<?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="00057544_0001"/>
<lb/>
(&amp;z Ea0t (Earoltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.4?r<lb/>
Tuesday, March 22, 1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
UNC Chancellor Fordham Denounces Funding<lb/>
Medical School 'Not Needed'<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"We built a new medical school<lb/>
we didn't need said Dr.<lb/>
Christopher C. Fordham III,<lb/>
chancellor of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, in<lb/>
a reference he made Thursday to<lb/>
the ECU School of Medecine.<lb/>
Fordham, who made his com-<lb/>
ments at a meeting of the Greater<lb/>
Raleigh Chamber of Commerce,<lb/>
said he believed that the UNC<lb/>
system is "overextended" and<lb/>
that he opposes any attempts by<lb/>
the N.C. Association of Indepen-<lb/>
dent Colleges and Universities to<lb/>
garner state support to supple-<lb/>
ment their incomes.<lb/>
When Fordham remarked that<lb/>
the UNC system contains<lb/>
"overbuilt colleges" he was refer-<lb/>
ring directly in one case to the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine, which<lb/>
was largely built as a result of the<lb/>
strong lobbying efforts of former<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins.<lb/>
In the summer of 194, when<lb/>
the plans for the ECU Medical<lb/>
School were being developed,<lb/>
UNC President W7illiam Friday<lb/>
placed Fordham in complete<lb/>
charge of the ECU medical school<lb/>
program. Before becoming<lb/>
chancellor at Chapel Hill, For-<lb/>
dham was dean of the UNC<lb/>
medical school.<lb/>
On numerous occassions during<lb/>
the development of ECU's<lb/>
medical school, Fordham came<lb/>
into conflict with Jenkins and<lb/>
others who were developing the<lb/>
project. At one point Fordham<lb/>
prevented ECU officials from us-<lb/>
ing any of the15 million set aside<lb/>
by the General Assembly for<lb/>
development of the school.<lb/>
Despite his recent suggestion<lb/>
that the ECU medical school was<lb/>
not needed, Fordham's own<lb/>
medical school dean, Dr. Stuart<lb/>
Bondurant, and Dr. William<lb/>
Anlyan, vice-president of health<lb/>
affairs at Duke University, appear<lb/>
to disagree with him. Both Bon-<lb/>
durant and Anlyan believe that an<lb/>
adequate number of medical doc-<lb/>
tors are being educated in state<lb/>
colleges. Neither felt there was a<lb/>
surplus of medical doctors.<lb/>
"I regret that he (Fordham)<lb/>
said that said ECU Chancellor<lb/>
John Howell, claiming that he did<lb/>
not wish to make a public debate<lb/>
out of the issue. "I think there are<lb/>
a great many people in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina who are glad that<lb/>
the medical school is there, and I<lb/>
doubt that they think it's one too<lb/>
many<lb/>
Dr. William Laupus, dean of<lb/>
the ECU School of Medicine, was<lb/>
unavailable for comment, but ac-<lb/>
cording to a spokeswoman in his<lb/>
office, Laupus left word that he<lb/>
had "no comment" regarding<lb/>
Fordham's remarks.<lb/>
On the issue of state funding to<lb/>
private colleges, Howell agreed<lb/>
with Fordham. "My position is<lb/>
the same as President Friday and<lb/>
all the chancellors in the entire<lb/>
UNC system Howell said "I<lb/>
think there should not be in-<lb/>
creases in the amounts that the<lb/>
state provides to private institu-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Howell noted the UNC system<lb/>
has already been forced to accept<lb/>
a six-percent cut in its budget,<lb/>
making it impossible for<lb/>
employees of the 16 school UNC<lb/>
system to receive cost of living<lb/>
salary increases.<lb/>
"We don't have as much<lb/>
money to operate this year as we<lb/>
thought we were going to have<lb/>
Howell said, adding that the<lb/>
budget office could only send 94<lb/>
percent of the original fiscal year<lb/>
amount promised to the system.<lb/>
"We're also working in a year in<lb/>
which nobody who works for the<lb/>
state got a raise<lb/>
Howell said the state's 38<lb/>
private colleges received an<lb/>
average of $850 per student in<lb/>
state aid, including an increase of<lb/>
S50 per student in the last year.<lb/>
"We are not in favor of a raise<lb/>
in state aid to private colleges<lb/>
Howell said. "We don't think<lb/>
that that's equitable at a time<lb/>
when we're (UNC schools) talking<lb/>
to the legislature about a raise<lb/>
next vear<lb/>
Reconstruction Begins On TKE House<lb/>
By PAT RICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff ?ril?r<lb/>
Preliminary repairs began last<lb/>
week on the Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
fraternity house that was damag-<lb/>
ed in an early-morning fire Jan. 8.<lb/>
The fraternity has secured a loan<lb/>
of $15,000 from a local bank to<lb/>
repair damage to the attic area of<lb/>
the three-story dwelling. The fire<lb/>
was limited to the attic area, but<lb/>
water and smoke damage occured<lb/>
in several other rooms.<lb/>
According to Assistant to the<lb/>
Chancellor Charles R. Blake.<lb/>
faculty advisor to the TKE frater-<lb/>
nity a second mortgage was ar-<lb/>
ranged with a local bank so<lb/>
renovation could begin. All<lb/>
repairs could be complete in less<lb/>
than a month, Blake said.<lb/>
Blake said the TKE organiza-<lb/>
tion was in good financial condi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The $15,000 loan will be used<lb/>
for basic structural renovation,<lb/>
including total rewiring of the<lb/>
house, restoration of the roof,<lb/>
complete shingling and a new ceil-<lb/>
ing in four or five rooms damaged<lb/>
bv water.<lb/>
" Blake said rewiring, which will<lb/>
cost $18,000, is a safety measure<lb/>
to update the original wiring,<lb/>
which was not fully equipped to<lb/>
handle the load of the 14<lb/>
residents, as well as replace<lb/>
damaged areas. <lb/>
Blake also said another $7,000<lb/>
or $8,000 would be needed for ad-<lb/>
ditional interior work to be done<lb/>
by the fraternity brothers<lb/>
themselves. He said painting,<lb/>
clean-up and general re-<lb/>
decorating would be handled by<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Blake said the recent TKE box-<lb/>
ing tournament, which raised<lb/>
about $2000 for the fraternity,<lb/>
and other revenues including dues<lb/>
from fraternity members, house<lb/>
rent and alumni donations have<lb/>
placed the TKE's on a "solid<lb/>
foundation" financially. He<lb/>
estimated the TKE organization<lb/>
generates between $22,000 and<lb/>
$23,(XX) a year in total revenues.<lb/>
"We underestimated our in-<lb/>
come Blake added. "We're in<lb/>
pretty good shape<lb/>
Blake praised the TKE alumni<lb/>
members for their help and con-<lb/>
cern during the last two months.<lb/>
"They've been constantly helping<lb/>
in many ways Blake said.<lb/>
"Thev'e been helping us keep the<lb/>
mortgage payments going he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
"We're very pleased said<lb/>
Blake. "We've gone into this<lb/>
thing with a great deal of planning<lb/>
with the contractors, the city, the<lb/>
boys and alumni members<lb/>
Blake said that the contractors<lb/>
began repair work on Monday<lb/>
following a delay in having partial<lb/>
electricty restored to the dwelling<lb/>
to run elective tools, lights and a<lb/>
large pump which was used to<lb/>
remove water from the dwelling's<lb/>
basement during the weekend.<lb/>
The renovation calls for the at-<lb/>
tic area to be converted into a<lb/>
storage facility, while other rooms<lb/>
on the first floor will be converted<lb/>
to bedrooms to re-allocate space<lb/>
for the four attic residents who<lb/>
were displaced by the fire.<lb/>
Blake thanked ECU director of<lb/>
See TKE, Page 6<lb/>
Memorial Held<lb/>
r??Kto Bv SCOTT I 48SO-<lb/>
The mood was somber Monday at the memorial service for EC I vtti<lb/>
dent David Martin, who was killed in the March 2 explosion at atafc<lb/>
Green.<lb/>
Legislators Set Aside<lb/>
SGA Money Limit Bill<lb/>
Graduation Audience Limited<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
uteuni NM Eaitor<lb/>
Attendance at the ECU com-<lb/>
mencement ceremony this year<lb/>
will be cut by approximately one-<lb/>
half over previous years, and<lb/>
graduates will have to obtain<lb/>
tickets for all guests, said Chair-<lb/>
man of the Commencement Com-<lb/>
mittee C.C. Rowe.<lb/>
A new attendance-limiting pro-<lb/>
cedure is being employed for the<lb/>
first time because the graduation<lb/>
ceremony must be held in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum instead of Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium. The football field in<lb/>
Ficklen is set to begin renovation<lb/>
before May 1 and will not be<lb/>
available for the ceremony.<lb/>
Graduates participating in the<lb/>
commencement ceremony must<lb/>
request tickets for family and<lb/>
friends who want to attend the<lb/>
ceremony. Each graduate will be<lb/>
guaranteed two tickets for guests<lb/>
upon request. Additional tickets<lb/>
may be available if seats are not<lb/>
filled.<lb/>
Fourteen hundred graduates<lb/>
usually attend the ceremony,<lb/>
which normally has an attendance<lb/>
of over 13,000. This year the at-<lb/>
tendance must be cut to the<lb/>
Minges capacity of about 6,900.<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium can seat 35,000<lb/>
people.<lb/>
All graduating students should<lb/>
have received an announcement<lb/>
of the new procedure and a guest<lb/>
invitation request card. Students<lb/>
may submit the ticket request star-<lb/>
ting next Monday, March 28,<lb/>
through April 15. During this time<lb/>
students can receive their initial<lb/>
two tickets for guests. The pro-<lb/>
cedure is not conducted on a first-<lb/>
come first-served basis.<lb/>
Between April 19 and April 29<lb/>
the Commencement Committee<lb/>
will fill requests for additional<lb/>
tickets as room allows, according<lb/>
to Rowe. Only about 5000 guest<lb/>
tickets can be issued due to the<lb/>
limited seating in Minges because<lb/>
of fire and safety codes.<lb/>
"It's a matter of taking care of<lb/>
people who really want to came to<lb/>
commencement Rowe said. He<lb/>
said the coliseum had been used in<lb/>
the past because of bad weather<lb/>
"Whenever we went into Minges,<lb/>
we've always had the problem of<lb/>
overcrowding<lb/>
Rowe said most students want<lb/>
three to five tickets, and he ex-<lb/>
pects most will be able to get that<lb/>
many. "Two is not a lot of<lb/>
tickets, but we'll try to take care<lb/>
of more if we can<lb/>
Audio speakers will be set up<lb/>
outside the coliseum to so that an<lb/>
overflow crowd can at least hear<lb/>
the proceedings. Rowe said no<lb/>
plans for outdoor seating have<lb/>
been made.<lb/>
Students can request their<lb/>
tickets at the student organization<lb/>
booth in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Commencment will be held on<lb/>
May 6 and the band concert will<lb/>
begin at 9 a.m. Former<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins and<lb/>
former U.S. Sen. Robert Morgan<lb/>
will be given the First honorary<lb/>
degrees awarded by ECU.<lb/>
Morgan will give the commence-<lb/>
ment address.<lb/>
Cries of "cut of order<lb/>
"motion to adjourn" and<lb/>
"previous question" were heard<lb/>
throughout debate Monday night<lb/>
as the SGA Legislature received a<lb/>
lesson in parliamentary pro-<lb/>
cedure.<lb/>
The thorough workout of<lb/>
Robert's Rules of Order was a<lb/>
result of a motion by the Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee that would<lb/>
put a 10-percent ceiling on the<lb/>
amount of funds a group could<lb/>
receive from the legislature during<lb/>
its annual budgeting process. The<lb/>
bill's sponsor. David Brown, said<lb/>
the limit would ensure all student<lb/>
groups a chance of getting money.<lb/>
The problem is that the SGA<lb/>
usually has around $100,000 to<lb/>
appropriate during the annual<lb/>
budgeting process. This year<lb/>
groups have requested a total of<lb/>
over $225,000, with some groups<lb/>
asking for as much as $43,000.<lb/>
These problems, according to<lb/>
the speaker of the house and op-<lb/>
ponent of the bill Gary Williams,<lb/>
should be worked out by the<lb/>
legislature via hardwork. not by<lb/>
what he termed "passing the<lb/>
buck" by enacting a limit.<lb/>
The whole text of the bill in-<lb/>
cluded a measure to go past the<lb/>
limit in emergencies with a two-<lb/>
thirds vote, arid exempted I - <lb/>
ecutive council budget from the<lb/>
limit.<lb/>
With Williams speech, a small<lb/>
group of legislators became<lb/>
adamantly opposed to the bill.<lb/>
Though they didn't hae the<lb/>
numbers to defeat the measure.<lb/>
they did have the skill to<lb/>
manuever around a vote ?ith<lb/>
parliamentary tools.<lb/>
The first try by the Williams'<lb/>
faction was a move to send th<lb/>
to the appropriations committee<lb/>
so a complete study could be cone<lb/>
on the bill. This measure was<lb/>
defeated 16-10.<lb/>
Williams then aked tor <lb/>
motions that would hac <lb/>
the bill, and each time he v-a<lb/>
defeated. Yet. his strateg)<lb/>
wearing down the ?arengi1<lb/>
other side was working. As the<lb/>
meeting dragged on a n u<lb/>
legislators began to leae. the vote<lb/>
margin on motions to table and<lb/>
kill the measure decreased<lb/>
Then came quorum calls and<lb/>
challenges to the chair, bu: a<lb/>
all the determined debate an I fer-<lb/>
vent finangling. the bill, after a -<lb/>
cond motion, was sent to the ap-<lb/>
propriations committee b a vote<lb/>
of 16-14. The bill will come up or.<lb/>
the floor again within the next few<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
Education School Denied Accreditation<lb/>
SRA PmMeiit Tory<lb/>
dent of the Stndeat<lb/>
tioas.<lb/>
"KoH By CINDY WALL<lb/>
Rosso is oae of the candidates running for presi-<lb/>
Government Association in the March 30 elec-<lb/>
The School of Education has<lb/>
been denied accreditation renewal<lb/>
by the National Council for Ac-<lb/>
creditation in Teacher Education,<lb/>
an organization that oversees<lb/>
teacher training programs in the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
According to Angelo Volpe, ac-<lb/>
ting vice chancellor for academic<lb/>
affairs, the school was turned<lb/>
down because of problems in the<lb/>
governing of its programs. Volpe<lb/>
said the quality of the ECU pro-<lb/>
gram was never questioned, but<lb/>
that the administration,<lb/>
maintenance and supervision was<lb/>
not up to the standards of the<lb/>
NCATE.<lb/>
Both Volpe and Charles R. Co-<lb/>
ble, the acting dean of the School<lb/>
of Education, said they want to<lb/>
assure students in the program<lb/>
that the NCATE denial of ac-<lb/>
creditation is only temporary and<lb/>
that teacher certification is not<lb/>
jeopardized. . <lb/>
"It hinges on technical matters<lb/>
unrelated to the cpyof tie<lb/>
programs Coble told The East<lb/>
Carolinian. The school has a year<lb/>
to correct the problems, he said.<lb/>
According to Coble, who of.<lb/>
ficially succeeds Dr. Richard<lb/>
Warner as dean on May 6, the<lb/>
School of Education is required to<lb/>
apply to NCATE every five years<lb/>
for renewal of its accreditation.<lb/>
The school is eligible to reapply at<lb/>
any time during the next academic<lb/>
year. Volpe and Coble were "very<lb/>
confidant" that the organization<lb/>
would accept the school's re-<lb/>
accreditation application some<lb/>
time next year.<lb/>
"Our program has emphasized<lb/>
diversity of teacher education pro-<lb/>
grams Volpe said. Authority in<lb/>
such a program is not centralized.<lb/>
Volpe said the format of diversity<lb/>
is one of the key area addressw<lb/>
by the NCATE.<lb/>
The School of Education was<lb/>
informed of its denial March 1"<lb/>
and is allowed a 15-day period in<lb/>
which to appeal the decision. The<lb/>
school has decided not to appeal<lb/>
and will reapply in the fall<lb/>
World News At A Glance<lb/>
(UPI) WASHINGTON ? President Reagan<lb/>
said Monday he will nominate veteran government<lb/>
executive William Ruckelshaus to be director of the<lb/>
embattled Environmental Protection Agency.<lb/>
Reagan praised Ruckelshaus' previous government<lb/>
service ? which included three years as chief of the<lb/>
EPA when it was formed ? and said he gave him a<lb/>
"broad, flexible mandate<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? Rita Lavelle, former chiet<lb/>
of the Environmental Protection Agency's toxic<lb/>
waste enforcement, disobeyed a House subcommit-<lb/>
tee subpoena to testify today. The panel voted to<lb/>
charge her with contempt of Congress.<lb/>
BRUSSELS, Belgium ? European finance<lb/>
ministers today agreed on an unprecedented<lb/>
realignment of all currenciei in the European<lb/>
Monetary System. That includes a further 2.5 per-<lb/>
cent devaluation of the weak French franc.<lb/>
NET ANY A, Israel ? Lebanese and Israeli<lb/>
negotiators made "more progress" today in<lb/>
U.Ssponsored troop withdrawal talks. But they<lb/>
left aside the crucial issue of security arrangements<lb/>
for Israel, officials said.<lb/>
SEATTLE ? Protesters vowed to continue<lb/>
monitoring progress of a train believed to be carry-<lb/>
ing 100 nuclear warheads to a Trident submarine<lb/>
base. They alleged the train violated speed limits in<lb/>
an effort to thwart their vigils.<lb/>
WASHINGTON - Through sharp words, secret<lb/>
briefings and personal lobbying. President Reagan<lb/>
will wage "an uphill battle" to dissuade Congress<lb/>
from slowing the pace of his defense buildup.<lb/>
Chief spokesman Larry Speakes said today, "It's<lb/>
probably the toughest yet, as far as budget pro-<lb/>
posals, for us.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? The Labor Department says<lb/>
the fund that helps pay for unemployment benefits<lb/>
in 27 states will run out today. House and Senate<lb/>
negotiators are working on a compromise version<lb/>
of a jobs bill that contains $5 billion<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 22, 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
11 vou or ouf organuation<lb/>
wouia like 'o Have an item<lb/>
pnntea in me announcement<lb/>
column please tpe it on an an<lb/>
nouncement torm ana send it to<lb/>
The East Carolinian in care ol<lb/>
the production manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carol.n.an<lb/>
oMice in trie Publications<lb/>
Be Id ng Fiyers and handwnt<lb/>
ten copy on odd sized paper can<lb/>
not be accepted<lb/>
mere is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements. but space is otten<lb/>
i.m.teo Therefore we cannot<lb/>
guarantee ma' your announce<lb/>
? A run as long as vou<lb/>
want ano suggest mat you do not<lb/>
rely solely on m,s column tor<lb/>
pub<lb/>
The oeaoine tor an<lb/>
nents s 3 p m Monday<lb/>
rrtt fwa. pap' ana 3<lb/>
. ? Aednesdaw tor the Thurs<lb/>
?i. paper No announcements<lb/>
?v weci after these deadlines<lb/>
a oe printed<lb/>
? space is available to a"<lb/>
arnpus organizations and<lb/>
? re. tments<lb/>
PLEASE READ<lb/>
BUSINESS<lb/>
ADMISSIONS<lb/>
For tnose st. den's who do not<lb/>
?ee' School ol Business aom.s<lb/>
s,on criteria dur.ng the<lb/>
Feoruary 21 Var.n 4 1983<lb/>
C-aigeof Viaior there wm be a<lb/>
one aa. change of maior per.od<lb/>
;w . kw 'nose students<lb/>
A.  meet me School of<lb/>
 s,ness dm ss on criteria<lb/>
Those stude's who waritl be on<lb/>
smpus on . ? ' a. refluesl<lb/>
ldmiSS  tc tne school of<lb/>
Dusmess bv following the stan<lb/>
-?ocec re<lb/>
?e students who will not be<lb/>
,mpus Or July 1. "83 bu'<lb/>
 me, a ee' the School<lb/>
 Bv s ness admissions re<lb/>
.  ?? it tne eno 01 the cur<lb/>
? e semester may appi to<lb/>
? mge theif maior t. tonowng<lb/>
?? v procedure<lb/>
Prior to leaving; campus this<lb/>
ester p,ck op your tile from<lb/>
? KjV sor<lb/>
 3Ke your f.ie to the depart<lb/>
?. secretary "? Accounting,<lb/>
Dec son Science Finance<lb/>
Management or Marketing as<lb/>
app'Opr ate<lb/>
 - . n e departmental<lb/>
out me torm to reques'<lb/>
?lange of maior evaluation<lb/>
? t you meet School ot Business<lb/>
e.e's ,ou will be Bdm<lb/>
-  , ' '983 and an aa<lb/>
? be ass.gnea 11 you do<lb/>
? ,ee' 'he reau rements. your<lb/>
? . A oe returned to ihe<lb/>
General College<lb/>
 " you return tc school in<lb/>
? . me appropriate<lb/>
 lta r. ??? " board tor<lb/>
? .  so' assignment<lb/>
The pam reliever Zomax is<lb/>
being temporarily withdrawn by<lb/>
McNeill Laboratories for<lb/>
relabeling purposes concerning<lb/>
the possibility ol allergic reac<lb/>
tions Any containers of the drug<lb/>
Obtained from the Student<lb/>
Health Center should be return<lb/>
ed to the Pharmacy at the<lb/>
Center Please do not take<lb/>
anymore ot the drug H you ob<lb/>
tamed the drug from a drug<lb/>
store please return to the place<lb/>
ot purchase You will be reim<lb/>
bursed the purchase price of the<lb/>
tablets by the place of purchase<lb/>
CHEERLEADER<lb/>
TRY OUTS<lb/>
The East Carolina university<lb/>
varsity Cheerleader tryoutswill<lb/>
te held at 7 30 p m on Tuesday<lb/>
Mari h 29 1983 on the main floor<lb/>
of Memorial Gym<lb/>
The first practice session will<lb/>
be held at 5 00 on Wednesday<lb/>
March 16 at the east end of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum An guys ano<lb/>
girls interested in tryng out for<lb/>
the 1983 84 squad should be pre<lb/>
sent at this first practice ses<lb/>
sion<lb/>
NATURAL LIGHT<lb/>
ULTIMAX<lb/>
ASPA<lb/>
March 26 27 is but a week<lb/>
away and the irates are getting<lb/>
their first ultimate tournament<lb/>
together' Come out and see the<lb/>
pest east coast teams compete<lb/>
in ultimate The irates practice<lb/>
every Toes ? Thurs at me bot<lb/>
torn of the hill at 4 00 Oub<lb/>
meetings are Moo n.ghts 8 00<lb/>
Rm28MSC Anyone nterested<lb/>
may attertv<lb/>
IM BASKETBALL<lb/>
CHAMPIONSHIPS ON<lb/>
TV<lb/>
The resident e nail intramural<lb/>
championship basketball<lb/>
games teatur.no the Fie' ' ? ?<lb/>
Sharpshooters versus me  ???<lb/>
Drivers and the Beik Banc's<lb/>
versus the Jones Enforcers will<lb/>
te replayed via video tape on<lb/>
Wednesday. March 23 The<lb/>
games will be shown on the big<lb/>
screen TV in me Galley Uones<lb/>
Residence Main beginning at<lb/>
7 00 p m Come early for a<lb/>
courts.de sea'1<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
The Career Plannng and<lb/>
Placemen! Service m the B'ox<lb/>
House is offering these one<lb/>
hour sessions to aid you in<lb/>
developing be"er interview.ng<lb/>
- s tor use n your ob searr-<lb/>
March 22 1983 Tuesday at 4 00<lb/>
p m ano March 24 1983 Thurs<lb/>
a 2 00 D  A tilm and<lb/>
o.scuss.or ot interviewing<lb/>
through the Career Planning<lb/>
ana Placement Servce will be<lb/>
shared<lb/>
SUMMER SCHOOL 19M<lb/>
ROOM RESERVATION<lb/>
Residence hall room deposits<lb/>
for Summer School 1983 will be<lb/>
accepted in the Cashier's Office.<lb/>
Room 105. Spilman Building,<lb/>
beginning April 5 Room<lb/>
assignments will be made m the<lb/>
respective residence hall offices<lb/>
on April 7 and April 8<lb/>
Thereafter, they will be made in<lb/>
the Office of Housing Opera<lb/>
tions. Room 201. Whichard<lb/>
Building The rent for a term of<lb/>
summer school is SIM tor a<lb/>
semi private room and JlSOfor a<lb/>
private room Additional rent In<lb/>
the amount of 20 is required tor<lb/>
Jarvis Hail<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 All other students may<lb/>
reserve rooms on a first come<lb/>
first serve basis on Friday.<lb/>
April 8<lb/>
Residence halls to be used for<lb/>
women are Greene Slay (first<lb/>
floor tor mobility impaired<lb/>
students' and Jarvis Men will<lb/>
oe housed n Fletcher. Slay<lb/>
(t,rst floor tor mobility impaired<lb/>
students' and Jarvis Hails<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
Souls meeting will be held on<lb/>
Thursday, March 24 at 7 00 p m<lb/>
M 221 Mendenhall Committee<lb/>
meeting will be at 00 p m<lb/>
Everyone should attend All<lb/>
organizations should have so<lb/>
meone present<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
MISSSOULS<lb/>
PAGEANT<lb/>
Miss Souls Pageant will be<lb/>
heid on Sunday. March 27 at 6 00<lb/>
p m in 244 at Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center Ticket are on sale<lb/>
lor Jl SO in Room 255 Fleming or<lb/>
can be purchased at door<lb/>
All right folks can we be<lb/>
serious tor a moment? We at<lb/>
NCSL have run bulletins<lb/>
sometimes rather strange ones<lb/>
? n the East Carolinian but tor a<lb/>
very good reason I NCSL the<lb/>
North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature is your student<lb/>
forum to the world and to the<lb/>
lawmakers on what concerns<lb/>
you state, local, or national!<lb/>
This is where students have<lb/>
their say and now is the time to<lb/>
get involved To those to NCSL<lb/>
heading this week to the<lb/>
Legislative Session in Raleigh<lb/>
good luck guys, and have fun'<lb/>
But tor those ot you still stuck at<lb/>
ECU relax' Monday night we II<lb/>
get back to business and speak<lb/>
,ng of which these folks win take<lb/>
over the business at the next<lb/>
meeting In short, here are the<lb/>
East Carolina Delegations<lb/>
NCSL Front Four for 1983 84<lb/>
Delegation Chairperson Kirk<lb/>
Shelley. Vice Chairperson Lisa<lb/>
Maness. Delegation Secretary<lb/>
Doreen Henry Delegation<lb/>
Treasurer Theresa Leamy<lb/>
There they are folks please<lb/>
give them your support Also<lb/>
why not let them and NCSL<lb/>
know how you teeP Getting your<lb/>
opinion heard about topics from<lb/>
hquor laws to Greenville to a<lb/>
bilateral nuclear freeze is what<lb/>
NCSL is all about Your voice<lb/>
makes a difference, so why not<lb/>
have a chance to use It? Jom us<lb/>
Monday n.ght at 7 p m in Room<lb/>
212. Mendenhall and to all out<lb/>
current members and to even<lb/>
our former members hey. come<lb/>
on back. guys, we still want you<lb/>
around Please attend this<lb/>
meeting We'll review session<lb/>
preview the April IC and next<lb/>
year as well as other fun items<lb/>
And to those of you who want to<lb/>
join come on by and get mvolv<lb/>
ed1 Yes. you can let the<lb/>
lawmakers know how you feel<lb/>
with NCSL<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may us the torm 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 it word<lb/>
doesn't tit No ads will be ac<lb/>
cepted over the phone We<lb/>
reserve the right to reject any ad<lb/>
All ads most be prepaid. Enclose<lb/>
1st pet line ot fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lowet case letters.<lb/>
Return lo THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
office b 3:00 Tuesday before<lb/>
Wednesday publications.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
CityState<lb/>
No lines<lb/>
BAB<lb/>
ter<lb/>
D?<lb/>
ne<lb/>
Sh<lb/>
i-er.car Sooet, for Person<lb/>
B  n gtrators will noia ts<lb/>
8j eiec'ions on Apr I 6 at 3 C<lb/>
Room 207 Raw s A<lb/>
? . loais ? ns ,0<lb/>
? ? eat become cart ol<lb/>
PA contad Brad Eowarosor<lb/>
- ?k ewici Needed are<lb/>
old memDers to he p<lb/>
spe ASPA s prcgresive<lb/>
To do your part get in<lb/>
ana become an officer<lb/>
member ASPA is ready<lb/>
Are you ready to be part<lb/>
SILENT DINNER<lb/>
M  e-ds e II -ave S em<lb/>
- nnef ft! s Thursday n g"t<lb/>
Vlai ? U l? ?' Marathon<lb/>
- ? s sponsored me S.gn<lb/>
.ang.age Cub if ybu come<lb/>
ha-e a great I me<lb/>
tore<lb/>
v.ec<lb/>
EPILEPSY ALPHA<lb/>
EPSILON DELTA<lb/>
Dr jerome Ha'ier from the<lb/>
Department of Pediatr.es at the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine Will<lb/>
speak on the topic o Epnepsy<lb/>
Tuesday n.ght March 22 at 7 30<lb/>
p m .n Flanagan Rm 307 The<lb/>
executive meeting of AED will<lb/>
oe at 6 30<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
The Society tor the Advance<lb/>
ment ot Management w,n mee<lb/>
on Thursday March 24 to Pawl<lb/>
104 at 4 00 Guest speaker Mr<lb/>
DcnBa'ham V ce President of<lb/>
Personnel wiW Naona' SprtW<lb/>
,nQ ,n Aashngton DC ?<lb/>
 r r ? IOC <lb/>
sneak o- Qua '? C rents<lb/>
Management E.er.one s il<lb/>
? tea o a'tenc<lb/>
FRISBEE<lb/>
The ECU frisbee club invites<lb/>
everyone to come out and see<lb/>
some of the best ultimat fnsbee<lb/>
to be played on the east coast<lb/>
tnis year The Natural Light<lb/>
Ultima flymg disc tournament<lb/>
,s this weekend March 26 and<lb/>
77. behind the Allied Health<lb/>
Bidg The first games will beg<lb/>
at 11 00 come out and suppor'<lb/>
the IRATES! The team plays on<lb/>
Tues and Thurs at the bottom ot<lb/>
College H.n at 4 00 Club<lb/>
meetings are Monday nights<lb/>
8 00 rm 248 Mendenhall<lb/>
Anyone interested il more than<lb/>
welcome to check it out<lb/>
MARKETING<lb/>
FILM SERIES<lb/>
The Amer .an Markeng<lb/>
Association and the Department<lb/>
of Marketing will present a I Irn<lb/>
se, cs on Marc" se.es on marc n<lb/>
:3ana24,nRawll30at3 00 The<lb/>
films will provide .ntormation<lb/>
about marketing opportunities<lb/>
? me areas of Advertising and<lb/>
Promotion and Sales Manage<lb/>
ment All interested ECU<lb/>
students are urged to attend<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
Ph. Beta Lambda will hold its<lb/>
next meeting Wednesday<lb/>
March 23. at 4 00 P m ,n Rawi<lb/>
341 Nominations for officers<lb/>
will be open<lb/>
PHOTOS<lb/>
For- your sake and others.<lb/>
have your picture taken for the<lb/>
ECU Yearbook' You may order<lb/>
p.ctures if you want out at least<lb/>
nave It made so you can always<lb/>
be remembered as having Deen<lb/>
here<lb/>
IVCF<lb/>
You ve been searching a"<lb/>
semester tor a good Christian<lb/>
teliowship that is perfect tor<lb/>
you. right' Well, we ve Oeen<lb/>
here an the time1 Come ana iom<lb/>
us this Wednesday night at 6 30<lb/>
,n the Biology Building N102 See<lb/>
you there<lb/>
AOH BEST LEGS<lb/>
AOH is presenting a best legs<lb/>
ontest to be held in front of the<lb/>
Student Store Photographs are<lb/>
oemg taken NOW can the AOn<lb/>
house TODAY ana make your<lb/>
appointment<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
OLYMPICS<lb/>
The Specal Olympics pro<lb/>
gram ot Greenvi'le and Pitt<lb/>
County is making preparations<lb/>
tor their spr.ng games to be held<lb/>
April 14. Iv83 at the East<lb/>
Carolina Track I Bunting Field!<lb/>
There will be a meet.no tor in<lb/>
d.v.duais or groups .nterested in<lb/>
volunteering wittl the Special<lb/>
Olympics Wednesday March<lb/>
23rd at 8 00 at M.nges Coliseum<lb/>
Room 136 individuals or groups<lb/>
interested in volunteering<lb/>
should contact Bill Twine at<lb/>
752 4137 ext 201 Dr Dave<lb/>
Poretta at 752 6441 or attend the<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
The Fountain ot L.te Christian<lb/>
Fellowship meets every<lb/>
Wednesday Night at 7 00 P m at<lb/>
the Ledon.a Wr.gnt Cultural<lb/>
Center tor a t.me of fun<lb/>
fellowship and Bible study<lb/>
IRS ADVISORY<lb/>
COUNCIL<lb/>
APPICATIONS<lb/>
Now's your chance to recom<lb/>
mend policies suggest new ac<lb/>
tivities programs and become<lb/>
mvolved with the operation of<lb/>
your intramural recreational<lb/>
services program! Applications<lb/>
are being accepted through<lb/>
April 8 for the positions of coun<lb/>
cil president and council<lb/>
representatives The Advisory<lb/>
Council includes a represen<lb/>
tative trom each of the par<lb/>
ticipation divisions fraternity,<lb/>
sorority, residence hall (a<lb/>
representative is included for<lb/>
each of the three campuses<lb/>
total ot 3 residence hall<lb/>
representatives), clubdepart<lb/>
ment and independent off<lb/>
campus Pnnopal duties of the<lb/>
Advisory Counc .1 include recom<lb/>
mendation<lb/>
policies procedures tor IRS pro<lb/>
grams services, reviewing<lb/>
disciplinary matters and ad<lb/>
visdmg the IRS staff of student<lb/>
concerns<lb/>
Application forms are<lb/>
available in 204 Memorial Gym<lb/>
All interested students are en<lb/>
couraged to apply not later than<lb/>
the April 8 deadline<lb/>
WHEELCHAIR<lb/>
ATHLETICS<lb/>
1983 CANOE TRIP<lb/>
The Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center for the Department of<lb/>
intramural Recreational Ser<lb/>
vices is sponsoring a Canoe Trip<lb/>
on Wednesday. March 23. 1983<lb/>
The trip is suitable for beginning<lb/>
or experienced canoers<lb/>
Trip participants will meet<lb/>
behind Memorial Gym at 3 00<lb/>
Dm on Wednesday tor a leisure<lb/>
iv paddle down the Tar R.ver<lb/>
lasting approximately 2 hours<lb/>
Participants should anve back<lb/>
at memorial Gym by 6 00 P m<lb/>
Advance registration and pay<lb/>
ment 13 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 mforma<lb/>
lion call or stop by room 113<lb/>
Vemonal Gym .757 6911 or<lb/>
757 63871<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
Student Council for Excep<lb/>
t.onai Children ,s having Special<lb/>
Educators from Fort Bragg<lb/>
School System New Hanover<lb/>
County School System and other<lb/>
school systems They w.n be<lb/>
d.scussmg iob opportunities<lb/>
tneir own system, and .nterv.ew<lb/>
tips Come iom us Monday<lb/>
March 28 to 129 Speight at 4.00<lb/>
it will be very benelioai<lb/>
FIRST AID CLASS<lb/>
CAR WASH<lb/>
When was the last time you<lb/>
aw the ong.nai color of your<lb/>
ar? By letting the Spring<lb/>
Pledge class of Gamma Sigma<lb/>
S.gma Soror.ty wash your car<lb/>
for a donation of S2 00, you can<lb/>
help a paralyied foster child<lb/>
land increase your gas mileage<lb/>
by removing the lag of an that<lb/>
extra weight') It will be open<lb/>
March 26 Irom 10 am to 4 pm at<lb/>
the Bypass Shell station on 101<lb/>
W Greenville Rd<lb/>
PRIMETIME<lb/>
New location with tun<lb/>
fellowship and training, spon<lb/>
sored by Campus Crusade for<lb/>
Chnst. m the Nursing Bunding<lb/>
Room 101 Thursday 79 pm<lb/>
E ueryone is invited<lb/>
JUMP ROPE FOR THE<lb/>
HEART EQUIPMENT<lb/>
The Equipment has arr.ved<lb/>
jump ropes. T shirts and Warm<lb/>
up suits are here W.nd breakers<lb/>
and prues are on the way The<lb/>
date .s Apr.I 23 The place .s<lb/>
Mmges Coliseum<lb/>
COLORGUARD<lb/>
TRYOUTS<lb/>
Anyone who w.shes to try out<lb/>
lor the ECU March.ng P.rates<lb/>
Coiorguard are urged to come to<lb/>
Help Sessions wh.cn w,n be<lb/>
given every Wednesday n.ght 7 v<lb/>
pm to the lobby of the muse<lb/>
bunding Tryouts are April 23<lb/>
Wiay 7 14 Males and females ac<lb/>
cepted<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
Ps Cn. will hole IS ? ?<lb/>
for -i-a crttcers tor 83 84<lb/>
year ana n liation<lb/>
membe-sor Sa"r 23<lb/>
t.on a"a r '?t on <lb/>
Wes'ern steer on Me"<lb/>
Dr .rj'dOoir E a ? ' '<lb/>
win pay lor their own ?<lb/>
for a 'ouch of class c ?<lb/>
in sen" forma' cr<lb/>
ciotn.ng For an aoed bo<lb/>
severa ? ? ' ' ? "?? "<lb/>
become w.nners "? ps<lb/>
fie draw.ng nea ma-<lb/>
Ps, en as? new<lb/>
members to ne'e M ?<lb/>
be a success now ?<lb/>
future You car fl<lb/>
ting PS Cn Ma' I 1<lb/>
AN<lb/>
come out and iom us<lb/>
The 1983 Southern States<lb/>
Reg.ona' wneeicna.r Games<lb/>
will be held on Apr.I 29 and 30 at<lb/>
the University ot North Carolina<lb/>
at Charlotte Events include ar<lb/>
Chery track and f.eld sw.mm<lb/>
,ng pentathlon weightl.ftmg.<lb/>
slalom and table tennis<lb/>
Students wishing to participate<lb/>
Wi need to meet quaMng<lb/>
standards tor events Par<lb/>
t.c,pants are classified accor<lb/>
o.ng t0 levels of ability For<lb/>
oe'a is contactor Dave Porret<lb/>
ta at 757 6441<lb/>
PE MAJORS CLUB<lb/>
Physical Education Ma,or s<lb/>
Ciub members wm rave a<lb/>
meeting Wednesday March 23 at<lb/>
7 00 p m The topic ot discussion<lb/>
will be the coordination of<lb/>
Greenv.ne Special Olympics<lb/>
with the Maiors Club Tom<lb/>
H.neswitbDr Paretta wm con<lb/>
duct the meeting at M.nges<lb/>
Room 136<lb/>
PRCCLUBMEETING<lb/>
Tuesday n,grv at t 00 244<lb/>
Mendennaii Elections tor fan<lb/>
semester oft cers will be<lb/>
discussed and also a gues'<lb/>
speaker w.ll be present Please<lb/>
come to support your club<lb/>
A tree 8 hour Red Cross First<lb/>
Aid Clas will be offered on Satur<lb/>
day March 26 For more .ntor<lb/>
mation call 756 4974<lb/>
OFF ANY<lb/>
COMPLETE PAIR OF<lb/>
EYE GLASSES<lb/>
l -UP IT" ?? " Not pood<lb/>
wMk ?ekea ?a?rtl?a apectai<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vi she campus mwmx<lb/>
pmc 1923<lb/>
Published every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday dur.ng tne<lb/>
acaoem.c year and every<lb/>
Wednesday aur.ng the sum<lb/>
mer<lb/>
The East Caronn.an is the<lb/>
of.c.ai newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina university, owned<lb/>
operated and pubished tor<lb/>
and by the students of East<lb/>
Carol.na university<lb/>
Subscription Rate HO yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian off-ces<lb/>
are located to the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus ol<lb/>
ECU. Greenville. NX.<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send ad<lb/>
aress changes 'o The East<lb/>
Caroiinien, Old South<lb/>
Bund.ng ECU Greenv.ne<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
The<lb/>
SAL-jCIIIi LOMS<lb/>
SOFT QQ,y<lb/>
, CONTACTS<lb/>
n?cj.i;Des30D.t aimttna<lb/>
AND CARE KIT<lb/>
aj? OPTICALII PALACE <lb/>
703.?elUe3lvn Ac ,o? F,o?n Pltl Plata Ne.l To I H A Reallv<lb/>
atv M Hams I it enved if. i?n<lb/>
Ope" 9 10 am lo 6 p m Hon rt<lb/>
4J0f<lb/>
Telephone 757 4344. 4147.<lb/>
? out and iom us .? ?" ?-?- <lb/>
756-9430<lb/>
ci<lb/>
:<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center - Greenville<lb/>
? "We have a large assortment of party goods,<lb/>
 cards, stuffed animals, gifts, and baskets for<lb/>
your Easter weekend' Come in and get your<lb/>
shopping done t f early!<lb/>
iwilTopenakK<lb/>
of doors?<lb/>
PLAN A HOBIE<lb/>
SAILING ADVENTURE TRIP<lb/>
INTO YOUR SUMMER<lb/>
Week long stress-challenge-<lb/>
adventures along tne Outer<lb/>
Banks ot North Carolina.<lb/>
$125 Complete.<lb/>
Register Now<lb/>
Pot ntoirnatior- mntea<lb/>
jr. vierrvoarst :x,taco v<lb/>
Camp Don L?<lb/>
Aiaparoe NC 285C<lb/>
919 2&amp;3 "06<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
(ZB,M6i<lb/>
&amp;M s&amp;Z&amp;<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
'???<lb/>
S<lb/>
.?.<lb/>
Q<lb/>
Beginning May 22. June 19. Jul 9 or Jul 24<lb/>
? ?????<lb/>
?)??????????????<lb/>
And<lb/>
this will<lb/>
'open a lot<lb/>
onkarts.<lb/>
Whptnet its ? yoot yearbook<lb/>
parents homi . ui best<lb/>
mend's wane! your senior portrail<lb/>
i a lasting nemonj<lb/>
L?jULaj-fl-8.a.o.<lb/>
State Farm .<lb/>
Insurance Companies<lb/>
Recognizes<lb/>
Attention:<lb/>
Male Summer School<lb/>
Students<lb/>
It sets j<lb/>
have t(<lb/>
Dynai<lb/>
work<lb/>
colleg)<lb/>
youct<lb/>
today<lb/>
the fn<lb/>
to do<lb/>
Located 1 mile past<lb/>
Hasting's Ford on<lb/>
10th St. extension<lb/>
e<lb/>
FREE room for both<lb/>
summer school sessions:<lb/>
Air conditioning<lb/>
Within walking distance of campus<lb/>
Part time work also available.<lb/>
See if you can qualify.<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday<lb/>
&amp; Thursday<lb/>
POPCORN<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
Bill McDonald<lb/>
Bill on?J his stotf finished 37th out of<lb/>
15 000 ogents in the U.S. in Auto Production.<lb/>
Bill wrote over 1,000 new auto accounts<lb/>
Bill is the leading agent in the District<lb/>
in new Homeowner and Fire Insurance.<lb/>
Production far the year 1982-writing over<lb/>
250 new fire accounts.<lb/>
Contact Don Wilkerson<lb/>
S.G. Wilkerson &amp; Sons, Inc.<lb/>
752-2101<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Tr ,sed Salad may be substituted<lb/>
-C:Sl mV35&amp; extra<lb/>
NAHl<lb/>
Vd t<lb/>
v<lb/>
Vicky Jones - Secretary<lb/>
Amber McDonald - Receptionist<lb/>
Vickie Taylor - Office Manager<lb/>
Devwanda Williams - Secretary<lb/>
Call Bill McDonald<lb/>
at 752-6680<lb/>
State Farm - E. 10th St Greenville<lb/>
Two Locations<lb/>
 Location No 1<lb/>
Owv.lW totoo Clue<lb/>
BO lo Si<lb/>
o, Intecsecrwn ? ?" A<lb/>
ot E C U Co??e??? a ?0'<lb/>
??Location No.2<lb/>
Tfc, Romodo lf?<lb/>
901 Green?ilte B?d<lb/>
. Jw? WSouteellCUC.<lb/>
1 one -???- iwa<lb/>
?, ,cKee?l? heto- ?? '<lb/>
looms end hrees<lb/>
mmm ??<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0003"/><lb/>
y?llii?icf<lb/>
15<lb/>
ih m<lb/>
?"MLMJiSEh<lb/>
J<lb/>
ijg<lb/>
PLAN A HOBIE "<lb/>
ADVENTURE TRIP '<lb/>
INTO YOUR SUMMER<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
EIGHT CHAPTERS<lb/>
BABYLONIAN HISTORY<lb/>
TOMORROW'S EXAM<lb/>
AND CATHY'S WAITIN<lb/>
?,o<lb/>
arm<lb/>
Companies<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
BiH McDonald<lb/>
faff finished 37th out of<lb/>
in the U.S. in Auto Production.<lb/>
1,000 new auto accounts<lb/>
ng agent in the District<lb/>
owner and Fire Insurance.<lb/>
r the year 1982-writing over<lb/>
iccounts.<lb/>
? ? . Jones - Secretary<lb/>
Amber McDonald Receptionist<lb/>
Vickie Taylor - Office Manager<lb/>
Dewanda Williams - Secretary<lb/>
Call Bill McDonald<lb/>
at 752-6680<lb/>
? ??? ? ? - E 10th St . Greenville<lb/>
It gets down to what you want to do and what you<lb/>
have to do Take the free Evelyn Wood Reading<lb/>
Dynamics lesson and you can do it ? handle all the<lb/>
work college demands and still have time to enjoy<lb/>
college life<lb/>
You can dramatically increase your reading speed<lb/>
today and that s just the start Think of the time,<lb/>
the freedom you d have to do the things you want<lb/>
to do For twenty years the ones who get ahead<lb/>
DOIT!<lb/>
have used Reading Dynamics It's the way to read<lb/>
for today's active world ?fast, smooth, efficient<lb/>
Don't get left behind because there was too much<lb/>
to read. Take the free Evelyn Wood Reading<lb/>
Dynamics lesson today You can dramatically<lb/>
increase your reading speed and learn about<lb/>
advanced study techniques in that one free<lb/>
lesson. Make the college life the good life With<lb/>
Reading Dynamics you can do it<lb/>
Two Lo "ions<lb/>
'Location No 1<lb/>
Gr??n?itU Rotory Club<lb/>
809 Johnston St<lb/>
at Intersection of Rotory A?e<lb/>
and Johnston St Just 1 .blocks North<lb/>
dKCU Compus on Rotary<lb/>
'?Location No 2<lb/>
The Romodo Inn<lb/>
301 GreenII Bd<lb/>
)u?t i mile South ot I C U Compus<lb/>
r.a, Intersection o.Oeenlie US 2o4 By Pos,<lb/>
and Arlington Bl-d<lb/>
,? schedule oelow ond at r.ght tor<lb/>
rooms ond times<lb/>
Schedule Of FREE LESSONS<lb/>
TODAY MAR.22 Noon and 3pm Rotory-<lb/>
-7pm Ramada<lb/>
WEDNESDAY MAR.23 2pm,4:30pm,7pm Rotary<lb/>
THURSDAY MAR.24 1:30pm Rotary-5pm,7:30pm Ramada<lb/>
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS<lb/>
Seating is limited, so<lb/>
please plan on<lb/>
attending the<lb/>
earliest<lb/>
possible<lb/>
lesson!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0004"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
?IB ?aHt (Earnlttuan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, 0,1 Maw<lb/>
MlKE HUGHES, Managmt Eduor<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT, D,rrc,or of Advrr,UU,t ClNDY PLEASANTS. Sports Edxor<lb/>
Scott Lindley, bus,? ? Greg Rideout, mm tw<lb/>
ALl AFRASHTEH. CM Mamjttr STEVE BACHNER, Emtrtammtm Editor<lb/>
Stephanie Groon. rnm ??? Juliana Fahrbach, sivi,Ed?0r<lb/>
Clay Thornton, r?a&amp;??? Todd Evans, production Manage<lb/>
March 22, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
ECU Med School<lb/>
Playing An All-Important Role<lb/>
Speaking last week before the<lb/>
Greater Raleigh Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce, UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
Chancellor Christopher Fordham<lb/>
expressed his disapproval of North<lb/>
Carolina's system of educational<lb/>
funding.<lb/>
Fordham blamed the state's fun-<lb/>
ding crisis on unnecessary<lb/>
overbuilding" of its colleges and<lb/>
universities. "It represents a<lb/>
serious problem he emphasized.<lb/>
"We're overextended Right<lb/>
now, we can't pay our bills, and<lb/>
they're asking for more<lb/>
Among the chancellor's il-<lb/>
lustrious list of unnecessary expen-<lb/>
ditures was the development and<lb/>
organization of the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine, which began nine years<lb/>
ago. "We built a new medical<lb/>
school we didn't need he said.<lb/>
It seems incredibly ironic that a<lb/>
"medical school we didn't need"<lb/>
has taken on the role of medical<lb/>
center for eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Perhaps Fordham forgets that life<lb/>
does exist east of the Piedmont.<lb/>
The constituents of eastern North<lb/>
Carolina ? who number in the<lb/>
millions ? have the same medical<lb/>
and educational needs as those to<lb/>
the west. And to maintain that the<lb/>
building of the ECU medical<lb/>
school was a mere spendthrift tac-<lb/>
tic only emphasizes the same<lb/>
Triangle-based ignorance that has<lb/>
become all too familiar in Green-<lb/>
ville for years.<lb/>
Of all people to question the<lb/>
need for a medical school in this<lb/>
region of the state, Fordham<lb/>
would seem an unlikely candidate.<lb/>
In July 1974, he was placed in<lb/>
complete charge of the ECU med<lb/>
school program by UNC President<lb/>
William Friday. But even then,<lb/>
Fordham seemed more interested<lb/>
in supreme jurisdiction than in ex-<lb/>
ecuting a worthwhile venture, tabl-<lb/>
ing the $15 million set aside by the<lb/>
state legislature for the school's<lb/>
construction and bickering<lb/>
endlessly with then Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins. In the end, in fact, the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine was com-<lb/>
pleted in spite of Fordham.<lb/>
Furthermore, Fordham would<lb/>
have done well to take counsel with<lb/>
the dean of his own school of<lb/>
medicine, Dr. Stuart Bondurant,<lb/>
who contends, "It seems that<lb/>
North Carolina medical schools<lb/>
are now educating approximately<lb/>
the correct number of physicians<lb/>
for the state, while access of North<lb/>
Carolinians to medical education is<lb/>
below the national average.<lb/>
"If these observations and con-<lb/>
clusions are correct Bondurant<lb/>
continued, "there appears to be no<lb/>
reasonable basis for reducing the<lb/>
size of the medical schools or<lb/>
otherwise reducing access of North<lb/>
Carolinians to careers in<lb/>
medicine<lb/>
With this in mind, it becomes<lb/>
readily apparent that Fordham's<lb/>
contentions have no basis what-<lb/>
soever.<lb/>
The fact is, Fordham is sweating<lb/>
out a minor shift in prestige. As<lb/>
more state funds are invested in<lb/>
ECU's School of Medicine, his<lb/>
own medical school receives less<lb/>
money, something administrators<lb/>
at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill simply<lb/>
aren't used to.<lb/>
Without a doubt, each of the<lb/>
state's constituent universities is<lb/>
feeling the pinch as North<lb/>
Carolina's legislators trim the<lb/>
educational budget more and more<lb/>
each year. But taking random jabs<lb/>
at one of the state's most wor-<lb/>
thwhile investments in recent<lb/>
years, the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine, with little or no factual<lb/>
basis, illustrates little more than<lb/>
childish envy on Fordham's part.<lb/>
State Senators Can Freeze Resolution,<lb/>
Signaling A Gray Day For Green's Future<lb/>
B PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
"Trickery, trickery declared the<lb/>
Rev. S. Collins Kilburn, executive direc-<lb/>
tor of the North Carolina Council of<lb/>
Churches, referring to the tactics last<lb/>
Thursday of Lt. Gov. James C. Green<lb/>
and other state senators who used<lb/>
parliamentary manipulation to defeat<lb/>
the nuclear freeze resolution in the<lb/>
Senate.<lb/>
The resolution, which won approval<lb/>
in the state House last week, calls for the<lb/>
United States and Soviet Union to work<lb/>
toward a bilateral and verifiable freeze<lb/>
on the development, testing and produc-<lb/>
tion of nuclear weapons.<lb/>
For more than a year, nationwide<lb/>
public pressure in support of a nuclear<lb/>
freeze has expanded to the point that<lb/>
almost three-fourths of the American<lb/>
people support the idea. This, despite<lb/>
strong lobbying by ultra-conservatives,<lb/>
who are attempting to discredit the<lb/>
freeze by claiming it is largely supported<lb/>
bv the Soviet KGB.<lb/>
It is important to note that an1<lb/>
others, conservative syndicated colum-<lb/>
nist James Kilpatrick has publicly.<lb/>
declared his support of the freeze. I asl<lb/>
vear, he warned Republicans that there<lb/>
was nothing in the nuclear freeze pro-<lb/>
posal that an good conservative cot<lb/>
not agree with. He also cautioned hi-<lb/>
fellow Republicans not to allow the<lb/>
Democrats and liberals to claim owner-<lb/>
ship of what was perhaps one ot the<lb/>
most important issues the world faces<lb/>
In North Carolina, led b the<lb/>
"running scared tactics of Gov James<lb/>
B. Hunt, who claimed he was against the<lb/>
freeze resolution, the anti-freeze war-<lb/>
riors have claimed a hollow victorv tor<lb/>
militarism. Their efforts to deteat the<lb/>
resolution are among the greatest<lb/>
mistakes the N.C. Senate has ever made.<lb/>
Throughout history, there has never<lb/>
been an issue of greater urgency than<lb/>
this one. To borrow a term I've seen on<lb/>
several bumper stickers: "Nuclear<lb/>
War Final Insanity<lb/>
John Caldwell, chancellor emeritus of<lb/>
N.C. State University, during his com-<lb/>
ments before the N.C. General Assem-<lb/>
ble last month, called on the legislature<lb/>
to support the freeze as a victor for<lb/>
"reason and conscience saying that<lb/>
passage of the freeze in North Carolina<lb/>
would gain some time and hope for<lb/>
humanity. "Call a halt to the growing<lb/>
madness and make room for sanitv he<lb/>
concluded.<lb/>
Unfortunately. Jimmy Green el al<lb/>
have not heeded this call to halt the<lb/>
menace of the nuclear arms race; the<lb/>
have opted to make no room for sanity.<lb/>
The people of North Carolina will not<lb/>
forget this one quickly. Green, who ha-<lb/>
greater political ambitions, ma have<lb/>
made the greatest political ? and moral<lb/>
? error of his career.<lb/>
Etiquette Shmetiquette; Have A Good Time<lb/>
Editor's Note: Stan Landers is vaca-<lb/>
tioning in sunny Smyrna this week, so as<lb/>
his second fiddle, I'll be filling in as best<lb/>
I can.<lb/>
Dear Stan Landers: My roommate,<lb/>
Edna, and I have been arguing for weeks<lb/>
about a matter of table etiquette, and I<lb/>
write to you as a last hope.<lb/>
MIKL HLGHLS<lb/>
?r<lb/>
It all started when I cooked a delicious<lb/>
dinner of chitterlings and hog jowls for<lb/>
St. Patrick's Day. You see, Edna's Irish.<lb/>
Anyway, we were sitting at our table, en-<lb/>
joying the extravagent eats, when all of a<lb/>
sudden, Edna coughs up a chunk of grey<lb/>
meat onto her plate. She said it was too<lb/>
tough to swallow. I picked it up, chewed<lb/>
it a while and agreed. But when I told<lb/>
her she should at least cover it up in the<lb/>
tablecloth, she stood up and belched out<lb/>
her disagreement. She said she'd read in<lb/>
one of your lesser competitor's columns<lb/>
(Dear Abby, I think) that what she did<lb/>
was proper. I think not. So tell me, Stan,<lb/>
who's right?<lb/>
GRISTLED IN GRIFTON<lb/>
Dear Gristled: In the first place, there<lb/>
is no single right or wrong in a matter<lb/>
like this one. A few etiquette sugges-<lb/>
tions, however, may be of some use to<lb/>
you and Edna: Some "experts" do say<lb/>
that it is proper to place the unsightly<lb/>
glop on one's plate. However, some<lb/>
others contend that the chunk should be<lb/>
delicately placed in one's napkin on<lb/>
one's lap. I tend to disagree with both<lb/>
sides, to some extent.<lb/>
What 1 always try to do when I find<lb/>
myself in that situation is turn what<lb/>
would otherwise be a social embarass-<lb/>
ment into a fun time for all! You'd be<lb/>
surprised at how many things you can do<lb/>
with a stubborn piece of meat. You can<lb/>
mold it into a cuddly animal shape, play<lb/>
hockey with it on your plate, toss it to an<lb/>
unexpecting friend and the best part<lb/>
is, you can save it in the refrigerator for<lb/>
later use! With this in mind, not only<lb/>
will you avoid the constant embarrass-<lb/>
ment of chewy pork ? you'll be the hit<lb/>
of every party and social gathering<lb/>
you'll ever be invited to. Good luck<lb/>
and good eating.<lb/>
Dear Stan Landers: I don't live<lb/>
around Greenville but am aware of your<lb/>
column through mutual friends. I've got<lb/>
this problem. I coach collegiate basket-<lb/>
ball at a school that I won't mention<lb/>
because the administrators at Maryland<lb/>
(fictional school) probably wouldn 7 like<lb/>
it too much. I can't reveal my true iden-<lb/>
tity either, because that would give me<lb/>
away. So, for the purposes of this letter,<lb/>
let's just say my name is "Righty<lb/>
You may think you know who I am, but<lb/>
I'm not him Honest.<lb/>
Anyway, about my problem: I have<lb/>
recently been blindly accused of the<lb/>
worst kind of illegal pick imaginable ?<lb/>
blackmail. But it's simply not true. I'm<lb/>
not a dirty player; I've always played by<lb/>
the rules. Just ask the NCAA. In all my<lb/>
years here, they've never been able to<lb/>
catch me at anything.<lb/>
Oh well, let me explain the situation as<lb/>
I see it. It all started last fall, when one<lb/>
of my players, a big, tall, black fellow ?<lb/>
a helluva nice guy ? was walking back<lb/>
to his dorm room one night and stumbl-<lb/>
ed (figuratively, of course) across this<lb/>
poor little coed with her blouse caught<lb/>
on a tree limb (a common problem on<lb/>
many campuses, like for instance at<lb/>
oh say the University of Maryland).<lb/>
Well, to make a long story short, he bent<lb/>
over to help the girl out and accidentally<lb/>
ripped her blouse off. Naturally, the rest<lb/>
of her clothes fell off as well, so being<lb/>
the chivalric man he is, the player took<lb/>
off his own clothes and offered to cover<lb/>
her. But by gosh, he got her out of that<lb/>
tree!<lb/>
Then, the next thing you know, she's<lb/>
filing rape charges against him. I just<lb/>
couldn't believe it! I know that little<lb/>
hussie had it all planned out from the<lb/>
start.<lb/>
Anyway, my star center (not his real<lb/>
position) gets put on probation, and the<lb/>
team starts dropping important games<lb/>
left and right. So, I call this girl, merely<lb/>
to suggest she get some psychiatric help,<lb/>
and the next thing I know, I'm being ac-<lb/>
cused of blackmail!<lb/>
The season's over for us, having lost<lb/>
our second-round game to a highly-<lb/>
touted university from somewhere in<lb/>
Texas. But now, I face the prospect of<lb/>
losing my job. Injustice, it seems, is<lb/>
everywhere, Stan. What, if anything,<lb/>
can I do to fight back?<lb/>
TENSE IN TUR TLETO WTV<lb/>
Dear Tense: You sound like my kinda<lb/>
guy, a real honest Abe, a real patriot.<lb/>
But let me give you a little advice: Tr<lb/>
calling the girl's friends. Maybe thev car.<lb/>
bring her to her senses. If not. then<lb/>
throw your weight around a little; use<lb/>
your "pull After all, you must have<lb/>
some "pull But remember, if all else<lb/>
fails, Righty, then just do what you've<lb/>
done so well for so long now denv.<lb/>
deny, deny. Good luck both on and in<lb/>
the court!<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes, a world -<lb/>
renowned delinquent and hell-raiser<lb/>
from Yonder. N.C, once checked out<lb/>
an anatomy book from Joyner Library<lb/>
and returned it three davs late!<lb/>
-Campus Forum<lb/>
Rape Ain't That Simple, Ann<lb/>
To Ann Shirley, Alumnus CSC1<lb/>
Like you, most of the females on this<lb/>
campus are disturbed by the recent<lb/>
reports of rapes on and off campus.<lb/>
Your proposed solution to avoid<lb/>
deserted areas day or night is unfeasi-<lb/>
ble, unrealistic and all too often im-<lb/>
possible. Your simplistic solution only<lb/>
serves to imply that women are respon-<lb/>
sible for their rapes. Rapes do not oc-<lb/>
cur only in dark, deserted areas. I sup-<lb/>
pose that the woman in Clement dorm<lb/>
should have had someone with her<lb/>
when she went to the lobby. Your<lb/>
preaching doesn't do very much for<lb/>
her. (Last) summer, another college<lb/>
student was attacked while walking<lb/>
with a friend in a well-lit, non-deserted<lb/>
area of Greenville. Rapes can occur<lb/>
where we're least likely to expect them.<lb/>
Women should not be made to feel<lb/>
that they are bad or doing something<lb/>
wrong when they decide to go<lb/>
somewhere alone. A woman should be<lb/>
able to go anywhere she wants to alone<lb/>
? even at night. I am not such an<lb/>
idealistic person that 1 do not see the<lb/>
risks involved, but having this need for<lb/>
protection pushed on women destroys<lb/>
what little independence they have<lb/>
gained over the last 100 years and<lb/>
relegates them to an inferior position in<lb/>
society.<lb/>
I do not intend to have someone<lb/>
around at all times to protect me from<lb/>
things that might happen. As a mature<lb/>
adult, I would like to be able to take<lb/>
care of myself, and I resent the fact<lb/>
that 1 am made to feel like a small child<lb/>
who must be guarded and watched<lb/>
over.<lb/>
If a solution to this problem exists,<lb/>
I'm sure it is much more reasonable<lb/>
than constant escorting and protection.<lb/>
The problem must stem from the wav<lb/>
that men and women view one another.<lb/>
Perhaps if we stopped seeing women as<lb/>
the property of males and males as the<lb/>
protectors of womankind, things<lb/>
would change. Trying to see one<lb/>
another as human beings with in-<lb/>
dividual strengths and weaknesses<lb/>
might help. Don't make the woman<lb/>
who has already been humiliated feel<lb/>
any more at fault. Ann Shirley, I really<lb/>
don't have a solution to offer, but 1<lb/>
hope you see that neither do you.<lb/>
Deborah Green<lb/>
Junior, CSCI<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
B PA IRK K<lb/>
ON Fill<lb/>
-<lb/>
President of the<lb/>
ECl Co. .<lb/>
Republicans Den-<lb/>
Kilcovne called<lb/>
Thursday 's state<lb/>
Senate defeal<lb/>
nuclear freeze resolu-<lb/>
tion a "<lb/>
cause of national<lb/>
defense<lb/>
nuclear freeze<lb/>
byisi and F '<lb/>
English Ins<lb/>
i dith Wcbl<lb/>
the defeat<lb/>
resolution, ? I<lb/>
omphshed<lb/>
unusual p<lb/>
t a r y rr, a<lb/>
"under: .<lb/>
neakv "<lb/>
iu<lb/>
left in the ha i<lb/>
Jame- C<lb/>
an opponent<lb/>
re He<lb/>
? ecej<lb/>
tie I<lb/>
?<lb/>
ment to th.<lb/>
able W:<lb/>
nted<lb/>
Gn<lb/>
- '<lb/>
 ? ?? tent 11<lb/>
.<lb/>
rh<lb/>
The ? ?.<lb/>
FCC Gives<lb/>
To WZMl<lb/>
Warren Baker.<lb/>
general manger<lb/>
WZMB radio station.<lb/>
proudly held out a<lb/>
Mngle -heet of what he<lb/>
termed "an unassumi-<lb/>
ng white piece<lb/>
paper The paper<lb/>
j- from the Federal<lb/>
C o m m u n i c a<lb/>
Commission which<lb/>
stated that WZMB.<lb/>
until December i.<lb/>
1988 was a fully<lb/>
licensed. FM-<lb/>
broadcasting station.<lb/>
For Baker, who has<lb/>
been involved ?<lb/>
WZMB in sev<lb/>
capace- since 198<lb/>
receipt of the licei<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
:? ? '<lb/>
culminai<lb/>
-<lb/>
The c<lb/>
? i<lb/>
Ba?<lb/>
-<lb/>
he was si I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Jeter, w<lb/>
t a : <lb/>
B spec a an i<lb/>
MARCH IS<lb/>
FOR SAVIN<lb/>
At the<lb/>
BICYU0<lb/>
90S<lb/>
1<lb/>
IRCRl<lb/>
SPRING TUNE<lb/>
ONLY $121<lb/>
includes Adjustmej<lb/>
Gears,Cones.True Wne?<lb/>
Check out the V 1983 <lb/>
fc?ooo?c?oc?o?cccoc?occc<lb/>
Greenville's B<lb/>
Now Being<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas .a<lb/>
true quality and have<lb/>
delivery costs in the prl<lb/>
PIZZA INN has chang<lb/>
all that'<lb/>
We sell our dell<lb/>
pizzas at Menuj<lb/>
No Surcharge,<lb/>
give FREE Dr<lb/>
our large and<lb/>
pizzas. TRY U!<lb/>
CALL 7S8-6266Greerv<lb/>
A<lb/>
I m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 22, 1983<lb/>
oinri<lb/>
mri"7<lb/>
M? itn<lb/>
ff?rr<lb/>
Resolution,<lb/>
jreen's Future<lb/>
( thai among<lb/>
ated colum-<lb/>
cl has publicly<lb/>
freeze I asf<lb/>
- thai there<lb/>
ze pro-<lb/>
e could<lb/>
cautioned his<lb/>
to allow the<lb/>
. laim owner-<lb/>
ne ol the<lb/>
d ? ices.<lb/>
by the<lb/>
' (io James<lb/>
- was against the<lb/>
freeze war-<lb/>
w victor) for<lb/>
lefeal the<lb/>
- the greatest<lb/>
Si. Senate has ever made.<lb/>
history, there has neer<lb/>
?e of greater urgency than<lb/>
this one To borrow a term I've seen on<lb/>
several bumper stickers "Nuclear<lb/>
 inoi (a  y<lb/>
1 ? chancellor emeritus of<lb/>
1 niversity, during his com-<lb/>
' - N. General ssem-<lb/>
I iture<lb/>
as a ry for<lb/>
cience that<lb/>
n Non ? arolina<lb/>
? ?pe for<lb/>
lit I the growing<lb/>
? -anit he<lb/>
? Green et al<lb/>
til to halt the<lb/>
H arms race; they<lb/>
make no room for sanity.<lb/>
u lina will not<lb/>
?ne quickl) (ireen, who has<lb/>
ambitions, ma) have<lb/>
political ? and moral<lb/>
areer<lb/>
d Time<lb/>
idvice: Try<lb/>
iends Maybe the) can<lb/>
her senses It not, then<lb/>
hi around a little; use<lb/>
ftei all, you must have<lb/>
B 11 remember, it all else<lb/>
i iust do what you've<lb/>
? o long now deny,<lb/>
den. Good luck both on and in<lb/>
Sote Hike Huuhes, a world'<lb/>
delinquent and hell-raiser<lb/>
,r V.C once checked out<lb/>
? boot '? loyner I ibrary<lb/>
i it three days late!<lb/>
le, Ann<lb/>
'lution to this problem exists,<lb/>
I'm sure it is much more reasonable<lb/>
than constant escorting and protection.<lb/>
? problem must stem from the way<lb/>
that men and women view one another.<lb/>
;aps it we stopped seeing women as<lb/>
ne propert) of males and males as the<lb/>
protectors ol womankind, things<lb/>
would change. Trying to see one<lb/>
another as human beings with in-<lb/>
dividual strengths and weaknesses<lb/>
might help. Don't make the woman<lb/>
W bo has ahead) been humiliated feel<lb/>
la i more at fault. Ann Shirley, I reallv<lb/>
Icon't have a solution to offer, but I<lb/>
hope von see that neither do you.<lb/>
Deborah Green<lb/>
Junior, CSC I<lb/>
9f?,pus Con?niunity Reacts To Freeze Defeat<lb/>
O'NEILL Senate resolution was the house last week the rni? u -ks-i. ?w. c <lb/>
Suit Write<lb/>
President of the<lb/>
ECU College<lb/>
Republicans Dennis<lb/>
Kilcoyne called last<lb/>
Thursday's state<lb/>
Senate defeat of the<lb/>
nuclear freeze resolu-<lb/>
tion a "victory for the<lb/>
cause of national<lb/>
defense Local<lb/>
nuclear freeze lob-<lb/>
byist and ECU<lb/>
English Instructor<lb/>
Edith Webber called<lb/>
the defeat of the<lb/>
resolution, which was<lb/>
accomplished largely<lb/>
through the use of<lb/>
unusual parliamen-<lb/>
tary maneuvers,<lb/>
"underhanded" and<lb/>
"sneaky<lb/>
The fate of the<lb/>
Senate resolution was<lb/>
left in the hands of Lt.<lb/>
Gov. James C. Green,<lb/>
an opponent of the<lb/>
freeze. He opted to<lb/>
cast an unprecedented<lb/>
tie-breaking vote sup-<lb/>
porting an amende-<lb/>
ment to the resolution<lb/>
that removed the con-<lb/>
dition that the freeze<lb/>
be bilateral and<lb/>
verifiable. When the<lb/>
votes on the amend-<lb/>
ment counted up to a<lb/>
24-24 tie. Green cast<lb/>
the 25th voe suppor-<lb/>
ting the amendment.<lb/>
A subsequent vote to<lb/>
table the resolution<lb/>
passed by a 25-23<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
The freeze pro-<lb/>
posal, debated in the<lb/>
Senate for about a<lb/>
month, was passed in<lb/>
the house last week.<lb/>
The House resolution<lb/>
calls on President<lb/>
Reagan and Congress<lb/>
to seek a bilateral and<lb/>
verifiable freeze on<lb/>
the production,<lb/>
testing and deploy-<lb/>
ment of the nuclear<lb/>
arsenals of the United<lb/>
States and the Soviet<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
The amendment to<lb/>
remove the require-<lb/>
ment making the<lb/>
freeze bilateral and<lb/>
verifiable was in-<lb/>
troduced by Sen.<lb/>
Harold W. Hardison,<lb/>
D-Lenoir, a leader of<lb/>
the freeze opponents.<lb/>
Supporters of the<lb/>
measure claimed that<lb/>
the Hardison amend-<lb/>
ment was introduced<lb/>
as an attempt to kill<lb/>
the resolution. Har<lb/>
dison denied the<lb/>
claims saying that his<lb/>
amendment was<lb/>
designed as a com-<lb/>
promise. "If anyone<lb/>
thinks Sen. Har-<lb/>
dison's amendment<lb/>
was not (intended) to<lb/>
kill it, then I have<lb/>
some underwater real<lb/>
estate I want to sell<lb/>
you said Sen.<lb/>
William G. Hacock,<lb/>
D-Durham, a prime<lb/>
sponsor of the freeze<lb/>
proposal, in the<lb/>
newspaper interview.<lb/>
Webber, who has<lb/>
led the freeze lobby-<lb/>
ing effort in Green-<lb/>
ville on both the state<lb/>
and national levels,<lb/>
said she was disap-<lb/>
pointed by the "very<lb/>
underhanded way" in<lb/>
FM<lb/>
which the Senate<lb/>
resolution was<lb/>
defeated. "It's logical<lb/>
and sensible to stop<lb/>
building (nuclear<lb/>
weapons) Webber<lb/>
said. "The freeze is an<lb/>
excellent way to begin<lb/>
this process of reduc-<lb/>
ing nuclear arsenals<lb/>
"A lot of the<lb/>
(Senate) members<lb/>
who really did not<lb/>
vote for this resolu-<lb/>
tion, who thought it<lb/>
was morally wrong or<lb/>
something, wanted to<lb/>
find some way out<lb/>
Kilcoyne said. "With<lb/>
a little parliamentary<lb/>
manuvering they<lb/>
found a way to water<lb/>
down the resolution<lb/>
to make it not worth<lb/>
voting on Natural-<lb/>
ly I'm pleased<lb/>
Webber claimed the<lb/>
Senate defeat of the<lb/>
resolution was a case<lb/>
of politicans not pay-<lb/>
ing attention to their<lb/>
constituents. "If they<lb/>
have to do sneaky<lb/>
things to kill it, it<lb/>
must have been well<lb/>
supported you feel<lb/>
as if your represen-<lb/>
tatives are trying to<lb/>
steal a vote from<lb/>
you Webber said.<lb/>
"Elected represen-<lb/>
tatives have to take<lb/>
postions on con-<lb/>
troversial issues<lb/>
continued Webber. "I<lb/>
would think they<lb/>
would try to do their<lb/>
best to listen to all<lb/>
their constituents.<lb/>
Webber said by<lb/>
defeating the freeze<lb/>
resolution, legislators<lb/>
might push people to<lb/>
"give up" on the<lb/>
political process or<lb/>
towards supporting<lb/>
third party can-<lb/>
didates. "They'd have<lb/>
to turn themselves in-<lb/>
side out to convince<lb/>
me that the common<lb/>
good was served by<lb/>
defeating the freeze<lb/>
Webber said.<lb/>
Opposition to the<lb/>
freeze proposal was<lb/>
heavy from several<lb/>
conservative<lb/>
organizations in-<lb/>
cluding the National<lb/>
Congressional Club,<lb/>
the political organiza-<lb/>
tion of Republican<lb/>
Sen. Jesse A. Helms.<lb/>
The Congressional<lb/>
Club financed radio<lb/>
and television ads<lb/>
against the resolution.<lb/>
The freeze move-<lb/>
ment was also dealt a<lb/>
serious blow earlier<lb/>
this month when Gov.<lb/>
James B. Hunt joined<lb/>
the ranks of the op-<lb/>
position.<lb/>
At the national<lb/>
level, a similar nuclear<lb/>
freeze resolutuion<lb/>
seems certain to pass<lb/>
in the House of<lb/>
Representatives, while<lb/>
it appears less likely in<lb/>
the Republican con-<lb/>
trolled Senate.<lb/>
Republican Sen. John<lb/>
P. East has said the<lb/>
nuclear freeze effort is<lb/>
a plot orchestrated by<lb/>
the Soviet Union.<lb/>
President Reagan<lb/>
claims a freeze on<lb/>
nuclear weapons<lb/>
would lock the nation<lb/>
into a position of in-<lb/>
feriority with the<lb/>
Soviet Union. Freeze<lb/>
supporters see ihe<lb/>
treeze as an important<lb/>
step in stopping an<lb/>
nuclear arms race,<lb/>
which they say is br-<lb/>
inging the world to<lb/>
the brink of nuclear<lb/>
annilation.<lb/>
To WZMB Radio Through 1988<lb/>
Warren Baker, marked the end of a license iPiPrh,Hi,M? a ,h,n?. :5 ? .<lb/>
Warren Baker<lb/>
general manger of<lb/>
WZMB radio station,<lb/>
proudly held out a<lb/>
single sheet of what he<lb/>
termed "an unassum-<lb/>
ing white piece of<lb/>
paper The paper<lb/>
was from the Federal<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
Commission which<lb/>
stated that WZMB,<lb/>
until December 1,<lb/>
1988 was a fully-<lb/>
licensed. F M -<lb/>
broadcasting station.<lb/>
For Baker, who has<lb/>
been involved with<lb/>
WZMB in several<lb/>
capacities since 1980,<lb/>
receipt of the license<lb/>
marked the end of a<lb/>
long road of hard<lb/>
work. "I feel great<lb/>
Baker told The East<lb/>
Carolinian. "This is a<lb/>
culmination of efforts<lb/>
dating back to 1978.<lb/>
The culmination of a<lb/>
lot of work by a lot of<lb/>
people<lb/>
Baker was busy all<lb/>
morning Monday call-<lb/>
ing people to share the<lb/>
good news. At the<lb/>
time of this interview,<lb/>
he was still trying to<lb/>
reach ECU medical<lb/>
school student John<lb/>
Jeter, who Baker call-<lb/>
ed a "key-figure" in<lb/>
obtaining the new<lb/>
license. Jeter had been<lb/>
involved with ECU<lb/>
campus radio since<lb/>
1978 when he worked<lb/>
with the previous AM<lb/>
radio station, WECU.<lb/>
He was instrumental<lb/>
in coordinating the<lb/>
switch to FM, accor-<lb/>
ding to Baker, and in<lb/>
the opening of<lb/>
WZMB, which began<lb/>
broadcasting in<lb/>
February of 1982.<lb/>
Baker said he was<lb/>
surprised that WZMB<lb/>
had received its<lb/>
license, which could<lb/>
have taken up to two<lb/>
years to process. The<lb/>
license does not mean<lb/>
-   TWO DAYS ONLY<lb/>
A<lb/>
S<lb/>
Yl<lb/>
-V <lb/>
Thurs - Fri<lb/>
March 24 - 25<lb/>
10a.m. until 7p.m.<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
1st Floor newspaper lounge<lb/>
By speciaTarrangement with GALLERY LAINZBERG,<lb/>
Cedar Rapids, Iowa<lb/>
.scoaxccooccoysxsocooo<lb/>
530 . tangle Street<lb/>
SREENV illE N C 2783<lb/>
'? 1 36' 6<lb/>
MARCH IS<lb/>
FOR SAVING MONEY<lb/>
At the<lb/>
sieves<lb/>
90S<lb/>
. ES a. SERn<lb/>
March Specials<lb/>
Tires<lb/>
27x1 4 Gum wall<lb/>
was 7.95 Now 3.99<lb/>
IRC Roadlite Gumwall 27<lb/>
was 8.95 Now 4.95<lb/>
all I<lb/>
99 <lb/>
OSCOOGCO<lb/>
SPRING TUNE-UP SPECIAL<lb/>
ONLY $12.00 Labor<lb/>
includes Adjustments on Brakes,<lb/>
Gears,Cones,True Wheels,And Safety Check.<lb/>
Check out the Sew 1983 line of Beach Cruisers o<lb/>
gegv'vcS)e&amp;SiC?OOOC'GOOOCCOCOOOCCCCCOOOOOQOS<lb/>
Pizza Xjqxi<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
delivery costs in the price-<lb/>
a change in any par-<lb/>
ticular aspect of the<lb/>
station's work, but it<lb/>
is the official recogni-<lb/>
tion ard approval of<lb/>
the .ation bv the<lb/>
FCC.<lb/>
WZMB had receiv-<lb/>
ed its license from the<lb/>
FCC Friday, but the<lb/>
station's call letters<lb/>
were incorrectly listed<lb/>
as WZBM. Baker<lb/>
received the corrected<lb/>
license Monday.<lb/>
Baker, who's term<lb/>
as general manager<lb/>
ends on April 15,<lb/>
plans to re-apply for<lb/>
the position that he<lb/>
won last year from<lb/>
Sam Barwick, the<lb/>
previous general<lb/>
manger.<lb/>
Baker said he and<lb/>
his staff had no im-<lb/>
mediate celebration<lb/>
plans. "We're too<lb/>
busy to party he ad-<lb/>
ded. "Don't tell the<lb/>
man lies quipped<lb/>
another employee<lb/>
who had different<lb/>
ideas. "Well, 1 guess<lb/>
we'll have a little time<lb/>
for a partysaid Baker.<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
?U Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756 3023 ?24 HRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
L-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
rgira-fl a688888Bafl8floaaoaaoBa 8? b ??" C<lb/>
:<lb/>
W CASE YOU HAUL N 7 ARD<lb/>
Pt.<lb/>
ain<lb/>
ftfvur<lb/>
?s a neuj restaurant<lb/>
W dacunt otun<lb/>
creo-iuiHe thai :<lb/>
Complete Automotive<lb/>
Service<lb/>
24 In I owing Service<lb/>
Jariran Rental ailabk'<lb/>
IPth Si<lb/>
Buck's<lb/>
Gulf<lb/>
 S WITHIN WAIMHG P&amp;JANCf<lb/>
?. MHi ? wt?- -?0 a ??. Im ? <lb/>
- stves homf sryf mrx?<lb/>
 HAS FR?SH 0AKC0 0HAJ<lb/>
 FfEArifl?S fAH V SYCAS<lb/>
far - 2- P? Tai<lb/>
-HAS HAmr HOUff (W fUfSMy<lb/>
4-e PM ??? . r <lb/>
'HAS TAAi? nfTS<lb/>
e '?' Nd THIS CC CH r N<lb/>
3<lb/>
FfZl . .T C<lb/>
L<lb/>
PC v A rtf<lb/>
iE" ?"? HE N ? . ??? c-<lb/>
AlL SPECIAL rrr ?.?.<lb/>
LajULftJUULfl a.B.ajUL9JJUUULftJLPJUL<lb/>
Copyright '983<lb/>
Kroge' Sav on<lb/>
ua-it'ty RioMs Reserved<lb/>
Mcne s<lb/>
oc2 to Oeatrs<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed M?r .<lb/>
thru Set Mar 26. 1963<lb/>
Sty<lb/>
V.<lb/>
<lb/>
ANHEUSEH BUSCH<lb/>
Natural Light<lb/>
v.oz mm<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
TAB. DIET COKE OB<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
v<lb/>
'?3v<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Eacf of these advertised items is re<lb/>
quired to be readily available tor<lb/>
sale m each Kroger Sav on except<lb/>
as specifically noted m this ad It we<lb/>
do run out of an item we in otter<lb/>
you your choice of a compretie<lb/>
'tern when available reflecting me<lb/>
arne savings or a rainchec which<lb/>
will entitle you to purchase the<lb/>
advertised item at the advertised<lb/>
price within X) days<lb/>
Open Mon thru Sat 8am to Midnight<lb/>
Sun 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
J300 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
?.???<lb/>
FESH<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
SANDWICH<lb/>
FROM THE DELI<lb/>
snnmp Salad<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
m<lb/>
?&amp; A<lb/>
24-Oz.<lb/>
1 Loaves<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
20?<lb/>
save<lb/>
30c<lb/>
KROGER FROZEN<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
S99<lb/>
12-Oz<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
firwind Chuck<lb/>
VAN GASP'S<lb/>
Beenee Weenee<lb/>
88<lb/>
KROGER LOWFAT<lb/>
OR REGULAR<lb/>
Cottage Cheese<lb/>
99<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
24-Oz<lb/>
Cup<lb/>
8-Oz<lb/>
Can<lb/>
CALIFORNIA SEEDLESS<lb/>
Navel Oranges<lb/>
<lb/>
113<lb/>
Size<lb/>
Each<lb/>
JUMBO PAPER<lb/>
Hi-Dri "lowels<lb/>
59<lb/>
4 t?ar<lb/>
jumbo<lb/>
Ron<lb/>
COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETY<lb/>
Ice Milk<lb/>
-f.<lb/>
i<lb/>
vi<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
REGULAR OR DIP<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
Vi-Gal<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
?MMMWtafli<lb/>
?BMnaVHH<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0006"/><lb/>
1 HI I AS! t AKOl INIAN<lb/>
MARC H 22. 1983<lb/>
N.C. Prison System Ineffective, Judge Says<lb/>
A judge claimed<lb/>
last week that North<lb/>
Carolina has been<lb/>
consistently ranked<lb/>
first in the nation in<lb/>
incarceration rates<lb/>
and that the real vic-<lb/>
tims of crime are the<lb/>
taxpayers who are<lb/>
forced to support a<lb/>
system that is not<lb/>
achieving its goals.<lb/>
Judge Willis P<lb/>
Whichard, a Ourham<lb/>
ludge and chairman<lb/>
of the Citizen's Com<lb/>
mission Report on<lb/>
Alternatives to In-<lb/>
carceration, was in<lb/>
Greenville Thursdav<lb/>
night to discuss the<lb/>
recommendations ot<lb/>
the commission he<lb/>
chaired for two years.<lb/>
"The United<lb/>
States, which we call<lb/>
the land of the free,<lb/>
incarcerates people at<lb/>
a highei rate than any<lb/>
country in the civiliz-<lb/>
ed world Whichard<lb/>
said. He called in-<lb/>
carceration a<lb/>
' ' p a r c u 1 u r a r 1 y<lb/>
American<lb/>
phenomenon" that<lb/>
had been established<lb/>
in the earlj 1800s by<lb/>
Quakers who were<lb/>
searching for a more<lb/>
humanitarian method<lb/>
of dealing with law<lb/>
breakers.<lb/>
The Quaker ideal<lb/>
was that incarcerated<lb/>
people would use their<lb/>
time of isolation to<lb/>
pray and repent.<lb/>
Whichard painted a<lb/>
glum picture of the<lb/>
N.C. criminal justice<lb/>
system. He called it<lb/>
costly, ineffective and<lb/>
overcrowded. "Either<lb/>
we have the worst sort<lb/>
of people in the world<lb/>
in North Carolina or<lb/>
there's something<lb/>
wrong with the<lb/>
system Whichard<lb/>
said. "1 think it's the<lb/>
latter<lb/>
Whichard said that<lb/>
incarceration for long<lb/>
periods of time was<lb/>
relatiel new in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Whichard said the<lb/>
high level of blacks in<lb/>
the state's prisons was<lb/>
due to poverty, lack<lb/>
of education and the<lb/>
background of the of-<lb/>
fender White<lb/>
prisoners were not put<lb/>
in Central Prison until<lb/>
1922.<lb/>
"Incarceration is<lb/>
an extremely expen-<lb/>
sive and costly<lb/>
remedy Whichard<lb/>
said, noting the an-<lb/>
nual cost of keeping a<lb/>
person in jail in is<lb/>
$9,600. Whichard<lb/>
said that during the<lb/>
time he was a judge<lb/>
the annual state cor-<lb/>
rections budget has<lb/>
grown from $28<lb/>
million to $168<lb/>
million including $111<lb/>
million used for new<lb/>
prison construction.<lb/>
Besides the high<lb/>
cost of incarceration,<lb/>
Whichard also<lb/>
pointed out that 76<lb/>
percent of the people<lb/>
admitted to N.C.<lb/>
prisons are admitted<lb/>
for non-violent of-<lb/>
fenses. Some<lb/>
estimates also put the<lb/>
state recidivism rates<lb/>
(the number of ex-<lb/>
offenders who return<lb/>
to prison) at about 60<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Whichard, North<lb/>
Carolina actually has<lb/>
a low crime rate.<lb/>
"North Carolina is<lb/>
at a cross-roads<lb/>
Whichard said,<lb/>
"where it faces a<lb/>
choice between conti-<lb/>
nuing to build more<lb/>
prisons or looking<lb/>
toward alternatives<lb/>
He added that<lb/>
because of the<lb/>
economy that the<lb/>
facilities for 14,000.<lb/>
Whichard said that<lb/>
what he termed<lb/>
"community based<lb/>
alternatives" were the<lb/>
kev recommendations<lb/>
another deficency.<lb/>
"Either we have the worst sort of people<lb/>
in the world in North Carolina or there's<lb/>
something wrong with the system. I<lb/>
think it's the latter<lb/>
of the commission number of people tur-<lb/>
made up of lawyers, rung to crime would<lb/>
TKE House Repaired<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
housing Dan Wooten tor<lb/>
assistance in relocating the 14<lb/>
1 Kl residents left homeless b the<lb/>
blae. 1 he dwelling was condem-<lb/>
ned b city, building inspectors<lb/>
the da) after the blae. "Dan<lb/>
Wooten was really super in<lb/>
assisting (Tkl- members) on a<lb/>
month to month basis Blake<lb/>
said. Ikl members who were left<lb/>
homeless from the fire are now<lb/>
living in dorm rooms, other<lb/>
fraternity houses and sharing<lb/>
apartments with friends, he add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Ik-cause of their precarious<lb/>
financial situation. Blake said it<lb/>
had not been decided how much<lb/>
of the revenue from this year's<lb/>
tournament would be given to<lb/>
charity. "St. Judes will be much<lb/>
better off (over the long run) it<lb/>
this fraternity survives Blake<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Kast Carolinian will publish<lb/>
SGA candidate platforms in next<lb/>
Thursday's edition.<lb/>
All candidates must have plat-<lb/>
forms to The Fast Carolinian by<lb/>
tomorrow, March 23 at 5 p.m.<lb/>
Thcv must be typed and double-<lb/>
spaced. NO EXCEPTIONS.<lb/>
I he Fast Carolinian offices are located on<lb/>
second floor of Old South building,<lb/>
across from Jovner Library.<lb/>
legislatures, ex-<lb/>
offenders, clerics and<lb/>
others.<lb/>
He cited restitution<lb/>
to the victims as<lb/>
increase. North<lb/>
Carolina's prisons<lb/>
and jails at present<lb/>
hold more than<lb/>
17,500 inmates in<lb/>
calling the victim a<lb/>
"neglected and<lb/>
forgotten person"<lb/>
who, instead of get-<lb/>
ting compensation for<lb/>
their losses, is made to<lb/>
pay still further<lb/>
through taxes to keep<lb/>
an offender in prison<lb/>
Client-specific<lb/>
planning was also<lb/>
mentioned bv<lb/>
Whichard as a viable<lb/>
alternative to in<lb/>
carceration. This pro-<lb/>
gram provides a<lb/>
tailor-made sentenc<lb/>
ing plan for each of<lb/>
tender If all condi<lb/>
tions of the plan are<lb/>
kept by the offender<lb/>
he or she docs not ge"<lb/>
sent to jail. Whichard<lb/>
also supported an ev<lb/>
pansion of the use ot<lb/>
probation.<lb/>
Whichard said that<lb/>
the three goals of a<lb/>
criminal justice<lb/>
system are punish<lb/>
ment. rehabilitation<lb/>
and deterrance<lb/>
"Prison does nc<lb/>
rehabilitate he said<lb/>
Treat the crew and we'll treat you,<lb/>
Get your career off to a flying start<lb/>
while youVe still in college.<lb/>
Irive to fan I 11 ? ? ??'?<lb/>
? i Marine on cani is h<lb/>
schoo . ? . ?<lb/>
. ireer with us of two way?<lb/>
?. ire si t'Hen eai<lb/>
nth in tin Marirn I ' irps Plah m<lb/>
Leadi rs Class PLC in PLC aviation we can<lb/>
s is a yreal . . rtui t ' i s<lb/>
vai i' U'aoeis anl i i<lb/>
I'd and self- '?<lb/>
" ? ?<lb/>
t starl<lb/>
in two six-w el<lb/>
' tV OIK '? '?'?' ' -<lb/>
II V . '? ? ??<lb/>
. ISS 'S IH I<lb/>
m t ? done in ?ne<lb/>
.iph im res train<lb/>
? ssii ins and uiiih irs<lb/>
? . ? m ? ?? idy on<lb/>
mi.irantee flight school and civilian Hying your wa it the Marine Corps<lb/>
essons during yon lor veai And in PLC law Platoon Leaders Class Make u appointment<lb/>
wi can guarantee summei employment in the with y mi Marine (' irpsiffic i Selection<lb/>
, field while vou re gaining youi advanced fficei thn ugh y ui college placement center.<lb/>
? Y<lb/>
?S<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
No Coupon Necessary<lb/>
Ever; Vonda, ana Tuesday night, ter? wee<lb/>
ot trie sear oraer any large - " re topping<lb/>
pizza tor trie cr Family Night Special"<lb/>
small P zza witti e sae<lb/>
-?  ??? ? ? .<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
service zone<lb/>
FREE ana aei'verea ree n our<lb/>
ites ' ess<lb/>
Or ? p t  2 p Z2 I " nuteS<lb/>
Two pizzas for the price of one . now that s a treat you can t beat'<lb/>
When it comes tc f pizza pta comes to vou<lb/>
 good a tn -r. '?? <lb/>
ADMISSION! -)QO<lb/>
IPPjzE"<lb/>
?0?1 ATRAMAfMNN'<lb/>
AT ATUWTiC BEftcn<lb/>
TVWi1 3 PRIZE<lb/>
50 PU-3 FCttkbi. Y?m? f?c? pass TO ElBo125 PlOS ???? E&amp; 1 Et?<lb/>
PtiS PRTZES RaR EACH QjWTtSXANT<lb/>
 <lb/>
J ?<lb/>
r<lb/>
gpend&amp;ieot So,<lb/>
Ml UODGES - PANTANA bOBS<lb/>
RECORD BAR Of GREENVILLE<lb/>
UNIVERSITY BtXtt EXCHANGE IcSW'S NEST<lb/>
JfOX SEA9DWS - FOSDiCfcS -PUAPOS -the SPA<lb/>
WCSTERM ?STtEC -TJG eOW SDP - WAlR P1Z2AZX.<lb/>
?WR UEADS OWLV- PUILS UNIVERSITY WAlCCuTTQES<lb/>
-SCiSSCJ?5rrM -CAUFOPNA 0JCEPT - NWSuCS<lb/>
-?SuRP'fvJ'S6A -HCMPTi DCUiMT-8iCVCL? POST<lb/>
- "3ZKUUAKJ GAEI3GW - CAPI?DW, RL EXXOW SB7VICE<lb/>
STATION<lb/>
r??e FwrRowrz? our 9fdwso(?S<lb/>
? -???-??<lb/>
Minister Talk-<lb/>
Central Amen<lb/>
Fact Finding<lb/>
Former t 'i<lb/>
Catholu ' ? 11 ainman<lb/>
Father Charles<lb/>
Mulholland will be.<lb/>
ECU on Th .<lb/>
speak on hi<lb/>
fact finding :rI ?<lb/>
Central Ame-<lb/>
Mulholland<lb/>
served j ? t<lb/>
chapla.r<lb/>
until 1978<lb/>
to Greenville a<lb/>
of CentM ?<lb/>
Week'<lb/>
state<lb/>
Cen-fd <lb/>
Week is c<lb/>
bv the Cam ?<lb/>
faith Td- <lb/>
Central V-<lb/>
the t??<lb/>
of the N '<lb/>
ofh<lb/>
pose i<lb/>
Ca:<lb/>
<lb/>
studv. ?<lb/>
on beha f ol<lb/>
tral An<lb/>
anc -<lb/>
cd<lb/>
<lb/>
. .<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
the I<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
tin<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
gOv<lb/>
. n<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU Student<lb/>
Spend Summ<lb/>
Underwater S<lb/>
Rv sll R1<lb/>
MOR(,n<lb/>
If vou've eve: beer, I<lb/>
<lb/>
.recks or interested in<lb/>
.I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
working under<lb/>
you could earn su<lb/>
semester hours' a<lb/>
b particir . n a<lb/>
unique program th -<lb/>
summer<lb/>
A field schoc<lb/>
Maritime Hist<lb/>
Underrate: i<lb/>
chaeolog) ill be h<lb/>
in Swansboro, June<lb/>
13 through Ju! 22<lb/>
The program <lb/>
co-sp msored bj I<lb/>
and Swansboro s<lb/>
200th  ?ersar<lb/>
Cdcbrai i<lb/>
tee<lb/>
rsareeiK<lb/>
attend<lb/>
ricip<lb/>
. eted -<lb/>
t r o - -<lb/>
m<lb/>
historr,<lb/>
re<lb/>
m<lb/>
Two ?'C c I<lb/>
cla<lb/>
on campus <lb/>
vide backj<lb/>
f or mat i o n<lb/>
America's<lb/>
ternv<lb/>
shipbuilding<lb/>
agriculture<lb/>
In add<lb/>
so u N- ai the a<lb/>
project - -<lb/>
S?anvr<lb/>
around unc. <lb/>
a r c h a e - -<lb/>
research methoo<lb/>
techmquev<lb/>
Students inter<lb/>
in diving a.<lb/>
must be cert ? d<lb/>
scuba b a nationalh<lb/>
recognized instruc-<lb/>
tional organization<lb/>
NeNertheless. a<lb/>
limited number of<lb/>
students interested<lb/>
onh in maritime<lb/>
histon. research and<lb/>
non-diving activities<lb/>
supporting the proiect cred<lb/>
at the site's location<lb/>
will also be permitted<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
Why Swansboro!<lb/>
Located on White<lb/>
Oak River just inside Res<lb/>
Bogue Inlet, the port men<lb/>
of Swansboro "was a Cart<lb/>
small and important Gre<lb/>
port in the late eigh- Care<lb/>
teenth and early nine- call<lb/>
teenth century ac- to s<lb/>
how v<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
seme<lb/>
and<lb/>
houti<lb/>
non<lb/>
will<lb/>
five<lb/>
S "4?<lb/>
conu<lb/>
in<lb/>
and<lb/>
1<lb/>
"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0007"/><lb/>
udge Says<lb/>
. lities tor 14,iKXV<lb/>
W c-A-d said that<lb/>
lg termed<lb/>
litj based<lb/>
s' were the<lb/>
commendations<lb/>
del icenc).<lb/>
t sort of people<lb/>
olina or there's<lb/>
the system. I<lb/>
.i v ?; a<lb/>
a n d<lb/>
. ' pci son<lb/>
? .??. ? get-<lb/>
i<lb/>
ises ? adc to<lb/>
further<lb/>
through taxes to keep<lb/>
an offender in prison.<lb/>
Client-specific<lb/>
planning was also<lb/>
mentioned by<lb/>
Whtchard as a viable<lb/>
alternative to in-<lb/>
carceration This pro-<lb/>
gram provides a<lb/>
tailor-made sentenc-<lb/>
ing plan for each of-<lb/>
fender. If all condi-<lb/>
tions of the plan are<lb/>
kept by the offender,<lb/>
he or she does not get<lb/>
sent to jail. Whichard<lb/>
also supported an ex-<lb/>
pansion of the use of<lb/>
probation.<lb/>
Whichard said that<lb/>
'he three goals of a<lb/>
criminal justice<lb/>
sstem are punish-<lb/>
ment, rehabilitation<lb/>
and deterrance.<lb/>
'Prison does not<lb/>
rehabilitate he said.<lb/>
and we'll treat you<lb/>
n<lb/>
rr<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
 every week<lb/>
3 rqe . i re "opping<lb/>
Family Night Special<lb/>
small c 2a with the same<lb/>
FREE ind ae??verea ree r our<lb/>
 - .v that s a treat you can t beat'<lb/>
r<lb/>
vou<lb/>
I<lb/>
L , pi<lb/>
7 phut<lb/>
N ? ANNUAL ?n<lb/>
p MB<lb/>
H'JTrTflSw'<lb/>
NIQQ<lb/>
pZE 11 iPR'ZE 1 r'SMK 2te SS ro<lb/>
<lb/>
aTtSTAN -N <lb/>
? e;fli<lb/>
iii<lb/>
z<lb/>
bES - PANTANA BOBS<lb/>
BAR OF GREEMVILLE<lb/>
MANGE-CROW'S NEST<lb/>
p a -Puads -TUtr SPA<lb/>
IC Si-OP - HAlC PtZZAZZ.<lb/>
fe ADVERSITY -lAiRCuTrgRS<lb/>
b?NA CCNCS'T - WM?SUCS lceucwT-BtcvGE Rssr k-vTQW, f?L EXXON SERVICE<lb/>
ojR SPONSORS<lb/>
<lb/>
Minister Talks On<lb/>
Central American<lb/>
Fact Finding Trip<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 22. IM1 7<lb/>
Former ECU<lb/>
Catholic Chaplain<lb/>
Father Charles<lb/>
Mulholland will be at<lb/>
ECU on Thursday to<lb/>
speak on his recent<lb/>
fact-finding trip to<lb/>
Central America.<lb/>
Mulholland, who<lb/>
served as ECU<lb/>
chaplain for ten years<lb/>
until 1978, is coming<lb/>
to Greenville as part<lb/>
of "Central America<lb/>
Week" across the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Central America<lb/>
Week is co-sponsored<lb/>
by the Carolina Inter-<lb/>
faith Task Force on<lb/>
Central America and<lb/>
the Executive Board<lb/>
of the N.C. Council<lb/>
of Churches. Its pur-<lb/>
pose is to invite North<lb/>
Carolinians to<lb/>
commemorate,<lb/>
study, reflect and act<lb/>
on behalf of our Cen-<lb/>
tral American sisters<lb/>
and brothers claim-<lb/>
ed a promotional<lb/>
booklet distributed by<lb/>
organizers.<lb/>
Thursday marks the<lb/>
third anniversary of<lb/>
the assasination of El<lb/>
Salvador's Ar-<lb/>
chbishop Oscar<lb/>
Romero. Romero was<lb/>
killed while<lb/>
celebrating mass,<lb/>
shortly after he had<lb/>
made several<lb/>
statements decrying<lb/>
the violence and kill-<lb/>
ings in his country.<lb/>
Mulholland met<lb/>
with several high<lb/>
government officials<lb/>
in the Central<lb/>
American nation of<lb/>
Nicaragua. He has<lb/>
been making an an-<lb/>
nual trip to the strife-<lb/>
torn region for the<lb/>
last four years.<lb/>
Besides<lb/>
Mulholland's visit,<lb/>
the ECU Committee<lb/>
on .Central America<lb/>
will conduct two<lb/>
public witnesses on<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
The committee,<lb/>
which attempts to do<lb/>
educational outreach<lb/>
about Central<lb/>
America in the univer-<lb/>
sity community, will<lb/>
hold a one-hour<lb/>
demonstration in<lb/>
front of the Student<lb/>
Supply Store at noon.<lb/>
Members of the com-<lb/>
mittee and supporters<lb/>
will be inviting<lb/>
students who oppose<lb/>
U.S. military aid to<lb/>
Cenral America, and<lb/>
those who would like<lb/>
to see peace in the<lb/>
region, to join them<lb/>
for the gathering.<lb/>
Educational leaflets<lb/>
will be distributed to<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The committee is<lb/>
sponsoring candle-<lb/>
light memorial vigil<lb/>
for Romero at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in the Pitt County<lb/>
Courthouse. Last<lb/>
year's vigil drew more<lb/>
than 50 participants<lb/>
including ECU staff,<lb/>
faculty, students and<lb/>
campus ministers.<lb/>
Mulholland's lec-<lb/>
ture will begin at 7:30<lb/>
following the vigil. It<lb/>
will be held at the<lb/>
Baptist Student!<lb/>
Center on 10th Street.<lb/>
ECU Students Can<lb/>
Spend Summer In<lb/>
Underwater School<lb/>
By STl ART<lb/>
MORGAN<lb/>
Ult Wnlff<lb/>
If you've ever been<lb/>
:unous about ship-<lb/>
wrecks or interested in<lb/>
working underwater,<lb/>
you could earn six<lb/>
semester hours' credit<lb/>
by participating in a<lb/>
unique program this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
A field school in<lb/>
Maritime History and<lb/>
Underwater Ar-<lb/>
chaeology will be held<lb/>
in Swansboro, June<lb/>
13 through July 22.<lb/>
The program will be<lb/>
co-sponsored by ECU<lb/>
and Swansboro's<lb/>
200th Anniversary<lb/>
Celebration Commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
Students of all ma-<lb/>
jors are encouraged to<lb/>
attend, and all par-<lb/>
ticipants will be pro-<lb/>
vided with a basic in-<lb/>
troduction to<lb/>
American maritime<lb/>
history, underwater<lb/>
archaeology and<lb/>
related subject<lb/>
material.<lb/>
Two weeks of<lb/>
classroom instruction<lb/>
on campus will pro-<lb/>
vide background in-<lb/>
formation on<lb/>
America's trade pat-<lb/>
terns, transportation,<lb/>
shipbuilding and<lb/>
agriculture.<lb/>
In addition, in-<lb/>
struction at the actual<lb/>
project site in<lb/>
Swansboro will center<lb/>
around underwater<lb/>
archaeological<lb/>
research methods and<lb/>
techniques.<lb/>
Students interested<lb/>
in diving activities<lb/>
must be certified in<lb/>
scuba by a nationally<lb/>
recognized instruc-<lb/>
tional organization.<lb/>
Nevertheless, a<lb/>
limited number of<lb/>
students interested<lb/>
only in maritime<lb/>
history research and<lb/>
non-diving activities<lb/>
supporting the project<lb/>
at the site's location<lb/>
will also be permitted<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Why Swansboro?<lb/>
Located on White<lb/>
Oak River just inside<lb/>
Bogue Inlet, the port<lb/>
of Swansboro "was a<lb/>
small and important<lb/>
port in the late eigh-<lb/>
teenth and early nine-<lb/>
teenth century ac-<lb/>
cording to Dr.I<lb/>
William N. Still, pro-l<lb/>
fessor in maritime!<lb/>
history at ECU.<lb/>
The naval storiesl<lb/>
industry (consisting!<lb/>
primarily of trade inl<lb/>
tar, pitch and turpen-l<lb/>
tine) and local ship-j<lb/>
building were con-<lb/>
tributing factors.<lb/>
Following the war,<lb/>
however, extensive<lb/>
shipping of former<lb/>
years narrowed down<lb/>
to trade with the West<lb/>
Indies and the late<lb/>
19th-century lumber!<lb/>
boom.<lb/>
Swansboro even-<lb/>
tually lost its status as I<lb/>
a port. The Civil War<lb/>
was its final blow.<lb/>
"We want to find!<lb/>
out what the early<lb/>
waterfront at the port i<lb/>
of Swansboro looked<lb/>
like, for example, the<lb/>
wharves, shipyards,<lb/>
etc Dr. Still ex-<lb/>
plained. "The field I<lb/>
school will be a com-<lb/>
bination of an<lb/>
academic exercise and'<lb/>
a project<lb/>
Dr. Still said that<lb/>
by using remote sens-<lb/>
ing equipment and by<lb/>
scuba diving,<lb/>
paticipants in the pro-<lb/>
gram will survey<lb/>
Swansboro's harbor<lb/>
and surounding<lb/>
waterways for re-<lb/>
mains of ships and<lb/>
other objects ofl<lb/>
historic cultural<lb/>
value.<lb/>
"It will be a great<lb/>
learning experience on<lb/>
how you do an under-<lb/>
water project he ad-<lb/>
ded.<lb/>
For North Carolina<lb/>
residents, cost of the<lb/>
six-week course will<lb/>
be about $450 for five<lb/>
semester hours' credit<lb/>
and $496 for six<lb/>
hours' credit. For<lb/>
non-residents, cost<lb/>
will be about $570 for<lb/>
five hours' credit and<lb/>
$740 for six hours'<lb/>
credit.<lb/>
For further details,<lb/>
contact the Program<lb/>
in Maritime History<lb/>
and Underwater<lb/>
Research, Depart-<lb/>
ment of History, East<lb/>
Carolina University,<lb/>
Greenville, North!<lb/>
Carolina, 27834. Or!<lb/>
call 757-6085 and ask<lb/>
to speak to Dr. Still.<lb/>
Win up to<lb/>
With a Food Lion<lb/>
Bumper Sticker<lb/>
M00000<lb/>
in FREE groceries!<lb/>
Hundreds of winners<lb/>
Details at Food Lion<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, March 26, 1983<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Round - Whole<lb/>
10-12 Lb. Avg.<lb/>
Sliced Free<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USM Ckaica Bitf Ckatk B.m !?<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
USDA Ckeiet Btif R8a.4 SirUin<lb/>
Ti Roastlk 22a<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USDA Out. Beef Cfc.ek Beaeieti<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
S Lb. Deck Or Mm - Frith Daily<lb/>
Ground Beef Lk 12S<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Seediest VMe<lb/>
Thompson<lb/>
Crapes<lb/>
USDA Ckaica Beef Reaaa - Sirleia<lb/>
Tip Steak i. 258<lb/>
Pk?. of 12 12 Oi. Cms<lb/>
Old<lb/>
Milwaukee<lb/>
2 Liter<lb/>
Coca<lb/>
m ?<lb/>
v:i<lb/>
L.<lb/>
1.S liter ? Ckiaatl. B?raaa4y. Rklae. ekaklte I 5 Lit" - BaraaeeY Ckaklte Rete Rkiae<lb/>
Flak etuklit fta Rete j e"ai? Bltat Frtatk el??here ZUfeeeel<lb/>
Carlo iTaylor Calif J<lb/>
Alt: it<lb/>
? ID<lb/>
11 Ounce<lb/>
7.2S Oz. -fMifwN<lb/>
Macaroni<lb/>
&amp; Cheese<lb/>
10 Or - Frezee<lb/>
i !?<lb/>
119 Sheets 2 Ply<lb/>
ti<lb/>
Wky Pay 2 61<lb/>
Why Pay -1 19<lb/>
Wky Pey 59 Eiek<lb/>
i iv ineets I fly <lb/>
So-Dri SODRI<lb/>
Towels DRI<lb/>
Why Pay 59 SiJ jv<lb/>
V<lb/>
4 Roll Pack -1 Ply<lb/>
Page Toilet Tissue<lb/>
IS 0z. - Slew<lb/>
Ken-l Ration<lb/>
? f<lb/>
Half Oellee SO Off<lb/>
Liquid Wisk<lb/>
99.<lb/>
2 Cm - Thank You<lb/>
Cherry Pie Filling Instant Potatoes<lb/>
D Oz. - leektia<lb/>
489<lb/>
4.5 Oi. - U??r Kieeey Hearty Ste? - Cat Fete'<lb/>
Purina 100<lb/>
10 Or - Ure<lb/>
Jeno's Pizza<lb/>
49 Oz. - W Sefteeer<lb/>
Fab Detergent<lb/>
???<lb/>
? T?<lb/>
DID<lb/>
lunce<lb/>
Del Monte<lb/>
Why Pay 1 19<lb/>
f32.<lb/>
6 S 0: Liqht Chunk T jni In Oil A<lb/>
? Chicken Of I<lb/>
gt The Sea<lb/>
L<lb/>
?1A ?<lb/>
Why Pa, 09<lb/>
 Duke's<lb/>
f Mayonnaise<lb/>
nvrtmut<lb/>
CATSUP<lb/>
inmf<lb/>
Why Pa, i js<lb/>
? ? HpMM<lb/>
 taMtaMM t m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
MARCH 22. 1983 Page 8<lb/>
What Price<lb/>
The Blues?<lb/>
Billy Price<lb/>
Dazz Band Joins King For April Slated Concert In Minges<lb/>
Special guest The Dazz Band will open for Evelyn<lb/>
"Champagne" King on Saturday April 23, at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum when the ECU Student Union Major Attrac-<lb/>
tions Committee presents its onl concert for spring semester.<lb/>
Tickets are priced at $7.50 for EC I students and $9.50 for the<lb/>
public. All tickets sold at the door will be $9.50. Tickets go on<lb/>
sale March 30 at the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
Nelliga<lb/>
By ROGER EBERT<lb/>
CMeafo Saa-Ttawt<lb/>
NEW YORK ? Kate Nelligan<lb/>
is in the midst of one of this<lb/>
season's great personal triumphs<lb/>
on the Broadway stage, and she<lb/>
plans to walk away from it. She'd<lb/>
rather make movies.<lb/>
She sits backstage in her dress-<lb/>
ing room at the Plymouth<lb/>
Theatre on 45th Street and talks<lb/>
about how comfortable stage ac-<lb/>
ting is, how reassuring, and<lb/>
about how mean the people who<lb/>
make movies can be. And then<lb/>
she says that after 10 years on the<lb/>
stage, her whole interest has<lb/>
shifted to film.<lb/>
She has a way of talking blunt-<lb/>
ly. She is, in fact, a wonderful<lb/>
talker: She can be poetic and fan-<lb/>
ciful one moment and then shift<lb/>
cheerfully to four-letter words.<lb/>
Her voice in either case is clear,<lb/>
precise, musical and compelling.<lb/>
There are those who wonder if<lb/>
she might not be the next great<lb/>
actress in movies, the next atter<lb/>
Mervl Streep, with great technical<lb/>
skill at the ser ice of both passion<lb/>
and intelligence.<lb/>
She is well-known in Fngland,<lb/>
where she starred on the stage for<lb/>
seven years, a Canadian playing<lb/>
British roles. She is becoming<lb/>
better known to moie audiences,<lb/>
after Eye of the eedle. Dracula<lb/>
and the current Without a Trace.<lb/>
Still, at 29, she probably has most<lb/>
of her best work ahead of her.<lb/>
She opened Jan. 6 on Broad-<lb/>
way in Plenty, a Joseph Papp<lb/>
production of a play by David<lb/>
Hare. It follows a British woman<lb/>
from her youth as a resistance<lb/>
fighter in Nazi-occupied France<lb/>
to her middle age as the bitter and<lb/>
possibly mad wife of a career<lb/>
diplomat. A virtuoso perfor-<lb/>
mance in a brilliant and cruel<lb/>
plav, it is possibly the best thing<lb/>
on Broadway right now, and<lb/>
Plenty is one of the hottest<lb/>
tickets. But Miss Nelligan and<lb/>
Hare plan to close the play after a<lb/>
few more months and move on to<lb/>
other things, including a movie<lb/>
version of Plenty.<lb/>
What they contemplate is<lb/>
heresy. A hit on Broadway is so<lb/>
rare that the conventional idea is<lb/>
to hope it runs forever. But when<lb/>
Miss Nelligan does decide to<lb/>
leave the play. Hare is determin-<lb/>
ed to see it close rather than<lb/>
restaged with another actress.<lb/>
Miss Nelligan, backstage,<lb/>
laughs at that: "They'd recast<lb/>
Lassie in my part here, if it would<lb/>
keep the play going long enough<lb/>
to win the Tony ? which it<lb/>
would definitely do ? and then<lb/>
run forever. But I think David<lb/>
has proven his point, since the<lb/>
plav is a hit. That's enough. He<lb/>
doesn't believe in hanging onto<lb/>
things forever<lb/>
Kate Nelligan is so good in the<lb/>
play that you can follow Hare's<lb/>
reasoning: Why keep the play<lb/>
alive at less than its original im-<lb/>
pact? Plenty is one of the few<lb/>
serious dramas of recent years<lb/>
that centers on a woman, a strong<lb/>
woman, and tracks her through<lb/>
the lives of several men. She is<lb/>
onstage almost every moment.<lb/>
See NELLIGAN'S, Page 10<lb/>
By GORDON 1POCK<lb/>
The Belushi-Akroyd parody of<lb/>
rhythm and blues in the movie<lb/>
The Blues Brothers is the closest<lb/>
most college students have ever<lb/>
come to witnessing early 60s R&amp;B<lb/>
? unless they also saw Otis Day<lb/>
and the Knights in Animal<lb/>
House. Even though Belushi<lb/>
wasn't much of a singer, the<lb/>
character he portrayed, Joliet<lb/>
Jake Blues, had his heart in the<lb/>
right place, and putting the band<lb/>
back together was for him a holy<lb/>
mission. It didn't matter that<lb/>
R&amp;B was a thing of the past, and<lb/>
the band was doomed to failure.<lb/>
Like Jake Blues, Billy Price<lb/>
became infected with R&amp;B at an<lb/>
early age. As a kid growing up in<lb/>
northern New Jersey, Billy listen-<lb/>
ed to the New York R&amp;B station-<lb/>
on his tiny transistor radio. He<lb/>
idolized soul singers like Sam<lb/>
Cooke, Jackie Wilson, Bobby<lb/>
Bland and Otis Clay, even though<lb/>
the Beatles and Stones were fast<lb/>
taking over America.<lb/>
"It's an obession. It's been<lb/>
that way for me since 1 was a little<lb/>
kid says Price. "When I heard<lb/>
Otis Redding sing, 'I've Been<lb/>
Loving You Too Long nothing<lb/>
else seemed to mattter<lb/>
In college at Penn State during<lb/>
the late 60s, Price was fronting<lb/>
horn bands for fraternity gigs<lb/>
while everyone else was getting<lb/>
their first taste of hard rock. And<lb/>
as disco swept the nation in the<lb/>
mid-70s. Price was touring as<lb/>
lead singer for the Roy Buchanan<lb/>
Blues Band, perfecting a vocal<lb/>
style after the great soul singers<lb/>
from the decade before.<lb/>
Price left Buchanan, and in<lb/>
1978 fulfilled his dream. He<lb/>
formed the Keystone Rhythm<lb/>
Band, modeling it after the rock-<lb/>
solid touring bands of 60s soul<lb/>
singers like James Brown, and<lb/>
Sam and Dave. Though the<lb/>
guitar, base, drums and<lb/>
keyboards are tight, it's the pum-<lb/>
ping horn section that makes the<lb/>
Keystones a soul band in the true<lb/>
sense.<lb/>
The comparison between Jake<lb/>
Blues and Billy Price is useful for<lb/>
those who are otherwise un-<lb/>
familiar with R&amp;B and soul<lb/>
music, useful for those who<lb/>
otherwise can't imagine a white<lb/>
singer dedicated, perhaps blindly,<lb/>
to a black style of music from 20<lb/>
Photo ?? CMBISSEWARO<lb/>
Bill Price<lb/>
years ago. No doubt, there is a<lb/>
kindred spirit between Jake and<lb/>
Billv Price.<lb/>
But there is a difference ? that<lb/>
between fiction and reality, bet-<lb/>
ween a character and a real man.<lb/>
Another big difference is vocal<lb/>
slyie ? Billy Price has it. He's<lb/>
not just imitating the great blues<lb/>
vocalists; he's the real thing.<lb/>
Critics have called Billy one of<lb/>
the best white R&amp;B singers work-<lb/>
ing today.<lb/>
Operating out of Pittsburgh,<lb/>
BP and the KRB have become<lb/>
one of the most sought after club<lb/>
bands touring the East Coast.<lb/>
They are particularly popular in<lb/>
DC where they recently broke<lb/>
attendance records at the Wax<lb/>
Museum. D.Cs largest rock<lb/>
night club. It is their<lb/>
unadulterated brand of R&amp;B that<lb/>
makes them distinctive on the<lb/>
club circuit. Bands like BUI Blue<lb/>
and the Nighthawks mix R&amp;B<lb/>
with rock to produce a sound<lb/>
more easily digested by their<lb/>
young, white audiences. But in a<lb/>
club environment, especially in<lb/>
larger cities that have a<lb/>
knowledgeable blues audience.<lb/>
Price's uniquelv faithful style is a<lb/>
strong draw.<lb/>
Billy stands on stage, an<lb/>
enigmatic figure in dark<lb/>
sunglasses, and the charisma<lb/>
flows. With the band pumping<lb/>
out a tight rhythm behind him,<lb/>
he's set to sing about his woman,<lb/>
how she done him wrong, down<lb/>
on bent knee begging his baby to<lb/>
come back. Or he's strutting the<lb/>
stage, rapping to some other<lb/>
See PRICE. Page 10<lb/>
Enduring Lecture<lb/>
'Poland' An Insightful Trip<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
"For over a thousand years, the history oj<lb/>
Poland has been marked by a consuming struggle to<lb/>
establish a viable and secure Polish nation in the<lb/>
plains of eastern Europe. Over the centuries, this ej-<lb/>
fort has suffered a series of near-fatal setbacks<lb/>
which have severely drained the energies and<lb/>
resources of the Polish people. Even today, with its<lb/>
internationally recognized borders and increasingly<lb/>
industrialized and modernizing society, the future<lb/>
of Poland is far from settled. Internally, a number<lb/>
of devisive pressures threaten the stability of the<lb/>
state. Externally, Poland remains within the effec-<lb/>
tive grasp of the massive and powerful Soviet Union<lb/>
to its last Itnm<lb/>
Dateline Data on World Affairs, 1979.<lb/>
Although written in 1979, prior to the more re-<lb/>
cent and more open "people's struggle" in this of<lb/>
35 million people, the above words do a more than<lb/>
fair job of summerizing the plight of the Poles. The<lb/>
Dateline report goes on to say that "perhaps the<lb/>
most obvious threat to Poland's existence has come<lb/>
from her powerful, expansionistic neighbors<lb/>
In recent years, Americans have come to identity<lb/>
with the Polish people as they struggle for freedom<lb/>
decent food and housing, effective labor unions and<lb/>
independence from soviet domination. Words like<lb/>
Solidarity and Gdansk are familiar to most of us<lb/>
Solidarity's gentle yet firm leader Leek Walesa has<lb/>
become something of an American hero. His brave<lb/>
acts of resistance, to attempts by the government to<lb/>
control his independent union, have been an in-<lb/>
TuXpeople who attended the Depart-<lb/>
meofTUitynions' Travel-Adventure Film<lb/>
titled Poland: The Enduring Dreamy treated o<lb/>
a different view of this nation which is rich m<lb/>
customs and traditions.<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
Sherilyn Mentes invites the audience into "her<lb/>
own" Polish world. She narrates flowlessly and in-<lb/>
sightfully through two rolls of film that she and her<lb/>
husband Matthew personally shot. Their travels<lb/>
take viewers from the Baltic Sea to the Tatra Moun-<lb/>
tains with many stops in between. The audience is<lb/>
able to meet many people, to catch glimpses of their<lb/>
beautiful art, simple living and colorful dances and<lb/>
customs. Mentes carefully blends an occassional<lb/>
touch of humor to her narrative.<lb/>
The audience becomes aware of the deeply rooted<lb/>
role that the Catholic Church plays in the lives of<lb/>
the Polish people. Several minutes of the Mentes'<lb/>
film is devoted to an exploration of that role played<lb/>
by the Church. Sherilyn zooms in on a Catholic<lb/>
priest who is delivering a sermon and remarks that<lb/>
the Polish people will often turn to the priest for<lb/>
guidence on how they should respond to the latest<lb/>
govenment edict.<lb/>
"When he (the priest) talks about the devil,<lb/>
everyone knows which one he means Sherilyn<lb/>
adds.<lb/>
Their film also presents exciting coverage of the<lb/>
1979 trip to Poland by Pope John Paul II as he<lb/>
returns to his homeland for the first time since tak-<lb/>
ing over the reigns of the entire Catholic Church.<lb/>
Private cars are rare in Poland, notes Sherilyn,<lb/>
because the price of gas is $3 a gallon, when<lb/>
available. Her trip also brings us to a factory where<lb/>
workers perform the delicate art of glass blowing<lb/>
and crystal cutting. The film cuts to another more<lb/>
unusual art form as the viewer watches an old man<lb/>
make a set of bag pipes out of a goat skin. The<lb/>
sound, which is produced by the player flapping his<lb/>
See POLAND, Page 9<lb/>
Pianist Serkin Performing At Hendrix On Thursday<lb/>
 i.imtd virtuoso piaaist Peter Serkin will perform a program of Bee thorn this Thursday<lb/>
?h TJ Itl ?. taMendetantf Stndent Centers Hendrix Theatre. Serkin has established<lb/>
TliZl m "oianist whose ninsical sympathies are broader than those of virtually any young<lb/>
mTskla-Ttareeentmemory Tickets can be purchmd at the Central Ticket Office, MSC.<lb/>
St or as ka I<lb/>
Fredtru Storaska<lb/>
Organization for i<lb/>
will speak in Hei<lb/>
Center n I hun?da Mai<lb/>
is under the spoe<lb/>
I niveritv I mn i<lb/>
Twelfth<lb/>
BRl iN IB. Kl<lb/>
Spi -<lb/>
began lasl S<lb/>
but 'he c<lb/>
pa'<lb/>
Twelfth Sigl<lb/>
Fr;j<lb/>
Sha<lb/>
edv ol<lb/>
playing in i<lb/>
fictional land<lb/>
merrv -m?ik i -<lb/>
drawn out<lb/>
point of weai<lb/>
Poland<lb/>
Continued In<lb/>
arm up and dow:<lb/>
to the s<lb/>
blown pipe-<lb/>
Despite th<lb/>
economv. the ?<lb/>
rer.er<lb/>
When f rts vt<lb/>
force the fa<lb/>
refu-cc ?<lb/>
farmer-<lb/>
ming si<lb/>
other 5 n p<lb/>
revoiu:<lb/>
Set lo I't'i n<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
MARCH 22. 1983<lb/>
Page I<lb/>
What Price<lb/>
The Blues?<lb/>
Billy Price<lb/>
Dazz Band Joins King For April Slated Concert In Minges<lb/>
Special guest The Da Band will open for Evelyn I ickets are priced at $7.50 for El I students and $9.50 for Ihe<lb/>
"Champagne King on Saturday April 23. at 8 p.m. in public. All tickets sold at the door will be $9.50. Tickets go on<lb/>
Minges Coliseum when the ECU Student I nion Major Attrac- sale March 30 at the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhal! Stu-<lb/>
tions Committee presents its onl concert for spring semester, dent (enter. t<lb/>
Nelligan Eyes A Film Career<lb/>
By ROGER EBERT<lb/>
CMcafo Saa-TUMt<lb/>
NEW YORK ? Kate Nelligan<lb/>
is in the midst of one of this<lb/>
season's great personal triumphs<lb/>
on the Broadway stage, and she<lb/>
plans to walk away from it. She'd<lb/>
rather make movies.<lb/>
She sits backstage in her dress-<lb/>
ing room at the Plymouth<lb/>
Theatre on 45th Street and talks<lb/>
about how comfortable stage ac-<lb/>
ting is, how reassuring, and<lb/>
about how mean the people who<lb/>
make movies can be. And then<lb/>
she says that after 10 years on the<lb/>
stage, her whole interest has<lb/>
shifted to film.<lb/>
She has a way of talking blunt-<lb/>
ly. She is, in fact, a wonderful<lb/>
talker: She can be poetic and fan-<lb/>
ciful one moment and then shift<lb/>
cheerfully to four-letter words.<lb/>
Her voice in either case is clear,<lb/>
precise, musical and compelling.<lb/>
There are those who wonder if<lb/>
she might not be the next great<lb/>
actress in movies, the next alter<lb/>
Meryl Streep. with great technical<lb/>
skill at the ser ice of both passion<lb/>
and intelligence.<lb/>
She is well-known in England,<lb/>
where she starred on the stage for<lb/>
seven years, a Canadian playing<lb/>
British roles. She i- becoming<lb/>
better known to movie audiences.<lb/>
after Eye of the eedle, Dracula<lb/>
and the current ithout a 1 race.<lb/>
Still, at 29, she probably has most<lb/>
of her best work ahead of her.<lb/>
She opened Jan. 6 on Broad-<lb/>
way in Plenty, a Joseph Papp<lb/>
production of a pla by David<lb/>
Hare. It follows a British woman<lb/>
from her youth as a resistance<lb/>
fighter in Nazi-occupied France<lb/>
to her middle age as the bitter and<lb/>
possibly mad wife of a career<lb/>
diplomat. A virtuoso perfor-<lb/>
mance in a brilliant and cruel<lb/>
play, it is possibly the best thing<lb/>
on Broadway right now, and<lb/>
Plenty is one of the hottest<lb/>
tickets. But Miss Nelligan and<lb/>
Hare plan to close the play after a<lb/>
few more months and move on to<lb/>
other things, including a movie<lb/>
version of Plenty.<lb/>
What they contemplate is<lb/>
heresy. A hit on Broadway is so<lb/>
rare that the conventional idea is<lb/>
to hope it runs forever. But when<lb/>
Miss Nelligan does decide to<lb/>
leave the play. Hare is determin-<lb/>
ed to see it close rather than<lb/>
restaged with another actress.<lb/>
Miss Nelligan, backstage,<lb/>
laughs at that: "They'd recast<lb/>
Lassie in my part here, if it would<lb/>
keep the play going long enough<lb/>
to win the Tony ? which it<lb/>
would definitely do ? and then<lb/>
run forever. But I think David<lb/>
has proven his point, since the<lb/>
play is a hit. That's enough. He<lb/>
doesn't believe in hanging onto<lb/>
things forever<lb/>
Kate Nelligan is so good in the<lb/>
play that you can follow Hare's<lb/>
reasoning: Why keep the play<lb/>
alive at less than its original im-<lb/>
pact? Plenty is one of the few<lb/>
serious dramas of recent years<lb/>
that centers on a woman, a strong<lb/>
woman, and tracks her through<lb/>
the lives of several men. She is<lb/>
onstage almost every moment.<lb/>
See NELLIGAVS, Page 10<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
Suff ?nlrt<lb/>
The Belushi-Akroyd parody of<lb/>
rhythm and blues in the movie<lb/>
The Blues Brothers is the closest<lb/>
most college students have ever<lb/>
come to witnessing early 60s R&amp;B<lb/>
? unless they also saw Otis Day<lb/>
and the Knights in Animal<lb/>
House. Even though Belushi<lb/>
wasn't much of a singer, the<lb/>
character he portrayed, Joliet<lb/>
Jake Blues, had his heart in the<lb/>
right place, and putting the band<lb/>
back together was for him a holy<lb/>
mission. It didn't matter that<lb/>
R&amp;B was a thing of the past, and<lb/>
the band was doomed to failure<lb/>
Like Jake Blues, Billy Price<lb/>
became infected with R&amp;B at an<lb/>
early age. As a kid growing up in<lb/>
northern New Jersey, Billy listen-<lb/>
ed to the New York R&amp;B stations<lb/>
on his tiny transistor radio He<lb/>
idolized soul singers like Sam<lb/>
Cooke. Jackie Wilson, Bobbv<lb/>
Bland and Otis Clay, even though<lb/>
the Beatles and Stones were fast<lb/>
taking over America.<lb/>
"It's an obession. It's been<lb/>
that way for me since 1 was a little<lb/>
kid says Price. "When 1 heard<lb/>
Otis Redding sing, 'I've Been<lb/>
Loving You Too Long nothing<lb/>
else seemed to mattter<lb/>
In college at Penn State during<lb/>
the late 60s, Price was fronting<lb/>
horn bands for fraternitv gig<lb/>
while everyone else was getting<lb/>
their first taste of hard rock And<lb/>
as disco swept the nation in the<lb/>
mid-70s. Price was touring as<lb/>
lead singer for the Roy Buchanan<lb/>
Blues Band, perfecting a vocal<lb/>
style after the great soul singers<lb/>
from the decade before.<lb/>
Price left Buchanan, and in<lb/>
1978 fulfilled his dream. He<lb/>
formed the Keystone Rhythm<lb/>
Band, modeling it after the rock-<lb/>
solid touring bands of 60s soul<lb/>
singers like James Brown, and<lb/>
Sam and Dave. Though the<lb/>
guitar, base, drums and<lb/>
keyboards are tight, it's the pum-<lb/>
ping horn section that makes the<lb/>
Keystones a soul band in the true<lb/>
sense.<lb/>
The comparison between Jake<lb/>
Blues and Billy Price is useful for<lb/>
those who are otherwise un-<lb/>
familiar with R&amp;B and soul<lb/>
music, useful for those who<lb/>
otherwise can't imagine a white<lb/>
singer dedicated, perhaps blindly,<lb/>
to a black stvle of music from 20<lb/>
PnotoB. CMRiS SEAHC<lb/>
Billv Price<lb/>
vears ago No doubt, there is<lb/>
kindred spirit between Jake and<lb/>
Bills Price<lb/>
But there is a difference ? that<lb/>
between fiction and realitv. bet-<lb/>
ween a character and a real man.<lb/>
Another big difference is vocal<lb/>
stvle ? Billy Price has it. He's<lb/>
not just imitating the great blues<lb/>
vocalists; he's the real thing<lb/>
Critics have called Biliv one of<lb/>
the best white R&amp;B singers work-<lb/>
ing todav<lb/>
Operating out of Pittsburgh,<lb/>
BP and the kRB have become<lb/>
one of the most sought after club<lb/>
bands touring the East Coast<lb/>
Thev are particularly popular in<lb/>
DC. where the recently broke<lb/>
attendance records at the Wax<lb/>
Museum, D.C 's larges: rock<lb/>
night club. It is their<lb/>
unadulterated brand of R&amp;B that<lb/>
makes them distinctive on the<lb/>
club circuit. Bands like Bill Blue<lb/>
and the Nighthawks mix R&amp;B<lb/>
with rock to produce a sound<lb/>
more easily digested by their<lb/>
young, white audiences. But in a<lb/>
club environment, especially in<lb/>
larger cities that have a<lb/>
knowledgeable blues audience.<lb/>
Price's uniquely faithful style is a<lb/>
strong draw.<lb/>
Billy stands on stage, an<lb/>
enigmatic figure in dark<lb/>
sungiasse. and the charisma<lb/>
Hows. With the band pumping<lb/>
out a tight rhythm behind him.<lb/>
he's set to sing about his woman.<lb/>
how she done him wrong, down<lb/>
on bent knee begging his babv to<lb/>
come back. Or he's strutting the<lb/>
stage, rapping to some other<lb/>
See PRICK. Page 10<lb/>
Enduring Lecture<lb/>
'Poland' An Insightful Trip<lb/>
<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
SUff Whirr<lb/>
"For over a thousand years, the history of<lb/>
Poland has been marked by a consuming struggle to<lb/>
establish a viable and secure Polish nation in the<lb/>
plains of eastern Europe. Over the centuries, this ef-<lb/>
fort has suffered a series of near-fatal setbacks<lb/>
which have severely drained the energies and<lb/>
resources of the Polish people. Even today, with its<lb/>
internationally recognized borders and increasingly<lb/>
industrialized and modernizing society, the future<lb/>
of Poland is far from settled. Internally, a nu fiber<lb/>
of devisive pressures threaten the stability of the<lb/>
state. Externally, Poland remains within the effec-<lb/>
tive grasp of the massive and powerful Soviet Union<lb/>
to its last<lb/>
Dateline Data on World Affairs, 1979.<lb/>
Although written in 1979, prior to the more re-<lb/>
cent and more open "people's struggle" in this of<lb/>
35 million people, the above words do a more than<lb/>
fair job of summcrizing the plight of the Poles. The<lb/>
Dateline report goes on to say that "perhaps the<lb/>
most obvious threat to Poland's existence has come<lb/>
from her powerful, expansionists neighbors<lb/>
In recent years, Americans have come to identify<lb/>
with the Polish people as they struggle for freedom,<lb/>
decent food and housing, effective labor unions and<lb/>
independence from soviet domination. Words like<lb/>
Solidarity and Gdansk are familiar to most of us.<lb/>
Solidarity's gentle yet firm leader Leek Walesa has<lb/>
become something of an American hero. His brave<lb/>
acts of resistance, to attempts by 'he government to<lb/>
control his independent union, nave been an in<lb/>
spiration to us all-<lb/>
Last Tuesday, people who attended the Depart-<lb/>
ment of University Unions' Travel-Adventure Film<lb/>
titled Poland: The Enduring Dream were treated to<lb/>
a different view of this nation which is rich in<lb/>
customs and traditions.<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
Sherilyn Mentes invites the audience into "her<lb/>
own" Polish world. She narrates flowlessly and in-<lb/>
sightfully through two rolls of film that she and her<lb/>
husband Matthew personally shot. Their travels<lb/>
take viewers from the Baltic Sea to the Tatra Moun-<lb/>
tains with many stops in between. The audience is<lb/>
able to meet many people, to catch glimpses of their<lb/>
beautiful art, simple living and colorful dances and<lb/>
customs. Mentes carefully blends an occassional<lb/>
touch of humor to her narrative.<lb/>
The audience becomes aware of the deeply rooted<lb/>
role that the Catholic Church plays in the lives of<lb/>
the Polish people. Several minutes of the Mentes'<lb/>
film is devoted to an exploration of that role played<lb/>
by the Church. Sherilyn zooms in on a Catholic<lb/>
priest who is delivering a sermon and remarks that<lb/>
the Polish people will often turn to the -priest for<lb/>
guidence on how they should respond to the latest<lb/>
govenment edict.<lb/>
"When he (the priest) talks about the devil,<lb/>
everyone knows which one he means Sherilyn<lb/>
adds.<lb/>
Their film also presents exciting coverage of the<lb/>
1979 trip to Poland by Pope John Paul II as he<lb/>
returns to his homeland for the first time since tak-<lb/>
ing over the reigns of the entire Catholic Church.<lb/>
Private cars are rare in Poland, notes Sherilyn,<lb/>
because the price of gas is $3 a gallon, when<lb/>
available. Her trip also brings us to a factory where<lb/>
workers perform the delicate art of glass blowing<lb/>
and crystal cutting. The film cuts to another more<lb/>
unusual art form as the viewer watches an old man<lb/>
make a set of bag pipes out of a goat skin. The<lb/>
sound, which is produced by the player flapping his<lb/>
See POLAND, Page 9<lb/>
;<lb/>
Pianist Serkin Performing At Hendrix On Thursday<lb/>
Acclaimed virtuoso pianist Peter Serkin will perform a program of Beethoven this Thursday,<lb/>
March 24, at 8 p.m. la Mendenhal! Student Center's Hendrix Theatre. Serkin has established<lb/>
himself as ? pianist whose musical sympathies are broader than those of virtually any young<lb/>
musician la recent memory Tickets can be purchased at the Central Ticket Office, MSC.<lb/>
StOruskQ I I<lb/>
Iredtru SI<lb/>
Otganizal n for I<lb/>
will vptaK<lb/>
(enter on I ru,<lb/>
is undt-r tin s<lb/>
I niversii I nmn- I<lb/>
Twelfth<lb/>
Bv RHlHlk<lb/>
Twelfth<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
merry -mat<lb/>
Jrau. n<lb/>
point of<lb/>
Poland I<lb/>
( onlinued fr<lb/>
arm up and i<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
blowi<lb/>
Desp e sen<lb/>
??<lb/>
When ef 1<lb/>
- <lb/>
i<lb/>
farn<lb/>
mine st<lb/>
other <lb/>
rev<lb/>
She-<lb/>
stl fO POI N<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0010"/><lb/>
ICH 22, IW Pa?? s<lb/>
rice<lb/>
es?<lb/>
ice<lb/>
Photo B. CHRISSEA?D<lb/>
Hill Prut-<lb/>
 n.ere is a<lb/>
alee and<lb/>
? ference ? that<lb/>
? ai d ' ealitj. bet-<lb/>
and a real man.<lb/>
. ce is ocal<lb/>
He's<lb/>
i i the great blues<lb/>
the real thing.<lb/>
ed Billy one of<lb/>
RiB Mnger work-<lb/>
? P ttsburgh,<lb/>
i KRB have become<lb/>
ight after club<lb/>
the Fast Coast.<lb/>
irl popular in<lb/>
recently broke<lb/>
records at the Wax<lb/>
DCs largest rock<lb/>
1 is their<lb/>
rand of R&amp;B that<lb/>
m distinctive on the<lb/>
club circuit. Bands like Bill Blue<lb/>
and the Nighthawks mix R&amp;.B<lb/>
kUh rock to produce a sound<lb/>
more easily digested by their<lb/>
oung. white audiences. But in a<lb/>
t ronment, especially in<lb/>
tha: have a<lb/>
sable blues audience,<lb/>
a faithful style is a<lb/>
on stage, an<lb/>
I ; figure in dark<lb/>
the charisma<lb/>
Y ? the band pumping<lb/>
rhythm behind him,<lb/>
"at his woman,<lb/>
one him wrong, doun<lb/>
. nee begging his baby to<lb/>
back. Or he"s strutting the<lb/>
g to some other<lb/>
see PRICE, Page 10<lb/>
i&amp;maa&amp;P'<lb/>
Si <lb/>
1<lb/>
k<lb/>
?ndrix On Thursday<lb/>
logram of Beethoven this Thursday,<lb/>
drix Theatre. Serkin has established<lb/>
er than those of virtually any young<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office, MSC.<lb/>
THE IASTC AROl INIAN<lb/>
Mk( it isis'<lb/>
Storaska Lecture On Rape Prevention Comes To Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Frederic Sloraska, Executive Director of The National<lb/>
Organization for The Prevention of Rape and Assault,<lb/>
will speak in Hencirix Theatre. Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center on Thursday. March 29, at 8 p.m. His appearance<lb/>
is under the sponsorship of the ECU Department of<lb/>
University I'nions Lecture Series Committee and the Stu-<lb/>
dent Residence Association. The subject of Storaska's<lb/>
lecture will be "How To Say No To A Rapist ? And Sur-<lb/>
vive Admission is hy ID and activity card for students<lb/>
and MSC membership for faculty and staff. Public<lb/>
tickets are $1 and are on sale at the Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
MSC.<lb/>
Twelfth Night A Real Blow Out<lb/>
By CARLVN FBFRT<lb/>
Malt Unlrr<lb/>
Spring officially<lb/>
began last Sunday,<lb/>
but the Acting Com-<lb/>
pany celebrates<lb/>
Twelfth Night this<lb/>
Friday evening.<lb/>
Shakespea s com-<lb/>
edy of mistaken iden-<lb/>
tity and sexual role-<lb/>
playing in a lyrical,<lb/>
fictional land, where<lb/>
merry-making gets<lb/>
drawn out to the<lb/>
point of weariness,<lb/>
makes a fitting cap to<lb/>
the first week of<lb/>
calendar-sanctioned<lb/>
spring fever in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
The title refers to<lb/>
the twelfth night of<lb/>
Christmas. January<lb/>
6th or the Epiphany,<lb/>
a once solemn<lb/>
religious feast grown<lb/>
Bacchanalian over the<lb/>
years. Celebration of<lb/>
Twelfth Night tradi-<lb/>
tionally included lots<lb/>
of drinking.<lb/>
Poland Lecture<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
arm up and down on a set of bellows, is similar<lb/>
to the sound of the more common mouth-<lb/>
blown pipes.<lb/>
Despite the socialist leaning of the Polish<lb/>
economy, the viewer learns that in Poland, 85<lb/>
percent of the farmland is privately owned.<lb/>
When efforts were made by the government to<lb/>
force the farmers to form collectives, most<lb/>
refused to work and-the plan failed. Hence,<lb/>
farmers own their own farms. Methods of far-<lb/>
ming still include the horse drawn plough and<lb/>
other simpler ways from the pre-industrial<lb/>
revolution era.<lb/>
Sherilyn brings her audience back through<lb/>
See TO POLAND, Page 10<lb/>
overeating, and<lb/>
orgies; folklore called<lb/>
it a "festival of<lb/>
misrule Originally<lb/>
an observance of the<lb/>
Feast of the Three<lb/>
Kings and the an-<lb/>
nouncement of<lb/>
Christ's birth.<lb/>
Twelfth Night the ho-<lb/>
ly day gave way to the<lb/>
Twelfth Night of wild<lb/>
sexual liasons, a spirit<lb/>
of indulgence and<lb/>
"anything goes<lb/>
Twelfth Sight is<lb/>
not about religion,<lb/>
and it isn't even set<lb/>
during Twelfth Night.<lb/>
But everyone on stage<lb/>
acts as if it was<lb/>
Twelfth Night. "If<lb/>
music be the food of<lb/>
love, play on, give me<lb/>
excess of it belches<lb/>
the duke of Ulyria in<lb/>
his opening speech,<lb/>
and from this point<lb/>
on, love and excess<lb/>
take over. Like Friday<lb/>
night in Greenville,<lb/>
Twelfth Night meant<lb/>
a night of parties; but<lb/>
like many Friday<lb/>
night parties, the<lb/>
revelry seems to go on<lb/>
a bit too long and too<lb/>
loud for some of the<lb/>
characters.<lb/>
You know the old<lb/>
saying, "you can't tell<lb/>
the players without a<lb/>
scorecard?" Well, in<lb/>
Twelfth Night, you<lb/>
can't tell 'em even<lb/>
with a scorecard. And<lb/>
neither can the<lb/>
players themselves. A<lb/>
pair of twins ? iden-<lb/>
tical, although<lb/>
brother and sister ?<lb/>
shipwreck in a strange<lb/>
land. Fearing her<lb/>
brother dead but still<lb/>
hoping to find him,<lb/>
the sister disguises<lb/>
herself as a boy and<lb/>
gets a job as a<lb/>
eunuch, or page, to<lb/>
the hedonistic Duke<lb/>
Orsino. The Duke is<lb/>
in love with a lady<lb/>
named Olivia, who<lb/>
wants nothing to do<lb/>
with him because<lb/>
she's mourning her<lb/>
dead brother, but she<lb/>
falls head over dainty<lb/>
heels for the disguised<lb/>
page.<lb/>
Meanwhile, her<lb/>
stuffy, cross-gartered<lb/>
servant Malvolio gets<lb/>
the impression the<lb/>
lady is in love with<lb/>
him. When the lost<lb/>
brother reappears,<lb/>
Olivia mistakes him<lb/>
for his sister (who she<lb/>
thinks is a man,<lb/>
anyhow) and whiskes<lb/>
him off for a secret<lb/>
wedding and<lb/>
whatever else.<lb/>
Confused? Of<lb/>
course, but with<lb/>
everyone on stage<lb/>
wearing a mask of<lb/>
some sort ? either a<lb/>
physical costume or<lb/>
disguised intentions<lb/>
? the characters will<lb/>
appear more confused<lb/>
than the audience.<lb/>
The audience, at<lb/>
least, will have pro-<lb/>
grams; the characters<lb/>
are never sure who's<lb/>
who and what's what.<lb/>
And some of them<lb/>
are just doing what<lb/>
comes naturally,<lb/>
whether role-playing<lb/>
or debauching or just<lb/>
staying drunk for five<lb/>
acts. Yes, it is a little<lb/>
like a warm spring<lb/>
night in Greenville.<lb/>
The Central Ticket<lb/>
Office has a handful<lb/>
of tickets left for Fri-<lb/>
day night's perfor-<lb/>
mance, and a few<lb/>
more for the com-<lb/>
pany's Saturday night<lb/>
presentation of<lb/>
Moliere's Tartuffe.<lb/>
WIN. PLACE.<lb/>
SHOW.<lb/>
nurVQA<lb/>
Vm re a winner<lb/>
when you come<lb/>
into our annual<lb/>
 pen House<lb/>
It's two days<lb/>
filled with the world's most ex-<lb/>
citing motorcycles Thf 1983<lb/>
Hondas Discover the look and<lb/>
feel of our radical new V twins.<lb/>
high performance V fours and<lb/>
spectacular new in line fours.<lb/>
And that's only the beginning.<lb/>
.Just for corning in well give you a<lb/>
free deck of Honda playing cards'<lb/>
And you'll get<lb/>
a chance to<lb/>
win a new 1982<lb/>
Urban Express<lb/>
Why even the<lb/>
deal of a lifetime<lb/>
can be yours during our Redline<lb/>
Super Sale. It's a chance to get<lb/>
selected Hondas at prices you<lb/>
may find impossible- to pass up.<lb/>
So come into our annual Open<lb/>
House.With the new models,great<lb/>
prices and free prizes you can get,<lb/>
there's never been a better way to<lb/>
thai feature all the great '83 Hondas, cover all your bets<lb/>
HONDA-SUZUKI OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
91S N. MEMORIAL DRHWY. 11 N.<lb/>
GREENVILLE.N.C. 27134<lb/>
PHONE 75t-30?4<lb/>
MARCH 25tfc, 2th<lb/>
??- (? I pi I lawr ? il"??u ?"<lb/>
i<lb/>
ADvERTiSEO<lb/>
'TEM POuC<lb/>
Each of th.se advfti??d items is r.quir.d to b. r.adily available tor sal. at or<lb/>
batow the advertised price in each AAP Store except as specifically noted<lb/>
in this ad <lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU WED.Sat March 26 A&amp;P IN Greenville, N C<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
YOUR fl&amp;P COUNTRY STORE<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPEND, WE WILL DOUBLE<lb/>
3 MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS. EXAMPLE: $10 PURCHASE 3 COUPONS<lb/>
$20 PURCHASE 6 COUPONS, $100 PURCHASE 30 COUPONS.<lb/>
Batwaan now and March 26. ft will radaam na-<lb/>
tional manufacturar s cants-ott coupons up to SO<lb/>
lor double thair valua Otfar good on national man-<lb/>
ufacturars canta-otl coupons only (Food retailar<lb/>
coupons not accaptad I Customar must purcrtasa<lb/>
coupon product in spacifwd sizs Eipirad coupons<lb/>
will not De nonorad One coupon par customar per<lb/>
item No coupons accepted lor tree merchandise<lb/>
Otter does not apply to A4 P or othar store coupons<lb/>
whathar manufacturer is mentioned or not When<lb/>
tha value ol the coupon eiceeds SO or the retail<lb/>
ol the item, this otter is limited to the retail price<lb/>
Savings are Great with A&amp;Ps<lb/>
DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS!<lb/>
MFCSMFCA&amp;P ADDED<lb/>
COUPONCENTS OFFCENTS OFF<lb/>
COUPON A25'25'<lb/>
COUPON B18'18'<lb/>
COUPON C50?50?<lb/>
COUPON D75-25'<lb/>
TOTAL<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
AT AAP<lb/>
sAlHHaMllllll <lb/>
!?&amp;?!&amp;<lb/>
3100<lb/>
' Head Lettuce a I<lb/>
CALIFORNIA CRISP<lb/>
SOLID ICEBERG<lb/>
GOLDEN YELLOW RIPE j WASHINGTON STATE RED<lb/>
Dole Bananas, Delicious Apples<lb/>
Dole<lb/>
Ift 48<lb/>
J H P?a?es-si<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
?F<lb/>
Margarine Quarters<lb/>
3IO0L.J<lb/>
0 pkgs. I<lb/>
MABCARiNE<lb/>
A&amp;P CHILLED <lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
99<lb/>
64 oz.<lb/>
carton<lb/>
 DIET COKE ? MELLO YELLO<lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle l09<lb/>
GOOD ONLY IN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
ALL NATURAL<lb/>
Breyer's Ice Cream<lb/>
219a?<lb/>
All<lb/>
Flavors<lb/>
V2 gal.<lb/>
carton<lb/>
IKRi<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
I<lb/>
SAVE54ON Yo0un;ay<lb/>
Miracle Whip -?<lb/>
II<lb/>
-? ? 32 oa<lb/>
Dressing ?<lb/>
?Lx<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT, MARCH 26 AT AAP<lb/>
UMCT ONE WITH COUPON AND $7.50 ORDER.<lb/>
SUPER SAVER COUPON<lb/>
jCtoheu SAVE4KON ??,<lb/>
.Bath Tissue<lb/>
631A<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
Whrte<lb/>
Yeltow-Blu<lb/>
OOOO THRU SAT, MARCH 26 AT AAP.<lb/>
UMTT ONE WITH COUPON AND $7.50 ORDER.<lb/>
632<lb/>
 v<lb/>
m?i, iomi iaHsMsniiutaaMmift<lb/>
MajMaM- "<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0011"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 22, 1983<lb/>
To Poland And Back<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
the deadly years of World War II<lb/>
when Poland saw 20 percent of<lb/>
her population killed. Poland<lb/>
became a land of "people<lb/>
without a country Sherilyn said<lb/>
"Poland lived only as a dream in<lb/>
the hearts of the Polish people<lb/>
At this point the film cuts to a<lb/>
large gate with words above it<lb/>
that translate to say "work will<lb/>
make you free The gate was the<lb/>
last one that 4,000,000 Poles<lb/>
passed through on their way in to<lb/>
the Dachau death camps. Poland<lb/>
was reduced to "a pile of rubble"<lb/>
because of the war, Sherilyn said.<lb/>
The film takes viewers to an<lb/>
old Polish shipyard where<lb/>
workers first struck for better<lb/>
conditions "the issue (for the<lb/>
workers) was not money<lb/>
Sherilyn notes "but a little<lb/>
freedom and the right to form<lb/>
trade unions<lb/>
During the film which the<lb/>
Mentes' call a "totally uncen-<lb/>
sored view of Poland before Mar-<lb/>
shall law" the audience is in-<lb/>
troduced to the term "practical<lb/>
co-existence" which is the used to<lb/>
describe the goal of some of the<lb/>
people regarding their relation-<lb/>
ship with the government "The<lb/>
Polish people have taught the<lb/>
world a new meaning for the<lb/>
word Solidarity said Sherilyn<lb/>
The "enduring dream" pro-<lb/>
gram was the final Travel-<lb/>
Adventure Film of the year.<lb/>
BLOOD DRIVE<lb/>
FLETCHER<lb/>
RESIDENCE HALL<lb/>
LOBBY<lb/>
THURSDAY, MARCH24<lb/>
12-6p.m.<lb/>
Year's Big Sleeper, 'Diner Weekend Free Flick A t Mendenhall<lb/>
(Left to right) Kevin Bacon, Mickey Rourke, Daniel Stern and Tim<lb/>
Daly star in Diner, a coined)-drama about five friends making the dif-<lb/>
ficult transition into manhood. The surprise hit of '82. Diner will be<lb/>
shown this Friday and Saturday at 5, 7 and 9 p.m. in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent C enter's Hendrix Theatre. Admission is b ID and activity card<lb/>
for students and MSC membership for faculty and staff.<lb/>
Nelligan's Life In Theatre Nears End<lb/>
C ontinued From Page 8<lb/>
Plenty was not a hit<lb/>
in England, Miss<lb/>
Nelligan says,<lb/>
although everyone in<lb/>
America assumes it<lb/>
was. "It set people's<lb/>
teeth on edge she<lb/>
says. "It got the worst<lb/>
reviews you've ever<lb/>
seen in your life. It<lb/>
was produced by the<lb/>
National Theatre, but<lb/>
business was so bad<lb/>
they only scheduled it<lb/>
for two performances<lb/>
a week. And yet we<lb/>
developed a cult au-<lb/>
dience, and on closing<lb/>
night all the people<lb/>
who'd seen it two,<lb/>
three or four times<lb/>
came, and stayed in<lb/>
the theatre until 2<lb/>
a.m. It was a com-<lb/>
plete surprise that it<lb/>
became a hit over<lb/>
here<lb/>
When she does<lb/>
leave the cast of Plen-<lb/>
ty, however, it will be<lb/>
the last play she docs<lb/>
for quite a time, she<lb/>
says.<lb/>
'Everybody's<lb/>
always talking about<lb/>
how well-trained the<lb/>
British actors are<lb/>
onstage, and how<lb/>
when they grow old<lb/>
they go into movies to<lb/>
make lots or money<lb/>
she says. "What a lot<lb/>
of rubbish. Movies<lb/>
are 10 times harder<lb/>
than plays. There are<lb/>
some movies where<lb/>
it's a triumph if<lb/>
you're still vertical<lb/>
when they're over<lb/>
She lights a<lb/>
cigarette and settles<lb/>
into a corner of the<lb/>
dressing room, a<lb/>
smart lady, very sure<lb/>
of herself, unsen-<lb/>
timental about the<lb/>
1<lb/>
Price Believes In<lb/>
Sticking To Some<lb/>
Pure R&amp;B Basics<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
man's woman, trying to be her backdoor man,<lb/>
testifying about sweet love in the midnight<lb/>
hour and meeting at the dark end of the street.<lb/>
Price and the KRB have released two<lb/>
albums, and neither fully captures the excite-<lb/>
ment they generate on stage. Unlike hard-rock<lb/>
bands that overwhelm club audiences by<lb/>
bludgeoning them senseless with high decibel<lb/>
noise, Price and company seduce a crow.<lb/>
Fingers start snapping and knees begin jerking<lb/>
soon after the band starts. With the first<lb/>
ballad, Billy's crooning voice backed by the<lb/>
wailing horns turns backbones to jelly. When<lb/>
the band turns the tempo up again, feet start<lb/>
moving, people start dancing and the<lb/>
temperature rises while sweat pours.<lb/>
Despite a large following of enthusiastic<lb/>
fans, the band's arcane style has kept major<lb/>
record companies away. The talent is there,<lb/>
but mass appeal is missing. Yet, Billy refuses<lb/>
to follow the successful example of the J. Geils<lb/>
Band and do R&amp;B in a contemporary style.<lb/>
"I think what we're doing is already com-<lb/>
merical explains Billy. "Look at Delbert<lb/>
McCIinton or the Stray Cats; they've achieved<lb/>
success without trying to go contemporary. If<lb/>
we make it doing what we're doing now, peo-<lb/>
ple will say 'they made it because they stuck to<lb/>
their guns If we try to go contemporary and<lb/>
still don't make it, people will say 'they sold<lb/>
out "<lb/>
But music, like fashion, is cyclical. New<lb/>
wave and punk bands are rediscovering early<lb/>
rock ? even rock-a-billy is back. A soul music<lb/>
revival cold be next, especially with groups like<lb/>
Billy Price and the Keystone Rhythm Band<lb/>
playing it so convincingly. And even if they<lb/>
never sell a lot of records, they're still one of<lb/>
the best club bands you're likely to ever hear.<lb/>
Price and company will make their debut<lb/>
appearance at the Attic tonight, March 22. If<lb/>
you're an R&amp;B fan, this band is a must. If the<lb/>
music was before your time, then you owe it to<lb/>
yourself to hear what Akroyd and Belushi<lb/>
were so wild about.<lb/>
stage: "All of us in<lb/>
the theater are seeking<lb/>
the approval o f<lb/>
strangers. We do.<lb/>
What a bizarre way to<lb/>
make a living. The au-<lb/>
dience is this extraor-<lb/>
dinary dark mother<lb/>
who enfolds you.<lb/>
With a film, it's never<lb/>
finished until you've<lb/>
been gone from the<lb/>
set for months. With<lb/>
film, the baby is<lb/>
always adopted.<lb/>
"My gift is for<lb/>
words. I've always<lb/>
been good at words. I<lb/>
can use them, I can<lb/>
make people unders-<lb/>
tand them, I'd spent<lb/>
many years on the<lb/>
London stage when<lb/>
my whole interest<lb/>
shifted to film ? and<lb/>
it did ? and words,<lb/>
you know, are not<lb/>
what fim is about. In<lb/>
film you use the feel-<lb/>
ings you don't and<lb/>
can't use in life.<lb/>
"When I came over<lb/>
here to New York, I<lb/>
did a TV play because<lb/>
1 needed the money. I<lb/>
was broke. I won't do<lb/>
another one unless<lb/>
I'm broke again. It<lb/>
took three weeks to<lb/>
shoot and almost that<lb/>
long to sit through. I<lb/>
agreed to do this play,<lb/>
because we had done<lb/>
it in London, but it's<lb/>
the only play I'll do<lb/>
here.<lb/>
"It's not a spec-<lb/>
tator sport. When we<lb/>
opened Plenty<lb/>
downtown in a<lb/>
smaller theater,<lb/>
Robert De Niro came<lb/>
one night with nine<lb/>
friends. They took up<lb/>
a whole row. Ten peo-<lb/>
ple in that theater was<lb/>
a crowd. Then they all<lb/>
walked out, halfway<lb/>
through, leaving that<lb/>
whole bloody empty<lb/>
row.<lb/>
"It had a very<lb/>
depressing effect. I<lb/>
was ready to slit their<lb/>
wrists. I have no more<lb/>
interest in the theater.<lb/>
I can't imagine myself<lb/>
playing Desdemona,<lb/>
dragging around in<lb/>
those clothes. I did<lb/>
spend seven years ac-<lb/>
ting with Sco field,<lb/>
Olivier, Gielgud,<lb/>
Richardson in the Na-<lb/>
tional Theater  and<lb/>
so I feel competent to<lb/>
say that it's rubbish<lb/>
that only stage actors<lb/>
can act. Film acting is<lb/>
infinitelv more dif-<lb/>
ficult. You can't use<lb/>
technique. You have<lb/>
to use yourself<lb/>
She sighs and<lb/>
blows out smoke.<lb/>
"But nobody agrees<lb/>
with me she says.<lb/>
"On the Today show,<lb/>
Jane Pauley said,<lb/>
'But, Kate, you're a<lb/>
very serious and<lb/>
gifted woman. Why<lb/>
waste your life in<lb/>
film?<lb/>
Miss Nelligan<lb/>
pauses to think about<lb/>
that. "What an ex-<lb/>
traordinary state-<lb/>
ment she says,<lb/>
finally. "Speaking for<lb/>
myself, 1 haven't gone<lb/>
to the theater to see a<lb/>
play in seven years. I<lb/>
go to movies.<lb/>
Now she stars in a<lb/>
sold-out Broadway<lb/>
hit and plans her<lb/>
movie career, not<lb/>
without some pain.<lb/>
"One of the directors<lb/>
I worked for she<lb/>
remembers, "did a<lb/>
hideously cruel thing.<lb/>
1 got into my costume<lb/>
and came out for him<lb/>
to look at me. He<lb/>
said, and I quote,<lb/>
"take the lady's hair<lb/>
down, put her in<lb/>
lingerie, and bring her<lb/>
back and let me have<lb/>
a look at her She<lb/>
bites her lip, and says,<lb/>
quite deliberately:<lb/>
"You really can't do<lb/>
that with me.<lb/>
8<lb/>
j Tapscott<lb/>
A VERY SPECIAL GIFT SHOPPE<lb/>
1 <lb/>
We Are Pleased to Announce<lb/>
Our Largest Spring Sale Ever<lb/>
? SALE EXTENDED THROUGH SATURDAY. MARCH 26 <lb/>
Entire Stock From 10 Up To 50 Off<lb/>
Tot tUMcl,<lb/>
Special Orders ? Consignment hems ? Scented Candies 10 H<lb/>
Tussie Mjssi ? Lamp Shades ? Claire BurKe 20 cm<lb/>
I ace Bedspread ? Tahle Cloth ? Stulfed Animals ? Stoney Point Decoys 25 cm<lb/>
All Prctures ? Brass ? Baskets ? Glassware ? Furnrture 30 cm<lb/>
 icker Chest ? ECU Hamper 'Campus Frames 'Folk Art IS &amp; 18' Tapers 40 o.<lb/>
T - ? Ceramic Accessories ? Haitian Wooden Dishes ? Silk Flowers &amp;<lb/>
Plants ? Wind Chimes ? Handmade Boxes &amp; Many Other Selected Items am 50 oa<lb/>
Out Regular Customer Know That We Cant Poaalbiy Hat tverythlna Here.<lb/>
You'll Juat Have To Come Byl<lb/>
"OMTSftlT<lb/>
Open MonSat 10-to<lb/>
757-3558<lb/>
222 East Fifth Street<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
gMMPgaMMMBOMMMMMBMBaaOOgggOpwa<lb/>
nafttecr<lb/>
TWO BIC0NIE06 BISCUITS $1.29<lb/>
(Vise prt-M-nt the coupon hefonr onknng ()nc coupon per cuo<lb/>
tonicr per U4I. pteaac Customer itium pas iiny role, ux This<lb/>
uiupon rut gcaidin comnuuuon with im other 1A1<lb/>
i Jrrer pood during nomul hreakriv) hours onl at the<lb/>
t itlowinK Harder t Rt-sUurams 9iOGotMdK<lb/>
street &amp; WOT F ItWi street (jitrnulle.<lb/>
(tffergood through Mas si<lb/>
present this coupon before ordennR One coupon per I<lb/>
w?t please ' ustomer must pas an sale-ux Thecou <lb/>
HVt-a.se <lb/>
i ustomer per visit.<lb/>
pun not good In i omhtnatM i with arts other oScr<lb/>
iloerisxxl after lost) AM daih . mis 21 the folk rss-mg Hardee s Restaurants 910<lb/>
(xanche Street 290-F. hfth street (rfremille N (?rrodthniui Mas SI<lb/>
198s<lb/>
nacdeer<lb/>
? I'JK tbak'i ?<lb/>
? m.1 SVTlrS Ifk<lb/>
fACoT<lb/>
at)<lb/>
264 By Pass,<lb/>
Next Door to<lb/>
Toyota East<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
 SPECIAL<lb/>
FOUR (4) Tacos<lb/>
for just M.39<lb/>
Not Good With Any Other Special<lb/>
a 8:00pm til closing<lb/>
f 15C draft with purchase of 4 tocos C<lb/>
YOUR B$N IS WORTH AN<lb/>
OFFICER'S COMMISSION<lb/>
THE ARMY.<lb/>
Your BSN means you're a professional In the Army, it also<lb/>
means you re an officer You start as a full-fledged member of our<lb/>
medical team Write Armv Nurse Opportunmes.<lb/>
P.O Box 7713. Burbank.CA 91510.<lb/>
ARMY NURSE CORPS.<lb/>
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
7i<lb/>
OLD FASHIONED<lb/>
H0T DOGS-BURGERS<lb/>
DRIVL THRU<lb/>
BREAKFAST<lb/>
GRAND OPENING<lb/>
OF<lb/>
WILBER'S<lb/>
FAMILY FAVORITES<lb/>
480 North Greene Street ? 752-S611<lb/>
(Across From Casablanca)<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
6 AM until 11 PM<lb/>
OLr biscuits are made from scratch and<lb/>
branded with our name!<lb/>
-SPECIALS-<lb/>
?Two Scrambled Eggs<lb/>
Hash brown, biscuit, jelly ? coffeeoniy99C<lb/>
?Two Ham Biscuitson1.19<lb/>
?Two Sausage Biscuitsomyl. 19<lb/>
?Econo-Pack Chicken<lb/>
Two pieces chicken, biscuit, honeymtA 0$<lb/>
?Snack Pack Chicken<lb/>
TeopiscescMctee.biscuH.frenchfries.honey anty1.59<lb/>
?Old Fashion Hot Dogsonty59c<lb/>
?Trout Dinners 1 on<lb/>
FIIHIIHV 9<lb/>
Chicken File! Sandwich Trout Sandwich<lb/>
Hamburgers, Shrimp Dinners, Buckeu<lb/>
QtChicken, Drivn-Th ur<lb/>
?-?<lb/>
j :<lb/>
I Hi I A1-<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
B KIlMCkl <lb/>
Nl.ll ? ntr<lb/>
John Hallo hn a grand<lb/>
home run and Charlie Smith <lb/>
ched a five-hit shutout a<lb/>
defeated George M i rtur-<lb/>
day in the secon<lb/>
ECAC-South double<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
In the first game. P<lb/>
I es Wright, utilir .<lb/>
speed pitches, gave ip ist I<lb/>
hits and C ar McM<lb/>
home runv to g  - ;<lb/>
and their torj<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Pirate ace Bh Da<lb/>
went the<lb/>
Baker<lb/>
BIND PI V sAM-<lb/>
Nportx r ?lii'<lb/>
two months as<lb/>
coordinatoi<lb/>
Ed Emory's<lb/>
Bake- has truly<lb/>
new home and<lb/>
After only<lb/>
ECU's offei<lb/>
Head<lb/>
associate, V"<lb/>
adapted to<lb/>
team.<lb/>
With spring<lb/>
? getting ur .<lb/>
eagerly begun gearing up ' "<lb/>
fall season. "I'm real<lb/>
about all the offensive pla-<lb/>
returning Baer sa d The<lb/>
Pirates will only lose one offen-<lb/>
sive starter this ye have 10<lb/>
returning.<lb/>
Baker will continue<lb/>
formation that Larry Beck<lb/>
troduced here last year Be<lb/>
no coaching for the ISFI 's<lb/>
Arizona Wranglers<lb/>
Larry Beckish<lb/>
each other, and 1<lb/>
with his offense<lb/>
When Coach Emory calk<lb/>
he said he wanted to run the same<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
"1 have learned the term,<lb/>
here, rather than having the<lb/>
py(rfaTifc mine: BaVfeafv ft<lb/>
will be the same offense ? the<lb/>
trap, or the option off the trap<lb/>
?'The theory is a little different<lb/>
from other options people are us-<lb/>
and 1 k<lb/>
was familiar<lb/>
Bjkc:<lb/>
- j<lb/>
Veteran Quarterback hein Ingrai<lb/>
ECU Get<lb/>
?yBANDI MES<lb/>
staff ntor<lb/>
Two ECl swimmers. Nan<lb/>
George and JoAnne McCully.<lb/>
(returned to Greenville Sunda<lb/>
night a All-Americas after com<lb/>
peting in the NCAA Division!i<lb/>
National Championships, in Longl<lb/>
j Beach Calif during Muck<lb/>
116-19. ,<lb/>
Fridav afternoon. Nan George<lb/>
ecame ECLs first NCAA All<lb/>
imcrica bv placing seventh m the<lb/>
,0-yard freestvle in 24.6 seconds<lb/>
loanne McCuliev quickly follow<lb/>
d suit later that afternoon byl<lb/>
inishing ninth in the 100-yardj<lb/>
reaststroke in 1:09.47.<lb/>
Kobe was extremely pleased b<lb/>
performance of his star swta-<lb/>
rs. "They swam very well hd<lb/>
"It was thrilling to get tw<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0012"/><lb/>
11<lb/>
nnf<lb/>
And Back<lb/>
workers firsJ struck tot better<lb/>
conditions "the issue (foi the<lb/>
workers) ?.b not money,<lb/>
Sherilyn notes "but a<lb/>
freedom and the right to form<lb/>
le unions<lb/>
During the film which the<lb/>
little<lb/>
Mentes' call a "totally<lb/>
uncen<lb/>
sored view oi Poland bet ore Mat<lb/>
shall law" the audience is in<lb/>
troduced to the term "practical<lb/>
co-existence" which is the used to<lb/>
he the goal of some of the<lb/>
c regarding theii relation-<lb/>
? with the government "The<lb/>
h people have taught the<lb/>
d a new meaning tor the<lb/>
Solidarity said Sherilyn<lb/>
The "enduring dream" pro<lb/>
av the final Travel<lb/>
. re film of the vear<lb/>
D DRIVE<lb/>
TCHER<lb/>
NCEHALL<lb/>
)BBY<lb/>
Y, MARCH 24<lb/>
-6p.m.<lb/>
EDNESDAY i<lb/>
 SPECIAL j<lb/>
OUR (4) TacosJ<lb/>
for just si.39<lb/>
Gooa Wifh Any other Special<lb/>
Ipm til closing<lb/>
rh purchase of 4 tocos C<lb/>
IS WORTH AN<lb/>
COMMISSION<lb/>
IE ARMY.<lb/>
. e Army, :t also<lb/>
' .edged member oi our<lb/>
trs Opportunities<lb/>
? A.9151C<lb/>
IHURSE CORPS.<lb/>
YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
n<lb/>
t T MRU<lb/>
?mm m i??i <lb/>
D OPENING<lb/>
BER'S<lb/>
Y FAVORITES<lb/>
Greene Street ? 752-8611<lb/>
Joss F-orn Casablanca)<lb/>
?WOPEN<lb/>
M until 11 PM<lb/>
are made from scratch and<lb/>
led with our name!<lb/>
-SPECIALS-<lb/>
ledEggs<lb/>
' ieiiy 4 coMeeonlybb<lb/>
SCUltSon.y1.19<lb/>
je Biscuitsom,1.19<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
CMSCuit honeyonlyl . 29<lb/>
IChicken<lb/>
iiscuil trench ?'ies hooey . . only I . 09<lb/>
Hot Dogsonly59c<lb/>
'S on,y1.99<lb/>
?Featuring?<lb/>
ndwiches. Trout Sandwiches<lb/>
jrs. Shrimp Dinners. Buckets<lb/>
Fken, Drive-Thru Window<lb/>
THE EASTCAROI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MARC H 22. I9JH<lb/>
Pagt II<lb/>
Pirates Split Crucial Doubleheader<lb/>
B EDMCKI.AS<lb/>
M??f Wrilrt<lb/>
John Hallow hit a grand slam<lb/>
home run and Charlie Smith pit-<lb/>
ched a five-hit shutout as ECU<lb/>
defeated George Mason 5-0 Satur-<lb/>
day in the second game of a<lb/>
ECAC-South doubleheader at<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
In the first game. Patriot hurler<lb/>
1 es Va right, utilizing effective off-<lb/>
speed pitches, gave up just four<lb/>
hits and Cary McMichael hit two<lb/>
home runs to give GMU a 6-2 win<lb/>
and their first victory of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Pirate ace Bob Davidson (0-1)<lb/>
went the distance in the first<lb/>
game, allowing just six hits and<lb/>
one earned run, but nevertheless<lb/>
tost as the Pirates managed only<lb/>
four singles off Wright.<lb/>
After George Mason took a 1-0<lb/>
lead on McMichael's homer in the<lb/>
first, ECU tied the game in the se-<lb/>
cond when Robert Wells raced<lb/>
home from third on a double steal<lb/>
play.<lb/>
ECU then took a 2-1 lead in the<lb/>
third on heads-up base running by<lb/>
shortstop Kelly Robinette.<lb/>
Reaching first on an error,<lb/>
Robinette stole second and reach-<lb/>
ed third on Todd Evans' groun-<lb/>
dout. Then, with Winfred<lb/>
Johnson at bat, Wright threw a<lb/>
wild pitch, enabling Robinette to<lb/>
reach home easily.<lb/>
The Patriots, managing only<lb/>
one hit through the first four inn-<lb/>
ings, finally got to Davidson in<lb/>
the fifth. Barry Durham singled,<lb/>
Mark Oliver grounded a hit bet-<lb/>
ween first and second base and<lb/>
Jim Youngblood reached on an<lb/>
error by Hallow to load the bases.<lb/>
Dan Cosby then blooped a<lb/>
single to left to drive in two runs<lb/>
and McMichael followed with his<lb/>
second home run of the game to<lb/>
give Wright a 6-2 lead.<lb/>
In the second game, it was<lb/>
Smith's turn to gain attention on<lb/>
the mound. The right-handed<lb/>
senior gave up just five hits, while<lb/>
walking two and striking out five.<lb/>
With Smith providing the<lb/>
defensive firepower, ECU decided<lb/>
to add some offensive electricity<lb/>
to a 1-0 lead in the fifth inning.<lb/>
Jack Curlings doubled with one<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Then, after Mike Williams<lb/>
reached on an error and a wild<lb/>
pitch moved both runners up,<lb/>
Robinette was inteniionaly walk-<lb/>
ed to load the bases. Hallow then<lb/>
took charge of the fireworks, sen-<lb/>
ding a home run over the right<lb/>
field fence to secure the victory.<lb/>
Baker Puts Offense In Gear<lb/>
B CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Sport t-ditor<lb/>
After only two months as<lb/>
ECU's offensive coordinator and<lb/>
Head Coach Ed Emory's<lb/>
associate. Art Baker has truly<lb/>
adapted to his new home and<lb/>
team.<lb/>
With spring football practice<lb/>
lust getting underway. Baker has<lb/>
eagerly begun gearing up for the<lb/>
fall season. "I'm real excited<lb/>
about all the offensive players<lb/>
returning Baker said. The<lb/>
Pirates will only lose one offen-<lb/>
sive starter this year and have 10<lb/>
returning.<lb/>
Baker will continue the option-I<lb/>
formation that Larry Beekish in-<lb/>
troduced here last year. Beekish is<lb/>
now coaching for the USFL's<lb/>
Arizona Wranglers.<lb/>
"Larry Beekish and 1 know<lb/>
each other, and 1 was tamiliar<lb/>
with his offense Baker said.<lb/>
"When Coach Emory called me,<lb/>
he said he wanted to run the same<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
"I have learned the terminology<lb/>
here, rather than having the<lb/>
Ptevr1nehfti mine. MsfeaJIV. rt<lb/>
will be the same offense ? the<lb/>
trap, or the option off the trap.<lb/>
"The theory is a little different<lb/>
from other options people are us-<lb/>
ed to seeing, but 1 knew about the<lb/>
offense before 1 got here<lb/>
Before coming to ECU, Baker<lb/>
had coached at The Citadel for<lb/>
five years and became the winn-<lb/>
mgest coach in the school's<lb/>
history , accumulating a 30-24-1<lb/>
mark, last year, the Citadel<lb/>
finished 5-6, and Baker, much to<lb/>
everyone's dismay, was fired.<lb/>
Before coaching at The Citadel,<lb/>
Baker was Furman's head coach.<lb/>
In five years, he earned a 27-23-2<lb/>
record, defeating North Carolina<lb/>
and East Carolina in 1970. "1<lb/>
think we played ECU every year I<lb/>
was at Furman Baker said, "so<lb/>
I've known about ECU and I've<lb/>
known Ed Emory for a long time<lb/>
too<lb/>
As Coach Emory's associate.<lb/>
Baker will share administrative<lb/>
duties and assume the head<lb/>
coaching capacity when Emory is<lb/>
out of the office.<lb/>
According to Baker, both<lb/>
coaches are going to have all they<lb/>
can handle with the upcoming<lb/>
season. The Pirates have seven<lb/>
away games scheduled, including<lb/>
such powerhouses as " Florida<lb/>
State, Missouri, the Univ. of<lb/>
Miami and the Univ of Florida.<lb/>
What is Baker's opinion of the<lb/>
Pirates '83 agenda? "1 think it's<lb/>
unrealistic for us he said, "but I<lb/>
don't think people believe it is<lb/>
realistic. If anybody plays a<lb/>
toughter schedule, 1 don't know<lb/>
who it will be.<lb/>
"First of all, I don't mean it as<lb/>
criticism, schedules like that br-<lb/>
ing on big contracts, but anytime<lb/>
you play seven away games, that's<lb/>
unrealistic<lb/>
Baker is well aware that the<lb/>
football program hasn't been fill-<lb/>
ing up Ficklen Stadium, but he<lb/>
also believes the problem can be<lb/>
rectified. "I think it's like the old<lb/>
saying, 'which comes first, the<lb/>
chicken or the egg At Furman,<lb/>
everytime we played here there<lb/>
was a big crowd, so 1 know it can<lb/>
be done. I think you can have a<lb/>
realistic home schedule<lb/>
According to Baker, ECU<lb/>
definitely has a problem because<lb/>
of its Division-1 status. "I'm a<lb/>
newcomer Baker said, "but in<lb/>
my opinion, the mistake was<lb/>
made two years ago. ECU should<lb/>
be a Division-I school, but we're<lb/>
so isolated.<lb/>
"It is realistic for Duke, North<lb/>
Carolina and N.C. State to play<lb/>
us. I don't know why there's three<lb/>
schools down the road from us<lb/>
who won't play us<lb/>
The Pirates are now getting<lb/>
ready for team that will play<lb/>
them, and one of Baker's top<lb/>
priorities will be to find a No. 2<lb/>
quarterback. "Kevin Ingram has<lb/>
really come on to fill the No. 1<lb/>
spot he said, "but with the<lb/>
teams we play, you've got to have<lb/>
a back-up quarterback<lb/>
Senior John Williams, along<lb/>
with freshman Brian Herndon,<lb/>
will be competing for the second<lb/>
.quarterback sport. Herdon,<lb/>
however, has been recovering<lb/>
from hip surgery, so he is not full<lb/>
speed yet.<lb/>
Another of Baker's main con-<lb/>
cerns are those players missing<lb/>
spring practice becuase of<lb/>
academic ineligibility. "We can-<lb/>
not afford to lose any players<lb/>
Baker said. "We have to always<lb/>
be concerned about the academic<lb/>
status of the players<lb/>
After looking at film, the new<lb/>
offensive coach praised the team<lb/>
for having speed and agility, and<lb/>
described senior offensive guard<lb/>
Terry Long as a "bonified all-<lb/>
America candidate<lb/>
When Baker arrived, most of<lb/>
the recruits had been signed. Since<lb/>
then, he has been able to become<lb/>
acquainted with several of them.<lb/>
"I think the recruits coming in fit<lb/>
ECU's Brian Peterson shows his pitching style in an earlier<lb/>
game. Against George Mason, Senior Charlie Smith pitched a<lb/>
five-hit shut oat to give the Bucs a conference win.<lb/>
our immediate needs. We're br-<lb/>
inging in good linemen, two<lb/>
quarterbacks, and we've have to<lb/>
compete with the likes of Carolina<lb/>
and N.C. State.<lb/>
But Baker isn't really concerned<lb/>
with recruits right now. He is<lb/>
fcusing his attention on return-<lb/>
ing veterans and spring practice.<lb/>
"Hopefully, we'll use varia-<lb/>
tions that will just add to the of-<lb/>
fense. We'll open up for more<lb/>
reverses and screens ? things I<lb/>
know that have been good to me<lb/>
in past years, but there won't be<lb/>
any drastic changes.<lb/>
"We will add and blend with<lb/>
what we have<lb/>
Hitters Sailing Along<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Anttaal Sporti Milor<lb/>
As the ECU baseball team<lb/>
begins its defense of the ECAC-<lb/>
South crown, several members of<lb/>
the squad have put together im-<lb/>
pressive statistics.<lb/>
Hitting has been the club's forte<lb/>
so far, with seven Pirates above<lb/>
the .300 mark.<lb/>
Leading the balanced hitting at-<lb/>
tack are junior Todd Evans (.360)<lb/>
and senior Robert Wells (.351).<lb/>
As a team, ECU is currently bat-<lb/>
ting .286.<lb/>
The Pirate pitching staff has<lb/>
suffered from the loss of Bill<lb/>
Wilder and Bob Patterson from<lb/>
last year's nationally sixth-ranked<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
The pitching staff's ERA is a<lb/>
hefty 3.07, compared to a 1.74<lb/>
mark at the same point last year.<lb/>
With their current 11-4 record,<lb/>
ECU is sailing along at the exact<lb/>
pace as last year. Last season's<lb/>
squad was also 11-4 at this point<lb/>
? en route to a 34-14 record.<lb/>
One big reason for the Pirates'<lb/>
success has been Winfred<lb/>
Johnson, a 5-11, 210-pound<lb/>
freshman from Elizabethtown,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Johnson is the first two-way<lb/>
(pitcher-hitter) player to play for<lb/>
ECU coach Hal Baird.<lb/>
The husky freshman has<lb/>
registered a 4-0 record on the<lb/>
mound while accumulating a 2.04<lb/>
ERA.<lb/>
When he's not on the mound,<lb/>
Johnson serves as the club's clean-<lb/>
up hitter. He is currently batting<lb/>
.292, with three home runs and 11<lb/>
runs batted in.<lb/>
Besides Johnson, another<lb/>
reliable hitter has been Evans. On-<lb/>
ly a junior, he has a chance to set<lb/>
the ECU record for hits in just his<lb/>
third season.<lb/>
Evans has 129 career hits, only<lb/>
52 behind Billy Best (1977-80)<lb/>
who had 181.<lb/>
Last year, Evans set the ECU<lb/>
single-season hit record with 64.<lb/>
Although only a .261 career hit-<lb/>
ter, centerfielder Robert Wells is<lb/>
blistering opposing pitchers with a<lb/>
.351 average. He collected only 26<lb/>
hits in all of 1982 and already has<lb/>
half of that total this season.<lb/>
Senior shortstop Kelly<lb/>
Robinette has combined with<lb/>
freshman Tony Salmond to give<lb/>
the Pirates a solid defense up the<lb/>
middle.<lb/>
After hitting only .247 in his<lb/>
first three seasons, Robinette is<lb/>
now hitting at a .303 pace. He is<lb/>
tied for the team lead in both runs<lb/>
and hits, and leads in at-bats.<lb/>
Junior outfielder David Wells<lb/>
and senior third baseman John<lb/>
Hallow are both coming back<lb/>
from early-season hitting slumps.<lb/>
Wells is currently batting .275,<lb/>
while Hallow is hitting .284.<lb/>
Pleasant surprises have come<lb/>
from the bullpen as relievers Kirk<lb/>
Parsons and Chubby Butler have<lb/>
been sharp, posting 1-0 and 2-0<lb/>
records, respectively.<lb/>
The Pirates will face the<lb/>
toughest portion of their schedule<lb/>
in the upcoming weeks in their<lb/>
quest to defend their conference<lb/>
title.<lb/>
Upcoming opponents include<lb/>
James Madison, N.C. State,<lb/>
Campbell, North Carolina, Old<lb/>
Dominion and Richmond.<lb/>
Veteran Quarterback Kevin Ingram will be the Bucs' No. 1 offensive caller during spring practice drills.<lb/>
ECU Gets Two All-Americas<lb/>
Bv RANDY MEWS<lb/>
SMR ? nltt<lb/>
Two ECU swimmers, Nan<lb/>
George and JoAnne McCully,<lb/>
returned to Greenville Sunday<lb/>
night as All-Americas after com-<lb/>
peting in the NCAA Division-II<lb/>
National Championships, in Long<lb/>
Beach. Calif during March<lb/>
16-19.<lb/>
Friday afternoon. Nan George<lb/>
became ECU's first NCAA All-<lb/>
America by placing seventh in the<lb/>
50-yard freestyle in 24.6 seconds.<lb/>
Joanne McCulley quickly follow-<lb/>
ed suit later that afternoon by<lb/>
finishing ninth in the 100-yard<lb/>
breaststroke in 1:09.47.<lb/>
Kobe was extremely pleased by<lb/>
the performance of his star swim-<lb/>
mers. "They swam very well he<lb/>
said. "It was thrilling to get two<lb/>
All-Americas in one day<lb/>
On the final day of competi-<lb/>
tion, George turned in the best<lb/>
performance ever by an ECU<lb/>
swimmer at the Nationals. She<lb/>
finished sixth in the 100-freestyle<lb/>
and set a new ECU varsity record<lb/>
in 53.74.<lb/>
The four-day event featured 54<lb/>
teams, including such<lb/>
powerhouses as Northern<lb/>
Michigan, Air Force and Furman.<lb/>
"This meet is three times bigger<lb/>
and ten times faster than the<lb/>
AIAW exclaimed head coach<lb/>
Rick Kobe.<lb/>
This is the first year the Lady<lb/>
Pirates have participated in<lb/>
NCAA swimming, having been a<lb/>
member of the AIAW in past<lb/>
years.<lb/>
In the first day of competition,<lb/>
ECU failed to place in any events.<lb/>
"It is a brutal meet with the<lb/>
NCAA and AIAW combined<lb/>
Kobe said. "Today, a new NCAA<lb/>
record was set in every event that<lb/>
was swam<lb/>
Other Pirates swimmers who<lb/>
did well in the meet included Kaky<lb/>
Wilson and McCulley in the<lb/>
100-individual medley, and the<lb/>
800-freestyle relay team of Nancy<lb/>
James, Nancy Ludwig, Nancy<lb/>
Rogers and George.<lb/>
Coach Kobe enjoyed the meet<lb/>
and was pleased with the perfor-<lb/>
mance of his swimmers. "It was a<lb/>
very competitive meet and we<lb/>
swam well in the individual<lb/>
events. A lot of freshmen made<lb/>
the trip and they got some good<lb/>
experience. I'm looking forward<lb/>
to next year<lb/>
ECU swimmers Nan George and Nu McCuHy returned home as ECU aU-Anaericw S??day.<lb/>
George became ECU's Hist NCAA all-America ever.<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
?"in i iiiminiiianiiiii in ? ??<lb/>
?'M1<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0013"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
itu<lb/>
M i Ki 1 IM <lb/>
1 ki H<lb/>
ls"h?<lb/>
Rutledge Combines Tennis With Academics<lb/>
Foi t asi i arolina<lb/>
tennis playei Pop.<lb/>
Rutledge, there has<lb/>
always been a conflict<lb/>
between the couri and<lb/>
the classroom<lb/>
Rutledge places<lb/>
more importance on<lb/>
a rademics than man<lb/>
athletes and<lb/>
throughout his career<lb/>
here at ECU<lb/>
often had to<lb/>
hi<lb/>
. lie has<lb/>
ik' sacrifice<lb/>
ins tennis goals in an<lb/>
effort to maintain<lb/>
academic ones<lb/>
??1 first two yeai-<lb/>
e I came out in the<lb/>
fall and made it up in-<lb/>
to the top six<lb/>
Rutledge said, "but<lb/>
?hen school and tennis<lb/>
?vould get to be too<lb/>
much, so both times I<lb/>
backed out halfwav<lb/>
through fall season to<lb/>
c oncentrat e on<lb/>
grades<lb/>
Hut last yeai things<lb/>
seemed to fall into<lb/>
place. Rutledge was<lb/>
able to stick with ten-<lb/>
5 I hrouj houi the en-<lb/>
;easo and siill<lb/>
satis tied with his<lb/>
tee<lb/>
a i ademic achiex e<lb/>
ment I he persistence<lb/>
paid ofl He con<lb/>
sistentU played at tIk-<lb/>
No 2 position behind<lb/>
now graduated Pirate<lb/>
ace Keith. Zengel<lb/>
Rutledge's record was<lb/>
9 -<lb/>
"Yeah, things wen!<lb/>
ptetn well for me last<lb/>
year Rutledge said<lb/>
"I was finally able to<lb/>
maintain some kind<lb/>
of happ) balance bet<lb/>
m ecu tennis a rid<lb/>
school I've averaged<lb/>
 4 the 1 ast five<lb/>
semesters and made<lb/>
the Dean's 1 ist twice,<lb/>
w, tnle still making pi 0<lb/>
gress with m game<lb/>
So es. I'm prett<lb/>
satisfied all around<lb/>
with the wa things<lb/>
went last yeai<lb/>
I ho situation,<lb/>
h owever, bec am e<lb/>
strained again this<lb/>
fall V hile taking 18<lb/>
hours ol difficult<lb/>
course work,<lb/>
R u 11 e d g e also<lb/>
developed a bad case<lb/>
of bronchitis.<lb/>
In what Rutledge<lb/>
now sails a "stupid<lb/>
mistake he<lb/>
neglected to notif)<lb/>
new coach Pat Shei<lb/>
man about missing<lb/>
practice Due to his<lb/>
lack ol communica-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"Mv goal now is to<lb/>
play the No. 1 posi-<lb/>
tion, and I fed confi-<lb/>
dent that I can do it.<lb/>
I'm practicing real<lb/>
hard Rutledge said.<lb/>
"My class load is<lb/>
it<lb/>
Don Kutlt'dui<lb/>
tion, he was dropped down some and this is<lb/>
from the No 2 posi probabl) my last ear<lb/>
tion down to No. 1 5.<lb/>
V present, he has<lb/>
worked his wav back<lb/>
up to the No 4 posi<lb/>
here, so I'm realK go-<lb/>
ing all out<lb/>
Rutledge sas this is<lb/>
"probably" his last<lb/>
vuar here because<lb/>
there is a long-shot<lb/>
that he may be eligible<lb/>
for another season,<lb/>
due to his minimal<lb/>
play as a freshman<lb/>
and sophomore.<lb/>
Rutledge came to<lb/>
ECU after playing<lb/>
competitively at<lb/>
several northern high<lb/>
schools. He won four<lb/>
letters at three<lb/>
schools: Ottawa Hill<lb/>
High in Toledo, Ohio,<lb/>
where he won two let-<lb/>
ters; South Kinstown<lb/>
High in Wakefield,<lb/>
Rhode Island - one<lb/>
letter; and Mountain<lb/>
lakes High in Moun-<lb/>
tain lakes. New<lb/>
Jersey one letter. He<lb/>
was a semi-finalist in<lb/>
the Ohio State<lb/>
doubles tournament,<lb/>
and a quarter-finalist<lb/>
in the Rhode Island<lb/>
State singles tourna-<lb/>
ment. During his<lb/>
tumor season, he was<lb/>
undefeated. In the<lb/>
summers of 8082,<lb/>
Rutledge concen-<lb/>
trated on tournament<lb/>
play here in North<lb/>
(arolina and was<lb/>
ranked in the top 40 in<lb/>
the state<lb/>
"1 suppose m big<lb/>
gest strength is m in-<lb/>
tensity and ability to<lb/>
respond to pressure<lb/>
competition. I play<lb/>
well when I get mad I<lb/>
have a knack tor com<lb/>
ing from behind, foi<lb/>
ekeing out close<lb/>
games at the end<lb/>
"As tar a- my i<lb/>
tual shots go, 1 have a<lb/>
good serve and volley<lb/>
game 1 know how I<lb/>
work spins pretty<lb/>
well 1 still have<lb/>
predominantly a slice<lb/>
game, though I'm<lb/>
working on top spin<lb/>
Actually , most people<lb/>
who plav me com<lb/>
ment on the strength<lb/>
ol mv serve, but<lb/>
presently I'm having<lb/>
some trouble w ith it.<lb/>
Rutledge conceded<lb/>
that his bigg<lb/>
weakness is<lb/>
overhead smash I'<lb/>
seems to be mv la I ?<lb/>
shot he said "1 K<lb/>
don't concentrate like<lb/>
I should, and it re<lb/>
quires a lot ol concen<lb/>
trtion and effort I he<lb/>
little, dinky lobs, in<lb/>
general, give me ti<lb/>
ble And I can't n i<lb/>
brag about m v<lb/>
forehand c i ?urt;<lb/>
it's not ev e ii a<lb/>
weapon I'm too ten<lb/>
tative with it. I don'i<lb/>
step into it and nail it<lb/>
like 1 should 1 net ;t<lb/>
quite otten, but<lb/>
seems to be coming<lb/>
along<lb/>
t r US'<lb/>
ime .<lb/>
keep hi<lb/>
?lie pi<lb/>
r .<lb/>
Ken<lb/>
R u 11 ed j ' H <lb/>
been sorn;<lb/>
long H(<lb/>
abil I i<lb/>
sense ! I<lb/>
ability<lb/>
geni<lb/>
- B rj<lb/>
tcted t<lb/>
&amp;l C.rr- '? ???? ?"0<lb/>
T s n. r' i Sleeping B a 9 s<lb/>
D hes<lb/>
and O<lb/>
Used Item bo B<lb/>
ARMY NAVY<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
'<lb/>
V ??? '<lb/>
BORl l()Ns<lb/>
App 's Mad 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
I 800 321 OS75<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
featuring L SDA choice beef<lb/>
cut fresh daily<lb/>
Every Tuesday in March 1983<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
$1.99 Reg. $3.49<lb/>
Served with King Idaho Baked<lb/>
Potato or F.F. and Texas Toast<lb/>
featuring Prime Rib every<lb/>
Fri.&amp;Sat. Night<lb/>
Now serving 14 oz. T-Bone<lb/>
2 locations to better serve you<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd. 756-0040<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St. 758-2712<lb/>
INXS Ramones<lb/>
Duran Duran<lb/>
Phil Collins<lb/>
Super Tramp<lb/>
Clash<lb/>
Triumph<lb/>
Marshall Tucker<lb/>
- <lb/>
Grand S<lb/>
State Ov<lb/>
?SUBduW<lb/>
<lb/>
America's Famous Foot Lonq Sandwich<lb/>
BUY1<lb/>
GET1 FREE<lb/>
SATURDAY MARCH 26<lb/>
11:00 A.M4:00 P.M.<lb/>
BRING A FRIEND<lb/>
BRING THE FAMILY<lb/>
 imit per customer<lb/>
208 E. 5th St.<lb/>
GREf. VI . V.C.<lb/>
A connecting riht cross is an example of the heavy punching that took place in last<lb/>
week's I k I Boxing tournament.<lb/>
TKE Boxing Packs Wallop<lb/>
Overton 's<lb/>
Supermarket, Inc.<lb/>
Attention Students<lb/>
Super Specials<lb/>
B MIKt HI (.Ills<lb/>
Manuring I- dit'r<lb/>
e 1976, Ikt<lb/>
ing has meani the<lb/>
thrill of athletic com-<lb/>
petition, the human<lb/>
drama of head-to-<lb/>
head combat and<lb/>
lots ol blood, rhis<lb/>
year was no excep<lb/>
nun As has been the<lb/>
custom Mnee the tour-<lb/>
nament's inception.<lb/>
the 1 Kf - put on quite<lb/>
a how last weeV . r,r<lb/>
i ing a nisi a little hit<lb/>
? a u Palact<lb/>
? i M inges.<lb/>
Hut t h e r e ? .15<lb/>
something different<lb/>
i ui th year's tour<lb/>
? Sometl<lb/>
hi wasn't the san<lb/>
Perhaj<lb/>
haps, that<lb/>
thing wa- the dp<lb/>
p trance ol the N 1<lb/>
bur Amateur Boxing<lb/>
' ib ol Kinston In<lb/>
this, their first ear ol<lb/>
competing at Minges,<lb/>
the) took tour ol the<lb/>
nine title fights. In<lb/>
fact, a tournament<lb/>
that tor seven years<lb/>
characteristically pit-<lb/>
ted student against<lb/>
student saw only three<lb/>
ECU boxers win<lb/>
trophies Never<lb/>
theless, there was<lb/>
plenty of action in<lb/>
store.<lb/>
In Thursday night's<lb/>
123 H2 pound title<lb/>
bout, lean, mean<lb/>
Jesse Daniels posted a<lb/>
second-round T K O<lb/>
against luan Velas<lb/>
quez, after daing his<lb/>
opponent with a stun-<lb/>
ning string of first-<lb/>
round punches<lb/>
And then came<lb/>
Kinston. I e v o n<lb/>
Rouse, the first<lb/>
member ol the Stai<lb/>
burtlut to appeal<lb/>
I hursdav night. came<lb/>
out ol his cornei<lb/>
smoking and all but<lb/>
destroyed his oppo<lb/>
nem, lohn Kilpatrick,<lb/>
scoring a first-round<lb/>
FRO in the 133-142<lb/>
pound weight class<lb/>
But gi adually.<lb/>
ted evening<lb/>
out In the 143 152<lb/>
pound title tight. Ed<lb/>
die Braxton took an<lb/>
obiousl close deci<lb/>
n ovei K appa<lb/>
tative<lb/>
lohn N. ?<lb/>
I ' :<lb/>
153-162<lb/>
as Mark Saieed won<lb/>
the post fight decision<lb/>
K : 1 Ipha<lb/>
cr I ouis Sot<lb/>
ECU's lerry Parker<lb/>
posted the best show<lb/>
ing against the Star<lb/>
burst lighters, taking<lb/>
his opponent Jesse<lb/>
Brown, to the wire<lb/>
before losing the deci<lb/>
sion in the 163-172<lb/>
pound weight class.<lb/>
But the Kinston<lb/>
club wasn't the only<lb/>
outside influence on<lb/>
the '83 tournament<lb/>
In the 173-182 title<lb/>
match-up, Tommy<lb/>
Pruitt, one ol three<lb/>
boxers representing<lb/>
the Greenville Police<lb/>
Department. scored a<lb/>
third round I K() over<lb/>
I SC"s David Kaplon<lb/>
after pelting Kaplon's<lb/>
face with a burrage of<lb/>
blood letting blows,<lb/>
following Thursday,<lb/>
night's competition,<lb/>
Pruitt was named<lb/>
Most Valuable Boxer.<lb/>
The next two fights<lb/>
went easily to Star-<lb/>
burst boxers. In the<lb/>
183-192 pound weight<lb/>
class, Kinston's Mike<lb/>
"Chiel Michael<lb/>
M ic h a e 1 " Whit e<lb/>
blasted E( I 's Man<lb/>
I owe in one of the<lb/>
e ening's shortest<lb/>
fights, another first-<lb/>
round TKO. Then<lb/>
came the 91-202 title<lb/>
tight, which definitely<lb/>
took tlie award for<lb/>
most lopsided, if not<lb/>
medic, contest.<lb/>
G PD representative<lb/>
Da n Heinz, who<lb/>
resembled little more<lb/>
than a 2(K)-lb. pun-<lb/>
ching bag against<lb/>
Kmston's Ed Smith,<lb/>
forfeited that title<lb/>
bout halfway through<lb/>
'he first round after<lb/>
Smith's makeshift at<lb/>
tempt at rearranging<lb/>
Heinz's facial struc-<lb/>
ture<lb/>
And m Ihursdav<lb/>
night's final contest,<lb/>
the 203 unlimited<lb/>
weight class, GPD's<lb/>
B.M. Hamill and<lb/>
Kappa Sigma's Keith<lb/>
Parkhill exchanged<lb/>
mostlv unimpressive<lb/>
blows for three<lb/>
straight lacklustre<lb/>
rounds en route to a<lb/>
post-fight decision in<lb/>
Hamill's favor.<lb/>
But all in all,<lb/>
despite a few one-<lb/>
sided bouts, the 1983<lb/>
TKE Boxing Tourna-<lb/>
ment provided much<lb/>
of the same entertain<lb/>
ment, excitement, ac-<lb/>
tion and blood as<lb/>
in past years, proving<lb/>
once again that it is<lb/>
one of ECU's finest,<lb/>
best-planned and<lb/>
most worthwhile<lb/>
traditions<lb/>
Special Introductory Offer COORS KEGS<lb/>
Only $45.00 Including tax, ice and cups,<lb/>
(deposit required)<lb/>
Dairy Fresh Specials<lb/>
Whole Maola Milk<lb/>
V2 gallon paper carton<lb/>
each 99<lb/>
Old South Orange Juice<lb/>
! 2 gallon paper carton<lb/>
each 99<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN ABoeriON ,drfi<lb/>
DEPEND ON that. ? <lb/>
- A " "  '?- '??- .? ?- " v<lb/>
' :  ? lav and gftt to support or?. ; ,? ?<lb/>
'ana you V its :??-?, mnfort Jr,d privacy are<lb/>
1 iredbythe ????' i"ofthe;emmg Center<lb/>
SERVICES ? .??lay -? Saturday Abortion Ap<lb/>
? ' - ? 1st &amp; 2nd Trimester Abortions up (<lb/>
 ?'? ? ? ???? Pregnancy rests? ?v Eony<lb/>
? ? ' ? ?'? ?? FeesB Insurance<lb/>
?;??:? CALL 78V5550 DAY OB NIGHT ?<lb/>
He : '? ve counse ;<lb/>
I edu  n foi wo<lb/>
THE FLEMING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
Groff's Assorted Types<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
6 oz. bag 89<lb/>
Coca-Cola, Mello Yellow,<lb/>
Diet Coke<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle each 99C<lb/>
Limit 4 of your choice<lb/>
Fresh Broccoli<lb/>
HPf<lb/>
bunch 68C<lb/>
ABORT lONb UP<lb/>
TO 12th WfcfcK<lb/>
Of- PREGNANCY<lb/>
$i?5 00 Preqnancv Test Birth<lb/>
Control ana Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
(3) 0SJS I Toll Free Number<lb/>
?00 111 7i6t between 9 A M<lb/>
and 5 P M Weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGHS WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Vrgan St<lb/>
Ralpiql<lb/>
Ex:Ires J- '<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Address<lb/>
ID Number<lb/>
Amt. ot Purchase<lb/>
PIRATE COUPON<lb/>
5 DISCOUNT<lb/>
on grocery orders<lb/>
D i sc o un X lot o 1<lb/>
?j<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0014"/><lb/>
4cademics<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INIAN<lb/>
privacy; 1 like his con<lb/>
Rma) gelce n t r a 11 o n and<lb/>
o n t h eremai kable ability<lb/>
?in whai is largely conceived b an in  dual event, tennis - somewhat difficult ate as ,i team p but Rutledge praised the ECM squad foi being able istments<lb/>
 I here is constant ' tig of positions We're ail i u ted about the up<lb/>
aning season, the u p g r a d e d v hed  and toughei com n "<lb/>
r<lb/>
V-r-?' IN<lb/>
Duron Duron<lb/>
Phil Collins<lb/>
Super Tramp<lb/>
Clash<lb/>
Triumph<lb/>
Marshall Tucker<lb/>
4pp&amp; oeofici<lb/>
Ramones<lb/>
"( ?  oyd<lb/>
; ?- '? nali Ut"<lb/>
H<lb/>
n-Urnprar<lb/>
? ? - lisi<lb/>
v<lb/>
&amp;iBmm<lb/>
' - as Famous Foot Lonq Sandwich<lb/>
BUY1<lb/>
Tl FREE<lb/>
RDAY MARCH 26<lb/>
0A.f4:00P.M.<lb/>
BRING A FRIEND<lb/>
ING THE FAMILY<lb/>
I imir I per customer<lb/>
208 E. 5 th St.<lb/>
GREEJSVILLE V.C<lb/>
ttention Students<lb/>
Super Specials<lb/>
RS KEGS<lb/>
:e and cups.<lb/>
C<lb/>
oca-Cola, Mello Yellow,<lb/>
Diet Coke<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle each 99C<lb/>
Limit 4 of your choice<lb/>
Fresh Broccoli<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
rf<lb/>
bunch 68c<lb/>
S<lb/>
OUPON<lb/>
OUNT<lb/>
y orders<lb/>
?i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
MARCH 22, 1983<lb/>
13<lb/>
7 Classifieds<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
TO THE WILD WOMEN MM,<lb/>
SUSAN, JO: Let the bonal.de<lb/>
organ, power of Nio roots. Talk-<lb/>
ing Heads. ?na the gun be with<lb/>
you. Never forget the good<lb/>
times; happy birmdaygeadua<lb/>
tion. Love always, Bryte and<lb/>
Becky<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
REASONABLE RATES. Spell<lb/>
??fl. punctuation and grammar<lb/>
corrections. Proofreading. Call<lb/>
OmWltMHIHta.m. f p.m.<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
Davenport at Washington Tacht<lb/>
? nd Country Club Thurs thru<lb/>
Sat. between s and p.m. or call<lb/>
4e 1SI4.<lb/>
Baltimore or Washington. D C<lb/>
Can leave March Ji. April I or 2<lb/>
Katie. 751 t?3 Call enyt.m.<lb/>
K? I firs. bem.? Todd Kvans is sho.n here atleraplin, lo keep . runner from<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING<lb/>
SERVICE, experience, quality<lb/>
work, IBM Selectric typewriter.<lb/>
Call Lanie Shive 7HSW1 or<lb/>
OAIL JOYNER 7S?-IT<lb/>
TYPING: Term papers, thesis.<lb/>
etc. Call Kempie Dunn. 752 47J3<lb/>
AUDIO ELECTRONICS SER<lb/>
VICE: Complete audio repair<lb/>
call after t p.m. Mark 752 124<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Lowest rate-<lb/>
on campus. ? years experience I<lb/>
BM type Call Cindy. JSs7?i,<lb/>
after 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
MOVING? No Ob too large orl<lb/>
small I Reasonable rates. call<lb/>
75533<lb/>
LOST: J YEAR OLD small<lb/>
black female dog White mark<lb/>
?ngs on chin and paws, no tail<lb/>
Answers to CLO Please call<lb/>
7S? 220 after 4 00 p m if seen or<lb/>
found.<lb/>
LOST: GERMaVsEPHERD<lb/>
Puppy, mostly black Answers to<lb/>
"Dusty Lost near Harding<lb/>
Street. If found, call S4 44j<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
WANTED. Organist for dinner<lb/>
WANTED: FEMALE<lb/>
Bartenders tor part time and<lb/>
summer job. Apply between 2<lb/>
end 4 Thursday, March 14th At<lb/>
tic. 103 E 4th Street<lb/>
ATTRACTIVE MODELS<lb/>
WANTED for figure ?<lb/>
"intimate apparel'<lb/>
photography Excellent pay<lb/>
Send figure photo and personal<lb/>
information to P O Box U13.<lb/>
Rocky Mount. N.C 27001 113<lb/>
ENERGETIC Partt.me<lb/>
Mlesperson needed Available<lb/>
mornings and Saturdays. Ex<lb/>
perience preferred but not<lb/>
necessary Apply ,n person,<lb/>
Leather n' Wood, Ltd. Carolina<lb/>
East Mall No phone calls<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
elsewhere in this paper tor taxa-<lb/>
tion and times<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
Grand Slam Carries<lb/>
State Over Pirates<lb/>
LEARN<lb/>
75?.?42<lb/>
10 YEARS<lb/>
TO FLY Call<lb/>
The ECU Pirates<lb/>
lost only their fourth<lb/>
baseball game of the<lb/>
ear Monday after-<lb/>
noon at the hands of<lb/>
'be N.C. State<lb/>
Wolf pack.<lb/>
The Wolf pack used<lb/>
a five-run 5th inning<lb/>
to pull out the in-<lb/>
trastate contest, 10-5.<lb/>
The game was<lb/>
scoreless after three<lb/>
innings, until ECU<lb/>
scored in the top half<lb/>
of the 4rth inning on<lb/>
an RBI double bv<lb/>
Daid Wells.<lb/>
The Wolfpack<lb/>
came back in their<lb/>
half of the inning to<lb/>
score one run on three<lb/>
ualks and two singles.<lb/>
ECU took the lead<lb/>
in the fifth on three<lb/>
consecutive singles by<lb/>
Jabo rulghum, Mike<lb/>
Williams and Robert<lb/>
Wells. Wilhams also<lb/>
scored on a wild pitch<lb/>
to make the score 3-1.<lb/>
N.C. State did the<lb/>
heavy damage in their<lb/>
half of the 5th inning.<lb/>
A grand slam home<lb/>
run by Doug Barbour<lb/>
put the game out of<lb/>
reach for the<lb/>
Wolfpack.<lb/>
The Pirates left 12<lb/>
men stranded on base<lb/>
for the game, a fact<lb/>
which ECU coach Hal<lb/>
Baird claimed was the<lb/>
fault of poor execu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"Our executing is<lb/>
where we have been<lb/>
deficient Baird<lb/>
said. "That cost us to-<lb/>
day and we're going<lb/>
to have to eliminate<lb/>
those type of mistakes<lb/>
in the future<lb/>
For the Pirates,<lb/>
who are now 11-4,<lb/>
Winfred Johnson<lb/>
picked up his first loss<lb/>
of the year after four<lb/>
consecutive wins.<lb/>
ECU was led in hit-<lb/>
ting by Robert and<lb/>
David Wells (no rela-<lb/>
tion), who had two<lb/>
hits apiece.<lb/>
The next Pirate<lb/>
game is scheduled for<lb/>
this afternoon at 3:00<lb/>
p.m. at Campbell.<lb/>
jijrior fxecs<lb/>
A9E VOti NEW IN THl JOB MARKET?<lb/>
SALAR<lb/>
Starts $1?00 - 524,100 increasing<lb/>
annually to $28.00 - $44,800 in four<lb/>
years .<lb/>
QUALIFICATIOHS<lb/>
?In! Ii-ue gratis, all degrees ami degree<lb/>
levels considered. Recent qrads looking<lb/>
tor first job as well as those<lb/>
contemplating a job change (under age<lb/>
34) are encouraged to apply! Required<lb/>
to pas rental and physical exams.<lb/>
FNt l : i<lb/>
Full medical, dental, unltaited sick<lb/>
leave, 3" days annual paid vacation,<lb/>
post grad education prograns and<lb/>
retlrenent in 20 years!<lb/>
JOB<lb/>
'Portions are still available in the<lb/>
following areas: Management (technical<lb/>
and non-technical). Engineering,<lb/>
Nuclear, Teaching, Intel 1 i gerce <lb/>
Aviation Management, Diving, Pilots<lb/>
Finance, Personnel Management. Worldwide<lb/>
? ocations - we pay relocation expenses.<lb/>
:f you're interested in finding out<lb/>
wre, see the Navy Officer Programs<lb/>
 they'll be on campus 29-31 March<lb/>
at the student (Wter. rjf ynil ,???,<lb/>
id.e it, send your resume or transcripts<lb/>
to:<lb/>
NELSON SKINNER<lb/>
U.S. NAVY OFFICER PROGRAMS<lb/>
1001 Navaho Or.<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27609<lb/>
Or call 1-800-662-7231<lb/>
8am-4pm, MonFri.<lb/>
Jounnk. I NEED A R,DE TO MO<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ITALIAN BUFFET <lb/>
5 P.MCLOSE<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
?LASAGNA m<lb/>
K ?SPAGHETTI $3.99<lb/>
ji(Choice of 3 Sauces)<lb/>
m?r? Wlth (jarlic Bread<lb/>
f'lh a" you can eat soup and salad $4.99<lb/>
MOVING? NO JOB TOO<lb/>
LARGE OR SMALL<lb/>
Reasonable rales Call 7S4-SJ<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE PERSON(S)<lb/>
WANTED to sub lease one room<lb/>
apartment at Tar River Estates<lb/>
this summer Apt ,s beside<lb/>
large swimming pool. Mas patio<lb/>
and is located 5 minutes Irom<lb/>
campus Can 7JI 4424 lor more<lb/>
information<lb/>
FREE Increase your reading<lb/>
speed on the spot at a free<lb/>
Evelvn wood Reading<lb/>
Dynamics Introductory lesson<lb/>
We'll also show you how it's<lb/>
possible to read and study three<lb/>
to l? times taster with better<lb/>
comprehension! Get better<lb/>
grades, have more free time<lb/>
Find out how See our large ad<lb/>
<lb/>
 -<lb/>
l?74 TOYOTA CORONA<lb/>
ac good mileage, clean (I.<lb/>
W iJU ask for Jim<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS, faculty, Matt<lb/>
Welcome to our tlea marfee at<lb/>
the Pitt County r in ej e.aiii<lb/>
located on North Greenville<lb/>
Blvd Open every Saturday and<lb/>
Sunday t M s Crafts, tee. h?r<lb/>
mture. books, etc Di<lb/>
old postcards buttons<lb/>
pistols and collectors<lb/>
Real bargains!)<lb/>
SURFBOARDS PRO SU?J?G<lb/>
DESIGNS. MTB. Diiele.<lb/>
twins and tns Clean itiapi i<lb/>
some damage U ?7e?<lb/>
TWIN BED WITH FRAME. 4?<lb/>
spring, mattress, table cites'<lb/>
Good condition, call 7S3 1S?.<lb/>
'?<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
nr<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
: 5th ANNUAL SPRING ZING <lb/>
; WING DING FLING THING :<lb/>
' " - ' STATES <lb/>
THUR<lb/>
kVrJIV ?HII4. -j (if.<lb/>
ALL-YOl-tAN-LAt J<lb/>
FLOUNDER DINNER<lb/>
Breakfast Bar open 6:00am"<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
205 GrMnvilU Blvd.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
CALL FORt<lb/>
DETAILS t<lb/>
 - . - 752-5543 t<lb/>
? .OTE: This annual event alwavs sells out <lb/>
 so please come early. I<lb/>
WW?M,m?w.TTTTT()t<lb/>
MARCH<lb/>
24th<lb/>
GIRLS FREE TILL 1030<lb/>
GUYS 99 ALL NIGHT<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR PRICES<lb/>
ON THE BAR ALL NIGHT<lb/>
RAFFLE SURPRISE???<lb/>
AND AN ALL CAMPUS<lb/>
iry CHUG<lb/>
V? 0FF<lb/>
GRADUATE TO GOLD<lb/>
AND<lb/>
DIAMONDS!<lb/>
With a Diamond College Ring<lb/>
from ArtCarved.<lb/>
Your ArtCarved Representative<lb/>
is here now with the beautifully<lb/>
affordable Designer Diamond Collection.<lb/>
An ArtCarved exclusive. Exquisitely crafted<lb/>
designs, all set with genuine diamonds, in 10k<lb/>
or 14k gold. Or, chose the elegant diamond-<lb/>
substitute Cubic Zircinia.<lb/>
Let your ArtCarved Representative show you this!<lb/>
beautiful class ring collection today. Gold and<lb/>
diamondsit's the only way to go.<lb/>
IRT(7,RVED<lb/>
COLLFGF RIMP,Q<lb/>
COLLEGE RINGS<lb/>
Tues. 22nd<lb/>
Wed. 23rd<lb/>
DATE ? "<lb/>
9-4<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
- Deposit Required MasterCard or Visa Accepted<lb/>
Student Supply <lb/>
SKLobby <lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
Nothing etee feete like real gold O<lb/>
The Official<lb/>
U Class Rings<lb/>
v ?<lb/>
r<lb/>
A<lb/>
mm<lb/>
" .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0015"/><lb/>
YOU CAN<lb/>
gets down to what you want to do and what you<lb/>
c to do. Take the free Evelyn Wood Re<lb/>
nics lesson and you can do it handle all the<lb/>
ollege demands and still have time to enjoy<lb/>
ife<lb/>
an dramatically increase your reading speed<lb/>
and that s just the start. Thim the time<lb/>
ou d have to do the things you ?<lb/>
Fc twenty years the ones who get ahea<lb/>
d Reading Dynam<lb/>
today s active world<lb/>
.?N <lb/>
Don t get left behind because there as too much<lb/>
to read. Take the free Evelyn Wo<lb/>
lamics lesson today ou can<lb/>
se your reading spee<lb/>
need study techniques in <lb/>
n Make the college life<lb/>
ung Dynamics you c<lb/>
t h<lb/>
TODAY MAR.22 Noon and 3pm Rotary-<lb/>
-7pm Ramada<lb/>
WEDNESDAY MAR.23 2pm4:30pm,7pm Rotary<lb/>
THURSDAY MAR.24 1:30pm Rotary-5pm,7:30pm Ramada<lb/>
Seating is limited, so<lb/>
please plan on<lb/>
attending the<lb/>
curliest<lb/>
possible<lb/>
lesson!<lb/>
3 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS<lb/>
<pb facs="00057544_0016"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>