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<pb facs="00057550_0001"/>
Mz<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No?l <lb/>
Tuesday, April 12, 1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
<lb/>
Graduation Location<lb/>
Ceremony Will Be Held In Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Chancellor John M. Howell,<lb/>
after reaching a compromise with<lb/>
all parties, has reversed his deci-<lb/>
sion to hold the Ma commence-<lb/>
ment exercises at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum<lb/>
Howell announced late Friday<lb/>
thai the Maj o commencement<lb/>
ceremony would be moved back<lb/>
to Ficklen Statium, its usual sue.<lb/>
1 or more than a week. Howell<lb/>
and Assistant Dean i C. Rowe,<lb/>
who ;s chairman of the Com-<lb/>
mencement Committee, were<lb/>
receiving strong resistance from<lb/>
graduating senior- to their plan to<lb/>
move this year's ceremony to<lb/>
Minges Coliseum which only<lb/>
hold's 6,900 people rhe 6,900<lb/>
figure included graduates and<lb/>
faculty, putting actual available<lb/>
seating at about 5,000. Past com-<lb/>
mencement crowds have been<lb/>
estimated at 13.(XX).<lb/>
Ficklen was originally<lb/>
unavailable because a $163,000<lb/>
renovation project on the<lb/>
stadium's football field was<lb/>
scheduled to begin later this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
I Cl political science senior<lb/>
Mike Wat kins had been cir-<lb/>
culating a petition asking that the<lb/>
ceremony be returned to Ficklen.<lb/>
Other students were upset because<lb/>
Rowe was only issuing two tickets<lb/>
per student to the commencement<lb/>
exercises.<lb/>
Rowe had planned to set up<lb/>
outdoor speakers for those unable<lb/>
to get inside Minges and closed-<lb/>
circuit television coverage for 200<lb/>
others.<lb/>
Howell said student resistance<lb/>
to the plan was one of the factors<lb/>
in his decision to return the<lb/>
ceremony to Ficklen under a new<lb/>
format where graduating students<lb/>
as well as visitors will be seated in<lb/>
the stands leaving only the band-<lb/>
shell and speakers platform on the<lb/>
sidelines at the south end of the<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
"A major factor was that 1<lb/>
began to see that they were not go-<lb/>
ing to start the project as early as 1<lb/>
had originally understood<lb/>
Howell added.<lb/>
Howell said that the length of<lb/>
time between graduation and the<lb/>
time the renovation was going to<lb/>
start became "shorter and<lb/>
shorter" and so he felt the<lb/>
ceremony could be switched back<lb/>
to Ficklen.<lb/>
"There was a lot o student<lb/>
discontent with the decision to<lb/>
have it in Minges Rowe said,<lb/>
adding that Howell .ad been con-<lb/>
sidering alternatives for several<lb/>
days. "Construction will be tak-<lb/>
See GRADUATION, Page 7<lb/>
Pt?0?t Bv CINDY (&amp;Ll-<lb/>
The site was chosen<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium will be the site of next month's commencment ceremonies for FCl<lb/>
by the university administration after students objected to the limited seating for family and friends<lb/>
available in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Legislature Approves Funding For Banquet<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
legislator David V hitley<lb/>
opposes banquet funding<lb/>
B DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
.sisij.fi: rw frditnr<lb/>
The SGA Legislature voted<lb/>
Mondav night to appropriate $752<lb/>
to fund its annual awards ban-<lb/>
quet, despite heavy opposition to<lb/>
the measure which allows student<lb/>
fees to pay for non-student guests<lb/>
at the banquet.<lb/>
I ast year legislators paid for in-<lb/>
dividual tickets to finance the<lb/>
banquet.<lb/>
I egislator David Cook led the<lb/>
opposition to student funding of<lb/>
the banquet, noting that the SGA<lb/>
had cut food and entertainment<lb/>
expenses from the budget of other<lb/>
groups in efforts to trim SGA<lb/>
allocations.<lb/>
Da id Whitlcv, chairman of the<lb/>
appropriations committee, also<lb/>
argued against the funding, citing<lb/>
a guideline o the appropriations<lb/>
committee that prohibits the<lb/>
allocation of student activity fees<lb/>
for "social events with no educa-<lb/>
tional or social value Whitley<lb/>
said some people could consider<lb/>
the giving out of awards at the<lb/>
banquet a service, but he did not<lb/>
think it was.<lb/>
Supporters o the measure,<lb/>
which passed by a vote of 17 to<lb/>
13, included SGA President Eric<lb/>
Henderson. Henderson said the<lb/>
cost of this year's banquet is lower<lb/>
than last year's, and noted that<lb/>
the room in which the event will<lb/>
be held does not cost anything.<lb/>
The banquet will be held in the<lb/>
multi-purpose room of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Henderson also said entertain-<lb/>
ment at the event would be pro-<lb/>
vided free by a student of the<lb/>
School of Music, and that the ap-<lb/>
propriation must be made im-<lb/>
mediately to allow the caterer,<lb/>
Servomation, time to plan the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Legislator Bob Morgan also<lb/>
argued for the bill, saving that<lb/>
SGA members work several hours<lb/>
a week all year without pay and<lb/>
"this is the only thing we'll be<lb/>
asking for ourselves<lb/>
The bill provides $752 for a<lb/>
banquet and reception for 110<lb/>
people, including members of the<lb/>
legislature, the SGA executive of-<lb/>
ficers, members of the honor<lb/>
board, selected faculty, guests and<lb/>
other SGA staff members.<lb/>
The measure originally contain-<lb/>
ed an additional $100 appropria-<lb/>
tion for wine at the reception, but<lb/>
it was brought out in debate that<lb/>
student fees cannot be used to<lb/>
purchase alcoholic beverages, ac-<lb/>
cording to the policy of the ECU<lb/>
Board of Trustees and the SGA.<lb/>
In other SGA business, the<lb/>
Legislature passed a resolution<lb/>
urging that graduation be held on<lb/>
a Saturday in future years, to<lb/>
allow friends arid relatives o<lb/>
graduates the chance to attend the<lb/>
ceremony without having to leave<lb/>
work or school. Graduation is<lb/>
scheduled to be on a Fridav at 9<lb/>
a.m. this year.<lb/>
The legislature deb<lb/>
resolution that would ask<lb/>
school administrator. <lb/>
the day of ihi- yeai s coi<lb/>
meni to Saturday. ?<lb/>
represents the gra<lb/>
senior class preside<lb/>
against the measure h<lb/>
would be difficult for n<lb/>
pie. especialh speakers,<lb/>
plans and reservations at sucl<lb/>
late date.<lb/>
He said the switch could in-<lb/>
terfere with some gradual<lb/>
to get married the da after<lb/>
graduation. He also said the<lb/>
ministration would be verv reluc-<lb/>
tant to chanee the dav.<lb/>
Researcher Speaks On<lb/>
'Dealing With Disaster'<lb/>
a. ?J ?<lb/>
A special program coordinated<lb/>
b a nationally-known researcher<lb/>
will be held Tuesday night to pro-<lb/>
vide emotional support for people<lb/>
who were involved in the explo-<lb/>
sion at the Village Green Apart-<lb/>
ment complex last month.<lb/>
Dr. Susan McCammon, assis-<lb/>
tant pro lessor in the the<lb/>
psycholog) department, with the<lb/>
support ol Elmer Meyer, vice<lb/>
chancellor for student life, has in-<lb/>
vited Jack Smith, a post traumatic<lb/>
stress researcher at Duke Univer<lb/>
sitv to present a program titled<lb/>
"How Do We Deal With<lb/>
Disaster'1"<lb/>
Smith will lead a community<lb/>
and survivor debriefing for people<lb/>
somehow involved in the disaster.<lb/>
Meyer worked with McCammon<lb/>
to form a special committee on<lb/>
post traumatic reactions.<lb/>
McCammon said the evening,<lb/>
program, which will be held at 7<lb/>
p.m. at the Catholic Newman<lb/>
Center (953 E. 10th St.), is open<lb/>
to the entire Greenville and ECU<lb/>
communities. This includes sur-<lb/>
vivors ot the explosion, their<lb/>
friends and family members and<lb/>
other interested community<lb/>
members.<lb/>
McCammon said tnai sne<lb/>
decided to form the committee to<lb/>
deal with the mental health con-<lb/>
cerns of people involved with the<lb/>
explosion. She noted that the<lb/>
ECU campus ministers had pro-<lb/>
vided some immediate emotional<lb/>
response to the disaster during<lb/>
their visits to the hospital and dur-<lb/>
ing the ordeal. "I wasn't aware of<lb/>
any other response from the men-<lb/>
tal health community McCam-<lb/>
mon added.<lb/>
McCammon said the ad hoc<lb/>
committe modeled its ideas after<lb/>
the past traumatic stress work that<lb/>
was done in Kansas City, Mo<lb/>
following the 1981 hotel disaster<lb/>
that claimed 111 lives and injured<lb/>
more than 200 people. Smith was<lb/>
one of the people who worked on<lb/>
post traumatic stress after that<lb/>
disaster.<lb/>
McCammon noted that the<lb/>
Village Green disaster had "some<lb/>
similarities" with the Kansas City<lb/>
disaster because it was<lb/>
"completely unexpected" and<lb/>
"not an act of God McCam-<lb/>
mon added that both disasters<lb/>
were the result of "a failure of<lb/>
technology<lb/>
McCammon said that it's im-<lb/>
portant, when an abnormal tragic<lb/>
event takes place, to help people<lb/>
involved in the disaster to unders-<lb/>
tand, intergrate and live through<lb/>
the experience.<lb/>
McCammon noted that because<lb/>
an event is not normal, there are<lb/>
certain expected predictable reac-<lb/>
tions that people will have, such<lb/>
as shock and disbelief. To others<lb/>
who were present at the time of<lb/>
the explosion, there was an<lb/>
automatic response to take action<lb/>
to aid those injured in the explo-<lb/>
sion. A third reaction is "a period<lb/>
of assessment" when people in-<lb/>
tegrate what has happened and<lb/>
finally experience the full impact<lb/>
of the disaster.<lb/>
"We felt like it was important<lb/>
to let people know that these reac-<lb/>
tions are normal responses to ab-<lb/>
normal situations McCammon<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to McCammon some<lb/>
ECU students involved in the<lb/>
Village Green incident have been<lb/>
experiencing several kinds of post<lb/>
traumatic stress symptoms. She<lb/>
noted that some have complained<lb/>
of recurrent nightmares, trouble<lb/>
concentrating, fear that the<lb/>
disaster will happen again and<lb/>
problems with school.<lb/>
The program tonight will be<lb/>
giving these people an opportuni-<lb/>
ty to share their feelings with<lb/>
others, McCammon said. "We<lb/>
want to legitimize the reactions<lb/>
that they're feeling and let them<lb/>
know this is normal she added.<lb/>
McCammon also added that a<lb/>
person who experiences<lb/>
"unusually persistant" post<lb/>
traumatic stress should seek pro-<lb/>
fessional help.<lb/>
Smith will lead an open discus-<lb/>
sion and then participants will<lb/>
break into small groups for<lb/>
discussion. McCammon said that<lb/>
students involved in the Jan. 8 fire<lb/>
at the Tau Kappa Epsilon frater-<lb/>
nity house are also invited to at-<lb/>
tend this program.<lb/>
Fraternity Members<lb/>
Charged In Assault<lb/>
Greek Week<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
ECU fraternit and sorority members pulled out all stops last week<lb/>
to celebrate Greek Week. For more pictures of the event, see the<lb/>
special feature on page 5.<lb/>
By MARY TOWNSEND<lb/>
Staff V? rite<lb/>
The first of 12 East Carolina<lb/>
University students facing assault<lb/>
and hazing charges in connection<lb/>
with Omega Psi Phi initiation<lb/>
practices was found guilty last<lb/>
week of assaulting a pledge<lb/>
brother.<lb/>
Wayne P. Smith, an ECU<lb/>
graduate student was granted a<lb/>
prayer for judgement (a postpone-<lb/>
ment of sentencing) from Judge<lb/>
Robert Wheeler. Wheeler wants<lb/>
to hear the remaining 11 cases<lb/>
before sentencing Smith. Smith<lb/>
was found not guilty on the haz-<lb/>
ing charge.<lb/>
Tony Micheal Jones, 20, filed<lb/>
the hazing and assault charges<lb/>
against 12 students, most of<lb/>
whom are Omega Psi Phi fraterni-<lb/>
ty members.<lb/>
Jones, a former Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
pledge, testified he suffered<lb/>
serious injuries requiring medical<lb/>
attention when he and other<lb/>
pledge brothers were assaulted by<lb/>
a group of Omega Psi Phi frater-<lb/>
nity brothers on Feb. 10.<lb/>
Smith, not an Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
member, was also present accor-<lb/>
ding to Jones' testimony. Jones<lb/>
testified that he and the other<lb/>
pledges were visiting some of the<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi fraternity brothers<lb/>
at a Wilson Acres' apartment the<lb/>
evening of the alleged assault.<lb/>
Jones said they were coming<lb/>
down a flight of stairs when<lb/>
group o around 12 fraternity<lb/>
members and Smith began pun-<lb/>
ching and kicking them.<lb/>
Jones also said he had bee:<lb/>
victim of hazing on Feb. 4 wl<lb/>
he and the other pledge broth s<lb/>
were forced to eat drv gr <lb/>
drink scalding water. Jones sa<lb/>
later that evening he was slapped<lb/>
and paddled. According to Joi<lb/>
testimony. Smith was an act t<lb/>
participant in the hazing<lb/>
Smith, charged with hazing a<lb/>
assault inflicting serious in ury,<lb/>
pleaded not guilty on both counts.<lb/>
and testified that he had not been<lb/>
present the evenings of the alleged<lb/>
assault and hazing.<lb/>
Smith, found innocent of the<lb/>
hazing charge, will be sentenced<lb/>
when the remaining cases are<lb/>
tried. The remaining 11 students<lb/>
charged by Jones for similar<lb/>
fenses were granted a three-week<lb/>
continuation. The continuation<lb/>
was granted when the lawyei<lb/>
representing all 11 defendants<lb/>
withdrew from the cases due to a<lb/>
conflict of interest.<lb/>
According to Assistant Director<lb/>
of Campus Public Health<lb/>
Safety Francis Eddings, this is the<lb/>
first official hazing case in more<lb/>
than eight years.<lb/>
School Funding Will Be A 'DeadIssue'<lb/>
With the new executive officers<lb/>
about to be sworn in, the con-<lb/>
troversy surrounding the funding<lb/>
of academic departments may<lb/>
well become, in the words of Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life Elmer<lb/>
Meyer, a "dead issue President-<lb/>
elect Paul Naso has said he is in<lb/>
favor of funding projects that<lb/>
receive no state funding and<lb/>
which benefit the school.<lb/>
Outgoing SGA President Eric<lb/>
Henderson recently stated his<lb/>
disapproval of funding various<lb/>
schools in the university, such as<lb/>
the School of Music. The dean of<lb/>
the music school, Charles<lb/>
Schwartz, said his department<lb/>
depends on funds from the SGA<lb/>
to finance the projects of the dif-<lb/>
ferent music ensembles. He said<lb/>
state law forbids the funding of<lb/>
certain activities that he feels are<lb/>
vital to the music school and the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
SGA Speaker of the House<lb/>
Gary Williams rebutted the charge<lb/>
by Henderson that academic<lb/>
departments abuse the legislature.<lb/>
He said the SGA is not funding<lb/>
the schools directly, but indirect-<lb/>
ly, through student organizations,<lb/>
such as The Student Forum for<lb/>
Musical Instruments, that are<lb/>
separate from the individual<lb/>
academic departments.<lb/>
Williams said the SGA funds<lb/>
the School of Music for activities<lb/>
that are beneficial to the school as<lb/>
a whole. He said the decision to<lb/>
fund these departments is based<lb/>
on the same criteria as other stu-<lb/>
dent organizations.<lb/>
Both Williams and Dean<lb/>
Schwartz admitted their is some<lb/>
overlap in the SGA funding into<lb/>
the instructional side of the<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Schwartz said the School of<lb/>
Music depends solely on the SGA<lb/>
to fund extracurricular activities<lb/>
that by law cannot be funded b<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor Meyer, advisor<lb/>
to the SGA, said he believes the<lb/>
legislature as a whole should<lb/>
decide what to do with the money<lb/>
they appropriate.<lb/>
Dean Shwartz did say that their<lb/>
original request of funds from the<lb/>
SGA for $56,000 has been altered<lb/>
considerably after consultation<lb/>
with Williams. Shwartz said he is<lb/>
not taking advantage of the SGA,<lb/>
but is only trying to get money for<lb/>
music programs that enhance the<lb/>
reputation of ECU.<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0002"/><lb/>
(She lEaat ?awltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.5<lb/>
P <lb/>
Tuesday, April 12,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Graduation Location<lb/>
Ceremony Will Be Held In Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
SMI ?rilf<lb/>
Chancellor John M. Howell,<lb/>
after reaching a compromise with<lb/>
all parties, has reversed his deci-<lb/>
sion to hold the May commence-<lb/>
ment exercises at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Howell announced late Friday<lb/>
that the May 6 commencement<lb/>
ceremony would be moved back<lb/>
to Ficklen Statium. its usual site.<lb/>
For more than a week, Howell<lb/>
and Assistant Dean C. C. Rowe,<lb/>
who is chairman of the Com-<lb/>
mencement Committee, were<lb/>
receiving strong resistance from<lb/>
graduating seniors to their plan to<lb/>
move this year's ceremony to<lb/>
Minges Coliseum which only<lb/>
holds 6.900 people. The 6,900<lb/>
figure included graduates and<lb/>
faculty, putting actual available<lb/>
seating at about 5,000. Past com-<lb/>
mencement crowds have been<lb/>
estimated at 13,000.<lb/>
Ficklen was originally<lb/>
unavailable because a $163,000<lb/>
renovation project on the<lb/>
stadium's football field was<lb/>
scheduled to begin later this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
ECU political science senior<lb/>
Mike Watkins had been cir-<lb/>
culating a petition asking that the<lb/>
ceremony be returned to Ficklen.<lb/>
Other students were upset because<lb/>
Rowe was only issuing two tickets<lb/>
per student to the commencement<lb/>
exercises.<lb/>
Rowe had planned to set up<lb/>
outdoor speakers for those unable<lb/>
to get inside Minges and closed-<lb/>
circuit television coverage for 200<lb/>
others.<lb/>
Howell said student resistance<lb/>
to the plan was one of the factors<lb/>
in his decision to return the<lb/>
ceremony to Ficklen under a new<lb/>
format where graduating students<lb/>
as well as visitors will be seated in<lb/>
the stands leaving only the band-<lb/>
shell and speakers platform on the<lb/>
sidelines at the south end of the<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
"A major factor was that I<lb/>
began to see that they were not go-<lb/>
ing to start the project as early as I<lb/>
had originally understood<lb/>
Howell added.<lb/>
Howell said that the length of<lb/>
time between graduation and the<lb/>
time the renovation was going to<lb/>
start became "shorter and<lb/>
shorter" and so he felt the<lb/>
ceremony could be switched back<lb/>
to Ficklen.<lb/>
"There was a lot of student<lb/>
discontent with the decision to<lb/>
have it in Minges Rowe said,<lb/>
adding that Howell had been con-<lb/>
sidering alternatives for several<lb/>
days. "Construction will be tak-<lb/>
See GRADUATION, Page 7<lb/>
?I<lb/>
Pfeoto By CINDY WALL<lb/>
The site was chosen<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium will be the site of next month's commencment ceremonies for ECU<lb/>
by the university administration after students objected to the limited seating for family and friends<lb/>
available in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Legislature Approves Funding For Banquet<lb/>
4<lb/>
Legislator David Whitley<lb/>
opposes banquet funding<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
AuiiUnl Ne?? Editor<lb/>
The SGA Legislature voted<lb/>
Monday night to appropriate $752<lb/>
to fund its annual awards ban-<lb/>
quet, despite heavy opposition to<lb/>
the measure which allows student<lb/>
fees to pay for non-student guests<lb/>
at the banquet.<lb/>
Last year legislators paid for in-<lb/>
dividual tickets to finance the<lb/>
banquet.<lb/>
Legislator David Cook led the<lb/>
opposition to student funding of<lb/>
the banquet, noting that the SGA<lb/>
had cut food and entertainment<lb/>
expenses from the budget of other<lb/>
groups in efforts to trim SGA<lb/>
allocations.<lb/>
David Whitley, chairman of the<lb/>
appropriations committee, also<lb/>
argued against the funding, citing<lb/>
a guideline of the appropriations<lb/>
committee that prohibits the<lb/>
allocation of student activity fees<lb/>
for "social events with no educa-<lb/>
tional or social value Whitley<lb/>
said some people could consider<lb/>
the giving out of awards at the<lb/>
banquet a service, but he did not<lb/>
think it was.<lb/>
Supporters of the measure,<lb/>
which passed by a vote of 17 to<lb/>
13, included SGA President Eric<lb/>
Henderson. Henderson said the<lb/>
cost of this year's banquet is lower<lb/>
than last year's, and noted that<lb/>
the room in which the event will<lb/>
be held does not cost anything.<lb/>
The banquet will be held in the<lb/>
multi-purpose room of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Henderson also said entertain-<lb/>
ment at the event would be pro-<lb/>
vided free by a student of the<lb/>
School of Music, and that the ap-<lb/>
propriation must be made im-<lb/>
mediately to allow the caterer,<lb/>
Servomation, time to plan the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Legislator Bob Morgan also<lb/>
argued for the bill, saying that<lb/>
SGA members work several hours<lb/>
a week all year without pay and<lb/>
"this is the only thing we'll be<lb/>
asking for ourselves<lb/>
The bill provides $752 for a<lb/>
banquet and reception for 110<lb/>
people, including members of the<lb/>
legislature, the SGA executive of-<lb/>
ficers, members of the honor<lb/>
board, selected faculty, guests and<lb/>
other SGA staff members.<lb/>
The measure originally contain-<lb/>
ed an additional $100 appropria-<lb/>
tion for wine at the reception, but<lb/>
it was brought out in debate that<lb/>
student fees cannot be used to<lb/>
purchase alcoholic beverages, ac-<lb/>
cording to the policy of the ECU<lb/>
Board of Trustees and the SGA.<lb/>
In other SGA business, the<lb/>
Legislature passed a resolution<lb/>
urging that graduation be held on<lb/>
a Saturday in future years, to<lb/>
allow friends aAd relatives of<lb/>
graduates the chance to attend the<lb/>
ceremony without having to leave<lb/>
work or school. Graduation is<lb/>
scheduled to be on a Friday at 9<lb/>
a.m. this year.<lb/>
The legislature debated a<lb/>
resolution that would ask the<lb/>
school administration to change<lb/>
the day of this year's commence-<lb/>
ment to Saturday. Cook. vho<lb/>
represents the graduating class as<lb/>
senior class president, argued<lb/>
against the measure because it<lb/>
would be difficult for many peo-<lb/>
ple, especially speakers, to change<lb/>
plans and reservations at such a<lb/>
late date.<lb/>
He said the switch could in-<lb/>
terfere with some graduates' plans<lb/>
to get married the day after<lb/>
graduation. He also said the ad-<lb/>
ministration would be very reluc-<lb/>
tant to change the day.<lb/>
Researcher Speaks On<lb/>
' Dealing With Disaster'<lb/>
A special program coordinated<lb/>
by a nationally-known researcher<lb/>
will be held Tuesday night to pro-<lb/>
vide emotional support for people<lb/>
who were involved in the explo-<lb/>
sion at the Village Green Apart-<lb/>
ment complex last month.<lb/>
Dr. Susan McCammon, assis-<lb/>
tant professor in the the<lb/>
psychology department, with the<lb/>
support of Elmer Meyer, vice<lb/>
chancellor for student life, has in-<lb/>
vited Jack Smith, a post traumatic<lb/>
stress researcher at Duke Univer<lb/>
sity to present a program titled<lb/>
"How Do We Deal With<lb/>
Disaster?"<lb/>
Smith will lead a community<lb/>
and survivor debriefing for people<lb/>
somehow involved in the disaster.<lb/>
Meyer worked with McCammon<lb/>
to form a special committee on<lb/>
post traumatic reactions.<lb/>
McCammon said the evening,<lb/>
program, which will be held at 7<lb/>
p.m. at the Catholic Newman<lb/>
Center (953 E. 10th St.), is open<lb/>
to the entire Greenville and ECU<lb/>
communities. This includes sur-<lb/>
vivors of the explosion, their<lb/>
friends and family members and<lb/>
other interested community<lb/>
members.<lb/>
McCammon said that sne<lb/>
decided to form the committee to<lb/>
deal with the mental health con-<lb/>
cerns of people involved with the<lb/>
explosion. She noted that the<lb/>
ECU campus ministers had pro-<lb/>
vided some immediate emotional<lb/>
response to the disaster during<lb/>
their visits to the hospital and dur-<lb/>
ing the ordeal. "I wasn't aware of<lb/>
any other response from the men-<lb/>
tal health community McCam-<lb/>
mon added.<lb/>
McCammon said the ad hoc<lb/>
committe modeled its ideas after<lb/>
the past traumatic stress work that<lb/>
was done in Kansas City, Mo<lb/>
following the 1981 hotel disaster<lb/>
that claimed 111 lives and injured<lb/>
more than 200 people. Smith was<lb/>
one of the people who worked on<lb/>
post traumatic stress after that<lb/>
disaster.<lb/>
McCammon noted that the<lb/>
Village Green disaster had "some<lb/>
similarities" with the Kansas City<lb/>
disaster because it was<lb/>
"completely unexpected" and<lb/>
"not an act of God McCam-<lb/>
mon added that both disasters<lb/>
were the result of "a failure of<lb/>
technology<lb/>
McCammon said that it's im-<lb/>
portant, when an abnormal tragic<lb/>
event takes place, to help people<lb/>
involved in the disaster to unders-<lb/>
tand, intergrate and live through<lb/>
the experience.<lb/>
McCammon noted that because<lb/>
an event is not normal, there are<lb/>
certain expected predictable reac-<lb/>
tions that people will have, such<lb/>
as shock and disbelief. To others<lb/>
who were present at the time of<lb/>
the explosion, there was an<lb/>
automatic response to take action<lb/>
to aid those injured in the explo-<lb/>
sion. A third reaction is "a period<lb/>
of assessment" when people in-<lb/>
tegrate what has happened and<lb/>
finally experience the full impact<lb/>
of the disaster.<lb/>
"We felt like it was important<lb/>
to let people know that these reac-<lb/>
tions are normal responses to ab-<lb/>
normal situations McCammon<lb/>
said.<lb/>
According to McCammon some<lb/>
ECU students involved in the<lb/>
Village Green incident have been<lb/>
experiencing several kinds of post<lb/>
traumatic stress symptoms. She<lb/>
noted that some have complained<lb/>
of recurrent nightmares, trouble<lb/>
concentrating, fear that the<lb/>
disaster will happen again and<lb/>
problems with school.<lb/>
The program tonight will be<lb/>
giving these people an opportuni-<lb/>
ty to share their feelings with<lb/>
others, McCammon said. "We<lb/>
want to legitimize the reactions<lb/>
that they're feeling and let them<lb/>
know this is normal she added.<lb/>
McCammon also added that a<lb/>
person who experiences<lb/>
"unusually persistant" post<lb/>
traumatic stress should seek pro-<lb/>
fessional help.<lb/>
Smith will lead an open discus-<lb/>
sion and then participants will<lb/>
break into small groups for<lb/>
discussion. McCammon said that<lb/>
students involved in the Jan. 8 fire<lb/>
at the Tau Kappa Epsilon frater-<lb/>
nity house are also invited to at-<lb/>
tend this program.<lb/>
Fraternity Members<lb/>
Charged In Assault<lb/>
Greek Week<lb/>
MX By GAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
ECU fraternity and sorority members pulled out all stops last week<lb/>
to celebrate Greek Week. For more pictures of the event, see the<lb/>
special feature on page 5.<lb/>
By MARY TOWNSEND<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The first of 12 East Carolina<lb/>
University students facing assault<lb/>
and hazing charges in connection<lb/>
with Omega Psi Phi initiation<lb/>
practices was found guilty last<lb/>
week of assaulting a pledge<lb/>
brother.<lb/>
Wayne P. Smith, an ECU<lb/>
graduate student was granted a<lb/>
prayer for judgement (a postpone-<lb/>
ment of sentencing) from Judge<lb/>
Robert Wheeler. Wheeler wants<lb/>
to hear the remaining 11 cases<lb/>
before sentencing Smith. Smith<lb/>
was found not guilty on the haz-<lb/>
ing charge.<lb/>
Tony Micheal Jones, 20, filed<lb/>
the hazing and assault charges<lb/>
against 12 students, most of<lb/>
whom are Omega Psi Phi fraterni-<lb/>
ty members.<lb/>
Jones, a former Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
pledge, testified he suffered<lb/>
serious injuries requiring medical<lb/>
attention when he and other<lb/>
pledge brothers were assaulted by<lb/>
a group of Omega Psi Phi frater-<lb/>
nity brothers on Feb. 10.<lb/>
Smith, not an Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
member, was also present accor-<lb/>
ding to Jones' testimony. Jones<lb/>
testified that he and the other<lb/>
pledges were visiting some of the<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi fraternity brothers<lb/>
at a Wilson Acres' apartment the<lb/>
evening of the alleged assault.<lb/>
Jones said they were coming<lb/>
down a flight of stairs when a<lb/>
group of around 12 fraternity<lb/>
members and Smith began pun-<lb/>
ching and kicking them.<lb/>
Jones also said he had been a<lb/>
victim of hazing on Feb. 4 when<lb/>
he and the other pledge brothers<lb/>
were forced to eat dry grits and<lb/>
drink scalding water. Jones said<lb/>
later that evening he was slapped<lb/>
and paddled. According to Jones'<lb/>
testimony. Smith was an active<lb/>
participant in the hazing.<lb/>
Smith, charged with hazing and<lb/>
assault inflicting serious injury,<lb/>
pleaded not guilty on both counts,<lb/>
and testified that he had not been<lb/>
present the evenings of the alleged<lb/>
assault and hazing.<lb/>
Smith, found innocent of the<lb/>
hazing charge, will be sentenced<lb/>
when the remaining cases are<lb/>
tried. The remaining 11 students<lb/>
charged by Jones for similar of-<lb/>
fenses were granted a three-week<lb/>
continuation. The continuation<lb/>
was granted when the lawyer<lb/>
representing all 11 defendants<lb/>
withdrew from the cases due to a<lb/>
conflict of interest.<lb/>
According to Assistant Director<lb/>
of Campus Public Health and<lb/>
Safety Francis Eddings, this is the<lb/>
first official hazing case in more<lb/>
than eight years.<lb/>
School Funding Will Be A 'DeadIssue'<lb/>
With the new executive officers<lb/>
about to be sworn in, the con-<lb/>
troversy surrounding the funding<lb/>
of academic departments may<lb/>
well become, in the words of Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life Elmer<lb/>
Meyer, a "dead issue President-<lb/>
elect Paul Naso has said he is in<lb/>
favor of funding projects that<lb/>
receive no state funding and<lb/>
which benefit the school.<lb/>
Outgoing SGA President Eric<lb/>
Henderson recently stated his<lb/>
disapproval of funding various<lb/>
schools in the university, such as<lb/>
the School of Music. The dean of<lb/>
the music school, Charles<lb/>
Schwartz, said his department<lb/>
depends on funds from the SGA<lb/>
to finance the projects of the dif-<lb/>
ferent music ensembles. He said<lb/>
state law forbids the funding of<lb/>
certain activities that he feels are<lb/>
vital to the music school and the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
SGA Speaker of the House<lb/>
Gary Williams rebutted the charge<lb/>
by Henderson that academic<lb/>
departments abuse the legislature.<lb/>
He said the SGA is not funding<lb/>
the schools directly, but indirect-<lb/>
ly, through student organizations,<lb/>
such as The Student Forum for<lb/>
Musical Instruments, that are<lb/>
separate from the individual<lb/>
academic departments.<lb/>
Williams said the SGA funds<lb/>
the School of Music for activities<lb/>
that are beneficial to the school as<lb/>
a whole. He said the decision to<lb/>
fund these departments is based<lb/>
on the same criteria as other stu-<lb/>
dent organizations.<lb/>
Both Williams and Dean<lb/>
Schwartz admitted their is some<lb/>
overlap in the SGA funding into<lb/>
the instructional side of the<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Schwartz said the School of<lb/>
Musk depends soWy on the SGA<lb/>
to fond extracurricular activities<lb/>
that by law cannot be funded by<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor Meyer, advisor<lb/>
to the SGA, said he believes the<lb/>
legislature as a whole should<lb/>
decide what to do with the money<lb/>
they appropriate.<lb/>
Dean Shw&amp;rtz did say that their<lb/>
original request of funds from the<lb/>
SGA for $56,000 has been altered<lb/>
considerably after consultation<lb/>
with Williams. Shwartz said he is<lb/>
not taking advantage of the SGA,<lb/>
but is only trying to get money for<lb/>
musk programs that enhance the<lb/>
reputation of ECU.<lb/>
I <lb/>
<lb/>
anfrf" - O " &amp;,<lb/>
?-?-???- <lb/>
,flS-(fc<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0003"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 12, 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item<lb/>
printed in the announcement<lb/>
column, please type it on an an<lb/>
nouncement form and send it to<lb/>
The East Carolinian in care of<lb/>
the production manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications<lb/>
Building. Flyers and handwrit<lb/>
ten copy on odd sized paper can<lb/>
not be accepted<lb/>
There is no charge for an<lb/>
nouncements, but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you<lb/>
want ana suggest that you do not<lb/>
rely solely on this column for<lb/>
publicity.<lb/>
The deadline tor an<lb/>
nouncements is 3 p m Monday<lb/>
tor the Tuesday paper and 3<lb/>
P m Wednesdayy for the Thurs<lb/>
oay paper No announcements<lb/>
received after these deadlines<lb/>
will be printed<lb/>
This space is available to all<lb/>
campus organizations and<lb/>
Departments<lb/>
CANCER RESEARCH<lb/>
Drs Mary J and Spence O<lb/>
Raab both m the Department of<lb/>
Hematclogy and Oncology at<lb/>
ECU Medical School, will speak<lb/>
on The Future of Cancer<lb/>
Research" at the AED meeting<lb/>
on Tuesday. April 12, at 7:30<lb/>
p m m Flanagan 307 All<lb/>
members and interested per<lb/>
sons are encouraged to attend!<lb/>
There will also be a meeting of<lb/>
Old and new officers of AED at<lb/>
7 00 p.m in the conference<lb/>
room<lb/>
AMBASSADOR PARTY<lb/>
The Ambassador's end of the<lb/>
? ear part is scheduled for Sun<lb/>
ray. April 24 1983 at 6 00 the<lb/>
Vice Chancellor and his wife will<lb/>
t.e hos'mg the party and maps to<lb/>
'heir home can be picked up at<lb/>
he Alumm Center if you plan to<lb/>
attend you must sign up by<lb/>
Wed April 20th m the<lb/>
Taylor Slaughter Alumni<lb/>
Center The scholarship. Am-<lb/>
bassador of the Year, and other<lb/>
awards will be announced at this<lb/>
tme We will look forward to<lb/>
seeing everyone there<lb/>
FRISBEECLUB<lb/>
Come to the bottom of college<lb/>
rues and thurs 4:00 and<lb/>
? cot ECU'S ultimate<lb/>
fanatics: the Irates<lb/>
"ad a great year and<lb/>
should most certainly be on top<lb/>
Club meetings are<lb/>
- jnts B 00 MSC Rm.<lb/>
.4 Mciio Hello Nags Head see<lb/>
you ths weekend at the irates<lb/>
end of the ear party.<lb/>
BEST BODY CONTEST<lb/>
There will be a Best Body Con<lb/>
test, April 22 1983 m Memorial<lb/>
Gym beginning at 8 00 pm. 1st<lb/>
and 2nd place plrizes will be<lb/>
awarded A disco will follow this<lb/>
event Sponsored by NAACP<lb/>
Limited supply of tickets<lb/>
available, price $2 00 Admis<lb/>
Sion S2 00<lb/>
FREE BAHAMA<lb/>
VACATION<lb/>
You've been waiting all year<lb/>
and now it here the second an<lb/>
nual BAHAMA MAMA PARTY<lb/>
sponsored by Budweiser and<lb/>
Hawaiian Tropic. The Party is<lb/>
on Monday. April 25 (the day<lb/>
before reading day) and begins<lb/>
at 300! Tickets are on sale right<lb/>
now for S3 00 and entitle YOU to<lb/>
a drawing for a FREE TRIP TO<lb/>
THE BAHAMA'S for "two" for a<lb/>
week, and also a glimpse at the<lb/>
V!SS HAWAIIAN TROPIC<lb/>
BIKINI CONTEST. YOU also<lb/>
get a Hawaiian Tropic viser, a<lb/>
Budweiser mug , and best of<lb/>
alla afternoon of listening to<lb/>
the SUPER GRIT BAND while<lb/>
enjoying ALL THE FREE<lb/>
BEER YOU CAN DRINK<lb/>
Ticket sales are limited so pur<lb/>
chase your tickets NOW! For<lb/>
more information call 752 5543.<lb/>
"Hey Bud, Lets Party<lb/>
PRCCLUB<lb/>
The PRC Club will Imeet Tues.<lb/>
April 12, in Brewster D 102 at 6<lb/>
p m. Tom Hartman, Superinten<lb/>
dent of Cape Hafteras Nat'l<lb/>
SeashoreFort Raleigh, will be<lb/>
the guest speaker His topic will<lb/>
be "How Agency Policy is Im-<lb/>
plemented in the Field<lb/>
MARKETING FILM<lb/>
SERIES<lb/>
The Department of Marketing<lb/>
and the American Marketing<lb/>
Association present a Marketing<lb/>
Film Series which will provide<lb/>
information about marketing<lb/>
opportunities and show the<lb/>
relevance of marketing to cor<lb/>
porate objectives and method of<lb/>
operation Topics will include<lb/>
"Marketing Research" (April<lb/>
13) and "Retailing" (April 14)<lb/>
The films will be shown in Raw!<lb/>
130 at 3 00 on both days All in<lb/>
terested ECU students are in<lb/>
vited to attend<lb/>
PRINTMAKER<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
Jacob Landau, well known<lb/>
printmaker, painter, and<lb/>
distinguished professor of Pratt<lb/>
Universiy, will conduct a morn<lb/>
ing and afternoon printmaking<lb/>
workshop seminar on April 14,<lb/>
1983 Morning time. 8:30-12,<lb/>
afternoon. 130 5. There will be<lb/>
a slide presentation and lecture<lb/>
that evening in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorioum at 7:30 that is open<lb/>
to the general public.<lb/>
HANDGUN CONTROL<lb/>
Does the fact that more than<lb/>
20,000 Americans die from nan<lb/>
dgun violence each year upset<lb/>
you? If so, you are encouraged<lb/>
to take a minute and stop by the<lb/>
table m front of the Student Sup<lb/>
ply Store tommorrow. Wednes<lb/>
day, April 13th, from 12 to 3 pm.<lb/>
information on how you can<lb/>
show your concern to our public<lb/>
officials will be available<lb/>
READ PAGE 29<lb/>
If you have a brown Universi<lb/>
ty Catalog, then if might help<lb/>
you to read page 29 about the CP<lb/>
and PS<lb/>
DUNKING BOOTH<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
Dunking booth for rent at<lb/>
$25day or 1100week BIG<lb/>
MONEY MAKER. Contact War-<lb/>
ren Co. jaycees, P. O. Box 431.<lb/>
Warranton, N. c. 275t9 or call<lb/>
(919) 257 121 or 257 1710.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter of PM Sigma Pi's<lb/>
national honor fraternity ex-<lb/>
tends congratulations to the<lb/>
following new brothers: Rusty<lb/>
Foster, Debbie Albutton. Jill<lb/>
Cargile, Eleanor Avary, Jane<lb/>
Jefferey, Linda Wilson, Lynne<lb/>
Frye, Caroline Haynas, Blake<lb/>
Eudailey, Barbara Chadweii,<lb/>
Georgia Mooring, Donna<lb/>
Zekonis and Danlse Gerard.<lb/>
We're proud of you<lb/>
Tau Chapter will conduct Its<lb/>
final business meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 13, at 5:00 pm<lb/>
in Rawl 130. All brothers please<lb/>
attend this meeting. We will<lb/>
discus's plans for Founder's day<lb/>
and Beach Week as well as old<lb/>
business.<lb/>
FREE SHOW<lb/>
You can see ECU'S Playhouse<lb/>
Production of "Our Town"<lb/>
FREE. Simply sign-up to usher<lb/>
for any night, or matinee perfor-i<lb/>
mances on the 15th and the 19th.<lb/>
You must sign-up in advance.<lb/>
Stop by the drama dept. office<lb/>
for more information.<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
Rev. June Norrls, pastor of<lb/>
the Metropolitan Community<lb/>
Church in Raleigh, will be the<lb/>
featured speaker at the ECGC's<lb/>
meeting. Rev Norris will speak<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. at the Newman<lb/>
House, 953 E. Tenth ST. All In-<lb/>
terested persons are invited.<lb/>
SCHOOL OF ART<lb/>
The School of Art Is offering<lb/>
the initial Wellington B. Gray<lb/>
Memorial Scholarship for<lb/>
undergraduate students of<lb/>
junior and senior rank who are<lb/>
currently enrolled full-time in<lb/>
the School of Art and majoring<lb/>
in Art Education. The Well-<lb/>
ington B. Gray Memorial<lb/>
Scholarship is the amount of<lb/>
500 00. To qualify, a student<lb/>
must have a grade point<lb/>
average of 3.5 in hisher major,<lb/>
and an overall average of 3.0.<lb/>
Slides of five works (name, title,<lb/>
media, date) must accompany<lb/>
the scholarship application<lb/>
form. Application forms may be<lb/>
obtained from the School of Art<lb/>
Office The deadline for all com-<lb/>
pleted application material is<lb/>
April 14. 1983 The scholarship<lb/>
will be awarded before the end<lb/>
of this acadmlc year.<lb/>
BAKE SALE<lb/>
The Phi Alpha Theta History<lb/>
Honor Soceity is sponsoring a<lb/>
bake sale Wednesday, April 13<lb/>
from 900 to 2:00. The location is<lb/>
in Brewster BA 314 beside the<lb/>
History office Proceeds will aid<lb/>
in aquiring needed journals for<lb/>
Joyner Library.<lb/>
Following the Bake sale there<lb/>
will be a meeting April 13 at 2 30<lb/>
in the Todd Room.<lb/>
BINGO PARTY<lb/>
The Department of University<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring another<lb/>
BingoIce Cream Party on Tues<lb/>
day April 12 at 7:00 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Canter<lb/>
Mulfi Purpose Room.<lb/>
All students, faculty, staff,<lb/>
their guests, and dependents are<lb/>
welcome to foln in on the fun.<lb/>
Play binge, aat delicious Ice<lb/>
cream, and win prizetl Eight<lb/>
different Bingo games are<lb/>
played and the admission is only<lb/>
.25 cants par parson.<lb/>
This is the last BingoIce<lb/>
Cream party for the Spring<lb/>
semester, but watch for an<lb/>
nouncements about our summer<lb/>
parties in the East Carolinian<lb/>
and on Bullentin Boards around<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
PITT COUNTY<lb/>
HEALTH FAIR<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
School of Medicine is sponsoring<lb/>
the Pitt County Health Fair on<lb/>
April 22 and 23 at the Carolina<lb/>
East Mail. There will be over 20<lb/>
community organizations in-<lb/>
volved . In providing screening<lb/>
ane) education during the two<lb/>
day period. Any student<lb/>
volunteers willing to help with<lb/>
health screenings and education<lb/>
will be appreciated. For more<lb/>
information or to volunteer,<lb/>
please call the Health Education<lb/>
Office at 757510. W need your<lb/>
participation in making this<lb/>
Health Fair a successl<lb/>
CANOE TRIP<lb/>
The Outdoor recreation center<lb/>
for the Department of<lb/>
intramural-Recreational ser-<lb/>
vices Is sponsoring a canoe trip<lb/>
on Wednesday, April 13, 1903<lb/>
The trip Is suitable for beginning<lb/>
or experienced canoers. Trip<lb/>
participants will meet behind<lb/>
Memorial gym at 3:00p.m. on<lb/>
Wednesday for a liesurely pad<lb/>
die down the Tar River lasting<lb/>
approximately 2 hours. Par<lb/>
ticipants should arrive back at<lb/>
Memorial gym at 6:00p.m. Ad<lb/>
vance registration and payment<lb/>
(13.00 per person is due by 4:00<lb/>
p.m. on Tuesday, April 12, 1983.<lb/>
Groups ?rt welcome. For<lb/>
registration or more Intorma<lb/>
tlon call or stop by rm. 113<lb/>
Memorial Gym, 757-4911 or<lb/>
757-4317).<lb/>
NEW OWNERSHIP<lb/>
Cousin's Pizzeria of raliegh<lb/>
with stores in Cary, Morrisvill<lb/>
and New York City is proud to<lb/>
announce that we have moved to<lb/>
the Great Greenvill Area. We<lb/>
will be located at 321 E Tenth<lb/>
St. at the corner of Charles St<lb/>
formerly Famous Pizza. We are<lb/>
looking forward to working with<lb/>
the students with our daily<lb/>
specials and with future events.<lb/>
Thank you.<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
SKILLS WORKSHOP<lb/>
On April 13, from 3:00-4:00<lb/>
p.m the ECU Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement Service will pre-<lb/>
sent an INTERVIEWING<lb/>
SKILLS WORKSHOP in<lb/>
Mendenhall 221 All are<lb/>
welcome!<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
lO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$185.00 Pregnancy Test, Birth<lb/>
Control, and Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counseling. For<lb/>
further intormatior call<lb/>
832 0S35 (Toll Free Number<lb/>
800-221 2548) between 9 AM<lb/>
ind 5 P.M. Weekdays.<lb/>
RALEIGHS WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigt<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
UtrtlNDON. Sfoo thats mode eis?r by<lb/>
h8J wor- .en o' the neming Center Counselors ore<lb/>
avanaoie day ono night to support and unoer<lb/>
stana you Your safety, comfort and privacy ore<lb/>
assured by the coring staff of the Fleming Center<lb/>
SERVICES: ? Tuesday - Saturday Abortion Ap-<lb/>
pointments ? 1st &amp; 2nd Tnmester Abortions up to<lb/>
18 Weeks ? Free Pregnoncy Tests ? Very Early<lb/>
Pregnancy Tests ? All Inclusive Fees ? insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CALL 7t1-55S0 OAY OB NIGHT ?<lb/>
Health core counseling TucDCUar<lb/>
and educdtion for wo- 'nc ?LCMIWto<lb/>
JenofoMoges CENTPP<lb/>
The Wachovia<lb/>
Grad Plan<lb/>
After you finish, it's a good start.<lb/>
SM<lb/>
?Established<lb/>
? Teller n8<lb/>
? MasterCard<lb/>
?Ready ReservAccount<lb/>
The Wachovia Grad Plan gives you all the banking<lb/>
services you'll need - and a Personal Banker to help you<lb/>
make the best decisions about your financial future.<lb/>
If you're graduating this year and plan to live in North<lb/>
Carolina, see a Personal Banker at the Wachovia office<lb/>
nearest your campus. Or fill out and mail the coupon below<lb/>
to receive the Wachovia Grad Plan information kit.<lb/>
Member F.DIjC.<lb/>
I will be graduating this year and<lb/>
plan to live in N.C. Please send me the<lb/>
Wachovia Grad Plan information kit.<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
ttecfom. Bank &amp; lust Company, HA<lb/>
R(LBoi3Bl8<lb/>
i. NX. 27102<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Permanent Mailing Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
State<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
School Name<lb/>
4<lb/>
"f<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may mm mt form at rvajHff or<lb/>
uao ? separate shoot of paper Iff<lb/>
you nood more lino. There oro 33<lb/>
units por lino. Each lottor,<lb/>
tuation mark and word<lb/>
counts os ono unit. Capttelixa<lb/>
hyphenate words property.<lb/>
space at and of "no if<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will bo oc<lb/>
copttd over the phone Wo<lb/>
reserve the right to refect any pd.<lb/>
?5? per line or fraction of a tat.<lb/>
Please print kfietyt Use capital and<lb/>
lower caM letters.<lb/>
?stojrn te THE CAST CABOUNIAN<lb/>
?Mice bf 3:P?<lb/>
NUB<lb/>
Address<lb/>
CirySute.<lb/>
No<lb/>
. at 73 per ine S.<lb/>
PHYSICAL<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
All stdudents who plan to<lb/>
declare physical education as a<lb/>
major during the spring<lb/>
semester or who intend to stu-<lb/>
dent teach during the spring<lb/>
semester should report to<lb/>
Minges coliseum at 10:00 am on<lb/>
Thursday, April 26, 1983 tor a<lb/>
motor and physical fitness test.<lb/>
Satisfactory performance on<lb/>
this test is required as a prere-<lb/>
quisite for official admittance to<lb/>
the physical education major<lb/>
program. More detailed infor<lb/>
mation covering the test is<lb/>
available by calling 757 6442.<lb/>
WEST AREA CAMPUS<lb/>
"West Area Gets High" on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 20th from 15<lb/>
pm in the parking lot adjacent to<lb/>
Clement and White dorms.<lb/>
Come join us and find our what -<lb/>
The Alternative really is<lb/>
SIGMA THETA TAU<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau, Beta Nu<lb/>
Chapter is having their Spring<lb/>
BanquetEducational meeting<lb/>
April 19. 1983 at 6:00 pm at the<lb/>
Greenville Golf and Country<lb/>
Club. The speaker will be Dr.<lb/>
Lucie Young Kelly, the national<lb/>
president-elect of Sigma Theta<lb/>
Tu. She will speak on "Using<lb/>
Research to Change Practice<lb/>
Dr. Kelly is a Professor of<lb/>
Public Health and Nursing and<lb/>
serves as editor of Nursing<lb/>
Outlook Registration fee is S9 00<lb/>
which includes dinner and<lb/>
gratuity. Students and inductees<lb/>
will pay Vj 0C Make check<lb/>
payable to Sigma Theta Tau,<lb/>
Beta Nu Chapter and return to<lb/>
Carol Cox, ECU School of Nurs<lb/>
ing by April 12. 1983. Include<lb/>
name, address, number atten<lb/>
ding and names of guests.<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau, Beta Nu<lb/>
Chapter is having their Spring<lb/>
induction April 23, 1963 at me<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium at 11:00 am.<lb/>
Dr. Helen Yura will speak on the<lb/>
"Nurse as Scholar<lb/>
Beta Nu is having a business<lb/>
meeting Monday. April 25, 1983<lb/>
at 7:00 pm at the School of Nurs<lb/>
ing, room 203. All new inductees<lb/>
invited to attend<lb/>
RESUME<lb/>
PREPARATION<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
The ECU Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Service's next<lb/>
resume workshop will be held<lb/>
April 13, 1983 from 1:30-2:30<lb/>
p.m. Please note that it is<lb/>
scheduled to be held in<lb/>
Mendenhall 221<lb/>
SPECIAL OLYMPICS<lb/>
The GreenvillePitt County<lb/>
Special Olympics Spring Games<lb/>
will take place on Thursday.<lb/>
April 14 at the East Carolina<lb/>
Track (bunting Field) from 9:30<lb/>
am to 2 00 pm. volunteers are<lb/>
needed to serve as "Buddies"<lb/>
and "Huggers If interested<lb/>
please attend a volunteers<lb/>
meeting on Tuesday, April 12 at<lb/>
the ECU track at 3:00 pm or in<lb/>
Minges coliseum. Room 136 in<lb/>
case of rain, if unable to attend<lb/>
volunteer meeting call 752 4137<lb/>
exf. 201 days or after 5:00 pm<lb/>
call 752 8272 or 758 7805.<lb/>
NO JOB, NOW WHAT?<lb/>
On April 19 at 3:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall 221, the Career<lb/>
Planning and Placement Ser-<lb/>
vice has invited the Personnel<lb/>
Manager of a major bank to talk<lb/>
on his perceptions of the job<lb/>
market for college graduates.<lb/>
Other job search considerations<lb/>
will also be discussed<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
The last General Meeting of<lb/>
the ECU Ambassadors will be<lb/>
held on Wed April 13, 1983 at<lb/>
5:00 pm in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Multi-Purpose room. We will<lb/>
elect our '83'64 officers at this<lb/>
meeting. Plans for our end of the<lb/>
year party will also be announc<lb/>
ed. If you are an Ambassador<lb/>
who will be graduating in May<lb/>
or in Summer School please call<lb/>
the Alumni Center and let them<lb/>
know (757 6072)<lb/>
CERAMICS<lb/>
ECU Ceramics Guild Spring<lb/>
sale Thursday, April 21, 1983 on<lb/>
ly 9 00 am - 6:00 pm on the ter<lb/>
race beside the gallery at<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Building.<lb/>
MCAT KAPLAN<lb/>
COURSE<lb/>
Attention all pre-med<lb/>
students A representative from<lb/>
Kaplan will be at ECU on Satur<lb/>
day, April 16th, at 10:00 em to<lb/>
present a minicourse on how the<lb/>
Kaplan course can improve your<lb/>
MCAT scores. We are looking<lb/>
for twenty interested persons to<lb/>
sign-up for the course in order<lb/>
for the Kaplan course to be<lb/>
taught at ECU this summer. The<lb/>
meeting is to be held in the<lb/>
Biology Reading Room and is<lb/>
free to the public so any in-<lb/>
terested persons may simply<lb/>
come on April 16th or contact the<lb/>
Biology Department.<lb/>
ALL ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
To all organizations wishing to<lb/>
be represented in the 1962 S3<lb/>
yearbook please contact Tam-<lb/>
my Edwards at the Buccaneer<lb/>
office as soon as possible The<lb/>
number is 757 6501<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
FOR CHRIST<lb/>
Back to the Bible Let's get<lb/>
back to the Bible! informal<lb/>
group Bible discussions; Men<lb/>
110 Belk, 7:30 pm Tuesday.<lb/>
Womens 212 Mendenhall, 7:30<lb/>
pm Thursday. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome!<lb/>
TAXES?<lb/>
WE'VE HAD ENOUGH<lb/>
Are you sick of paying taxes?<lb/>
Well did you know that 64 per<lb/>
cent opt your federal tax dollar<lb/>
goes directly for the support of<lb/>
the military budget and poast<lb/>
war bills? We might as well<lb/>
make our checks directly<lb/>
payable to the Pentagon! If<lb/>
you've had enough, then join<lb/>
other ECU students and Green<lb/>
vilie residents for a demonstra-<lb/>
tion It will be held at the inter<lb/>
nal Revenue Service office in<lb/>
Greenville on Tax Day April 15.<lb/>
The theme of the demonstration<lb/>
is tentiveiy set to be "Taxation<lb/>
without Representation Be at<lb/>
the IRS office on 1st street at<lb/>
noon "Money for jobs-Not for<lb/>
War For further information<lb/>
call 758 4906<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
"Student volunteers ere need<lb/>
ed to take parts ? and 11 of the<lb/>
National Teachers Examination<lb/>
on April 21st from 1 00 pm ?<lb/>
6:00 pm el igibie students ere se<lb/>
cond semester sophomores or<lb/>
first semester juniors<lb/>
The Stdate Department of<lb/>
Public instruction (Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C.) has asked East Carolina<lb/>
University to assist in the<lb/>
validation of the NTE Students<lb/>
who are eligible and wish to<lb/>
volunteer should register in the<lb/>
Dean's Office of the School of<lb/>
Education or call Ect 6271. no<lb/>
later than 5:00 pm on April 5th.<lb/>
There will be no charge for<lb/>
this test The test scodres will be<lb/>
used for validation purposes on<lb/>
ly. Volunteers will have excused<lb/>
absences from classes on April<lb/>
21st between 1 00 p m and 6 00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
PARKS,<lb/>
RECREATIONS<lb/>
AND CONSERVATION<lb/>
To all Parks. Rrecreetions.<lb/>
and Conservation Majors,<lb/>
minors, ano faculty. Do not<lb/>
forget our fantastic evening of<lb/>
dining and dancing during the<lb/>
PRC Spring Banquet This gala<lb/>
event will occur Friday, April 15<lb/>
from 6:00 pm 1 00am at the<lb/>
Holiday Inn. Tickets ?rt<lb/>
available at the PRC building<lb/>
For more info call 757-i<lb/>
HELP NEEDED<lb/>
On Tuesday April 19th Th?<lb/>
Boy Scouts of America w.n o<lb/>
holding its annual Goia R jsr a'<lb/>
the Unviersity m h,ch 300 -a-<lb/>
dicepped boys will c?r' c :??'<lb/>
The Carnival tpe ??f'<lb/>
scheduled for I 30 to Appro.<lb/>
imatet 1) 00 am The -<lb/>
terested m assisting .n tn.s iw<lb/>
thwhiie experience should cor<lb/>
tact Dr Dave Porrr?a M.nges<lb/>
Cotesium 757 6441<lb/>
TAXES<lb/>
Volunteers from The EC j -<lb/>
counting Society aoe th Sa<lb/>
tionai Association of Accou-<lb/>
tentj will be in the mam ooc . <lb/>
MendenrvaH Student Centc kj<lb/>
heip 'individuals prepare a?<lb/>
returns from to 7 p m ea -<lb/>
Tuesder ,n March. a<lb/>
Tuesdays and Thursdays<lb/>
April through April 15<lb/>
S. R.A.<lb/>
Escorts are needed or ?-<lb/>
Escort Service Anyone<lb/>
terested m being an esc<lb/>
please contact your dorrr a,rec<lb/>
tor<lb/>
CATHOLIC<lb/>
NEWMAN<lb/>
COMMUNITY<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Com<lb/>
munity invites all interested<lb/>
students to participate m their<lb/>
activities and workship ser<lb/>
vices. Mass is celebrated on<lb/>
Wednsday evenings at 5 00 p m<lb/>
at the Newman Center (953 E<lb/>
10th street) to'lowed by a prfr<lb/>
gram and meal Sunday Mass is<lb/>
celebrated at 12 30 pm on Son<lb/>
days m room B 103 of the<lb/>
Biology Building For more in<lb/>
formation call 753 4216.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
5rmg the catfms corn .<lb/>
1925<lb/>
Published every Tijesoa,<lb/>
and Thursday during ??<lb/>
ecedemtc year and eve<lb/>
Wednesday during the s ?<lb/>
mer<lb/>
The East Carolinian s me<lb/>
official newspaper of Eas<lb/>
Carolina University, owned<lb/>
Jperated and published tor<lb/>
ind by me stuoents of Eas'<lb/>
'aroiine University<lb/>
.(inscription Rate: tit yearly<lb/>
The East Carol,n,an offices<lb/>
are faceted in the Old Sewtit<lb/>
Building en the campus of<lb/>
ECU. Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send ad<lb/>
dress changes to The Eas?<lb/>
Carolinian. Old South<lb/>
Building, ECU Greenville.<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 757-434. ?37,<lb/>
6J09<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Fantasy<lb/>
ECU Jazz Band<lb/>
Kneewalkers<lb/>
Gary Kern<lb/>
Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band<lb/>
X-tra, X-tra<lb/>
Final Act To Be Announced<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
MarceUa Ruble-Fortune<lb/>
Teller and Palmist<lb/>
Antique Images- Old Time<lb/>
Costumes Photographs<lb/>
Caricatures Unlimited-A<lb/>
New Look At Yourself<lb/>
The Rose Tattoos-Funky,<lb/>
Daring, and Fun Tattoos<lb/>
PLUS LOTS OF GREAT FOOD<lb/>
AND<lb/>
DS AND CURLEY, I<lb/>
T-Shirts on Sale; Monday 18<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
n<lb/>
State<lb/>
B PATRICK 0'NEII.i<lb/>
An investigation<lb/>
team from the State<lb/>
Board of Education<lb/>
has handed ECU s<lb/>
teacher education<lb/>
programs a two-year<lb/>
probation. According<lb/>
to acting Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for<lb/>
Academic Affairs<lb/>
Angelo A. Volpe, the<lb/>
decision was not<lb/>
unexpected and<lb/>
means that ECU<lb/>
teacher education<lb/>
prograi<lb/>
ly given<lb/>
provisK<lb/>
as opi<lb/>
usual<lb/>
prova!<lb/>
Volt<lb/>
assuranj<lb/>
state's<lb/>
the red<lb/>
accredit!<lb/>
national<lb/>
questioi<lb/>
of EC<lb/>
He sai<lb/>
would<lb/>
studerr<lb/>
Scholars<lb/>
to.<lb/>
A memorial<lb/>
scholarship fund has<lb/>
been established at<lb/>
ECU to honor the late<lb/>
David Martin of<lb/>
Raleigh, the ECU<lb/>
senior broadcasting<lb/>
student who died m<lb/>
the March 2 explosion<lb/>
at Village Green<lb/>
Apartments.<lb/>
The scholarship is<lb/>
intended to assist<lb/>
outstanding ECL<lb/>
student<lb/>
broadc<lb/>
are un<lb/>
the fui<lb/>
ship awj<lb/>
ing of<lb/>
The<lb/>
and<lb/>
Commi<lb/>
drama<lb/>
deport<lb/>
minister<lb/>
ship,<lb/>
for the<lb/>
-entj<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
To The E<lb/>
By MILLIE WHITE<lb/>
Malt Vkntrr<lb/>
The Eastern Carolina Cod<lb/>
Cola Bottling Comparn m<lb/>
presented the ECU School<lb/>
Medicine with the company<lb/>
former bottling plant in GreeJ<lb/>
Mile.<lb/>
The 17,5000-square-l<lb/>
building is located on the corrl<lb/>
of Dickinson Avenue and P<lb/>
Street. The gift includes the CM<lb/>
pany's storage facihtv and an a<lb/>
jacett lot.<lb/>
? - -<lb/>
-<lb/>
$3000.no<lb/>
 $?,noo s<lb/>
? FREE KM?<lb/>
S?e<lb/>
?<lb/>
E.C.U.<lb/>
Coml<lb/>
who: Eveh<lb/>
MW,<lb/>
When: Satl<lb/>
Where:<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
THURSDAY, APRIL 21<lb/>
12:00 NOON-?<lb/>
Rain Site: Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Ticl<lb/>
Record<lb/>
Price:<lb/>
Studt<lb/>
$7<lb/>
T$-M S?:<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0004"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 12, 1983<lb/>
.ffcoac.<lb/>
1cck?ed.<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
"f?1"<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
P NEEDED<lb/>
 9tt1<lb/>
ll Gold Rjsh a'<lb/>
- ' ? oa'e<lb/>
m S or<lb/>
??a Age<lb/>
?KES<lb/>
rtn Na<lb/>
? ? 'ax<lb/>
? ' p - e? K<lb/>
Ma and<lb/>
" " rsOavS in<lb/>
S R A<lb/>
I hi t axl Carolinian<lb/>
and ever<lb/>
g s ne<lb/>
' Easf<lb/>
ea tor<lb/>
? Eas'<lb/>
R J'e $20 yearly<lb/>
' i o'hces<lb/>
 - NM Old Soutti<lb/>
. n 'h? campus of<lb/>
; ir?n.iiie N C<lb/>
- aa<lb/>
? jes ? e Eas?<lb/>
South<lb/>
? ??tnville.<lb/>
6364 ?37<lb/>
TIONS<lb/>
Fortune<lb/>
Umist<lb/>
is- Old Time<lb/>
otographs<lb/>
limited-A<lb/>
t Yourselj<lb/>
oos-Funky,<lb/>
un Tattoos<lb/>
CEES<lb/>
State Puts Education Program On Probation<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff V riler<lb/>
An investigation<lb/>
team from the State<lb/>
Board of Education<lb/>
has handed ECU's<lb/>
teacher education<lb/>
programs a two-year<lb/>
probation. According<lb/>
to acting Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for<lb/>
Academic Affairs<lb/>
Angelo A. Volpe, the<lb/>
decision was not<lb/>
unexpected and<lb/>
means that ECU<lb/>
teacher education<lb/>
programs were actual-<lb/>
ly given a "two-year<lb/>
provisional approval"<lb/>
as opposed to the<lb/>
usual five-year ap-<lb/>
proval.<lb/>
Volpe repeated his<lb/>
assurances that the<lb/>
state's decision, like<lb/>
the recent denial of<lb/>
accreditation from a<lb/>
national group, never<lb/>
questioned the quality<lb/>
of ECU's programs.<lb/>
He said the decision<lb/>
would not penalize<lb/>
students enrolled in<lb/>
these programs.<lb/>
Last month, the<lb/>
National Council for<lb/>
Accreditation of<lb/>
Teacher Education<lb/>
(NCATE), denied ac-<lb/>
creditation to ECU's<lb/>
teacher training pro-<lb/>
grams. Richard W.<lb/>
Warner Jr dean of<lb/>
the School of Educa-<lb/>
tion said that both the<lb/>
state and NCATE<lb/>
sent their "site<lb/>
teams" to evaluate<lb/>
ECU at the same<lb/>
time, but that both<lb/>
teams made indepen-<lb/>
dent decisions.<lb/>
Neither Warner or<lb/>
Dean-elect Charles<lb/>
Coble felt the state's<lb/>
decision was a<lb/>
response to the<lb/>
NCATE denial. "I<lb/>
suspect the members<lb/>
of the two visiting<lb/>
teams talked with<lb/>
each other, but I<lb/>
would not presume to<lb/>
say that the state<lb/>
evaluation team was<lb/>
dictated to by the<lb/>
visiting team from the<lb/>
national council<lb/>
Warner said.<lb/>
"They're (the state)<lb/>
not following<lb/>
NCATE added Co-<lb/>
ble. "There's was a<lb/>
separate committee<lb/>
looking at the same<lb/>
study and making<lb/>
essentially the same<lb/>
decisions. They raised<lb/>
legitimate issues<lb/>
There are 11<lb/>
disciplines at ECU<lb/>
that fall under the<lb/>
jurisdiction of the<lb/>
School of Education.<lb/>
They include elemen-<lb/>
tary and secondary<lb/>
education, special<lb/>
education, music<lb/>
education, art educa-<lb/>
tion, home economics<lb/>
education, driver and<lb/>
traffic safety educa-<lb/>
tion, health and<lb/>
physical education,<lb/>
school and communi-<lb/>
ty health, library<lb/>
sciences and theater<lb/>
arts.<lb/>
The NCATE and<lb/>
state evaluations both<lb/>
cited ECU teacher<lb/>
Scholarship Set Up To Honor Martin<lb/>
programs as lacking a<lb/>
centralized authority<lb/>
in its programs.<lb/>
"There did not ap-<lb/>
pear to be a single unit<lb/>
charged with over-all<lb/>
responsibility for<lb/>
coordinating all mat-<lb/>
ters related to teacher<lb/>
education the state<lb/>
report said.<lb/>
NCATE also claim-<lb/>
ed that there was not a<lb/>
coordinating agency<lb/>
for all the teacher<lb/>
education programs<lb/>
at various campus<lb/>
locations and that<lb/>
there were excessive<lb/>
facultv work loads in<lb/>
special education.<lb/>
Coble, who said he<lb/>
fully expected the<lb/>
state's decision to<lb/>
grant provisional ap-<lb/>
proval to ECU, said<lb/>
the system of gover-<lb/>
nance is very<lb/>
technical.<lb/>
"We have to work<lb/>
out a more agreeable<lb/>
governance structure<lb/>
that will have the ap-<lb/>
pearance and<lb/>
substance of confor-<lb/>
ming to their stan-<lb/>
dards Coble said.<lb/>
"We're just beginning<lb/>
to develop the<lb/>
stratestv to do this<lb/>
Volpe and Warner<lb/>
both agreed with Co-<lb/>
ble that the matter<lb/>
would be corrected<lb/>
during the next<lb/>
academic year.<lb/>
"We'll go ahead and<lb/>
do what needs to be<lb/>
done to obtain ac-<lb/>
creditation Volpe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Volpe and Coble<lb/>
both indicated that<lb/>
several steps had<lb/>
already been taken to<lb/>
remedy the criticisms<lb/>
leveled by the two<lb/>
educational bodies.<lb/>
t CU e? Bureau<lb/>
A memorial<lb/>
scholarship fund has<lb/>
been established at<lb/>
ECU to honor the late<lb/>
David Martin of<lb/>
Raleigh, the ECU<lb/>
senior broadcasting<lb/>
student who died in<lb/>
the March 2 explosion<lb/>
at Village Green<lb/>
Apartments.<lb/>
The scholarship is<lb/>
intended to assist<lb/>
outstanding ECU<lb/>
students in the field of<lb/>
broadcasting. Efforts<lb/>
are underway to build<lb/>
the fund in time to<lb/>
make the first scholar-<lb/>
ship award in the spr-<lb/>
ing of 1984.<lb/>
The Scholarship<lb/>
and Recruitment<lb/>
Committee of the<lb/>
drama and speech<lb/>
department will ad-<lb/>
minister the scholar-<lb/>
ship. A spokesman<lb/>
for the committee said<lb/>
students will have to<lb/>
apply for the money,<lb/>
but criteria for the<lb/>
award have not been<lb/>
set yet.<lb/>
Spearheading the<lb/>
ECU faculty effort to<lb/>
establish the fund is<lb/>
Dr. Carlton Benz of<lb/>
the ECU Department<lb/>
of Drama and Speech<lb/>
broadcasting division.<lb/>
According to Scott<lb/>
Parker, general<lb/>
manager of the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse, the Sun-<lb/>
day, April 17, perfor-<lb/>
mance of Thornton<lb/>
Wilder's Our Town<lb/>
has been dedicated to<lb/>
Martin, and proceeds<lb/>
from that perfor-<lb/>
mance will go to the<lb/>
scholarship fund.<lb/>
"This provides<lb/>
everyone in the cam-<lb/>
pus and community<lb/>
who knew David an<lb/>
opportunity to con-<lb/>
tribute to the scholar-<lb/>
ship fund and also at-<lb/>
tend a performance<lb/>
that is specifically<lb/>
dedicated to David's<lb/>
memory he said.<lb/>
Benz pointed out<lb/>
that those who cannot<lb/>
attend the April 17<lb/>
performance of the<lb/>
play but still wish to<lb/>
assist with the<lb/>
scholarship fund<lb/>
should make their tax-<lb/>
deductible donations<lb/>
payable to the East<lb/>
Carolina Theatre<lb/>
Foundation and send<lb/>
them in care of the<lb/>
David Martin<lb/>
Memorial Scholarship<lb/>
Fund to the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Drama and<lb/>
Speech, ECU, Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C 27834.<lb/>
Further informa-<lb/>
tion about the<lb/>
scholarship fund is<lb/>
available by telephon-<lb/>
ing 757-6390.<lb/>
<lb/>
Coca-Cola Donates Vacant Building<lb/>
To The ECU School Of Medicine<lb/>
By MILLIE WHITE<lb/>
Surf ? riler<lb/>
The Eastern Carolina Coca-<lb/>
Cola Bottling Company has<lb/>
presented the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine with the company's<lb/>
former bottling plant in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
The 17,5000-square-foot<lb/>
building is located on the corner<lb/>
of Dickinson Avenue and Pitt<lb/>
Street. The gift includes the com-<lb/>
pany's storage facility and an ad-<lb/>
jacent lot.<lb/>
Tom Segrave, vice president<lb/>
and general manager of the Coca-<lb/>
Cola company, presented the deed<lb/>
to the property to Vice Chancellor<lb/>
and Dean William E. Laupus and<lb/>
ECU Medical Foundation Presi-<lb/>
dent Edwin W. Monroe on behalf<lb/>
of the company's board of direc-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
"We are grateful to Mr.<lb/>
Segrave and Coca-Cola for their<lb/>
continuing support to the School<lb/>
of Medicine Laupus said. He<lb/>
added that Dickinson Avenue and<lb/>
the surrounding areas open a<lb/>
number of possibilities for future<lb/>
use by the university, but im-<lb/>
mediate plans call for the building<lb/>
to be used as a storage facility for<lb/>
the university and medical school.<lb/>
According to Segrave, the<lb/>
building was given to the medical<lb/>
school because the company knew<lb/>
that the school could use it to their<lb/>
advantage. Giving the building<lb/>
"is a continuing effort for us to be<lb/>
a supportive industry in the med<lb/>
school Segrave said.<lb/>
ITALIAN NITE<lb/>
SPAGHETTI<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
?Choice of Pastas<lb/>
?Choice of 3 Sauces<lb/>
?Fresh Hot Breads<lb/>
?Shoney's Own Special<lb/>
Baked<lb/>
'Spaghetti<lb/>
99<lb/>
I l AT .<lb/>
Ti?fe<lb/>
EVERY WEDS.<lb/>
5 PM-10PM<lb/>
?i-ii-<lb/>
vA.Tn<lb/>
ALL<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
EAT<lb/>
SOUP<lb/>
- AND<lb/>
SALAD<lb/>
S4.99<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
205 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Dr. William Laupus<lb/>
EARN nVFR $1000.00 PFR MONTH<lb/>
If you are d natn, physics, chenistry jr enji n?vn ny major with j<lb/>
"8" averaqe or better, earn over . per unth through your<lb/>
junior and senior years sumers included! Tne Navy's NUP0C<lb/>
(Nuclear Propulsion Officer) Collegiate Program is looking for<lb/>
qualified individuals. Other benifits include:<lb/>
? $3000.00 cash bonus immediately upon acceptance into program<lb/>
 $22,000 starting salary - $40,000 after just four years<lb/>
 FREE Medical Dental care and nany other TAX FREE benefits<lb/>
 30 days PAIO annual vacation<lb/>
 1 year graduate level training<lb/>
 Immediate responsibility<lb/>
 Valuable engineering experience<lb/>
 Fducation benefits<lb/>
 Job security with fast promotions<lb/>
If you're interested in finding out nore, send resume or<lb/>
transcripts I :<lb/>
FRANK WIGGINS<lb/>
U.S. HAVY OFFICER PROGRAMS<lb/>
1001 Navaho IV .<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27609<lb/>
Or cal1 1-800-662-7231<lb/>
8ari-4pn, MonFri.<lb/>
See the Havy's Flight Oenonstration lean<lb/>
"Blue Angles" Saturday, April 23rd at<lb/>
the Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry<lb/>
Point, NC.<lb/>
E.C.U. Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee Presents:<lb/>
who: Evelyn King wSpecial guest<lb/>
Dazz Band<lb/>
when: Saturday,April 23, 8:00pm<lb/>
Hawaiian Tropic<lb/>
and<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
Where: Mjjjggg Coliseum<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale at:<lb/>
Central Ticket Office at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Record Bar at Carolina East Mall in Greenville<lb/>
Apple Records in Greenville<lb/>
Record Bar in New Bern<lb/>
Price:<lb/>
Student<lb/>
$7.50<lb/>
Public<lb/>
$9.50<lb/>
At The Door<lb/>
$9.50<lb/>
Present<lb/>
The 2nd Annual<lb/>
Bahama Mama<lb/>
Party<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
The Miss Hawaiian Tropic<lb/>
Bikini Contest and the SUPER<lb/>
GRIT BAND!<lb/>
Monday, April 25 3:00 pm At<lb/>
The KAPPA SIGMA HOUSE<lb/>
Tickets $3.00<lb/>
The Tickets entitle you to a Drawing<lb/>
for a week in the BAHAMAS for two,<lb/>
a Hawaiian Tropic viser, Budweiser<lb/>
mug, and a afternoon of listening to<lb/>
the SUPER GRIT BAND LIVE while<lb/>
enjoying<lb/>
ALL THE FREE BEER<lb/>
YOU CAN DRINK<lb/>
Call 752-5543<lb/>
 ? ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0005"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
SUie ?aat (Earolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, om<lb/>
Mike Hughes, ?????, ,w<lb/>
WAVERLY MeRRITT. amoMrf,? ClNDY PLEASANTS, spans Eduor<lb/>
Scott Lindley, ?,??,?, ??,? Greg Rideout, mm ??<lb/>
ALl AFRASHTEH, Crrrf Manager STEVE BACHNER, ??mOTn?, ??<lb/>
Stephanie Groon, outow M???r Juliana Fahrbach, siyieEduor<lb/>
Clay Thornton. Tecmcai sum Todd Evans, produce Manage,<lb/>
April 12. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
SGA Funding<lb/>
Arts Biting Off More Than We Can Chew<lb/>
About two weeks ago, outgoing<lb/>
SGA President Eric Henderson of-<lb/>
fered some solutions to what he<lb/>
sees as an abuse of SGA funds.<lb/>
He cited several facts and<lb/>
figures, including the student<lb/>
legislature's funding of the schools<lb/>
of Music, Art and Speech and<lb/>
Drama. Last year, these three<lb/>
departments received 44 percent ?<lb/>
although petitioning for even more<lb/>
? of the budget pie, with the<lb/>
School of Music taking the biggest<lb/>
slice ? $26,479.<lb/>
This year's petitioning is ex-<lb/>
pected to be about the same, if not<lb/>
worse. The School of Music has<lb/>
already requested $56,000 in stu-<lb/>
dent funds for the 1983-84<lb/>
academic year, a request which, if<lb/>
granted by the SGA, would leave<lb/>
the legislature with about $4,000.<lb/>
(The SGA should have about<lb/>
$120,000 to work with, but after<lb/>
the executive budget and the<lb/>
reserve fund are subtracted, the<lb/>
figure stands at approximately<lb/>
$60,000.)<lb/>
According to Henderson, under<lb/>
the current practice of petitioning<lb/>
and funding, smaller groups and<lb/>
organizations ? groups that really<lb/>
need the money ? have very little<lb/>
chance.<lb/>
In the case of the School of<lb/>
Music, a large chunk of that<lb/>
department's SGA allocation goes<lb/>
toward non-student projects and<lb/>
expenses, such as office equip-<lb/>
ment. Sure, the schools of Music,<lb/>
Art and Speech and Drama may<lb/>
well be in dire need of office equip-<lb/>
ment, but not at the students' ex-<lb/>
pense.<lb/>
Nevertheless, despite affirma-<lb/>
tions by former Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for Academic Affairs Robert<lb/>
Maier that each academic depart-<lb/>
ment receives adequate funding<lb/>
from the university, music school<lb/>
Dean Charles Schwartz contends<lb/>
that "about one-third of our<lb/>
operating budget is dependent<lb/>
upon SGA funds<lb/>
All academic departments<lb/>
receive funding through student<lb/>
tuition. And most operate suc-<lb/>
cessfully within the confines of<lb/>
that budget. Granted, concerts,<lb/>
lectures and other academic lux-<lb/>
uries may well necessitate the peti-<lb/>
tioning of SGA funds. But when a<lb/>
handful of university departments<lb/>
consistently seek more than half of<lb/>
the SGA's allocating budget for<lb/>
operating expenses, then it would<lb/>
seem those individual departmen-<lb/>
tal budgets are in need of<lb/>
reorganization.<lb/>
It's time they realize the SGA is<lb/>
not responsible for making up the<lb/>
difference on their poorly-planned<lb/>
budgets. Such continuous alloca-<lb/>
tion only encourages these schools'<lb/>
dependence on funds they<lb/>
shouldn't receive in the first place.<lb/>
As a result, student SGA monies<lb/>
are consistently spent for non-<lb/>
student expenses, while those pro-<lb/>
jects which may directly benefit the<lb/>
students must suffer  for lack<lb/>
of funds<lb/>
This sad fact was exemplified<lb/>
earlier this year in the infamous<lb/>
"bus snelter" issue. Granted, stu-<lb/>
dent opinion on the need for addi-<lb/>
tional bus shelters was mixed at<lb/>
best. What's so unfortunate,<lb/>
however, is that even if the consen-<lb/>
sus had recognized the need for<lb/>
new bus shelters, the SGA didn't<lb/>
have the funds to pursue the pro-<lb/>
ject past the paper stage.<lb/>
And why didn't they have the<lb/>
money9 Because almost half of the<lb/>
SGA's money was burned up by<lb/>
the aforesaid schools even before<lb/>
fall semester 1982.<lb/>
In an effort to combat the ever-<lb/>
increasing petitioning from various<lb/>
university academic departments,<lb/>
Henderson has proposed a<lb/>
decrease in student SGA fees. At<lb/>
present, the SGA receives approx-<lb/>
imately $7.75 from each student's<lb/>
fees at the beginning of the year.<lb/>
Under Henderson's plan, that par-<lb/>
ticular fee would be cut by $3 per<lb/>
student, decreasing the SGA's<lb/>
total allocating budget to about<lb/>
$22,000.<lb/>
But decreasing student fees by<lb/>
$3 isn't what ECU needs. A $3 sav-<lb/>
ings is practically worthless<lb/>
anyway, especially when one con-<lb/>
siders other college expenses.<lb/>
Why not maintain the $7.75 stu-<lb/>
dent fee and use a bit more discre-<lb/>
tion in allocating funds? Is that<lb/>
asking too much? Just because the<lb/>
SGA has a little extra money<lb/>
doesn't mean it has to hand it all<lb/>
over to the School of Music for a<lb/>
few new chairs. There are plenty of<lb/>
worthy student-centered organiza-<lb/>
tions on campus whose financial<lb/>
needs have been overlooked for<lb/>
too long.<lb/>
For example, more students are<lb/>
involved in fraternities and<lb/>
sororities than in the Arts, yet the<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity Council has been<lb/>
consistently denied office space.<lb/>
Their sincere need of that office<lb/>
space was perhaps best illustrated<lb/>
in the recent explosion at Village<lb/>
Green. Most of the IFC's files<lb/>
were, for lack of other space, kept<lb/>
at Village Green, and subsequent-<lb/>
ly, were lost.<lb/>
Student funds could also be put<lb/>
toward increasing handicap access<lb/>
in the older buildings on campus.<lb/>
Tremendous strides have, indeed,<lb/>
been made in this area, but without<lb/>
a doubt, there is plenty of room<lb/>
for improvement.<lb/>
In our opinion, the SGA should<lb/>
review these and similar proposals<lb/>
before appropriating $26,479 to<lb/>
the music school again. It's high<lb/>
time someone else got a big slice of<lb/>
the SGA pie.<lb/>
PRESIDENT<lb/>
ROY WILLIAMS'<lb/>
ISALWAVS<lb/>
m,AT LEAST<lb/>
DURING<lb/>
VlSITiM(q<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Bermudez Plots Attack From All Sides<lb/>
Invasion Of Nicaragua<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
and JOE SPEAR<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? The second civil<lb/>
war in four years is currently raging in<lb/>
Nicaragua. Our associate Jon Lee<lb/>
Anderson has been traveling with the<lb/>
rebel forces inside the country. Here is a<lb/>
recent report:<lb/>
The man directing the invasion of<lb/>
Nicaragua is Enrique Bermudez, who<lb/>
used to be the defense attache in<lb/>
Washington for the late dictator<lb/>
Anastasio Somoza.<lb/>
As Bermudez explains it, the main at-<lb/>
tack on Nicaragua is coming from Hon-<lb/>
duras in the north. Miskito Indian guer-<lb/>
rillas are operating on the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
in the northeast. Finally, another rebel<lb/>
group is maneuvering along the Costa<lb/>
Rican border to the south.<lb/>
Bermudez says he is directing the<lb/>
three-pronged civil war from Honduras<lb/>
by means of a central command center<lb/>
inside Nicaragua. He uses both human<lb/>
messengers and coded radio com-<lb/>
munications.<lb/>
Government forces have retreated,<lb/>
says Bermudez, leaving the rebels a<lb/>
chance to occupy territory and distribute<lb/>
arms to the native population. The most<lb/>
significant development, the exiled<lb/>
leader claims, is the way the peasants<lb/>
have rallied to the rebel cause. He<lb/>
predicts the civil war will be largely a<lb/>
rural operation, and he is confident that<lb/>
his forces will control the countryside.<lb/>
Thus, the situation in Nicaragua ap-<lb/>
On Death And Dying:<lb/>
Ways I'd Hate To Go<lb/>
I guess we all start thinking about<lb/>
death at some time in our lives. And be-<lb/>
ing an extremely skinny columnist whose<lb/>
favorite targets are football players and<lb/>
Sumo wrestlers, 1 find myself thinking<lb/>
about the inevitable more and more all<lb/>
the time.<lb/>
But it's not so much an obsession as it<lb/>
is a fascination. To put it in the ver-<lb/>
nacular ? as much as I hate the ver-<lb/>
nacular ? death is awesome.<lb/>
I'm not really sure just how I want to<lb/>
go, but 1 have narrowed it down to a few<lb/>
ways I definitely don't want to go.<lb/>
MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
k-?<lb/>
First of all, I don't want to be squash-<lb/>
ed on the side of the road by a Mack<lb/>
truck like some disobedient mutt or an<lb/>
armadillo with tunnel vision. Maybe it<lb/>
wouldn't be such a bad way to go, but I<lb/>
just don't want a bunch of tourists driv-<lb/>
ing by on their way to Florida to scrunch<lb/>
their faces as they straddle by and ask,<lb/>
"Oh gross, Agnes, what the hell was<lb/>
that?"<lb/>
I don't want to go in an electric chair<lb/>
either. I'd look ridiculous with my hair<lb/>
standing up and my arms and legs smok-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Since I don't want to have too many<lb/>
enemies when I go, I don't want to<lb/>
drown face-down in a water fountain<lb/>
either. I know how angry I get when I<lb/>
have to wait five minutes behind some<lb/>
water buffalo just to get a drink.<lb/>
I'm afraid of heights, so I don't think<lb/>
I'd want to fall out of an airplane or die<lb/>
of a Midol overdose.<lb/>
I don't want to choke to death on a<lb/>
piece of chewy, nasty meat or day-old<lb/>
bread, so I don't eat at Mendenhall<lb/>
anymore.<lb/>
Being also closterphobic, I don't want<lb/>
to be smothered by a fat person who<lb/>
loves pizza and tomato juice but doesn't<lb/>
take showers.<lb/>
I don't want to keel over standing in a<lb/>
soup-line in Bethel.<lb/>
I don't want to be served up as the<lb/>
main course at a Pygmy international<lb/>
food fest.<lb/>
I don't want to be stampeded by a<lb/>
herd of angry yaks in southeast Africa<lb/>
while taking part in a native ceremonial<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
I don't want to be eaten alive by<lb/>
anything, especially a fiock(?) of<lb/>
belligerent penguins.<lb/>
I don't want to be mistakenly locked<lb/>
in a pet store at night and killed by<lb/>
pirhannas, boa constrictors or fumaga-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
I don't want to go to a Special Olym-<lb/>
pics track meet and catch a misthrown<lb/>
shotput or an errant javelin in the<lb/>
mouth, ears, or especially in the groin.<lb/>
I don't want to die choking on a<lb/>
mouthful of popcorn at a Jerry Lewis<lb/>
film festival, because people might think<lb/>
I was laughing.<lb/>
I don't want to be smothered in<lb/>
peanut butter and eaten by a swarm of<lb/>
cockroaches while watching old Ozzie<lb/>
and Harriet reruns on a large-screen TV.<lb/>
I don't want to be hunted down like a<lb/>
rabid skunk by an angry posse just<lb/>
because I have three overdue library<lb/>
books.<lb/>
I don't want to be locked up overnight<lb/>
in a walk-in safe with a wild animal or a<lb/>
Jehova's Witness.<lb/>
I don't want to get smashed up in an<lb/>
auto accident, because I just bought a<lb/>
new pair of fuzzy dice for the rear-view<lb/>
and got the hole in my roof fixed.<lb/>
And finally, I don't want to be tor-<lb/>
tured to death by having to read old<lb/>
copies of The Ebony Herald, having to<lb/>
listen to WZMB's philosophical DJs or<lb/>
for that matter, having to reread my<lb/>
own columns.<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes, friend,<lb/>
confidant and bowling partner of the in-<lb/>
famous Stan Landers, didn 't realize how<lb/>
many Mormons attend ECU.<lb/>
pears to be similar to that in El<lb/>
Salvador: The government controK the<lb/>
cities, while the rebels control the out-<lb/>
back. The difference is that in<lb/>
Nicaragua, it's the leftists who are trying<lb/>
to defend the cities against anti-<lb/>
communists in the hills.<lb/>
Bermnudez insists his people will keep<lb/>
fighting "as long as there is a Marist-<lb/>
Leninist regime in Managua<lb/>
DEADLY LOOPHOLE A<lb/>
dangerous loophole in the nation- en-<lb/>
vironmental laws permits businesses that<lb/>
generate up to one ton of toxic wastes<lb/>
each month to dispose of them in cit<lb/>
dumps. But unfortunately, such dumps<lb/>
were never constructed to handle toxic<lb/>
wastes.<lb/>
Under the loophole for smaii in-<lb/>
dustries, even the most deadl of<lb/>
chemicals, including dioxins and PCBv<lb/>
can be dumped in urban sites ? as long<lb/>
as the monthly total for each business<lb/>
does not exceed one ton. This adds up<lb/>
Nearly 2.7 million tons of toxic wa:e-<lb/>
are dumped in city sites every year Th<lb/>
is nearly six percent of the nation's<lb/>
hazardous wastes.<lb/>
Last year, former Environment Pro-<lb/>
tection Agency Administrator Anne<lb/>
Burford teamed up with industrial<lb/>
bigwigs and successfully defeated a<lb/>
legislative effort to close the loopnoie.<lb/>
Now that she is no longer around. Con-<lb/>
pen will try again.<lb/>
FAMILY AFFAIR: Alter the Sosiet<lb/>
Union invaded Afghanistan<lb/>
December 1979. the Kremlin installed a<lb/>
its puppet president former deputy<lb/>
premeir Babrak Karmal. he left his wife<lb/>
behind in Czechoslovakia, where he had<lb/>
been living in exile, and took up<lb/>
residence with a mistress in the presiden-<lb/>
tial palace in Kabul.<lb/>
Karmal's mistress was assigned to<lb/>
oversee at least three goernme<lb/>
ministries. Her brother landed a<lb/>
lucrative post as the head of the Na-<lb/>
tional Institute of Carpets. Rugs and<lb/>
carpets are among Afghanistan's fead.r<lb/>
exports.<lb/>
Karmal then selected his own first<lb/>
cousins as the chief of the secret police.<lb/>
the minister of defense, the minister oi<lb/>
finance, the ambassador to Hungar<lb/>
and the charge in Washington. DC<lb/>
Another first cousin was named to a<lb/>
high public-health post.<lb/>
HEADLINES AND FOOTNOTFS<lb/>
Naval surveillance systems could proe<lb/>
invaluable in the patrol of U.S. coastal<lb/>
waters for illegal drug shipments. But an<lb/>
unpublished government audit disclose<lb/>
that the Pentagon is reluctant to get in-<lb/>
volved. It seems the brass hats fear their<lb/>
secret weapons could be exposed during<lb/>
ensuing court cases.<lb/>
? A recent Social Secuntv Ad-<lb/>
ministration search for unauthorized<lb/>
recipients of benefits turned up tew<lb/>
cheaters, but the effort wasn't all for<lb/>
naught. In the process of analvzing the<lb/>
check-cashing habits of recipients, ac-<lb/>
cording to the internal review it was<lb/>
discovered that the Treasurv Depart-<lb/>
ment could delay payment deposits a<lb/>
few extra days and save the taxpavers<lb/>
about $100 million a year.<lb/>
Copynjhl. MM<lb/>
I nited Feaiurt Svnd.?ir. Inc<lb/>
Starvation: 'Hidden Holocaust Of Our Time'<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
NEWS FLASH ? 50,000 die Monday<lb/>
from starvation.<lb/>
That's right, 50,000 people died<lb/>
yesterday from "dramatic starvation<lb/>
But there won't be any newspapers car-<lb/>
rying the story, because frankly, it's the<lb/>
kind of stuff people would rather not<lb/>
know.<lb/>
United Nations figures show that<lb/>
almost 20 million people die each year<lb/>
from hunger, yet we live in a world of<lb/>
plenty. Most of us have never experienc-<lb/>
ed the pains of hunger, so we're unable<lb/>
to conceptualize the horror of this all-<lb/>
too-common occurrence.<lb/>
Next Saturday, the GrecnvilleECU<lb/>
Hunger Coalition will be holding the<lb/>
twelfth annual "Walk For Humanity<lb/>
The Walk is an opportunity for us to<lb/>
make a small contribution to the<lb/>
elimination of hunger in our world.<lb/>
By walking, we attempt to empathize<lb/>
with the millions of poor people<lb/>
throughout the world who also walk,<lb/>
not by choice but by necessity. Statistics<lb/>
show that women and children in poor<lb/>
rural villages all over the world often<lb/>
spend half their day walking to obtain<lb/>
water. By Walking, we also raise funds<lb/>
for both local and international hunger<lb/>
relief.<lb/>
Twenty-five percent of the funds rais-<lb/>
ed from the Walk will be used by Green-<lb/>
ville's Church Ministries United to pro-<lb/>
vide food for Greenville's needy citizens.<lb/>
The other 75 percent will be used by any<lb/>
of its 14 internationally-recognized<lb/>
religious and non-religious hunger relief<lb/>
organizations. The individual who<lb/>
makes a donation to the Walk can<lb/>
choose which of the international groups<lb/>
he or she wishes to support.<lb/>
Now is the time you must all decide<lb/>
whether you plan to participate in the<lb/>
Walk or not. Some of you may choose<lb/>
to walk; others may want to pledge a<lb/>
friend who's walking. As you're making<lb/>
your decision, keep in mind that:<lb/>
? 700 million (although some<lb/>
estimates claim the figure is as high as<lb/>
one billion) people are starving.<lb/>
? As many as half the children born in<lb/>
some third-world countries die before<lb/>
their fifth birthday.<lb/>
? One-fourth of the world's people<lb/>
have only contaminated water to drink.<lb/>
? There are 17 million men, women<lb/>
and children wandering homeless or liv-<lb/>
ing with only the barest of shelters in<lb/>
refugee camps.<lb/>
Hunger may not be on the front page;<lb/>
JLat V K within our rane of<lb/>
2Sfi but ll docs ??? It ?s the hid-<lb/>
den holocaust of our time, and it can<lb/>
and must be stopped.<lb/>
wJhJT? 2 unough r?ources in this<lb/>
workl to end hunger if we can only find<lb/>
more. w?? share. So come on - "Put<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL i -83 5<lb/>
Greek Week Filled With Celebration<lb/>
Greek Week<lb/>
Pholo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Fraternity life's cup runneth over this past week as Greeks of all stripes took to partying all oer<lb/>
Greenville. The festivities started with the Inter Fraternity Council Banquet and went on to include<lb/>
such events as Kappa Sig's Funky Nassau, Kappa Alpha Track Meet, Phi Tau Sprint Fling. Pi Kap<lb/>
Photo By DAVE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Field Day and climaxed with the big bash at Mosier's Farm. If most of the soro<lb/>
members don't make it to class this week, the administration should understand<lb/>
Carolinian understand. The hard work the different members of the Greek sys<lb/>
causes throughout the school year deserves a blow-it-out blast at the end of the sen<lb/>
to the those who went overboard ? take two aspirin.<lb/>
fraternitv<lb/>
The Last<lb/>
r worthy<lb/>
ne advice<lb/>
The ALAMO<lb/>
Restaurant &amp; Nightclub<lb/>
Greenville's newest nightspot &amp; eatery.<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
s.<lb/>
ladies Night with The Fmbers<lb/>
All Ladies Free till 9:00<lb/>
Happy Hour 5:30-9:00<lb/>
8:30-12:30<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
The Alamo's 1st ladies Lockout<lb/>
with DJ Don tickers<lb/>
All Ladies Free all night<lb/>
H RQR will he doing live Remote<lb/>
from 8:30-11:30<lb/>
For the Ladies free draft, wine and<lb/>
Champagne from 8:30-10:00<lb/>
Men in at 10:00pm<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
SO 4<lb/>
o Admission till 8:00-All Greek Members<lb/>
25draft All Sight.<lb/>
Late Sight Happy Hour 11:00pm-1:00am<lb/>
Music by request with H RQR's Kirk Williams<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
orth Tower<lb/>
Doors open at 7:00 Happy Hour 7-9:00pm.<lb/>
PL?DGr&amp;S<lb/>
P?ES?MT<lb/>
I MM N Memorial l)r<lb/>
tcrow from (.rtcnvilli irpnri<lb/>
( losed Minda. except tor special events PInnm ? mm for additional information<lb/>
&amp;ne<lb/>
aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiminiumminiumiiiimiimmniiiiig<lb/>
v.<lb/>
752-3861<lb/>
MonThurs.4PMto1 AM<lb/>
Friday 4 PM to 2 AM<lb/>
Sat. 12 Noon to 2 AM<lb/>
Sun. 12 Noon to 12 Midnight<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
1403 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
I r<lb/>
1 L.<lb/>
Cheese4.20<lb/>
1 Hem4.95<lb/>
2 Items5.70<lb/>
3 Itemsa.45<lb/>
4 Items7 20 i<lb/>
5 Items7 95 i<lb/>
Extra SauceFree I<lb/>
Thick CrustFree I<lb/>
Price Per Item75-<lb/>
The above prices do not include 4 tax<lb/>
Buy 1 get 1 free is Back!<lb/>
Buy one 16" 2-item or more pizza<lb/>
and receive 12" 1-item pizza free<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
n i<lb/>
j i<lb/>
3?.?CXX??S?XXaS ,<lb/>
BiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiitiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiimimniiiiiiiiiiHmHiiiimiiimiimiMMiiiiii<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
Located 1 mile past<lb/>
Hasting's Ford on<lb/>
10th St. extension<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday<lb/>
&amp; Thursday<lb/>
POPCORN<lb/>
SHRIMP<lb/>
$295<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
i<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Tossed Salad may be substituted<lb/>
forSlaw35 extra<lb/>
:<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
delivery costs in the price<lb/>
PIZZA INN has changed<lb/>
all that!<lb/>
We sell our delivery<lb/>
pizzas at Menu Prices!<lb/>
No Surcharge. We also<lb/>
give FREE Drinks with<lb/>
our large and giant<lb/>
pizzas. TRY US TODAY!<lb/>
CALL 758-6266 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
U-Filler-up gas station<lb/>
Located under the'BIG FLAG "<lb/>
across from Pitt Plaza<lb/>
on 264 Bypass.Now open for business<lb/>
Stop in soon for all of your<lb/>
petroleum needs<lb/>
Cigarettes 65<lb/>
also air ?water for your convenience<lb/>
Have a safe Easter weekend.<lb/>
Low, Low qgs prices<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0007"/><lb/>
 J<lb/>
<lb/>
JHEf AST CAROLINIAN APRIL 12, 1983<lb/>
Cliches Hide The Mark Rather Than Hit<lb/>
? WKSLEYt, HPPKKT<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(UPI) ? Cliches ar<lb/>
the name of the game,<lb/>
so to speak, in<lb/>
Washington. Some<lb/>
call it bureaucratese<lb/>
or government gob-<lb/>
bledygook.<lb/>
Academics at ECU<lb/>
call it jargon. But a<lb/>
rose is a rose is a rose.<lb/>
It's still a cliche.<lb/>
The current one<lb/>
around town is "he's<lb/>
on a roll meaning<lb/>
?ie person is enjoying<lb/>
a streak of success.<lb/>
Senate Republican<lb/>
leader Howard Baker<lb/>
was one of those using<lb/>
that one.<lb/>
That cliche pro-<lb/>
bably will outlast the<lb/>
previous one,<lb/>
"infrastructure<lb/>
which President<lb/>
Reagan trotted out<lb/>
late last year to<lb/>
describe his ad-<lb/>
ministration's pro-<lb/>
posal to rebuild the<lb/>
nation's network of<lb/>
highways and bridges.<lb/>
The Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration also pro-<lb/>
vided us with a couple<lb/>
of other cliches,<lb/>
equally terrible, "the<lb/>
window of<lb/>
vulnerability" and<lb/>
"social safety net<lb/>
The first one refers to<lb/>
the nation's defense<lb/>
against outside<lb/>
enemies; the second<lb/>
refers to the basic<lb/>
welfare programs for<lb/>
the needy.<lb/>
Going backwards in<lb/>
time, we got a bagful<lb/>
of cliches in the '70s.<lb/>
When two people<lb/>
went "eyeball to<lb/>
eyeball they were<lb/>
confronting each<lb/>
other in a showdown.<lb/>
"Keep on truckin"<lb/>
black evangelist Tom<lb/>
Skinner said. He<lb/>
meant, keep pluggin'<lb/>
ahead.<lb/>
Or there was the<lb/>
"scenario the plan<lb/>
or way something was<lb/>
supposed to unfold or<lb/>
occur. Or two of the<lb/>
worst, "interface<lb/>
meaning points of<lb/>
contact, and "bottom<lb/>
line an accounting<lb/>
term meaning about<lb/>
the same thing as the<lb/>
last word or that of<lb/>
ultimate importance.<lb/>
During Watergate, refusing to follow<lb/>
former White House orders.<lb/>
Counsel John Wesley Others came out of<lb/>
Dean III kept saying the '60s. "Bite the<lb/>
"at that point in bullet President<lb/>
time a phrase about Lyndon Johnson and<lb/>
twice too long, and tens of thousands of<lb/>
tLsk. academic definition<lb/>
Originally. a f" the term<lb/>
"summit" meant a charismatic, which<lb/>
meeting of the highest comes from the Greek<lb/>
leaders, and was used word for grace. No<lb/>
to refer to a gathering anybody particularly<lb/>
of the Western heads appealing js<lb/>
White House chief of<lb/>
staff Alexander Haig<lb/>
referred to the<lb/>
"firestorm" that<lb/>
followed the<lb/>
"Saturday night<lb/>
massacre" of ad-<lb/>
ministration officials<lb/>
others said. "Fish or<lb/>
cut bait Rep. Mor-<lb/>
ris K. Udall, D-Ariz<lb/>
said. Somebody else<lb/>
phrased it "paint or<lb/>
get off the ladder<lb/>
They all meant to get<lb/>
started doing the hard<lb/>
A wareness Week Opens Eyes To Handicapped<lb/>
By PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
"Wising Up On the<lb/>
Handicapped" is the<lb/>
theme of this year's<lb/>
Handicap Awareness<lb/>
Week, which begins<lb/>
today and runs<lb/>
'hrough Thursday.<lb/>
A full program of<lb/>
activities is designed<lb/>
to create an awareness<lb/>
of the problems and<lb/>
.ipabilities of the<lb/>
handicapped within<lb/>
the Greenville com-<lb/>
munity and on ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
As in the past, the<lb/>
activities of the week<lb/>
were coordinated by<lb/>
ECU graduate<lb/>
students in the<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Rehabilitation<lb/>
Counseling. This<lb/>
year's coordinators<lb/>
are Kathy Wilson,<lb/>
Sandy Jackson and<lb/>
Betty Waters.<lb/>
Dr. Sheldon<lb/>
Downes, chairman of<lb/>
i he Department of<lb/>
Rehabilation Studies,<lb/>
and C. C. Rowe,<lb/>
coordinator of Han-<lb/>
dicapped Student Ser-<lb/>
vices. are advisors to<lb/>
the three coordinators<lb/>
and the Handicap<lb/>
Awareness Commit-<lb/>
tee. Downes em-<lb/>
phasized fthat Han-<lb/>
dicap Awareness<lb/>
Week is not affliated<lb/>
with any national or<lb/>
state programs. "It's<lb/>
strictly an ECU and<lb/>
Greenville event<lb/>
Downes said. This is<lb/>
the third year ECU<lb/>
has held the event.<lb/>
f Handicap<lb/>
Awareness Week is<lb/>
sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association and<lb/>
the Pitt County Com-<lb/>
mittee for Employ-<lb/>
ment of the Han-<lb/>
dicapped.<lb/>
Downes noted<lb/>
several areas that will<lb/>
be addressed by the<lb/>
series of seminars,<lb/>
workshops, booths<lb/>
and films. Topics in-<lb/>
clude:<lb/>
? Public awareness of<lb/>
the problems of the<lb/>
and assist the han-<lb/>
dicapped.<lb/>
? Exhibits of many<lb/>
innovative devices<lb/>
developed to assist the<lb/>
handicapped.<lb/>
? Explanations of<lb/>
how affirmative-<lb/>
action laws help the<lb/>
handicapped.<lb/>
Downes called af-<lb/>
fimative action a<lb/>
"very powerful law"<lb/>
that helps the han-<lb/>
dicapped in many<lb/>
ways.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Wilson, the planning<lb/>
for the event started<lb/>
in January. "We hope<lb/>
that the simulation ac-<lb/>
tivities, awareness<lb/>
booths, seminars<lb/>
and entertainment<lb/>
scheduled for this<lb/>
year's Handicap<lb/>
Awareness Week will<lb/>
create an awareness<lb/>
within the ECU cam-<lb/>
pus as well as the<lb/>
handicapped in every- Greenville community<lb/>
day living situations, as to the problems<lb/>
such as obtaining<lb/>
employment and pro-<lb/>
per work conditions<lb/>
and the various ways<lb/>
that handicapped peo-<lb/>
ple are assisted.<lb/>
? Displays by the<lb/>
many organizations<lb/>
and societies that help<lb/>
and capabilities of the<lb/>
handicapped, "Wilson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The similation ac-<lb/>
tivities allow those in-<lb/>
terested to experience<lb/>
certain handicaps<lb/>
such as blindness or<lb/>
using a wheelchair.<lb/>
The activities will take<lb/>
place everyday from<lb/>
noon to 4 p.m. on the<lb/>
campus mall.<lb/>
Awareness booths<lb/>
will be set up by<lb/>
various groups that<lb/>
do some type of work<lb/>
with handicapped<lb/>
people. Booths will<lb/>
also be set up on the<lb/>
campus mall from 10<lb/>
a.m. to 4 p.m. Both<lb/>
activities will be mov-<lb/>
ed to the main lobby<lb/>
of Mendenhall in the<lb/>
event of rain.<lb/>
Several seminars,<lb/>
lectures and films will<lb/>
be held at various<lb/>
campus locations<lb/>
throughout the three<lb/>
days.<lb/>
On Tuesday even-<lb/>
ing Chet Motter-<lb/>
shead, N.C. State<lb/>
Liaison for the Inter-<lb/>
national Year of<lb/>
Disabled Persons, will<lb/>
deliver a keynote ad-<lb/>
dress in the Biology<lb/>
Auditorium of the<lb/>
ECU Science Com-<lb/>
plex. Other speakers<lb/>
include Dr. Hal<lb/>
Shingley, Director of<lb/>
Greenville's TEACH<lb/>
Program; Ms. Mary<lb/>
Elesha-Adams, a<lb/>
clinical specialist with<lb/>
Greenville's Regional<lb/>
i A wG TYME MARKETING, INC.<lb/>
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752-4450<lb/>
INVITES YOU TO ENJOY<lb/>
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 Thay had<lb/>
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HARD DAYS<lb/>
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THURSDAY<lb/>
at the<lb/>
?a<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
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FREE BEER<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
ADMISSION<lb/>
???? (8:30-10:00)<lb/>
? Coming April 21 Twist Contest $200 1st prize<lb/>
The very best in Solid Gold Rock and RoU<lb/>
with WITN's Greg Allinson<lb/>
Rehabilitation<lb/>
Center; Mr. Kay<lb/>
Mclntyre also a<lb/>
clinical specialist with<lb/>
R.R.C Dr. Stephen<lb/>
Thomas, assistant<lb/>
professor in the ECU<lb/>
Vocational Evalua-<lb/>
tion Program; Dr.<lb/>
Betty Levey, ECU<lb/>
special education pro-<lb/>
fessor; Rickey Mimms<lb/>
from Raliegh's Voca-<lb/>
tional Rehabilitation<lb/>
Center and Dan le<lb/>
Roux of the Eastern<lb/>
Carolina Vocational<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
ECU campus at-<lb/>
torney Dr. David<lb/>
Stevens will open the will provide singing<lb/>
program tonight at 7 entertainment on<lb/>
p.m. in the Biology Tuesday night follow-<lb/>
Auditorium (Room ing the film.<lb/>
103). The film "The<lb/>
Invisible Barrier" will<lb/>
be shown. Thursday<lb/>
night at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright auditorium,<lb/>
ECU'S "sign to song"<lb/>
acting troupe<lb/>
"Fantasy" will per-<lb/>
form. Fantasy has<lb/>
become nationally<lb/>
known for their<lb/>
musical interpreta-<lb/>
tions through sign<lb/>
language.<lb/>
The "Caswell<lb/>
Choir" from Kinston<lb/>
Wilson said she<lb/>
hopes that the 3-day<lb/>
event will help the<lb/>
handicapped to<lb/>
become more aware<lb/>
of the resources<lb/>
available to them<lb/>
within the Pitt County<lb/>
area.<lb/>
Wilson said that<lb/>
Mimm's topic,<lb/>
"handicaps and the<lb/>
employment pro-<lb/>
cess is an area that<lb/>
needs to be discussed.<lb/>
of government ? the<lb/>
president, the British<lb/>
prime minister, the<lb/>
French president, the<lb/>
West German<lb/>
chancellor.<lb/>
Now, almost any<lb/>
important meeting<lb/>
becomes a "summit"<lb/>
? President Jimmy<lb/>
Carter's 1978 summit<lb/>
on the Middle East, or<lb/>
the upcoming<lb/>
"summit of in-<lb/>
dustrialized nations"<lb/>
in Williamsburg, Va<lb/>
in May.<lb/>
Then there was that<lb/>
memorable day in<lb/>
1962 when a seat mate<lb/>
in a Chicago taxi got<lb/>
out and said to the<lb/>
driver, "Have a nice<lb/>
day Millions of<lb/>
people repeated that<lb/>
now boring farewell.<lb/>
President John F.<lb/>
Kennedy was first<lb/>
described as<lb/>
' charismatic . "<lb/>
Sociologist Max<lb/>
Weber had an<lb/>
charistmatic.<lb/>
President Dwight<lb/>
D. Eisenhower chip-<lb/>
ped ? Ike was a<lb/>
golfer but no pun is<lb/>
intended ? in with<lb/>
the term "finalize<lb/>
He might have said,<lb/>
simply, finish.<lb/>
But for outright<lb/>
creativity. Western<lb/>
ranchers come up<lb/>
spontaneously with a<lb/>
crack that com-<lb/>
municates immediate-<lb/>
ly in a way that<lb/>
everybody<lb/>
understands.<lb/>
"Cut that out ?<lb/>
you're scarin' me<lb/>
said a rancher when<lb/>
told his cattle were<lb/>
out of the pasture and<lb/>
running down the<lb/>
highway.<lb/>
Or this one: "He<lb/>
went around me like I<lb/>
was tied a South<lb/>
Dakota rancher said<lb/>
about a fast driver<lb/>
who passed his pickup<lb/>
truck at high speed<lb/>
Weekend<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
Greenville,N.C.<lb/>
Special<lb/>
April 15th,16th&amp; nth<lb/>
Buy 8oz. N.Y. Strip Reg. Price $5.89<lb/>
Pay only price $2.95 Second N.Y.<lb/>
Strip All steaks served with King<lb/>
Idaho Potatoes or Fries -Texas Toast<lb/>
salad Bar only $1.00 with this special<lb/>
V<lb/>
ing Prime Rib<lb/>
Every Fri Sot. Night<lb/>
: ' Serving 14ozT-Bone<lb/>
April Lunch Specials Mon-Sat 11-2<lb/>
Jr. Sirloin $2.19 wsalad bar $3.19<lb/>
Chopped Sirloin $2.49<lb/>
wsalad bar $3.49<lb/>
lb. Hamburger w Baked Pot. $1.89<lb/>
wsalad bar $2.89<lb/>
Baked Potato wsalad bar $2.50<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St. 758-2712<lb/>
500 w. Greenville Blvd. 756-0040<lb/>
RR.C.<lb/>
4 CCNSB&amp;KnOH<lb/>
2 b-<lb/>
X tNTOES S?G UP 9V<lb/>
KOMT<lb/>
'???<lb/>
 ATTENTION<lb/>
ECU. STUDENTS &amp; FACULTY<lb/>
ANNOUNCING<lb/>
. HUCKLEBERRY'S<lb/>
ttfttftf- 7524n<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
: &amp;&amp;l "GET AQUAINTED" "?<lb/>
 SPECIAL<lb/>
? (Formally Biscuit Town-A cross from Crows Nest)<lb/>
t<lb/>
a<lb/>
t<lb/>
j CHICKEN SPECIAL<lb/>
????????????<lb/>
(llam-9pm Mon. thru Sat.)<lb/>
Two piece chicken snack our choice, Fries &amp;<lb/>
Biscuit included!<lb/>
(with purchase of any Med. or Lg. Beverage per orderj<lb/>
ONLY 99<lb/>
RIB SPECIAL<lb/>
<lb/>
(11am till 9pm Mon. thru Sat.)<lb/>
We're Taking YouBackin TimeFor the Time of Your Life! I ?<lb/>
Two Jumbo Beef Ribs, Fries,<lb/>
(with purchase of any Med. or Lg. Beverage per order)<lb/>
ONLY $1.99<lb/>
it 7 Days a Week it<lb/>
Gradual<lb/>
Coat From Page 1<lb/>
ing place at the time<lb/>
Rowe added, "but<lb/>
they're (contractors)<lb/>
going to leave a little<lb/>
sector clear for the<lb/>
platform party<lb/>
How-ell said the<lb/>
ceremony won't be as<lb/>
"pretty" because the<lb/>
graduate procession<lb/>
will have to walk up<lb/>
through stairways<lb/>
underne th the<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
According to ECU<lb/>
Athletic Director Ken<lb/>
Karr, the football<lb/>
field had needed<lb/>
"massive renovation"<lb/>
for more than two<lb/>
years, but that delays<lb/>
in the approval of<lb/>
state funds had kept<lb/>
the project in limbo.<lb/>
Karr said the field<lb/>
needed to have a new<lb/>
irrigation system in-<lb/>
stalled, and it als(<lb/>
to be regraded<lb/>
reseeded.<lb/>
"The field is<lb/>
worst shape ml<lb/>
history of the ui<lb/>
sity said ECU<lb/>
football coach <lb/>
Emory,<lb/>
couldn't even<lb/>
cows on it<lb/>
Emory, a tw<lb/>
graduate of<lb/>
called gradual<lb/>
"the most lmpol<lb/>
event of the year'f<lb/>
said he under;<lb/>
the students prol<lb/>
He had made thel<lb/>
gestion to use<lb/>
stands in Ficl<lb/>
before How ell hai<lb/>
nounced his chanl<lb/>
plans.<lb/>
According<lb/>
Rowe. some<lb/>
students had<lb/>
participating<lb/>
black-market ai<lb/>
SRA Holds R<lb/>
For Presidenc<lb/>
By DARRYL<lb/>
BROWN<lb/>
ul:nt No? Editor<lb/>
The Student<lb/>
Residence Association<lb/>
is holding a run-off<lb/>
election today for<lb/>
president of the<lb/>
organization, and the<lb/>
winner will be sworn<lb/>
in at the SRA banquet<lb/>
tomorrow, said Dean<lb/>
of Residence Life<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum.<lb/>
Last week's election<lb/>
for the chief executive<lb/>
of the organization<lb/>
ended with onb<lb/>
votes separating<lb/>
two candidates oi<lb/>
almost 700 ball<lb/>
cast. Dann V!<lb/>
received 331 v<lb/>
while his Oppoj<lb/>
Mark Niewald re<lb/>
ed 329.<lb/>
Niew aid<lb/>
mediately called<lb/>
the run-off eiecl<lb/>
because his rotai<lb/>
within two percenj<lb/>
White's. The eled<lb/>
committee<lb/>
Fulghum had<lb/>
question ab<lb/>
Group Studies<lb/>
The University<lb/>
Committee on the<lb/>
Status of Minorities<lb/>
will be conducting its<lb/>
annual forum next<lb/>
Monday from 4 p.m.<lb/>
to 5 p.m. on the mall.<lb/>
This year's pro-<lb/>
gram will be in the<lb/>
form of<lb/>
discussion<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
a panel<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
John M.<lb/>
Howell and Vice<lb/>
Chancellors Elmer<lb/>
Meyer and Angelo<lb/>
Volpe as panelj<lb/>
Dr. Clinton R D<lb/>
mg. chairman of<lb/>
committee, will s<lb/>
as moderator<lb/>
The forum<lb/>
begin with 1<lb/>
remarks from<lb/>
three admmistraj<lb/>
in which they will<lb/>
dress questions<lb/>
mitted in advancel<lb/>
leaders oi the stu<lb/>
minority groups<lb/>
open question<lb/>
Treat the ere'<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
NoC<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
Every Monc<lb/>
o me year<lb/>
pizza tor me<lb/>
and we'll trc<lb/>
numbers of<lb/>
service zonel<lb/>
Or ptck<lb/>
Two pizzas for the price of<lb/>
When it corn<lb/>
Not qocl<lb/>
L<lb/>
P.T.A. "Hada<lb/>
no<lb/>
Gety<lb/>
Call P.T.AI<lb/>
? - - - - ? -<lb/>
??fc ?-W' fcl Ml- rf?i I H -? Wl ?M? .?to,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0008"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
Hit It<lb/>
iginaiiy, a<lb/>
Immit" meant a<lb/>
bung of the highest<lb/>
Jiers. and was used<lb/>
lefer to a gathering<lb/>
Ihe Western heads<lb/>
jovernment ? the<lb/>
Indent, the British<lb/>
e minister, the<lb/>
ich president, the<lb/>
German<lb/>
iceilor.<lb/>
low. almost any<lb/>
ortant meeting<lb/>
lie- a summit"<lb/>
denl Jimmy<lb/>
 18 summit<lb/>
he Middle East, or<lb/>
upcoming<lb/>
n ra I of i n -<lb/>
 ized nations"<lb/>
liamNburg, Va<lb/>
,t<lb/>
there as that<lb/>
irable day in<lb/>
a hen a scat mate<lb/>
Chicago taxi got<lb/>
nd said to the<lb/>
"Hae a nice<lb/>
Mi lions of<lb/>
epeated that<lb/>
 .ireueil.<lb/>
rsideni John F.<lb/>
a h first<lb/>
:d as<lb/>
id<lb/>
Max<lb/>
an<lb/>
academic definition<lb/>
for the term<lb/>
charismatic, which<lb/>
comes from the Greek<lb/>
word for grace. Now<lb/>
anybody particularly<lb/>
appealing is<lb/>
charistmatic.<lb/>
President Dwight<lb/>
D. Eisenhower chip-<lb/>
ped ? Ike was a<lb/>
golfer but no pun is<lb/>
intended ? in with<lb/>
the term "finalize<lb/>
He might have said,<lb/>
simply, finish.<lb/>
But for outright<lb/>
creativity, Western<lb/>
ranchers come up<lb/>
spontaneously with a<lb/>
crack that com-<lb/>
municates immediate-<lb/>
ly in a way that<lb/>
everybody<lb/>
understands.<lb/>
"Cut that out ?<lb/>
you're scarin' me<lb/>
said a rancher when<lb/>
told his cattle were<lb/>
out of the pasture and<lb/>
running down the<lb/>
highway.<lb/>
Or this one: "He<lb/>
went around me like I<lb/>
was tied a South<lb/>
Dakota rancher said<lb/>
about a fast driver<lb/>
who passed his pickup<lb/>
truck at high speed.<lb/>
RR.C.<lb/>
- . DNSEPVATtCN<lb/>
ftScT<lb/>
,? By 3 30 njfcSQAC- NMCJT<lb/>
<lb/>
lACULTY !<lb/>
Y'S<lb/>
ill<lb/>
$&amp;??.<lb/>
rOH,<lb/>
rows Sest)<lb/>
m Mon. thru Sat.)<lb/>
ice, Fries &amp;<lb/>
W per order;<lb/>
ru Sat.)<lb/>
Biscuit<lb/>
e per order)<lb/>
Graduation Moved<lb/>
Coat From Page 1<lb/>
ing place at the time<lb/>
Rowe added, "but<lb/>
they're (contractors)<lb/>
going to leave a little<lb/>
sector clear for the<lb/>
platform party<lb/>
Howell said the<lb/>
ceremony won't be as<lb/>
"pretty" because the<lb/>
graduate procession<lb/>
will have to walk up<lb/>
through stairways<lb/>
underneath the<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
According to ECU<lb/>
Athletic Director Ken<lb/>
Karr, the football<lb/>
field had needed<lb/>
"massive renovation"<lb/>
for more than two<lb/>
years, but that delays<lb/>
in the approval of<lb/>
state funds had kept<lb/>
the project in limbo.<lb/>
Karr said the field<lb/>
needed to have a new<lb/>
irrigation system in-<lb/>
stalled, and it also had<lb/>
to be rcgraded and<lb/>
reseeded.<lb/>
"The field is in the<lb/>
worst shape in the<lb/>
history of the univer-<lb/>
sity said ECU head<lb/>
football coach Ed<lb/>
Emory. "You<lb/>
couldn't even graze<lb/>
cows on it<lb/>
Emory, a two-time<lb/>
graduate of ECU,<lb/>
called graduation<lb/>
"the most important<lb/>
event of the year" and<lb/>
said he understood<lb/>
the students problem.<lb/>
He had made the sug-<lb/>
gestion to use the<lb/>
stands in Ficklen<lb/>
before Howell had an-<lb/>
nounced his change in<lb/>
plans.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Rowe, some ECU<lb/>
students had been<lb/>
participating in a<lb/>
black-market attempt<lb/>
to secure extra tickets<lb/>
to the commence-<lb/>
ment. Some<lb/>
graduating seniors,<lb/>
not planning to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the com-<lb/>
mencement exercises<lb/>
had been requesting<lb/>
their two tickets<lb/>
anyway and passing<lb/>
them on to desperate<lb/>
friends in need of the<lb/>
extras.<lb/>
Rowe said that the<lb/>
new decision "doesn't<lb/>
change anything" as<lb/>
far as the ticket issue<lb/>
is concerned. Rowe<lb/>
explained that<lb/>
because there's still a<lb/>
possibility of bad<lb/>
weather conditions on<lb/>
May 6, the graduation<lb/>
could still be held in<lb/>
Minges. Rowe added<lb/>
that only those with<lb/>
tickets would be<lb/>
allowed inside in this<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Students are still<lb/>
being asked to pick up<lb/>
their first two tickets<lb/>
and make requests for<lb/>
additional tickets if<lb/>
they're needed.<lb/>
Howell and Rowe<lb/>
both believe that<lb/>
because the com-<lb/>
mencement is on a<lb/>
Friday instead of<lb/>
Saturday the crowd<lb/>
will be less. Howell<lb/>
said the 13,000 figure<lb/>
was an<lb/>
"overestimate<lb/>
Rowe added that<lb/>
8,000 to 8,500 would<lb/>
more likely be the tur-<lb/>
nout.<lb/>
Both Howell and<lb/>
Rowe said they believ-<lb/>
ed that the new loca-<lb/>
tion would be<lb/>
satisfactory to<lb/>
everyone. "If more<lb/>
poeple are happy,<lb/>
fine Howell said.<lb/>
SRA Holds Run-Off Election<lb/>
For Presidency Of Organization<lb/>
By DARRYL<lb/>
BROWN<lb/>
Assisiant New Ediior<lb/>
The Student<lb/>
Residence Association<lb/>
is holding a run-off<lb/>
election today for<lb/>
president of the<lb/>
organization, and the<lb/>
winner will be sworn<lb/>
in at the SRA banquet<lb/>
tomorrow, said Dean<lb/>
of Residence Life<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum.<lb/>
Last week's election<lb/>
for the chief executive<lb/>
of the organization<lb/>
ended with only two<lb/>
votes separating the<lb/>
two candidates out of<lb/>
almost 700 ballots<lb/>
cast. Danny White<lb/>
received 331 votes<lb/>
while his opponent<lb/>
Mark Niewald receiv-<lb/>
ed 329.<lb/>
Niewald im-<lb/>
mediately called for<lb/>
the run-off election<lb/>
because his total was<lb/>
within two percent of<lb/>
White's. The election<lb/>
committee and<lb/>
Fulghum had some<lb/>
question about<lb/>
whether a run-off<lb/>
could be held when<lb/>
only two candidates<lb/>
ran in the original<lb/>
election and delayed<lb/>
announcing the run-<lb/>
off until Friday.<lb/>
After a meeting Fri-<lb/>
day morning, they<lb/>
decided the second<lb/>
election would take<lb/>
place today and its<lb/>
outcome would be<lb/>
final, regardless of the<lb/>
margin of victory.<lb/>
Only an absolute tie<lb/>
could force another<lb/>
run-off, according to<lb/>
outgoing SRA presi-<lb/>
dent Tory Russo.<lb/>
Voting stands will<lb/>
be open until 4 p.m.<lb/>
today in the campus<lb/>
dormitories, and can-<lb/>
didates were allowed<lb/>
to continue their cam-<lb/>
paigning this week.<lb/>
The SRA will swear<lb/>
in all new executive<lb/>
officers at the<lb/>
Wednesday banquet,<lb/>
and it will approve its<lb/>
new logo for the up-<lb/>
coming year.<lb/>
Group Studies Minority Status<lb/>
The University<lb/>
Committee on the<lb/>
Status of Minorities<lb/>
will be conducting its<lb/>
annual forum next<lb/>
Monday from 4 p.m.<lb/>
to 5 p.m. on the mall.<lb/>
This year's pro-<lb/>
gram will be in the<lb/>
form of a panel<lb/>
discussion featuring<lb/>
Chancellor John M.<lb/>
Howell and Vice<lb/>
Chancellors Elmer<lb/>
Meyer and Angelo<lb/>
Volpe as panelists.<lb/>
Dr. Clinton R. Down-<lb/>
ing, chairman of the<lb/>
committee, will serve<lb/>
as moderator.<lb/>
The forum will<lb/>
begin with brief<lb/>
remarks from the<lb/>
three administrators<lb/>
in which they will ad-<lb/>
dress questions sub-<lb/>
mitted in advance by<lb/>
leaders of the student<lb/>
minority groups. A<lb/>
open question and<lb/>
answer session will<lb/>
follow their remarks.<lb/>
Special requests are<lb/>
being sent byihe com-<lb/>
mittee to campus<lb/>
organizations asking<lb/>
that they submit ques-<lb/>
tions related to the<lb/>
concerns of minority<lb/>
students. Downing<lb/>
asked that these ques-<lb/>
tions be received<lb/>
before April 18, the<lb/>
date of the forum.<lb/>
Questions should be<lb/>
addressed in written<lb/>
form to Dr. Mary<lb/>
AiLEL. Rose .special<lb/>
assistant to the<lb/>
chancellor (room 104<lb/>
Spilman).<lb/>
The forum is<lb/>
designed to "to be a<lb/>
positive exchange<lb/>
related to the con-<lb/>
cerns of minority<lb/>
group members<lb/>
Downing said.<lb/>
Ti<lb/>
Treat the crew and wen treat you<lb/>
; ? in<lb/>
tfJ<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
No Coupon Necessary<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
Every Monday and Tuesday night, every week<lb/>
of the year, order any large 2 or more topping<lb/>
pizza for the crew, ask for the "Family Night Special"<lb/>
and we'll treat you to your own small pizza with the same<lb/>
numbers of toppings FREE and delivered free in our<lb/>
service zone, in 30 minutes or tess.<lb/>
L<lb/>
Or pick up two pizzas in 15 minutes.<lb/>
Two pizzas for the price of one  now that's a treat you cant beat!<lb/>
When it comes to f pizza, pta comes to you.<lb/>
Not goo! with any other special<lb/>
P.T.A. "Had a piece lately" t-SWrts<lb/>
now on sale<lb/>
Get yours today!<lb/>
Call P.T.A, for your order.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APR1I it im 7<lb/>
dKOFVED<lb/>
CLASS RINHS IMP<lb/>
CLASS RINGS INC<lb/>
Now when you buy any ArtCarved<lb/>
college ring, you not only get one nng<lb/>
loaded with style and quality, you<lb/>
get two. A great college ring?and a<lb/>
diamond fashion ring. FREE. Its a<lb/>
beauty?10K gold with a genuine 2<lb/>
point diamond. Retail value? $60. The<lb/>
perfect way to express yourself, your<lb/>
style, or your feelings for that special<lb/>
someone. Available exclusively from<lb/>
your ArtCarved Representative for a<lb/>
limited time only.<lb/>
April 13,14,15<lb/>
Wednesday,<lb/>
Thursday,<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Deposit Required MasterCard or Visa Accepted<lb/>
Time9-4 p, tudent Supply Store Lobby<lb/>
c 1983 AnCarvad ass <lb/>
Support The Businesses<lb/>
That Support ECU<lb/>
University Book Exchange<lb/>
Domino's Pizza<lb/>
Overton's Supermarket<lb/>
Todd's Stereo<lb/>
H.L. Hodges Sporting Goods<lb/>
The Elbo Room<lb/>
P.T.A.<lb/>
Western Sizzlin' Steak House<lb/>
Goodyear<lb/>
AtBarre<lb/>
Campus Alcohol and Drug Program<lb/>
Coin and Ring Man<lb/>
Sweetings Shoes<lb/>
TacoCid<lb/>
420 Crab<lb/>
ZaJes Jewelers<lb/>
Western Steer<lb/>
Lanteres Jewelers<lb/>
Nutri-System<lb/>
Carry Copy Center<lb/>
Pet Village<lb/>
Malpass Mufflers<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Boyd's Barber Shop<lb/>
Sammy's Country Cooking<lb/>
Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
Dieuers Bakery<lb/>
Marathon<lb/>
Robinson's Jewelers<lb/>
The Flower Basket<lb/>
The Wash House<lb/>
AAP<lb/>
Plain Jane's<lb/>
Georges Coiffeurs<lb/>
Golden Dragon<lb/>
Arby's<lb/>
Morgan Printers<lb/>
Shoney's<lb/>
J.D. Dawsoa<lb/>
TeJereut T.V.<lb/>
Plaza Shell<lb/>
StyftagSaMa<lb/>
Buck's Gulf<lb/>
Mitchell's<lb/>
Les Jewelers<lb/>
Balloons Over Greenville<lb/>
Optical<lb/>
Jefferys<lb/>
United Figure<lb/>
Bill's Fast Food<lb/>
Mitchell's Hair<lb/>
and Wine<lb/>
Taff's Office Supply<lb/>
The Atk<lb/>
Body<lb/>
The Subway<lb/>
Backstage 1<lb/>
A ecu Copy<lb/>
BuhUhUl I 'ii' u<lb/>
- - - -??<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
APRIL 12. 1983<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
ECU Lends<lb/>
Hand With<lb/>
'Godspell'<lb/>
By ELIZABETH JENNINGS<lb/>
GODSPELL. a dinner theatre at the<lb/>
Rjmada Inn in New Bern, April 21-23<lb/>
and 28-30. Dinner will begin at 7p.m. and<lb/>
the show at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
After a long hard day of<lb/>
classes, many ECU students relax<lb/>
with their favorite soap opera or<lb/>
beverage, but Paul Baker has<lb/>
other plans. Baker, a sophmore<lb/>
majoring in dance, drives to the<lb/>
Footlight Theatre in New Bern<lb/>
after clases to rehearse Godspell.<lb/>
He's the show's choreographer.<lb/>
Last summer. Baker was assis-<lb/>
tant choreographer for Godspell<lb/>
at the Liberty Carter in<lb/>
Kenansville. "Some people from<lb/>
Footlight saw me in Godspell at<lb/>
the Liberty Carter and asked me<lb/>
to choreograph for them he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Baker, from Pink Hill,<lb/>
displays remarkable drive and<lb/>
ambition toward a career in pro-<lb/>
fessional dance. Even his Sun-<lb/>
days are reserved for rehearsal.<lb/>
Now that takes dedication.<lb/>
Godspell is a musical collage of<lb/>
song, mime, and dance in vignet-<lb/>
tes based on the New Testament.<lb/>
The production draws most of its<lb/>
ten-character cast from the New<lb/>
Bern community. Two ECU<lb/>
alumni. Dennis Dellimar and<lb/>
Willie Sumner, play major roles.<lb/>
Dottie Holliatschek, the<lb/>
Footlight's director of publicity,<lb/>
explained there is no lead<lb/>
character in Godspell. Every<lb/>
character is on stage at all times;<lb/>
an occasional spotlight will focus<lb/>
on a character for a solo perfor-<lb/>
mance. "There's a lot of dancing<lb/>
and it's all very energetic said<lb/>
Holliatschek.<lb/>
English grad Dellimar will play<lb/>
John the Baptist. He also<lb/>
directed The Prime of Xfiss Jean<lb/>
Rrody last winter.<lb/>
Sumner's character, Steven,<lb/>
theoretically represents Jesus<lb/>
Christ. Sumner, who graduated<lb/>
last year with a major in drama,<lb/>
began working in Footlight with<lb/>
a minor role in Guys and Dolls<lb/>
last fall. For The Prime of Miss<lb/>
Jean Brody, he was assigned the<lb/>
position of props manager. His<lb/>
dedication to the Footlight<lb/>
Theatre lanu d him the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to serve as assistanat direc-<lb/>
tor for the musical The King and<lb/>
I which will appear next fall.<lb/>
Baker is undecided about his<lb/>
plans for the future. He will<lb/>
choreograph Godspell again this<lb/>
summer at the Liberty Cart. He<lb/>
will continue working on the re-<lb/>
quirements for his dance degree<lb/>
at ECU this fall. Baker is an in-<lb/>
spiration to his ECU colleagues,<lb/>
satisfying academic requirements<lb/>
while strenthening his dance<lb/>
skills.<lb/>
Tickets are available at Bran-<lb/>
ches Department Store and the<lb/>
Harvey Mansion Restaurant,<lb/>
both in New Bern. Because<lb/>
Godspell will be presented as a<lb/>
dinner theater, reservations must<lb/>
be made two days in advance.<lb/>
The Footlight Theatre is a non-<lb/>
profit community theater that<lb/>
gives talented dancers and actors<lb/>
of all ages, including ECU<lb/>
students, a chance to perform<lb/>
and enhance their skills.<lb/>
Averaging three productions a<lb/>
year, the Footlight presented<lb/>
Guys and Dolls, and The Prime<lb/>
of Miss Jean Brody, last year.<lb/>
Godspell in April is special for<lb/>
another reason: In 1977, the<lb/>
Footlight opened with a produc-<lb/>
tion of Godspell.<lb/>
Next year's production plans<lb/>
include The King and , The Fan-<lb/>
tastiks, and The Madwoman of<lb/>
Chaillot.<lb/>
"We encourage anybody to<lb/>
come and try out for the plays<lb/>
said Ms. Holliatschek. She said<lb/>
they post audition schedules in<lb/>
local New Bern newspapers and<lb/>
in the entertainment section of<lb/>
the Views and Observer.<lb/>
And don't forget Godspell,<lb/>
coming up April 21-23 and 28-30.<lb/>
Edmonds And Curley Return To Host 'Barefoot On The MalV<lb/>
Professional M.C.s Edmonds and Curley will return to host the ECU Student Union Special Events Committee. Also on the<lb/>
festival "Barefoot on the Mall" for the second straight year on mall will be fortune-teller Marcella Ruble, tattoo artists The<lb/>
Thursday, April 21 on the University Mall. The annual celebra- Rose Tattoos, Antique Images Photography. Caricature<lb/>
tion of the spring season begins at 12 noon and is sponsored by Unlimited, at well as plenty of food.<lb/>
Lange: A Painful Struggle<lb/>
By DAVID ROSENTHAL<lb/>
Rolllaf Stoat<lb/>
NEW YORK ? "I'll tell you<lb/>
something Jessica Lange is say-<lb/>
ing. "1 wouldn't for anything in<lb/>
the world go through my life<lb/>
again. I wouldn't. It's been real<lb/>
painful. I mean, even with all the<lb/>
joy, it's been ? God ? painful<lb/>
She shifts left, then right, then<lb/>
down, then up again. "I always<lb/>
go through anything. I explore<lb/>
everything to the fullest whether<lb/>
good or bad.<lb/>
"Now, 1 feel a whole period of<lb/>
my life coming to a close and<lb/>
something else opening up. I<lb/>
don't know what it is, but I sense<lb/>
it's going to take me into the<lb/>
realm of ? this will sound corny<lb/>
? self-examination<lb/>
 'HftCKjfcis. the brink of a new<lb/>
cydev Tnis one will last nine<lb/>
years, Miss Lange has been advis-<lb/>
ed, until she is 42. And whatever<lb/>
happens in 1983 will set the ir-<lb/>
revocable path. It is a propitious<lb/>
time then for assessing.<lb/>
All this comes when Jessica<lb/>
Lange's movie career has never<lb/>
been more promising. She cur-<lb/>
rently is starring in two highly ac-<lb/>
claimed films, Tootsie and<lb/>
Frances, and for both she receiv-<lb/>
ed an Academy Award nomina-<lb/>
tion (last night she won the Best<lb/>
Supporting Actress award for her<lb/>
role in Tootsie). This is the first<lb/>
time since 1944 that someone has<lb/>
been nominted for two acting<lb/>
Oscars in the same year.<lb/>
But still, she feels uncertain.<lb/>
"You know she says, "I've<lb/>
always had this sensation that<lb/>
I've no connection to the person I<lb/>
was yesterday. It's not so bad<lb/>
now, but there was a period of<lb/>
my life when I didn't even feel<lb/>
connected to the person I was 10<lb/>
minutes ago. It was kind of<lb/>
frightening at one point ? kind<lb/>
of free-floating in the present<lb/>
with no tentacles touching down<lb/>
anywhere<lb/>
Yet, it couldn't have been so<lb/>
awful, could it? This is a sur-<lb/>
vivor, a victor, the beautiful<lb/>
mother of a beautiful child.<lb/>
It is not enough. Jessica I ange<lb/>
wants it all. To be the best, know-<lb/>
ing full well the impossibiht of<lb/>
superlatives. The craving tor<lb/>
perfection. Hers. The world's.<lb/>
"A lot of the lifestyle I've<lb/>
engaged in during the past is go-<lb/>
ing to have to be eliminated she<lb/>
says. "The thoughts come quick-<lb/>
ly, quietly, barely audible amid<lb/>
the cries for cheesburgers and<lb/>
tuna. "I've always put myself,<lb/>
my desires, first. And I don't<lb/>
think it's the way the human<lb/>
spirit was meant to exist. RealK.<lb/>
what I'm looking for is to live in<lb/>
some kind of state of grace<lb/>
Miss Lange was born in rural<lb/>
Minnesota but moved 18 times<lb/>
with her family. Her father was a<lb/>
See JESSICA. Page 9<lb/>
Rocks Best Bet<lb/>
Punks Get Even Tougher<lb/>
The Clash: like most art forms, punk rock Is effective on more than just one level<lb/>
By JOSEPH B. MORTON<lb/>
StaH Writer<lb/>
Has complacency rendered the bond between rock<lb/>
music and its audience uncertain? Have imagina-<lb/>
tions been stifled so that rock's remains lie with the<lb/>
greedy record magnates? Rock's best purpose, to<lb/>
criticize familiar social problems, has been aborted<lb/>
through commercialism; however, that purpose has<lb/>
resurfaced through a renewed intersest in the punk<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
In the fifties, fledgling rock music appalled our<lb/>
elders who clasped their hands over their ears and<lb/>
listened only with distaste to music that would later<lb/>
become a socially relevant art form and instant<lb/>
channel for self-expression; rock provided both<lb/>
player and listener, the rebellious young, with a vent<lb/>
for hostility.<lb/>
The recent frustrations of some of the legendary<lb/>
pioneers of rock indicate a loss in the fan's ties to<lb/>
the flagrantly remembered purpose of the medium.<lb/>
Before disbanding, the Who, a band that always<lb/>
pushed for a little extra during its live performances,<lb/>
complained that today's record-buying public lacks<lb/>
enthusiasm ? even anger, if you will. This new<lb/>
breed of video-game-playing zombies can no longer<lb/>
see the Who perform. Does it even care?<lb/>
Another profound and still prolific band. Pink<lb/>
Floyd, led by the anarchic Roger Waters, put<lb/>
together an album and a film based on that album<lb/>
that deal specifically with the artist's alienation<lb/>
from his audience. (Both the film and album are ap-<lb/>
propriately titled The Wall.)<lb/>
Much of rock's energy was buried with legends<lb/>
like former Rolling Stone Brian Jones, Janis Joplin,<lb/>
Jimi Hendrix, and the "lizard king Jim Morrison.<lb/>
Morrison, excruciatingly labelled a "pop star con-<lb/>
stantly challenged his audiences passivity with his<lb/>
own brand of shock treatment.<lb/>
Where is the anger? Where is the energy?<lb/>
Today, much of rock is written, arranged and<lb/>
produced according to a set formula. Very few peo-<lb/>
ple really dance to "rock 'n' roll" anymore, so it<lb/>
has become rock sans roll.<lb/>
The rock called "punk" has itself survived the<lb/>
adversity that it gravitates toward and has revived<lb/>
the attention to politics, sorrows, struggles, living<lb/>
conditions and other gritty, gut-level stuff that rock<lb/>
used to be made of. The U.K. was the setting tor the<lb/>
eruption of the punk movement: the Clash, the Sex<lb/>
Pistols, Sham 69 and many other bands led the way<lb/>
by attacking the boring, worn out rock morals of the<lb/>
70s and exploiting the stagnation that had become a<lb/>
staple of the decade. During this time, late 70s, runk<lb/>
surfaced in the United Statis with very little response<lb/>
one way or the other. Since then, punk has found<lb/>
domestic success with the help of changing tastes in<lb/>
music, changing attitudes, radio airplay (thanks in<lb/>
part to the resurgence of AOR) and record com-<lb/>
panies' inevitable interest in the commercial poten<lb/>
tial of the genre.<lb/>
Punk bands of the 80s play at their audiences<lb/>
rather than to them. The Dead Kennedvs, Black<lb/>
Flag, X, Circle Jerks, and the always-violent Fear<lb/>
are just a few of the bands who keep their music<lb/>
political and far less commercial than todav's "new<lb/>
wave" bands. When Fear blast the refrain "1 don't<lb/>
care about you; fuck you" at their audience, thev<lb/>
not only provoke a violent response from most club<lb/>
crowds, but also evoke reflection on the themes of<lb/>
alienation, apathy and rejection in societv. So, like<lb/>
most art forms, punk is effective on more than one<lb/>
level.<lb/>
Punks don't have to be addicted to drugs or par-<lb/>
ticularly disturbed to be good punks; but a certain<lb/>
attention to unconventional clothing and hairstyle is<lb/>
a good iconoclastic way of expressing a punk stance.<lb/>
The music provides a promiscuous freedom for its<lb/>
disciples, so that involvement doesn't necessarily<lb/>
mean that hate, hate, and more hate is the onlv thine<lb/>
you'll get out of it. <lb/>
While rock (n roll) remains only an item for a<lb/>
good time, punk rock carries over into its follower's<lb/>
lives by giving them a precise definition of the situa<lb/>
tion they re in. Fun is fun, but it shouldn't consume<lb/>
anyone s life. One could view today's punk move-<lb/>
me?. !? !?" our c,dcrs viewed earlv<lb/>
??.Lll ?! Ut m?t Pf0 arcnt that narrow-<lb/>
minded. The musical inclination of most rock au-<lb/>
diences isn't even worth noting. So 1 won't<lb/>
It's one of the prototypes of punk, Iggy Pop who<lb/>
sums up the increasing demand for prog?es!fve<lb/>
music when he sings "I need more rcss,vc<lb/>
Jessica La<lb/>
A Rags-Ti<lb/>
ontinued From Page 8<lb/>
salesman, the travel-<lb/>
ing kind Also a<lb/>
coach, a dreamer, a<lb/>
teacher, a dnrie-<lb/>
When his teenage<lb/>
daughter hoppec<lb/>
freight train one p:<lb/>
ing, Al Lange ap-<lb/>
predated the gesture<lb/>
He thinks it's fine she<lb/>
became an actress ?<lb/>
since that's what she<lb/>
wants ? but just last<lb/>
Christmas. with<lb/>
Frances and Tootsie<lb/>
hauling in the crow<lb/>
Al suggested Jee go<lb/>
back to college for a<lb/>
law degree, just ;n<lb/>
case.<lb/>
He wanted, the<lb/>
say, to be a iawe:<lb/>
Dorothy, his a<lb/>
wanted to dance V<lb/>
says Miss Lange's<lb/>
2-year-old ba<lb/>
Alexandra, whose<lb/>
father is Mikhail<lb/>
Baryshmko. favors<lb/>
her grandmothers.<lb/>
Al and Dorothy live<lb/>
in hfickerson, M;nn<lb/>
which isn't real! i<lb/>
town, just a dot in the<lb/>
wild not tar h<lb/>
Lake Superior<lb/>
onl Neer. mile- fi<lb/>
Miss Lange-<lb/>
cabin in tiolyoke<lb/>
Miss Lange owns I<lb/>
acres, her parent- -i-<lb/>
She had beer.<lb/>
desperate. . raz.<lb/>
Raenou to ce:<lb/>
of these parts when<lb/>
she wa young Now<lb/>
she returns all the<lb/>
time. You pees<lb/>
Mi- Langes er-<lb/>
book from Ctoquet<lb/>
High School, u<lb/>
her intelligent, open<lb/>
face pops out like a<lb/>
beacon from the faces<lb/>
of the rifle-tea<lb/>
typing whizze- and<lb/>
home-ec queens<lb/>
There she grins, an<lb/>
"A" student. Na-<lb/>
tional Honor Society.<lb/>
star of the senior cla-s<lb/>
production, of Rebel<lb/>
Without a Cause.<lb/>
When she left for<lb/>
Minneapolis, for her<lb/>
art scholarship at the<lb/>
uniersit. she me: a<lb/>
photographer named<lb/>
Paco Grande and<lb/>
never looked back<lb/>
The countr girl arc:<lb/>
the displaced<lb/>
Spaniard ran to<lb/>
Europe and around<lb/>
the United Sta es<lb/>
And een:u.iii. in<lb/>
190 the wed.<lb/>
4,With m hus-<lb/>
band, when we were<lb/>
together during the<lb/>
early ears, the rea<lb/>
Strong years, we were<lb/>
inseparable Miss<lb/>
Lange rememK s<lb/>
"We lied. literally,<lb/>
in this truck together.<lb/>
and we'd go<lb/>
without<lb/>
am-<lb/>
ma <lb/>
atte<lb/>
war<lb/>
Other ise,<lb/>
the : .?<lb/>
launched i<lb/>
tra<lb/>
America in<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
ed aril <lb/>
opera '<lb/>
' aC<lb/>
too There i<lb/>
the Great <lb/>
The-<lb/>
she<lb/>
?r<lb/>
mime<lb/>
" iti .<lb/>
M<lb/>
sio:<lb/>
dili<lb/>
achsev i<lb/>
fullne-<lb/>
on.<lb/>
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Dei.<lb/>
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'I ki<lb/>
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very -s<lb/>
tha<lb/>
DOBK<lb/>
H<lb/>
Bu<lb/>
v ler<lb/>
Pa" S<lb/>
"1<lb/>
jority<lb/>
disgus I<lb/>
in 1<lb/>
the<lb/>
lives<lb/>
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it's i p<lb/>
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It's be<lb/>
Ba. i<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
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a big Dij<lb/>
la <lb/>
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H<lb/>
. - ? i<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
Would like to than!<lb/>
Sfnu<lb/>
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Apple Records<lb/>
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Pharos Fine Foods<lb/>
and Pizza<lb/>
For Heads Only<lb/>
TacoCid<lb/>
Kings Sandwich<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0010"/><lb/>
APRI1 12. IW1<lb/>
Page S<lb/>
On The Mall'<lb/>
tial Fentommittee. Also on the<lb/>
larcella Ruble, tattoo artists The<lb/>
lages Photograph). Caricatures<lb/>
food.<lb/>
uggle<lb/>
i<lb/>
itul<lb/>
li is not enough. Jessica 1 ange<lb/>
i i he the best, know-<lb/>
. ' . well the impossibility oi<lb/>
The craung tor<lb/>
on. Hers The world's.<lb/>
"A lot of the lifestyle I've<lb/>
iged in during the past is go-<lb/>
be eliminated she<lb/>
Th ights come qukk-<lb/>
. .  ? barek audible amid<lb/>
the  es for cheesburgers and<lb/>
lTve aiuas put myself,<lb/>
desires, first. And 1 don't<lb/>
? it's the ua the human<lb/>
' was meant to exist. Really,<lb/>
I'm looking for is to live in<lb/>
ne kind of state o grace<lb/>
Mis I ange was born in rural<lb/>
Minnesota but moved 18 times<lb/>
with her famiK. Her father was a<lb/>
See JESSICA, Page 9<lb/>
1st Bet<lb/>
Tougher<lb/>
Jessica Lange fs Career<lb/>
A Rags- To-Riches Story<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 12, 1983<lb/>
ontinued From Page 8<lb/>
salesman, the travel-<lb/>
ing kind. Also a<lb/>
coach, a dreamer, a<lb/>
teacher, a drifter.<lb/>
When his teenage<lb/>
daughter hopped a<lb/>
freight train one spr-<lb/>
ing, Al Lange ap-<lb/>
preciated the gesture.<lb/>
He thinks it's fine she<lb/>
became an actress ?<lb/>
since that's what she<lb/>
wants ? but just last<lb/>
Christmas, with<lb/>
Frances and Tootsie<lb/>
hauling in the crowds,<lb/>
Al suggested Jessie go<lb/>
back to college for a<lb/>
law degree, just in<lb/>
case.<lb/>
He wanted, they<lb/>
say, to be a lawyer.<lb/>
Dorothy, his wife,<lb/>
wanted to dance. Al<lb/>
says Miss Lange's<lb/>
2-year-old baby,<lb/>
Alexandra, whose<lb/>
father is Mikhail<lb/>
Baryshnikov, favors<lb/>
her grandmothers.<lb/>
Al and Dorothy live<lb/>
in Nickerson, Minn<lb/>
which isn't really a<lb/>
town, just a dot in the<lb/>
wild not far from<lb/>
lake Superior and<lb/>
only seven miles from<lb/>
Miss Lange's log<lb/>
cabin in Holyoke.<lb/>
Miss Lange owns 120<lb/>
acres, her parents 40.<lb/>
She had been<lb/>
desperate, crazy.<lb/>
Ravenous to get out<lb/>
of these parts when<lb/>
she was young. Now<lb/>
she returns all the<lb/>
time. You peer in<lb/>
Miss Lange's year-<lb/>
book from Cloquet<lb/>
High School, where<lb/>
her intelligent, open<lb/>
face pops out like a<lb/>
beacon from the faces<lb/>
of the rifle-team stars,<lb/>
typing whizzes and<lb/>
home-ee queens.<lb/>
There she grins, an<lb/>
"A" student, Na-<lb/>
tional Honor Society,<lb/>
star of the senior class<lb/>
production, of Rebel<lb/>
H ithout a Cause.<lb/>
When she left for<lb/>
Minneapolis, for her<lb/>
art scholarship at the<lb/>
university, she met a<lb/>
photographer named<lb/>
Paco Grande and<lb/>
never looked back.<lb/>
The country girl and<lb/>
the displaced<lb/>
Spaniard ran to<lb/>
Europe and around<lb/>
the LJnited States.<lb/>
And eventuallv, in<lb/>
1970 they wed.<lb/>
"With my hus-<lb/>
band, when we were<lb/>
together during the<lb/>
early years, the really<lb/>
strong years, we were<lb/>
inseparable Miss<lb/>
lange remembers.<lb/>
"We lived, literally,<lb/>
in this truck together,<lb/>
and we'd go for days<lb/>
without speaking to<lb/>
anybody else except<lb/>
maybe a gas-station<lb/>
attendant when we<lb/>
wanted to fill up.<lb/>
Otherwise, it was just<lb/>
the two of us, kind of<lb/>
launched in space,<lb/>
traveling around<lb/>
America in this old<lb/>
truck<lb/>
Grande was obsess-<lb/>
ed with sex, death and<lb/>
opera. Miss Lange<lb/>
had her obsessions,<lb/>
too. There is always<lb/>
the Great World Out<lb/>
There obsession, and<lb/>
she's been through<lb/>
ones about painting,<lb/>
mime, the occult and,<lb/>
of late, acting.<lb/>
Miss Lange's obses-<lb/>
sions, though, go in<lb/>
cycles. She works<lb/>
dilligently at them,<lb/>
achieves an ease and<lb/>
fullness, then moves<lb/>
on. Such was the<lb/>
obsession with<lb/>
Grande, it seems, and<lb/>
the obsession died<lb/>
long before the mar-<lb/>
riage ended just a<lb/>
couple of years ago.<lb/>
She pursued mime<lb/>
in 1971 when she Hew<lb/>
to Paris for an ap-<lb/>
pointment with<lb/>
Etienne DeCroux, the<lb/>
master of mime. She<lb/>
spent the next two<lb/>
years living in a gar-<lb/>
ret, working some<lb/>
with the Opera Comi-<lb/>
que. "I knew im-<lb/>
mediately I was<lb/>
good Miss Lange<lb/>
says. "It came very,<lb/>
very easily. And I find<lb/>
that the easier it<lb/>
comes, the faster 1<lb/>
lose interest<lb/>
But there was no<lb/>
audience for mime,<lb/>
even on the Parisian<lb/>
streets. So she got on<lb/>
a plane and left. She<lb/>
is an abrupt woman.<lb/>
When she skipped<lb/>
Paris, she left a fur-<lb/>
nished apartment.<lb/>
"1 think the raaT<lb/>
jority of people set-<lb/>
tle she says with<lb/>
disgust. "They settle<lb/>
in relationships, in<lb/>
their jobs, in their<lb/>
lives. They just settle.<lb/>
And that's something<lb/>
? and I'm not saying<lb/>
it's a positive thing ?<lb/>
but something I've<lb/>
never been able to do.<lb/>
It's been the source of<lb/>
a lot of pain<lb/>
Back from the con-<lb/>
tinent, she found<lb/>
waitress jobs in<lb/>
Manhattan and did<lb/>
some modeling. Then<lb/>
came a screen test for<lb/>
a big Dino De<lb/>
Laurentis movie spec-<lb/>
tacular, King Kong.<lb/>
Hundreds of inter-<lb/>
views were arranged.<lb/>
Quotes were<lb/>
manufactured, fed to<lb/>
the press. When she<lb/>
went to the screening,<lb/>
she covered her eyes<lb/>
with her hands.<lb/>
It was two lonely<lb/>
years before more<lb/>
work. There was<lb/>
money from Kong to<lb/>
buy a rural Wisconsin<lb/>
homestead. Then<lb/>
there was Bob Fosse.<lb/>
He fell in love, then<lb/>
cast Miss Lange as a<lb/>
one-woman Greek<lb/>
chorus in All That<lb/>
Jazz. No one really<lb/>
noticed. Next:<lb/>
Jessie: Did you ever<lb/>
see How to Beat the<lb/>
High Cost of Living?<lb/>
Me: No.<lb/>
Jessie: You'll live.<lb/>
OK, just as you<lb/>
might be ready to trot<lb/>
out the violins, just<lb/>
when Miss Lange was<lb/>
drinking too much in<lb/>
a Raleigh N.C<lb/>
motel, suffering<lb/>
through a play called<lb/>
Angel on My<lb/>
Shoulder (at the old<lb/>
Village Dinner<lb/>
Theatre), director<lb/>
Bob Rafelson drop-<lb/>
ped in. He cast her in<lb/>
his version of The<lb/>
Postman Always<lb/>
Rings Twice.<lb/>
There was hot<lb/>
chemistry onscreen<lb/>
between her and Jack<lb/>
Nicholson, but people<lb/>
weren't ignited. The<lb/>
good news was the<lb/>
critics. They went<lb/>
from saying how pret-<lb/>
ty Jessica Lange look-<lb/>
ed to commenting<lb/>
favorably on her ac-<lb/>
ting.<lb/>
It was a<lb/>
breakthrough.<lb/>
See LANGE'S, Page 10<lb/>
 $15?? OFFANY ?<lb/>
COMPLETE PAIR OF<lb/>
EYEGLASSES<lb/>
ff?  ?ACSC!lLOMC<lb/>
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THQPNTON WlDEB S PUUTZB3 ZE-WT JNfgG OASSC<lb/>
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ploiting the stagnation that had become a<lb/>
le decade During this time, late 70s, punk<lb/>
the L'nited Statis with er little response<lb/>
k the other Since then, punk has found<lb/>
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inging attitudes, radio airplay (thanks in<lb/>
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few of the bands who keep their music<lb/>
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Jrovoke a violent response from most club<lb/>
it also evoke reflection on the themes of<lb/>
apathy and rejection in society. So, like<lb/>
rms, punk is effective on more than one<lb/>
lon't have to be addicted to drugs or par-<lb/>
listurbed to be good punks; but a certain<lb/>
o unconventional clothing and hairstyle is<lb/>
loclasuc way of expressing a punk stance,<lb/>
provides a promiscuous freedom for its<lb/>
ho that involvement doesn't necessarily<lb/>
hate, hate, and more hate is the only thing<lb/>
cut of it.<lb/>
Nck ('n' roll) remains only an item for a<lb/>
punk rock carries over into its follower's<lb/>
ring them a precise definition of the situa-<lb/>
te in. Fun is fun, but it shouldn't consume<lb/>
fe. One could view today's punk move-<lb/>
music as our elders viewed early<lb/>
11, but most people aren't that narrow-<lb/>
The musical inclination of most rock au-<lb/>
W even worth noting. So I won't.<lb/>
lof the prototypes of punk, Iggy Pop who<lb/>
Jthe increasing demand for progressive<lb/>
In he sings "I need more<lb/>
PHI KAPPA TAU<lb/>
Would like to thank all our Sponsors that made<lb/>
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WWWi<lb/>
mm<lb/>
???-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0011"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 12, 1983<lb/>
Lange's Long Affair With 'Mischa'<lb/>
Subject She Considers Most Private<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
Postman's editor,<lb/>
Craeme Clifford, was<lb/>
chosen to direct<lb/>
Frances. He gave<lb/>
Miss I ange the lead<lb/>
role, and how she ran<lb/>
with it. A major<lb/>
motion-picture per-<lb/>
formance by someone<lb/>
once written off as<lb/>
professionally dead.<lb/>
She shot the female<lb/>
corned) lead in Toot-<lb/>
sie immediately after-<lb/>
ward, and now<lb/>
evcryo e wonders out<lb/>
loud whether there is<lb/>
a part Jessica I ange<lb/>
can't do<lb/>
1 he New York<lb/>
Times has proclaimed<lb/>
her to be. along with<lb/>
Meryl Streep, one o<lb/>
the two most sought-<lb/>
after properties in<lb/>
Hollywood. With<lb/>
Miss Streep pregnant,<lb/>
the job opportunities<lb/>
?or Miss I ange are<lb/>
ripe. And Miss 1 ange<lb/>
who earned<lb/>
$350,000 for Tootsie<lb/>
and is showing a<lb/>
healthy interest in<lb/>
Frances revenues with<lb/>
her two percent of the<lb/>
producer's gross ? is<lb/>
discussing retirement.<lb/>
It is an alien con-<lb/>
cept, or should be, it<lb/>
seems, to a 33-year-<lb/>
old actress ap-<lb/>
proaching peak earn-<lb/>
ing power, explosive<lb/>
popularity and over-<lb/>
due fame. But Miss<lb/>
Lange is serious; since<lb/>
filming Tootsie and<lb/>
Frances, she hasn't<lb/>
accepted any of the<lb/>
umpteen offers flow-<lb/>
ing to her.<lb/>
"I'm just not going<lb/>
to do this for very<lb/>
long she says of her<lb/>
acting career. "I real-<lb/>
ly don't think I will.<lb/>
I've never found a<lb/>
natural ease in mak-<lb/>
ing movies. It has no<lb/>
harmonious life of its<lb/>
own<lb/>
There are main<lb/>
reasons to believe<lb/>
these are more than<lb/>
the facile sentiments<lb/>
of a poseur. This is no<lb/>
glitzy girl, no photo-<lb/>
opportunity party<lb/>
hound, but smarter<lb/>
than most folks in the<lb/>
business and smart<lb/>
enough to know it.<lb/>
"There's a very low<lb/>
standard of morals in<lb/>
Hollywood Miss<lb/>
Lange says. "There<lb/>
are a lot of people<lb/>
with very little cons-<lb/>
cience. I'd say 70 per-<lb/>
cent of the business is<lb/>
illusion. No, delu-<lb/>
sion. People are<lb/>
deluded in what's lm-<lb/>
portaht, in values.<lb/>
False ideas are impos-<lb/>
ed on your life that<lb/>
really have nothing to<lb/>
do with any kind of<lb/>
universal truth<lb/>
Miss Lange will<lb/>
talk about her career,<lb/>
her life, her family,<lb/>
but virtually never<lb/>
about her loves. She<lb/>
met Baryshnikov<lb/>
soon after she finish-<lb/>
ed King Kong. They<lb/>
have now been<lb/>
together, off and on,<lb/>
for seven years. It has<lb/>
been a private<lb/>
romance with a very<lb/>
public child. Alexan-<lb/>
dra (whom they call<lb/>
Shurs) stays largely<lb/>
with her mother.<lb/>
"When 1 first met<lb/>
Mischa Miss Lange<lb/>
says, "there was<lb/>
something so familiar<lb/>
about him that he felt<lb/>
like a brother.<lb/>
Physically, emo-<lb/>
tionally, everything.<lb/>
Even though there<lb/>
was a tremendous<lb/>
a tea that was<lb/>
unspoken ? because<lb/>
of language problems<lb/>
? it wasn't one of<lb/>
those relationships<lb/>
where you meet so-<lb/>
meone and there's an<lb/>
immediate history. It<lb/>
wasn't even<lb/>
something I<lb/>
understood. That was<lb/>
the immediate<lb/>
response. 1 don't<lb/>
know if 1 feel that<lb/>
way now ? it's seven<lb/>
years down the road,<lb/>
it has a history of its<lb/>
own<lb/>
For his part,<lb/>
Baryshnikov finds<lb/>
Miss Lange far more<lb/>
confident than ever<lb/>
and praises her art to<lb/>
the skies. He does,<lb/>
however, sound a tad<lb/>
bemused by her cur-<lb/>
rent ambivalences. He<lb/>
attributes a lot of it to<lb/>
her most recent job.<lb/>
"I think this<lb/>
Frances Farmer<lb/>
period will just pass<lb/>
he says. "I think she's<lb/>
playing this role for a<lb/>
little too long. It<lb/>
would be real stupid<lb/>
of her not to work a<lb/>
lot now. But 1 think<lb/>
she will take big<lb/>
chances in terms of<lb/>
her career and in her<lb/>
life. She won't listen<lb/>
to anybody, anyway;<lb/>
she will do what she<lb/>
wants to do<lb/>
I<lb/>
ADvEHTiSED<lb/>
ITEM POUO<lb/>
Each of KM ?dw.ftiMd itimi is r.qu.rad to be r??dily ?????jT ?r<lb/>
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The visitors from neu-<lb/>
Mount punched ml l? I<lb/>
five different ECl p tchci<lb/>
process of wn: -<lb/>
game ? .<lb/>
After<lb/>
season with an imprc<lb/>
start. ECL ha<lb/>
of the la<lb/>
ly stands a !<lb/>
One bij<lb/>
slump<lb/>
statt. is wa<lb/>
afternoi<lb/>
 esleya<lb/>
lead after the 1<lb/>
with the<lb/>
Richard Mattock<lb/>
over the : .<lb/>
starter Bo Da<lb/>
In the third i<lb/>
was re<lb/>
Butler, but H .<lb/>
batter ;  - - <lb/>
Charhe Simpson a<lb/>
Medley<lb/>
Butier ?a -<lb/>
McClanahar <lb/>
Lady<lb/>
Although the 1 a<lb/>
ball team could<lb/>
termed "underd -<lb/>
name going<lb/>
Thursday doub<lb/>
Flo- da Sta -<lb/>
FortunateU. the Bc- die<lb/>
live up to theii name<lb/>
the shocked<lb/>
e ampton FSl b<lb/>
first came. 2-0.<lb/>
The Lad) Pirates i d<lb/>
cond contest. 4-0. before the LaM<lb/>
Noles scored two runs in - j<lb/>
and knocked n three more it<lb/>
fifth to to wm. 5-4.<lb/>
FSl. now 52-5, is - d<lb/>
the best slow-pitch<lb/>
in the country nd<lb/>
reason, head coac ? v<lb/>
Manahan wa-<lb/>
the plaers" perfc no . ce "1: wj<lb/>
a good team effort she s;j<lb/>
??fhe kev thing is thai i<lb/>
learn we ca -<lb/>
did that today<lb/>
"When the started<lb/>
didn't give up -<lb/>
back "<lb/>
In tlK rst game, the<lb/>
charged a: the Seminoles, - <lb/>
the onl two runs by dtha te<lb/>
in the first inning l <lb/>
 illiams go: a doub<lb/>
Hooks reached on an a<lb/>
first inning. Daus th<lb/>
score V illia m<lb/>
Oayton. CL<lb/>
brought Hooks<lb/>
Clat, scored wh? eFS<lb/>
cher dropfx J<lb/>
home. The Ptra e Nj<lb/>
off to car . - fifth s<lb/>
SO far this ear FSl I<lb/>
hits against leanetu R<lb/>
first game<lb/>
In the ve<lb/>
enjoyed a four- run le.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
B RXMn MEWS<lb/>
xi?ff W - ?<lb/>
rei<lb/>
Freshman Chris B<lb/>
first place in tht<lb/>
second consecutive mtt<lb/>
ECL men's track lean<lb/>
in the Carolina Re.a<lb/>
weekend in Chape' H I<lb/>
Brooks, a freshman<lb/>
Raleigh, out-jumpec<lb/>
competitive field will<lb/>
23' 10 1 2 He was also i?.tor<lb/>
at the Duke Imttattonal<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Mabry<lb/>
B RAND MFS<lb/>
staff Wmtt<lb/>
Delphine Mabr set a<lb/>
record to take first place in<lb/>
800-meter event in 2:11.6 ?<lb/>
George Mason Invitational<lb/>
weekend in Fairfax. Virginia<lb/>
The ECU women placed<lb/>
tiers in almost every event agj<lb/>
such teams as Villanova.<lb/>
Stale, Georgetown and<lb/>
Forest<lb/>
Aside from setting a<lb/>
record. Mabry also placed<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0012"/><lb/>
? t e?diy available Km ??!? ? ?r<lb/>
cm as specifically noted J<lb/>
ILLE NC<lb/>
; At fcHS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
iPpmq Center<lb/>
rtviiie N. C.<lb/>
TRY STORE<lb/>
RTED<lb/>
BEt<lb/>
Round Roast<lb/>
! 199<lb/>
B<lb/>
SWEET &amp; JUICY<lb/>
Rome Apples<lb/>
QUARTERS<lb/>
'arkay Margarine<lb/>
2 100<lb/>
a?? pKgs<lb/>
:b coupon<lb/>
K)N<lb/>
ur<lb/>
5<lb/>
"You Pay Only<lb/>
69<lb/>
-RDER<lb/>
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ALL<lb/>
GRINDS b<lb/>
bag<lb/>
H?OK AND 7 SO ORDER<lb/>
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You Pay OnlyV<lb/>
)g tou nay<lb/>
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W can g<lb/>
79<lb/>
 64S<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
?XPRIl 12. 1983 Page u<lb/>
Bishops Outslug Slumping Pirates<lb/>
B KEN BOLTON<lb/>
vMMaai s,?iv t dilor<lb/>
The North Carolina Wesleyan<lb/>
Bishops erupted for six runs in the<lb/>
eighth inning to break a 6-6 tie<lb/>
and defeat the ECU Pirates 12-6<lb/>
in a Monday afternoon contest at<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
The visitors from nearby Rocky<lb/>
Mount punched out 16 hits off of<lb/>
five different ECU pitchers in the<lb/>
process of winning their 22nd<lb/>
game against only three losses.<lb/>
Alter starting off the 1983<lb/>
season with an impressive 10-2<lb/>
start, ECU has now lost four out<lb/>
of the last five games and current-<lb/>
lv stands at 15-10.<lb/>
One big reason for the current<lb/>
slump is the failure o' the pitching<lb/>
staff, as was the case Monday<lb/>
aftei noon.<lb/>
Wesleyan jumped out to a 3-1<lb/>
lead after the first two innings,<lb/>
with the main blow being a<lb/>
Richard Mattocks two-run homer<lb/>
over the right field fence off ECU<lb/>
starter Bob Davidson.<lb/>
In the third inning, Davidson<lb/>
was replaced by reliever Chubby<lb/>
Butler, but Butler only retired one<lb/>
batter and gave up RBI singles to<lb/>
Charlie Simpson and Mooehie<lb/>
Medley.<lb/>
Butler was replaced by Robbie<lb/>
McClanahan, who retired the side<lb/>
after giving up a run-scoring<lb/>
single to Vince Chamberlain.<lb/>
After the top half of the third<lb/>
inning, the score was 6-1, and<lb/>
things were looking bleak for the<lb/>
defending ECAC-South champs.<lb/>
But the Pirates came back to tie<lb/>
the score with two runs in their<lb/>
half of the third and three runs in<lb/>
the sixth inning.<lb/>
With one out in the bottom of<lb/>
the third, Pirate first baseman<lb/>
Todd Evans doubled to deep<lb/>
center field. After David Wells<lb/>
reached on an error, freshman<lb/>
designated hitter Winfred<lb/>
Johnson drove home Evans with a<lb/>
single.<lb/>
With men on first and second,<lb/>
N.C. Wesleyan shortstop<lb/>
Chamberlain mishandled a<lb/>
Robert Wells grounder, allowing<lb/>
David Wells to score.<lb/>
The Pirates added three more<lb/>
runs in the sixth on three hits and<lb/>
a pair of walks.<lb/>
Second baseman Tony Salmond<lb/>
opened up the inning with a slow<lb/>
roller down the third-base line for<lb/>
a base hit. After walks to David<lb/>
Home and Jabo Fulghum loaded<lb/>
the bases, Kelly Robinette singled<lb/>
to drive in Salmond.<lb/>
With no one out and the bases<lb/>
full of Pirates, John Hallow miss-<lb/>
ed a golden opportunity to add to<lb/>
his RBI total. (Hallow is the all-<lb/>
time ECU RBI leader with 96.)<lb/>
The senior Greenville native,<lb/>
who also played noseguard on the<lb/>
ECU football team his first two<lb/>
years at ECU, hit a sharp<lb/>
grounder to first baseman Mike<lb/>
DeLeone. DeLeone threw to<lb/>
home plate for one out, and cat-<lb/>
cher Toby Holliday threw back to<lb/>
DeLeone for the double play.<lb/>
That brought up Evans, who<lb/>
greeted Wesleyan starter Larry<lb/>
Parr with a two-run double to the<lb/>
left-center gap to even the score at<lb/>
6-6.<lb/>
Neither team scored in the<lb/>
seventh, setting up the six-run<lb/>
outburst by the Bishops in the<lb/>
eighth inning.<lb/>
After a single by Medley and a<lb/>
throwing error by Fulghum put<lb/>
men on first and third. Holliday<lb/>
singled up the middle to drive in<lb/>
Medley and Willie Arrington.<lb/>
Senior reliever Kirk Parsons<lb/>
was sent in to replace Mc-<lb/>
Clanahan, and after a sacrifice<lb/>
bunt, Mattocks drove in Holliday<lb/>
with a single up the middle.<lb/>
Mattocks then proceeded to<lb/>
steal second and went all the way<lb/>
to third on a ground out. Not con-<lb/>
tent with his progress to that<lb/>
point, Mattocks decided to steal<lb/>
home. Parsons' throw was not in<lb/>
time and Mattocks slid in under<lb/>
the tag of Fulghum to make the<lb/>
score 10-6.<lb/>
A single by Terry Coates, a<lb/>
double by DeLeone and a single<lb/>
by Simpson added two more runs<lb/>
and chased Parsons.<lb/>
Brian Peterson, the fifth Pirate<lb/>
pitcher, came in and recorded the<lb/>
final out.<lb/>
Besides Evans, who had two<lb/>
hits, drove in two runs and scored<lb/>
two runs, Kelly Robinette had a<lb/>
good day at the plate for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
See ROBINETTE, Page 13<lb/>
N Mwoir.<lb/>
Mattocks 2b<lb/>
DeSota dti<lb/>
i ?,a;c. rt<lb/>
VI cone It<lb/>
Simpvon 'h<lb/>
Mcdlcx if<lb/>
Arnagton cf<lb/>
Hollida t<lb/>
( hambcria:n sv<lb/>
it T h t?<lb/>
? 3 3 J<lb/>
J000<lb/>
4 2 2 1<lb/>
 1 4 I<lb/>
 i i :<lb/>
4 : ; i<lb/>
? 1 i o<lb/>
4 o : ;<lb/>
i i i<lb/>
Toulv<lb/>
 12 16 II<lb/>
?? siaroiiaa<lb/>
Rohinciit vs<lb/>
Hi? If<lb/>
?v?ns :b<lb/>
D clis rf<lb/>
Johnson dh<lb/>
R eils cf<lb/>
Salmond ;t<lb/>
Home Jb<lb/>
Fulghurr (<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
?b r I H<lb/>
? 02<lb/>
4 0 10<lb/>
5 i ; :<lb/>
110 0<lb/>
4 0 11<lb/>
? o o o<lb/>
4 110<lb/>
: : i o<lb/>
110 0<lb/>
2? f ? 5<lb/>
K.C.Waakyaa 123 mate-12<lb/>
EaatCaratJn ol'Oo:ooo ?<lb/>
DP - NC 1. tCL 0 LOB - NC? 6. ECU ? 2b -<lb/>
VI cone, bin- (2) b - DeLeone HR ? Mattocks<lb/>
?P- P" 16-01. IP - McClanahan (?<lb/>
Records - M'k 22-J; ECL 1? 10<lb/>
Lady Bucs Surprise Seminoles<lb/>
Although the Lady Pirate soft-<lb/>
ball team could hardly ever be<lb/>
termed "underdogs that's the<lb/>
name they had going into last<lb/>
Thursday's doubleheader with<lb/>
Florida State University.<lb/>
Fortunately, the Bucs didn't<lb/>
live up to their name. Instead,<lb/>
thev shocked two-time national<lb/>
champion FSU bv winning the<lb/>
first game. 2-0.<lb/>
The I adv Pirates led in the se-<lb/>
cond contest, 4-0, before the Lady<lb/>
Noles scored two runs in the third<lb/>
and knocked in three more in the<lb/>
fifth to to win. 5-4.<lb/>
FSU, now 32-5, is considered<lb/>
the best slow-pitch softball team<lb/>
in the country. And for that<lb/>
reason, head soft ball coach Sue<lb/>
Manahan was obviously proud of<lb/>
the players' performance. "It was<lb/>
a good team effort she said.<lb/>
' The key thing is that we have to<lb/>
learn we can beat the best, and we<lb/>
did that today.<lb/>
"When they started to hit, we<lb/>
didn't give up. We tried to come<lb/>
back "<lb/>
In the first game, the Lady Bucs<lb/>
charged at the Seminoles, scoring<lb/>
the onlv two runs by either team<lb/>
in the first inning. Yvonne<lb/>
Williams got a double and Fran<lb/>
Hooks reached on an error in the<lb/>
first inning. Davis then hit a fly to<lb/>
score Williams and Jo Landa<lb/>
Clayton. Clayton's single then<lb/>
brought Hooks to the plate.<lb/>
Clayton scored when the FSU cat-<lb/>
cher dropped the ball on a slide<lb/>
home. The Pirates held the Noles<lb/>
off to capture their fifth shutout<lb/>
so far this year. FSU had just two<lb/>
hits against Jeanette Roth in the<lb/>
first game.<lb/>
In the second game, the Pirates<lb/>
enjoyed a four- run lead after the<lb/>
first inning. Williams reached on<lb/>
a fielder's choice and Hooks<lb/>
reached when an error was made<lb/>
at second. Senior Mitzi Davis then<lb/>
tripled and scored on a single<lb/>
from Yolanda Clayton. Robin<lb/>
Graves moved Clayton to third<lb/>
with a hit and she came in on a<lb/>
sacrifice fly by Tamara Franks.<lb/>
FSU scored two runs in the<lb/>
third inning and knocked in three<lb/>
more in the fifth to go ahead.<lb/>
The absence of right fielder<lb/>
Cynthia Shepard was definitely<lb/>
noticed in ECU's lineup.<lb/>
Shepard's grandmother died last<lb/>
week. "Cyn is the sparkplug of<lb/>
the team Manahan said. "She's<lb/>
a threat everytime she comes to<lb/>
the plate. You can look at the<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Sue Manahan<lb/>
North Carolina doubleheader and<lb/>
see that.<lb/>
"She figured in both of the runs<lb/>
in that. Her speed makes her<lb/>
capable of advancing at anytime,<lb/>
but too. we're a team, and one<lb/>
player doesn't make or break us<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
Manahan and the team were<lb/>
well-aware of FSU's status, and<lb/>
the head coach explained why the<lb/>
Lady Noles are regarded as the<lb/>
top squad in the coi iry.<lb/>
"What makes them number<lb/>
one is that they have 13 full<lb/>
scholarships "Nobody else can<lb/>
approach that. Thev have a<lb/>
$186,000 budget, and that doesn't<lb/>
include their grants. Nobody else<lb/>
has that<lb/>
What does ECU have? "Our<lb/>
budget is only $17,000, and that<lb/>
includes everything. If you look at<lb/>
it from a dollar standpoint, they<lb/>
should not lose<lb/>
Since the AIAW was discon-<lb/>
tinued this year, the women now<lb/>
compete in the NCAA. The Lady<lb/>
Pirates will not have the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to play in a national NCAA<lb/>
slow-pitch championship since<lb/>
one is not held, but Manahan said<lb/>
post-season competition is not<lb/>
totally out of the question. "We<lb/>
have a state tournament and then<lb/>
the ASA (American Softball<lb/>
Association) is sponsoring an in-<lb/>
vitational she said.<lb/>
Next year, the Pirates wil switch<lb/>
to fast-pitch and Manahan is<lb/>
looking forward to the change.<lb/>
"N.C. State has already commit-<lb/>
ted to go to fast pitch and N.C.<lb/>
State, we understand, is dropping<lb/>
softball for soccer next year.<lb/>
We'll be ready for fast pitch.<lb/>
We've already recruited with that<lb/>
in mind<lb/>
ECU Frosh Finish On Top<lb/>
B RANDY MEWS<lb/>
surf U nler<lb/>
1 reshman Chris Biooks took<lb/>
first place in the long jump for the<lb/>
second consecutive meet as the<lb/>
ECU men's track team competed<lb/>
in the Carolina Relays this<lb/>
weekend in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Brooks, a freshman from<lb/>
Raleigh, out-jumped a highly<lb/>
competitive field with a leap of<lb/>
23' 10 12. He was also victorious<lb/>
at the Duke Invitational last<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Craig White, who just beat out<lb/>
former Olympian Charles Foster<lb/>
in the 110-meter hurdles in a<lb/>
previous meet, had trouble jump-<lb/>
ing the seventh hurdle and only<lb/>
managed a fourth place Finish.<lb/>
His time of 14.14 was still only<lb/>
less than a second from qualifying<lb/>
for the Nationals, and he is ex-<lb/>
pected to do so before the season<lb/>
is over.<lb/>
In the 100-meter dash, Nathan<lb/>
McCorkle placed fifth in 10.76,<lb/>
but could have done better as<lb/>
evidenced by his relay time of 9.8.<lb/>
That realy team of Terry<lb/>
Brown, Joseph Dingle, Erskine<lb/>
Evans and McCorkle finished<lb/>
third in the 400-meter race in<lb/>
40.32 seconds.<lb/>
"That was the first time this<lb/>
year I've tried an all freshman<lb/>
combination in the 400 relay<lb/>
said head coach Bill Carson.<lb/>
"They did very well under the cir-<lb/>
sumstances<lb/>
The Pirates will travel to Rich-<lb/>
mond, VA next weekend to com-<lb/>
pete in the Richmond Invita-<lb/>
tional.<lb/>
Golfers Place Fifth<lb/>
Mabry Sets Record<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Delphine Mabry set a meet<lb/>
record to take first place in the<lb/>
800-meter event in 2:11.6 at the<lb/>
George Mason Invitational this<lb/>
weekend in Fairfax, Virginia.<lb/>
The ECU women placed run-<lb/>
ners in almost every event against<lb/>
such teams as Villanova, Penn<lb/>
State, Georgetown and Wake<lb/>
Forest.<lb/>
Aside from setting a meet<lb/>
record, Mabry also placed in a<lb/>
field event. She was fourth in the<lb/>
long jump, with a leap of 17<lb/>
9 12<lb/>
In the 100-meter dash, Robin<lb/>
Cremedy and Tcrissa Hudson<lb/>
both had qualifying times of<lb/>
13.00. In the finals, Cremedy<lb/>
finished second, while Hudson<lb/>
placed fourth.<lb/>
Cremedy and Cathcart both<lb/>
placed in other individual events.<lb/>
Cremedy was seventh in the 200 in<lb/>
26.4, while Cathcart took fourth<lb/>
in the 400 in 57.4.<lb/>
The ECU golf team had their<lb/>
best performance of the year this<lb/>
weekend, finishing fifth among 12<lb/>
teams at the UNC Invitational in<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Chris Czaja led the Pirates in-<lb/>
dividually with a three-day total<lb/>
of 220 strokes. He was followed<lb/>
by freshman: David Doolby and<lb/>
Roger Newsom who Finished with<lb/>
221 and 222 respectively.<lb/>
Rounding out the top five for<lb/>
the Pirates was Kelly Stimart with<lb/>
223 strokes and David Woodward<lb/>
who shot a 224.<lb/>
Bill Brooks of Guilford won in-<lb/>
dividual honors for the tourna-<lb/>
ment with a 213. Florida's Chip<lb/>
Hall also finished with 213, but<lb/>
Brooks was victorious in the<lb/>
playoff round.<lb/>
In team standings, UNC took<lb/>
first with 858 strokes, NCSU was<lb/>
second with 860, Wake Forest<lb/>
shot a 865 and Duke had 875.<lb/>
ECU and Guilford tied for the<lb/>
fifth spot with 885 strokes each.<lb/>
Head coach Jerry Lee was very<lb/>
proud of his teams high finish. "T<lb/>
was extremely pleased with our<lb/>
teams performance, and it felt<lb/>
especially good to beat such teams<lb/>
as Florida and South Carolina.<lb/>
"On the second day, everyone<lb/>
on our team shot par or better,<lb/>
giving us the second best round of<lb/>
the tournament Lee added.<lb/>
The Pirates will close out their<lb/>
season next weekend when they<lb/>
compete in the Old Dominion In-<lb/>
vitational in Nags Head.<lb/>
Pfto'OS B? GA8 P4TTEISO.<lb/>
ECL third baseman David Home tags out N.C. edevan's Mike<lb/>
DeLeone as he unsuccessful) attempts a head-first lide.<lb/>
Pirates Place Fourth In<lb/>
N.C. State Invitational<lb/>
After a well-plaved<lb/>
doubleheader against FSU, the<lb/>
ECU women's softball team<lb/>
followed with a disappointing<lb/>
fourth-place finish at the N.C.<lb/>
State Invitational in Raleigh this<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
In the quarterfinal game on<lb/>
Saturday, the Pirates fell to Nor-<lb/>
thern Kentucky. 3-0. N. Kentuckv<lb/>
scored all three runs in the third<lb/>
inning. The Lad Bucs had nine<lb/>
hits and two errors, while N. Ken-<lb/>
tucky had six hits and one error.<lb/>
ECU's Fran Hooks was the onlv<lb/>
leading hitter, going two-for-<lb/>
three.<lb/>
On Fridav. the Lad) Pirates<lb/>
lost to N. Kentuckv. 11-1. ECU<lb/>
scored its only run in the fourth,<lb/>
while N. Kentuckv knocked 10<lb/>
runs in the same inning.<lb/>
Following the big loss, the Bucs<lb/>
came back by downing Western<lb/>
Carolina. 9-8. The Pirates had a<lb/>
6-2 lead at the bottom of the<lb/>
third. WCU retaliated bv scoring<lb/>
two runs in the fourth and three in<lb/>
the fifth, but ECL came out on<lb/>
top by adding three runs in ihe<lb/>
fifth inning. ECU had 17 hits and<lb/>
two errors, while WCU had IS<lb/>
hits and one error.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates then went up<lb/>
against hosting N.C. State. B:<lb/>
the Bucs weren't too congema; In<lb/>
eight innings. ECU captured a 4-2<lb/>
victor) over the Lady Woifpack<lb/>
Tied 2-all. the Pirates scored two<lb/>
runs in the eighth to win.<lb/>
ECL had 11 hits and one en<lb/>
and the Pack finished wtih 10 h ts<lb/>
and six errors Leading hitters<lb/>
were: Hooks, three jr;<lb/>
Williams, two-for-four, Ham -<lb/>
two-for-three: and Roth wc<lb/>
two-for-three.<lb/>
"I think we came out a little I<lb/>
vesterdav (Fridav) after the game<lb/>
wtih Florida State Manahan<lb/>
said. "Northern Kentuckv car<lb/>
out ver strong. 1 think thev sur-<lb/>
prised us a little because thev were<lb/>
so consistent at the plate<lb/>
Despite disappointment.<lb/>
Manahan still saw mam positive<lb/>
aspects. "We had two good games<lb/>
against Western (Carolina) i<lb/>
State she said. "We hit the ball<lb/>
hard. We did a good defensive<lb/>
in the mud<lb/>
Now 14 the Ladv Pirates will<lb/>
play Louisburg toda at 3 p m.<lb/>
The game scheduled for Wed<lb/>
dav against Virginia Com-<lb/>
monwealth has been cancelled<lb/>
Pttoto By GARY PATTERSOaj<lb/>
ECU Golf Coach Jem Lee instincts team member on finer points<lb/>
of the snort game during eartier practice ronnd.<lb/>
-J<lb/>
-? ff?i an'nnm ? t m<lb/>
-?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0013"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 12, 1983<lb/>
-4-<lb/>
?<lb/>
Seve Shows 'Em At Masters<lb/>
AUGUSTA, Ga.<lb/>
(UP1) ? It's a good<lb/>
thing Seve Ballesteros<lb/>
doesn't like playing<lb/>
on this side of the<lb/>
ocean.<lb/>
If he did, he'd take<lb/>
a lot of dollars away<lb/>
from American<lb/>
golfers and convert<lb/>
them into Spanish<lb/>
pesetas.<lb/>
Ballesteros earned<lb/>
$90,000 ? approx-<lb/>
imately 11 million<lb/>
pesetas ? Monday by<lb/>
winning the Masters<lb/>
for the second time.<lb/>
But he says he'll make<lb/>
only three more U. S.<lb/>
appearances this year<lb/>
? in the Westchester<lb/>
Classic, the U.S.<lb/>
Open and the PGA<lb/>
Championship ?<lb/>
because of his com-<lb/>
mitments in Europe.<lb/>
"1 won't even be<lb/>
able to play in the<lb/>
Tournament of<lb/>
Champions because<lb/>
it's the same week as<lb/>
the Madrid Open he<lb/>
said. "I made that<lb/>
commitment before 1<lb/>
won the Masters<lb/>
Tom Watson,<lb/>
Ballesteros' playing<lb/>
partner Monday and<lb/>
at times his closest<lb/>
pursuer, said he'd like<lb/>
to see the long hitting<lb/>
Spaniard play the<lb/>
U.S. tour. "Seve ob-<lb/>
viously has his<lb/>
reasons for not doing<lb/>
so said Watson.<lb/>
"He gets guarantees<lb/>
in Europe and has to<lb/>
limit his play because<lb/>
of his back<lb/>
"One of these<lb/>
days said<lb/>
Ballesteros, who<lb/>
makes his home in<lb/>
Santander, Spain,<lb/>
"I'll come over and<lb/>
play the tour for a<lb/>
vear to see how good I<lb/>
am<lb/>
He showed that<lb/>
Monday when, star-<lb/>
ting the day one shot<lb/>
behind co-leaders Ray<lb/>
Floyd and Craig<lb/>
Stadler, he played the<lb/>
first four holes in<lb/>
4-under to vault into a<lb/>
three-stroke lead and<lb/>
then coasted home<lb/>
with a 3-under-par 69<lb/>
that gave him a total<lb/>
of 8-under 280 and a<lb/>
four-shot victory over<lb/>
runnersup Ben Cren-<lb/>
shaw and Tom Kite<lb/>
who had 68 and 69<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
"To go birdie,<lb/>
eagle, par, birdie; to<lb/>
go 4 under in the first<lb/>
four holes, that was<lb/>
the key said<lb/>
Ballesteros. "I don't<lb/>
know if that's the best<lb/>
start 1 ever had, but it<lb/>
was the most impor-<lb/>
tant<lb/>
"Ballesteros got off<lb/>
to such a great start it<lb/>
put a damper on<lb/>
everyone's spirit<lb/>
said Kite, who has<lb/>
been sixth or better<lb/>
seven times in the past<lb/>
eight Masters but<lb/>
never a winner. "It<lb/>
was like he was driv-<lb/>
ing a Ferrari and<lb/>
everyone else was<lb/>
driving a Chevrolet<lb/>
When he heard<lb/>
that, Ballesteros quip-<lb/>
ped, "Back home, I<lb/>
ride a bicycle<lb/>
Ballesteros, who<lb/>
turned 26 Saturday,<lb/>
said he wasn't surpris-<lb/>
ed no one made a run<lb/>
at him after he<lb/>
jumped into a com-<lb/>
manding lead. "The<lb/>
key on this course is<lb/>
you have to wait for<lb/>
the birdies he said.<lb/>
"On the last round, if<lb/>
you're three or four<lb/>
behind and try to<lb/>
make birdies, they<lb/>
never come. Try to<lb/>
play aggressive and<lb/>
this course will kill<lb/>
you<lb/>
Ballesteros, winner<lb/>
of the British Open in<lb/>
1979, was 10-under<lb/>
after making a<lb/>
15-footer at the ninth<lb/>
hole but seemed to be<lb/>
slipping a bit when he<lb/>
took bogeys at 10 and<lb/>
12 and when he<lb/>
salvaged a par at 13 he<lb/>
figured it was time to<lb/>
start playing safe.<lb/>
"After 13 is when I<lb/>
told my caddy 'from<lb/>
here to the last hole,<lb/>
we have to play it in<lb/>
par he said. "We<lb/>
did. Good thing too<lb/>
Watson closed to<lb/>
two strokes at the<lb/>
eighth hole when he<lb/>
sank a 25-foot eagle<lb/>
putt. But Watson,<lb/>
another two-time<lb/>
Masters champ, then<lb/>
had a string of three<lb/>
straight bogeys and<lb/>
although he closed to<lb/>
three back when he<lb/>
birdied the 13th, it<lb/>
was all over when he<lb/>
took a double bogey<lb/>
at 14.<lb/>
"The 14th sealed<lb/>
my coffin said Wat-<lb/>
son. "The lights went<lb/>
out for me. As 1 said<lb/>
earlier in the week, I<lb/>
had to play my best to<lb/>
win and I didn't play<lb/>
my best<lb/>
Watson, with a 73,<lb/>
and Floyd, who had a<lb/>
75, tied for fourth,<lb/>
five shots behind<lb/>
Ballesteros. Hale Ir-<lb/>
win had a 69 Monday<lb/>
and Stadler a 76 and<lb/>
they wound up in a tie<lb/>
for sixth at 286. Lan-<lb/>
ny Wadkins (71), Dan<lb/>
Pohl (71) and Gil<lb/>
Morgan (74), who led<lb/>
at the end of the rain-<lb/>
delayed second<lb/>
round, were at 287<lb/>
and the only others<lb/>
under par for 72<lb/>
holes.<lb/>
Arnold Palmer, one<lb/>
shot off the lead after<lb/>
the the first round,<lb/>
saw his score climb<lb/>
day by day to finish<lb/>
far back in the pack at<lb/>
8-over 296. Jack<lb/>
Nicklaus had to<lb/>
withdraw at the start<lb/>
of the second round<lb/>
because of back<lb/>
spasms. The only<lb/>
amateur to play the<lb/>
last two days was<lb/>
James Hallet of South<lb/>
Yarmouth, Mass<lb/>
and he wound up at<lb/>
297.<lb/>
This was only the<lb/>
second time and the<lb/>
first in 10 years the<lb/>
fourth round of the<lb/>
Masters was played<lb/>
on a Monday. That<lb/>
happened because the<lb/>
second round was<lb/>
rained out Friday and<lb/>
plans to play 36 holes<lb/>
Sunday were thwarted<lb/>
when Saturday's<lb/>
round couldn't be<lb/>
completed before<lb/>
dark.<lb/>
Pack May Still Meet With President<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C.<lb/>
(UP1) ? North<lb/>
Carolina State<lb/>
University basketball<lb/>
officials didn't hear<lb/>
from the NCAA in<lb/>
time Monday, so a<lb/>
meeting with Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan was<lb/>
cancelled.<lb/>
The Wolfpack<lb/>
basketball team,<lb/>
which won the NCAA<lb/>
championship last<lb/>
week, had been in-<lb/>
vited to the White<lb/>
House for congratula-<lb/>
tions from the presi-<lb/>
dent. But Wolfpack<lb/>
officials wanted to<lb/>
clear the trip first with<lb/>
the NCAA.<lb/>
Wolfpack officials<lb/>
had to cancel their 5<lb/>
p.m. appointment<lb/>
with Reagan because<lb/>
the NCAA had not<lb/>
told the university by<lb/>
10:30 a.m. whether<lb/>
the team could go.<lb/>
Capitol Broad-<lb/>
casting, owner of<lb/>
several broadcast sta-<lb/>
tions, had offered to<lb/>
pay the $118 fare for<lb/>
15 team members, for<lb/>
a total of $1,770.<lb/>
Coaches and their<lb/>
wives were going to<lb/>
pay their own way.<lb/>
Rudolph Pate, vice<lb/>
chancellor for foun-<lb/>
dations and university<lb/>
relations, said the trip<lb/>
had to be postponed<lb/>
when word did not<lb/>
come from the NCAA<lb/>
as expected.<lb/>
Pate said the White<lb/>
House appointments<lb/>
officer he contacted<lb/>
asked him to let him<lb/>
know when the<lb/>
NCAA decision was<lb/>
made. Pate said he<lb/>
thought there was a<lb/>
good possibility the<lb/>
invitation to meet<lb/>
with the president<lb/>
would be re-extended.<lb/>
The seats had been<lb/>
reserved for the team<lb/>
on a flight leaving<lb/>
Raleigh-Durham Air-<lb/>
port at 2:45 p.m. The<lb/>
meeting with Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan was<lb/>
scheduled for 5 p.m<lb/>
and the team was to<lb/>
be back in Raleigh by<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
Capitol Broad-<lb/>
casting offered Friday<lb/>
to pay the plane tare<lb/>
nmmmmmmmimwmr<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
 SPECIAL<lb/>
FOUR (4) Tacosi<lb/>
for just M.39<lb/>
Not Good With Any Other Special<lb/>
8:00pm til doting<lb/>
with purchase of 4 tocos C<lb/>
for the team<lb/>
members. Neil Juvin.<lb/>
station manager, said<lb/>
before the day was<lb/>
over his office had<lb/>
been advised 15 team<lb/>
members would be<lb/>
going.<lb/>
"It seemed it was<lb/>
all rolling at that<lb/>
time Kuvin said.<lb/>
"Nobody could point<lb/>
to a line or a<lb/>
paragraph in the rules<lb/>
that would rule it<lb/>
out<lb/>
But later in the day,<lb/>
Kuvin said, he was ad-<lb/>
vised the NCAA rules<lb/>
committee had ques-<lb/>
tions about the offer.<lb/>
Photo By GABY PATTERSON<lb/>
Six women and four men cheerleaders will make up the 1983-84<lb/>
cheerleading team. Pictured above are (Front row) Sophomore<lb/>
Karen Hall, an art major; (second row, I to r) Junior Patti Harrill.<lb/>
an interior design major: Senior Scott Perry, a computer science<lb/>
major; Senior Cindy Batson, a business major; (third row) Junior<lb/>
Renee Myers, a business major; Sophomore Lisa Lyon, a computer<lb/>
science major; Senior Jennifer Cooper, a dance major; (fourth row)<lb/>
Sophomores Robbie and Ronnie Rice, both computer science<lb/>
majors; and (fifth row) Sophomore James FJkins. a pre-<lb/>
environmental law major. Cooper and Perry will serve as co-<lb/>
captains next year.<lb/>
Open Mon thru Sat 8am to Midnight<lb/>
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Sat. ApriM6. 1983<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
EaC o these advert se3 tarns t re<lb/>
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t<lb/>
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Lb.<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
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 T<lb/>
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F"ESH CRUSTY<lb/>
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Harrf Rolls<lb/>
99<lb/>
CAMBELLS<lb/>
Tomato Soup ???<lb/>
10V-Oz.<lb/>
Can<lb/>
EMBASSY<lb/>
Grape<lb/>
Jelly<lb/>
32-Oz.<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
FIRST OF THE SEASON<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
$449<lb/>
Full <lb/>
Quart<lb/>
ECU'S Daid UdN r<lb/>
third-inning grounder<lb/>
Robine<lb/>
Cont'd Fmm Page 11<lb/>
The ser<lb/>
?stop had ?<lb/>
five tr:r<lb/>
and drove ? ?<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
After :? gaune,<lb/>
ECL head coat Ha<lb/>
Baird cited<lb/>
pitching rod<lb/>
as keN to the<lb/>
come<lb/>
Classi<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
F ??RES fROV ?? .ocks ?<lb/>
tilings U ?ro.? L :a- <lb/>
party : muc" ?!? j- Mi<lb/>
diyH ift?i, Fraja ?<lb/>
HOLLYWOOD ? i :c ? -?<lb/>
ou cleaned rha- bM ? Do I<lb/>
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eOonti? more a???nait ??'<lb/>
vow ? ?? 'Ms' ?.ftp ? v??<lb/>
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They re taking c?e- ? mv c<lb/>
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ROOMMATE HEECET FOU<lb/>
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SERVICES<lb/>
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TYPING Term papers thesis<lb/>
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TYPING ? U years experience<lb/>
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?few ma- ?frars thechee)<lb/>
IS LEARNING SPANISH A<lb/>
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Tutor,ng available MtukU<lb/>
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Rush jbs PerMene ana<lb/>
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eCU STUDENTS, laortty ftN<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057550_0014"/><lb/>
?r<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
)<lb/>
'holo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
cheerleaders will make up the 1983-84<lb/>
r d above are (Front row) Sophomore<lb/>
(second row, I to rt Junior Patti Harrill.<lb/>
senior Scotl Pern, a computer science<lb/>
on. a buineN major; (third row) Junior<lb/>
i lajor ?v?phomore I ia I on, a computer<lb/>
iniferooper. a dance major: (fourth row)<lb/>
Ronnie Rice, both computer cience<lb/>
lophomore Jame hlkins. a pre-<lb/>
I.ooper and Pern will sene as co-<lb/>
AOv'ERTlSED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
1 ' ese advertised items is re<lb/>
sd to be readily available for<lb/>
sale in eacri Kroger Sav on. except<lb/>
as specifically noted in this ad If we<lb/>
Jo run out of an item we will offer<lb/>
? Xi your choice of a comparable<lb/>
teni when available reflecting the<lb/>
same savings or a rainchoch which<lb/>
 entitle you to purchase the<lb/>
advertised item at the advertised<lb/>
D' e within 30 days<lb/>
41<lb/>
i<lb/>
wast Beef<lb/>
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SAVE<lb/>
90c<lb/>
FRESH CRUSTY<lb/>
Kaiser<lb/>
Hard Rqhs<lb/>
6990<lb/>
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IHEjASTCAROLlNlAN APRIL 12 1983<lb/>
13<lb/>
Hart Named Assistant AD<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
University Director of<lb/>
Athletics, Dr. Ken<lb/>
Karr, has announced<lb/>
the selection of Dave<lb/>
Hart, Jr, to fill the<lb/>
position of Assistant<lb/>
Athletic Director for<lb/>
Marketing.<lb/>
Hart, 34, comes to<lb/>
East Carolina from<lb/>
LeGrange, KY, just<lb/>
outside Louisville,<lb/>
where he served as<lb/>
head basketball coach<lb/>
at Old ham County<lb/>
High School from<lb/>
1977 to 1982. During<lb/>
his coaching at<lb/>
Oldham, Hart became<lb/>
heavily involved in<lb/>
high school sports<lb/>
marketing that receiv-<lb/>
ed national recogni-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Within two years of<lb/>
accepting the position<lb/>
at Oldham, the atten-<lb/>
dance for<lb/>
creased from 150 to a<lb/>
sell-out situation on<lb/>
season tickets of 3200.<lb/>
Hart's efforts were<lb/>
noted in an article he<lb/>
authored for Scholar.<lb/>
ty Mtfzto. as well<lb/>
. ia speaking to the<lb/>
Naitonal High School<lb/>
Coaches Association<lb/>
in Indianapolis.<lb/>
"We need fulltime<lb/>
attention in the areas<lb/>
sales nad advertis-<lb/>
ing said Karr. "Our<lb/>
need is to increase<lb/>
revenue capabilities<lb/>
for football, basket-<lb/>
ball and baseball.<lb/>
With the restructuring<lb/>
of our operations to<lb/>
involve this fulltime<lb/>
Position, I feel we are<lb/>
taking positive steps<lb/>
for our athletic pro-<lb/>
gram<lb/>
Worthy<lb/>
ia- of promotions, ticket A graduate of the<lb/>
University of<lb/>
Alabama in 1971,<lb/>
Hart played basket-<lb/>
ball under CM.<lb/>
Newton, and then<lb/>
worked as a graduate<lb/>
assistant in the pro-<lb/>
gram while earning<lb/>
his master's degree in<lb/>
itn.<lb/>
Han will assume<lb/>
duties at East<lb/>
Carolina the final<lb/>
eek of April.<lb/>
INGLE WOOD<lb/>
Calif. (UPI) - James"<lb/>
Worthy, the NBA's<lb/>
top draft pick last<lb/>
year, is out for the<lb/>
season with a broken<lb/>
leg and<lb/>
surgery<lb/>
With<lb/>
Lucas.<lb/>
"I don't feel too<lb/>
good right now, I'm<lb/>
sort of down Wor-<lb/>
thy said Monday.<lb/>
will not be able to<lb/>
return until late in the<lb/>
playoffs, if at all. ?<lb/>
Since McAdoo has<lb/>
been sidelined. Wor-<lb/>
thy has made more<lb/>
il! nde? ?2S? " 4" iny na$ m? more<lb/>
Tuesdav il "52 M cham' ?han 60 percent of his<lb/>
esday to pions without him, shots from the field<lb/>
the floor, coming up<lb/>
with all the big<lb/>
plays<lb/>
"I'm just numb<lb/>
said Coach Pat RUev.<lb/>
"I'm just concerned<lb/>
about James Worthy<lb/>
the man. I don't give<lb/>
a damn about the<lb/>
season "<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
third-<lb/>
?hote By OAKY PATTERSON<lb/>
SEELirtr xromt -w? ???-?<lb/>
fuse the bone together Worthy smiled and<lb/>
with screws, the Los said, "Why nof TTy<lb/>
Robinette Turns Hat Trick<lb/>
Cont'd From Page 11<lb/>
The senior short-<lb/>
stop had three hits in<lb/>
five trips to the plate<lb/>
and drove in a pair of<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
After the game,<lb/>
ECU head coach Hal<lb/>
Baird cited the lack of<lb/>
pitching<lb/>
as keys<lb/>
.ome.<lb/>
"We're not getting<lb/>
good enough pitching<lb/>
and not getting the big<lb/>
defensive plays when<lb/>
we need them Baird<lb/>
stated. "But the kids<lb/>
are playing hard<lb/>
The Pirates are cur-<lb/>
rently going through<lb/>
one of the worst<lb/>
and defense slumps that Baird can<lb/>
to the out- remember in his four<lb/>
years at ECU, and<lb/>
with some important<lb/>
games coming up in<lb/>
the future, Baird is<lb/>
optimistic about the<lb/>
remainder of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"I hope we can turn<lb/>
things around Baird<lb/>
commented. "The ,<lb/>
key will be if we can Thursday<lb/>
get a couple of well- will play<lb/>
pitched games<lb/>
The Pirates<lb/>
will<lb/>
face the same<lb/>
Wesleyan team on<lb/>
Tuesday afternoon at<lb/>
3:00 in Rocky Mount.<lb/>
After that game,<lb/>
ECU will face intra-<lb/>
state rival North<lb/>
Carolina at home on<lb/>
night and<lb/>
four con-<lb/>
ference games in three<lb/>
days this weekend.<lb/>
Angeles Lakers an-<lb/>
nounced Monday.<lb/>
The loss of the stan-<lb/>
dout 6-foot-9 for-<lb/>
ward, who suffered a<lb/>
fractured tibia just<lb/>
below his knee in Sun-<lb/>
day night's game<lb/>
against the Phoenix<lb/>
Suns, hurts the<lb/>
Lakers' chances of<lb/>
becoming the first<lb/>
team since 1969 to<lb/>
repeat as NBA cham-<lb/>
pions.<lb/>
"We've had very<lb/>
serious injuries this<lb/>
year said guard<lb/>
Magic Johnson, "but<lb/>
this one really hurts<lb/>
won it without me last<lb/>
year<lb/>
Dr. Stephen Lom-<lb/>
In the last seven<lb/>
gmes before being<lb/>
injured he had shot a<lb/>
sizzling 76 percent.<lb/>
'It puts a lot of<lb/>
r? r (A<lb/>
KytigfeM<lb/>
the most It's going to James will be ready to<lb/>
a big effect on return to action in ap-<lb/>
bardo will perform pressure on everybody<lb/>
the surgery which now said guard<lb/>
will consist of inser- Michael Cooper<lb/>
ting one or two screws 'James was starting<lb/>
io hold the fracture in to pl?y niagnificent<lb/>
postion whde it is basketball. He was<lb/>
healing in Centinekj playing both ends of<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
"We feel optimistic<lb/>
about his eventual<lb/>
return said Lakers<lb/>
team physician Dr.<lb/>
Robert Kerlan.<lb/>
"Without complica-<lb/>
tion, the prognosis for<lb/>
the future is excellent<lb/>
and it is expected that<lb/>
GROMt m n -<lb/>
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ROOMMATE<lb/>
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ROOMMATES WANTED FOR<lb/>
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CAR STEREO COMPLETE<lb/>
with amtm receiver, equalizer<lb/>
and speakers. M watts and like<lb/>
now. Call STEVE at WMgS.<lb/>
FOR SALE: FISHER S3<lb/>
SPEAKERS. Will sell cheap.<lb/>
ga Call 7st-a?77.<lb/>
l4e EUICK LA SABRE: Ex<lb/>
cellont consition. Now tiros,<lb/>
S37S. Call 7St-o4Q. <lb/>
FOR SALE: Burgundy 27-inch<lb/>
10 speed Shogun bike Just<lb/>
bought m Fob. Toe clips. Ex-<lb/>
cellent price $115 or best offer.<lb/>
Call 7sa-04oo and leave message.<lb/>
10-SPEEO BICYCLE: Windsor<lb/>
International $11$ or best offer.<lb/>
Excellent shape, have barely us-<lb/>
ed it. Can't afford to move with<lb/>
it. Call 7SI-?5. Jennifer<lb/>
177 MOB Asking SI000 Call<lb/>
7S2-OMS.<lb/>
LOOKING FOR AM APART<lb/>
MENTTT We're graduating this<lb/>
semester and nood someone to<lb/>
take our lease in May.<lb/>
J bedroom townhouse with new<lb/>
carpet, located at River Bluff<lb/>
behind Papa Kati. For more in-<lb/>
formation, call 7Se-jo4e and ask<lb/>
for Stoole or Kevin.<lb/>
PEHSON(s) WANTED to<lb/>
sublease 2 bdrm townhouse at<lb/>
Cherry Court May through<lb/>
August. For more info, call<lb/>
7S2-3730.<lb/>
logo View, only<lb/>
utilities. 7S2-72M.<lb/>
SIM plus<lb/>
APARTMENT to sublease for<lb/>
summer at Cannon Court. Bus<lb/>
route to ECU. If interested, call<lb/>
7S7 U20<lb/>
THE BLOODMOBILE SPON<lb/>
SORED BY PANHELLENIC<lb/>
will be held on Wed. Apr. u and<lb/>
Thurs. Apr. U from u 00 to 4 00<lb/>
p.m. at MendenhaM A donation<lb/>
would b? greatly appreoated<lb/>
CREENMILLRUN: 1 bedroom<lb/>
apt. for rent May Aug. Com<lb/>
pletely furnished, air condition-<lb/>
ing, pool, basketball court. Call<lb/>
757 1445.<lb/>
the team<lb/>
Worthy was injured<lb/>
with 10 seconds left in<lb/>
the third quarter of<lb/>
the Lakers' 101-95<lb/>
loss at the Forum.<lb/>
After attempting to<lb/>
tip in a missed shot;<lb/>
he landed on his left<lb/>
leg and then tumbled<lb/>
to the floor with Suns'<lb/>
forward Maurice<lb/>
proximately six mon-<lb/>
ths<lb/>
Worthy was being<lb/>
counted on the give<lb/>
the Lakers the offense<lb/>
off the bench that<lb/>
thev lost when Bob<lb/>
McAdoo sustained a<lb/>
broken bone in his<lb/>
foot one game after<lb/>
the All-Star break.<lb/>
McAdoo probably<lb/>
T Shirts. Stooping Bags<lb/>
Ut.fl<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
STORE IS-1<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
l M woe ken<lb/>
. yn. Ma 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL-FREE<lb/>
i-tat-ni-asrs<lb/>
ss<lb/>
CAN DO<lb/>
25 Offset Resumes<lb/>
Photocopies<lb/>
5C<lb/>
for<lb/>
S12.50<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
Claw - oe-<lb/>
E m  -<lb/>
?&amp;! !e -52 1233<lb/>
L DOVNTOvN<lb/>
412 EVANS MAi<lb/>
NEED SUMMER BOARDING<lb/>
WITN LOW RENT7 Subleasing<lb/>
two bedroom apartment at Col-<lb/>
:A7TTIC ATTir:<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
WED<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
'ONE NIGHT ONLY<lb/>
<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
oiC Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
754-3023 - 24 MRS. <lb/>
PLAZA SHEL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
t-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
rTrmffilnii<lb/>
i'M. month<lb/>
'S? 0501<lb/>
NEEDED FOR<lb/>
Private, furnished<lb/>
four-bedroom house,<lb/>
near Traffic Office.<lb/>
plus 14 utilities.<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING<lb/>
SERVICE, experience, quality<lb/>
??rk. IBM Seloctric typewriter<lb/>
Co Lan.e Shive 7M-SMI or<lb/>
GAIL JOYNER 7Se-loo?.<lb/>
TAPING: Term papers, thesis,<lb/>
??. Call Kempie Dunn, 758-0713.<lb/>
AOlO ELECTRONICS SER-<lb/>
VCE Complete audio repair<lb/>
C er pm- 7I??Wo-<lb/>
moving? No ion too largo or<lb/>
"nail! Reasonable rates, call<lb/>
" mr<lb/>
T r ping ? 11 yoars experience<lb/>
C" ,Si'7 rtor I:So p.m. ?<lb/>
NEED TYPINGT Call Cmdy<lb/>
3? ?74t after S:M. 10 yoars ex-<lb/>
oenence IBM typo. Spelling,<lb/>
grammar errors chocwod.<lb/>
H LEARNING SPANISH A<lb/>
B'TCHT Causing your hair to<lb/>
?all out' call mo ? I can help,<lb/>
tutoring available, flexible<lb/>
"ours. HERRI 717-HSt<lb/>
TV?ING AND GRAPHICS ?<lb/>
?ush jobs. Portfolio and<lb/>
Florences. Call S. Hamilton<lb/>
7Mm ?r L. Piantedesia<lb/>
WWi.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
l ECU STUDENTS, faculty, staff:<lb/>
Welcome to our No market at<lb/>
m? Pitt County Pairgrounds<lb/>
'ocatod on North Greenville<lb/>
8lvd Open every Sahjrdaiy anal<lb/>
Sunday l til S. Crafts, toots, hjr-<lb/>
nifure, boats, etc. Displays of<lb/>
old postcards, buttom,<lb/>
P'stois and cot lectors'<lb/>
I j bargantsil<lb/>
K1'S? KAWASAKI, 1MI, SI,W.<lb/>
J Priced to sell Groat bargain.<lb/>
Goon condition. This is a real<lb/>
I "motorcycle Make am ottor CaM<lb/>
'Mtis.<lb/>
1 PANASONIC THRUSTERS, 2<lb/>
advents, 2 Sony speakers, new,<lb/>
must sell. Call 7S2-23M, ask for<lb/>
Rick and Judy.<lb/>
KENMORE REFRIGERATOR:<lb/>
I 13 yoars old. 2.S cubic foot.<lb/>
Available May I, SI25. Groat<lb/>
bargain, call in aoos<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST: BLUE and orange<lb/>
MacGregor gym bag in BC-IOJ.<lb/>
Browstor BMg Monday April<lb/>
11 about 13 90 Must have back<lb/>
with all contents. No questions<lb/>
asked. Call ?sa t-us or contact<lb/>
Political Science Department at<lb/>
Browstor. <lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
t ONLY$2.00 ADMISSION FOR E.C.L. STLDETs?<lb/>
THUR<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
ADMISSION<lb/>
FOR LADIES ?<lb/>
TILL 10:30 <lb/>
50 BEVERAGE:<lb/>
TILL 11:00 :<lb/>
i<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
ft<lb/>
?<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?k<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?t?<lb/>
ft<lb/>
?k<lb/>
-k<lb/>
?k<lb/>
JOLLY'S PAWN SHOP<lb/>
?E X-RAVES<lb/>
CORNER OF GREENE ST.<lb/>
A PACTOLUS HWY<lb/>
GREENVILLE NC<lb/>
7S2-5758<lb/>
?CCEPT?ta AHr i;iuioyaiui<lb/>
FOX COu-H?L<lb/>
ALL TftAMSACTKHtSCONFIOEMTIAI.<lb/>
WE BUY<lb/>
SILVER<lb/>
AND GOLD<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Jd?<lb/>
WANTED: WOMAN TO SHARE<lb/>
2 bedroom duplex May July $1.<lb/>
Furnished, grand piano,<lb/>
sundock. Lass than I mile from<lb/>
campus. UlSmoath. 7Sl-ign.<lb/>
WANTED: VERY LIOHT par-<lb/>
fabte typewriter by ???. CaM<lb/>
Julie Pay now, at 3SS-4UI or<lb/>
7S7-04U.<lb/>
WANTING TO BUY: DOUBLE<lb/>
BED. Call 7SO-S4Q4.<lb/>
?GIRL DORMS DON'T FORGET<lb/>
 FREE ADMISSION IN APRIL :<lb/>
(EXCEPT CONCERTS) ?<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
we nvt moot wvsnToav or<lb/>
?cw a ueeo McncMiuacMM<lb/>
?? ecu at wwotasAia eoot<lb/>
wt havs cur our ff-wnis ggg<lb/>
go ournw rnoM tmo racToav<lb/>
JOLLY'S PAWN SHOf<lb/>
Spend Yomr Summer<lb/>
at<lb/>
aims<lb/>
T.ys<lb/>
ruonrrunc<lb/>
Lno? onacTion or sxacmomes<lb/>
AUirm udkii<lb/>
sTcnaos<lb/>
can oaoios with ta?s a vtuni<lb/>
C-UJILMINGTON<lb/>
Register for Summer S? ssitms<lb/>
For information contact:<lb/>
Director of Summer Sessions<lb/>
P.O. Box 3725. UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C. 28406<lb/>
or call (919) 791-4330 ext. 2195<lb/>
r<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
RIDERS NBEOEO: 1 riders to<lb/>
Atlanta. Share gas. Leave t a.m.<lb/>
April 14. Return Monday April<lb/>
17. 7M-PH4.<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
MOVING NO JOB TOO<lb/>
LAROS OR SMALL!)<lb/>
Eoaaawabja ratas. caW 7BMSU.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE BRSON(S)<lb/>
WANTSD la ?? Han un riam<lb/>
 at Tar Rivor Estates<lb/>
Apt. is beside<lb/>
I pvvlp RoM gVAIn<lb/>
la located S rnimiH<lb/>
CaM 7S9-0434 N<lb/>
YOGI<lb/>
VANTSYOU<lb/>
AT<lb/>
T)ominion<lb/>
Ata m, am n. wttmm u<lb/>
????? HmmmfmWm)mf<lb/>
H?,fnrkpjta<lb/>
TnwoJ<lb/>
Farioartkafi<lb/>
TVftrfOfflw.<lb/>
.sn 75711, rstlax<lb/>
Thursday is the last day to<lb/>
get your picture<lb/>
taken for the<lb/>
yearbook-<lb/>
come on up<lb/>
between 9-12 or 7-5<lb/>
 ? -l ? i ? ? ' " <lb/>
?ni m 'Q? ii? ii 1BN11 ifcmm.ua,<lb/>
? i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0015"/><lb/>
14 THE EAST CAROLONIAN APRIL 12, 1983,<lb/>
Pirate Club Willl<lb/>
Raise Money<lb/>
Through April<lb/>
During the month<lb/>
of April, the ECU<lb/>
Pirate Club will at-<lb/>
tempt to raise<lb/>
$300,000 in the Pitt<lb/>
County area.<lb/>
The Pirate Club is a<lb/>
non-profit organiza-<lb/>
tion which provides<lb/>
financial support in<lb/>
the form of scholar-<lb/>
ships to the athletic<lb/>
department.<lb/>
On Tuesday, April<lb/>
5, the Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ts Greenville Chapter<lb/>
of the Pirate Club<lb/>
kicked off its' Spring<lb/>
Fund Drive, known as<lb/>
the "Siege of 83<lb/>
This is a United Way<lb/>
type approach which<lb/>
is designed to per-<lb/>
sonally contact in-<lb/>
dividuals in all facets<lb/>
of public and private<lb/>
sector employment.<lb/>
chancellor John<lb/>
Howell and Greenville<lb/>
businessman Les<lb/>
Garner are Com-<lb/>
manders of the Siege<lb/>
ol "Fleet which is<lb/>
divided according to<lb/>
profession or location<lb/>
of business.<lb/>
Charles Shavitz,<lb/>
Student Assistant in<lb/>
the Pirate Club, is<lb/>
Captain of the Pirate<lb/>
Ship "ECU Student"<lb/>
and is assisted by<lb/>
lieutenants represen-<lb/>
ting the S G A,<lb/>
sororities, frater-<lb/>
nities, residence halls,<lb/>
and other ciubs and<lb/>
organizations. As part<lb/>
o the current siege,<lb/>
all graduating<lb/>
students are being of-<lb/>
fered free, one-year<lb/>
memberships in the<lb/>
Pirate Club. These are<lb/>
worth $30 and entitle<lb/>
the new member to all<lb/>
privileges associated<lb/>
with that level of giv-<lb/>
ing; Purple Report<lb/>
newsletter, decals,<lb/>
membership cer-<lb/>
tificate and card, as<lb/>
well as priority to pur-<lb/>
chase season tickets to<lb/>
home and away<lb/>
games. Most im-<lb/>
portantly, they get the<lb/>
satisfaction of know-<lb/>
ing they are helping to<lb/>
provide scholarships<lb/>
for talented<lb/>
studentathletes.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Shavitz, if East<lb/>
Carolina is to con-<lb/>
tinue its expansion<lb/>
from a primarily<lb/>
regional university in-<lb/>
to one of a national<lb/>
scope, the Pirate Club<lb/>
must increase from its<lb/>
current level of 1,750<lb/>
members to more<lb/>
than 3,000 for ECU to<lb/>
remain competetive in<lb/>
Division I-A.<lb/>
As Pirate club<lb/>
memberships and<lb/>
contributions in-<lb/>
crease, the athletic<lb/>
program is able to use<lb/>
revenues for<lb/>
operating expenses<lb/>
and facilities im-<lb/>
provements, as well as<lb/>
for increased Financial<lb/>
guarantees which are<lb/>
necesary to bring<lb/>
powers into 35,000<lb/>
seat Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Graduating<lb/>
students should sign<lb/>
up for free member-<lb/>
ships at the Student<lb/>
Supply Store on Mon-<lb/>
day, April 18 and<lb/>
Tuesday, April 19<lb/>
from 10 a.m. until 3<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Complete Automotive<lb/>
Service<lb/>
24 hr. Towing Service<lb/>
Jartran Rentals Available<lb/>
Buck's<lb/>
Gulf<lb/>
2701 E. 10th Si.<lb/>
758-103J<lb/>
Plain<lb/>
<lb/>
is a new restaurant<lb/>
in docuntoivn<lb/>
qreenvilie that:<lb/>
 S WfTHIti WALKING PtSVWCB<lb/>
.? 4Hh ?t bet-u?r pondmd jacH and book teorn)<lb/>
 SERVES HOAfE-STYLE EOO0<lb/>
(usually 7 )r1aW?s frmpaPH daily <lb/>
HAS TAKE-acTS ju n t? joo7<lb/>
 FEATURES OAU-Y SPECIALS<lb/>
? Tuesday is Bisceglia Day<lb/>
Sample troa gloss of win wHfc dmnor 4:30-9:00<lb/>
HAS TAKE-OtJS (j? ??? 7? ?7<lb/>
Watch for the opening<lb/>
of the Old Jail<lb/>
with all ABC permits<lb/>
Bausch &amp; Lomb<lb/>
Soft Lenses<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
includes initial eye examination, lenses, care<lb/>
kit. instructions and follow up visits tor one<lb/>
n onth ECU student I.D. required.<lb/>
USOA Cbtie ? B??f Ui<lb/>
16 Oi. Bottlts - CirtM cf t<lb/>
149 I $59 $459<lb/>
Pk? .of 12 -12 Oi. Cats<lb/>
??? - Oaf??t ?Wm. Caetlia. Pl.k CfctWt.<lb/>
 Via Km<lb/>
Pepsi M<lb/>
Cola I Carlo Rossi I Beer<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
Pk? .?! 6 -12 0i. Cats ?? L?<lb/>
Schlitz<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
22 Ounce<lb/>
Why Pay M.J9<lb/>
31<lb/>
14 Oi. Cat ? JUsirtaJ<lb/>
Alfro Poo, Food<lb/>
99<lb/>
00<lb/>
399<lb/>
10) Cat - FrtaeaCat<lb/>
I Slokeiy Oraan Beam<lb/>
79<lb/>
4 Put?1 Mt<lb/>
Edon Toilet Tissue<lb/>
99<lb/>
44 Oi. Oaetf<lb/>
Fabric Softener<lb/>
75<lb/>
f 7 Saaett - 2 PI<lb/>
Viva Tourels<lb/>
Oiert<lb/>
JF0 Mayonnaise<lb/>
41<lb/>
I Oi. Maaaai<lb/>
Instant Potatoes<lb/>
"471<lb/>
IS 0l Cat f -i- Utv ??<lb/>
Fiat ft CfcUkM<lb/>
use N' Boots<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
OPTOMCTNC<lb/>
?Y?CAR?C?HI?R<lb/>
Of<lb/>
228 GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
TIPTON ANNEX<lb/>
"f56-0404<lb/>
Dr. Parte HoMte<lb/>
NOW LOOKING GOOD<lb/>
COSTS LESS<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 ??a)wiNaalr,f"mm"<lb/>
?m<lb/>
10 0.jnc?<lb/>
12 Ounce<lb/>
Del Monte c<lb/>
 Jeno's<lb/>
 Pizza<lb/>
??&amp;<lb/>
CATSUP<lb/>
?, Ps, 1 2 9<lb/>
Wht Pa, '1 I"<lb/>
a<lb/>
l Lt a'a?' ? Quai<lb/>
Shedd's<lb/>
w s t 3.<lb/>
M? 4? ????"??'<lb/>
 ?? mm 1 mmmm0mmm0t$4fm<lb/>
 ' ?fc??"Bav -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057550_0016"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>