<lb/>
Paul Tardiff on Piano<lb/>
original and jazz standards<lb/>
Plus music by<lb/>
Charlie Parker<lb/>
Sonny Rollins<lb/>
Theoloninius Monk<lb/>
Friday?Sat.<lb/>
March 18th and 19th<lb/>
9p.m. until<lb/>
Beef Barn<lb/>
400 St. Andrews Drive 756-1161<lb/>
?niiiiiiiliMil<lb/>
ECU STUDENTFACULTY DAY<lb/>
APRIL 16,1983<lb/>
-???<lb/>
SIGEP<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
8:30 to 1:00<lb/>
EVERY SUNDAY<lb/>
COVER CHARGE:<lb/>
Joiaufnr ry.cicilrmrnt ml mkf briwr<lb/>
TW Madtal I Moa Tr??d Coamiltet a ipoasoria, . tnp 10 Hal Doauaioa<lb/>
Tkkrti u.Kmo.??H, Central TVkn Of ficr. MraaVaaaO Slmteairain<lb/>
For atorr iaioraatioa.roatart the Ccalral Tickrl Officr ai 757U.?i 2?<lb/>
:mmimmmmmmmmmmi<lb/>
m<lb/>
.<lb/>
Members $3.00<lb/>
Member Gentlemen $3.50<lb/>
Guest Ladies $4.00<lb/>
Guest Gentlemen $4.50<lb/>
Memberships Will Be Available<lb/>
At The Poor<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
BEVERAGE<lb/>
ALLNIGHT<lb/>
LONG<lb/>
GRAND OPENING<lb/>
OF<lb/>
WILBER'S<lb/>
FAMILY FAVORITES<lb/>
480 North Greene Street ? 752-8611<lb/>
(Across From Casablanca)<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
6 AM until 11PM<lb/>
Our biscuits are made from scratch and<lb/>
branded with our name!<lb/>
?SPECIALS?<lb/>
?Two Scrambled Eggs ftft<lb/>
Hash browns, biscuit. jeily 4 coffeeonjy99<lb/>
?Two Ham Biscuitsomyl .19<lb/>
?Two Sausage Biscuitsomyl .19<lb/>
?Econo-Pack Chicken - on<lb/>
Two pieces chicken, biscuit, honeyonly I .29<lb/>
?Snack Pack Chicken fi<lb/>
Two pieces chicken, biscuit, french fries, horwy ontyl.59<lb/>
?Old Fashion Hot Dogsomy59c<lb/>
?Trout Dinnersomyl .99<lb/>
?Featuring?<lb/>
Chicken Filet Sandwiches, Trout Sandwiches<lb/>
Hamburgers, Shrimp Dinners, Buckets<lb/>
of Chicken. Drive-Thru Window<lb/>
Jall you can<lb/>
?PLAY Everyday<lb/>
? to 6:00p.m. <lb/>
 $3.00<lb/>
.e<lb/>
. e<lb/>
?f<lb/>
llUUIIIIalllMlr"iimnJH<lb/>
?<lb/>
ttttttiiihhUTTTfl<lb/>
Open<lb/>
12 Noon<lb/>
, Daily<lb/>
v- . y<lb/>
'4<lb/>
10th St.Ext. by Papa Katz 758-1820<lb/>
8 Tokens for $1.00 (2.00 LIMIT)<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
Expires 5-15-83<lb/>
Your 1st scoop of Ice Cream4 price<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
Expires 5-15-83<lb/>
Receive a FREE<lb/>
2 Game ticket when you purchase<lb/>
a 2 Game ticket at the regular<lb/>
price ($3.00)with this<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
Expires 5-15-83<lb/>
? ???<lb/>
'?? ??i??<lb/>
L<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0011"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
I Hi AM CAROl IMAN<lb/>
MARCH 17, 1?83<lb/>
Madison Ready For WV<lb/>
Photo b GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
David kaplon (left) and C.J. Harris exchange blos in a 173-182 lb. weight<lb/>
class bout Wednesda nihl in the second qualiivinu. niht of the 1983 IKK<lb/>
Boxing 1 ournament at Mingesoliseum. kaplnn won the contest b decision.<lb/>
Final-round competition will bt-gin tonight at 7:30.<lb/>
GREENSBORO,<lb/>
N.C. (UPI) ? James<lb/>
Madison Coach Lou<lb/>
C a m p a n e I 1 i<lb/>
understands West<lb/>
Virginia Coach Gale<lb/>
Catlett is saying the<lb/>
Dukes like to stall and<lb/>
Campanelli is sore<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
"I resent people<lb/>
speaking when they<lb/>
have no knowledge of<lb/>
what's going on, no<lb/>
facts Campanelli<lb/>
said this week.<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
takes on West<lb/>
Virginia and Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth plays<lb/>
LaSalle as the NCAA<lb/>
Basketball Tourna-<lb/>
ment comes to the<lb/>
Greensboro Coliseum<lb/>
Thursday night. The<lb/>
winner of the James<lb/>
M a d i s o n - W e s t<lb/>
Virginia game goes<lb/>
against North<lb/>
Carolina Saturday,<lb/>
while the winner of<lb/>
the other game will<lb/>
play Georgia.<lb/>
I ittle was known in<lb/>
North Carolina about<lb/>
James Madison this<lb/>
time last year but the<lb/>
Dukes quickly chang-<lb/>
ed that when they<lb/>
gave eventual NCAA<lb/>
champion University<lb/>
of North Carolina one<lb/>
of its toughtest games<lb/>
of the tournament.<lb/>
James Madison,<lb/>
19-10, got into the<lb/>
NCAA Tournament<lb/>
this year by winning<lb/>
the ECAC South<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
Campanelli says the<lb/>
stall is not part of the<lb/>
Dukes' game strategy<lb/>
despite what Catlett<lb/>
thinks.<lb/>
"We like a medium<lb/>
tempo, no matter<lb/>
what Coach Catlett<lb/>
says Campanelli<lb/>
said. "He says we<lb/>
play stall-ball. I don't<lb/>
think we do that. We<lb/>
play good defense. 1<lb/>
don't coach his group<lb/>
and he doesn't coach<lb/>
mine<lb/>
James Madison is<lb/>
led by Dan Ruland<lb/>
who is averaging 15.2<lb/>
points and 6.7 re-<lb/>
bounds a game.<lb/>
Charles Fisher is<lb/>
averaging 10.3 points.<lb/>
West Virginia is<lb/>
23-7 and was ranked<lb/>
in the top 20 during<lb/>
the first few weeks of<lb/>
the season. The<lb/>
Mountaineers drop-<lb/>
ped out of the rank-<lb/>
ings never to return<lb/>
after losing to North<lb/>
Carolina State and<lb/>
Stetson in December.<lb/>
West Virginia won<lb/>
the Atlantic 10 Con-<lb/>
ference championship<lb/>
Saturday by defeating<lb/>
Temple in<lb/>
Philadelphia.<lb/>
It's also the second<lb/>
straight year West<lb/>
Virginia has been in<lb/>
the NCAA Tourna-<lb/>
ment. The Moun-<lb/>
taineers beat North<lb/>
Carolina A'T 102-72<lb/>
in the opening round<lb/>
last year but then lost<lb/>
to Fresno State 50-46<lb/>
in the second round.<lb/>
West Virginia's at-<lb/>
tack is led by senior<lb/>
guard Greg Jones,<lb/>
who has been averag-<lb/>
ing 22.8 points per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
West Virginia had<lb/>
some big wins this<lb/>
year, including one<lb/>
against then top-<lb/>
ranked University of<lb/>
Nevada I as Vegas,<lb/>
but also has dropped<lb/>
some games it was<lb/>
supposed to win<lb/>
Catlett has criticized<lb/>
the team pubiclv for<lb/>
lack of concentration.<lb/>
"If we go play our<lb/>
system efficiently, we<lb/>
should be all right<lb/>
he said of the James<lb/>
Madison game. "I'm<lb/>
more concerned about<lb/>
how we perform than<lb/>
how they plav<lb/>
Virginia Com-<lb/>
monwealth, 23-6. wa<lb/>
on a 15-game winning<lb/>
streak when it lost to<lb/>
Alabama-<lb/>
Birmingham in the<lb/>
semifinals of the Sun<lb/>
Belt Conference<lb/>
Tournament. The<lb/>
Rams are led b<lb/>
Calvin Duncan,<lb/>
averaging 17.4 points<lb/>
a game; Fred Brown,<lb/>
with a 12.9 point<lb/>
average; and Michael<lb/>
Brown with a 10 8<lb/>
point average.<lb/>
VCl Coach J.D<lb/>
Barnett has expressed<lb/>
satisfaction about get<lb/>
ting into the East<lb/>
Region<lb/>
"I personal!) fell<lb/>
we would get a I<lb/>
with 23 wins having<lb/>
plaved against the op-<lb/>
position that we<lb/>
plaved he said<lb/>
"But 1 did not know<lb/>
where we would go<lb/>
Watch the<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
ciXXclCxYw<lb/>
o1<lb/>
A<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
- . B i I i m still rvad - 1 ?<lb/>
'Of ?ou Love YOUR<lb/>
SECRET ADMIRER<lb/>
FIFl Mow s rout ?ou ?n m<lb/>
gettlfl SIOShMl tttlS wt-t kt'HG<lb/>
down jt the hoq show1 SK'PPY<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
NEAT CLEAN FEMALE<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Cs<lb/>
?;? at O j- Mills Studio Rent<lb/>
15 0C monthly Apartment lur<lb/>
nished<lb/>
MATURE RESPONSIBLE<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED in<lb/>
3 bedroom duplex 2 blocks trom<lb/>
campus 170 plus one third<lb/>
utilities 75?47?5<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING<lb/>
SERVICE e?per.ence quality<lb/>
work IBM Selectric t?pt.iriter<lb/>
Call Lame Shive 7S6 530 or<lb/>
GAIL JOYNER 756 !0?J<lb/>
TYPING Term papers, thesis<lb/>
etc Call Kempie Dunn. 752 6733<lb/>
AUDIO ELECTRONICS SER<lb/>
VICE Complete audio repair<lb/>
call ater 6pm Mark 752 1796<lb/>
NEED TYPING' Lowest rates<lb/>
on campus I years experience<lb/>
IBM type Call Cindy 35S 6748<lb/>
atter s 00 p m<lb/>
MOVING' No cot) too large or<lb/>
small1 Reasonable rates call<lb/>
ISI "533<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST . . t A H O L D '?<lb/>
- - ? . . ilVfiitff mark<lb/>
inqs on ch.r nd paws no tan<lb/>
Answers 'o CLO Please call<lb/>
? ?' . ? ? en or<lb/>
found<lb/>
LOST GERMAN SHEPHERD<lb/>
puppv mostly black Answers to<lb/>
Dusty Lost near Harding<lb/>
St . ? It (ound call T? 4483<lb/>
0fi Anniversary Celebration<lb/>
aj Roast Beef<lb/>
I, I Sandwich!<lb/>
II MIT N? COUPON NECESSARY<lb/>
f March 12-20<lb/>
FOR SALE iMmmmMmmmrwmmMMMMmmMMmmJm<lb/>
CAN DO<lb/>
25 Offset Resumes for<lb/>
D. c $12.50<lb/>
Photocopies 5C<lb/>
CURRY 1)<lb/>
COPY p<lb/>
CENTER of Greenville<lb/>
752 1233<lb/>
includes typing,<lb/>
second sneets &amp; envelopes<lb/>
8' : X 11 1 side<lb/>
Classic Laid Paper<lb/>
Expires J 30 83<lb/>
412 EVANS MALL DOWNTOWN<lb/>
qqooooooooooooooooogoooooooqoooqqoooooooooqogqBD&amp;ag<lb/>
MARCH IS<lb/>
FOR SAVING MONEY<lb/>
At the<lb/>
BICYCte<lb/>
90S<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENTS Wan-<lb/>
to earn entra money from your<lb/>
room at your convenience?<lb/>
Unlimited earnings potential'<lb/>
Start your on business and<lb/>
take it with you wherever you<lb/>
go A unique wav to save and<lb/>
make monev i interested call<lb/>
752 0207 4 00 p m 9 00 p m<lb/>
Monday through Friday<lb/>
MOVING' NO JOB TOO<lb/>
LARGE OR SMALL"<lb/>
Reasonable 'ates Call s 9533<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE PERSON S<lb/>
WANTED to sub lease one room<lb/>
apartment a Tar Rv?t Estates<lb/>
this summer Apt is beside<lb/>
large swimming pool has patio<lb/>
and is located 5 minutes trom<lb/>
campus Call 7 58 6424 or more<lb/>
information<lb/>
9 TOYOTA CORONA 4 speed<lb/>
a c good mileage ci-an t' 200<lb/>
rSI 1513 -sk tor Jim<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS Ucult ?taf1<lb/>
Welcome to our flea market i1<lb/>
n. Pitt County Fairgrounds<lb/>
located Ml Norfl<lb/>
BUd Open .  r , Saturday .nn<lb/>
Sunday S til 5 Crafts tools fui<lb/>
niture books c D piays of<lb/>
old postcards buttons ami<lb/>
pistols and collector items<lb/>
Real bargains<lb/>
CIGARETTES From 54 4, a<lb/>
carton Will deliver no limit<lb/>
Call '53 5812 nd leave name<lb/>
number order time and place<lb/>
ot deh ver y<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
WANTED Organist for dinner<lb/>
muiic and iounge See Janice<lb/>
Davenport at Washington Tacht<lb/>
and Country Club Thurs thru<lb/>
Sat between 5 and 9 p m or call<lb/>
946 ISM<lb/>
UNFURNISHED ROOM NEED<lb/>
ED 758 43S7<lb/>
IMMEDIATE OPENING ECU<lb/>
senior Become part ot a sue<lb/>
cesstul team with a proven<lb/>
record marketing the Colle9e<lb/>
Defender Insurance Savings<lb/>
plan to ECU students Set vour<lb/>
own hours AM training and<lb/>
license provided e?cellent ear<lb/>
n,ng potential Call 752 0121.<lb/>
Lawrence R Garrett CLU Pro<lb/>
essionat Planning Services<lb/>
!<lb/>
Free Hearing Screening <lb/>
For those people who were in close J<lb/>
proximity to the explosion at Village $<lb/>
Green Apartments on March 2,1983. <lb/>
CONTACT:Speech Pathology <lb/>
and Audiology Department,Regionah <lb/>
Rehabilitation Center, Pitt County T<lb/>
Memorial Hospital $$<lb/>
for appointment (757-4448). i<lb/>
. A.<lb/>
B-E<lb/>
March Specials<lb/>
Tires<lb/>
27x1 Gumwall<lb/>
was 7.95 Now 3.99<lb/>
IRC Roadlite Gumwall 27x1x1<lb/>
was 8.95 Now 4.95<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
RtDE NEEDED to Washington,<lb/>
D C area leave anytime<lb/>
tomorrow. March IB Will pay<lb/>
tor gas Call Steve at 752 884<lb/>
Lady Pirates Blow<lb/>
Hurricanes Away<lb/>
Mitchell's Hair Styling Salon<lb/>
Mitchell's Hair Styling Salon<lb/>
is offering a new look<lb/>
in Spring hair Fashions<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
Phone 756-2950 or 756-4042<lb/>
The lady Pirate<lb/>
Softball team bleu the<lb/>
I.ouisburg Hurricanes<lb/>
avvav, 11-1, Wednes<lb/>
day. and Fran Hooks<lb/>
pitched her first<lb/>
shutout with a 3-0 vic-<lb/>
tory to sweep the<lb/>
doubleheader.<lb/>
In the first game,<lb/>
the Lady Bucs scored<lb/>
four runs each in the<lb/>
first two innings, and<lb/>
Louisburg had two in<lb/>
the second inning,<lb/>
giving the Pirates an<lb/>
8-2 lead. Three more<lb/>
runs in the third inn-<lb/>
ing, however, sealed<lb/>
the victory for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
The Bucs had nine<lb/>
hits and made two er-<lb/>
rors. Leading hitters<lb/>
for ECU were Mitzi<lb/>
Davi who went<lb/>
2-for-2, slamming a<lb/>
double and a triple.<lb/>
Sandy Kee and<lb/>
Melody Ham also<lb/>
weni 2- for-3.<lb/>
"We hit the ball<lb/>
very well becuase we<lb/>
got our hits<lb/>
together said Head<lb/>
Coach Sue Manahan.<lb/>
"As in Florida, we<lb/>
showed good depth.<lb/>
The people on the<lb/>
bench did a good job.<lb/>
"It was a very good<lb/>
way to start our home<lb/>
season<lb/>
ECU'S Jeannette<lb/>
Roth pitched the first<lb/>
two inning, while<lb/>
Hooks came in to<lb/>
pitch the final three.<lb/>
In the second game,<lb/>
the I ady Pirates<lb/>
scored one run each in<lb/>
the third, fourth and<lb/>
fifth innings<lb/>
Senior Cynthia<lb/>
Shepard, who went<lb/>
two-for-two, knocked<lb/>
a homerun in the fifth<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
Wendy () m e n t<lb/>
went three-for-three.<lb/>
and Donna Panos was<lb/>
two-for-three, with a<lb/>
triple and a homerun.<lb/>
"Fran Hooks<lb/>
showed a lot of poise<lb/>
in starting her in her<lb/>
first game and pit-<lb/>
ching a shutout<lb/>
Manahan said.<lb/>
"Donna Panos<lb/>
(rightfield) had a lot<lb/>
of power at the<lb/>
played. She came<lb/>
through with good<lb/>
shots everytime at<lb/>
bat.<lb/>
"In spite of the<lb/>
weather, the team<lb/>
held together well<lb/>
defensively.<lb/>
Louisburg played well<lb/>
in the second game,<lb/>
which was difficult<lb/>
after the first game<lb/>
ECU upped its<lb/>
record, 5-4. while<lb/>
Louisburg fell, 2-4.<lb/>
The Ladv Bucs play<lb/>
next Tuesday at UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
SPRING TUNE-UP SPECIAL<lb/>
ONLY $12.00 Labor<lb/>
includes Adjustments on Brakes,<lb/>
Gears,Cones,iue Wheels,And Safety Check.<lb/>
Check out the New 1983 line of Beach Cruisers<lb/>
Studies in Daniel<lb/>
Prophecy Seminar<lb/>
THURSDAY NIGHTS<lb/>
beginning MARCH 17 7:00p.m.<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Questions pertaining to the<lb/>
events of world history:<lb/>
lo?o through the centuries.<lb/>
prophecies found in the Book of<lb/>
Daniel have death proven their<lb/>
reliability.Their 100 accurate<lb/>
portrayal of past events gives certain<lb/>
confidence that perdictions reguarding<lb/>
the near future will also come true.<lb/>
Discover for yonrsetf what this biblical<lb/>
prophet and author has to say about<lb/>
our work) todav.<lb/>
Questions that probe the<lb/>
secrets of the future:<lb/>
The studies in Daniel Seminar<lb/>
consist of ten. weekly sessions, fcach<lb/>
includes a lecture along with<lb/>
stimulating, informal discussion<lb/>
concerning prophecy and its<lb/>
application to the final days of this<lb/>
world's history.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Attend this Nationally Popular<lb/>
Prophecy Seminar No Registration Fee<lb/>
Forget Hard Days!<lb/>
Wee Got a<lb/>
Hard Days Night<lb/>
Thursday, March 17th<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Carolina Opry House<lb/>
Free Admission<lb/>
Free Draft-ALL NIGHTLONG<lb/>
Free club memberships given away<lb/>
The very best in Solid Gold<lb/>
Rock-n-Roll mth GregAllinson<lb/>
We're Taking You<lb/>
Back in Time<lb/>
For the Time of Your Life!<lb/>
i<lb/>
We Cm Help<lb/>
Students helping Students<lb/>
CAMPUS ALCOHOL A DftUQ PBOOftAM<lb/>
?0i SOSErwiiBidf<lb/>
mmw<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057543_0012"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>